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9SuzXZj9FIk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9SuzXZj9FIk
DEF CON 26 BCOS Monero Village - Howard hyc Chu - Inside Monero
for those of you don't know me my name is Howard Chu I am a founder and CTO of this company Simas corporation where we're kind of based in the US we were founded in Los Angeles but now everybody is scattered to different parts of the world like I took off to Ireland and people are in France wherever ever I personally have been writing open source software since the 1980s I actually did write a lot on code that runs the internet Diego wasn't kidding about that I've also worked on a lot of the developer tools that most programmers still used today almost all of the new compiler tools can you make the linker the debugger I've been through all of that code I I have a personal policy that I do not use software that I haven't touched myself all right so everything that like like this Android distro that I'm running on this own is one that I built everything on my laptop you know the Linux systems you know I should be driver to the kernel and basically yeah I won't touch anything that's close source if I can't get my hands inside it I won't use it I did a few years working for NASA at the drug Hoffman Laboratory in Pasadena I worked on the spatial for three years I was good fun so I actually do have software that's been in orbit and never crashed okay more recently I've been working on database technology this database engine I developed in 2011 has turned out to be the world's fastest smallest and most reliable transactional database that's kind of interesting because Manero uses it now so that's kind of cool I've been working on the open l that project for almost twenty years and and you know we turned that from a small research piece of code into production quality code that today is the world's fastest distributed database so lots of other stuff and I've actually been working in a security software for quite a long time a lot of the again a lot of the foundational defensive software that you see on UNIX systems that came out of work that I did these back in JPL I've also spent some time reverse engineering hacking on proprietary protocols like the stuff that it'll be used and these things are still out there on the web now you can still find rtmp dumped on github in the project okay so topics for this talk what does Manero I mean you got kind of a flavor of that with Diego's introduction but I'll get a little bit more comprehensive about that now this talk is not going to be you know dive deep into the math or the real details of technology though the Monaro research lab guys will cover that more through this weekend but but you'll get nice overview right so first of all what is venero we talked about this it's a totally private cryptocurrencies but it's still built on a public block painting all right it's still built on a block payment anybody can participate in the thing about it that special though is all the transactions that show up in the block chain are still okay that means you see the details of what's going on inside a transaction but you can see that the hands that have that and where does this main Manero come from well it's actually just a simple word for money comes from the Esperanto language how many of you guys are familiar with Esperanto okay it's a hacker crowd that's obviously an easy question okay this project started in 2014 so it's only just barely four years old now here's a snapshot from a coin market cap it's kind of hard to read but the basic message here is that about a year ago an arrow was worth $22 per coin I updated this last night it's about 98 dollars somewhere around 100 bucks back in January it reached a peak of four hundred seven dollars so it's it's had its ups and downs okay so first of all a really basic definition what is a cryptocurrency okay and the one I posted up here is literally just copied out of Wikipedia most of the cryptocurrencies that exist today and there's at least a thousand of them now most of them are ports of the Bitcoin code right and Bitcoin code base was released in 2009 the the main feature of that app that makes in crypto currencies that makes in cryptographic the cryptography is just used to create what's card called artificial scarcity all right because normally when you've got digital technologies you can copy them in emit at will right you've got a you've got a file you can create as many copies of it as you want and obviously in a currency you need things to be rare or actually unique you know if I have a ten dollar coin I shouldn't be able to make infinite copies so that 10 dollar coin and keep spending lee if you did that you wouldn't have a working currency so the trick with crypto currencies is the cryptography is used to ensure scarcity every transaction that occurs in one of these crypto currencies is recorded on what's called a blockchain and basically a block gain is just a public distributed record right distributed ledger so blockchains they're basically a distributed database okay it's a distributed database with what we call group commit which means you batch a whole bunch of transactions into a single group and you commit them into the database all at once right this terminology helps me because I I come here from a distributed database background I don't know if it helps you so much but that's where we are so transactions are grouped into blocks and they get committed at one time and typically there's a very high commit lately see all right that means blocks don't happen very frequently okay for example in Bitcoin a block is committed on average about once every 10 minutes and in normal databases like sequel whatever you would expect commits to happen within a few milliseconds so this is this is a really start defining difference between blockchain and regular databases in Manero the block time is two minutes so it's a little more frequent but still it's much slower than you're used to in the database world the other thing about blockchain that makes it a chain is that every block carries a signature of the preceding block a hash cryptographic hash and as each block chains back to with the hash fits previous one you can start from the tail and work towards the head and know that every block is valid because every block has the correct - if you if you run across the block that doesn't have the correct a schvitz preceding one then you know that something is broken on your blockchain somebody's been tampering or that sort of thing now again in these cryptocurrencies the blocks and the transactions are broadcast basically they're transmitted across peer-to-peer networks so everybody who wants to use the currency generally has not participate in its net so everyone node in the network actually validates every single block they validate the signatures for each one one this kind of processing is extremely redundant that means you've got a network of a million nodes and a million nodes are doing the exact same calculation each time yeah highly redundant but that's intentional because when everybody is doing the same calculation they should all get the same answer if any one of them gets a different answer you know that something is broken somewhere in your network so the act of producing these blocks compiling them together it's called mining and mining is again it's extremely fluid intensive and based on proof of work I'm not talking about prove mistake that's a completely different system so we're just talking about how Bitcoin Manero and several other similar coins operate right the cost of mining is actually an essential part of the security of the system okay because you know it costs significant resources to perform lining that means it's it's very expensive to attack the network and try to forge data again mining is a bit of a competition it's a race so the miner that generates the next block first gets a reward for doing so Co now race conditions do occur frequently where multiple miners could produce different blocks at about the same time okay so in the database world we call this eventual consistency but the chain doesn't always agree with itself all the time but eventually it'll converge to a single longest chain okay so I referenced Bitcoin a lot because it was the first digital currency that's really been successful to any extent and their aim was to be trustless and permissionless and a decentralized system now you have to understand the context of the world when Bitcoin was created you know this was in 2008-2009 just after the last global recession and the creation of Bitcoin was a direct reaction to the mismanagement of the world's funds by global banks central banks right so you get people who see gee the global banks just screwed us all how can we create a money system that doesn't have that as a factor as an element in in how the system works so this this is what led to the creation of it jointly and they really like that success of money systems they have some very essential properties right it must entrust this the system should operate without any trusted third partner the banks were the trust of third parties and they they broke their trust you know they they screwed a lot of people they were there was a lot of corruption going on a lot of false accounting going on and so when you place your value in a trusted third party that Qatar Department isn't worth your trust you're totally screwed right so you want a system that doesn't require a trust in a third party they wanted the system to be permissionless so that anybody can use it and nobody can deny you use of that right again if you look at the modern banking system you know a simple example here in the u.s. marijuana is legal in many states in the country now right but a lot of businesses can't actually deal in marijuana and have bank accounts because the banking regulations say they're not allowed to do this so a again when you've got this centralized trusted third party that decides you can and can't use the money system you know that's it's it leads to unclear discrimination and exclusion and so again you know if you're gonna build a new system you wanted to have properties that allow everybody to use it equally and fairly alright and then this leads to the last point of decentralization the only way you can guarantee that nobody is going to lock people out is if there's no central point of control if there's no central decision-maker you can say oh I like this guy using my coin but I don't want this guy using the coin you know you have to have the power diffused enough that no single entity can make arbitrary decisions like that okay so what's that that's that's what this slide says right here so you know point has all these these great ideals but in fact it fails in multiple ways all right it is not actually permissionless okay we already have documented examples of users and accounts being banned or you know shut off from access coins being blacklisted based on their usage history all right so it is a fact that people can control who gets access to the Bitcoin network it is not decentralized okay if you look at the distribution of mining power on the Bitcoin network you know it's like like 80% of that the space in a couple small cities in China and the rest of the world doesn't even amount to 15% so there's a strong centralization happening here it also it doesn't actually behave like the cash all right it doesn't behave like money when you spin it coin when you send a coin to a vendor you know you're giving the your complete financial history and actually you're seeing the vendors complete financial history at the same time I'm you know you see each other's wallet address and you suddenly know everything there is to know about their spending habits so this I mean this is it's insane to even think of it as money right if you if you think like okay I've got a 50 cent coin in my pocket and I'd give it to this guy and he toss us into into a coin jar alright nobody can look at that time chart and say oh yeah Howard put 50 cents in there there's no way to know that alright and if you're looking you know if the guy with the coin jar is there he can't tell oh yeah Howard still has two dollars in his pocket you know there's no way to know that in a regular exchange of real money but in Bitcoin these things are all revealed and really revealing these things is is detrimental you know if you're running a business if you're you know trying to do if you cheese it you're trying to buy a surprise gift for something all of these things are totally legitimate use cases for regular money but they can't be achieved on a public block painting like Bitcoin so it fails as a currency it also fails just as a technology okay the Bitcoin network today is claimed to support where seven transactions per second okay if you look at the statistics it never actually gets faster than three and a half pounds I've got four segments okay and you know put that in the perspective of a credit card processing Network will handle those thousands of transactions per second so you're talking about this global currency and and proclaiming it can be used for everything but it can't even manage you know a hundred of what a typical existing currency network already does the other problems I mean technology wise you know the code in Bitcoin is loaded with hard-coded constants that constrain how it behaves and these these constants tend to be a source of great controversy in the Bitcoin developer community you know this is this one megabyte block size limit has been there and has been a source of great controversy for at least three years the other thing you know the Bitcoin coin distribution it's it sets have a fixed coin supply and so eventually the last coin will be issued in mining and nobody actually knows if the mining network will continue to operate after that event right because they're trusting that miners will still want to mind based on transaction fees in each block but there's actually no incentive for them when the the main block reward goes to zero so Manero in in a lot of ways you can think of Manero as Bitcoin to data all right it's it's a system that people design for years after Bitcoin existed so they've observed a lot of the problem set that exists in the Bitcoin technology and they've come up with solutions to most of these all right maybe not all all right it is actually permissionless right coins are fungible so they can't be banned they can't be censored points don't have any history so you can't choose to ban them them it is actually fairly decentralized in comparison a bit point it's it's much more distant than decentralized and the proof of work out where the makes centralization more difficult okay now in the past six months we've had some examples that would challenge this assertion but I'll get into that later it actually does behave like cash all right when you when you spend a Manero that doesn't reveal anything about what's left and your wallet and it doesn't reveal anything to the buyer or the seller about each other's holdings so it actually does behave like money the technology is dynamically scalable all right there aren't really any hard-coded constants in the code basic that limit its performance it has a perpetual tailing issue diego mentioned this earlier this morning so at the at the beginning all right you've got a large amount of coins being emitted and then the number of coins tails off to a small value but it never drops below 0.3 coins per minute right 0.6 per pot the code base is based on something called crypto note which is a completely separate independent code base for Bitcoin so it doesn't inherit any of bitcoins bugs but it also I mean there's a downside which is we don't don't hear any of bitcoins adoption so just to give you some insight into how the number of coins will progress over time the blue line here is the Bitcoin coin emission curve and you can see it will max out eventually at 22 million or whatever the value is and right around the Year 2040 the Monaro curve will cross the Bitcoin curve and it will continue continue growing on that point okay so how does all of this actually work right how does it an arrow ensure that it remains permissionless and to be permissionless requires you to be unsensible and the unsensible requires fungibility Diego talked a little bit about that this morning this is probably one of the most important characteristics that makes money what it is it makes it usable right so again yeah one point equals any other point one X bar equals one x mark every point is indistinguishable from every other point that you have to have privacy and anonymity for all of your transactions once you establish that any coin is completely private that means it has no individual history that can be traced right and once once you have no history then then there's nothing for you know a controlling entity to try and bang again compared to Bitcoin and pretty much every other coin that's based on Bitcoin you know the the sender address and the receiver address are both publicly they're both recorded forever in the blockchain right the transact amount is publicly and any particular coin can be traced all the way back to its in database creation so you can see everybody who's held out from from any point in time so you cannot have fungibility without a total privacy and anonymity for every transaction now there are some cryptocurrencies out there that provide optimal privacy okay or they only obscure one or two elements of a transaction but because the use of privacy is optional the majority of transactions are still transparent and the ones that aren't transparent actually stick out right they become noteworthy and once they become noteworthy and distinguishable they're tracing the other problems in practice when privacy is optional the majority people won't actually use it right they won't even know they may not even be aware that they need to choose to use it okay so there you know there are a bunch of different elements of a transaction that will show up on a block you know how are we protecting each of these elements first of all your wallet address you know the long string of digits that identifies your wallet never actually appears in the blockchain you know the addresses that you talk about and and give to each other when you say hey send me money to this address those never appear in the block instead we use stealth addresses and the stealth address is randomly generated and it's a one-time use okay so since it's randomly generated it can't actually be associated back to you any actual wallet address so everything that's recorded in the blockchain stands on its own it can't be linked back to any original wall so that takes recipients now how do we protect the identity of the sender right we have something called a ring signature so instead of a transaction containing just one coin that a sender is sending out it actually can point contains multiple decoys right and currently the narrow ring size you set at seven which means there's one real coin in six decoys there's there's another trick to using link signatures the ones we use are called traceable which means we can generate a key image that goes with each ring signature and that key image is unique that's neatly associated with the coin that's being spent so we can identify if a double spend attempt is being made so if you're familiar with public key cryptography you know there's always a key parent right there's a public key and a private key if you encrypt a message with the public key you can only decrypt it with a private key and vice versa if you encrypt the message for the private key you can only decrypt it with a public right so that's that's a standard single key signature in a ring signature you you actually associate multiple private keys with the message and anybody can observe this and verify that all of the participants in that ring signature had a valid key but you cannot identify which one one is the original sender a more recent improvement in Manero supposed to deployed January 2017 it's called ring confidential transactions and so the prior to this prior to January 2017 the transaction amounts were published right but with confidential transaction the transaction amounts are also hidden and the funny thing about CT is this technology was developed by a Bitcoin developer for using Bitcoin and they still haven't deployed it you know I mean this was developed over three or four years ago and actually Manero is the first to deploy and and the technology underlying confidential transaction is also based on ring signatures so there's there's an ongoing theme there so I'll give you the basics of how this works I'm not going to go into great depth here because that's somebody else's talk but the idea is you you store a transaction amount in what's called a Peterson commitment and you are committing to a hash of the actual value right so you don't actually show ten dollars or whatever you generate a hash of the actual value and it's a special kind of a cache these hashes can actually be added to each other and the result is still a valid sum so the sum of two hashes is equal to the hash of the final value and that that means you can independently verify that the inputs and the output are exactly what they claim to be even though you don't know the numbers inside now there's there's a problem which is that if you can't see the values inside that's it's possible for somebody to to quit giving negative numbers in or whatever all right so so we also require arrange proof that's that asserts that the values are actually within a valid range you know values have to be within you know zero to two to the 64 minus 1 1 and so this range proof is basically it says in our case we break a value up into you into binary we represent it as a string of binary digits and we just construct a ring signature for each digit it says it oh yeah this digit could be 0 or 1 the next digit could be 0 or 2 to be 0 or 4 or 0 or 8 and before all of these together to create the final value and as Diego mentioned a rate rate quite large it's something like 1200 bytes or proof so this this has a bit of a cost on our network we're working to reduce that cost when we introduce bulletproof Slater this year here another element of privacy that you know some people talk about is hiding the network address when you actually create a transaction right so we've been working with something called the ITP invisible Internet Protocol it's very similar to tor or its comparable in its purpose and it'll hide the actual Internet addresses of all the participating network nodes the project that's working on ITP is called Kaufering and they actually had their first alpha release just about a week ago so that's that's moving right along and anonymous here this weekend is and he'll be talking more about that copy as well ok so the centralization this this has been a pretty hot topic in the past couple of months the the proof-of-work algorithm that the miners execute is called kryptonite and it was designed to be memory hard which means it uses a lot of RAM and it depends on the slowness of RAM to make me make it hard work it actually uses multiple crypto algorithms it uses AES 256 uses casick plague and the breast whole bunch of other crypto hash algorithms it is I mean it was resistant to a state documentation primarily due the cost of putting a lot of RAM on a chip ok that's that's really the main protection it depended on its it's kind of difficult to implement on GPUs because it uses a large number of random accesses into memory so it uses a large amount of memory and it uses it in random order ok and GPUs are optimized to access memory in sequential order so there were some considerations to how to make this memory hard but I'll get more into that later in comparison alright the Bitcoin mining hash is based on sha-256 which is a cryptographic hash it's been around for a few years and it was designed intentionally to be very efficient and very easy to implement all right so the Bitcoin hash is actually quite trivial to to put into hardware in silicon and that that's kind of what has led to bitcoins problems today right there couple of chip manufacturers in China that can make super op I shot 256 chips and they keep them all for themselves so now kryptonite it was a good idea for 2013 when it was designed alright but there are actually kryptonite Asics in existence today I'm wearing so I'm actually these are Asics I love them but uh the thing you have to realize its memory hardness is not a good idea because memory is a fast-moving target all right every three years memory ticking memory capacity doubles all right capacity doubles and the speeds increase okay so to base your entire defense on memory hardness to me that was stupid okay and now I wasn't around in 2013 so I couldn't tell these guys that yes today I'm gonna say that memory hardness is a stupid feature for a proof-of-work rather it's not adequate and you know I've proposed a new algorithm it's called random J s there's actually two projects out there now one of them is called programmable P o W I helped design that as well that's that's it aimed more at GPUs and random J s just aimed more at CPUs but I would say you know there's there's nothing exclusive in those designs they could they could work on either so the main the main idea here is you want a proof-of-work algorithm that actually exploits the features of a general purpose CPU all right the like if you look at the sha-256 algorithm it was made to be easy to build in heart heart I mean that was his purpose was to be very fast and very efficient and if you want proof of work you want the work to actually be hard it should actually take some time if you take energy and it should take difficult computations so that's the idea behind the random program proof of work and these are I mean the proof of concept has been out for a couple months in it and a more final implementation exists today it's just undergoing testing now so as opposed to Bitcoin with its fixed block size and its three and a half transactions per second in Manero the block size is dynamic it's based on the median block size of the previous hundred blocks and the limited I mean the only reason to limit the block size is because we're afraid of spam right we're afraid of somebody who's going to turn generate hundreds or thousands of dummy transactions just to clog my network okay so with a fix or with a limited block size the fee goes up as as you start raising the block size so somebody who's trying to generate thousands of spam transactions it gets very expensive for them to keep that out of also the transact a fee is calculated based on the transaction size and the block size so all of this feeds together and says if you're generating a lot of the stuff you're gonna pay more now the fee is also dynamic in that as legitimate usage increases the fee will decrease and again that's based on a median of the previous other blocks there's another element of scalability which is simply the size of the block pain data right and and this is actually where my involvement in the narrow begins okay the original Manero code kept all of its blocked pain in in memory in RAM and so if you're working with a PC that's only got a 32-bit processor you can't use more than 2 or 4 gigs of ram in there and then you're done so the Monaro project I kind of realized they're running into a brick wall they needed to move the blockchain from Ram into a database so just some stats January 2015 the block came was five gigabytes in size when they put it into the LM DB database suddenly the RAM usage dropped to only ten megabytes and just not only was using ln v be saving memory for them it actually saved time all right even with their memory only database which which you would expect a memory only data structure should be super fast right it should be a zillion times faster than this but in reality maybe because that code just wasn't all that great it was much slower all right so even with only five hundred eighty-five thousand blocks it took four point two hours to sync that whole chaining whereas with LM VB at a million blocks it took only ten minutes so using Ellen DB was that was a huge step in ensuring scalability for this block chain I just measured this a couple of weeks ago I've got a first-generation Raspberry Pi it can sink the whole block chain it will take a couple of months okay so one of the things that that bugs me a lot right because I mean I come to software from an efficiency standpoint okay primarily I mean I also working security and I understand the trade-offs there but you have to understand that these these two needs these two demands are completely opposed to each other right to get Network privacy and anonymity you have to slow down network performance a whole lot because you're sending traffic through multiple hops instead of just sending it by the most direct path you know to get on chain privacy and anonymity you're sacrificing a lot of performance and efficiency because your transactions are so much larger now to carry this extra data that obscures the original amounts and the original addresses right there's there's a tension here that I don't see a quick resolution to and and this becomes more important over time all right if you look at these money supply emission curves you see that they draw these things out to the year 2050 okay baby the bitcoin guys believed that bitcoin would be the money of the future and everybody would be using it you know 30 years later and I don't think that's really a valid viewpoint if if you listen to some people you know they're saying we're gonna have colonies on Mars by 2030 okay now if that's true it could happen you know you on musk is going to Mars that means the currency of the future must work at interplanetary scale and bitcoin won't do it but Mineiro actually won't do it either right so what we have today is only the rough beginnings all right nothing of none of the technology that we use today is still gonna be viable 10 or 20 years from now it's gonna be completely different you know we may still call it Manero but it's not gonna be based on the same code as we're running today all right all right so the final takeaways reitman an arrow is the world's first cryptocurrency that actually behaves like currency it actually behaves like money you know it's fun jumble it's private it's anonymous when you spend it you don't give away any extra information about yourself the design of Manero didn't come out of nowhere all right it did benefit from observing bitcoin studying bitcoin and seeing all of its flaws and saying hey look we know how to fix these and it does work today but you know it's only one step there's there's there's a long revolution ahead of us yeah yeah yes the blacklist exists because of those other hunky forts all right basically you know it's not the same as we talked about a Bitcoin blacklist basically we're saying here are a couple of outputs that have been used on on another chain that forth from the narrow chain and for you to use them could be are for you to use them as decoys in a valid transaction would be dangerous yeah right sure because the Bitcoin blockchain is stored in Google leveldb and that sucks okay as an actual answer all right in L&D be right the design is it's fully transactional which means every right is actually atomic okay level DB is not a transactional database you know they they say that they support atomic rights but that's not actually true okay so I actually have a very little respect for level DB for a number of reasons but mostly because they lie they misrepresent its capabilities okay here's here's the thing thing like LM DB stores all of its data in a single file okay within a single file it is possible for you to do a sequence of operations that shows up in one one atomic incident level DB stores its data in multiple files it is actually impossible for you to update multiple files and have that become visible in one atomic instant there are always multiple interview intervals of time where you can see intermediate states okay and it's those intermediate states that trip you up if the machine crashes while it's in the middle of updating a sequence of files the database gets corrupt because there's no atomic update yeah earlier you mentioned new there's no speaker earlier you mentioned Bitcoin had trouble changing you know something as simple as a hard-coded value how do you see Manero you're talking about even changing proof of work in the narrow which seems like a much grander change how do you see governance playing into that and and do you see an eventual Bitcoin if ocation of the governance where you know you kind of move into a comfortable state it's worth too much money you can't make these changes without having big big problems or worrisome that's a good question and I'm not sure I know the answer to that I would say eventually it probably will get to that point okay but we're not there yet you know right now everybody understands this this is an experiment everybody understands we upgrade every six models okay so that's that's just you sign up for that kind of turn when you participate you know every six months this is going to change eventually we may slow that down and say okay every one year this is going to change and then it may slow down even further after that but we're not there yet yeah why the transaction why are they so slow there's there's a lot of factors that feed into that okay database performance is an element all right they're using a slow database Bitcoin transactions are slow or for Network propagation reasons all right you know they're they're trying to throttle the transaction rate so that a single transaction has time to propagate to the entire network all right it's a large network that's that's gonna be slow there's a lot of factors okay would Manero have the same issues with slow transact high speed maybe all right you know my personal belief is that we cannot have a single global cryptocurrency all right the example with colonies on Mars should prove that to you we actually need some kind of sharding or fractional networks right that's that's really the only way to keep performance up and cover large-scale yeah well you know we we have worked going under way to support pruning for the block painting so that that'll you know reduce the size and the future does that answer your question or was it a different question yeah oh right but the Monaro network itself is not working on storing carpet rarey data right we want to store financial transactions and nothing else but there there are other you know side chains that could do that in the future yeah well okay does blackballing constitute an attack gun fungibility but creating the transactions that needed to be blackballed yeah the forking is certainly a threat you know I mean otherwise we wouldn't have had to go to the step of blackballing you know and and we we had to warn people look if you're using you know X M C or X mo or xn be whatever the heck they all were if you if you are using these things with your existing Manero wallets with your existing coins you know you're going to be putting putting all of the network's at risk and the other yeah what yeah what what can we do to help adoption of Capri yeah start writing code start integrating it to the apps that you care about you know all of all of this is volunteer work so whenever somebody says I want this to happen they just do it or it won't happen yeah right right right since every ring signature has a key image you can actually detect that yeah yeah okay so at one point in time for a glorious eight months I had a company called Manero direct that allowed you to purchase Manero using dollars euros pounds whatever alright we we've shuddered that company for the moment because our payment processor got acquired by another company and that other company had weird policies towards cryptocurrency so we couldn't continue with them now in the meantime you know I personally still use cracking down right and me I mean I use them because I can buy directly with euros or oh one more wait more one more what am i working on next at the moment I'm actually trying to get Ellen bb10 out the door and one of the interesting features that we've added in one dotto is a database level encryption and part of the reason that feature exists is so that we can start moving the Monaro wallet into LM DB and keep all the data encrypted [Applause]
DEFCONConference
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2018-12-02
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDdDWQPrqfw
Umbilical hernia repair in a horse
thing you do is you take foreign to last come this is three inch elastic on it's much better with four inch and you start right like this bring it down so it's nice firmly attached and you press this until all the hernia contents are back up through the hole compressed in you take this a little bit of an elastic on a little bit the elastic in it and you can feel that it's not extruding anymore let me make sure that this isn't interfering with the penis then you bring all the way up and now you're going to come a little bit closer to this part here but you're going to move across so it doesn't figure-eight you're gonna come up the other side it helps if you have a big wingspan like me when you come up the other side you make sure you're covering elastic on so it's overlap and then as you come here try and get as much this off it helps if it's not too cold or too warm and you're kind of come out here and come across now you're doing a figure eight again so you're coming back on the back side then just coming out and now this side is really close to the stifle area and as you do this you have to be careful that this horse could turn into a bucking horse just like a bucking strap so as long as the handle or the fold and you are aware of that but they usually don't do it until you release them and they take the first step forward so I'm doing a continuation and you see how it's folding in here that's one of the restrictions that can occur and I'm coming forward again they're coming back up on the front side I'm trying to take at least a half a bite on the skin itself so you can really stick to the fold now I'm coming back here and you can see a little bit of a a little bit of this white gauze showing I'm gonna try and get that out of there just like that pull it forward and that make sure that the tape is covering it and I'm pulling the back side and hopefully you can see how well it's covered now is this your last your tape today all right so I've put on two rolls of three-inch elastic on you can see that this is all compressing here that the prepuce or where the penis comes out and is not obstructed if it does become obstructed which I it won't he knows cut a little bit out here and sometimes you have to cut you and see how the tape is rolling back this is where this fold get some skin irritations but it's nothing will go away if your horse is a halter horse be aware that when you take this you be taking some of the hair off and it's not going to be good for a halter class but nor is an umbilical hernia so you have to weigh it this is a non-surgical non-invasive way to compress the gut contents to allow the abdominal muscles to close over it takes about seven to fourteen days so this will probably have to be replaced in about a week and to do that you take your surgical scissors you know the blunt on one side and you cut down here right down the midline and you peel it off this way you peel down with the skin and peel it off to make sure somebody's holding the full when you do it on occasion if it's really hot out and they sweat a lot this whole thing can become loose and it's no longer adding pressure down here that's when you need to change the bandage all righty so we're going to just step back a little bit and we're going to ask them to take a look a little bit of a walk I want a good patient but a very good page
The Equine Practice, Inc
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2019-07-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=maz0LLZkUeQ
Innovation in hard-tissue management with Piezotomes
let's go to block grafts my favorite harvesting area is here it's the reed ramona region and if i harvest here the bone i do it 100 with the piezo and in cases where i have severe bone loss i really rely on those block grafts because um with particulate material it would be very unlikely to regain the bone so here's one example one clinical example that you can see here's a video i hope that this will run where we harvested the bone with the piezo it's very easy i do just a single incision inside the bone i take out the bone block it takes probably five minutes and then this bone block is fixed with two screws i get rid of the sharp edges with the uh with the tip and here you see that we are able to regain the bone uh and even though we have a nice bone quantity i add here during implant placement another bone substitute material just to make to thicken out it's like you need to think like make it as big as possible um of course allograft blocks are another alternative i use them in abundance and still do in cases where i need to really grab big sites so one thing is that you are unlimited in volume of the bone substitute materials so even in those very big areas that needs to be graphed grafted i i i don't need to harvest it from from the donor side of the patient we wait here four to five months before we start to load this bone with implants we know that the literature is is pretty limited with allergenic blocks but what we have is showing that we can use it as a successfully technique but this is the worst case scenario this is a case i did and what was going wrong in here a wrong or not a full effective manipulation of the soft tissue and that's so important because if this bonus is exposed you don't need to think about like to graft it again or put membranes but upon this this will never heal in so we should avoid this why while using what i call the scissor prep and the scissor prep is just a separation of the periosteum from the ep periosteal connective tissue so when i need to graft here this side i do a full flap with releasing incisions that are going beyond the mark of gingival line then i take a scissor and i do a separation of the periosteum which we'll see be seen here and the epi periosteal connective tissue so you go from one side to the other once you've exited here with your scissor the other side you can see that everything that is now laying on the scissor is purely periosteum and if you do here now the incision you cut purely periosteum no nerves and no blood vessels that are in the connective tissue because this is causing a massive swelling and a massive bleeding i do this prior to any augmentation augmentative surgery because then i can fix this flap to the cheek i have a very good visibility to my operation side and i don't need to manipulate this flap when i am about to finish my surgery another technique is a flap release of the lingual area in the mandibular you see here we did the bone splitting here and it was not possible to raise the flap um in order to cause a primary wound closure of this area with the bucket side so what we did was you do a gentle preparation with steri let's say buds where you push down you push down the soft tissue here towards the head line where the middleweight muscle is inserting you see those fibers very clearly when you push this tissue down and once you've pushed this down and you see those fibers of the muscles you can take a tweezer and as i say always like you play the violin you go with the with the blunt with blunt tweezer alongside those exposed fibers and you tear a little bit with another surgical teaser this flap region here and you will see that you will expand the flap more and more and more you can gain here up to one centimeter of flap with this very simple and very safe technique here is one case where we did an allograft block grafting with the so-called pin latch technique so we created a latch with the piezo buckling from the area where we needed to graft i took a allograft block and separated the sponges bone from the cortical plate this cortical plate is later used as the outline for my new graft or from my new for my new crest so you can see here this is the the latch we created and here the the thin plate is fixed because it allows to stay very stable not to flip gives nutrition in this area to the apical part of the of the thin bone and here this void is filled with the particulate material of the sponges area of the bone block mixed with slowly resolvable particulate material from any material that you use what we do is we cause here like little holes inside the bone to provoke a bleeding why do we do this because out of these holes we have bleeding from intraoculars blood vessels with a very high amount of progenitor cells stem cells and growth factors so we give another physiological cellular stimulation to our craft important here is mandatory is a very good primary wound closure that we don't expose this grafted area here you see the mental nerve this is our bucket plate of the bone block here you see a little bit of the latch remaining and after a couple of months after four months the patient returned back you see here the screw that we take out this is before this is after and this is what i want to obtain here is the bucket plate completely incorporated with the recipient side this is sponge's bone that is showing a nice bleeding so it's very very vital bone and here is the lingual plate this is what i want to achieve another case in the lower very compromised bone a big defect here two bone blocks directly screwed to the recipient side we added some particulate material place the prf membrane upon it and achieved here again with the same technique a primary room called closure with a continuous metro suture returning back after five months you see here nice bone vital bone extraordinary expanded in width we take out those screws and we place the implants tunnel technique provided by ken 1982 is going back to the same principle of the intact periosteum that does release those progenitor cells i was explaining previously so we do a vertical incision and we create a pouch a pocket we create a full flap in this area it's not a full flap but it's a full flat preparation and once we have created this void you can scratch the buccal area a little bit to provoke another bleeding giving new cell stimulation to the graft at that days i was doing it with a material called easy graft uh it's a bio-linked um better tcp and hydroxyapatite material and the bile anchor is making this very rigid after 30 seconds to one and a half minutes so can you mold it with your fingers it's it's setting after one and a half minutes it's getting brickstone hard so you need to be a little bit fast but then you can mold it place it there where you want and it stays there you don't need any additional membrane because if you leave the periosteum intact it is staying stable here you see the area that was grafted but again today i go more and more to this biological protocol where i use this sticky bone with the prf mixed and have the same results importance of the soft tissue is in bone grafting procedure procedures is super super super important and one take home message for you guys today is if the biotype is bad in areas where you want to graft convert it first into a good one we know that the biotype of the of the gingiva is mandatory for a good result in grafted areas the thinner the gingival layer upon the bone is the higher is the risk risk that you will have and the higher is the failure rate that you will undergo so one thing is to thicken out the soft tissue here you can see one case a young lady where we needed to take out those two center and sizes she had here apical processes she was having permanent consistent pain and she asked me for an input restoration we start with minimal invasive atromatic extraction of those two teeth no flaps 100 flatness and then we maintain all the integrity of the soft and the heart tissues we place in here the two implants and what i do then is i create a pouch with a very small instrument and i separate the periosteum from the bone i create a pouch to introduce here a collagenous material in this case it is fibrocyte provided by geistfish company you can take any collagen that is working in your hands or a connective tissue if you would like but i want to expand here the width of the soft tissue the soft tissue is so important in conjunction with the with any bone grafting protocol you see here a very uneventful healing after a couple of weeks this was uh before this was after six weeks here we have the two implants in place and then we start after three months we loaded those implants with the temporary splinted crowns on temporary abutments these are peak abutments and we loaded those two implants prematurely and what we did here is i injected hyaluronic acid hyaluronic acid is working beautifully in my hands to enhance soft tissue as well you see here a beautiful healing after five months very nice integrity of the soft tissues here the two implants in place with the abutments these are the final abutments made out of zirconia the two screws and here the final two crowns that's the result after six months very nice integrity of the soft tissues like creating even a papella here around the implants and very nice integrity i will come soon to finalize my presentation with the intro lift which is uh our our our big ship uh that we invented now i think 12 years ago and the infra lift is called the hydrodynamic ultrasonic crystal sinus lift technique and we do this every single day it has replaced the lateral window technique to 99.9 percent and i do this even with immediate influence at the same situation or delayed implants when we just graphed this but this can replace the whole lateral window technique completely as you can see here we have remaining 1.6 millimeters we have here after the intro we've gained 13.6 millimeters important is that the augmented area is going in wide enough to the medial aspect of this side because this is some something i see very often that it's more buckly you see the material and this is a problem this is what you can see when you have very little bone this is a remaining bone height of 1.5 millimeters after the elevation that is done by the trumpet by the tkw5 you see during expiration and inspiration of floating membrane so you grab this side with the material that is working in your hands this is what i want to see the next day on my pain when my patients return back no swelling no bruising no complaints no pain not the necessarily of antibiotics because we have very very small access to the augmentative sites but we need to have a 3d analysis of the sinus i want to know if there is septums from like 1910 uh explained by underwood if those septums are vertical if there's those septums are horizontal i don't have a problem with their horizontals but we need to analyze the bone structure i need to have a clear view of the sinus mucosa and you cannot estimate this schnaidera membrane with a normal 2d scan what is the technique we go with our drills um or with the piezo tips to the sinus floor i like this sca kit the sinus crystal approach grip provided for instance by neobiotech this is a blunt drill with what stoppers and they go in one millimeter steps so with these stoppers you can go very safe towards the schneider towards the science fault wall you can open the sinus with not causing a rupture of the membrane which is super important that's the kit and this is um the these are the bursts so whenever these traps are filled here with the bone this is a complete blunt bur and it is not cutting but it's like pushing a little bit inside the sinus floor area with not causing trauma to the schneiderin membrane that's the case from 2012 you see a very extension sinus very little remaining bone upon this the sinus floor so once we have a situation like this i do create two osteodomies with the piezo and then first we fill we start to fill with collagen or with prf just to place something as buffer on top to provide any micro trauma or macro trauma to the schneider membrane then we fill it this is the result you see here a very huge augmentation of this area 12 grams we place in here of of a over material and of course then you need to wait a little bit longer six to eight months prior to any implant placement so once we have a situation like this we create two osteomyes in a distance of 1.5 centimeters and then you can do bilaterally the lifting of the schneiderin membrane you see here the tkw5 in place that is creating with the cavitation effect that i will explain soon a lift off this area so what is the cavitation effect we have ultrasound uh frequency that is based beyond 80 kilohertz cavitation needs 10 watt per centimeter and once we have this oscillation the high frequency oscillation this is transmitted with the c line we use as a matter into ultrasound waves and with the saline it is creating micro bubbles that do implode in a very short period of time and this implosion releases itself energy and this energy is transmitted to the schneiderin membrane we know that cavitation is antibacterial so when you work with a piezotome in crucial areas you even have an antibacterial device in your hands during your surgery here you see a very short video that i love to show how the um how the cavitation effect is beautifully working here in the sheep skull look here inside the sinus this is the schneider membrane and what we do is we push like with pauses on the on the foot switch and you see a beautiful elevation of the schneider membrane even if you don't touch it important is that we do have enough material medially of the implant so when i have a remaining bone height of three millimeter left then this is enabling me to place an implant if i have less i would do it in two steps like here in this case here is very little bone less than two millimeters we did our infra lift we wait for four to five months we turn back and then we place the implant when i do immediate implant placement at that site and i need to do here in addition bilateral augmentation then i flip here as i was described as the poncho technique one prf membrane but you can use a collagen collagenous resorbal membrane as well upon this augmentated area and then you wait and let it heal but the risk reducer number one to avoid ruptures is use something you place prior to augmentation prior to the initial lift of the schneider membrane because this is working as an airbag in the car you can use collagen you can use prf use something that is resorbable biological and that is soft prior to any other step that's mandatory we did compare ruptures because ruptures may occur of course but the good thing is the ruptures with the intra lift are very very low and we did a comparison of different techniques with balloon lift with the summer's osteotome or with the intra lift on sheep skulls and ayatogenic rupture provided by us and then we compared the rupture length and the rupture with so if a balloon is let's say exploding then of course the rupture size is pretty big something between 10 and 12 millimeters 40 millimeters almost in the pipes if you cause a rupture with the summer's osteotome inside the schneider membrane it might have in this red line here something between six and probably ten millimeters but you see with the intra-lift technique we stay below two millimeters and two millimeters is something that we can handle this is reducing the risk of failures and to explain if things might go wrong but with the necessarity of or unnecessarily to create big manipulation of the bone i show you this this uh this case we did a course here we placed two implants we created here a nice dome with the infra lift technique but the patient had a massive infection here of this site she returned back and we did a classical antibacterial and anti-biological and antibiotic therapy for a while and once you return back the whole sinus was clear you still see here that the schneider membrane is intact we have the integrity of the particulate material still there and we were able to load those imbalance with ceramic crowns so this is something that's very important for the users if things are going wrong stay cool because you won't create a super drama here you see another case uh particular material pretty nicely seen immediately and then the conversion into autologous bone four month post-op and now i show you in a very close to end um the very very difficult case which is in my opinion the case that you can only execute with the intro of technique properly if you look on this 2d scan let's say view of a 3d scan this doesn't look so bad we have here the bone this is the remaining bone doesn't look that bad here's a little peek we could manipulate this and you would plan your implant something like here but that's only the 2d truth look at the 3d tooth this is the cross section look how the bone is going here's buckley this is palladal the schneider membrane is lying here but the bone is going in a curve creating here another mountain going back into a cavern and going up again and going this way so if you were to hear a lateral window you would need to go with your instrument all this way and you would end up exactly here where you see the yellow line this is finito if you would try to lift the this is impossible with with hand manipulation because you would not see you would not feel and you would not reach this area if you would go with a summer's osteotome in here this would be very unlikely to manipulate because this is like a u-shaped void of the sinus floor so a rupture would be very very likely because you would create very high tension forces here and here but with the intra lift and with the cavitation effect we can lift off this area due to physics look what we did here this is the same case you see we came from the crystal approach we didn't touch the lateral wall you see a nice lift up even if we had an attitude anatomy that is very very challenging here in this area very challenging but we were able to lift up the membrane properly and to place the implant conclusion here is make sure that you're able that your patients are ready for bone augmentation that your patients are ready for implants and i have to admit that i was not focusing on this topic 10 years ago but it's so important that your patients have a proper vitamin d level that is exceeding 60 nanograms per milliliter i love this study from from very very famous people shukron tiziano testori patrick balachi from france and shokon kori that there is two risk factors in bone grafting a high amount of low density lipoprotein cholesterol and a low serum vitamin d3 so it's important to check this prior to any big grafts if your patients have excuse me if your patients are very low in here then it's very difficult to achieve proper cells so please do not underestimate these two factors that low density lipoprotein and serum vitamin d3 and with this i'm open now for the q a session if you want to get in touch here's my email address but you will find me on on facebook and instagram and linkedin as well and this is a nice proverb by francois de la rochefoucault he was saying there is nothing constant in life than change and with this i cordially thank you for your attention and i'm ready for the q a session
International Academy for Ultrasonic Surgery and Implantology
UCI0a6igAit29ePq9GNZZMBg
2021-04-30
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
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3,674
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Js_dtB4PAis
Top 10 most expensive shoes in the world
welcome to this youtube channel in this video we  are going to talk about top 10 shoes in the world   so before starting this video please like  this video and subscribe to this channel   for future updates number 10 harry winston ruby  slippers 3 million dollars these ruby slippers   are designed by harry winston and are a copy of  dorothy's ruby slippers from the wizard of oz   they are adorned with priceless jewelry and  feature art that takes two months to create on   the 50th anniversary of the film's release in 1989  the pair of slippers are a nod to the wizard of oz   ron winston the son of jewelry designer  harry winston decided to celebrate the 50th   anniversary of the hollywood classic the wizard  of oz in the most extravagant way possible and   he decided to do so by recreating dorothy's ruby  slippers these shoes are the pinnacle of luxury   meticulously made with 4600 rubies these stunning  shoes have 50 carats of diamonds in addition to 1   350 carats of rubies these ruby slippers which  cost 3 million dollars much outshine the original   which were made of simple red sequins number nine  stuart weitzman rita hayworth heels three million   frida hayworth one of the old hollywood darlings  earned a spot in fashion the beautiful subdued   shade of sienna satin used in the design of these  heels as a refreshing change from all the glitz   and glam typically seen in expensive footwear  the earrings are prominently displayed in the   center of the shoes elevating the whole ensemble  to pure poetry despite its understated elegance   this pair features a satin ruffle near the toe  section with a variety of precious gemstones   including diamonds sapphires and rubies these  three million dollars open-toed heels are the   property of hayward's daughter princess yasmin  aaga khan the rita hayworth heels are studded   with diamonds rubies and sapphires and are  stuart weitzman's most costly accessories   number eight stuart weitzman cinderella  slippers 2 million dollars these beautiful   stuart weitzman slippers are made of italian  leather and are another stuart weitzman creation   cinderella a well-known fairy tale heroine served  as inspiration if that wasn't enough the right   shoe is home to a five carat amaretto diamond  which is worth over a million dollars on its own   alison krauss a country singer wore the  four-inch stilettos to the 2004 oscars   and they blended into the background allowing  the audience to focus on the dazzling diamonds   the cinderella slippers are made up  of 565 quiet diamonds set in platinum   at the laces and are another luxurious  pair from stuart weitzman's expensive range   a pair of these shoes has a 2 million price tag  number 7 debbie wingham heels 15.1 million dollars   debbie wingham who is no stranger to making luxury  pieces was commissioned to design this obscenely   expensive pair as a birthday gift the high heels  are set with some of the world's most valuable   and rare gemstones such as blue and pink diamonds  which explains the exorbitant price the shoe shell   is made of silver while the plaque is made of pure  gold the rest of the shoes are made of leather   but they have 24 karat gold paint on them this  priceless pair was stitched with 18 karat gold   these shoes are the second most costly pair of  footwear in the world made by british designer   debbie wingham the designer partnered with  chris campbell a footwear designer to create   these shoes for a private client as a  gift for a family member's 30th birthday   the client's family collection of precious stones  was used and the whole process took over 100 hours   they have three carat pink diamonds on the front  and one carat blue diamonds on the back of each   of them number six jada dubai and passion  jewelers diamond shoes 23.6 million dollars   jada dubai and passion jewelers have teamed up to  produce one of the most costly pairs of shoes ever   created the stiletto heel shoes which cost 17  million dollars are set with a pair of 15 carat   d grade diamonds the trim is embellished with a  total of 238 diamonds the pair which costs more   than most mansions on the french riviera was on  display at the burj al arab in dubai alongside   a less exotic red pair encrusted with rubies  and costing just twenty seven thousand dollars   it took nine months for expert shoemakers  to create it out of pure gold it is unknown   if it was sold number five tanzanite heels two  million dollars these stuart weitzman stiletto   heels the third on this list were the product of  a partnership between eddie levine and weitzman   these heels which are valued at two million  dollars are a sight to behold the fact that   these shoes are made of gleaming silver adds  to their allure giving them a delicate ethereal   appearance a pair of tanzanite heels designed by  stuart weitzman is encrusted with 185 carats of   elegant bright blue tanzanite gemstones as well  as a 28-carat tanzanite that adds to its charm   a pair of these beauties could set you back two  million dollars number four nike air mag 2016 26   000 if you like shoes this is one shoe for which  you might consider taking out a second mortgage   on your home back to the future too a cult sci-fi  film from the 1980s inspired the 2016 version of   the air mag although the auto lacing feature and  lights in that pair were accomplished by cinematic   effects all of that technology has now become  a reality 30 years later these sneakers have   a motor and are battery powered the brand only  produced 100 of these making them extremely rare   these shoes are currently on the market for  26 000 on average number three the hermes   brickenstock sandals 34 000. to 76 000 will  you ever consider chopping up a hermes bag   most people would be offended by the mere  suggestion but mischief a brooklyn group was   it also combined the cork souls of  german birkenstock sandals with its own   fashionistas have praised the unusual combination  and three pairs have already been published   this nefarious fashion label has previously  combined t-shirts from 10 streetwear labels   in a similar fashion in high street  fashion hermes birken bag is a must-have   at least two leather workshops turned down  mschf's concept of chopping by a birken bag   prices for the sandals range from thirty four  thousand dollars to seventy six thousand dollars   this would seem to be a deterrent to potential  buyers however according to the company they   may only have four to six pairs left to  sell number two testoni shoes minus 38 000.   men are notoriously inept when it comes to knowing  what looks good on their feet but even the most   sartorially challenged individual must admit that  these shoes are beautiful and they should given   that each pair costs a whopping thirty eight  thousand dollars if you're wondering how the   brand explains its high price it all comes down  to the brand's revolutionary norwegians technique   the leather used to make these shoes as the finest  alligator leather available and is highly durable   despite the fact that testoni was established in  1929 the brand's craftsmanship is well ahead of   its time another factor that contributes to the  high price of these shoes is their exceptional   water resistance which is something that every  man seeks in an ideal pair of leather shoes   number one nike so carl air force one supreme  max minus fifty thousand dollars the futuristic   sounding air force one supreme max one of the  most costly nike shoes is next on the list from   dependable old nike since their release every dude  has fantasized about owning a pair of these shoes   this pair goes a step further than the air force  one range which was a diamond studded extravaganza   furthermore the company has improved the  footwear's longevity this time around the bright   neon splashes on the body of these shoes might  have been excessive but they actually complement   the overall sleek look the upper portion of  these shoes is made of luxury leather while the   bottom is made of 3m reflective material the neon  green laces add a cool pop of color to the shoe   what do you think of our list let us know in the  comment section below if you enjoyed this video   and want more videos from us again be sure  to hit that subscribe button before you go
Most Affluent
UCZH3muyTcUK3fiBSQSAclRg
2021-09-20
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0H6R_wCkzw
PRAISE IS WHAT I DO: REPEAT OFFENDERS
praises what i do is sister with a testimony and today we're going to be talking about repeat offenders folks that continually repeat the same sins over and over and over again are repeat offenders many have accepted that you paid their bail father yahuwah and they go and they break parole and they keep on breaking the law repeat offenders many do not get caught but eventually they will be found and brought to trial before the judge yahuwah although the bail was paid by yahushua hamashiach and they've been set free and they're free to live sin free they skipped out on the bale and the bounty hunter will locate them and bring them to the judge many will plead innocent by virtue of yahushua having bailed them out however when the heart is looked into and judged by the great judge the guilty verdict will be decreed by the judge they will here depart from me you workers of iniquity for i never knew you it is appointed unto man wants to die and then the judgment hebrews 9 27 when one really should die to self and truly submit that one will show that the trial that they've been through has caused them to bring meats worthy of repentance that one comes to plead guilty truthfully pleading guilty for they know they're guilty they throw themself on the mercy of the court and they say i'm guilty as charge and they cry out for mercy that one that has died to self and truly submits that one that shows up to the trial with meats worthy of repentance they will show that they have lived without a continual daily breaking of the law having lived according to the laws of the land the kingdom of heaven that one will face judgment with the assurance of acquittal knowing that when they stand before the judge of the world they will stand guilty as charged the prosecutor will be shut down by the defense the defense attorney yahushua hamashiach himself he will defend that one and shed light on the truth of the matter and ultimately claim that the penalties and punishments are to be expunged and time served will be accepted due to said penalty being paid by the blood of yahushua hamashiach the one that shuts the prosecutor down the defender the righteous one the holy one the prosecutor will be held in contempt of court and he himself will be jailed we that one including me although guilty as charged because another paid my penalty and stepped in i we you all of us will be free to go to eternity with our savior the one that has defended us throughout all time those that come and stand before the judge that have continued to mock the judge and thumb their noses at the legal system that he has set forth they will stand as if they feel they are entitled to mercy because they allow the bale's bondman to pay their bail they will say i have associated myself with you i have come to court time and again and you have bailed me out numerous times each time a repeat offender they will say that they have gun done good deeds and they will say that they have even though they have willfully disobeyed the laws and broke the rules that you have kept bailing them out and they will plead for mercy their pattern becomes habitual and the habit the habitual sin the regarding of iniquity in their hearts the lack of discipline the refusal to obey the rebellion the pattern will be reminded to them their lack of repentance will flash before them the fact that their lies and their pattern repeat offense has become part of their very fibers of their being their criminal minds will accept that each time that they returned and they were given another chance and although they had no desire to change and no determination whatsoever to obey the rules and laws they will still stand believing that they are entitled to mercy the law breaking that became normal every day habitual ritualistic for them the continual rituals the religiously daily habitual rituals that they followed without remorse until the ritual became habitual and the repeat offender comfortably continued in their discourse although they were bailed out over and over and over again with chance after chance after chance their time ran out and the repeat offender was safe or so he or she thought knowing that the believing was the only concept that was required as they come to the end to find out that men are liars and only yahuwah is true these will stand before the judge pleading not guilty the defense lawyer cannot prove his case and responds to the judge i do not know this one although he or she she says that they know me i cannot reciprocate the easy verdict of not guilty escapes with the hope of everlasting life and the repeat offender is thrown into outer darkness where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth the prosecutor smiles and gets another win for his record the judge has no choice but to follow the rules and the laws stated in his manual the guilty must be punished many will be sentenced to death many more many more eternity is a long time where will you spend eternity romans chapter 3 verse 4 certainly not indeed yahuwah must be true and every person a liar just as scriptures say when you speak you will be shown to be right and you will win the verdict when you go to law hopefully you can claim that as your own saints because you're not a repeat offender you hate sin and you flee from it psalm 51 4 this should be our cry praise is what i do and this is what i repeat daily we should repeat this against thee and only thee have i sinned and done that which is evil in thy sight for thou will be justified in the reproof triumphant in thy judgments are you a repeat offender or did you lay your sin down to god be the glory praise is what i do a sister with a testimony i pray that you have a wonderful amazing hallelujah phil day in yahushua's name amen
SWAT . CHURCH
UCxhEE4Q9CfxaLv4jL28Ig9w
2020-09-30
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metadata
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1,071
5,771
ab6qvIB6S0k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ab6qvIB6S0k
A Surprising Development | Amanda Mary - GcMAF - Fetal Stem Cells - Planned Parenthood
horizon 52 we have a surprising development today here are some tweets from amanda mary jewell's twitter account from earlier in september joanne basket writes to amanda mary jewell along with dabu7 professor doom and chad lilly i need to find out now what the delivery system is stem cell or animal cell amanda mary writes back to joanna along with davu7 professor doom and chad lily i am training in stem cell delivery with a wonderful doctor in mexico soon amanda mary also writes back to the same people that stem cells can come from many things including an apple it's an interesting study and on this last tweet uh four other people saw this tweet as indicated in the twitter account including spiro so back on september 9th then amanda mary jewel is telling joanna basket double seven professor doom and chad lily with spiro also informed that she is to receive training soon in stem cell delivery from a doctor in mexico and that it is an interesting study amanda mary jewell who is still pushing gc math as a cure for all cancer well looks like mr grim v was absolutely correct since he first spoke of this issue back in august warning professor doom chad lilly robert j morris and spiro that amanda mary jewell's story was suspect and that gc math contained animal cells he even first mentioned back in august that the preferred animal cells in production for gc math were aborted fetal stem cells later producing a video covering the definitive proof of this fact i have seen no such similar revelations from any video or g plus post from either professor doom chad lilly or spiru even though they saw this tweet back on september 9th why no update from these people doesn't the community on youtube have a right to know the truth on this important subject
LostHorizon52 aka Debbie
UC9Tm9Spnovv-jOrr5RMNCAA
2015-09-28
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
en
317
1,767
-jdRufnzkdo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jdRufnzkdo
Master the Art of Smooth Talking: Confidence, Authenticity, and Success
yeah hey yeah hey yo sometimes I really just want to rock you [ __ ] know I'm really about to blast so I really just having my time in my life you know because I know it does they gonna last I'll make it happen you know cause I ain't gonna be lost in the past I had to change the Cavs I ain't broke without no cash in this [ __ ] you see that [ __ ] get into the back hopped up in that [ __ ] really winning [ __ ] yeah like a bag in a [ __ ] win I'm doing me I've been going in lovely but then whatever I represent looking for to the L to the o to the K to the I keep it on the L O W cause you know me and my crew we've been at the bottom like the toe toes [ __ ] I'm not a whole [ __ ] I keep a pole [ __ ] pocket swole [ __ ] that's what I'm on on the road [ __ ] when I go off the thumb [ __ ] I'm making songs that come from the heart hey I know hey I belong I'm letting it go for sure over the top of my head you see that it's so cold like a frozen cone I'm in this video you see what I [ __ ] Gonna Do on here really yeah touching the microphone he making it marked at all yeah marked at all he making it be getting married for all I kept it going for Ross [ __ ] be talking that [ __ ] and they style self still in the same place so not keep it yeah honey I'm keeping it real real real real [ __ ] we making like keeping it heavy Edge just so you're still still I'm up in this picture you seeing my phone really highlights some food on the grill grill I got that recipe I got the sauce [ __ ] can I mess with me I'm in this [ __ ] but she texting me she like the way that I'm getting that check and I whip it hey I did it in that microwave I'm getting high y'all see how much I had to change up my place I got that going you see what I'm on I'm not even lost I've been no maze I'm making it happen up up on my phone I'm doing my thing y'all saving me I came Superman cause I ain't no super one I put my [ __ ] yeah land I'm doing my thing is not going through demands I'm making it happen I'm making my man say I'm making my men's eight to all the [ __ ] Pretenders you seeing that I'd give it to you I'm a vendor I kept it going yeah you know when it was Hunger hey [Music] today we're gonna be getting into how to smooth talk all right so look look I'm gonna be teaching y'all I had a smooth talk now look this right here do not do this do not do this if you ain't ready you smooth talking could cause you a lot of problems you think just cause you know you learn how to talk you get what you want but just look just know use it wisely smooth talking is supposed to be used as a defense to get you out of situations and situations like if you are you know having to tell a murderer to put that gun down instead of killing everybody around you you know you could be a smooth talker enough just to you know do the six nine do some some fun some sexy that's what it says now do some sexy like or you know you know like some like some sex [ __ ] like s-e-x like you know that I could lead that too but if you're just saying a bunch of nothing just know the karma is on you so y'all been warned I'm gonna break it down now get into it though like uh if you want to keep listening from this point it's all up to you but hey so first one on my list to be a smooth talking from okay so be confident and relax like be like add a little nonchalant to your little your aura like be a little out of it but not like two out of like be like like you know straight up real life like be vibing you know Vibe and be vibing with the wind for real second speak clearly and moderate Pace like speak at a hundred percent clearness pronunciate and moderate the pace that you go with go go with what you you can like you know it's more sufficient with you like what makes you more you know you can think of another word to say at that exact moment use humor this is the third one use humor and wittiness to engage others you know so like when you trying trying to you know smooth talk be or be around like a group of people make sure you be more humorous and be witty with the to when you engage in in participating and you know you'll be smooth talking without even knowing it and fourth listen and show genuine interest in others you know so like when you're speaking smooth speaking you gotta actually hear it's really not all about you it's really about the response so you got to actually hear what they saying so you can you know know if you really you know saying it the right way or if you if you even a person who could uh seem like you slick with the words you say and seven try storytelling this will Captivate your audience this will like you know whatever whatever you know um people you're around when you smooth talking if you put a story in it and be like and then uh this is a story about you know this person you just go in with it you know you don't even gotta be a real story it could just be a story about you and but you made it about somebody else so if be authentic and true to yourself This is how you be the best smooth talker ever in the world to exist you got to be authentic and true to yourself and nine use appropriate vocal vocabulary and avoid using filtered words like um and like so instead of saying like this or um because people when you say like too much people don't take you serious and we say um people look at you [ __ ] best word to say is silence come up with something hey that that is how you you know smooth talk you know it it's simple be true to yourself and keep it 100. and keep your what you're gonna talk about keep it keep it you know real unless you're on a delusional side that's up to you though
lokiferg
UCH4xz9uVAeZQzT1eVSIpHyg
2023-06-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,164
5,860
r_3dy_NwvnM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_3dy_NwvnM
CTGamercon Pools B1 Losers Round 4 - Beesu vs JuniorJunes - SF6 Tournament
in Connecticut along with M yeah along with rowlet uh believe his significant other yes uh no no not significant other just friend just friend just hanging out stavia uh significant other ah the sparring partner yeah we're going to have to see how these two Spar Cammy a pretty good pick for b i yeah it's it's the pick and three part six that works oh yeah he also has a Ken player oh okay I think he also has the Ken all right I to grab oh big big Parry where you Misses the overhead no punish on the Whi grab cool again we're in there uh junior Jess just holding back the respect he has for bisu here uh I would I would have respect but land's a big jump in you're burnt out though oh no continuation of the combo no continuation reactions is this modern no that that that's a c up there right yeah man that was I it's a buffer buffer and a half my has content with holding back yeah I feel like both players are content to just hold back make other make the first mistake they play enough mhm oh yeah what privilege this character has Luke if I still played this game I would play Luke oh yeah The Golden Boy empty jump grab confident visu respecting the dash we have grab loops Double Dash uh you're dead spends all of it I like it deep breath from uh junior Junes just it's okay meter Advantage going into round three this isn't Grand blue I'm fine yeah you're just not safe from Buu in any game he's just omnipresent except three I have never seen Junes drop those what is going on yeah the nerves are there for sure wow check the drive rush into full combo dive kick is very nice throw into the corner that's big J just just contend to sit back oh drops the game-winning combo oh no like this be has a chance to fight now ex ex dive kick yeah okay wake up ja does it J you see shaking shaking his head he like what do I need to do oh yeah he bet the farm on that jab that was if if uh pisu had the mey not quite soon enough on the drive impact in order to punish that it is something you can do but you do have to be on top of uh your reaction there no punish crouching medium punch still a good button Evergreen button if you will it's always good DB okay get out of my Skies we're just happy to play neutral where [Music] you oh is that it the drop got crapped okay not happy with it be very not happy win is at the W I feel like he's never happy when you're when you're an a fighting game player and you've been uh you've been grinding you don't like like what you see you do something weird and even though it worked it's just like uh that's not me kick yeah throw junas has been respecting Buu's wake up the entire set Buu has not woken up with uh oh is this it uh no we dropped it that's unfortunate oh beu just needs to hit into the link oh great counter hit confirm did that work we are Camy you press the button from across the screen killer B on the attack full screen yeah I mean I don't know if it's full like like literally you know that's upsetting but at least three quarters that's that's that's upsetting as a as a zenie player oh yeah it hurts where you going okay bizu putting on the pressure now tuness not respecting why would you you're you're Luke Yeah medium punch will probably win anyways yeah oh that could have been big damage but you know Corner pretty good as well catching the toes but better watch your toes oh you're dead spend the bar yeah yeah be seems more collected round mhm the set slowly escaping Jess's grasp it's going to have to pull it together where you going oh okay finally bisu does the wake up uh uppercut and was correct [Music] misses the the grab punish but still in the lead no meter though burnout is such a big deal yeah oh interesting Comm grab your dead that's hype that hurts getting by that doesn't hurt that's fire cuz you know you're like that option is so weird cammies never go for it but when they do it's like it's going to hit I feel like Buu does never never does flip kick so you can maybe jump on a read I you can maybe jump on a read I wouldn't have guessed right I would have been thinking here comes like the uh aerial kick or the the low the safe low did not expect the the grab we like to risk it for the biscuit man young players like just think of all all his past characters speak to ah I'll risk it why not yeah genan probably going to going to carry yeah
House Of 3000
UCU0gcxKefgK9P4RJHxcKNxg
2024-04-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
en
869
4,341
TxDo8CqXDMA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxDo8CqXDMA
Blueprints and Planners tutorial - Laurence Plays Factorio
in the last tutorial I spent some time talking about setting up robaport networks how the Bots work and what the different types of chests do during that I mentioned that you can copy and paste chunksyville Factory and the Bots will fly out to build it these copy chunks are called Blueprints and there's a lot more to them than just being part of copy paste let's take a closer look at them welcome to Lawrence plays factorio creating a blueprint is easy copy a chunk of your factory and place it in your inventory congratulations you've made a blueprint these can be selected later and placed wherever you want however if you hold down shift when you drag you'll see a blue Highlight on the selection and when you release you'll get a lot more options for your blueprint you can give it a name choose the icons that will be displayed on the thumbnail add a description to remind you later what on Earth it's for set it to snap to grid which I'll come back to later because it's quite complicated and you can choose what sort of information gets included with the filters entities means any normal building assembly machines pumps Rail stations Etc this is the default and what you'll get if you don't hold down shift when you copy tiles are any flooring that you've laid such as stone bricks or concrete in the space exploration mod this includes space scaffolding copying train stop names means that when you drop the new blueprint in the station won't have a random name and so may already have trains configured to go to it this can be very useful if you're setting up a new station that is to have identical settings perhaps an additional mine but can be dangerous if you copied an iron mine and are now trying to place a copper mine trains and train fuel allow you to make sure the Box place a fully programmed train and fuel it up so it's ready to depart if you right click on anything in the blueprint it will be grayed out this has removed it from the blueprint but until you save you can undo by left clicking on the grayed out item getting rid of tiles under an entity is difficult though at the bottom of the left pane you can see a list of all the components in the blueprint this is a useful reference if you're trying to get rid of almost all of the pylons or Robo ports from an area you've copied especially as you can also right click on these to remove all instances of that component from the blueprint again left clicking we'll Place more back again finally at the top the Green Arrow can be used to upgrade items in the blueprint by default this will upgrade everything that can be upgraded belts assembly machines and inserters but you can use a pre-configured upgrade planner if you want the arrow button allows you to export your blueprint as a text string this can be saved outside factorio in a text document then sent to a friend or whatever you want there is a matching import string button on the toolbar which can be used to import these strings back into factorio as well creating a new blueprint personally I don't like importing other people's blueprints generally but it can be a good way to learn hit the create blueprint button and you'll have a shiny new blueprint in your hand ready to use as before you can drop it into your inventory as a temporary place to keep it and if you right click on it you can edit it or delete it to place a blueprint simply take it in your hand and click somewhere in the world the blueprint will be placed as ghosts and construction Bots will fly out to place all the components as I said earlier if there's anything in the way of the blueprint you won't be able to place it and you'll get an error message but you can force it by holding shift this will Mark any bits of nature in the way such as trees rocks and cliffs for deconstruction and the Bots will deal with these as well [Music] if there's other bits of Factory in the way these won't be removed the game will place all entities that can be placed but won't overwrite anything that's already there it's up to you to make sure the area is tidy first note that entities will be reprogrammed if you have an assembler set up to build yellow belt and you paste an assembler that's programmed to build red belts over the top of it it will update the assembler's recipe it won't replace or add modules or rotate belts or inserters however now let's take a look at snapping blueprints to a grid this is the option I mentioned earlier when you copy and shift drag and it allows you to place down multiple Blueprints and have them automatically align with each other you can choose the size of the grid which affects how often the blueprint will place allowing you to space them out and also where in the grid the blueprint is placed finally you can choose whether the grid aligns with an absolute position so offset a number of that grid size from the origin or whether they are placed relative to the first one you placed early traditionally many people try to set this order grid to be chunk aligned that is matched up with factorio's internal 32x32 grid this can be done by setting the grid size to 32 by 32 and then making sure that whatever your built Blueprinting is the right size to fit in that alternatively you can turn on the show grid option and carefully Build Your Design inside one of the squares this system can be handy for placing down construction areas like green circuit arrays but really comes into its own for rail systems especially if you want to build a city block design [Music] create a blueprint for each chunk of rail you want to use straights and Junctions are the most important but you can make Corners as well if you want and then open each blueprint and turn on Snap to grid making sure the size is set to 32x32 and your design is centered so that the rails will meet up between chunks once you've created These Blueprints it's trivial to stamp down large areas of rail you can drag the straights and then drop in the Junctions or Corners very quickly if you include rope reports on power in your blueprint you could make the whole thing self-building alternatively if you like mods you could try file as shown in this video tangentially related to blueprints are deconstruction planners and upgrade planners which I'm trying to resist calling red prints and green prints respectively these can be accessed from their buttons on your toolbar or with the keyboard shortcuts which by default are alt D and ALT U respectively at their simplest you can drag them across the world and Mark any entity under them for deconstruction or for an appropriate upgrade and as ever your dedicated and hardworking Bots will fly out to make your wishes come true the powerful part of these planners however is that they can be customized drop a deconstruction planner into your Hotbar and right click on it from here you can choose to whitelist that is just deconstruct the items you specify or Blacklist so deconstruct everything except the items specified item filters can be set as before by clicking on the squares or by bringing items over from your inventory there are two tabs here floor tiles must be done in the second tab note that if the deconstruction planner matches both entities and tiles in an area it will just select the entities the entities picker has a few options which you won't be used to you can specify environment items such as fish Cliffs or specific tree or rock types and you can also select miscellaneous which includes things like ghosts and items on the ground pay no attention to the final tab here this is there because I have cheats running in order to make making videos easier the upgrade planner can be configured in a similar way right click on it and it opens a new window in here you can choose what items will be upgraded from what to what when you select the first item you'll see all items the upgrade planner can work on but after you pick one and click on the other side of the conversion you'll only see compatible upgrades no you can't upgrade a belt into a chest but you can use the upgrade planner to downgrade as well if you want currently all your red green and blueprints are just sitting there in your Hotbar or inventory taking up valuable space that could be used for iron plates fortunately there's somewhere else we can stick them Press B to open the blueprint manager any of your blueprints or planners can be dropped in here and when you put one in the final row a new row will be created so you won't ever run out of space using blueprints from here is as easy as clicking on them and then using them as normal in the world when you're finished with it press Q to dismiss it don't put it in your inventory or hot bars that will take it out of the blueprint manager you'll see that there are two tabs at the top of the window these allow you to have personal blueprints which only you can see but will appear in every game you play and shared ones that will be visible to anyone in the current game this is great for when you have a standard station design you can save it into the game blueprint and everyone else on in your game will be able to use it this system works well at least until you have too many Blueprints and the interface becomes over full and cluttered fortunately there's a system for creating books of blueprints which are essentially folders that you can then sort your blueprints into click the blueprint book on the toolbar to create a new book if like me you've hidden that button because you don't use it very much you can use the three dots to show all available controls and still use the buttons from in here drop this book into your blueprints manager as normal and then right click to open it from here you can give it a title so you can find it again easily in the future as well as icons to make sure you recognize it now you can drop blueprints into it just as before you can even add additional books inside books to give you a tree structure if you need to remove the blueprints from your Hotbar middle click on them if you open them up and delete them it will delete them from the blueprints book as well and with that we've come to the end of the tutorial you now know everything there is to know about Blueprints and the Bots which will build them for you I hope that's been useful if you have any questions put them in the comments and I'll see what I can do I'd also be interested to hear any other ideas you have for more areas that need some explanation don't forget to subscribe so you see the next tutorial and come along to join the streams to see these sort of designs being made live thanks for watching and I'll see you next time bye [Music]
Laurence Plays
UC8tloLKwEtygtykSb511qog
2023-06-27
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1,998
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ZLEnQUtQxoY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLEnQUtQxoY
How To Build A PGR Flag Pole In Just 10 Minutes!
foreign [Music] hello writers this is Steve I'm with the American Legion Post 787 writers out of Cicero New York I'm here to show you how to build a pgr style flagpole out of a camera monopod many people who have purchased the pgr aluminum poles have been unhappy with them over time because they don't lock into position and they won't stay extended there are a lot of videos out there on how to build this particular one but this is my version the first step is to purchase the following a camera monopod I've had good success with building two previously with one particular monopod it's the Vivitar VT 67. 67 inch monopod costs about thirteen dollars and 45 cents then you need one one inch rubber Furniture foot two s binder dual Carabiner Clips I prefer the small number one size three cable ties that's all you need now for the tools a pair of pliers for gripping and pulling with a cutter and a small Phillips head screwdriver in this case now for the build for the first step go to the top of the battle pod where your camera mount is and at the base in this case is a set screw if you get a different brand or a different type amount of pod that's okay it may be mounted differently it may be glued it may be a set screw you have to figure that out but in this case it's just small Phillips set screw unscrew it and twist the top right off the foam grip will slide down out of the way temporarily now take your furniture foot for an end cap press it on the end it should press on perfectly like I said if you have another brand or it doesn't fit quite right you can use a little electrical tape if it fits a little loose wrap a few wraps around it slide it on you can glue it whatever you wish now slide your foam grip right up against the rubber foot that part's done now for step two go to the opposite end and unscrew the end through it till it stops Take One S binder and attach it like this it'll fit tight take your players give it a pull until you hear a snap then tighten the nut down that's done now for the lower clip go down to just below the second locking clip so when you extend your pole all the way close the full length of the flag take two zip ties wrap run around the pole like this and the other one Crossways looping under the zip tie that you tightened now attach your binder clip tighten it up clip the ends off and you're all done all you need to do is Mount the flag get yourself a three foot by five foot flag and attach it to the pole now this is how it works take it out of the bag what's nice about it is it comes in a nice bag it packs nice and small unroll it it's already attached unhook the clips and extend it it's all set to the length extended all the way the flag is nice and tight now once you're done just retract it lock the clips now it brings both the ends together pull it back and essentially fold it in half roll it right up on the pole this might take a little time get it nice and neat all rolled up nice and tight grab your bag slide it up and there you go what I like about it also is I think it's better than the aluminum pgr Pole is that it does retract smaller than the aluminum pole and the diameter is smaller I keep the flag attached just rolled up and it fits nicely in this bag leaving plenty of room in my saddlebag if you find this video useful please click like on the link if you want to see more videos like this subscribe to our Channel thanks for watching ride safe
American Legion Riders. Cicero, NY Post 787
UC56IdZRciHkH5kmmAl_mXcw
2022-12-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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en
689
3,439
exqGNo5K_jk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exqGNo5K_jk
Ultimate Nightclub Money Guide After Criminal Enterprises DLC
[Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] in this video i'll be explaining the best ways to make money from your nightclub in gt online there are a few changes that have happened since the criminal enterprises dlc released in july 2022 understanding exactly how the various ways to make money works can be a little complicated so i'll try my best to make it as easy as possible to understand the nightclub is one of the best ways to make easy money and i'm sure at least some of you will be shocked to learn exactly how good it is now before we start don't forget to drop this video a like so without further ado let's get to it just another day in the office before the various updates and buffs to the nightclub i would have only recommended buying a nightclub if you had previously purchased a ceo crate warehouse and or hangar a bunker an mc coke lockup a counterfeit cash factory and a meth lab but that's now not the case you can make great money back without having any of those running so let's look at setting up your nightclub and how much it will cost the cheapest nightclub starts at just over a million and the most expensive one starts at 1.7 million ideally you want one around the city center as that is where the majority of the missions you are likely to complete will be it's also good to have easy access to a main road but ultimately you may only need to use your nightclub sporadically so it's not totally necessary if you don't want to spend a bit of extra money on one of the best locations when buying all of the options here are purely cosmetic and will have no bearing on the amount of money you will make with the exception of the storage which is where your product will be stored once it has been sourced so make sure you buy the maximum capacity if you have the five businesses i mentioned earlier if you do not own any of these yet you can skip this edition for now you can buy a floor or two if you have two or more of the other businesses i'll expand on this later in the video buying all four floors of extra storage will cost you just over 1.7 million once you've bought it you will need to add some additional upgrades if you don't have any of the other businesses i mentioned previously you can just buy the staff upgrade for 475 000 this will help you maximize your daily income from the nightclub you'll also want to buy the security upgrade for 695 000 which will decrease the likelihood of the nightclub being attacked by enemies affecting your popularity and stock and therefore profit so to start off with you're looking at at least 2.25 million to get going with an old landlord you then need to collect your staff and the equipment which shouldn't take more than 10 minutes in total [Music] once your club has been set up you now need to source yourself a dj this will be a simple little mission with some cutscenes once your dj has been acquired the popularity of your club will be maxed out with maximum popularity you will make a hundred thousand dollars for the first 96 minutes which is equivalent to two in-game days after this period the popularity will drop by half a bar where the income will then decrease to 45 000 for the next 48 minutes from then on the income will drop dramatically starting at just 25 000 and then down by 1 000 for each quarter of the popularity that declines this graph shows how much you'll be making for each bar of popularity if you have no popularity at all your club will only make 1 500 every 48 minutes there are a few ways to keep your popularity high enough to earn good money each time you acquire a new dj for the first time it will cost you a hundred thousand dollars but this will max out the popularity bar there are four dj's in total all of which play awful music which is why i turn the music volume off and play my own [Music] once you have acquired the djs you can then change them over at a cost of ten thousand dollars a time this will increase your popularity by half a bar another way of increasing your popularity is by doing little side jobs by accessing the promote club option from your computer okay my friend you want a popular club you gotta have a charm a compliment here a free bottle there and there and there it's way more free bottles and compliments which is why you're gonna get me a shipment of champagne these are very tedious and boring but don't take too long to complete with each one filling at least one bar of popularity [Music] [Applause] one of the best ways to boost popularity is by seeking out the little blue dots or the man symbol inside the club the blue dot represents a troublemaker that needs throwing out and the blue man icon will be a vip that you need to prevent from dying oh i just did some asking around and this guy is a sustainability manager and environmental consultant for globe oil do you have any idea how wealthy and sadistic those kind of people are so yeah please don't let him down each completion of the task will give you one bar of popularity back i know this is a big deal the best way to run this part of the nightclub is to maximize your popularity and then come back after 192 in-game minutes which is equivalent to 3 hours and 12 minutes after that period you will have made 175 000 which can be collected from your safe you can then just replace your dj for 10k or do one of the blue icon missions from inside the nightclub and your popularity is back to full strength again look at it like just paying 10k or doing a short easy task which will net you a total profit of 160 000 you just need to be patient in that time you are free to go and make more money elsewhere while your safe fills up again now please just go ah okay the saves capacity is 255 000 so any money made after that cap will be lost so be sure to empty out on a regular basis before the bust in a nightclub the saves capacity was only 70 000 and you'd only make 10 000 for every 48 minutes at maximum popularity so in essence the nightclub is now five times better in regards to how much money you can actually make another benefit of the security upgrade that you should have purchased is the security cameras which you can view and go afk without being kicked from the lobby ideally if you just want to stay in the game for your businesses to make money while you go off and do real life things like work or school or watching all of my other amazing videos and leaving a like gta series videos suggest not even buying a security upgrade because they reckon you won't get raided unless you are registered as a ceo or biker this is true but you're not always able to quit or disband before a raid will start and if you're like me you're most likely a biker or ceo most of the time so you can complete other tasks in the game or to simply call in your oppressor quicker so if you are going afk in the cameras make sure you have disbanded before you disappear this brings me on to the other side of the nightclub you can have up to five warehouse technicians but there are seven types of product that they can produce they are cargo and shipments sporting goods south american imports pharmaceutical research organic product printing and copying and cash creation each of these is linked to a different business in the game so in order to produce cargo and shipments you need to have purchased either a ceo office and crate warehouse or a hangar a hangar will start from 1.2 million a ceo office plus any crate warehouse will set you back a minimum of 1.25 million sporting goods is the bunker with the cheapest at just over a million i have done a comprehensive guide on the bunker business since the update so i highly recommend watching that first before deciding what bunker you should get south american imports is the code lockup and they start at 975 000 pharmaceutical research is the meth lab which starts at nine hundred and ten thousand pest creation is the counterfeit cash factory which starts at eight hundred forty five thousand then there is the organic produce and printing and copying which is the weed farm and the document forge your business respectively do not concern yourself with the weed or the document forgery as they are the two businesses here that will net you the least amount of money do not listen to stuttering dumbasses who will tell you the document 4g business is a good investment a a one create a a heist but um document forgery is worth selling now guys it must be said that in order to buy any of the biker businesses you will first need to purchase an mc clubhouse and they started 250 000 if you bought the cheapest of the five businesses it would cost a total of just over 5 million but this base price can easily more than double if you went for the higher price options and fitted them with extra upgrades so do bear that in mind it's important to note that you do not need to upgrade any of the businesses i just mentioned in order for your nightclub technicians to source the product here so if you're not planning on running any of them as a business outside of the nightclub only ever buy the cheapest you need that said you will get a slight increase in your take-ins if you are actively using any of the other businesses for example the south american imports which is the coke business will have a cap of 10 crates which will sell for two hundred thousand dollars however if you are actively running this business and have stock in it that will stretch to 270 000 you can just choose to have a bit of product sitting in the business and never sell it if you didn't want to just to keep your profits in the nightclub at a maximum you should however invest in the equipment upgrade for just over 1.4 million this will increase the speed at which your goods are sourced which is vital as the process is very slow to begin with to maximize your productivity and income you should assign all five of your technicians to source the south american imports sporting goods cargo and shipments pharmaceutical research and cash creation as you can see here these are the top five for making the most money in the shortest amount of time feel free to pause this video to see the breakdown to maximize your selling potential you should sell when your south american imports have been maxed out with its 10 crates this is also the same time that the pharmaceutical research and the cash creation have also hit their maximum capacity selling now will clear the way to start making more of these for the next sale otherwise the time passed after hitting their cap the nightclub is only producing cargo and shipments and sporting goods rather than all five at the same time this will take a total of 20 hours of in-game time and will sell for around 1 million you may get a special delivery option available to you these are specially selected items that can be sold for a small bonus for example two crash creation crates two south american import crates and nine cargo shipment crates would normally sell for a total of 137 000 but i could sell this one here for over 161 000 instead the larger the order the larger the bonus it's possible to fill up your nightclub warehouse faster and also source crates you wouldn't normally have if you didn't buy all the relevant businesses one way which is new since the criminal enterprises dlc is to call johan and ask him to find you a crate decided at random which you can then go and pick up hey boss what can i do for you cool totally let me see what we have yeah this should work i've got my eyes on a shipment of cargo coming through the docks right now it's on a talk boat minimal security couldn't be simpler just get it back to the club after delivering the crate there is a 20-minute cooldown before you can request another one johan blair speaking oh hey boss cool no worries another way of stocking your nightclub faster is by completing business battles in free mode lobbies there are many variations but one of the best is by delivering a specific vehicle as it is the equivalent of two crates rather than just one [Music] [ __ ] me however i only recommend doing these if you have a spare few minutes [Music] as for the selling missions depending on how many crates you are selling will depend on what vehicle you will be using for anything up to 89 crates you will be using a speedo custom 90 to 179 crates and it would be the mule custom and anything else above that would mean the pounder custom you can choose to upgrade these vehicles with armor and weapons which are a nice addition especially if you plan to sell in public lobbies for the bonus but these upgrades are not cheap the speedo custom comes with the nightclub but the mule custom and the pounder custom will need to be purchased separately from the war stock cash and carry the mule starts at 72 000 and the pounder starts at 241 000 but upgrading them fully we'll add much more onto that amount obviously if you do not have the vehicles big enough to shift the crates you will be limited on how much you can sell at any one time the good part of this is that every single selling mission will only ever be one vehicle unlike the bunker ceo crates or the biker businesses where you will have multiple this means it's more likely to be a successful sale when selling in a public lobby unlike the other selling missions selling in a public lobby will now pay more since the update with a bonus of two percent for every person in the session so let's say you sold one million dollars worth of stock and there are 29 other people in the lobby you then receive a massive bonus of 580 thousand dollars with multiple vehicles especially if you ended up selling as a solo player this was not worth the risk but only delivering one vehicle now makes it all worthwhile but you will still occasionally come across the mark two degree for [ __ ] [Applause] if for whatever reason your stock does get destroyed you can simply load into another lobby and start the selling mission all over again but you will have lost a sizeable amount of your original stock the selling missions are very easy and one in particular will only take a massive minutes other selling missions may see you go to three locations and make drop-offs there usually pursued by some attackers every successful sale will see tony take a sizable cut for some reason great okay looks like you're done here i will fiddle the accounts and send you the money just another day in the life of nightclub maven tony prince lgt with some urgent business the nightclub should be looked at as a long-term investment i've made almost 150 million from it without really even trying and now with the increase in payments can make much much more so if you found this video useful please drop it like and maybe consider subscribing for more i'm beats down and i'll see you in the next one [Music] [Applause] [Music] you
BeatsDown
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2022-08-07
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4pjNeL9Jvo
Come and meet your Debian Publicity team!
if everyone if anybody is watching welcome everybody to the publicity team talk donald is was going to make an introduction about what would do we do but since he's having issues with this audio uh laura let me ask so where are you uh i i i live in spain i'm based in spain okay i live in brazil so how long how long years you are helping on publicity i don't remember very well i started i started translating deviant in 2010 or 2011 and then i well this comes i started making translation for the website and then started to be in contact with the publicity between two first because of the translation of the davian project news and other things and then in 2015 i think i started to care about the that conf publicity coverage and also i became legion developer and became the press delegate too and since then this is the most the one of the main things i do in deviant i also participate a lot in the work in the web team and that's all yeah some years ago there were two teams right publicity and the news am i right uh yes but that was not my my in my time it was first it was before so i it seems i came to the publicity team just when they were converging these two things so i i know about it because i've read about it but i didn't feel that there were two things when i came when i stopped participating and now uh uh is it i mean the name maybe sometimes it's a little bit confusing because we say publicity but for example we don't care about the merchandising we care about spreading news about debian for the wider audience and also inside the project so when there is an important thing to say in the name of the debian project we usually write that news and when somebody in deviant does something that we think it's nice that everybody knows we rely that news to the deviant channels and sometimes we also talk with the journalists to coordinate for example first releases all of with people from the uh public relations department of certain for example companies or organizations when we want to do a joint first release or some things like that so it is a little bit about it's maybe more about press or publishing things that about marketing or metallizing or things like that and on the other side the web the web the debian website is handled by the web team so we the publicity team initially only cares about the news section of the website but in practice for example we also publish the release point announcements and some people of the team like donald me are also members of the web team so we have some kind of overlap there and when there is something that affects some change that affects the visual appearance of the project for example we want to change the icon in the website or things like that we try to coordinate from the publicity team in our team there is is there some publicity published professional like some journalist or something like that or everybody is just contributors that you like to to write tests yeah because there's a spot maybe someone is thinking that i need to be a journalist or i'd be to be a publisher to join the team no in fact the team must i mean the regular contributors of the teams is a very short thing it's very small thing it's a donald it's me and it's you and jean-pierre herod sometimes on other translators but the content is done by us and no one of us are have a journalist background or anything we try to do the best that we can and we encourage and also we have uh english reviewers people native speakers that review the texts and help us a lot uh i mean it's not a very professional thing we would like to have people to create content more professionally i mean native speakers native english speakers uh also more translators for more languages uh people creating artwork that sometimes we we have very good help from some deviant contributors who are also designers but they are not regularly in the team we we try to ask them when we need something and most of the times they they answer and they provide things but it will be nice that somebody is inside the team to think in that way and to so the content that we generate is more also visual attractive and things like that we but i don't know the the the thing is that the audience we have on the particularities of the debian project is so diverse and so big that we don't fit very well in the traditional marketing workflows or things like that also because we are a volunteers project so i mean i don't know how to say most of the people are in other things that also contribute to something try to contribute in their policy so this makes the team and the work a little bit difficult because we don't have too much workforce and and if i want to help but i i can't write very well in english is this a problem or someone can help me for example i can write a draft in english and someone else will review this test for for to please publish it okay i will i will explain my experience because i am not very also proficient in english or i do work the best i can but as i've learned a lot hello hi can you hear me yes we cannot see you but we can hear you uh i will finish this this small thing and then i will let you okay uh uh if if you are open to other people writing your things a lot you are very welcome to provide content even if it is not uh good english uh if you write something and then other people come and read write rewrite it because of proof read or because the grammar or whatever or the way the text is written it's not very clear and you become like upset because oh somebody is making i'm making many mistakes or somebody is making too many corrections if the if this is a problem for you um well maybe we can you can start in a path or something like that or talk or or try to read before or other content that we have published to get the style or the things in the the way that we usually do but if for you is not a problem that somebody comes on and rewrites or corrects and things like that it's perfectly fine i've read i've learned a lot reading the things that were already published so for example when i have to publish something anything i cloned the rep or i i cloned the repo i tried to find an older news that was similar and start with that and then evolve it to the new content so this way i i try not to repeat the same mistakes that i make in english because the older news have already been proofread by the english native speakers so this way the small small the steps my english became a little bit better and for us that we are not not native uh english native so you can improve our english right and after reading this correction that someone done in our tits right it's a good way to learn to improve our english yes yes yes uh i think i will not speak anymore and let's give donald some time hi donald are you there yes i'm rebooting at the moment i'm using two different computers i'm running a microphone from one to the other live streaming is on we have some echo now hi hello with the old school microphone we are we are have some echo do you still hear the echo yeah let me see it's okay now okay so how are you i'm well how are you both i'm fine good to see you i heard some of the chat going on was very good i was interviewed laura here it became an interview enough where are you i'm in brooklyn new york cool let me just plug in my headphones so we get less echo yes i was speeding the pad meanwhile sorry no no i mean i was reading the the path where people are doing well okay cool last year i met donati here in kurichiba on at deb conf10 it was great to meet you personally laura i i don't know i don't need to hear her personally yet just for video and tests yes since we are in different continents it's very hard to find for example the the time and motivation and money and whatever to to make a team sprint uh last year i went to to the mini that comes in marseille and i could met thomas vincent and yeah he wrote i i hope i said well his name and we were talking about a team and how can people get more involved and so on and i also met al bambidal who is caring about the merchandising part in the website and sometimes he also contributes to the publicity team but it's i think we never had a whole team meeting this is the first one good but also to one of the points that laura was making it is somewhat difficult to have meetings because we're spread across the world in so many different time zones so you know we really rely a lot on irc to kind of get things moving in any direction whatsoever or email but it is very difficult i think sometimes for us to kind of all come together at one central point i am overjoyed that this is actually happening today yeah very nice so we have some talks right that we wrote on the pad right some ideas for discussion let me pull the path okay i went to um book last year some few weeks after that minute that become myself so i was there but laura was not i think two weeks tweaks after marcel that was very nice i i am happy if people of the any of the teams and the fellows publish the team meet without me i mean some i assume that sometimes it's difficult to have meetings because of timetables and things like that and one of the things that i wrote in the past was that what about maybe we could arrange some regular meetings in irc to maybe not discuss just to come together on advanced work and i think for example in my case i think that would help me to find the time and to sit down and to put my time on the publicity things that i have pending uh but on the other side some people don't like this having a timetable or regular things and prefer to just contribute to deviant when they can so i was i was a little bit uh reluctant to promote regular meetings of the team but maybe we should i don't know i wanted to to ask here and see what people think yeah i think so did you think in some headlights like one one one per month or some days after did you think some headlights i i don't know i think one one puts one time at least one per month and maybe another or uh for just uh advanced things or i don't know i really don't know because i am also my timetable is that is not regular and i don't know if i can attend myself yeah i've been magic and other people working writing in the start how could we get relevant source to bring helpful info on the daily communication channels well uh i have i had one idea that is in my head since sometimes but i don't know if it is good idea or not uh i have the idea of the deviant ambassadors or i don't know the name in english when you send somebody to one country and they cover the news of that country and things like that i i think we could make a list of the teams or areas that people like for example i am in in the outreach team already and i am in the web team already and i am in the in the deviant diversity team already well not just lurking there but i am i mean if something happens in those areas i know and i can write something or say something to the wider audience but for example i am not in the viennese i am not in in the debian games for example i i don't i don't participate there and uh i thought that maybe other uh publicity member is genuinely interested in deviant games and can be our ambassador there and just have in mind that if something comes from that team that is nice come to the i mean write something for the publicity team uh but i don't know because i don't know the areas where people are interested and also we are very few so i don't know if we could coverage more or we should ask make a big call general to the project to all the team or the team's member please help the public team please write things for the debian blog instead of your personal or in addition to your personal blogs i mean it's also it's okay if people want to share in their blogs or in their social networks with their individual accounts but what what happened if some debian team wants to publish some tests for example about some new healing or something about their teams what can you do for for for the publishing team use this list we usually we are usually happy to to review a draft for the for example for the debian block but i think they should start at least the initial draft because they know the details we don't know so and we also don't like for example some people sends mail to deviantart announce about uh what is about uh team spring for example the people in the pearl team all the people in the whatever all the debian team they sent their report to the devil develops if they provide even the same text as a as a debian article we publish it but if they don't say anything publish some micro news link into the mail cool if they provide a photo we publish the article in the debian blog including the photo but if they don't say anything i mean it's difficult for us to go behind every debian team hey you did a splint come bring the photo we want to publish an article i mean maybe we can do it maybe we should do it but i feel a little bit shy to go and push in that way it is a bit difficult because we have to am i echoing no no it's okay okay um it is the deputy is large i mean it's very very it's larger than most people think i think even for us inside of debian to realize how large the organization is so it's hard for us really to kind of find every little bit of news to talk about sometimes we we see things and we are aware of them and then we forget that everyone else is not always aware of them so we really do rely on people saying that they've done an activity in debian or towards something and we will absolutely publish it because i think so the better solution for a team is starting to write some draft because they know better than us about what they are doing for in on this team inside this team right exactly we can't follow everybody to know what is going on with all the teams in debbie yes and even they don't know to need to know nobody needs to know the infrastructure that we used to publish i mean for example if you want to publish a uh an article in the deviant blog in beats deviantart you can do in many ways you can open a path an asset pad or a spamming storm deviant and right there and then we can turn it into a mark down and in the added to the repo or you can clone the repo and commit yourself or add your file in the i mean it depends on how people likes to to work uh we also we just need more or less the initial draft the tip title the authors and the unexpected day date to publish but in the rest i mean the the way that we elaborate the content or you elaborate the content it's not important you can use the one that you want and later we can translate it to the corresponding format in our bits repo or the dpn or whatever and i would say also on that same point when doing the drafts if it's very or slightly technical that the author should definitely include that information we don't mind having to follow up but sometimes it's a little outside of our purview um myself i don't program so some things can be a bit daunting for me to kind of re-record on so it's always nice to have the ability to contact the person who initially wrote the draft so if they can kind of make themselves available or maybe overexpand in the article that they want to vote for that would also be great and encouraging for us as well to get that news out and donate what change what official trainers we have on publicity team to publish about debian can you tell us we have the micro nose which is um like very very quick i want to say bits but this is something else also but very little quick bits of information that we need to get out very quickly uh bits we use as the official blog of the project so that will be where you'll find like official information that comes forth from us we have the dpn the wm project news which i have been the person responsible for the hold up on but it's more so moved to an archival um use because the other news outlets that we have are really pushing so forth i'm sorry pushing forth most of the news so by the time people do read the dpm the news is already two three weeks old which an internet time is pretty much like years old cool laura someone else would like to to add yes we also publish some announcements uh in the website and also mail them to debian news which is the same mailing list where we send the debian project news but these announcements are few i mean usually we left them for more traditional news for example we published the debt conf closing announcement summarizing what that come has been and so on but this is also published in bits deviantart as a bits article and also micro news uh we publish the the obituaries when we learn about somebody that passed by unfortunately we like to express our condolence in some way and this we we want this kind of information to stay in the website for a long time so we publish it as announcement and sometimes for example important donations or big partnerships with between deviant and other organizations we publish it as announcement in the website but most of the usual daily or normal news are published via micro news when the source of information is in other place for example in some debian mailing list or in some other website or by in an article in bits.deviant.org but we also i mean if you if people follow micronews or the debian profile in any social network they will get everything because everything we publish in other channels we also micro use it cool if someone write a test in their blogs someone else that and someone that is not a debian developer or debian contributor but just like to write about debian in their blog they can send the link for us to publishing micro news right it's a good idea it's a good idea but we we also make some creation i mean we don't publish everything i mean for example we usually try not to publish well sometimes we publish news about deviant that are appearing in other sources but we we we don't want to to to appear that for some certain media we publish and some other certain other media we don't publish so we prepare them in the the foreign sources the third parties we try to balance a little bit we follow planets planet deviantart so if your blog is there and we find interest in the your article we can we will probably micromusic but other articles calls that maybe we feel that it's not for a wider audience or i mean we decide yeah we just we need to read before and think about that yes it depends on many things sometimes we there are things published also in website that have include too much advertising there and even also we think that most of our readers have ad bloggers and so on we are a little bit reluctant to publish a link from a source who is very i mean too much advertising or things like that this is an example i mean yeah sure we can talk we can talk about it i think we need to do to do some correlation is there a equation right yeah right we certainly don't mean because we can't publish like everything and we do try to keep the focus really on things that are happening in debian and open source communities for the most part but you know as laura did say sometimes someone will have like a small link or blurp to something and you know if you follow the link then it's something else then something else and something else and it goes way off the point that we're trying to get out and another thing i wanted to say that this can be uh one of the barriers is that most of our the things that we publish are in english so i understand that many people would write in their own language or would write in their own language and writing in english is more difficult for them so i'm afraid that some news don't appear too much because of that but uh well we know in debian maybe you need a minimum level of english to to participate in the community so if somebody wants to to realize some news but is not sure about their english or cannot write in english they can contact their language team and maybe find somebody to help them from the other translators for example if it is the case of spanish i can help but i don't know many other languages so i think that we could try to coverage some spanish lang in french portuguese i'll trust on you yeah and i can help maybe german we can convince somebody to help in that case and probably some more languages i mean we can think the website translators for example if somebody wants to say something and they can only write in their own language they can we can try to find a translator to translate but then we publish in english and in the native language i think following on that i mean we have demonstrated that we do publish in other languages so i think if someone's more comfortable posting something or submitting something rather in their own language if we can just verify the translation we certainly can publish it in that language it shouldn't be a barrier to anyone who wants to get information out well certainly you do want to put forth as many things in english as possible i don't think the language necessarily needs to be a barrier for getting information out but again that's going to depend on if we can get it translated and and about it debian project news that we send by email it's a little stop it i take full responsibility for that yeah i i really would like to get the news back up and running uh it was very frequent then not so frequent than semi-frequent and now it's just kind of sitting so the last attempt i made at it was to just have it to stand as like an archival um issue for the things that have happened so far in the year but one of the things that kind of works against the vpn i'm getting a lot of that going sorry that works against the vpn is we have published most of that news already so it makes it somewhat difficult to find sources that we can actually add into it and also at the very bottom of the is a link to the articles that we've already published in the other sources so the level of redundancy that's kind of built into it kind of makes it a bit more difficult to add data to it think i think that uh the one of the problems that we have in the vm project news is that for one person is huge work because it's very big piece of text and to review to write and to review and for then we split in some parts but the people caring about each part are very far away and we have very different timetables and then for example jumpier does the once upon a time deviant the deviant uh the how can i mean the sections about the packaging and deviant contributors and so on i started doing the quick links the micro news that would the list of micro news and donald start to do the other part the more more writing parts but we just don't um engage the three of us so when when one of us put time the other are not available so we cannot find the time to just finish and publish it's difficult so maybe i mean maybe we could try to be more serious and with the deadlines and just put a deadline and try to do it and if it is not done publish what is this done i mean until that moment uh i i'm not sure i don't know i live also this is mostly donald's territory so i try to care about other things too i don't know i'm certainly a fan of pushing some like just getting something out for the sake of getting something out the feedback on the vpn is always very good people do enjoy reading it at the last webcomp that i physically attended uh i got a lot of feedback and people really loved reading it and here i thought no one was reading it but apparently a lot of people are reading it yes but it's just as we say it's it's a little difficult getting the whole thing put together we we put together a giant issue i think two years ago like the largest issue that we ever published and i think for me personally it just started my like slow like decline into doing it because it was a lot of work and if we can't get the entire team to contribute to it it becomes very daunting uh another thing that they read on the part madok wrote what about some case studies uh of how people use deviant on the main web deviant website wait maybe i can talk two or three minutes about the debian website because i'm also webmaster and we have one section about users that then uses in the website if you go to www.devian.org users you can find how people use debian in organizations or companies or whatever government to public administrations and but this listing is a little bit old and we need to update it i mean we are receiving new entries all the time but we also know suspect that some entries are old and they are not using or well they are not using any more or they or the organization is not active anymore so we should remove some entries from there and this is some kind of work i mean somebody needs to care about that section and it's also hip work donald me started one audit in 2014 2015 and we do we did as as much as we could and then stopped and because also the publicity work became more heavy on us and then two years ago we were thinking in the web team about removing the all that section i was feeling very sad about it and i said well let's make a call if somebody can help and i can help them to get started in that section and some volunteers came around uh but i also couldn't find my enough time to mentor them or to review their work and and now it's the situation is that some new entries are are there and we also have one new contributor that is looking for broken links in our website so because of those broken links probably the some old entries will be removed and maybe we should we could try some somebody to i mean to make a new call and to renew that section and when when we have enough workforce people to care about that section we can think about it putting well we are also the thinking about the home page of the website and maybe show there some the new things that are coming to the website like the new new people using deviant and then not only the the small things that we published the release point and their obituaries and the big big big announcements but also small news i mean to have some coordination between the things that we publish in via the publicity team that also could appear in the debian website home page but we need money we need workforce we need people to be serious about something and to keep on working on it for some time because at the end for example i am mixing in the two teams and you can imagine that it's already big work and i mean we need more contributors but i mean but people wanting with their heart to stay here for some months minimum or one year because it's not about doing something in two days or so it's big work yeah i would also say on that kind of ask um publicity is one of the easiest i think ways into debian so we value any contribution it's a very easy way to get in um to contributing back to something that you love my entry into debian was through the city team as well so i i have a big heart for it like definitely come and join us we'll definitely use you and appreciate you i believe we'll have to finish because we are in the time i would like to encourage people to write about their experience about uw conf 20 and send it to micro news uh it's a good idea because we have a lot of people watching this w comes online any people can write about that and send to micro news it's a it's a good idea right if they if they're writing their blogs we can keep an eye and maybe do some special articles in bits summarizing the different linking to the different experience yeah it's a good idea this is another possibility or we can or we can try to finish the deviant project news bulletin this time and next week and include some special about that control something like that i don't know today i feel very motivated because it works really nice to see your faces and to talk uh i hope the others too and the people watching too and let's continue talking in our rc channel and let's put hands on work cool okay so i will say we will get the news out by i don't have a calendar well next weekend is the beginning of the new month so maybe september 5th gives us some full seven days yeah it's good okay we broke it and feel nice so everybody i hope everybody enjoyed this uh and come to the deviant publicity rec channel and let's continue talking all right bye bye everybody see you you
DebConf Videos
UC7SbfAPZf8SMvAxp8t51qtQ
2021-01-03
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
5,579
28,424
XNdVtcV-Obg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNdVtcV-Obg
2021 Triumph Street Twin Review | First Ride
well welcome back to the channel much appreciated for you joining me today and today we're out on the uh the 2021 triumph street twin um i've just fueled her up so uh yeah we're ready to go let's jump on see what she's all about all right let's fire her up keon clutch in oh lovely sound to her [Music] drop her in the first hold on and away we go i said i just feel that fueled her up put some put a little bit of fuel in no issues with the fuel filling of the fuel we'll take a right here today uh nothing coming oh instantly i love the sound of the engine indicator off no self-cancelling indicators honor oh instantly a lovely feel to the bug so i've just jumped on the bike so uh you see how she rolls gel with the bike nicely well anyway yeah one for a few of the specs the bike is a 900cc it's the high torque engine liquid cooled eight valve single overhead cam and that's the the 270 degree parallel twin that's why come you get that lovely sound that lovely note from the engine which i absolutely love on this already you know you can you can you sort of tell straight away really yeah absolutely lovely the bike will give you 65 brake horsepower 7500 rpm 7500 rpm and 80 newton meters of torque at 3 800 rpm we'll experience a bit of that once we get on the nationals warner open and see what she's all about here we go hold on hope you can hear me okay it's a bit breezy today oh yes absolutely lovely gorgeous it's got that two into two the brushed stainless exhausts which are actually i really do like them i prefer them than the chrome hello says another followed by the fellow bike without enjoying the sunshine today it's not a bad day today it's a bit breezy so i hope you can hear me okay i want to open a bit cool yeah very nice i'm in fifth gear at the moment this is a five-speed box wet multi-plate clutch with a torque assist clutch that's the first thing you notice when you uh when you get on this is that is how light that clutch is that is yeah i could pull over my little finger and it's the same with a lot of these triumphs just adjust these mirrors it had quite small these mirrors on here but we'll have a look at the visibility a little bit of vibration there this has to be expected from the from the twin because visibility's okay very nice so yeah like i say you can pull that clutch in with your little finger no issues at all very loud be very good going through traffic come on a bit actually knocked it down into fourth gear though i think the gears are very low it's very long gauge you know so your revs are going to be fairly uh fairly low suspension you've got the 41 millimeter the cartridge forks on the front with the old traditional gators i will do a walk around to stay tuned and uh i believe they're non-adjustable on the front and the rears are the uh the twin shock unit twin shots adjustable for your preload only my first first thoughts are very comfortable c height is 765 millimeters and i believe they've added an extra additional 10 millimeters so giving you 765 millimeters of foam very very comfortable first thing i notice is that as well very nice very nice brakes on here as well there's no expense fed with the brakes you've got the 310 millimeter single disc on the front with the brembo foot four part calipers and on the rear you have a 255 millimeter single disc with a twin pot knitting calipers we'll check the brakes out a little bit of poke front brake very good boy there on the front brake just try the rear actually not too bad on the rear either fairly good we'll do both of them together hello sir yeah no issues with the brakes i'll stop you should you need to stop in a hurry absolutely lovely i'm enjoying this ride today on this so yeah much appreciated thanks triumph uh ling strianth in uh in whatton norfolk get yourself over much appreciated thanks for the loan of the boat today in order for me to bring you this review lovely absolutely lovely it's got a wheelbase of 1450 millimeters a lot of a lot of old waffle but i'm just going to run through some of the specs yeah no giving you a 20 25.1 degree rake absolutely gorgeous we've got no sixth gear but at the moment i'm you know i'm like i said earlier it's just very very long geared so i don't i think you'll be okay with that lots of subtle changes for uh 2021 lovely colors as well it comes in three different colors starting price of 8 200 pounds and uh yeah jet black 8 200 and cobalt blue and the um the matte iron stone which is this color here and i actually love this color which is 8400 so yeah very impressed so far loads of attention to detail on the bike loads of attention to detail as usual what you can also do with this bike is you can have this restricted to the a2 license you know for the new rider and you know when you're ready have it have it removed so that can all be done for the dealers no issues at all it's got the uh the single clock uh analog display double sum it's a it's a multi-functional display so you've got you know your analog display there for your speed uh the bonneville branded and you've got the lcd display it's got two rider modes as well which are accessible through this mode button close the throttle it's got road and rain we're currently in road at the moment because it's not raining traction control and abs is standard like i say we leave all that on we wouldn't we don't want to be turning out off although the sun is shining it's very nice to be out today one thing as well with these triumphs on this model you've got many accessories optional official triumph accessories i believe 120 additional accessories all come with the same guarantee and they're all suited to the bike so um you know it's ranging from all sorts of luggage security items not got loads of power but i say as can be expected for you know what it is basically but it's an absolute pleasure to ride the weight of the bike is 216 kilograms that's the wet weight and i say wet weight the fuel the fuel tank is there i think that's a 16 liter i might be wrong i'll put it on the screen if i am fuel consumption 68.9 acclaimed 68.9 mpg hello sir so yeah you can really ride this to your heart's content really lots of attention to detail on the filler cap we will pull over in a minute so don't go anywhere stay tuned and i'll give you a thorough walk around of this lovely machine lovely machine all this attention to detail on the filler cap here um button cluster yeah very minimalistic on this model horn we'll try the horn actually nothing around nothing behind give a little distance there [Music] yeah usual sort of horn [Music] you can experience that talk it's quite nice and refreshing can i tell you about the bike yeah right button cluster obviously it's got the kill switch here and it's actually you know you start the bike for the kill switch as well as as usual on these triumphs hazard lights there led lighting and only on the rear on the rear light front light is just the um the usual halogen i think very nice be very comfortable for your your rock check on the back your passenger on the back very comfortable i've got no issues there at all suspensions nice and flush very nice indeed so i'm in fourth gear here at the moment which actually tests them breaks out again there's nothing behind so doing 50 mile now here yeah they're very good then considering there's a single disc on the front a little bit easy it's not my bike we'll find somewhere up here in a minute and we'll pull over pleasure to ride and i know i thought about all of these drums but you know get yourself out and test ride highly recommend i've not i've not rode a bad one um obviously i've got my favorites and i own one let's put in here somewhere out the way not to cause any bother um have a look trying to find somewhere suitable in the sun just come in the air the wrong way nevermind yeah we're pulling here on the gravel stop the bike side stand very easy nice little pogiari bit there neutral is very easy i'll turn her off jump off the bike take the gloves off so here we have it the street street twin 2021 the new street twin uh specifications we've got like i've said before actually the there's a liquid cooled eight valve single overhead cam with the 270 degree can crank angle parallel twin and i love i love all of these keeling fins here as well and on the on the header clamps all very you know very nice there to keep with the iconic look uh you know the bonneville look radiator you could do the radiator guard on there to be honest yeah it's got the the uh performance of 60 it's claiming 64.1 brake horsepower at 7500 rpm and 80 newton meters to talk at 3800 rpm and i love these brushed stainless two into two exhaust as well twin silence has actually got the hidden catalyst in there if you can see right away right tucked in there behind that heat shield so links are two together um wheels we've got cast aluminium alloy wheels 18 inch on the front and 17 inch on the rear a nice nice design there multi-spoke and there's the rear tyres are pirelli tyres probably phantom tyres um obviously it's dry today so uh you know no issues with the grip today um forks like i said earlier 41 millimeter cartridge forks non-adjustable there one thing i have noticed not not on this one but on other models is that these reflectors sometimes when they put them on they're not they're not straight it's just me being particular but yeah i suppose you could take them off should you want to um it's just one thing i've noticed in the past that they haven't been straight uh it's just me moaning uh rear shocks yeah you got the rear shock units with the preload adjustment there down the bottom there um front disc you have the single 310 i've gone through all of this earlier actually so i'm not going to bore you with it but we'll just have a walk around the bike and we'll look at the you know the quality of the build of the bike actually um you know you've got your brembo brakes here lighting let's turn the lights on i always like to put the hazards on actually as you like so like i said it's not an led on the front and not in any non led indicators and rear we have a rear led light but no led indicators as i said and i love like i said i love those brush stainless exhaust that's my you know it's one of my uh most favorable uh sort of you know the way this bike looks you know in the flesh it's probably not doing any justice on the camera let's turn them hazards off display have a look at the display there so you've got your speedo there um fuel gauge we'll put some more fuel in before i take the bike back uh info button here so we can scroll through trip counter trip two miles per gallon that'll all come into life when the bike's running uh oh it's got there at 64.6 mpg and the range the time the rider modes are on road at the moment so you press the mode button to move it across to to rain we'll leave it on road so leave it on road there oil warning light engine management light abs light we'll go through the other settings traction control you can turn on or off i'll leave that on i don't know why you'd want to turn that off really lovely attention to detail here as well love this fuel tank um love you know the the style of it the teardrop type type style of it uh what we did say the size didn't we yeah that's actually a 12 liter fuel tank um like giving you six range of 68.9 mpg love these new intake brushed alloy covers here as well yes lots of lots of changes um very nice see the ht caps here as well usb seat under usb um connection under the seat there if you wanted to charge your devices foot pegs very substantial nice good quality foot pegs there very nice yeah i love it i love how it's all tucked away as well you know in here but it's all hidden all the catalyst very nice indeed that very nice like so this is the matt ironstone color 8400 it comes in two other colors jet black which is 8200 or the cobalt blue which is very nice as well that's another one of my favorites uh again 8 400 for that one got the rubber gators on here the old traditional gators yeah very nice all this brushed stainless i sorry brushed aluminium here with your um your satin black i actually prefer the chrome this is my first personal choice anyway i prefer the chrome you know the retro chrome display dash there you know the dark clocks but yeah anyway it's very nice i'm very impressed right okay then let's jump on and ride some more maybe you heard me all over that because i i am beside quite a busy road here and uh there's a lot of road noise there she goes brings in the life just love the sound see if we can turn around here without any bother on the gravel and we're off make sure i go out the right way of the garage this time i've got my visor up there a little bit of air flux it's quite warm today and there we go no bother there nice one thing i you know i like about this bike is it it's one of those boys you can just jump on and ride with ease you know certain bikes you jump on and uh you know they really do take some getting used to and this thing i've this thing i shouldn't call that thing as a motorcycle this lovely motorcycle it's a yeah it makes your life very easy it would make an excellent commuter bike you know the the feet pet the foot pegs in a nice position you know what with that extra 10 mil on the seat as well giving you maybe that additional supplies giving you more comfort that's for sure you know it's lovely lovely um you know lovely riding position there can't really say any more than that got plenty of torque plenty of pull gearbox is lovely and smooth obviously no quick shifter or also blipper open these vents let some air in but um just love the sound of that when you open when you wind it open as well loads of attention to detail there is like i've said before there is lots of optional extras as well so you can inspect this bike as you desire you know and they all come with it with the um the same type of warranty you know as they offer with bikes it's all compatible specifically made for you know for the motorcycle and there's lots to choose from color wise i think i like the other one the cobalt blue that's my in my my personal opinion i like you know i like a nice paint job that i can i can polish and have a little ride through here it's quite a nice nice little roux here yeah i like a paint you know nice paint job that i can i can polish and it's on a sunday afternoon where's he going or he's just gone up the curb and pushed loads of up in the road very nice not quite the wide van man but the red van man everywhere you go anyway yeah i really do appreciate you joining me today on this on the on this uh ride out review it's the first ride on this machine if you haven't subscribed would much appreciate you joining the channel hit the thumbs up you know if you enjoy the video hit the thumbs up that really does help out the channel and uh i'll promote the video and the channel i get lots of comments i'll try and answer all the comments as best as i can i love reading comments i keep them coming keep the comments flowing no issues with i i did have a feeling that i was going to need the sixth gear on the bike but i know we're only doing sort of 50 60 mile an hour here and there but you really don't need to sit they've geared this bike it's very tall geared long geared so you're crabby just to sit here probably down in the third actually you can hear the exhaust burbling away probably going to turn out to be quite a long long review this one but there is a lot to say there's a lot there's a lot more what's um kind of impressed me with this i like the idea as well of the you know the being able to have this adapter to the a2 license becomes very appealing to um to be doing very appealing to the new ride of this and then once you're ready you can have the restriction removed by triumph i can remove it and uh you know then grow into the bike some more you know very easy very easy to ride i could probably sit on this bike and ride it all day and there's no exaggeration with the comfort and the you know the enjoyment it's a perfect day today the sun's out and i want a bike and and it doesn't really get much better so um yeah i'm very very pleased very pleased with this anyway i hope you've enjoyed the review and uh hopefully i will see you on the next video hit that subscribe button and take care see you soon [Music]
Rider Reviews
UCvUhexq4BW3dO9eMpPW4YrQ
2021-09-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
3,234
16,432
B3MDmABSzhw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3MDmABSzhw
Ron Paquette quotes Moon son saying he knows they use brainwashing
so we should show up there ex Mooney Ron pette says he spoke to Moon's son about brainwashing right and I said um in many ways it reminds me sometimes of like the Communist camps and at that point he said yeah I know he says he says uh father learned that and when he was in prison camp and I I kept I kept trying to make the point that no no the way we bring in people and the way we control people is kind of like the way that this goes on in in uh North Korean prison camps and he kept saying I know yes
Allen Key
UCJojSQM2GVzsLnAPhT8p0jg
2012-10-10
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
109
506
asSRGzS-CvA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asSRGzS-CvA
Why work for us? Hear from Giles Bezzina, Senior Environmental Officer
My name’s Giles, I’m a  Senior Environmental Officer.  Life growing up in Cairns, I suppose my childhood  was doing this, experiencing this every day.   It’s really great that I now have a job where I’m  working every day to protect places like this.  So at uni, we have these grand ideas about  being on the front page of the newspaper,   being on the front lines, protecting  the environment, driving for change.  It’s not always like that.  And I guess in this role,   we see it. We’re behind the scenes  somewhat, but we have huge impacts.  I’m proud to do this job. I started at  the bottom. However, I’m achieving results   for the betterment of the environment, for  the betterment of the Queensland public,   for the future of my daughter. It feels really  good to be a part of that. And in the 10 months   that I’ve been here, I have progressed  quickly to a Senior Environmental Officer.  I’m really passionate about the outcomes  that we achieve day in, day out.  It’s such a fantastic place to be a part  of and everyone’s really supportive.  The best part about working for the Department  is the diverse array of experience and knowledge   and skillsets that are working here. You may  not have even known it, but we have some of   the brightest scientific minds in Queensland  working as part of a government organisation.   Not only are they some of the brightest minds, but  they’re really, really open and willing to help   you achieve your goals and your development. We may not achieve the insane environmental   outcomes that we’re always striving for  in a single day, but every single day,   we’re making steps in the right direction. That’s  a great day for me. And that’s a great outcome.
Queensland Environment
UCX4vgduReX5nXgzJc_ofJhQ
2022-10-04
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
295
1,963
YoggRx1Ox7s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YoggRx1Ox7s
One Minute Tutorials: How To Squat
squats are a great compound exercises they'd not only work your lower body but your upper body as well squats also translate well into many of our daily actions such as getting up from a chair or college your feet should be approximately shoulder width apart your toes should be pointing outwards at a slight angle you need to be pointing in the same direction as your feet your hips and shoulders should be square stick your chest out and put your shoulders back she was squatting with the barbell when I place the barbell on your deltoids and not your neck ideally your knees should not cross your toes your back should be straight and you shouldn't be leaning over you should aim to lower yourself until your hip joint and knee joint are both parallel with the ground the flexibility and strength allows you can go lower also will not be able to hit that depth initially little acts of flexibility strength and lack of familiarity with the exercise you want to keep your core as tight as possible throughout the duration of the lift as you begin to rise from the bottom of the lift you want to avoid the knees from turning inwards as the puts pressure on the ligaments you also want to avoid leaning forward too much double-cut unnecessary pressure in the back muscles and spine and could cause you to fall forward at the very top you want to lock out
Thee Broski
UCPxORfONAlTJmxTONsvv4tw
2018-04-14
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
248
1,354
Y_22W6f-13E
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_22W6f-13E
The Mis Adventurers - Twitch Bits 6!!!
[Music] we've got two tails to get through [Music] a hint um maybe [Music] just get the dress undressed again now i said get the dress not get undressed bow [Music] do you want to check what that is that i found just bear with me girl now what bears do you can't see any i can't see any reapers on the map on the bright side of live i've had a book resting on the other battery and the other battery has been charging right well if you put the battery on and put something on it so it stays where it is the battery yeah it'll charge right okay you need to be on the country should be on the controller you're not like need to put it in hamster mode or something that sleep's coming for us i know and we've got um should we have a bit of a laugh you don't mind paul fit in a bit of loot no jail look at me about scratcher [Music] double d boobies on the boat nothing right on our corner that's why yeah that's why i said stay in the boat what i did incoming i know you've got a target now higher we're going to go chain shot on the board hmm that's what i do hells bells on the bells [Music] [Laughter] that's it uh diamond where you going oh okay oh may i'm [ __ ] prick the prick are you taking the mega kicks kagame [Music] uh look i don't want any problems oh jesus where the [ __ ] is ireland they move [ __ ] around uh no sorry east mate my fault [Applause] [Music] jacket who are you talking to me or the dog oh me all right ah still no idea [Music] yeah i'm talking to the dog i'm not lying set borderline board line brodie what are you doing today uh playing sea thieves with you [Music] oh okay well played day [ __ ] sake i didn't yeah where i was could have got it in the boat i've just swung the whole island watch your lap time [Music] should we go to that island in front and have a look do i have to oh ow let's don't look at my time what are you doing okay she just licked my toe now she's trying to say something but she's all got it this little piggy no she wants some cheese no buff i've got very clean feet actually no i never smell oh mate mate why why have you done this to me you weren't back for it well yeah because we need the [ __ ] cash for it man oh oh right we've got a tall tale there so you know when we get our like little mission things ever so much for honest j moments they're going to try and go for the board and the ram ram strap best strat we're going for the ram whoa hello oh mate full chest rock and roll [ __ ] and balls so there we go there's a challenge whoa whoa whoa yeah never say it's too easy damon i just think where i've just put that little [ __ ] where am i just i don't know where have you put that little [ __ ] what [ __ ] are we on about buying the pretext boom boom boom shanking my moon boom kaboom oh he's on the bottom deck [ __ ] my house i'm exploding because i got wires going off the boat and hope that nothing went wrong harry they're coming at us mate on right side right side right side now have you got cursed cannons you missed didn't you're dead made a noise are they going down [ __ ] off yes mate they're going down mate yes uh wow yes ma'am have you got any uh ooze missions any ooze missions whose missions oh bloody hell that's not a chest i want to say yeah all right day all right that's enough that's off my eyes they burn they're not right ready i'm trying to mate with my bloody boats oh my god day you're still in that dress man [Music] people need bloody counseling i'm all for like you know a bit of casual dressing but you actually um yeah pull it off too well to the point where i'm actually enviously jealous the only reason i've done it is because i'm hoping that people think it's a woman's insulation yeah i think the masculine face and the hair give it away really christmas yeah you could be mr christmas can you come in uh make me alive quick great i'm on the behalf near the wheel near other way near the wheel near the way on the other wheel quick quick quick too late to our left to my left bit quicker i'm turning on it really banner oh [ __ ] just put me asleep bastard and it's just not just off the boat because we've got a big slobber meat doesn't mean that we can cook it very well well one wasn't going to go quite down that route but whatever wait wait wait wait that's why it goes to the end of the boat to be fair with the way you're dressed i'll never be short of content [Music] then [Music] you
VaderMonkey Gaming (VaderMonkeyJayLive)
UCDrx5doapCyQqg363Kz8CEQ
2021-10-13
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
887
4,525
6X4RRsN8mkg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6X4RRsN8mkg
Optimize CSS - Grouping Identical Declaration Blocks
hi I'm David part Sica and I created CSS burner as a rapid optimization tool for CSS now this is going to be a video for the playlist regarding optimization opportunities and it's going to be another example of a commonly missed optimization possibility in many many style sheets that I've scanned and you'll see why after I show you this game you'll see why it's difficult to find but it's it's an optimization opportunity that will leave you know hundreds in some cases hundreds of kilobytes of unnecessary markup on the table that's just downloaded by end users browsers and it just doesn't need to be in your stylesheet so okay so here we have two rules I just call them alert div and confirm div and they're both ID they both have ID selectors and you see a rule set within each declaration block we see this one here and we see this one here okay so I'm going to give you a moment to scan this CSS they're both complete blocks you could see that the the closing right brace is there for the second one barely fits so give you a moment to take a look and maybe you can see what the optimization opportunity is okay a few more seconds okay so what I'm gonna do now is I'm gonna scan this CSS and I'm going to add all the options except I don't want to include the Dom you are the most important one is right here the optimized CSS we need to see what kind of optimization opportunities exist in the style sheet which CSS burner will detect in a split second so let's scan this okay and then we get rid of this dialog box and we see that there is a when we mouse over the indicator any indicator can be moused over to show us a tooltip see that the indicator tells us there is a repeated declaration block and so if we click it the corresponding optimization it's highlighted on the left side and the report and we see here the explanation is blocks which are identical have been found in your CSS so and they tell us the report tells us what we can do about it so we can group selectors when the declaration blocks so what's in the brace is one though that's identical markup we can group this markup together just by grouping the selectors with commas so here we see that if we look closely we see that the declaration block rules seen the giveaways I think are these z-index fifty-five thousand you don't see that too often and we see for both of them that the the body of the declaration block the rules are exactly the same and so when these rules especially when they're very large they become a difficult to detect by the human eye because you have to know scan and compare multiple properties and values and that's across in large style sheets that's across you know thousands of lines of code and you have to make that comparison but the reason why this is such an important one is because we see here that practically half but it winds up because you know the selectors also consume bytes but you know a large chunk thirty-five thirty-six percent of the total markup does not even need to be there because it could have just been grouped into alert div comma can confirm div and that would have been that would have rendered the application the south sheet rules would have rendered the application exactly the same way because grouping by commas is very well-known thing and that's one of the in my opinion one of the main main utilities and advantages of using CSS burners I don't know of another application that can do this so quickly that can make these comparisons and tell you you have repeats that can now chopped off in some cases you check out my blog entries one of my blog entries talks about this but in some cases I mean you could take 25% off of a large stylesheet so you know a well let's just say a 200 KB stylesheet 50 kilobytes can come off of that because grouping will shave off that much and like I said it's difficult because when style sheets get large it's hard to actually do these kind of matching or you know this kind of functionality so I find that this is super powerful and in most cases just to give you the whole you know both sides of the argument in most cases it's just very small blocks for example display:none display:none will you'll see scattered throughout many style sheets or with 100% or display:block those can be grouped and oftentimes what you'll see is you know 1020 selectors that are comma separated in a row and group together so and that helps to but these big blocks are the one that people are definitely going to miss the human eye cannot catch and is an example of the power of CSS Berners optimization functionality so it's a common optimization opportunity and it's why it's part of this playlist so if you found this video helpful please give it a thumbs up and if you have not subscribed to the optimized CSS channel please do so and look for some more of these helpful videos in the not so distant future
Optimize CSS
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2018-03-17
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
916
4,880
VBPNpxDjA2I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBPNpxDjA2I
The Narrow-Minded Jesus - More About Jesus - The Gospel of Christ - MAJ 7
(singing: To destroy the works of the evil one and the kingdom of darkness with light and to rescue men from the law of sin, this is The Gospel of Christ. To proclaim the news unto the poor) Narrator: The Gospel of Christ spreading the soul-saving message of Jesus. And now: Ben Bailey. (singing) This is The Gospel of Christ. In John chapter 14 verse number six, Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No man comes to the Father except by me." As you think about the words of Jesus throughout the New Testament, Jesus, as it relates to doctrinal matters, salvation, His teaching was indeed narrowminded. Now don't get me wrong, Jesus was open to all, who are willing to obey the gospel, coming to him. He said, "Not everybody that says Lord, Lord, is going to heaven, but he who does the will of my Father in heaven", Matthew 7:21. And yet, at the same time, Jesus said, "Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden." And so today, in our study of 'More About Jesus', we think about the narrowminded nature of Jesus' teaching and exclusivity of some of his principles concerning Christ himself and Christian living. As always, we welcome you to today's study. We're so glad that you've joined us as we learn more together about the Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. As always, these lessons are brought to you by members of the Lord's church. If you'd like to have a copy of this series of lessons or any of our lessons, we encourage you to write to us or call us or visit us on our website: thegospelofChrist.com. From that website, you can order free videos or CDs of our lessons, as well as a host of Bible study materials that are available free of charge. And if you've got a question or a Bible study idea or something that you been thinking about, we'd love to help you with that in any way that we can. Also, we encourage you to visit the church of Christ in your area. In your town, you'll find people, in the Lord's church, who are concerned about the Bible and who love lost souls and who would love to sit down and visit with you more. As we think today about the narrowminded nature of some of Jesus' teaching, we all realize that we likely live in a world that doesn't like to be narrowminded about certain things. We live in a society that wants to be open and have so many open views and yet is that really what Jesus taught? We live in a world that says, "just choose the church of your choice, God'll be happy with that." We live in a world that says whatever kind of marriage you want, whether that be between two men, or a man and a woman, or two women, that's okay and we should never be exclusive on those ideas. And yet God is exclusive in his teaching in the New Testament. For example: as you think about the narrowminded nature of Jesus, one of the things that the Lord was indeed narrowminded about was righteous living. Listen to his words in Matthew five verse 20, as he's teaching in the sermon on the Mount, Jesus says, "Unless your righteousness exceeds the righteousness of the scribes and the Pharisees, you'll by no means enter the kingdom of heaven." What was wrong with the scribes' and Pharisees' teaching? They were saying, but not doing, according to Matthew 23. They went halfway around the world to make a proselyte, and then Jesus said, "You make him twice as much a son of hell as yourselves". And so, when Jesus taught about things where he was indeed restrictive about, one of those was righteous living. Friend, as you think about living for Christ and the seriousness of it and what that really means, Jesus exemplifies that. In Luke chapter 2 verse number 49, as Jesus parents almost chastised him for leaving the the group and not being with the caravan, Jesus, when asked why did you leave, where were you, responds by saying, "Did you not know I must be about my Father's business?" Friend, that's the mindset that every child of God needs. Righteous living is not an optional matter; it is something God demands of his children. Do you remember Romans 12 versus 1 and 2, the apostle Paul said, "I beg you by the mercies of God, I beseech you by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice." What do you mean Paul? Holy and acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service. Do not be transformed to this world but, do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed. Renewed by the transforming of your mind that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God. As you think about Christ and really living and having that exclusive restricted nature of living for Christ, friend, we're talking about making real sacrifices every day to live for Jesus. Listen to Jesus' words in Luke nine verse 23, Jesus said, "If any man desires to come after me, let him deny himself, take up his cross daily and follow me." Paul would say to Christians in Corinth, "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have from God, (listen now) and you are not your own, for you were bought at a price. Therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit which are his." I belong to Christ. My life is no longer about self; I've got a live for God and for Christ everyday. Friend, let me give you a prime example of what we're talking about when we think about real righteous living, that is exclusive, that follows the pattern of Jesus Christ. The apostle Paul probably serves as a great pattern for what that means. Paul exemplified his life, now that it's been transformed to live for Christ, in Galatians 2 verse 20. Paul said, "I've been crucified with Christ. It's no longer I who live, Christ lives in me. This life that I now live in the flesh, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me." And so, as we think about this idea, we want to emphasize that Christian living is indeed something that Jesus wants us to do a hundred percent. It can't be halfhearted, it can't be lackadaisical, we've got to be serious about living for Christ in every way. You know when I think about things that Jesus was really exclusive, restricted about, narrowminded about, it was being converted. Conversion, changing one's process, changing one's mind to really live for Christ, is indeed a total change. In Matthew 18 verse number three, Jesus illustrated this by saying, "Unless you are converted and become as one of these little children, you'll by no means enter the kingdom of heaven." The context is: some have brought children to Jesus and the disciples don't think Jesus needs to be dealing with children. So they can rebuke them for bringing these children to Jesus and Jesus said, wait a minute now. Let the little children come to me. Do not forbid them, for of such is the kingdom of heaven. And then Jesus will say, "Unless you become like one of these little children, you will by no means enter the kingdom of heaven." What is it Jesus is trying to emphasize about conversion that is so restricted in its nature there? Friend, unless I'm willing and unless we're willing to completely give up, to trust Jesus, follow him, and commit 100% to the conversion process, I cannot be what God really wants me to be. I've got to make sure that I recognize Jesus must have 100% of everything. You know a lot of it is about trust. What made Jesus use the illustration of children? Children trust their parents implicitly and without doubt usually. Friend, isn't that the way we ought to do with God? Once we've looked to the word of God, once we've seen its truthfulness, once we recognize Jesus is the son of God, in that conversion I need to trust Jesus fully. Do you remember Proverbs 3 verse number five? Here's what we're talking about - the proverb writer said, "Trust in the Lord with all your heart, lean not on your own understanding. Acknowledge him in all your ways, He will direct your paths." I've got to give all my heart to the Lord. There can't be doubt, there can't be 95% the Lord 5% me, the conversion process must be total commitment to the Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Now, let me give you a couple of illustrations about this that I think, from Jesus teaching, help us to understand it better. A man comes to Jesus and he's a pretty good man, we might say. He comes to Jesus with a great question. Here's his question, "Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?" In Mark chapter 10, Jesus addresses this rich young ruler and He says, "Keep the commandments: do not murder, do not steal, do not commit adultery, honor your father mother. And the man comes back to Jesus and says, "All this I've done from childhood." Jesus said, "One thing you lack. (Wait a minute, this man has been keeping those commandments. What is it that he lacks?) Sell what you have. Give to the poor. Come follow me." The Bible says that man went away sorrowful, because he had great riches. That man hadn't really been fully converted. He hadn't fully given up everything to follow Jesus. Are we saying it's wrong have things? That's not what Jesus is teaching, nor is that the idea. But the idea is full commitment to the Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, full conversion to his cause, that would cause one to do what the Lord said in Revelation 2:10, "Be faithful until death and I'll give you the crown of life." And so, what does the Lord want of his children. He wants us to fully convert to the idea of trusting him, following him, and doing whatever he says, so that ultimately we can have the crown of life. Now, a third thing that Jesus was indeed narrowminded about, was the essentiality of repentance or changing our mind. In Luke chapter 13, we have an illustration of this. In Luke 13, Jesus is going to teach about repentance, but what leads Him to this is: certain people think they're better than others and they're kinda looking down on, maybe people who they believe God's wrath has been exhibited toward. And so they come to Jesus and they say, "Lord, what about these 18 people who are walking down the road and a tower falls on them, weren't they worse sinners than anybody else, or what about these Galileans who Pilate mingled their blood with their sacrifice, meaning that they were killed by Pilate and their blood was mingled with that sacrifice." And so, what about these people that these great acts of vengeance, it looks like, came down upon from heaven? You know what Jesus said. Jesus basically ignored those people and said, "Unless you repent, you'll all likewise perish." Friend, if there's one thing Jesus emphasized from the very moment he began his ministry, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." John said it, Jesus said it, and from that point on, Jesus restricted the idea of repentance to being essential to really living for the Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Now, when we talk about the essentiality of repentance, it's kinda important for us to understand, no doubt, what that idea is. What do we mean by repentance? Is repentance just an outward show? I want to give you an illustration, from the Old Testament, that helps us to see that repentance is more than an emotional, outward, sign. Joel chapter 2 verse number 13, Joel said to the people who desperately needed to change their ways, "Rend your hearts, not your garments." Now friend, the Israelites had been great about having things that they thought exhibited true repentance. They might throw dust and ashes upon their head. They might pull out the hair from their head. They might sit among the ash pile, as Job did, in essence. They might pluck the hair out of their beard even. Was that something God wanted? God said, "Rend your hearts, not your garments." True repentance is a changed way of thinking that leads to a changed way of acting. Acts three verse 19, Peter preached, "Repent and turn, or be converted, that your sins may be blotted out." "Godly sorrow produces repentance", Second Corinthians chapter 7 verse number 10. And so, to really be what God wants me to, I've got to repent, meaning that I've got to amend my ways, see what God wants me to do, and turn to God and his will. A great example: First Thessalonians chapter 1 about verses six through 10, Paul says of the Thessalonicans, that they had turned from idols to God, to serve the true and living God. They stopped looking at idols. They turned in the right direction of God and they started doing, serving God, and doing exactly what he wanted them to do. Friend, let me mention to you another thing that Jesus was indeed narrowminded about, as it relates to his teaching. The Lord and Savior Jesus Christ was absolutely exclusive concerning the essentiality of baptism. I know that, today, we live in a world, in an environment and atmosphere religiously, where people don't often see the importance of baptism. Some people will say, "Baptism, yeah, that's something good you ought to do, but do you have to do it to be saved?" To that, they would answer, "No." Others would say we ought to, to be identified, or become a member of a certain religious group, but not essential to salvation. Friend, regardless, and I want you understand the way we're saying this, regardless of what men say, what matters for us today is what does Jesus say? In John 12 verse 48, Jesus said, "He who rejects me and does not receive my word, has, that which judges him, the word I've spoken will judge him in the last day." And so, as we think about Jesus' teaching on the essentiality of baptism, please understand: all that matters is - what this book says, what God says, not what men say. Now, let's turn our attention to what Jesus did say. I want to direct your attention to a passage in the gospel of John and I'd like for you look in John chapter 3 with me for just a moment. Look in John chapter 3 beginning in verse number one, the Bible says, "There was a man, of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews. This man came to Jesus by night and said to him, 'Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher come from God, for no one can do these signs, that you do, unless God is with him.' Jesus answered and said to him, 'Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of heaven.' Nicodemus said to him, 'How can a man be born when he's old? Can he enter a second time into his mother's womb and be born?' Jesus answered, 'Most assuredly, I say to you, (listen to this now) unless one is born of water and the spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.'" Friend, as we think about Christ's teaching on baptism, please listen very carefully to exactly what Jesus said. Jesus said "unless." That's restrictive. Jesus said "except." That expresses that there's one way. Jesus said, "Unless one is born of water and the spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God." Is it essential that one be born of water to get into God's kingdom? Absolutely it is! And friend, that kingdom is the place of the saved. Let me give you a few other examples of this, one coming from the teaching of Jesus right before he gives or right after he gives the great commission, you remember the great commission, Mark 16:15, "Go into all the world, preach the gospel unto every creature." Lord, what do you want me to preach? "He that believes and is baptized, will be saved. He that does not believe shall be condemned", Mark 16 verses 15 and 16. Friend, as you think about the teaching of Jesus on baptism, may I ask you to consider this? What is it Jesus said one must do to be saved? Listen to it again, "He that believes will be saved"? That's not what Jesus said. "He that is baptized will be saved"? It's not all what Jesus said. What did Jesus say? "He that believes and is baptized will be saved." Friend, if Jesus said you've got to believe and be baptized to be saved, why would anybody want to say it's not essential to salvation? Now, is that a theme that runs throughout the New Testament? Indeed it is! You open to Acts chapter 2, and for the first time, God's saving gospel, the message of salvation in Jesus, is going to be preached. Peter points out, "You, with lawless hands, have killed Christ." They realized that. They'd killed their Messiah. They cried out, "Men and brethren, what shall we do?" They're cut to the heart. They want to know, "what can I do to be saved?" "Repent and be baptized every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins", Acts two verse 38. "Those who gladly received his word, were baptized and the Lord added to the church daily, those who were being saved", Acts chapter 2 verses 40 through 47. So, Peter taught baptism was for the remission of sins. Now friend, if we we're really going to kinda get a picture of when it is that a person goes from being lost to saved, I don't think we can find a better example than that of the apostle Paul in Acts chapter 9. The Lord approaches Saul of Tarsus, whom we will later know as Paul, "Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?" "Lord, who are you?" "I'm Jesus, whom you're persecuting." "Lord, what would you have me to do?" "Go into the city, it'll be told you what you must do", Acts nine verses one through six. We get the update on exactly what God said in Acts 22. God sends a message or a man named Ananias. Ananias comes to Saul and says, "Saul, Saul, why are you waiting? Arise and be baptized and wash away your sins, calling on the name of the Lord." Friend, it is sin that separates us from God. Isaiah 59 verses one and two, "The Lord's ear's not heavy, that it cannot hear; His arms not shortened, that it cannot save. But your sins and your iniquities have separated you from your God. And so, sin's that barrier that brings separation; causes one to be lost. If I can know exactly when sin is removed, I can know when I'm saved. Listen again, Acts 22:16, "Arise, be baptized, wash away your sins." Sounds a lot like First Peter 3:21. Peter said, "Baptism does now also save us." Friend, if God's inspired word says baptism saves us, why would we dare say it's not essential to salvation? Do we realize that's how you get into Christ? Galatians 3:27, "As many of you as were baptized into Christ, have clothed yourselves with Christ." And so, please understand, Jesus did teach except or unless one is born again, born of water and the spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven. You know, as I think about things that Jesus really was restricted about, was definitely narrowminded about, one of those was the fullness and the inspiration of God's inspired word. In Matthew chapter 24 about versus 34 to 36, Jesus will say, "Heaven and earth will pass away. My words will never pass away." Jesus will say in the gospel of John that the Scripture cannot be broken and Jesus later said in John 17:17, "Sanctify them, (praying to the Father) sanctify them by your truth. Your word is truth." Friend, as I think about things that Jesus definitely wanted us to stand firm upon, one of those is the inspiration of God's word. Without the Bible, without understanding, without knowing, and and being fully committed to the fact that this book is absolutely, word for word, the word of God, where is our faith? What faith do we have without that? This book is the foundation of our faith. In fact, Scripture affirms throughout its inspiration. Listen to Second Timothy 3:16, "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped unto every good work." Holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit. So yes, Jesus absolutely affirmed God's inspired word is something we need to stand firm upon. There's another great teaching that Jesus emphasized and definitely wanted us to be ready for and it is His final coming. In Matthew chapter 24 verse 36, Jesus said, as He thought about His coming, as He answers that final question, Jesus made the wonderful statement that of that day and hour, no one knows, not even the Son, the Father in heaven's the only one who knows that. Is Christ going to come again? He absolutely is! The day, the Bible teaches there is a day coming, when Jesus will come back to this earth and we desperately need to be ready for that great day that there'll be great sound. According to First Thessalonians 4 verses 13 to 16, "A shout, the voice, the trumpet, the voice of an Archangel, and the dead in Christ will rise, will meet Him in the air." Friend, the truth is that God has sent his Son to this earth to save mankind and Christ is coming back to claim His own and ultimately the world will be destroyed at that point. And so, I want to live in view of that and always be ready to be with the Lord. Jesus said, "What I say unto you, I say unto all, watch and be ready." Friend, tying that idea into, that idea into the fact that Christ is one day going to come back, into Jesus words in John 14:6, helps us to see our need, to truly follow Christ and do what he says. Do you remember it? We began with this verse, John 14 verse six Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No man comes to the Father except by me." Friend, is there any other way to be saved outside of Christ? He's the way, He's the truth, He's the life. Outside of Jesus, you can not, it is impossible to get to the Father. That's why God sent His Son. "God so loved the world, He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life." He made salvation available so that all of us could one day live with the Father in heaven. Friend, it's God's desire that all men be saved. First Timothy two verse four, "God wants all men to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth." "God is not slow concerning His promises, as some men count slowness, but He is long-suffering toward us, not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance", Second Peter three verse number nine. Friend, there's nothing wrong with having a definite, a definitive plan, a definitive way, something that I can be assured of, and Jesus does indeed provide us with that. And so today, we ask of you, are you sure you're a child of God? Have you obeyed the blessed gospel of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ? Have you heard the message that there is a Savior, that Jesus brought salvation to the world and that He is the only way, John 14:6? Do you really believe in Christ as the Savior and the Son of God, John 8 verse 24? If so, are you willing to repent and turn from sin and turn to God, Acts three verse 19? Would you confess the name of Jesus before men, Matthew 10 verse 32 and 33 and would you do what Jesus said, "He that believes and is baptized, will be saved", Mark chapter 16 verse number 16? As always, we want our listeners to know that this message is motivated out of a love for God, and out of a love for souls. Why speak on things like this today? Because friend, more than anything, God wants people to be saved. We want people to be saved and we don't know how much time we've got. Let's make sure that we're ready to live with God for eternity before it's everlastingly too late. You may have just joined our program and are wondering, "What is The Gospel of Christ?" "The Gospel of Christ" is an evangelistic work of the churches of Christ that reaches the world with the gospel through TV, radio, and Internet. Our motto is "Taking the whole gospel to the whole world." We believe in having a book chapter and verse for everything we do and say. And unlike many other religious groups, we're concerned about lost souls, not your wallet. ♪ Singing♪ We encourage you to visit thegospelofChrist.com for a host of Bible study materials as well as audio and video copies of our lessons. If you'd like to have a copy of today's lesson, please visit our website and fill out a media request form or you can email us at: mail@thegospelofChrist.com, call us toll-free at 580-798-7656 or write to us at PO Box 788, McMinnville TN. 37111. ♪ Singing ♪
The Gospel of Christ
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2018-02-28
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The Law Shows Us We Need a Savior
the law shows us our guilt in order for us to see our need for a savior let me say that again I'd like it write it down the law shows us our guilt in order for us to see our need of a savior see we messed up when we saw the law and said okay here's the rule book and I've got to just keep this law and then I'll go to heaven or no that's not the purpose of the law the law was given to show you that you needed Jesus because the problem with you and I is that we think we're good we think I'm not that bad I've never killed anyone you know I've never robbed the bank I don't think I've done bad enough to go to go go to hell and then God says no no let me show you that you are guilty let me show you that you are bad so that you will call upon someone to save you are you there in Galatians 3 look at verse 24 wherefore the law was our schoolmaster what's the word schoolmaster me it's an old word means teacher or instructor wherefore the law was our schoolmaster the law was our teacher the law was our instructor to bring us unto Christ that we might don't miss it be justified by faith are we the Lord God gave us a law so that we could be justified by what no no God gave us the law so it was bring us to Christ so he can be justified by faith notice verse 25 but after that faith has come we are no longer under the schoolmaster why are you trying to keep the law to get yourself to heaven when you're in Jesus Christ he said if you're in Christ through faith you're no longer under the schoolmaster keep your finger there in Galatians go back to Romans chapter 3 verse 19 Romans chapter 3 verse 19 Romans chapter number 3 and verse number 19 notice what the Bible says Romans chapter 3 and verse 19 now we know Romans chapter 3 and verse 19 now we know that what things soever the law say it say it to them who are under the law why why does the law speak to us romans 319 notice now we know that whatsoever thing the law says is say to them that are under the law why notice that every month maybe stop and all the world may become guilty before God so you're not going to get to heaven and tell God you know well I think I should go to heaven because you know I used to do drugs and I quit doing drugs now look I think you ought to quit doing drugs but if you think quitting drugs are gonna get you to heaven you're not go to hell you say why you know I think I should go to go go go to heaven God because you know I used to live a really bad life and I used to be involved in this nice being on that thanks to be involved in gangs and I used to steal nice or lyon I used to cheat but I quit doing those things and I started going to church I turned over a new leaf now look that's great I think you should do that I'm glad you did that but if you're counting on that to get you to heaven you're gonna die and go to hell say why because look the law was there to get us to shut our mouths and to become guilty before God knows verse 20 therefore by the deeds now what's the word deed mean it's an action by the deeds of the law there show no flesh be justified in his sight for by the law is the knowledge of sin look at verse 28 same chapter skip down to verse 28 therefore we conclude because Paul's been giving this argument about salvation I'm not going to take time to go through the whole chapter you can read Romans chapter 3 in context in your own time I would encourage you to do that but notice what he says in verse 28 therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law I mean is it clear throughout the Bible is it extremely clear that's how asians not my words salvation thought about what you do salvations not by keeping a good life salvations not by keeping a rulebook something she's not by doing this and not by doing that salvation is through the faith in Jesus Christ alone that's what the Bible teaches
Alex 1611
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2016-05-18
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SciandTechUpdates 11 - corona polymerase, DNA signature mutation, Ptarmigan - தமிழ் - Samy22
hello friends today update love us Tina Caronna we're a sort of polymerase machine so our structure on the fine manubrium not even the tail karana address or the protein structure the to Fineman is or the polymerase machine and the structure on the fine material so you saw out in bana me now in the - in the drug on the market in Sylacauga the tip of polymerase enzyme at the Doudna I'm not a genetic material DNA it's now the multiple copies nary on the Xerox copy and porom load a prosthetic emulous are they my panda so wonder you multiple copies of phenomena buzzer ignition the deputy repair iris no on the tab and copy at a community of those are the two Ethernet repair country either and it just happened to the multiple copy on the phone number so I'll stop or talk on the Scylla molecule is lower on the totem IRA links and URL drugs and simple so and your trucks tripe and a band those were track 1 the turn in the polymerase reaction on the continuum stop and each and so these are the antiviral tricks so listen 1 so the polymer is structure on the importance and you go Maurice and often min ago so father all and it in area Drexel on the test one track monitor the helpful on this control so right now when the para maana DNA damage not a chromosome mutation or DNA repair polyp is missing on the mutation when the son was simpler so in the mutation final audit in the cancer in the would rather so now on the day when the teeth 11% or finding many alumni the apocrypha in in the pretty damaged on generalize the vanilla one of the sunlight long the t UV rays I'm a sucker of food types and my food room other Putin Silla sometimes Jenny take away when the generai as a process is not to come Elena say long time was it not mad you could have smoked punters delay now and we know many different drugs in the why are you on the trail go normal DNA dimension of the automatic on the term of bodily make a demon so DNA on the Reaper I he line armed robber but maritime on the holiday on the Terry problem in rural a no-drama kasi on the reply so when the Mikasa DNA on the damage other kind of body laundry friends other garments other type of mutation because indentation other vero type of militia so in the murder when the two different different on the body not the not on the ship you so who pawned the new moon identity into the exam which go back with this mope on Ranga so Attila and the other one do a DNA damage on the so I'll take another signature on the mutation in the DNA damage their appearance on the my exam on the DNA mutation on the Naraku on the ring chain but listen finding lambda and the matter in the ear color on song in aa topic or a consumer Donna you know the DNA damage on the Reaper and in closet open every clock around completely prior to him the Reaper Amal conjure one person on the missile so in the middle the different type of mutation on the formula so ethyl on the water process when the tally mark Lila on the tour process on the chimerical a man the mutation of and the 2/3 between area time on the where Myra under formula so in the main area group of process under Natalie mall arnold signature on the wreck Adama sometimes on the designation Myrick Romero comma sometimes in this signature alarm array where the mutation with Mina on the the group of action area action area process long say in the Dow and attend the mutation on the consumer so if you can under a database might even the read even amongst ready for another one thing the Myrick possibilities law on the T the opinion so future London in the matter under a different kinds of mutations now occur the pattern eternal future on the tree now on the TV couple on the medicines now and it could grow my the world so find him on the table up at the back room was no Arctic wildlife other particular on the retire me and bird species you bring the energy consumption air-cooled on Savannah surah marij per turn I'm a boil on the energy where Malema convert are they could hear a tiny island anomaly here across surrounding area on the cold Obama he together so you'll allow and examine the energy consumers Luanda along the particular species matter it comes fake money Gong gentle away and it articular coil a further than the 2.0 our way down the north pole pocket London T so the article about it kind of birds wildlife one general I come here but I mean the party line the species bird punishment be entertainment come here coma even and then the power the other allele in alchemy other other than the summer spring and flowers love pool on the poker time ago prom the temperature warm or so on the time la pagina and the paramon did not lie Leonardo and between the energy contribution on the lower so in the processing Maria wildlife on in the species laminaria wildlife around system on which commemorates so either went wrong guru polygon but poor recent of a global warming climate change lava sea front resident in the summer spring will allow to Nadia member so in the marine system when the term support página 1 de toute la a la me on the Mario so I run on the T week on the to bali kuta so hangar so today when the moon updates on the path ago so here on the kill on the common-law spa so next week when Tamara that she updates or Agra so on the very capable of me too
Samy22
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2020-05-03
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From Cereal to Civilization: How the Discovery of Beer Shaped the World | Odd Salon DISCOVERY 7/7
hi okay so actually so before I begin this talk on there it did Stein yes we're gonna to toast tonight because I'd like to dedicate this talk to a friend of mine who's passed away I kind of Fraggle seriously the most Fraggle a lot of people you know him knew him he is definitely hands down the most authoritative person will ever meet about the subject I'm about to talk about so here's a Fraggle right so um when you think of discoveries that have happen to help shape civilization you think of things like well I mean a lot of talks that we've had so far about you know under sunder sea worms and like lost cities and like you know all sorts of other manner of important discoveries a lot of people don't really consider like things like beer right beer right be regarded as the oldest beverage in recorded history um it's the third most popular drink right after tea and water it dates back to as early as 35 BC in Mesopotamia but early indications that could actually have been even older than that maybe as old as like 7000 BC in China there are some indications of that there's records of definitely being used being in Sumer which is now modern Iraq but how did it first come about and how did it affect have its effects on civilizations as that are yet to come so important question here is like what exactly is beer it's the result of brewing of grain cereals wheat rye corn rice and some instances in water during the breeding process fermentation occurs which produces amongst other things sugars in the form of molto's the yeasts that form eat away at the sugars which then produces ethanol alcohol and also carbonation so as byproducts as byproducts so it should be also noted that early beers didn't use hops which came actually much later like but however a lot of these herbs a lot of herbs that were added as flavors and such are kind of mentioned up here some of these are really weird to like like caraway I'm like now when to try that there is no recorded history as to exactly who or when beer was first were created but it's generally accepted that it quite possibly might have predated recorded history in all likelihood beer was created accidentally by soaking cereal grains and water to help loosen the outer shells and making the nutrients inside easier to eat you can add heat to that eventually and the brewing process was sped up resulting in a gruel like substance which was also very alcoholic right right seriously I kind of I really want to try this man just an experiment with us but um so pictured here you can see how Sumerians likely drank the stuff but it's also accepted that they created straws right Sumerians created straws to get to the liquid underneath the thick rule floating on the surface of this foul liquid but but potent there is some evidence that indicate that beer beer predates bread and it's extremely possible that beer was developed to first and experiments and attempts to create bread so Sumerians and other early cultures valued this stuff tremendously um it's in this document that's pictured here you can see that's from around 30 3100 BC it's written in cuneiform we have what's described at at this this is basically a receipt for like the best beer in them in the city of Ur I was apparently made by this guy Tim a Lulu who apparently like you but he really he sold the best beer in the city and there's like this is this is a proof of it this is a should also be noted this this tablet is the only known surviving document from the city of Ur of this pure time period right so not only did beer provide a good reason to trek 200 miles to another city for to conduct trades but also it was an ultraportable food source and the source of nutrients grains and cereals generally are much easier to grow and generally you know then maintain and such then like fruits and vegetables and livestock last but also kind of important I mean the creation of beer oftentimes made impure water potable right so then made it safe to consume so in fact without beer culture pure culture as we know it probably would have wouldn't have an advance as fast as it did when it did the discovery of beer affected all aspects of life it was a major reason for early humans to go from being hunter-gatherers to selling down to agrarian societies so pictured here is the a portion of the epic of gilgamesh which is the first known tale of civilization and details the story of the epic hero in key do who becomes civilized once he's taught to drink a beer right this was done in and religion and religious setting of course because religion was you know totally married to everything everything and the beverage was and when the beverage first discovered later on that the famous poem the him to Ninkasi was a recipe for ancient beer Ninkasi was the ancient Sumerian goddess of of beer and it was actually noted as like being the physical manifestation of beer and it was thought that you actually shouldn't she transferred her and herself into you when he drank beer from her recipe right you become one with beer the Egyptians right altered the Sumerian brewing methods to create a smoother lighter brew which could be poured into a cup and or glass for consumption so yeah actually yeah it wasn't too far from that Egyptian beer therefore is often cited as the first beer and the world because it was had more in common with waiting normally identified as beer but it's still I mean even that wasn't close to like what we drink today is it was I mean it was it didn't have the giant yeah thick gruel on top but it was still not exactly beer as we know it right um it a lot of people know that the ancient workers at Giza who built the pyramids were given beer this is true they were actually were given B rations of three times a day it's also believed that the women were in charge of the brewing process and responsible for beer production right beer like Sumerians beer also played a part in their religion so in the tale of the destruction of mankind the Great God raw grew tired of the humanity's [ __ ] and decided to destroy everyone on the planet he and he unleashed Sekhmet to go on a genocide Alang spree tearing people apart and drinking their blood so the other gods were like wait a minute raw you need to kind of like settle down here because like if segment persists there's no one left there will be no enough to you know toxaemia provide sacrifices and I mean who are really teaching this lesson to any of their teaches tune his lessons to anyways if there's no one you know around right so Rawls like okay yeah you're right um okay you tried calling segment back but she was consumed with this bloodlust didn't want to like to have anything a part of it so raw came up with his good idea he came and made this big giant bowl of beer dyed or red and put it in front of segments path the goddess finds the beer thinks it's blood drinks it becomes totally drunk falls asleep and wakes up as the goddess Hathor in which is kind and gentle tune and kind and gentle friend of humanity true story beer even played a part in the ancient games inching games and entertainment evidence shows that beer may have been a major factor in ancient each great civilizations the ancient so archaeologists have found in ancient Greek cities thousands of grains of cereal taped to around like 2100 BC they played this popular game called koto bows which is essentially early beer pong yeah they would they would they had this large bowl or a bucket and it would have smaller little floating bowls inside of it and the players would sit around and throw little like heavy things into the smaller bowls to try and sink them and yeah when you drink beer has an in history has proven to save lives true during an outbreak of the plague in 16 612 80 in Germany there was a monk named Arnold of mess who established a monastery in Oden Berg he persuaded his parish to drink beer in its place of water which was contaminated with the plague he didn't know this but he was like his whole his own notion was that what was it from man's sweat to God's love beer came into the world and so and you know a lot of people just drank the beer and so the water and it saved lives apparently Saint Arnold to this day is still Revere is the patron saint of Brewers beer is affected vocabulary in various ways throughout history so the additive bridal actually for instance derives from the anglo-saxon noun of a bride ale originally a bride ale was the drink given out at weddings often times produced by the family of the bride there was there was strict laws by the way about how much it could be made and you know pays on how many people were the wedding and yeah there of course have been beer tragedies in history most people know about the effects of prohibition in the US and what it had there but do you know about the great London beer flood of 1814 you do okay great this is gonna be easy so in in October 17th in the st. Giles parish of London the muse and company's brewery had a fatal accident three hundred and twenty three thousand Imperial gallons of beer exploded out of the building after one of the vats collapsed causing a domino effect and creating a lethal flood of beer the spill it out on the streets the flood broke through the walls the brewery and also broke through the walls of the Taba shock arms pub nearby swamped nearby George and new streets and flooded a room where there was a week happening right now and certain irony there um eight people were killed many more were injured actually no charges were made against the brewery as it was the courts who ruled it as an act of God however the scandal was enough to end the bin then business over a period of time in the brewery was eventually demolished in 1922 and as claimed closing let's not forget the overlooked beers importance during war right so during during world war ii right after the invasion of Normandy in France the Allied front frontline troops were critically short of beer I mean there was a huge morale issue and right yeah no beer and as a result in conjunction with the RAF bootleggers became known as sorcerers sprang up with an idea to get beer to the frontline troops they would clean up these these fuel tanks these these cool tanks that could be jettisoned can you clean them out entirely fill them up with Pale Ale fitted them to the bottom and Spitfires and these planes would would fly to the frontlines in the troops in Normandy reach Heights of about 15,000 feet so the computer was really cold by the time they landed drop off the tanks and fly back and do this and this happened for years and so one one report had that one spitfire landed on a runway and no one was there to receive it and they found that that reason why is because these Germans had taken a roost in this nearby clock tower and just shooting anyone nearby so every was like Coco Coco would say drop the beer and just the planes took off before getting shot down the operation was made to the jettison that these these tanks eventually gave whereas even given an official designation modification XXX however one night one as one might expect the tanks that formerly held the aviation fuel tainted the taste the beer so it's kind of metallic tasting and wasn't that great however under praising Royal Air Force a personnel also modified the Spitfire bombs bonfire rocks to fit actually barrels to the bottom of the wings so the aircrafts would cruise through the sky with a barrel attached to each either side of the fuselage so uh so I'd like to end this talk with a quote from Martin Luther there's a lot of quotes but this this one this one resonated with me whoever drinks beer he is quick to sleep whoever sleeps long does not sin whoever does not sin enters heaven thus let us drink beer thank you [Applause] all right Thank You Egon for that enlightening talk that was great I didn't know about the beer flood in London I know it makes me sad but now that I know knowing is half the battle want to think once again I want to thank Public Works for hosting us tonight everyone give them a round of applause [Applause] and I want to thank all of our volunteers again there's so many of you this is that this is really a community effort and and we love that all of you participate we love that all of you in the audience are part of us we love that you guys up on the balcony have also been here I can't see any of you these lights are brutal but I know you're there because when I'm sitting there I can see you I know you exist all right next up we've got we'll be back on May 7th four stories of spite we've got six tales of ill-will and bad blood pernicious maliciousness and rancorous intent and the festering resentment that inspires vengeance curated by Marci Bennett yeah go Marci if you have an idea for a spiteful story submit it now to on salon.com slash speak and of course discounted tickets in advance are for sale at the merch table right meow once again if you're inspired by our talks you know where to go odd salon.com slash speak be sure to join our email list to keep up with odd with upcoming salons and speaker news including when you can join us for our membership excursions between salons you can find us online as well in all the usual places that Twitter's the Grahams the face Borg's a Tod salon and again please please please consider joining us as a member as part of our patreon community or as a sponsor of a salon if you are a place of employment has far more money than the rest of us please convince them to give it to us because we'd like it members and patrons remember both enjoy a host of insider benefits from ticket discounts to more odd stories from on salon speakers and fellows you can go online for more info inquire at the merch table for details they'll be there for a few minutes after we wrap up and remember to join our Facebook groups something weird where we're going to be posting follow up to follow up reading lists and links related to tonight's talks and we welcome you to join us and share stories and inspirations there as well thank you public works Thank You speakers you guys really just you did me you did me you made this really easy we did this oldest guy stuff I have one more thank you I'd like to thank Seth for being our amazing curator tonight this was his first time curating and it is a ton of work and we compensate our speakers in drink and book so we are compensating our curator with drink and books and a theme will particular form tonight and a very special you have earned our curator pin Oh again please give it up for Seth thank you so much for wrangling all the cats tonight thank you thank you is sold uh thank you everybody thank you all for coming tonight oh they want to see the books okay books sure you want to see my books baby huh okay this is the speaker's book which I selected for our speakers tonight the age of gold HW brands most of it is excellent he does sort of leave off a lot of the shitty things that John Sutter did but you've got my invocation to remind you about how horrible that [ __ ] was the rest is fascinating it's a great read and this book is so I'm in Winchester the map that was not on fire that changed the world so thank you everybody for this this is this is an incredible thing thank you all for coming good night
Odd Salon
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2019-04-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VWx4fa1DviA
Die Geheimnisse des WAGYU-Rindfleischs in der Straßenküche enthüllt!
ever wondered why wagu beef's price tag sends your wallet into shock here's why hailing from Japan wagu cattle are treated like royalty with massages special diets and even beer to stimulate appetite these bines live the high life but that's not all wag's unique selling point is its marbling that's the fat evenly distributed within the muscle tissue it's this marbling that gives wagu its melt-in your mouth texture and exquisite flavor more marbling equals a higher grade meaning a heftier price finally wag U's Rarity adds to the cost only a few th000 wagu cattle are exported from Japan annually making it a high demand low Supply delicacy so next time you splurge on [Applause] [Music] wagu what
Streetfood aus aller Welt
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2024-04-08
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJDHS8_9YiM
Samsung Monitors 49-inch Super Ultra Wide 2k HDR Gaming Monitor: WOW!!!
[Music] hey guys thundery here and it's been a while since I've done a hands-on video but I had to do one for this because the behemoth is back last year we took a look at Samsung's massive 49 inch monitor it was the ears model the chg 90 and lovely monitor 49 inches resolution was a bit on the shorter side so we had a resolution last day of 3840 by 1080p with in aspect ratio of 32 by 9 really huge this year samsung has changed things with their brand new c49 rg9 numbers number naming for some of these things are crazy but doesn't matter it's the brand new 49 inch monitor and it's resolution is 5120 by 1440 this thing is crisp it is clear and as a gamer you are going to love this let's talk about some of the specs what you find that with this this is a curved monitor it's got a curved curvature of about 1800 R so it's got that nice curve that banks around it covers your whole field of vision while you again you get C jump in and experiences Plus this is a HDR monitor as well so it's good certified for HD I'll display up to a thousand nits max brightness which is better than some TVs out there so you're getting some really sharp good call us contrast all that fun stuff that you expect from being of course things that support HDR HDR 10 which is also absolutely amazing now you your Azzam give me monitor you expect to have a few gaming features AMD freesync - it's got a refresh rate rate of 120 Hertz which is less than 144 from last year but 128 I'm fine with that plus it's you know it's a bump up in resolution on there which is great contrast ratio is three thousand to one and response time is four milliseconds now some of you going okay that's it might be a little higher nah a brand well playing division to smooth it was just really nice to see the gameplay just kind of flow with this and it was just an awesome looking monitor now if you're not a gamer this too is great for your workstation especially for workflow I didn't get to do any editing on there but just imagine your timeline from beginning to end if your Creator you're gonna love this monitor because you can definitely do that scrubbing through your timeline do know your work it is it is fantastic now when you're just doing daily tasks or watching video because of course it is a 32 by 9 aspect ratio you're gonna get bars on the side because nobody actually has videos at that aspect ratio but you will get some nice space for your video content and if you want to watch videos and work at the same time you've got that capability because because you've got two that space right in there I can't wait to fully try out this monitor because I think what the previous model did last year was really amazing and they've stepped things up this year pricing wise it's gonna be till 4499 but just pretty much the same price last year's model basically came out as so you're getting at least the same pricing statue from last year which is good so if you have any thoughts comments about the brand new Samsung 48 in 49 inch behemoth I'm even gonna mention the model number name because it's just all over the place but you know what I'm talking about leave your thoughts down below let me know what you think is something you need to pick up is this something that you wanted to see the increase in resolution what do you think about the specs leave all that below we can discuss otherwise guys to forget to like and share this video favorite this video and again if you're looking at pick it up use our link down below this is thunder you saying thank you very much and always enjoy head statements [Music]
Booredatwork.com
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2019-05-23
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hq4QtK0-WHQ
Association Access and Inclusivity – Decoding Belonging in Events
foreign [Music] chat and online discussion where we warm ourselves by the virtual fire with topics of the day welcoming thought leaders and Trailblazers alike to join up in this online home for the community I'm the host of Association chat Kiki letalian and for today's episode what is belonging what is this idea of belonging and and how do we know if we belong and why does it matter anyway uh Renee Brown wrote a lot of fantastic books but Renee Brown wrote a book called daring greatly and in this book she says belonging on the other hand doesn't require us to change who we are it requires us to be Who We Are and I think when we think about that it's like you know is that really the essence of belonging and what does that mean for us as Association Executives what does that mean for us when we're planning our events and that's why I'm thrilled to introduce Our Guest for this episode because there are a lot of questions about this topic for sure and when I introduce these people I hope you're as excited as I am first we have Naomi Claire krellen she is one of the warmest most lovely people that you can ever meet uh it seems appropriate when discussing today's topic she's the CEO of storycraft lab and then continuing the on the warmth theme we have Megan henschel I met her for the first time in Frankfurt Germany and of course our first meeting include the hugs so Megan is the Strategic lead for the global events division at Google and with that I am bringing them both up thank you so much for joining me today oh my gosh my pleasure I'm so happy to be here so so you're here we are talking about this this topic um belonging is so it's such a big thing and so the I guess the very basic question everyone probably has is what is this type what is the belonging index how did this get started where did this idea begin and so Naomi Megan I'm not sure who wants to answer that first but I don't know do you feel I'm looking for signals in the eyes Naomi do you feel particularly excited uh well you know this is a story actually that Megan and I have told a bunch of times I'm like who who yeah um it actually kind of goes right back to when we started working together uh with storycraft lab had kind of jumped on uh this amazing opportunity to partner with Megan and a group of folks that she had brought together called XI from within Google and we were actually kind of engaged to help with a different topic was evolving techno-social Norms something they're very kind of googly googly area investigation um but as we were working together and doing a lot of audience based research we kept hearing this term come out belonging and whenever people were talking about Community they talked about belonging when they talked about engagement they talked about belonging when they talked about meaning or inclusion or participation it was belonging belonging belonging and it got to the point where Megan just said we we have to stop for a moment and actually go investigate this yeah I oh go ahead Megan yeah just some context on XI for any anybody tuning in who may not be familiar it's um short for the the Google experience Institute and this community was brought together this effort was initiated to really help us better understand in a post-pandemic world how we might leverage events Gathering experiences to support Humanity to add value to our organizations um to even drive Revenue like all of the things that we do right is experienced professionals but Naomi's right belonging kept coming up and the more we study it and the more we learn and the more we experiment with it the more it is undeniable it's almost like a pointillism painting right like every dot we lay on this canvas every person we talk to every time we take the wheel or the index somewhere new this really beautiful picture is emerging that tells us belonging is critical for for thriving and flourishing not only for our organizations but for people um it is it is a bridge between surviving and thriving um so I'm super excited to talk about it and just so grateful for Naomi's partnership and all this work well and so and I I found out you all are working also with David Allison our good friend David Allison with value graphics and so when did David come into the mix for the belonging index and I just I'm trying to think of this sort of evolution of the project and how things how things kind of came together well we've reached a point through discussions and kind of the qualitative conversations and dialogue that we had been having through the XI work where we were starting to discover and pull into a framework these different Pathways or Journeys to belonging um what did those Journeys look like for different people and uh we were connected with David who his company valued graphics is amazing they have this incredible um source of data I mean it's nearly like a hundred sorry a million um a million survey responses worldwide and um just in terms of the pursuit of inclusive dialogue and thinking about your audience in that way it's just an incredible resource he was um just so kind wasn't he Megan he he wanted to get involved and bring um the results that they get on the value Graphics side of things to bear in the belonging conversation yeah I wondered about that because we've had we've had him on Association chat in the past and um and looking at sort of the nuances of what belonging means to different cultures and all of that type of thing I thought well that kind of makes sense how that would come in and I can see how that that would add to what you're doing so we have the wheel of belonging talk to us a little bit about this wheel of belonging uh sure yeah absolutely and and I think we can talk about kind of then how it integrates with their value Graphics because that's kind of like David is is helping us get to the the 2.0 I think uh with with the belonging index um and and that was something that Megan and David really kind of cooked up um but before we kind of brought David in I was really looking a third leg to our store um he uh we were looking as I said about with all of those kind of qualitative conversations and dialogue around belonging we were starting to understand that there were a there were a series of Journeys towards belonging that it was almost like this um sequential progression that an individual experiences over a number of touch points over and uh over a period of time so for experienced designers it kind of leans into the fact that you don't just flip a switch to belonging but you have to be intentional and thoughtful about meeting an individual where they are understanding their goals their needs their hopes desires dreams uh and figuring out how we through the choices that we offer the experiences we design can help move them forward towards that state of belonging right so that was that was where we started to then as you'll see at the wheel of belonging.com distill that into a framework that people can use to understand yeah I think so much of the work that Naomi and I have been partnering on along with lots of other community members within SSI is um Frameworks uh design templates like usable actionable things like a lot of the things that the research is pointing at feel very conceptual because they're not things that we've historically measured they're not things that we've historically aspired to in a tangible way like excited when those are the outcomes right like when we create belonging or we have a really positive emotional uh feedback loop with our attendees but like now we're actually trying to hand people things that help them practically execute so the wheel is um themes and patterns and you know repeat things again and again and again that we've heard from different people because belonging is incredibly personal and it's like you're an intimate situation right and so when we when we started on this journey we were like how could we possibly design for this because it is so personal but we're seeing the same touch points the same moments the same themes pop up again and again and again and so now we have these really amazing paths eight of them right that are Trends their patterns they're things that we might be able to attach tactics to and that sort of I think next steps using David's uh belonging based sort of data poll um to pair that with the wheel and then say okay if belonging for your audience looks like X here are three to five things that you can do as a designer to make sure that you're making them feel seen and considered and that belonging will exist within that experience so can you I love it I love it because automatically what I'm thinking is okay you have to walk me through one of the pathways please talk to me about one of these Pathways and like give me some examples of some of the things like tactics that you use connected to them so can you do that would would one of you mind doing that for me yeah sure um no no worries so um if I I think it was I put in uh I I went to the belonging index it was a link here to um the the beta version of of the index that everybody can test out and what you do first of all is you enter in the geographical region that you're concerned with right okay so um let's say that we're in Asia and then you're going to put your industry vertical in there I think I put in um it was either Finance or farming it was a it was an F and what it gave me was these kind of uh GPS coordinates for what belonging means to that particular group by region and by industry vertical and one of the first uh responses there gives you the three top definitions of belonging uh one of the first ones is I feel like my uh my contributions are valued okay right uh so what we've found on the wheel of belonging is that there is one particular Pathway to belonging called love and appreciation um so you might encounter an individual at the start of their Journey where uh welcoming them is something that begins their Journey towards belonging as a result of the way in which you welcome them into an experience they feel accepted that their presence there is is a positive thing that it has value right um then they're going to feel considered when they see the experience design that has been uh uniquely tailored to their needs and what it means to have them engaged and ultimately they're going to feel valued as a result of that pathway so you kind of pull them through to a place where they feel loved and appreciated as a result of being accepted considered and valued so what we would do is we would take that belonging result from the value graphics that my contributions are valued and we would place it on that love and appreciation pathway and we would say Okay Kiki this is what uh this is one of the top uh definitions of belonging for your audience in this region let's think about how we can build that love and appreciation pathway across all of the touch points of your experience design so it gives you a way to kind of navigate the complexity right and find a lens to focus your work through I love it so so just a quick like I'm just going to roughly apply this really fast so maybe an example would be if I take uh that pathway and thinking along those lines and I'm thinking about an Association group and I am trying to help them feel like they belong and that they're loved and appreciated along the way maybe I found out their favorite treat or their favorite drink and I have that waiting for them when they check into the hotel um that sort of thing a personal note yeah something that's human that says something simple like I am so glad right you are here right specifically that person that I care about them as an individual and it's not some sort of this is not the time to think okay um I'm gonna just cut and paste the same message to everyone we're trying to make them feel yeah I loved and appreciated individually yes love and appreciation is one of my favorite Pathways because I think it's one of the most universal and in a way this this whole journey that we've been on is an ethnographic study around what belonging means to people and how we might not only more deeply understand it but design against it but I actually pulled up the wheel and I found a quote that I love and it's from Erica speed at Forbes and this is something we hear again and again and again from people across all Pathways but this is something so deeply tied to love and appreciation but she said belonging feels like a place where you feel accepted holistically and there's no necessity to code switch felt because you are different you feel the freedom and safety to show up as your most authentic self and I love this because we talk so much about belonging is on Maslow's hierarchy of needs it is a fundamental human motivation it is critical to our success and our ability to flourish as a human but we can never get to self-actualization or being our full authentic selves without belonging we need other people to love and value and appreciate Us in order for us to do that for ourselves it's it's one of the most mainstream social science theories I think you know this is something that I've become so passionate about because who is more uniquely positioned other than a vet and experienced professionals to help cultivate this in the world right we're bringing people together it's such a huge opportunity so it is such an opportunity and I mean this should be front of mind for uh not just event professionals but especially any is anyone who works in associations which is all about bringing people together um whether it's in person at an event or online at an event or through Community what have you um and so why do you think it's so hard I mean why do you think it's it's you're you're doing this because it needs to be done because we still need work in this area why do you think it's so hard for event Professionals for Association Executives to sort of I don't know take the time to to bring in these insights about belonging and and to incorporate those okay I have some strong opinions but mine go ahead controversial um I think I think it's it's systems it's it's organizational systems it's hierarchies it's these arbitrary constructs that we've been existing inside of for really for too long and they tell us that we actually can't be open and transparent and authentic because we're only supposed to be this version of ourselves in any given environment right and that's code switching in and of itself but I don't think it's us I don't think it's actually hard for us I think it's very intuitive for us no mean I've seen it everywhere we've taken this work people come in and you immediately see them like ah they take a breath people hide people have hugged strangers um made friends in an instant right just having these conversations it comes natural to us as human beings to do this it is the systems and the constructs and the rules and the Norms that are the roadblocks here so those are the things that we have to break down but until we open this up and have these conversations more broadly it's gonna be really hard to do that yeah I think the um what I would add on to that you mentioned it I kick in in your prompt their time right take the time to do this uh you know I think that that's change change is difficult it's tough uh and what we all respond to as humans as we've got all of these parameters and uh budgets tightening and timelines tightening is you know in times of stress we revert to the muscle memory of known behaviors right um so I think there's an element of self-awareness where we need to kind of step away from those systems as Megan is talking about that are driving certain and deep-seated reactions forgive ourselves for that and find ways that we can carve out the time and I think that's really why Megan and I and the rest of the XI community is so passionate about helping people with tools and techniques that navigate that complexity because there are things when we're talking about belonging you you can't um simplify it you know to simplify it is to disregard um so many people that have their own unique and complex Journeys but what we can do is come up with tools that help us navigate that and simplify within the processes and the systems that we have to work around um so you know if we can come up with Frameworks and steps that people can look to and this is what we heard a lot at the co-labs right Megan was that folks need they need the first few steps like how do I begin right if I'm going to carve out time within my intensely pressured life process and schedule then I need I need to know you know I can't go off spinning on my own journey of Discovery what are the first three steps that I can take to get me on my way you know and once we're going Kiki we can imagine like what's that welcome moment right how can okay let me go find some people that can be greeted uh you know we can get there but it's it's just kind of knowing that there's the safety of a system right to step into especially when we're doing something new and different well you know I think that the the idea the concept of all of this is so strong and I think the argument for it is so strong I get the why what are the challenges what are the things that are um because every we know every project runs into challenges so um are you running into challenges are there are there are there people who push back and say we don't need it I mean what what are the things that you're running into that maybe you didn't expect or maybe you expected them I don't know I mean so much of this uh work is counter-intuitive to the way we operate especially in like the corporate world and so I think I've definitely experienced some like hackles raised and some friction like whoa whoa this feels like very woo-woo and emotional and we're just trying to deliver business outcomes but I could I'm not going to but I could spit facts and data at you all day about why this matters to business and why you will not get brand loyalty and why you will not retain talent and why you will not be successful as an organization without this um but that it is not terribly intuitive that things like belonging and emotional sentiment and self-actualization support strategic business value outcomes we have to connect those dots as people who are you know neck deep in this work um and so I think that's a lot of what we've been doing as we socialize it it's like hey if you need data and facts to support caring about this and justifying this to your stakeholders we're here to help and we've heard a lot of people say they could really benefit from something like that so I think as an incubator for the industry with XI we really want to start to provide some of that more broadly and help people tell the story and help them get their stakeholders to care about it um but yes definitely there's definitely not everyone gets it right away yeah and I think you know I think that could be you know a big challenge as well like for all of the change makers in an industry it can be tiring to repeat that again and again you know some of the kind of fundamental reasons why over and over so if we can kind of through the incubator work actually come up with that executive summary that um everybody can roll out you know if there's a question about belonging his why like one you know the fact I keep going to is you know if if you can get to a state of belonging or a feeling of belonging an individual is 167 more likely to recommend wow 167 yeah likely to recommend I mean you know just let that sit with the marketing department for a minute and you know that will um that'll really kind of talk to you I mean it feeds directly into net promoter scores and all of those uh other metrics that we uh we probably could dedicate another talk about uh about those but you know I think I think there there is this fundamental set of reasons um so it's just about being able to articulate those clearly and with the energy to do it over and over again if needed I know it's a I mean we're having this conversation uh on a Friday afternoon so talking about energy to like go after these things is it's a little bit challenging in and of itself um what are some of the goals that you have I mean how do you know that you've been successful with this what do you want what okay what are the goals where what do you want to see happen with this project synchronicity I think in my mind we're starting a movement with this work and it's a movement not only to make our industry more successful but it's also to use what we are great at which is bringing people together to support humanity and make create change it within Society because it a lot is broken right now and it is I I think so much of it personally is because of this crisis of belonging yeah um so you know I I I'm I want to start a movement with this and I want this to I want in 10 years for people to wonder why we aren't measure during the sense of belonging at our events and waiting how well we did against something like that um and I think back to your question Kiki about sort of headwinds and obstacles with this work it's not something we can measure and you know if it if you can't measure it it doesn't matter so like that is where we're headed is to be able to tactically execute and then measure how well we executed with something like belonging and you know creating the right emotions like all of these things that um feel very ethereal right now yeah we want to make them uh more pragmatic and real um because I think that speaks to the real power of what we do as Proprietors of experience like that that's the stuff that matters even more than traditional Roi yeah I think you know the process that we're going through right now um it's like much of what we do at XI the development process is a collaborative and open one so as we're going through this exercise now to actually step through and ideate those different kind of tactical recommendations using the belonging index and the wheel of belonging Pathways as that prompt for ideation that's something that anybody can get involved with so you can email us at belonging at storycraftlab.com and we're running a series of office hours for the XI community and anybody that is interested in joining this conversation um over over the course of the summer they'll be on like Tuesdays and Thursdays starting on the 29th of of June um so those will be places where We're actually inviting people to come in with one of the belonging value attributes that they found through David's value Graphics database that they want to kind of work forward and we're going to use it almost like a little focus group exercise to bring people into so at the same time as that ultimately will generate you know a more organized set of recommendations the process can be one that will help Partners start to zoom in to those specific aspects of belonging that they want to deliver and develop in their associations at their events right because I think when once they can start to identify like okay I want to really dig into networking I really want to dig into what that registration experience is I really want to dig into this particular piece with that lens of belonging that will then allow the group to start tracking I did this exercise I rethought This Thread here's the return that I saw right and that's stuff that we're actually hoping through that um really kind of collaborative approach folks will start to contribute to the industry to the community and then we could then we can start building out the argument the business argument for belonging the the test the result right I love I love what you said earlier about talking about um this idea of it being a movement okay um I when I think about associations I think about the massive potential of there being an association for everything right that's what we have but but it's this ability to bring um the best and the brightest in every industry in every field in every science and in everything you can imagine and to think about what would happen if we reached out to those groups and were able to make massive transformation to really mobilize to really do amazing things through every industry I mean it's it's just incredible to think about the potential and this idea of why people are not more engaged and it being connected to belonging or a lack of feeling belonging for those associations I know that there are Association you know leaders that are out there who have been just banging their heads against the wall trying to crack the code to that trying to figure out you know what does engagement really mean it's not necessarily clicks it's not necessarily you know it's not even how many people register for my annual meeting but what is it right and um and so you know how do we move beyond that so that people truly feel like they belong before I let you go today I know we're running up on time um do you have an event that you've been to recently or an association you belong to where you've really felt like you belong and if so what was it oh my goodness is it 2 is it too kind of secular you just the Only Rule is that you have to be honest that's it yeah so I I think the collabs have been that for me um XI days was this incredible event where we brought our exercise Community together Global Community together for the first time in in a Google space in New York City and it was wonderful but I was sort of because that was my event I was like out of my body and not terribly present but we've been running these co-labs um through XI in partnership with Naomi around the world that's how we met at IMAX Kikis we were there running collabs and those conversations regardless of the broader environment and like where those are happening have been such incredible moments of like meaning and connection for me um because we've been talking so much about belonging it just inherently organically exists in those spaces and you know people come up and they say like this was like a really safe space can I come back and hang out later or I didn't really know who my people were at this event this is my first year attending or whatever it might be but like I think I found my people so like I'm gonna be back people were coming back for every single co-lab at IMAX just like that in and of itself is proof that this resonates and that this matters um so I I think the collabs so if people want to reach out they want to get involved I have belonging at storycraftlab.com yes yeah we we have what's the new project.com what should they visit that too yes the new project is um some some work around radical inclusion that we've been doing specifically for nerd diversity and neurodivergent individuals so people who are autistic ADHD OCD dyslexia dyspraxia lots and lots of conditions but we're talking about close to 25 percent of the global population the new project is something we launched out of Exile last year specifically as a love letter to those communities at our events and please check that out um we also have an external yes that this uh website here if you want to learn more about XI if you want to be added to our distribution list for content and products like that's a great place to reach out to okay so XI Dash external at google.com May again Naomi thank you so much for joining me today I know that you have to run off you have very busy schedules but I appreciate you taking the time to talk to me about belonging to talk to Association chat and you I just want you to know you made me feel like I belonged in this conversation I really appreciate feeling like I could be a part of it and talk with you both about it and I will be sending you an email get you signed up for these uh focus groups Kiki you can I love it let me let me sign up send me that email I will all right have a great time thank you can you believe it what phenomenal people I mean I've got to tell you um I just just absolutely love talking to Naomi talking to Megan they both are absolutely phenomenal um and you know I will share the uh details on how to reach them how to get involved with the belonging index the wheel of belonging all of this stuff I mean the XI stuff that's going on can you believe that I need to get more involved so I hope that you learned something today that you feel like you've learned a little bit more about belonging a little bit more about why you should care about these things and how to apply them to your next events and to your associations and with that I hope you continue you asking questions and searching around you every day because as Joseph Campbell once said the cave you fear to enter holds the treasure you seek have a great rest of the week everyone foreign [Music]
Association Chat
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2023-06-23
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdxMDvM3CUM
DONT MISS THIS MIMIC TEAR LIQUID METAL WEAPON - Elden Ring - How To Get Nox Flowing Hammer Guide
so my beautiful people i am back with another hour and ring video and in my quest to find every weapon in the game i come across a weird hammer which is basically made out of the same shiz the mimic theories you know that liquid metal it kind of acts like a hammer a whip it is really bizarre but it's absolutely awesome and i definitely thought i'd share with you guys because like i said my quest to farm every weapon in the game or find of the weapon in the game this is one i miss so i'm pretty sure there will be people out there i've missed this too it's called the knocks flowing hammer and today i showcase all how's it going guys my name is dpg if you enjoyed the video leaving the like google helps out and if you like what you see and want to see more be sure to subscribe okay so that knocks flowing hammer which weapon skill is called the flowing form you can see it's kind of like acts like a a spinning whip slam thing it does take out enemies around you as well it's pretty cool guys it really is so as you can see it scales with strength and that dexterity and attributes required 17 in strength and seven in that dexterity not bad whatsoever guys and like i said it seems to be that kind of forged from the same liquid metal the silver tier helmet is and the mimic theories as well pretty cool guys pretty cool so where do you get this finger actually it's quite simple well it's easily miscible you don't have to find nobody for this it's just found randomly so guys where we are we're at the mimic tier grace point you know the tier bus we're gonna head from here now to get down here guys most people will know this but for those that don't you need to actually gain access to knock on eternal city do this guys by defeating radar the diamond is located over here once you do this you get an amazing cutscene and meteor strikes the earth you come here for hike west and you'll see there's a massive hole in the ground and it allows you to come down to where i'm at here and it's a simple guys just coming this way it's simple we will have to fight the mimic tier bus in the area right now well it's straightforward once you've done that activate that grace point and from here i'll show you exactly where this thing is located so up here guys jump on your horse and follow this path yeah i find this i was like wow i mean there's probably tons of other videos on this weapon but like i said unless you're really locking for it or know about it already you're gonna have no idea this in the game like i i had no idea i come across it and thought what the heck is that and then they use it oh this is cool this is absolutely that's great it really is so come here guys take a sharp left this way let's keep following this path ignore all these ads don't stop to fight them ignore adele hop on there the singing show and come behind her and you want to come down this way oh something shooting milky ass there's a gray set which you may want to activate if you haven't already and then guys you just want to come this way jump off here run and jump there and walk around let me put my light on and walk around here then guys you want to jump off to you right simple as that and then here just jump down and actually collect that silver to your husk from here guys we have to jump down this way and again we have to jump down that way ignore these ads don't worry about them let's run past these run past them all and come down here now come this way careful not to fall off that would be embarrassing and then once you're in this room jump down here and you want to come across this way come through here now through here you'll see there's a room there which we actually don't want to go to today but if you haven't done that already use a stone saw king going there but you want to jump out the window onto this platform just like so and as you can see it looks like you can just drop down but you can't you need to make a running jump so from here just run and jump simple as that they can take out that dude if you want to if you don't want to come up here jump through this window and on this body right there guys will be this weapon and it really is that simple guys and well there we have it this is a weapon that you haven't got you had no idea about you missed come back and get this thing is pretty cool it's pretty unique and it could be one for the future guys if you enjoyed the video leave a like really helps out if you like what i see want to see more adam link be sure to subscribe and hopefully my beauty for people i will see you on that next one you
DPJ
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2022-04-29
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DW4wpHL-D6I
اللحام بالغاز تصنيع الماكينات الثقيلة
if you need welding and cutting solutions for your wind turbine for your pressure vessel oil tanker or pipelines just come to boda boda serves to Fortune Global 500 companies with products including welding come welding rotator positioner and CNC cutting system meanwhile the Shanghai Essen Welding Fair is upcoming be sure to visit our piece both Welkom offshore wind tower and foundation manufacturing boda solutions for offshore wind tower and foundation manufacturing monopile is the most commonly used foundation style for offshore wind turbines today a simple design typically driven into the sea bed or grouted into sockets drilled into rock the monopile supports the wind turbine tower either directly or through a transition piece Moda offshore wind tower and foundation manufacturing solutions shell manufacturing fully integrated column and boom welding and special rollers for efficient long seam and flange welding small section assembly and welding small section building increases the productivity of the full line full section assembly Bota solutions are able to rotate and transport monopoles up to 1,500 tonnes groove machining and outside welding circular milling is integrated into the production line and welding is applied externally to the mill using multi-head platforms plate joining complete production line with conveyor integrated milling and welding on both sides plate prefabrication blasting and cuttings of plates Bota onshore wind tower and foundation manufacturing structures and manufacturing techniques for onshore towers have been established during the last decade and competition in the manufacturing industry has become more and more intense investing in welding and production automation is the only way to maintain profitability Botta innovative solution
Maquina De Soldar automatizaciones de soldadura
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2018-04-22
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SMC by A¸W¸ Tozer:Attributes of God Series 2, The Omnipotence of God
my time to speak on the omnipotence of God I want to read four texts Genesis 17:1 never was 90 years old and mine the Lord appeared to Abram and said unto him I am the Almighty God after 1926 jesus said unto them with God all things are possible Luke 1:37 the angel said with God nothing shall be impossible revelation 19:6 they herded that were the voice of a great multitude and as the voice of many waters this is the voice of mighty thunderings saying Alleluia for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth now out of a shining jewel case of luminous texts many of them thousands of them there are five children for tonight Abraham then call Abram God said I come they all make me good now Lord Jesus said positively all things are possible with God the angel turned it round and said it natively nothing shall be impossible with God then the voice of the great multitude hallelujah for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth now there's a bamboo stick on the omnipotence of God I suppose thing to do would be to defy in immittance I know that mobs don't come the area when you do that but there are always enough sincere earnest God hungry people to give any man a good hearing we will talk about these good things so I want to talk a little about omnipotence point out that by definition it means potent comes of course on new potent meaning potent all om ni meaning all and potent meaning a powerful able to do and to have power and then on the potent omnipotent means to be able to do all and to have all power there is a romance of word somebody I think wrote a book by that name but if you fall in love with words you'll never have you'll never be bored again as long as you live that is not by yourself I admit that there are people who are bores and they would bore you if you're in your coffin but you'll never be bored by yourself because you can always think about a big word and that will help you well that's what the word PO can mean if only but it means although potent it means having a potency all the potency there is we talk about protein meaning powerful we talk about about the omnipotent omnipotent and then we come to a second word and that is the word Almighty which is also here Almighty now that means exactly the same thing is omnipotent only that it's from the anglo-saxon and omnipotent of you knows from the Latin and I have noted that in the Bible the word Almighty used 56 times of God and it never used the anybody else but God in our English Bible the word omnipotent is only used once and that is that refers to God and in the English Bible I repeat the word old ladies use 56 times and it's never used of anybody else but God and there's a reason for this almighty you know means having an infinite and absolute plenitude of power and when you use the words infinite and absolute you can only be talking about one person and that is God there's only one infinite because infinite may mean without limit and it's impossible that there should be two beings in the universe without limit so there being only one you're referring to God so Almighty is having an infant in absolute plenitude of power and you know that philosophy has to admit this and human reason as little as I think of it I rewrote the read or review of a book of mine the other day written by a doctor of philosophy and he was in favor of it but he's not holy so he said the number of things that I was that was against scholarship which I am NOT I'm just against big wins and that's all I'm just against fellows whose and heads are inflated I'm not against a real scholar such as Augustine or fault or Luther or Wesley but I'm just against men who think they're scholars but reason has to come down and kneel and declare that God is omnipotent now if you can't prove a thing if the thing they don't know if they accept by reason you don't have it if you have it by revelation the holy men of God speakers are moved by the Holy Ghost then you have it but when once you have it by revelation then reason sometimes is forced to come and kneel down and say the Lord dominant andrina and admit that it's true so I give you three propositions briefly here one of them is proposition one that God has power now that God has power is declared of course everybody know that David said I heard once that God has power and twice I heard that power belongs them to God and the man Paul one of the greatest intellects the world ever knew said this for the invisible things of God from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead you look at the pastori heavens above and see the eternal power of God there God's power and Godhead are found there we used to sing a song in some places they still sing it this spacious from a mental mahai and all the blue ethereal sky the spangled heavens are shining frame their great original proclaim and we read son from day to day as his creator's power display and publishers in every land the work of an almighty hand as soon as the evening shades prevail the moon takes up the wondrous tale and nightly to the listening earth repeats the story of her birth while all the stars around are burning all the planets in their turn confirm the tidings as their own and spread the truth from pole to pole in reasons here they all rejoice a matter for that glorious voice forever singing as they shine the hand that made it is divine so the god has power and whatever God has it without limits God has power and God's powers without limit therefore God is omnipotence since he has power and since God has no limits since God is absolute what ever touches God or God touches is absolute and therefore God's power is infinite and God is Almighty well we come to the omnipotence of God proposition 2 is that God is the source of all the power there is there isn't any power anywhere that God isn't the source of it whether it be the power of intellect the power of spirit the power of soul or the the power of of dynamite or the power of the storm or the power of magnetic attraction wherever there is any power at all God is the author of it and the source of anything has to be as great or greater than that which flows out of it isn't that so if you pour 1/4 of something say 4 to milk out of the can that can has to be equal to that quart of milk it's got to be anything that comes out of the can has to be as big as the can and the can or the can has to be as big as I'd which comes out of it what I'm trying to say and it can be very much larger who can have your going to have a can with several gallons and only pour a quart of anything out of but the source has to be as big or larger than that which comes out of it so all the power there is came from God all the power there is and therefore God's power must be equal to all the power there is and all the power there is must mean all power all potency all might and God that he'd again equal to that or greater than that and then proposition 3 is that God delegates power to his creation but he never relinquishes anything of his essential perfections God gives power but he doesn't give it away when God gives power to an archangel he still retains that power God can't give anything of himself away and when God gives power to to the son he gives he keeps that power when God pours power upon a man he still keeps that power God can't relinquish anything of his power because if he relinquished his power he would be less powerful than he was before and if he were less powerful and it was before he would not be perfect for perfection means that he has to have all power I don't know whether you followed me on that in and you come on shake your head real hard and see whether we can get the wheels turning but that's a proposition and Abadi can see that God can't give away his power now when when they say there's a battery the battery has so many volts in it so much power in it then is that slowly given away the battery gets weaker weaker you'd found that out of a cold morning sometimes when you go out and step on the start then there's there's a discouraged moan from down there somewhere but the thing won't turn over you have custody or battery and your battery has failure it has used up its power it has given it away it has relinquished that so that it little by little it has become less than it was before when God gives power to Archangels and angels and redeemed men and mountains and seas and stars and planets he doesn't relinquish anything if he did he would be less than he was before and God batteries would run down the same as your battery in your car runs down so everything comes out from God and returns to God again and the great god almighty that will rain that omnipotent God that will reign out under in the coming days that their prophet tells us about when the Lord God omnipotent reigneth he has now all the same amount of power that he had when he made the heaven and the earth and called the stars into being and he will never have any less power than he has now and he will never have any more since he has all the power there is now that is the God we serve my brothers and sisters that is it God we serve therefore I cannot for the life of me see any reason in the world why anybody should be fearful and timid and say I I don't I'm I'm afraid I can't make it I'm afraid God can't take me God can keep the stars in their courses and God can keep the planets in their orbit and God can keep his great heaven yonder and God can keep all his vast display of might everywhere throughout his universe surely God can keep you surely God can keep you it's like a play for somewhere on the seat in a in the jetter airplane moaning and tumbling for fear that plane can't carry its weight can't carry its weight that thing weighs several tons and it has several tons of people on it and several more tons of baggage on it and one little fly wings so much there isn't a pair of skills anywhere in Toronto probably outside of the laboratory that could even weigh the little guy and yet we can imagine him sitting there flubbing his little wings and saying I'm just afraid this plane won't hold me course it'll hold you up I wouldn't want to hold up a fly wouldn't want to be caught dead doing it but raising it for an illustration than saying that say is that the plane will hold up the fly all right and so the great God Almighty when he stretches his broad wings there and moves out upon the wings of the wind gotta keep you my friend he'll keep you you turn yourself over to him you keep you and you'll hold you and nothing can keep nothing can destroy you so you see there God contains and continuous sustains and continues to sustain all things that there are opposed I as power it says by the word of his power and so it perpetuates and holes together it is God that holds thing all things together you ever wonder why you don't cave in from 14 pounds of pressure on every square into your body have you ever wondered why you don't blow up from internal pressure some of you do and then you you say it's your nervous ancestors that made to act like that when actually always happened you've blown up but but I mean it literally why don't you well I don't we blew up because the Great God Almighty has spoken his power into his universe and everything runs according to that power now what about the laws of nature I'm sure somebody will come to me and say or at least you'll think if you're too courteous to come and say it you will say now wait a minute that preacher said that all the power there is God has it and that it's all in God and that nothing leaves God then what about the law nature well let's look at that word the law of nature is the businessman says let's kick it around a little while I like that when they get together in on smoke and eat spam and sweet potatoes and Butler gets up at the head of the table and said now I've got a proposition to kick around so let us kick around this little proposition here about law what is law anyway well laws a word of two meanings at least two meanings it's an external rule imposed by Authority if you don't know it if you don't think so try parking buy water plug some time and go whistling off to Eton's or somewhere and when you come back you will go whistling off to pick up your car or at least to tell the police why you did it there's a law imposed by Authority and it has such a such a rule a rule against murder against us halls and against robbery all the laws that we make they make them in Ottawa I wonder what they do with all the laws they turn out not on Washington not the laws you know but a lot of them thank God we don't know one-third of number one ten thousand so we can live we knew what all they were we just die worrying about it then you know they turn outlaws of all kinds and those are the laws imposed by authority from the outside they have what they call sanctions you either do it or else and the or else part is what the judge says that you're supposed to suffer you use your sentence to fine or you're put in jail or something else well now that's one kind of law then there's another way the word law is used and that isn't properly used at all scientists use it and philosophers use it and we use it generally but it's not properly a law it's the path god power and wisdom take through creation and that's that's what we call the law of nature's the way things are an eagle lays an egg and matches it niche an eagle instead of a mud turtle or a frog and we call that the law of nature no they law there's I know anything about nobody passed that law anywhere in any Parliament or Congress that's just they're just that's the way it is if an eagle is the eggs that will hatch an eagle but if a barnyard spectravideo is it it will hatch out another barnyard spectral buddy that's that's the way nature operates but there's no law that I know any place that says it's got to be like that it's phenomenon rather than a law take the law or we call it an electromagnetic field or the law of gravitation or the law of light or the law of sound or the law of the atoms we say their law nobody put any law there just the way God's power runs through his creation God moves through his universe a free God moving through in creation and the patty-cakes we call the laws of nature that's the way God works and science studies those laws and these phenomenon phenomena studies them and all practical scientists base scientists based upon them of course two things all scientists know and one is a uniformity of these phenomena they never change from year to year from century to century or from millennium to millennium they never change they're always the same that is God always acted the same way all the time and that's one reason I can sleep comfortably at night that's one reason why I can live in peace and I believe die in peace because I serve God was always the same and acts according to himself with uniformity always and so he takes the same path through the universe at all times and the resultant ability to predict that path is what scientists called the law of nature so we can have navigation and engineering I heard of the sailor one time it was told by somebody in authority on shipboard now you keep they keep that starry on there just a little off the port bow and a couple hours later that officer came back and they were way off course and he said that I told you to keep the star off the port bow he said we passed that star along well the the the Navigator if the star could be passed and if there were such a thing as the laws of God not being uniform if God would work one way they suppose that God where were whimsical and the Sun would come up in the east on Wednesday and then somebody would get up on Thursday morning and say mama look where the Sun isn't it be coming up from the south and in on Saturday morning about seven o'clock that yellow ball would come up from the north we'd say what's happened in the world is a world gone drunk because it's the Sun is rising and setting the opposite to what it usually does but you don't need to expect that God doesn't work that way the great God who made the heaven in the earth works according according to uniform laws or to the phenomena of the universe I think he always takes the same path through his universe and you can always predict where God will be and always know how it is with God and that's why the Word of God stands secure and that's why when you meet certain conditions you can always be sure that there will be certain or results because God is always taking that path through his Bible always going by the same Road through the scriptures always God never goes backtrack circles around or detours but always goes the same way all the time that is when God makes a promise God can keep that promise if the promise is over here and you're over there it will be a dead promise but if you'll come over where it is it will be a lie of promise if your God makes a promise and puts conditions and you don't meet conditions but plead the promise nothing will happen you can pray for a lifetime and nothing will happen but if you will meet the conditions and go where God is you'll find God right there all the time that's the way it works that's right you can have faith in God and know absolutely that God is there now engineering and astronomy and chemistry and navigation and all else can be because the laws of nature as we say the phenomena are always predictable and uniform and science studies these in one color studies them and a we says that it's pure science he doesn't care what you're going to do with it he's going to split the atom and he doesn't care what you do it the thing after its split so then there comes along the applied scientist and he takes the work of the of the pure scientist abstract scientist and he applies it either for a bomb to blow up a city or for an engine for unship does making a difference to the cure scientist that is objectively he should not care he's simply finding out where God moves through his universe he doesn't always call it God I suppose usually he doesn't he calls it laws and said that's the way the laws are but we who are God's children say that's the way God West that's the way God's dealings on the way he does things in his universe religion goes back of science and goes further in and further down and further up further on he says I'm not stopping with the laws of nature the phenomena the nature of the path of God through his material universe but I'm going back to God himself back to the source of it all to the cause of it all to the master of these phenomena so religion Christianity Christ by the Holy Ghost takes us back now to that vast mysterium tremendum that mysterious wonder that fills his universe know people like to use big words and I suppose if there's a more horrendous expression that I've ever heard was heard was used by the philosopher and the Christian tillage in rudolph otto german philosopher he referred to the god in his world as being the absolute gigantic never-resting active world stress i thought the man left open his mouth to say that with an absolute gigantic never-resting active world stress well now what I'd like to be able to tell you is that this world stress once said I am that I am and took personality and said I'm rather do active gigantic undulating ever moving well stress but I am I am and that is my name forever and that's my memorial unto all generation and the son of that gigantic never-resting undulating active world test once said when you pray say our Father which art in heaven hallowed be thy name here is a man and he sits on throne and inhabits a palace and wears a crown and Arobin holds a one and they call him your majesty and he's called a plenipotentiary and a potentate there we have that word potent again adding power potent age is a tapeless power you know and he has all that and so he's called a plenipotentiary and a potent taking me your majesty and the king but he has a little boy or girl out back and when they see him they run to him and yell daddy I remember when the present Queen Elizabeth was growing up I followed her since she was a wee little talk journal followed her up and the pictures and magazines and papers hauled her all the way up to her first pair of stockings and ran long after where she is now pictured in the papers about it and I remember hearing one time about dignified although kind they all George the fifth her father her grandfather at one time where they were about the house there somewhere or whatever they call it and the old king left the door open and little Elizabeth turned to him and said John Paul go towards that door and the King of England went and closes the door at the voice of a little girl where it is you know you he couldn't pull in that pose and taking center potential it Elizabeth he was just again his granddaughter and so no matter how mighty this and philosophers may want to call it judging what awful terms they want to apply to the power of the rules is young fsq and I can say our Father which art in heaven hallowed be thy name and we can come and get intimate with God and God loves it God loves it they said that's the old dignified King smiled and went and closed the door and God Almighty's like that he loves to have his people know that in spite of his greatness his omnipotence in his power he still said our Father which art in heaven and said when you pray say our Father which art in heaven he says he's a father to the fatherless and he's a husband to the widow and that that he is himself knows all our our troubles and that he makes our bed in our sickness have you ever read that in the scripture this mighty great God who fills heaven and earth makes all our bed and our sickness he said who is that to mix the business lose a sheep and turns a pillow to keep it cool and gives your life when you're sick it's Bob who does it if you only knew it he is that God and so that world stress said I am and said when you pray say our Father God everywhere joyously everywhere joyfully God calls himself this now I I read live one time I memorized it and I want to I want to pass it on to you because I think it's well worth you hearing this was this was a scholar preacher who preached this sermon intersect like this by James Weldon Johnson who was a great colored poet he said that God stepped out on space and he looked around and said I'm lonely I'll make me a world and as far as the eye of God could see darkness covered everything blacker than a hundred Midnight's down the cypress swamp then God smiled in the light broke and the darkness rolled up on one side and the light stood shining on the other then God took the light that he had made and he put it in his hands and you're all the light around in his hand till he made the Sun and then he flung a sum against the blazing in the heavens and the light was left from making the Sun God gathered it up in his hand into a shining ball and he flung it against the darkness strangling the night with the moon and the stars then down between the darkness and the light got hurled the world and God said that's good and God Himself stepped down and the Sun was on his right hand and the moon was on his left in the stars were clustered about his head and the earth was under a season and God walked and where he trod the footsteps followed the valleys out and bold the mountains up and he stopped and looked and saw that the earth was hot and barren so God stepped over the edge of the world about the seven seas and the about his eyes and the lightning flash we his hands and the thunder rolled and the waters above the earth came down the cooling water came down and the green grass sprouted and the little red flowers appeared and the pine trees pointed their finger to the sky and the oak spread out these arms in the lake cuddle down in the hollow of the ground the river ran down to the sea and God smiled again in the rainbow appeared and curled itself around his shoulders then God raised his arm and he laid his hand over the sea and over the land and he said bring forth bringing for quicker than God could drop his hand pictures and files and beasts and birds swam the rivers and the seas roamed the forest in the woods and spit the air with their wings and God said that's good and God walked around and God looked around and all that it made he looked at his son and he looked at his boon and he looked at his little stars looked at his world with all its living things and God said I'm lonely still then God sat down on the side of the hill by a deep wide river he sat down and God thought and thought till he thought I'll make me a man up from the bed of the river God scooped the clay and I up by the bank of the river he kneeled down and there the Great God Almighty who lit the Sun and fix it in the sky who flung the Stars to the most far corner of the night round of the earth in the middle of his hand this Great God like a mammy bending over her baby kneeled down in the dust toiling over a lump of clay till he shaped it in his own image then into it he blew the breath of life and man became a living soul amen amen I don't know what you think of that but I love it that Clarence Darian all was a was an atheistic American lawyer and he said that the only fundamentalist thing he liked that's fundamentally to know that that's the way this brother believed God made the heaven and the earth well maybe he was a little bit materialistic in his viewpoint but God got it here nevertheless and it's all around about this and we had a good natured argument coming down with rounding out there was the moon it has been showing 20 minutes before but it was the moon alright it's up there God set it up there and he set the Sun down yonder and in between the two we made the earth and spangled the heavens with the stars and God made all this we go back we go back of laws we go back of science we go back of matter we go back to the God Himself and Christianity calls you to the knowledge of this God himself this is eternal life that you might know God and Jesus Christ to me a sense this is eternal life you can know God himself and salvation means the knowledge of God himself I don't know the artist don't know the artwork I know the artist I happen as you know to be loved or vigilant I don't know Beethoven but I know Beethoven's works somewhat a little bit it would have been much better I supposed to know the man himself they say it was pretty rough customer but then he was a genius powered above the geniuses of generations well it would have been wonderful to know him I just listened today while we had our dinner who the Sonata the fifteen sonata by Beethoven being played and this beautiful beautiful but I suppose it would been more wonderful if I could have shaken hands with the great Beethoven and said I considered an honor to shake your hand sir you are you I consider you one of the greatest composers that ever lived genius did you shake in his great head and walked away but I just could have said and told my grandchildren and their grandchildren would have heard about it my great grandfather shook hands with Beethoven would have been wonderful so with so with Michelangelo greatest artists of his day the greatest sculptor of his day the greatest poet of his day I could have shaken hands with Michelangelo or if I could sit down and eaten with him and sup with him and talk with him the need have called me by my first name I'd have called him by his first name I'd have introduced into my friends and said I'd like to meet Ron Delica I'd like to have you meet the great Michelangelo that would have been better than knowing his worse I have seen his tremendous piece of sculpture called Moses that awful figure all that mighty man but it would have been better if I could have seen the man himself so let men turn their telescopes on the heavens and their microscopes on the molecules that then probe and search and tabulate name and find and discover and I dare say to them I'd like to tell you something I know the one who made all this I'm personally acquainted with the one who made it what about the galaxies Reverend what about the Milky Way under don't you know are they just I know what it is much good I just read about them you did I would say to him I know it is it's galaxies so far away that you can't see them so they blur like looking at a city a long way off you see a blur when you get closer you see the lights that's what the Milky Way is you know I know the one who put the Milky Way there I know the one who put the ocean where it is and said this is where you are and not one step product the ocean has never dared move out of its banks so we know God for himself God the Father Almighty maker of heaven and earth and Jesus Christ is only Son our Lord that's why I can't understand why the churches the gospel churches in our days are such such a bunch of plain children jesus said so such as we are he said there you don't like the way I do we said you you're like children playing in the marketplace especially decided to play a funeral and you all sit and cry and we walk by and pay no attention to you and you don't like it because we don't try with you then you're going to play dancing so you pipe a tune and we're busy and we don't pay any attention to you and you go on typing it too and then you get mad because we don't stop and dance so do little children playing in the marketplaces we're grown up we have serious minded people and we got something to do and we can't stop and turn around and play Church or play similar play dance with you every time you get a notion so said Jesus and effect to the people of his day and the gospel churches are like children in the marketplaces over the last 50 years they've become progressively less more and more like children in the marketplaces they want to pipe one day and dance another day and play children next day and play Church the next day I refuse to play Church absolutely refuse to play Church I believe in fate God Almighty who made all this has called me there I dare to call him my own he has been to call me his beloved his danger say that you're accepted in the beloved he's deigned and stooped to say and we're his children how much faster and bigger is it always if we were only as big inside as we are outside used to say about a certain automobile it was bigger inside than outside I don't believe it but they said that it was the Dodge said bigger in size it is outside I believe that all of God's children ought to be infinitely bigger inside than outside I think that you and I ought to live high up yonder somebody said it was on cloud nine there's a night after the service well that's where we belong but our feet ought to be on the earth it ought to come down and have a good hard core of Earth a reality in us throughout this stay down here and play in the marketplaces you ought to search by the power of God the cleansing blood of the Lamb get to know the Great God Almighty but I wandered from my sermon I got to come back around and say what does all this mean to us now what does it mean that God Almighty has all the power there is well it means that God has ability always to do anything everything he wills to do you see nothing is harder or easier with God's hard and easy can't apply to God because God has all however there is hard or easy applies to me suppose I have 100 units of power now we'll just break it down say this tour I had 100 units power of the guide at 9:00 and 7h but we call it 100 for the sake of the illustration 100 units of power all right you set a task for me and it uses up 25 units all right I got 75 left you said a test for me that uses up 50 units and I have 50 left I can still do it but I don't like it set of tasks for me to take 75 and I'm straining set of tests for me that takes 80 and I only have 20 left and I'm really exhausted set a task for me that has 95 and I've only got 5 points left and I'm ready to go to bed and rest up because I'm using up my units of power but has God limited is God limited to so many units so that God uses up his power God makes the world menthols exhausted ensues and that took everything out of me but tons of silly business is that that anything took anything out of God God who has all the power there is can make a Sun in the star and a galaxy as easily as you can lift a Robin off the neck God can do anything because anything as easily as he can do anything nor our faith or our unbelief rather than our faith really our unbelief we hesitate to ask God to do hard things because we figure that God can't do the hard ones but if we're there easy we ask God to do them we have a headache we say Oh God heal my headache but if we if we have a heart condition we don't ask the Lord about that because that's too hard for the Lord what a shame that we make it hard things for God nothing's hard for God nothing whatsoever nothing no God's wisdom and power he's able to do anything as easily as he's able to do anything else men told me one time that he had two diseases one of them was critical and might prove fatal and the other was chronic and they just have to live with it so he went was prayed for for healing and now this sounds silly and the rather humorous but it actually happened he told me seriously he said you know what happened he said I was healed of the dangerous one but I still had the other one he couldn't he couldn't summon I'll feel that God could electronics me Oh God have had a tool on even you can do it that's no way to look at God my brother God can do anything anything at all you say oh you knew how my life is tangled up God can untangle your life just as easily as you can do anything else because he has all the power there is and all the wisdom there is there are two songs and one says in all our makers grand designs omnipotence with wisdom shines the other is a colored song written by or at least sung by the colored people maybe I told this before you've read it somewhere but it's true there was a Presbyterian preacher by the name of Albert D Simpson a Canadian from out in the eastern part of Canada and said Rhode Island and he was down in the States at that time it was a very great Presbyterian preacher one of the great orators of his time great preacher him from everywhere to hear that mighty Canadian pour out his eloquence but he began to get sick he got sicker and sicker and he was only about thirty six or seven he got worse and worse and down he went worse and worse until he said many a time I was called upon to have a funeral and I uttered on the edge of the grave out pronouncing the last rites of the object we had over the bed not knowing but what I would tumble in myself into the grave and finally in the deep discouragement he did himself gave it all up and said I can't go on I cannot have to quit the ministry even though he was a highly successful minister one day he took a long walk thank God for sometimes with you long walk she took a long walk out into the woods somewhere I think it's a Saratoga Springs New York I remember he came on the colored camp meeting and there in the colored camp meeting where the courts had two Colored boys up there singing and they were singing a kind of round affair you know in jingling sounds it just goes on and on and on and on you know they have to click for lack of time no place to NZ songs and this one had this for a course nothing is too hard for Jesus no man can work like him well there of that educated cultured preacher you know would one of these when he called surplices I remember one brother got up and said we never have to worry about surf lessons in our church we have never known I figure to have any but the pastor is in some of these churches you know aware of them and he had one and he was a dignified fellow but all that dignity went out of him and he listened to these four colored boys seeing no man can work like him nothing is too hard for Jesus he fell on his knees and said Lord if nothing is too hard to leave then I'll cast deliver me deliver me now Lord there among the pine-trees he said with the tall peaks of the pine tree for the spires of this Cathedral under the sky above he nothing gave himself over to the Lord and was instantaneously and perfectly delivered he said to prove it I was well the next act claim the moment literally claim the mountain and looks done he lived about 36 years after that worked like a dog worked like a slave worked so hard that he put machine everybody around him never took a vacation once it took a vacation and went away for a few days and hurried back home to rest up Great God Almighty had done something for him come in to enlighten and form him because he dared believe now do you see my brethren at these tops on that rebuke of God all right I have retired theology that only scholar can get older the truths for you and me realities for us now I can stand before you now and say what's your trouble what's your trouble that mean wise you can't live with all right nothing is too hard for Jesus got a mean husband to treat you because dog nothing's too hard for Jesus got a boss at the shop that you prayed you just will have a breakdown God will handle that boss that's some troubles Gus got a temper got a temper you can't control God does he care that if you let him if you want him to there isn't anything God won't handle risen the situation that God can't take care of because in all our makers grand designs omnipotence with wisdom shines and nothing is too hard for Jesus and no man can work like him so an effortless power effortless power I say because effort means I'm expending energy but when God works he doesn't expend energy he is energy so an effortless power God did and his doing his redeeming work incarnation we standing with all and speak in hushed tones say how could it be that the Great God Almighty could be conceived in the womb of a virgin I don't know how it could be I know that the great God who is omnipotent the Great God Almighty could do it if you wanted to do it I heard about a Scotsman I was walking down the street he heard two men walking ahead of them they were learning fellows and they didn't believe that Jonah had been swallowed by the whale and they didn't believe that Balaam's ass had spoken with man's voice The Scotsman couldn't stand it any longer and he what happened courteously tapped one of them on the shoulder and he said long if you will make a donkey I'll make him talk and if God can make there don't be God can make him talk and if God to make the fail God can may make him able to swallow Jonah and if God can create you God can take care of you and yours God can make your soul God can send your souls so the Incarnation was easy for God hard for us to understand the mystery of godliness but not hard for God atonement Jesus died in the darkness under on that cross to tell all the world don't try to understand you can't understand somebody wrote a book about the chemistry and blood I think it's wretched I know no more about how the blood of Jesus Christ can atone for sins and I know what God's nature's life I only know it does I only know that when he died to atone and rose that it's home I know it an order I'm reconciled to God through the blood of the Lamb and that's all I know and that's enough and I don't expect to know any more while the ages roll and I don't have to I know God can do it man oh when God raised his son from the dead he could do that man Oh God can raise you from the dead never stop to think about the resurrection what a hard thing it is to think about all these people that lie on this North American continent way back to the cave builders and to the mound builders long before white man was ever on these shores all of them lies somewhere sleeping in Moundsville West Virginia there's a mound bigger bigger than this church made up of the grave the people that have died generations ago how's God gonna find all that dust I don't know that how is God going to find the dust of a man who has been cremated and his ashes sprinkled on the flowing stream or dropped out of an airplanes and sprinkled is like dust over the oceans I don't know that but I don't have to know I put my hand in God's and God takes my hand and holds it heart and says now boy you just come along and keep happy and I'll take care of everything I can make the creation and I can keep it and I can bring about incarnation and I can bring about atonement and I can bring about resurrection and I can bring about your resurrection so I'm not worrying I can't visualize my resurrection but I can believe it amen so did with forgiveness and cleansing of habits cleansing from sin and the breaking of habits that's sin that has been on you so long that ugly scene you hated so bad and it's been there so long and you wish you were free and you just can't have the courage to believe I appeal to you tonight there to believe that the Lord God omnipotent lives and with him nothing shall be impossible he has all the power there is your nothing nothing compared with the great things that God did and yet God does that as easily he does this God pardons your sin and cleanses your spirit gives you his nature just with justice Grady he makes the heaven in the earth because God is God God can deliver you from temper and pride and fear and hate and all other disease of the soul you'll only trust me now there have been every night some who have been coming talked with me and I've prayed with them and one man nimma grant the Kenneth 5 year seven years has been here Roman Catholics never attend becoming a research over the last few Sunday's classify Sunday night I talked with me his request he told me he thought something had happened he thought something at had oh he says changes changed he was talking like a born again man he didn't know the theology but he was talking like a born again man he said now next my wife worried about my wife some friend who knew this family told me that the wife said she was never happy here in her entire life than that her husband has found Christ God's doing these things doing it his way you need help I'll be glad to pray with you tonight and talk with you out here either way this way downstairs or through the back but then into the chapel over here we've talked it over after we have sung while we're singing for number is 284 284 [Music]
The Bible-smith Project
UCIePeL-A46WHIOdC2Svzaqw
2020-04-24
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The speech that sealed John F. Kennedy's fate? | www.kla.tv/en | April 22, 2017
i'm zeebo na sponsee snap clear not so not i known sites in april 27 1961 john f kennedy gave an extraordinary speech in new york to the most important newspaper publishers about a great threat he spoke about the serious danger that an announced need for increased security will be used to extend its meaning to the limits of official censorship in secrecy and this because of a monolithic meaning unified and ruthless conspiracy which is being opposed all over the world he asked the newspapers to alert the American people and to inform them about everything without restriction you've probably never heard of this speech despite having read anything about it in the mainstream press the content of the speech was so highly explosive that it most likely set the course for Kennedy's deadly fate on November 22nd 1963 in Dallas listen now to Kennedy's speech which might have caused his fate and which has not lost any of its explosiveness and timelessness the very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and open society and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies to secret oaths and to secret proceedings we decided long ago that the dangers of excessive and unwarranted concealment of pertinent facts far outweigh the dangers which are cited to justify it even today there is little value in ensuring the survival of our nation if our traditions do not survive with it and there is very grave danger that an announced need for increased security will be seized upon by those anxious to expand its meaning to the very limits of official censorship and concealment that I do not intend to permit to the extent that it's in my control and no official of my administration whether his rank is higher low civilian or military should interpret my words here tonight as an excuse to sense of the news to stifle dissent to cover up our mistakes or to withhold from the press and the public the facts they deserve to know but I do ask every publisher every editor and every newsman in the nation to re-examine his own standards and to recognize the nature of our country's peril it requires a change in outlook a change in tactics a change in missions by the government by the people by every businessman or labor leader and by every newspaper for we are opposed around the world by a monolithic and ruthless conspiracy that relies primarily on covet means for expanding its sphere of influence on infiltration instead of invasion on subversion instead of Elections on intimidation instead of free choice on guerrillas by night instead of armies by day it is a system which has conscripted vast human and material resources into the building of a tightly knit highly efficient machine that combines military diplomatic intelligence economic scientific and political operations its preparations are concealed not published its mistakes of buried not headlined it's dissenters are silenced not praised no expenditure is questioned no rumor is printed no secret is revealed it conducts the cold war in short with a wartime discipline no democracy would ever hope or wish to match I am NOT asking your newspapers to support an administration but I am asking your help and the tremendous task of informing and alerting the American people for I have complete confidence and the response and dedication of our citizens whenever they are fully informed I not only could not stifle controversy among your readers I welcome it this administration intends to be candid about its errors or as a wise man once said an era doesn't become a mistake until you refuse to correct it we intend to accept full responsibility for our errors and we expect you to point them out when we missed them without debate without criticism no administration and no country can succeed and no Republican survive that is why the athenian lawmaker Sola decreed it a crime for any citizen to shrink from controversy and that is why our press was protected by the First Amendment the only business in America specifically protected by the Constitution not primarily to amuse and entertain not to emphasize the trivial and the sentimental not to simply give the public what it wants but to inform to arouse to reflect the state are dangers and our opportunities to indicate our crises and our choices to lead mold educate and sometimes even anger public opinion this means greater coverage and analysis of international news for it is no longer far away and foreign but close at hand and local it means greater attention to improved understanding of the news as well as improved transmission and it means finally the government at all levels must meet its obligation to provide you with the fullest possible information outside the narrowest limits of national security and so it is to the printing press to the recorder of man's deeds the keeper of his conscience The Courier of his news that we look for strength and assistance confident that with your help man will be what he was born to be free and independent
Klagemauer TV - English
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2017-04-22
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CQOp5w8tiM4
DCMI 2022- DCMI Community updates
and welcome everybody to uh the session 19 of dcmi 2022 which is the community updates uh I'm Aleister McDonald from the University of Edinburgh where I'm the metadata and University collections facility manager and I'm also the current chair of the dcmi governing board um so what our session uh today will consist of it's a series of short presentations from dcmi institutional members and working groups and this follows on from the 2021 members Forum which showcased the work of our institutional Regional members we have presenters from East Asia the Americas in Europe reflecting the international nature of the dcmi community we'll have six short presentations in this session which will last 90 minutes and it's also an open session so it's not just open to conference delegates and all can um can attempt uh what we'll do is we'll have all the presentations and then general questions at the end so if you have any questions that occur to you uh during a presentation please put them in the chat along with who you would like them addressed to or at the end of the presentations just raise your hand if you'd like to speak and ask a question so as I say we'll have six uh presentations and it's again it's reflecting the work of the institutions and the working groups bcmi so our first presentation uh this is pre-recorded as you are is unable to make it uh is uh on the progress by the work of the scholarly resources application profile uh yuha Carla is a senior advisor at the National Library of Finland where he has over 20 years experience in standards related work his involvement with dcmi began the second doubling core conference in 1996. you her co-chairs the dcmi scholarly resources application profile working group with his colleague ozma sumanan who is a member of the dcmi governing board and as I say his presentation will today be recorded so um if somebody can help like that okay foreign [Music] advisor in the National Library of Finland it's my pleasure to tell you a little bit about the school resources application profile and let me stop a presentation um the aim of the working group is to improve doubling comma the data terms by adding terms with which to describe scholarly resources with which remain things like doctoral dissertations Master's thesis scientific articles Etc um this kind of resources are already described using doubling core but universities and other research institutions need a non-standard extensions to the metadata terms to do this and these extensions reduce semantic interoperability and make a metadata exchange interpretation more complicated and also maintaining these extensions requires doctor getting default this working group was established back in 2021 by these a governing board and the decision of the board was based on a proposal made by the National Library of Finland and we used two existing specifications on from UConn United Kingdom office of Library networking and then another one from the National Library of Finland to write the proposal The Finnish guidelines document is unfortunately only available finish uh my colleague osmosworman and myself are co-chairs of this working group that has a fairly extensive website in GitHub containing the latest profile raft meeting minutes and documentation about the issues that we have discussed we have had 17 meetings so far and we have discussed very diverse set of problems like how to express affiliations how to express contributors and their roles and so on so forth we have made some generic decisions concerning the profile one is that some of the metadata terms that we create will be generic for the CMI metadata terms and the date lost is an example of this and then some other terms are specific to strap application profile like a date available as public craft we also need to alter semantics of some dcmi terms access rights is example of this because we have to specify access rights in the context of repositories we also need a syntactical devices which haven't existed in the past like how do we connect the creators with the affiliations in various doubling core syntaxes date is an interesting area in four scholar resources because it is often important to clarify when a certain research finding was first published and in which form so we have decided to propose State lost and date missing in order to make room for tombstones of Publications that have been retracted or which have for some other reason on missing but then we also have plenty of dates to cover different stages of publication process from date available as public crafts to A Date Update here uh roles we need to specify a lot of roles for various kind of contributors and also to decide whether certain agents are contributors or something more fundamental and we have decided to propose the usage of Library of Congress relate or terms as scrap roles foreign profile included just for um roles for contribute those degrees wise or edit or fund an opponent but we believe that many more of these roles will be added in the working group meetings in the future uh also if we come up with something that is not included Congress so far we have decided that the atom send a request to the Library of Congress that it should be added to the list some examples of other terms that we are proposing embargo that will be that we have specified in a form of embargo date range and the range must happen in date publication status we have decided to use a public craft preprint boost print submitted manuscript application and updated application um so this enables us to use a publication status as a means of telling apart a different variance of the same resource affiliation is is complicated because full coverage of persons affiliation can only be provided in Authority record and in swap context we decided to just provide the creators affiliation or affiliations at the time the described resource was created we still have a lot of work to do and uh there are challenges involving semantics uh what kind of metadata should be provided and syntax how to express this metadata in machine readable form the process once we have completed the profile is that the dcmi usage board will decide which terms which proposed terms will be included in the CMI methodic terms and once uh dcmi has done the work then ISO will take over and there is a new terms and other changes will be introduced into the iso World version of Dublin core as well but of course all of this will only be useful if uh terms are implemented or applications and switching and customers will be important at this stage thank you for your interest in this presentation I will be I may not be available for questions because timing of this session is a bit inconvenient for me it's 11 o'clock in the evening in Finland foreign thanks to you have for providing us with the um video uh as a member of the scholarly resources application uh profile working group I would be happy to take questions from anyone about that and anything that I can't answer I will of course uh refer to either uh Karen Coyle or Tom Baker who are also members of the working group and so our second presentation this evening is an Institutional uh showcase and um Frederick Plainwell uh has the role of developer at the National Library of Sweden with a focus on ontologies and information modeling the National Library of Sweden is the newest dcmi member and Frederick has sat on the dcmi governing board since February of this year sir Frederick thank you Alistair and thank you for this invitation uh I'm just going to share the screen [Music] um this presentation is called from machine readable to machine reasoning it kind of is a showcase as you said of the information transmutation at the National Library and this is our first gcmi Community update which is very nice we became the institutional member uh in February this year and except for me in the governing board we're also represented by Christina Agustin admitted strategist she is the alternative representative and Nicholas Lindstrom is in the usage board and he was in a panel yesterday talking about beam frame which some of you might have heard foreign to go back to the Royal Library which is called in Sweden I will refer to it as KB it's the national library but it actually derived from the king's private collection and or collections today is kind of because of the legal deposit law from 1616 number one which of course then was not uh it was more of an instrument of censorship to to be able to see what was printed in the Kingdom but it actually helped us preserve a lot of Sweden's cultural heritage and this law in the modern day became more expanded into sounds moving images and through a merge with another archive for the standard image and that the extension of the law for legal deposits we have a quite a big collection of different materials another one of KB's tasks is to promote development and collaboration within the Swedish Library sector which means we have a Swedish Union catalog libris which contains about 14 million titles books newspapers magazines and integration material and it has the Holdings of 45 Millions from about 600 Swedish libraries and this is kind of where I will put the focus today however I need to go back to the initial idea and concept of why are we describing things and the purpose is usually in our context to locate or make sense of something we want to find or use and a perspective of that can be found in on battery goes quote of how we as humans make sense of the incomprehensible so to speak and that is through lists and catalogs and this quote kind of reflects on how items are in a sense very physical and and when we think about catalogs I think a lot of people still has this image in their minds but hi the catalog itself is actually a technological iteration of what came before um the core is the same but we usually the technology in which we describe things as bibliographic items became formalized in a sense for the purpose of finding things and most of them in the metadata concerns three things which is the need for efficiency in both production and use because we all have bigger volumes of data the content and media become more Diversified and harder to describe and the structure relationships to other things become also more important so in the 60s Mark became a revolution in the library world as I think a lot of you know it was through collaboration efficiency ideas to do less double work and be able to share cataloging cards um it was for the purpose of printing them still so the electronic databases were still to come but this kind of in Sweden it kind of put to Flame an idea of an integrated library system and in 1972 the first iteration of libris was released and the technological hurdles from the start was pretty big and I should not go into those here um but as um as we move forward to what libris is is the idea is still the core of doing one cataloging of a book and let that come to the collective use and in after several iterations the laborious transition to Mark in 2002 and all the critique against Mark was already Brewing by that time the new system enabled bigger volumes of metadata improved record reuse with an international standard Global connectedness and development of a lot of products by Libras around the core catalog especially easy ways to access and transform records which is kind of crucial for what is to come uh five years later a new libris.com is presented uh it's a modern at the time uh web interface to search it was developed by libraries with using persistent HTTP Uris and lightweight apis and this kind of sets the stage for the next Evolution which is linked data 2008 libris is published as the first catalog Library catalog that was published in a sling data and it's entirely um with a basic Geographic records using ontologies like this is cause and fall off but these are very basic records um however they do kind of show the proof of concept of linking things together and Martin malmstein did a presentation of this actually at DC 2008 in Berlin making a library catalog part of the semantic web and then in 2009 the linked open data Cloud which showed which Services there are using linked data you can see that there's a little seed here for interoperability within the internet uh a few years later we are actually here over 1500 data sets connected so it's kind of hard to overview but it kind of shows the promise of having building blocks being able to link to each other and as we can State links or relationships and we are still in our core system using mark and Karen Coyle kind of succinctly pushes the idea that if you want to use entities and relations we have to have something else than Mark 21 at the core so the needs of a new system is kind of familiar but this time we need to more efficiently describe diverse media with a structured data model we need to handle larger volumes of data both manually and automatically and when I also like to connect to the web and use data from other sources and contexts outside the library but our experiences with the libis.cobedit.se service kind of says that there was a demand for simple apis and the rather not to use the library specific techniques like Mark 21 Etc 3950 which is kind of complicated so labus Excel becomes the new cataloging system which the development starts in 2012. and we go into production in 2018 so it was kind of a long development phase but uh the entire libraries catalog was converted from Mark 21 to rdf Based On A Big Frame 2 vocabulary and still using extensions of Scott's DC and schema and so on all the while we're still being able to consume and produce Mark 101 because almost all systems surrounding the ecosystems are still dependent upon this format and another key component in the libris movement is the kbv application vocabulary which is that id.kb.se vocab service which provide us with extensions and mappings to other ontologies and also the being able to use our own Swedish labels and definitions translated directly in the vocabulary and the method of the policy at core base to strive as much as we can to use linked data as the method in all handling storing and provisioning of metadata so except for libris and it could be asse we also have now of Sri ePub the Swedish research Publications and bibliometric Analysis using Big Frame and datacode.sc which is handling digital object and data sets is using extensions of dcat for example and we're still looking at how this fits in the general picture um we still have the digital archive and the audio visual archive which data that could be a statistic can be the sort of front page four but we're still also um very much trying to find our ways on how we should either link cache copy and transform data with other sources and this is one of the most challenging aspects today because realizing possibilities is certainly a process and all all the while the enhanced possibilities that we can see uh the short time using link vocabularies and entities in production pipelines are not uh all in place yet the amount of duplicated work also lessons with linking but still we need to use learn to use these possibilities and uh to connect to the rest of the world to share data we need to have our entities in order we also do have looking back to the collections which are now in a digital form and much of them and this means that we have the ability to form cable lab the idea of a lab the library is not new MC has one and it's very inspiring but it also this enables researchers to engage in a large scale analysis of KB's Collections and test and explore the potential for artificial intelligence to be used within the library and the NLP needs big amounts of data that we got so a lot of the digital material is not available to the general public but becomes useful to generally trained language and acoustic models and we use this to explore uh some of the activities that we're doing now in the lab is automated linked subject system creation expressed as link open data based not on actual words or terms but only based on content similarity extracting entities and frequency keywords from articles and illegal deposits of electronic material large-scale image and audio analysis which could result in quite a huge amount of extracted information since we have millions of hours of speech also crowdsourcing Corrections for predicted annotations and what we see as challenges here is data is always messing and the simplification is not easy we saw the the simple first libris rdf was kind of way too simple and now we're still working on trying to simplify and figure out what it is we need going forward and also a big part is normalization by linking strings and codes on this ambiguating so we don't have just a string saying it's paper in uh unknown language but we can link to an actual definitions with to a material for paper and have links to other things so working with all these sometimes it feels like pure Alchemy to work with metadata and the transformation layer so I'd like to call that alchemetadata but still uh what we also find is that benefit arises in usage so getting things out there is very important thank you thank you very much Frederick that's um really a wonderful presentation saying so much that was uh you know ahead of the curve and Forward Thinking from collecting computer games via legal deposit to uh even publishing your brief linked uh data records that's that's fantastic thank you so we'll um move on now to our next present which is um again a an Institutional um showcase and it's from hygiene Kim at the National Library of career and hygiene uh has worked since 2001 having responsibility uh for so 2021 at the National Library of career and she's had responsibility for bibliographic standards at the metadata and sustainable access division she's currently working to align the Korean Mark format call Mark with Mark 21 and as an interest in the transition from Mark to link data based bibliographic Frameworks and again her pre uh her presentation today is pre-recorded hello I am hessing Kim I'm a librarian who is working in metadata and sustainable access division of National Library of Korea for your information I'm going to share to National Library of career s-n-l-k in this presentation today I'd like to share any case activities on a new bibliographic data environment this is a brief introduction of myself now you can see the contents of this presentation are introduced an overview of any case long-term plan titled as a national bibliography 2013. then I will share currently working project under the plan let's start to return introduction to what national bibliography 2030 is discipline is to transform the current market Centric bibliographic structure into a new structure suitable for Linked data environment by 2030. the plan was announced in July 2021 by metadata and sustainable access division and it has three main purpose one development of Korean bibliographic data appropriate for web and linked data environment to flexible acceptance of new type of resources three enhancement of mutual reusability between data inside and outside the library the plan is divided into three stages which are groundwork introduction and implementation each stage will take three years actually the first stage started last year I'll explain each step in more detail in the first stage groundwork we will adjust the basic standardization system for the transition to the next bibliographic data structure we are going to update two kinds of Korean mark with a cool Mark for bibliographic data and Authority data and we will plan and arrange several projects to accept the difference we will expand the scope and scale of authority data including uniform titles also we will advance Korean national bibliography services for data sharing and utilization after that we are going to move to the next stage introduction stage is to create the foundation and enrich bibliographic data we will revise energies cataloging guidelines by applying the Korean cataloging rules which will be revised in 2024. then we will convert the Legacy data to data that complies with new kcr5 and we will create mapping rules for conversion between different bibliographic languages such as Kumar dupe frame moves to be frame and we will expand Linked data-driven vocabularies In bibliographic data we will form a working group with domestic libraries and related institutions the last step is to implementation States we will try to convert simple language data into B Frame data in order to establish detailed conversion plan and if the plane is ready all Legacy Mark data will be converted to be Frame data in honest tools for buffering conversion and editing will be developed in this stage at the same time we will Design templates to create viewframe data by typable resources we will also establish a plan to reorganize and optimize the library systems for new data structure from now on I'll share with you about the main project in progress at nrk under the national bibliography 2013. energy is updating cool mark cool Mark is a dominant bibliographic language used to create data in domestic libraries kumark is a stable standard because it is established as a Korean national standard however due to that it is difficult to reflect update issues whenever necessary so there are some gaps with cool mark didn't fully apply International Library standards like Library reference model so it is necessary to update Kumar to ensure interoperability with International standards and to facilitate conversion into the next data structure we started the project to update the cool mark from 2021 as a result of that we made the drift last year during the time requirements are collected from domestic libraries through online public hearing and email and so on from this year we are reviewing the drift from a practical point of view for example conflict with quarantine coding scheme and harmony with characteristics of Korean materials and read retroactive conversion of Lego status we are expecting the the final version will be released in 2023 another ongoing project is adaptation of be frame purpose of this project is to lay the foundation to apply B frame in order to successfully introduce B frame you must understand it and be able to use it this year's project is making a viewframe specification and a guide in Korean this material will be helpful for everyone who wants to understand if frame we started the project last June and now we have a draft after having some time to leave you we will open the final version to the public furthermore we are going to give lectures for libraries to help understand be frame so far I briefly introduced any case activities on transition to a new bibliographic data structure I really appreciate that I have an opportunity to give a presentation I hope this presentation is useful for you thank you for listening and if you have any questions please feel free to email me I was just talking and thank you to hygiene uh for uh sending through her pre-recorded presentation there and of course you can direct any questions to hygiene uh if you would like to ask anything about their row work so um we're now moving on to another report on one of the dcmi Committees uh this time from Marsha's anger it's a report from the dcmi education committee and Marcia is a professor of information science at Kent State University her research interests include knowledge organization systems linked data semantic Technologies and digital humanities uh the author of over 100 research papers and six books her research projects have received funding from organizations including hclc Fulbright and many others she's chaired and served on a great many committees working groups and executive boards and is a serving member of the dcmi gaffling board and the isko board of directors so well sure thank you I will share my screen here Who is the security hi everyone this is Masha Jen I'm currently the chair of the dcmy education committee this report will give a summary of the main activities in the products from the task growth of the education committee during these two years the education committee was initiated by Sam o and Tom Baker back to 2020. the committee was extended extremely since last year and now we have 26 members together they represent various countries and regions in the world the initial objective of the committee is to coordinate activities in Publications that teach and inform users about current development and Technologies for metadata the committee organizes webinars and tutorials and commissions blog posts for audiences ranging from newcomers to experts including teachers of metadata in both academic and professional setting during this two years the community members have been contributing to the dcmi conferences you can see a lot of chairs and cool chairs as well as the moderators the student form started from 2021 University this year into those listed here many of them also contributed to recruit and recommend the best practices from their countries there are eight task groups in this committee members volunteers to be leaders or participants of each task group tg1 focuses on the blocks creating plaques for metadata education purposes cg2 write the summaries of key articles on with the data it is three reports on metadata standards and revisions tg4 collaborating with webinars prepared tutorials on new metadata applications tg5 is a new one this year focusing on any one filters special interests and Trends in the metadata so far we have the metadata and AI is to show interest area six it's on the DC usage in other models in tg7 has our webmasters and advisors who together already made the TC all the DC website by this tg7 romantically enhancement of the doubling core website G8 has been successfully organizing webinars and offers through dcmi and ASUS T foreign successful webinars and tutorials offered and last year there were five of them a year ago back has one also in other languages this is a future plan for having other languages in the webinars as well our tg4 focusing on the tutorials through a identify new release the or update to the tools platforms and the standards that would be interesting to dcmi community and the members in addition to keep tracking the past the tutorials from the community they also review relevant tutorials from conferences organizations in the information science and work with the conference coordinate with webinar touch group and provide this kind of webinar tutorials they will also extend this to other languages new platform to created by the tg7 for blogs poster white papers and resource lists with this kind of workflow this is a draft education committee tracks so members can publish drafts there and then approved by the teacher chair and the committee chair as well as the directory of the dcmi and decide whether this will be released on the Dublin core website test group 3 focuses on the metadata standards which have updates in the 2020s so it's the newest place for anyone would like to find the new information the two major parts one is new and the notable development the second is the current standards which have been updated in addition to the general purposes one we have the metadata for cultural objects and visual resources for research data or archives preservations provenance and for publishing in the Press Communications foreign to the element standards we also upload the links related to the standardized schemes the vocabularies can be used and the guidelines the related updates it's about the in cause this metadata standards updates actually it's a part of the encourse website called networked knowledge organization systems services structures and cuts recently it's moved from the my can stay website to the Incas dot Dublin code.org foreign interest group already had some activities and developed the income application profile and the kill is type vocabulary this year the incos website moves to doubling core formerly announced it's a document to all the workshops initiated in Back to the 1997 HDM DL 97 Workshop led by Joseph bush the website has already modern 20 years so now it's officially part of the dcmi thank you so much everyone for contributing to the metadata community of the world thank you thank you very much for that Marcia it's a really quite an amazing breadth and depth of areas that the different tasks group cover and I think really does show the truly International nature of the community when you saw how many different areas of the world the members of the different task groups came from yes so our next presentation that comes from shigayo sigimoto and shigaya is a professor emeritus at the University of sakuba he has been involved in dcmi since the late 1990s and is a serving member of the DC my governing board his interests include metadata models for cultural and historical entities such as intangible cultural heritage media arts and natural and man-made disasters and his presentation today is on the work of the core cultural metadata model interest group of dcmi shigay thank you and good morning and good afternoon what a good evening somebody in Japan it's quite early in the morning so they let me start my presentation okay all right do you see the slide yes oh running so yeah I'll talk about the core cultural metadata model interest group and um so the this is the background so the in my understanding the in a sense the conventional or to this traditional metadata schemes is great items country because it has been built as a kettle for the memorial institutions and on the other hand I'm the reason development of the linked data or the link to open data and rdf uh on the net people are likely to access by content but not by items so this is one understanding of itself and also the cultural entities so the around that the culture entities point of view so uh the many of the I'll say the digital collections of the cultural entities are created from the tangible object especially those built in the 1990s are how they created by this digestion of the Holdings of the institutions but on the other hand we do have the many digital collections of intangible things but in a sense those intangible ideas are collection of intentical Heritage are created from the recordings so in that sense recordings videos are the films they are a kind of detangible object and I thought that we need to think about what how can we distally archive in terms of object and also in Japan I'm involved in the City media are database project which is aimed to build um metadata or the in a sense of bibliographical records for Comics the Japanese manga is Japanese comics and video games and animations and New Media Arts which are rather oriented to content so the users want to find content but not items so items are there in a senses uh set in the secondary position from the user's point of view and like a europeana the link to open data has become a very important technology and infrastructure for users to access cultural content and a basic question is that done do we have a well-defined basis to Modern cultural entities of various types and um the my House's starting point was um metadata for intentional culture Heritage and also the media art things I wanted to discuss about the metadata schemes or the modules for those new areas then let me show this slide so there are quite various types of the culture Heritage so first of all in Japan dance performance in Thailand or paper making by the fireworks and uh animation video game and then well notice the paintings and a big castle in Japan and a disaster so these things are collected in digital forms and we create digital also the culture of digital archives okay so how can we model them as a metadata that is a basic question so the as I mentioned the base model of conventional methods are standards and developed by the uh developed by MLA in memory institutions communities are primarily oriented to items because they have been developed for describing the items included in the their institutional collections so basic questions that um base model of this would work for tangible object and the additional salary is however there's a cultural resources are curated and archived so that that the bear is the opposite that I mean I showed in the previous that's right so we collect these are surrogates that some original object are too large too big to move in into the memory institutions over ephemeral or just um actions or something in tangible and uh users would want to find an access Resources by their contents but not by their physical locations because for example when we think about the physical location of fireworks where is that it was it existed in air for a very short time so to the conventional standards and data models work well that was my basic questions and so here this slide shows some comparison of the item-centric model and content oriented model so on the left this is very in a sense it's a simple actually I very much simplified the in the reality the model is quite complicated but here we have the originals and the these are surrogate and the metadata is created for this in a sense this combination so on that for example the uh the museum libraries memory institutions create the additional collections by distancing the original ones to this surrogate and we could have some set of data circuits for the original one and we using access from this this surrogate on the europeana for example collect metadata from the memory institutions and provide a portal to those systems these are collections on the other hand on the net we do have various types of metadata and users find some I'll say concept already some I'll say conceptual entities and then users find access Plus to do so images and then use them and in some case those users would want to visit museums and see the real original object that are basically on the in in our daily life we use our failure metadata available on the internet and use them as a primary entry point or access point to the cultural object okay so I think that many people are living in this site and sometimes many people use the cancer ID metadata or the camera databases provided by memory institutions and for example in the case with europeana these are well connected okay then let me move on so let me think about the entity types so the in the conventional memory institutions I think the main part of the collections is uh the tangible option and on the other hand we do have quite a various steps on the internet because our entities or events so for example the disasters like on natural disasters and mermaid disasters and also ephemeral objects so in those cases we cannot collect the original things okay so the and we can I can say something about the domains so for example the Performing Arts that's um that could be I'll say intangible culture entities or some of the Contemporary Art but there are several times theater plays dance music Etc and the new media art so for example the installations those things could be understood maybe understood as a performance or the compilation so they are primary events and events live performance disasters are made or natural so these things are how to be collected as the original phone so added to mentioned about experientials so the and also the objects so objects means physical or digital objects object so the for example the museum is collections is a kind of uh physical and Perpetual object but on the other hand we do have to create various FML objects and we use recordings to to collect FML object and also we have the static and dynamic and there are several types of the of the object types and experiences so the my definition of the experientials is that the entities which we can experience see listen touch and anyways it's what we can experience so for example the sports performance that could be we can see this post performance so in the sense that is the kind of experientials so not all cultural entities can be collected personal entity but we can connect with this service recordings of a low performance so let me move on to this slide so the this interest group is named core cultural metadata model and uh at the workshop yesterday we had some discussion about that name and uh so this slide shows my understanding or the my definition so this is a pausing the core cultural metadata and model so the first one core because uh we are working it is this Mi so core is quite an important term and the interoperability across domains and also the minimal side so this is my understanding the features come around and are applicable to various types of cultural entities so in the sense tangible intangible Perpetual or whatever and cultural method and this is rather obvious Metallica culture entities and model so a set of abstract entities and the relationships among them classes and their relationships which are defined to identify cultural entities objects events action services and so on and mother could be understood as an abstract system useful to identify cultural entities and their structures so actually this is my definition and now other of the interest group I would like to discuss about the meaning of the core cultural metadata model all right so this idea is last slide and um so uh actually I have to say that this is a ccmm interest group has been quite silent uh mainly because of my laziness and but um in this dcmi conference we had two panel sessions and one work session so the session number five so visual media arts and the session number 17 shared by moderated by Marsha and then the topical cultural and linguistic challenges and we had Workshop yesterday and myself and I'm asking Marshall to be a lead of the community and also the I'd like to invite people who have interest in this group and also the who want to lead this group and also uh the dcmi has given us the infrastructure so email and GitHub okay but um not very active yet as I mentioned and uh I like to continue with this question as interest group and using the GitHub and the mainly this and we welcome people to join ccmm interest group so that's it thank you very much I mean that is a really fascinating way of looking things and it goes just so much Far Beyond Simple ideas of who creators are or who'd published something it's it's really a fascinating thing to to look at say our um final presentation comes from Tom Baker and uh it is on the um future directions of the this my usage board uh Tom is the dcmi technical director and usage board chair and he's worked on metadata and the semantic web since the 1990s he helped publish Scots in the early 2000s and currently contributes to the shape Expressions language checks he consults widely on projects most recently about data in agriculture and he's worked as a researcher in Italy in Germany including the frampov society and gottingham State Library Tom has a an MLs from Rutgers University an Ma and PhD from Stanford he's taught at the Asian Institute of Technology Bangkok and sung Yun Kwan University in Seoul Tom do you see do you see my slides yes yes good all right so um I'm going to start this talk about future directions by um um looking Oops why is this not working looking at the past so um how did this all start uh it started in the early years 1995 1999 the workshop years uh you'd have 50 to 150 people in a room at once and at night people would be huddled around their laptops um and that's when the Dublin core um was created in the beginning was the element um what and the question was what is an element is it like a mark field is it like an HTML element is it like an iafa template attribute is it like an XML element um if you look carefully at this photo from Canberra in 1997 you'll see about half of half a dozen of the founders of the rdf working group at w3c so on the margins already this notion uh that it could be an rdf property so it was first published in 1998 the 15 elements without a particular data model um Dublin core qualifiers the first major expansion of the vocabulary there is an ad hoc usage Committee of 26 members for about half a year or through nine months and uh it added um some qualifiers element refinements and encoding schemes and published dcmi type vocabulary okay but at the same time um uh rdf was um published as a w3c recommendation in 1999 and if you look at one of the appendix uh appendix appendices of that specification uh you'll see Dublin core as an rdf vocabulary the First rdf vocabulary developed outside of the worldwide Web Consortium and in uh 2001 we um Drew attention to the um uh the importance of uh Uris uh persistent Uris um and with the dcmi namespace policy which says that meanings can can evolve within defined limits um if um if meanings evolve too far and become new meanings they require new Uris and it was at the time I think Innovative in its emphasis on Uris as persistent identifiers so dcmi usage board was started in 2001 the the current one um it's always been about eight people plus or minus um and um and basically over the course of the years um we um um we nudged the dcmi community in the direction of um the rdf data model um which was quite I mean it was quite controversial um I think because um and I'll um I'll come to this in a second because um rdf was still had not established itself as it was seen as a as kind of a pie in the sky research project I think by many people and um but by 2008 um uh dcmi metadata terms were were defined as an rdf vocabulary of properties and classes and data types um so this is just a few I'm going to run through these very quickly these are a few slides from a presentation I gave last year at the conference about dcmi today so um Frederick was had us in the very nice slide of um of the library card catalog and mentioned clay tablets I believe as well but if we consider this metadata one point 1.0 so metadata on the physical carriers um then metadata 2.0 um was relational databases online catalogs for libraries spreadsheets XML in the 1990s um and what they had in in common um is that they were about machine readable data and fixed data structures but fundamentally designed with the assumption that they would be used in closed systems then metadata 3.0 um so the idea of semantic web um in 1999 the idea of linked open data in 2006 knowledge graphs um 2011 wikidata and um and uh knowledge graphs and bip frame by the way I believe that also started uh schema.org and frame I believe started around that time as well um and these in metadata 3.0 is characterized by use of Uris AS Global identifiers um and graph data structures and machine understandable semantics so the status of um I think now it's um it's it's no longer controversial that dcmi metadata terms is an rdf vocabulary but as we try to explain the usage board tried to explain in the iso 15836 in published in 2019 dcmi metadata terms are expressed in rdf vocabularies for use and linked data but creators of non-rdf metadata metadata can use the terms in context such as XML Json uml or relational databases um by focusing on the natural language text of definitions usage notes and examples um so um we don't think that having the vocabulary based on rdf is an impediment to its use in um in metadata in Technologies of um of of metadata 2.2.0 so um the usage board has um has pursued a policy of what I call cautious expansion um and the position of dcmi and the metadata ecosystem I think is um to provide these broadly applicable terms we've made some exceptions to fill mostly to fill gaps in the application profiles more specific properties but we've kept we've kept the overall vocabulary small so that it is maintainable with limited resources and so that it is relatively coherent um I wanted to call out uh one um uh thing that we did uh along the way um announced in 2005 uh we collaborated uh with the Library of Congress to um and the Library of Congress declared a selection of Mark relators as rdf properties and declared them to be sub properties of DC contributor uh yuha mentioned this in his talk earlier um because they they're used in the scholarly resource application profile and um it's interesting to note this is an early use of rdf by Library of Congress 2005. um I think ID luck gov service I think that came online in in 2010 if I'm not mistaken so um the usage board is uh formally recognized by ISO as the maintenance Agency for a dcmi metadata terms and um it's uh the first uh niso standard was published in 2001 first ISO standard in 2003 and it has been reviewed and um and recently in in 2019 it was extended with um dcmi properties and classes and this will continue the usage board will continue to serve in this in this capacity but meanwhile in the broader dcmi Community I think it's important to realize that um the after um 2001 uh the attention of the dcmi community really turned um it focused Less on dcmi metadata terms per se it was more about the notion of an application profile so at conferences and working groups there were there was a lot of work a lot of discussion of of the application profile um and uh there was also a focus uh at dcmi conferences on other vocabularies that could be used in application profiles so schema.org wikidata bib frame um there have been uh important tutorials sessions and panels about about all of these um Dublin core dcmi style application profiles today um Define metadata schemas they use rdf or rdf ish vocabularies um they um add constraints and the idea of the application profile um fits um some very important new rdf shape languages which I won't discuss such as shecks and shackle um there is I wanted to call out uh one important to a work in progress um DC tabular application profiles um that effort um uh is being led by Karen Coyle and um Karen and John Hawk are going to um give a um a tutorial about DC tabular application profiles tomorrow so I recommend if you're interested and the app the tabular application profile is is um is our attempt to to make it easy for people to create application profiles and spreadsheets that can be then converted into machine uh readable representations and uh and um converted into shape languages for use and validation in that sort of thing um I also wanted to mention in this context that notion of application profile of patterns um so the DC tap effort is also making a cookbook uh it's um also being led by by Karen and the idea is to help people make better profiles um and it is about usage but it's not currently within the scope of the usage board so maybe it should be that's something we um uh will um we'll discuss so all of the things above on um the um maintenance of the dcmi metadata terms will continue as before uh what other things uh what other activities uh could the usage is the usage board doing or could it um will it be focusing on one is the review of application profiles and here we had uhas presentation earlier um the um about the scholarly resources application profile there is a new process whereby the usage board reviews proposed proposals for new terms that come out of the um about out of the profile development process and um is also then approves its final publication um as a dcmi application profile um then there's the notion of mapping to to other vocabularies and um we have some work in progress uh some draft mappings to schemat or schema.org also some to wikidata and to bipframe um and um it's um it's not entirely clear uh how we should how we should proceed with this because DC properties are usually more General than what they map to so if you look on the left you see an example of DC terms date and there are some variants of date in schema.org that are narrower um but um not that we see um something that is quite as general as DC date so perhaps other vocabularies should be mapping to to dcmi metadata terms um and but and we recognize that mappings um always depend on their intended use so um um so um maybe we should be um looking at new approaches to uh mapping and maybe we should be working um uh more uh in dcmi this is not just the usage for it but the usage board is of course involved with all of these things with um open source programs and tools uh here's an example from a presentation by Nicholas Lindstrom yesterday uh in the bip frame um and the bib frame panel about showing processes they've developed at the National Library of of Sweden to um to take uh in this case descriptions in rip frame and express them in um in on the one hand Target a is dcmi metadated terms and Target B is schema.org um and so um mappings maybe um uh depend on the application in which they um uh they will be used and so um I think um I've run out of time and um and that was my brief uh tour of um what the usage board has done in the past and um and some possible new directions for the future thank you thank you very much Tom it's wonderful to say that the actual history and depth of what the usage board has done how things have evolved over the years and um um anyway that does bring us to the end of our session so thank you to everyone who's attended thank you to all our speakers um especially those of you who've got up very early in the morning to present uh the next session in 10 minutes will be our closing Keynotes from uh Carol Palmer from the University of Washington High School followed by some uh final remarks and Samo uh DC my executive director thanks very much thank you
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)
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2023-02-01
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14RGOx7SzhU
Poland is preparing to transfer six more MiG 29 aircraft to Ukraine, Ukraine vs Russia Military News
Poland is preparing to transfer six more MiG-29 aircraft to Ukraine in addition to the eight that have already been delivered or are currently being transferred Polish president Andre dudar said at a press conference in Warsaw on Wednesday following talks with Ukrainian president vladimi zelensky for mix from our warehouses have been transferred to the Ukrainian Air Force in recent months for migs are now being transferred additionally that is already eight dudar said we are ready to hand over six that are being prepared for this they could be handed over fairly quickly the Polish president said at the same time according to him we have Megs that have been modernized according to Nato standards we will still need these migs but at the moment when they are released after the arrival of new aircraft I am sure that in the future we will be able to transfer more if there is such an opportunity but this will require the consent of our partners the first 12 mig-29s delivered to Poland were nine MiG 29 as and three MiG 29 UBS in 1989-1990. the aircraft were based at Minsk mazawiyeki and used by the first fighter Aviation regiment which was reorganized in 2001 as one Escada lotnic to a tactics Nago or first tactical Squadron in 1995 to 1996 10 used examples were acquired from the Czech Republic after the retirement of its mig-23s in 1999 and mig-21s in 2004. Poland was left for a time with only these 22 mig-29s in the Interceptor role the 22 mig-29s Poland received from the German air force in 2004 a total of 14 were overhauled and taken into service they were used to equip the 41st tactical Squadron replacing its mig-21s as of 2008 Poland was the biggest NATO MiG-29 user Poland had 31 active MiG 29 SARS of 2017. they are stationed with the first tactical squadron at the 23rd air base near Minsk mazawiyeki and the 41st ts are the 22nd air base near malborg there have been unconfirmed reports that Poland has at one point least to MiG 29 from its own inventory to Israel for evaluation and the aircraft has since been returned to Poland as suggested by photographs of a MiG-29 in Israeli use three polish MiG-29 as were reported in Israel for evaluation between April and May 1997 in the Negev Desert on the 7th of September 2011 the Polish Air Force awarded a contract to the wzl2 company to modernize its MiG-29 Fleet to be compatible with Polish f-16s for mig-29s from one L participated in the Baltic air policing mission in 2006 while 41. Health aircraft did so in 2008 2010 and 2012. polish mig-29s played the aggressor role in the NATO tactical leadership program joint training program in albacetin 2011 2012 and 2013. on the 18th of December 2017 a Meek 29 crash landed in a forest near the 23rd Air Base while performing a landing approach the pilot did not eject but survived the crash with minor injuries this was the first crash of a MiG-29 during its nearly three decades-long operational history in the Polish Air Force on the 6th of July 2018 another MiG-29 crashed near paslik with its pilot dying in an ejection attempt technical issues are suspected to have played a role in the crash another crash followed on the 4th of March 2019 this time the pilot ejected and survived on the 8th of March 2022 Poland announced a willingness to transfer their operational Fleet of MiG 29 aircraft to the U.S via the Ramstein Air Base in exchange for aircraft of a similar role in operational capability with the intent of transferring the mig-29s to Ukraine to use in the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine on the 16th of March 2023 Polish president Andrei dudar announced that Poland would transfer four operational mig-29s to Ukraine with the understanding that additional aircraft would be delivered after servicing and preparation Poland is the first NATO country to provide Ukraine with fighter aircraft the mycoin MiG-29 is a twin-engine fighter aircraft designed in the Soviet Union developed by the mykoian design Bureau as an air superiority fighter during the 1970s the MiG-29 along with the larger sukhoisu 27 was developed to counter new U.S Fighters such as the McDonald Douglas F-15 Eagle and the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon the MiG-29 entered service with the Soviet Air Forces in 1983. while originally oriented towards combat against any enemy aircraft many mig-29s have been furnished as multi-role Fighters capable of performing a number of different operations and are commonly outfitted to use a range of air to surface armaments and precision munitions the MiG-29 has been manufactured in several major variants including the multi-role mycoin Mig 29m and the navalized my coin Mig 29k the most advanced member of the family to date is the mykoian mig-35 later models frequently feature improved engines glass cockpits with hota's compatible flight controls modern radar and infrared search and track sensors and considerably increased fuel capacity some aircraft have also been equipped for aerial refueling following the dissolution of the Soviet Union the militaries of multiple ex-soviet republics have continued to operate the MiG-29 the largest of which is the Russian Air Force the Russian Air Force wanted to upgrade its existing Fleet to the modernized MiG-29 smt configuration but financial difficulties have limited deliveries the MiG-29 has also been a popular export aircraft more than 30 Nations either operate or have operated the aircraft to date
Military News Channel
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2023-04-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-GfxI05VgA
THE WAR WITH WELYN? - Rust
[Music] keep flying around I'm not gonna get the red car cuz I'm just gonna take a bunch of reds and it's not healthy they're on you now wrong yeah and he can't move out there right he's stuck I think there's an invisible wall I mean he might get he met field goal thank you I killed one I had got him I had cuddle I'm kamikaze on you sold it here can barrel hit him he's down he's down he's down no real he'll blow up our hell he's alive hey Kelly's here though yeah why is it shoot me oh we're finishing he's down I didn't she they might have shot up it might have a go at me he's keeping it away he's keeping it away from us good job not going there we go there we go there we go nice nice nice nice Oh Buddy Holly I'm gonna say it still suitable where does buddy go go down go down did you see his body happy happy another scrappy there he is there is way too low you wait too long oh you're good for me it's kamikaze funny pick me up he's on scotchy scotch scotch dude I can't see you just trying to I'm going to you right now Dave you ready he's coming down yeah go go go now go down go down off getting gonna get you oh no my chess piece oh my god you gonna hit this file and fly on plan rip my chess piece I put a chest piece over chest because I think let's go straight home three G once have a bunch I have like all the guns oh there's a big heavy yo go go they're going a big mini big scrappy coming in all they're coming right to our base maybe headshot sit down stop yeah let's go I need on the row they're flying over flying over yes you know two people who can fly fly [Music] they're trying to land on us or something my god is so medieval give me back them back home huh yo you tryna get back to the roof brother [ __ ] I'm down watch out my pythons right next to the door can they get it we're not going to the roof really trying to boost up right now they're trying to boost up oh we're getting pushed from the other people right now - I can't get inside now they could hide in this [ __ ] I'm open the front door guys what friends are the front doors of the tuna can land you know Hailey's not based our bunker in them what are you call me here come here come here come here look see it's coming in boom it's in her face let's hop out what's on that one I have a bed in base I'm so stupid we can return around he's right behind you a headshot oh one day I knew he's gonna know who's gonna fall for that I'll shoot next a lot our house I think [Music] [ __ ] intense it's still there do you naked actually drive this copy I'm try I want to see this I'm the passenger I might die amended Sunday yo say if I seize it oh [ __ ] seeds brother are you getting shot one is on them titties [ __ ] guys that he's gonna he's gonna tell stories don't go back there oh my god I'm gonna get shot I might like further than that but that was pretty good they're following us they're just stream saving us yeah I figured there I figured they knew all right put them all they stop so trash go back there quick ones pre-prom he's pushing is pushing oh we've all dead oh I'm here I need something this is safe spot here look at those horror skills voice hoarse Nova ran alongside I'm such a good [ __ ] horse ride and [ __ ] player guys lost their guns and then they just totally dark em some babies oh my god there they are they're coming then we're dead they're gonna see our [ __ ] heli - don't snipe me please [Music] sorry I killed one to ones that once I where's another heli coming where's this guy's gun we're getting let's kill these [ __ ] I'm just putting everything away and I'm gone they may take off one dead where's yeah he's dead I think Davies to the right of gas station wait let stand wherever they loot those bodies he's lying he's lying go go go shoot him I'm looking for it's not gonna kill it well somebody fly me mini cops are coming in somebody fly me quick oh yeah we forgot there's a mini coming in boys mini coming in for our base I'm pretty sure it's probably this guy's crew they probably have a case [Music] he's landed his landing go up high I just want to see where he's hit twice he's running back and running back healing so they get somewhere around here you [ __ ] this beer I'm gonna med sorry Pickering you'll pick up everything you can boost me the roof yeah he's going in he's gotta be [ __ ] with you got a man you guys could come back Oh core what sorry sorry yeah here's a little bit buddy dicks in the ground how am i dead right now chat tell me
BCHILLZ!
UCnh59SDp1U1oF6wC8vk5-Pw
2019-10-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gZKwpzElYc
June 2023 Write from Dictation Prediction - Real PTE Exam Memories
foreign [Music] for the students computer is a great source of knowledge for the students the timetable will be posted on the website in the morning the timetable will be posted on the website in the morning road safety measures can reduce accidents road safety measures can reduce accidents all students do their homework at home his analysis study appears to be based on the false premise his analysis study appears to be based on the false premise the sports team members often practice on weekdays and play games on weekends the sports team members often practice on weekdays and play games on weekends optional tutorials are offered in the final week of a term optional tutorials are offered in the final week of a term it is clear that National trading system is a good thing it is clear that National trading system is a good thing tomorrow's lecture has been canceled due to the power cut tomorrow's lecture has been canceled due to the power cut currently the growth of the company is unpredictable currently the growth of the company is unpredictable we are moving at a very fast pace digital scans of archived materials are provided with a small fee digital scans of archived materials are provided with a small fee there is a fitness center next to the Student Union there is a fitness center next to the Student Union I am glad that Professor Gordon just joined our faculty I am glad that Professor Gordon just joined our faculty accountancy students need to submit their dissertations this week accountancy students need to submit their dissertations this week Linguistics is the scientific study and Analysis of language Linguistics is the scientific study and Analysis of language philosophy uses logic and reason to analyze Human Experience philosophy uses logic and reason to analyze Human Experience the commissioner will apportion the funds among all the sovereignties the commissioner will apportion the funds among all the sovereignties during that time people had large families as an insurance against some children loss during that time people had large families as an insurance against some children loss the student service center is located on the main campus behind the library the student service center is located on the main campus behind the library the office opens on Monday and Thursday following the Freshman seminar the office opens on Monday and Thursday following the Freshman seminar students live in the residence hall during the term time students live in the residence hall during the term time all laboratory equipment will be provided in class all laboratory equipment will be provided in class during the examination electronic devices must be left to the supervisor during the examination electronic devices must be left to the supervisor today we have a guest speaker who is visiting from Canada today we have a guest speaker who is visiting from Canada it took almost three years to build the football stadium it took almost three years to build the football stadium you may not be allowed to read any books without the reading list you may not be allowed to read any books without the reading list a few journalism students need to read the school newspaper a few journalism students need to read the school newspaper you will be tested via continuous assessment and examinations you will be tested via continuous assessment and examinations audition of the University choir will be on hold until the next week audition of the University choir will be on hold until the next week the farmers need to adapt to the changes of the climate the farmers need to adapt to the changes of the climate some people regarded it as care While others regarded it as recklessness some people regarded it as care While others regarded it as recklessness I went to the University of Bristol where I studied chemistry I went to the University of Bristol where I studied chemistry the residence hall is closed prior to the academic building closing time at the end of the semester the residence hall is closed prior to the academic building closing time at the end of the semester even the most motivated students may need help to choose their careers even the most motivated students may need help to choose their careers consumers are better informed today because of the internet consumers are better informed today because of the internet the college includes two branches physical and social sciences the college includes two branches physical and social sciences the study of nutrition is a growing field the study of nutrition is a growing field many students are now studying science technology engineering and maths many students are now studying science technology engineering and maths every year more and more courses become available online every year more and more courses become available online we encourage students to complete applications before the deadline we encourage students to complete applications before the deadline you do not need to be encouraged to be a hero you do not need to be encouraged to be a hero visual aid is really helpful for revising visual aid is really helpful for revising you will be tested via continuous assessment and examinations he will be tested via continuous assessment and examinations audition of the University choir will be on hold until the next week audition of the University choir will be on hold until the next week the farmers need to adapt to the changes of the climate the farmers need to adapt to the changes of the climate calcium's nutritional value enjoys growing popularity every year calcium's nutritional value enjoys growing popularity every year before choosing your university courses you should consider your future career before choosing your university courses you should consider your future career it is a debate about the value of knowledge it is a debate about the value of knowledge you may not manage your time well without a reading list you may not manage your time well without a reading list your term papers should include current social issues your term papers should include current social issues the study of physiology involves in traditional sciences and social sciences the study of physiology involves in traditional sciences and social sciences we no longer respond to any postal reference requests we no longer respond to any postal reference requests all the Student Union students can register their names to get that service all the Student Union students can register their names to get that service practical experience is a vital part of legal training practical experience is a vital part of legal training poor posture and neck strain are common for office workers poor posture and neck strain are common for office workers while some people regarded as care others regard it as Reckless while some people regarded as care others regard it as Reckless the terms illness and disease are confusing despite clear differences the terms illness and disease are confusing despite clear differences carbon dioxide is the main source of greenhouse gases that cause climate change due to human behaviors carbon dioxide is the main source of greenhouse gases that cause climate change due to human behaviors many experts think that the world climate is changing many experts think that the world climate is changing there have been long streams of extreme weather since human history there have been long streams of extreme weather since human history cells are the basic building blocks of all animals and plants cells are the basic building blocks of all animals and plants foods containing overabundant calories Supply little or no nutritional value foods containing overabundant calories Supply little or no nutritional value he was regarded as the foremost Economist of that time he was regarded as the foremost Economist at that time the amount of time spent on configuration varies considerably the amount of time spent on configuration varies considerably there is no economic recognition that borrowing is necessarily bad there is no economic recognition that borrowing is necessarily bad medical researchers have focused on the causes of diseases and treatments medical researchers have focused on the causes of diseases and treatments the key witnesses to the event have conflicting recollections the key witnesses to the event have conflicting recollections there is a widely believed perception that engineering is for boys there is a widely believed perception that engineering is for boys graduates from this course generally find jobs in the insurance industry graduates from this course generally find jobs in the insurance industry artificial intelligence has made significant progress for the last few years artificial intelligence has made significant progress for the last few years technology has changed the media we both used and studied technology has changed the media we both used and studied the economic predictions turned out to be incorrect the economic predictions turned out to be incorrect the deadline of this assignment is tomorrow the deadline of this assignment is tomorrow when the roots of a plant failed foliage suffers when the roots of a plant failed foliage suffers these three separate resources are not enough for this assessment these three separate resources are not enough for this assessment he wrote poetry and plays as well as scientific papers he wrote poetry and plays as well as scientific papers industry experts will discuss job opportunities in an automated Workforce industry experts will discuss job opportunities in an automated Workforce plants are the living things that can grow in land or in water plants are the living things that can grow in land or in water calculators may not be used in the examination calculators may not be used in the examination your ideas are discussed depending on your seminar or tutorial your ideas are discussed depending on your seminar or tutorial salt is produced from seawater or extracted from the ground salt is produced from seawater or extracted from the ground many universities lectures can now be reviewed on the internet many universities lectures can now be reviewed on the internet the student shop has a range of stationery the student shop has a range of stationery many diseases on the list have been eradicated many diseases on the list have been eradicated the untapped potential of using the sun's Rays is phenomenal the untapped potential of using the sun's Rays is phenomenal a new collection of Articles has been published a new collection of Articles has been published measures must be taken to prevent unemployment rate from increasing measures must be taken to prevent unemployment rate from increasing calculators allow us to add numbers without making mistakes calculators allow us to add numbers without making mistakes lecture outlines are available on the faculty board and the internal website lecture outlines are available on the faculty board and the internal website you will study two core and three optional modules you will study two core and three optional modules assignments should be submitted to the department office before the deadline assignments should be submitted to the department office before the deadline we have a lecture on the morning of Thursday we have a lecture on the morning of Thursday the disease that was serious has now been eradicated the disease that was serious has now been eradicated imported packages are likely to be used in many computers imported packages are likely to be used in many computers your ideas are sophisticated in seminars and tutorials your ideas are sophisticated in seminars and tutorials the department is organizing a trip to London in July the department is organizing a trip to London in July the tutorial timetable can be found on the course website the tutorial timetable can be found on the course website the posters are on display at the larger lecture theater the posters are on display at the larger lecture theater farming methods around the world have greatly developed recently farming methods around the world have greatly developed recently the course involves pure and Applied Mathematics the course involves pure and Applied Mathematics momentum is defined as the combination of mass and velocity momentum is defined as the combination of mass and velocity Americans have progressively defined the process of plant growth and reproductive development in quantitative terms Americans have progressively defined the process of plant growth and reproductive development in quantitative terms sugar is a compound that consists of carbon oxygen and hydrogen sugar is a compound that consists of carbon oxygen and hydrogen trees benefit the City by absorbing water running off-road trees benefit the City by absorbing water running off-road the castle was designed to intimidate both local people and the enemies the castle was designed to intimidate both local people and the enemies journalism faces the crisis and the light of the digital Revolution journalism faces the crisis and the light of the digital Revolution speed is defined as how quickly an object or a person moves speed is defined as how quickly an object or a person moves tribes vied with each other to build up monolithic statues tribes vied with each other to build up monolithic statues the collapse of the housing market has triggered recessions throughout the world the collapse of the housing market has triggered recessions throughout the world academic libraries across the world are steadily incorporating social media academic libraries across the world are steadily incorporating social media the university has invested in the new technology designed for learning the university has invested in the new technology designed for learning students should leave their bags on the table by the door students should leave their bags on the table by the door we need to answer security questions if we want to reset the password we need to answer security questions if we want to reset the password salt is produced from the sea water or extracted from the ground salt is produced from the seawater or extracted from the ground honey can be used as Food and Health product honey can be used as Food and Health product International exchanges formed an important part of our study program International exchanges formed an important part of our study program note lecture will begin punctually so please do not be late note lecture will begin punctually so please do not be late [Music] foreign [Music]
Moni PTE MAGIC
UC75E-GWY0hj3Dkt_qhZzECw
2023-06-08
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
2,396
14,608
rVpssmxU1Ow
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVpssmxU1Ow
John Stewart's Calculus Section 3.1 Q34
okay so once again a person too much time on his hands makes calculus videos part seven this is question 34 from uh section 3.1 and yeah this is the general strategy um throughout most these videos anytime you've seen e to the x i've just said oh the derivative of e to the x is just easy x back again but this time because you have e to the x plus one i feel like i should sort of explain where that comes from so basically there's an inside outside function and what you're doing is something called the chain rule which is really covered in section 3.3 or 3.4 a little bit later but when you do a derivative technically you're doing a derivative of the outside function multiplied by the derivative of the inside function right it's just the rule kind of thing so normally when you do the derivative of x basically all you get is one and since e to the x times one is just e to the x the derivative just comes down e d x but here we have something a little bit different we have x plus one right and also of course we have a constant and derivative constant is always zero all right so looking at this one on the right hand side it's a constant and what's the derivative of a constant by this point if you've been watching all the videos in the series you should have this memorized the derivative of a constant is just zero and on the right hand side we are basically taking the derivative of e to the power of x plus one which is the same as e to the power of x plus one times the derivative of what's on the inside the derivative of what's on the inside well you got a polynomial of first degree of x and you have a constant the x just becomes one and the constant becomes zero at one plus zero is just the same as one so you just end up with e to the x plus one if you put this all together you have e to the x plus one from the first term and you have zero from the second term and together these two terms just add to e to the x plus one so it's pretty similar to what you've done before i think all that they're basically trying to do is just teach you that if you have e to the x plus some thing and that thing is a constant you just get e to the x plus the constant and yeah that's basically all this trying to show you anyways if you like this video please consider subscribing i'll be uploading more videos in the series later and probably from this textbook but if you got a specific question from a later section you need help with just feel free to send a screenshot to me and send it to me and i'll do my best to help you solve it and yeah appreciate all the support from the community all the likes and subscribes and donations and yeah i'll continue to try it over by sort of videos that kind of feel like one-on-one tutoring for you guys so you got an explanation of what the answer is why the answer is what it is and what the problem is trying to teach you all right thanks again and goodbye
Math Made Fun
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2021-01-18
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
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2,914
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9Utd4oOfqQ
Congolese Tag
hi everyone and welcome back to our channel [Music] uh in honor of congolese independence day today we are bringing you a congo tank [Applause] okay so i'm going to be asking uh my team some questions um just to see how much they know about the country in which we come from and there's no prize um just maybe just ego whoever wins just gets to say that they won um so i'm gonna okay guys so we're gonna get into the questions uh everyone has a clipboard everyone has a marker everyone is ready to compete okay i'm gonna start i'm gonna start okay ahead to you yes i don't know so the first question um congo is in the top five largest countries in africa where in the top five do they rank in terms of actual size let me just use this so are they the largest countries second largest third fourth or fifth in africa just write down the number real big it gave you go first number two number two okay what do you think number one number one d what do you think number three number three number three for sure it is actually number two number one is actually either algeria sudan is number three libya's number four chad is number five wow jason's like that question all right when is congolese independence day day month end year okay ready say it out loud 1972. do you flip yours june 30th 1960. yeah june 30th 1916. [Music] david so everyone gets a point yeah foreign okay let's find that video again what is the area code for congo oh easy oh [Music] okay [Laughter] everyone got it right i get an extra for it for a bonus okay that's wrong but i will give someone the extra point if they actually know if you're calling from canada uh what do you put what are the four numbers i don't know this one actually the three numbers the three numbers you put before 243 from bonus points write it down ready down the ghetto i forfeit you forfeit for real i don't call says he gave up what is the currency of hunger sometimes you have to learn from your mistakes right okay we're going to start with chris [Music] okay you not get [Laughter] you it rock she at a time no i lied no just dean gaber ties for with four points and you guys have three but it's just because okay i'm going to ask a hard question i know this is going to be whoever can get this number closest to without going over okay what is the literacy rate in congo so the population of people who can read by percentage percentage so write down the percentage of the population who you think is closest right closest without going over closest without going over oh 2016 2016 okay 26 a.m what school school i just have to take in the context of congress that note that literature okay so know how to read reading and everything yes the literacy rate without going over without okay gabe flip it over what do you think say it out loud 43 43 okay 45 45 okay 59 59 40 the correct answer is 77 yeah right okay this is gonna be another tough one i just wanna i just wanna throw random ones okay a lot of land but how what percentage do you think is water i'll give you a hint it's less than 50 percent okay i was gonna say i didn't want anyone to be embarrassed but that's it doesn't really help it doesn't because you could have said 51. i just say you do ok [Laughter] oh my god okay okay we're gonna start with chris well it's really 25 christopher 25 okay 33 okay or 15 okay so you're both all over it's actually three point three five percent wow it's actually [Laughter] thanks for watching okay okay guys right now it is 11 17 p.m what time is it in just congress 11 17 p.m what time is it in congo count on your heads please i got it i think i got it okay we're gonna start with chris christopher 7 17 am yeah okay 5 17 a.m okay 4 17 a.m oh okay you cheated 6 17 a.m guys glow takes this one come back season i'm telling you no no no no no no no no no no no no isn't it six hours what is our current president's first and last name got this one first and last name bonus points for middle name extra bonus points if you know the name of his wife wow i'm not stressed and spelling counts including accents i'm gonna wait till gabe is done writing okay does it kind of like it's close to no no okay i'm talking about this nutrition there is no tissue where's his wife's name i'm actually going to start with d okay inside out so follics chilombox [Laughter] i think his wife's name is denise okay chris okay felix chilombo mama denis bethu is the name mama no i'm sorry i'm sorry sir it is not me right everyone's gonna get a point for getting his name okay her name is guys you guys are going to hate globe her name is denise [Applause] oh you said denise okay i'm pretty sure your middle name is marijuana what is what is congo's national animal and bonus points if you can draw it [Music] please oh you have to draw it bonus points if you want to draw wow you have to give it a try it's okay i'm spirits of laziness super laziness saving myself from embarrassment i got it okay gabe do you want to go for it we'll save the best for last the one who didn't want to draw it today sure nope can you hold it in the frame please leopard that's your final answer okay i was thinking can we see the drawing just let's hold it up for the people to see that's how it looks that looks like the thanksgiving turkey [Music] i really want [Laughter] [Music] [Laughter] okay everyone gets a point except for chris for knowing the animal glow gets a point for drawing it well oh yeah i'm gonna give her a point for creativity yes oh man so you're really gonna bend my horn that looks like a turkey a turkey for real wow okay last question for all the marbles what are the colors of the flame of the congolese flag in order no it doesn't matter there's tech no i'm by by majority i'll do it in order anyway there is no order do you read from left to right or top to bottom no but it's still which which color is this okay let's put it in order in terms of what color takes up the most space on the flag okay so put one for whatever takes the most space to the the second and then three the last cool nice let's go from like a still so the three colors which one takes up the most space and then which one takes up the second amount of space and then which one the third okay okay okay what are the three colors first of all blue red and yellow okay which one takes up the most space blue because the the whole circumference or the feeling of the surface of the uh of the flag is blue okay okay and then red because the stripe that goes across the flag across your diagonal has more red than the the lines outside of it which are yellow okay and if you add it to the yellow which is the star it's it's not more it's not more than uh blue red yellow okay the surface area of the blue takes a little space just fixing the diagonal diagonal the red is more thicker than the yellow yeah there you go i said blue red yellow but i said blue yellow and red let me explain okay the the background of the dropper is blue okay i see where she's going the the diagonal part is red however the outside is yellow on one side and yellow on the other side and then the yellow is the hitoil problem is chris what's your explanation please okay uh i didn't put an order matt should be blue red yellow like this one huh cool do i have to explain okay base huh nakatikati red stars yellow stars styles did you say stars is it not stories well sorry there's only one star whatever it doesn't matter i got the thing written for you you said stars so you three get a point so it's between right now d has seven points gabe has seven points and glow has eight oh no this next question is going to be worth five points i ran out of paper okay i was right there i was right there man as of the list of 2021 of the largest countries in the world okay where is congo on the list land space in the world land land [Music] we just give the number the number in the world right in the world wow and the list i'm looking at has 232 countries of course markers down if you have it this is worth five points so anyone can win literally close this without going over okay i'm gonna give 30 more seconds [Laughter] okay i want everyone to is everyone's pens down yes because i don't want no cheating okay let's just flip it at the same time no because i want you to say it 44 44 okay d i said fifth okay in the world okay in the world 13 in the world in the world the answer is 11. so the closest was going over smith is glow well congratulations what did i say around the beginning of the video i'm still going to win i'm still going to win she still have 12. no it's just that [ __ ] okay you're going to win did you want to write 11 no i want to write seven pull it like this i was gonna push seven as well i was like you know what you know what too much thinking going on okay i'm gonna have three fun questions um for the congo tags second place is going to be is good you have the bronze medal third place is for you jelly blue brown's better company pennies leather and stands back in the dates they just pass you i okay on the topic of music on your top three of congolese music artists who is in your top three in what order you don't have to write it down we're gonna just say it oh no i thought it was terrible it's not a competition game it's okay it's over it's okay you went somewhere you do something isn't that okay top three top three glow you can start you won okay oh thank you am i rubbing it in i'm sorry [Music] good list second place miss oh um honestly i only have two i'm going to say i love her she never mind and uh my second favorite kanye's artist her name is oh my god she's saying this already [Music] who's in your top three okay number one is on there uh the first generation first generation right specifically and [Music] oh my god guys someone knows music like this man no this guy should be a dj hi kid mr limo who is on your top three um number one so [Music] just amazing [Music] my first choice has to be babida the original like from 1965 yes um number two [Laughter] uh my number two is going to be papa wimba wow we're stinking she spoke to me at a very young age um and my number three the queen herself jello moana celeste yes second question in honor of congolese independence day you're at your congolese independence day barbecue what are you putting on your plate we'll go in reverse order so i'll go first barbecue you said yes the feeling is different the vibe is different okay oh that changes my answer it's not a couple it's called videos day barbecue okay cool okay so in that case there should be everything yeah yeah i'm gonna say yes okay so for me on my plates three items very simple i have fufu i have common delay and i have pondo but on a separate plate because i don't like my food i feel bad where does that add the bottle wash it okay chris what's on your plate for the main course um rice rice and your knees um rice and pundu and then either chicken or community on the side um and then galette or mikate as a snack if you had to choose between the two for sure okay it depends which kind of mica they because there's the dark skinned one and then the light skin the light skin one avic lavanee donald if we start with the base dog [Music] oh my gosh i became my den though so turkey butt oh not but everything in that water first of all first of all uh stuff was plum guy that thing was fine it's amazing it's it's it's sweet and and and sour as well yeah you eat one of that fan yo yo you'll be good you just knock a lipstick i'm very passionate um and it can be cut with liquid glass to be cut with the actual string from the quango oh i like that thank you because the way just like yeah because the texture is different yes but there's everything everything does that be fun everybody doesn't like this but i personally love food blog okay has to be on this this side this one side you know this on this side people don't like it but um and then i have nutaba but it has to be [Music] that's and a nice glass of cold water yeah light eyes yes oh yes it tastes different in the bottles it does a bit new yeah you could take some of the village but and glow what is on your plate when you're at a barbecue the vibe is kind of different you don't want to go for me i don't you don't want to go crazy you know you that from me like i don't want to go crazy at least two on the plate not the dry ones not the trouble no no no no no no no it'd be perfectly what yeah no okay thanks carnivores the way they uh explained it yes yes then you need a sauce with the community you can't eat it right and as a dessert obviously um waffles the waffles have to be soft yes you guys don't like legality the hard ones i don't know how you get here's the thing why i tend to move away from my kimba uh at a bar it's not always done right yeah yeah it's not done right if we i don't know where they get their their patents from but yeah yeah they do it too early because they usually [Laughter] because it's rare to actually eat like the juicy very juicy one yeah okay that's actually true but when it's there the finish is quick you barely even you see it once and then by the time you get to it okay guys so to wrap up this video we're gonna start over there go all the way to the end we're gonna say our legal government congolese name and we're going to sign out in honor of congolese independence day i have to be honest actually i'll go last i'll go last oh no what i want to finish it off chris you want to go first my name is christian cine pingabo what is your message for congress independence day [Laughter] [Music] wow shout out to dj frank yes and my message to you guys is honestly just send me a new transfer yes you'll see my full name huh thanks that doesn't count it counts [Music] my name my full name speak speaker weird chest i can't with my chest my full name is uh glody makanga kofu the makanga um divine actually stole my name she just replaced the a with the o right hers is my conga mine is my kanga i was born before her so her her family was like oh i like his meal oh wow [Music] uh and my message for for you know congress independence day so be together and uh say hi smile it's okay to smile wow thank you guys so much for watching don't forget to hit that subscribe button as well as that notification post do not forget to comment and like as well share to your friends and families and once again we are the drc united business group did you even say it in every video do something stupid [Music] foreign [Music]
The DRC United Business Group
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2021-06-30
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Batter convinces ump to change the count, a breakdown
another umpire lost track of the count but this time he was kind of coerced into losing track of the count by the hitter it's brought to you by keeps two out of three of you men out there you're gonna go male pattern balding before you're 35. you can keep your hair keeps.comboy carlos santana's up i did another breakdown on this complete inning you can go watch but i just wanted to isolate this moment because it's kind of its own fun video the first pitch is a ball now it's a wild pitch or pass ball that then gets thrown to second the run runner advances so a lot happens on it but it was a ball the next pitch is a stolen base now that's a strike this is the one that gets confusing for everyone because nobody's paying attention to what las diaz is calling this pitch and maybe he didn't scream it but he does motion strike which makes the count one and one carlos santana i don't think heard him and i think a scoreboard operator didn't hear him or see that i think the scoreboard operator has this as two and oh right now but it is one and one and then the next pitch is a strike you see laz calls it a strike again so now it's one and two we're going to speed up fast forward the next pitch is a ball now it's two and two but on the jumbotron i think they have it as three and one because you're gonna see the umpire reiterate his account and he's gonna say all right we got a 2-2 count and then the batter santana says what no what what are you talking about huh i thought it was a 3-1 count look at the scoreboard and i saw all right you guys are right you guys are right you guys are right my bad my bad my bad is 3-1 it's 3-1 that's foolish of me my bad three and one i don't i don't need to ask for help or or anything the angels you know what if it's not three in one the catcher the pitcher the manager of the angels the fans the other umpires they'd surely correct it no you had it right laz we got your back you had it right so it's three one three run everyone pitcher catcher sound good to you three and one three and one three and one three and one it's not two and two like i thought it was that was my bad that was my bad it's three and one three and one three and one three and one three and run carlos santana is excited about it steps back into the box they call for the pitch and ball four really ball three leads to another rally now who's at fault here everyone ev everyone i think everyone is at fault especially the umpires the other umpires carlos santana i don't think he was trying to trick him i think he would he thought he didn't realize that call on the stolen base was called a strike and the scoreboard operator didn't either and then they're all going off that keeping count is really hard to do keeping your hair isn't as hard you can go to k-e-e-p-s dot com john boy 50 off your first order they have a network of expert medical advisors prescribers and care specialists to support you in making your hair goals a reality keep your hair keep track of the count congratulations to the mariners you tricked the umps
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Haumea | Wikipedia audio article
how mayor minor planet designation 136,000 108 how mayor is a possible dwarf planet located beyond Neptune's orbit it was discovered in 2004 by a team headed by Mike Brown of Caltech at the Palomar Observatory in the United States and independently in 2005 by a team headed by jose luis ortiz moreno at the sierra nevada observatory in spain though the latter claim has been contested on september 17 2008 it was recognized as a dwarf planet by the International Astronomical Union IAU and named after how mayor the Hawaiian goddess of childbirth though subsequent observations cast doubt on its shape being consistent with hydrostatic equilibrium and thus perhaps not a dwarf planet how mayor's mass is about one-third that of Pluto and one one thousand and four hundreds that of Earth although its shape has not been directly observed calculations from its light curve indicate that it is a Jacobi ellipsoid with its major axis twice as long as its minor it's gravity was until recently thought to be sufficient for it to have relaxed into hydrostatic equilibrium how mayor's elongated shape together with its rapid rotation and high albedo from a surface of crystalline water ice are thought to be the consequences of a giant collision which left how mayor the largest member of a collisional family that includes several large trans-neptunian objects TN owes and how may is to known moons high occur and namaka how mayor is currently the third largest known trans-neptunian object after Eris and Pluto topic history you topic discovery two teams came credit for the discovery of how Mayor Mike Brown and his team at Caltech discovered how mayor in December 28 2004 on images they had taken on may 6 2004 on July 20th 2005 they published an online abstract of a report intended to announce that discovery at a conference in September 2005 at around this time Jose Luis Ortiz Moreno and his team at the instituto de astra fish at sir de andalucía at sierra nevada observatory in spain found how mayor on images taken on march 7 to 10 2003 ortiz emailed the Minor Planet Center with the discovery on the night of July 27 2005 Brown initially conceded discovery credit to Ortiz but came to suspect the Spanish team of fraud upon learning that his observation logs were accessed from the Spanish Observatory the day before the discovery announcement these logs included enough information to allow the Ortiz team to pre cover how Mayer in the 2003 images and they were accessed again just before Ortiz scheduled telescope time to obtain confirmation images for a second announcement to the MPC on July 29th Ortiz later admitted he had accessed the Caltech observation logs but denied any wrongdoing stating he was merely verifying whether they had discovered a new object pre coveri images of how mayor have been identified back to September 22nd 1955 ieu protocol is that discovery credit for a minor planet goes to whoever first submits a report to the MPC Minor Planet Center with enough positional data through a decent determination of its all and that the credited discoverer has priority in choosing a name however the ieu announcement on September 17 2008 that how mayor had been accepted as a dwarf planet did not mention a discoverer the location of discovery was listed as the Sierra Nevada observatory of the Spanish team but the chosen name how mayor was the Caltech proposal Ortiz's team had proposed at gesina named for the ancient Iberian goddess of spring topic name until it was given a permanent name the Caltech discovery team used the nickname Santa among themselves because they had discovered how mayor on December 28 2004 just after Christmas the Spanish team were the first to file a claim for discovery to the Minor Planet Center in July 2005 on July 29th 2005 how Mayor was given the provisional designation 2003 el61 based on the date of the spanish discovery image on September 7 2006 it was numbered and admitted into the official Minor Planet catalog as 1 3 6 108 200 3 e el 61 following guidelines established by the ieu that classical creeper belt objects be given names of mythological beings associated with creation in September 2006 that Cal Tech team submitted formal names from Hawaiian mythology to the ieu for both 1 3 6 108 200 3e el61 and its moons in order to pay homage to the place where the satellites were discovered the names were proposed by David Rabinowitz of the Caltech team how mayor is the matron goddess of the island of hawaii where the manicure observatory is located in addition she is identified with papa the goddess of the earth and wife of wake a space which at the time seemed appropriate because how mayor was thought to be composed almost entirely of solid rock without the thick ice mantle over a small rocky core typical of other known creeper belt objects lastly how mayor is the goddess of fertility childbirth with many children who sprang from different parts of her body this corresponds to the swarm of icy bodies thought to have broken off the dwarf planet during an ancient collision the two known moons also believed to have formed in this manner a thus named after two of how mayor's daughters hi ARCA Anamika the proposal by the Ortiz team at escena did not meet ie you naming requirements because the names of Stronach deities are reserved for plutinos that resonate three-to-two with Neptune which was not the case for this body which is in 712 resonance see at has seen a section dwarf planet topic classification how mayor is a pluie toid a dwarf planet located beyond Neptune's orbit it is classified as a dwarf planet because it is presumed to be massive enough to have been rounded by its own gravity into a shape in hydrostatic equilibrium but not massive enough to have cleared its neighborhood of similarly sized objects how mayor was initially listed as a classical creeper belt object in 2006 by the Minor Planet Center but no longer the nominal trajectory suggests that how mayor is in a week 712 orbital resonance with Neptune which would make it a resonant object instead although there are pre coveri images of how mayor dating back to March 22nd 1955 from the Palomar Mountain digitized Sky Survey further observations of the orbit will be required to verify its dynamic status topic orbit how mayor has an orbital period of 284 earth years a perihelion of 35 astronomical units and an orbital inclination of 28 degrees it past aphelion in early 1992 and is currently more than 50 astronomical units from the Sun how Mayer's orbit has a slightly greater eccentricity than that of the other members of its collisional family this is thought to be due to how Mayer's weak 7:12 orbital resonance with Neptune gradually modifying its initial orbit over the course of a billion years through the Kozai effect which allows the exchange of an orbits inclination for increased eccentricity with a visual magnitude of 17.3 how mayor is the third brightest object in the Kuiper belt after Pluto and Makemake and easily observable with a large amateur telescope however because the planets and most small solar system bodies share a common orbital alignment from their formation in the primordial disk of the solar system most early surveys for distant objects focused on the projection on the sky of this common plane called the ecliptic as the region of sky close to the ecliptic became well explored later sky surveys began looking for objects that had been dynamically excited into orbits with higher inclinations as well as more distant objects with slower mean motions across the sky these surveys eventually covered the location of how mayor with its high orbital inclination and current position far from the ecliptic topic rotation how mayor displays large fluctuations in brightness over a period of three point nine hours which can only be explained by a rotational period of this length this is faster than any other known equilibrium body in the solar system and indeed faster than any other known body larger than 100 kilometers in diameter while most rotating bodies in equilibrium are flattened into oblate spheroids how maher rotates so quickly that it is distorted into a tri-axial ellipsoid if how mayor were to rotate much more rapidly it would distort itself into a dumbbell shape and split into this rapid rotation is thought to have been caused by the impact that created its satellites and collisional family topic physical characteristics because how mayor has moons the mass of the system can be calculated from their orbits using Kepler's third law the result is 4.2 times 1021 kilograms 28% the mass of the Plutonian system and 6% that of the moon nearly all of this mass is in how mayor topic size shape and composition the size of a solar system object can be deduced from its optical magnitude its distance and its albedo objects appear bright to earth observers either because they are large or because they are highly reflective if their reflectivity albedo can be ascertained then a rough estimate can be made of the size for most distant objects the albedo is unknown but how Mayer is large and bright enough for its thermal emission to be measured which has given an approximate value for its albedo and thus its size however the calculation of its dimensions is complicated by its rapid rotation the rotational physics of deformable bodies predicts that over as little as a hundred days a body rotating as rapidly as how mayor will have been distorted into the equilibrium form of a tri-axial ellipsoid it is thought that most of the fluctuation in how Mayer's brightness is caused not by local differences in albedo but by the alternation of the side view and end view as seen from Earth the rotation and amplitude of how Mayor's light curve were argued to place strong constraints on its composition if how mayor were in hydrostatic equilibrium and had a low density like Pluto with a thick mantle of ice over a small rocky core its rapid rotation would have elongated it to a greater extent than the fluctuations in its brightness allow such considerations constrained its density to a range of 2.6 to 3.3 grams per CC by comparison the moon which is rocky has a density of 3.3 grams per cc whereas Pluto which is typical of icy objects in the Kuiper belt has a density of 1.8 6 grams per CC how mayor's possible high density covered the values for silicate minerals such as olivine and pyroxene which make up many of the rocky objects in the solar system this also suggested that the bulk of how mayor was rock covered with a relatively thin layer of ice a thick ice mantle more typical of creeper belt objects may have been blasted off during the impact that formed the how main collisional family several ellipsoid model calculations of how Mayer's dimensions have been made the first model produced after how mayor's discovery was calculated from ground-based observations of how mayor's light curve at optical wavelengths it provided a total length of 1960 to 2500 kilometers and a visual albedo PV greater than 0.6 the most likely shape is a tri-axial ellipsoid with approximate dimensions of 2000 x 1500 times 1,000 kilometers with an albedo of 0.7 1 observations by the Spitzer Space Telescope give a diameter of 1150 plus 250 minus 100 kilometers and an albedo of 0.8 4 plus 0.1 minus 0.2 from photometry at infrared wavelengths of 70 micrometers subsequent light curve analyses have suggested an equivalent circular diameter of 1,450 kilometers in 2010 an analysis of measurements taken by Herschel Space Telescope together with the older Spitzer telescope measurements yielded a new estimate of the equivalent diameter of how Meir about 1,300 kilometers these independent size estimates overlap at an average geometric mean diameter of roughly 1400 kilometers however the observations of a stellar occultation in January 2017 cast a doubt on all those conclusions the measured shape of how mayor while elongated as presumed before appeared to have significantly larger dimensions according to the data obtained from the occultation how mayor is approximately the diameter of Pluto along its longest axis and about half that at its poles so the resulting density of about 1.8 grams per cc is more in line with densities of other large TN O's this resulting shape is inconsistent with a homogeneous body in hydrostatic equilibrium although it is expected to be differentiated it is not known whether that would make its shape consistent with hydrostatic equilibrium nevertheless how mayor appears to be one of the largest trans-neptunian objects discovered smaller than Eris Pluto similar to may make and possibly 2007 or10 and larger than Sedna Quay or and orcas topic surface in 2005 the Gemini and Keck telescopes obtained spectra of how Meir which showed strong crystalline water ice features similar to the surface of Pluto's moon Charon this is peculiar because crystalline ice forms at temperatures above 110 K whereas how Mayer's surface temperature is below 50 K a temperature at which amorphous ice is formed in addition the structure of crystalline ice is unstable under the constant rain of cosmic rays and energetic particles from the Sun that strike trans-neptunian objects the time scale for the crystalline ice to revert to amorphous ice under this bombardment is on the order of 10 million years yet trans-neptunian objects have been in their present cold temperature locations for timescales of billions of years radiation damage should also read in and darken the surface of trans-neptunian objects where the common surface materials of organic ices and Tolan like compounds are present as is the case with Pluto therefore the spectra and color suggests how mayer and its family members have undergone recent resurfacing that produced fresh ice however no plausible resurfacing mechanism has been suggested how mayer is as bright as snow with an albedo in the range of 0.6 to 0.8 consistent with crystalline ice other large tierno's such as Eris appear to have albedo s-- as high or higher best-fit modeling of the surface spectra suggested that 66% to 80 percent of the how main surface appears to be pure crystalline water ice with one contributor to the high albedo possibly hydrogen cyanide or filler silicate clays in organic cyanide salts such as copper potassium cyanide may also be present however further studies of the visible and near infrared spectra suggest a homogeneous surface covered by an intimate one-to-one mixture of amorphous and crystalline ice together with no more than 8% organics the absence of ammonia hydrate excludes cryovolcanism and the observations confirm that the collisional event must have happened more than 100 million years ago in agreement with the dynamic studies the absence of measurable methane in the spectra of how Maher is consistent with the warm collisional history that would have removed such volatiles in contrast to make make in addition to the large fluctuations in how Mayer's light curve due to the body's shape which affect all colors equally smaller independent color variations seen in both visible and near-infrared wavelengths show a region on the surface that differs both in color and in albedo more specifically a large dark red area on how Mayer's bright white surface was seen in September 2009 possibly an impact feature which indicates an area rich in minerals and organic carbon rich compounds or possibly a higher proportion of crystalline ice thus how mayor may have a mottled surface reminiscent of Pluto if not as extreme topic ring a stellar occultation observed on the 21st of January 2017 and described in and the 11th of October 2017 nature article indicated the presence of a ring around how mayor this represents the first ring system discovered through a tear no the ring has a radius of about 2,000 287 kilometers a width of approximately 70 kilometers and an opacity of 0.5 it is well within how mayor's rush limit which would be at a radius of about 4400 kilometers if it was spherical being non spherical pushes the limit out farther the ring plane approximately coincides with how Mayors equatorial plane and the orbital plane of its larger outer moon high occur the ring is also close to the three-to-one resonance with how mayor's rotation which is at a radius of 2285 plus or minus 8 kilometers the ring contributes around 5% to the total brightness of how mayor in a study about the dynamics of ring particles published in 2019 Othon cabo winter and colleagues have shown that the one two three resonance with how Mayer's rotation is dynamically unstable but that there is a stable region in the phase space consistent with the location of how mayor's ring this indicates that the ring particles originate on circular periodic orbits that are close to but not inside the resonance topic satellites hi rker and Amica two small satellites have been discovered orbiting how mayor 136,000 108 how mayor i Hi'iaka and 136,000 108 how mayor two namaka browns team discovered both in 2005 through observations of how mayor using the WM Keck Observatory hi ARCA at first nicknamed Rudolph by the Caltech team was discovered January 26 2005 it is the outer and up roughly three hundred and ten kilometers in diameter the larger and brighter of the two and orbits how mayor in a nearly circular path every forty nine days strong absorption features at one point five and two micrometers in the infrared spectrum are consistent with nearly pure crystalline water ice covering much of the surface the unusual spectrum along with similar absorption lines on how mayor LED Brown and colleagues to conclude that capture was an unlikely model for the system's formation and that the how main moons must be fragments of how mayor itself namaka the smaller in a satellite of how mayor was discovered on June 30th 2005 and nicknamed Blitzen it is 1/10 the mass of Hi'iaka orbits how mayor in 18 days in a highly elliptical non Keplerian orbit and as of 2008 is inclined 13 degrees from the larger moon which perturbs its orbit the relatively large eccentricities together with the mutual inclination of the orbits of the satellites are unexpected as they should have been damped by the tidal effects a relatively recent passage by a three to one resonance with high arc ur might explain the current excited orbits of the how maeín moons at present the orbits of the how maeín moons appear almost exactly edge-on from Earth with namaka periodically occulting how mayor observation of such transits would provide precise information on the size and shape of how mayor and its moons has happened in the late 1980s with Pluto and Charon the tiny change in brightness of the system during these occupations will require at least a medium aperture professional telescope for detection hi ARCA last or cultured how mayor in 1999 a few years before discovery and will not do so again for some 130 years however in a situation unique among regular satellites Namek a--'s orbit is being greatly talked by hi ARCA which preserved the viewing angle of namaka how mayor transits for several more years topic collisional family how mayor is the largest member of its collisional family a group of astronomical objects with similar physical and orbital characteristics thought to have formed when a larger progenitor was shattered by an impact this family is the first to be identified among tier knows and includes beside how mayor and its moons 5 5 6 3 6 200 to TX 300 approximately equals 360 4 kilometers to 4 8 3 5 1 9 9 5 SM 55 are proximately equals 174 kilometers 1:9 308 1:9 960 o66 approximately equals 200 kilometers 1 201 7 8 200 300 p32 approximately equals 230 kilometers and 1 4 5 4 5 3 200 5rr 43 approximately equals 252 kilometres Brown and colleagues proposed that the family were a direct product of the impact that removed how mayor's ice mantle but a second proposal suggests a more complicated origin that the material ejected in the initial collision instead coalesced into a large moon of how mayor which was later shattered in a second collision dispersing it shards outwards this second scenario appears to produce a dispersion of velocities for the fragments that is more closely matched to the measured velocity dispersion of the family members the presence of the collisional family could imply that how mayor and its offspring might have originated in the scattered disc in today's sparsely populated creeper belt the chance of such a collision occur over the age of the solar system is less than 0.1% the family could not have formed in the denser primordial creeper belt because such a close-knit group would have been disrupted by Neptune's migration into the belt the believed calls of the belts current low density therefore it appears likely that the dynamic scattered disk region in which the possibility of such a collision is far higher is the place of origin for the object that generated how mayor and it skin because it would have taken at least a billion years for the group to have diffused as far as it has the collision which created the how mayor family is believed to have occurred very early in the solar system's history topic exploration it was calculated that a fly B mission to how mayor could take fourteen point to five years using a Jupiter gravity assist based on a launch date of the 25th of September 2025 how mayor would be forty eight point one eight astronomical units from the Sun when the spacecraft arrives a flight time of sixteen point four five years can be achieved with launch dates on the first of November twenty twenty six the 23rd of September twenty thirty seven and the 29th of October twenty thirty eight how mayor could become a target for an exploration mission and an example of this work is a preliminary study on a probe to how mayor and its moons at thirty five to fifty one astronomical units probe mass power source and propulsion systems at key technology areas for this type of mission topic see also astronomical naming conventions clearing the neighborhood International Astronomical Union planets beyond Neptune list of solar system objects most distant from the Sun in 2015 equals equals notes
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2019-05-06
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DobB3bACM2E
Doll House $191k Speed Build l BLOXBURG: ROBLOX
[Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] hello panda indeed as you can tell from the title probably I am going to be building a dollhouse yes I felt like building this I have no idea where this idea came from I just searched up a picture of a doll house and I technically just made it kind of using that idea so first I'm going to be outlining right now I'm going to be creating a patio area and this is going to be a three-story dollhouse so that's what we're going to be doing I'm going to first start with the exterior like usual and then move on to the inside and change some things around as I go [Music] as you can see now I'm going to be baking the outlines of where the roofs may go and I'm going to be changing that later on photo of the second purple this is too much why do people do this I always chase them down a bootie keeps running away then I asked her if she's actually sure and she says yes 100% thank you so much [Music] and now I'm going to be adding in the windows the main accessory or outlook of the dollhouse [Music] I also decided to go with a dark blue wood color because I felt like I didn't want like a bright pink one like a Barbie house and be mistaken for a Barbie house so I thought this one was really pretty and it fit nicely by the way before you say anything about the songs I know this one is going to be a little bit creepy sounding but I felt like it reminded me of a dollhouse even though this is a happy and cheerful dollhouse and all the musics that I input I just like them it doesn't have to fit with the house sometimes I just randomly picked them if I like listening to them while editing so I'm sorry if you don't like them but I just put them there [Music] I also played around with this because I wanted the roof to go inwards but I didn't really like hell was coming out so I just made this one big wall [Music] for these two areas I use three different types of roofing because I wanted some of them to stand out and pop out of the house giving it more shape and that's what it perfectly did [Music] time to move on to the interior and start off with all the decorations and this is where the kitchen is going to be [Music] I also felt like the house was still a little bit big because I didn't want the kitchen to go out all the way so I decrease the patio side before I forgot to tell you that I know I didn't put the back walls because this is a dollhouse so I tried to make it look like a dollhouse by just having an open back and it actually turned out pretty cool I mean like it's different for role playing and it looks a little weird but you can always fix this if you just said you want this as a real house and then when I was building I saw this this is adorable thank you so much and I love all those panda lenders out there watching ok wait up random comment why are you my so obsessed with this color wood and texture I think this is like my favorite texture in blocksberg I don't know why I'm saying this but people said I should talk more in my videos and I am and I'm the king of time so now we're going to be coloring the kitchen let's continue you didn't think I would leave that fast did you um I'm coloring in this kitchen a blue color because I thought I would go with the blue theme this is like a pastel blue and I like how the kitchen turned out then the rest of the house was pretty not modern but it's--but well in my opinion then I kept building and I saw the shadow randomly and I'm like what is that did I saw Joanna running around in circles on my built mode box outline and she got even more fans up there while I was building no this is not annoying to me so she's all good she even asked me if it was okay and I said sure I just got a little bit spooked out because I'm like how is this shadow in my built mode then I saw her now I feel like more people are going to be doing this in the future I guess we'll just have a dance party up there [Music] I also remembered that doll houses have lots of cabinets and they make it look so pretty well from the houses that I played with when I was smaller yes I used to be obsessed with dolls but now I'm like the total opposite but that's okay because who doesn't love a good doll play [Music] and I forgot to mention this part is like a living room area or a chill-out area for adults for this floor I figured that I would put the bedrooms up here if by any chance you are rebuilding this let me just tell you that I'm going to be changing lots of things around because I have no set plan wall building so I'm just telling you that this bedroom will have a bunk bed [Music] [Applause] [Music] take a look at that cheese watching me build this bedroom and the shadow is right on top of the bed I also got this carpet idea from my sibling to all credits to them because I absolutely love it I also asked the people outside watching me build what color to do the bedroom sunset at pastel blue sunset pastel pink and other sentiment cream but there was more Pink's for this bedroom so that's what I went it [Music] and now I'm going to be building the fairly bigger room because I had nothing else to do with this space and to not ramp everything together I built a bathroom in here so if you need to use the bathroom in this house yes you have to get through this bedroom but it's right in front of the door so the guests don't even have to go inside the bedroom take a look someone looks like an elephant that's adorable let me just say this bathroom was pretty challenging because I only had three walls and I had no idea how to build it but we got through it and now I'm going to be moving on to the bedroom with adding decorations and everything [Music] I was going to also turn this bedroom into a blue color but then I'm like snap let's go with men's green because I felt like the outside was already blue so we change up the colors [Music] then to finish up the bedroom I added a little desk area [Music] and here I just got the idea why not do bunk beds because we have high ceilings and it's perfect so I put in a one bed over here then put in a double bed on the top floor because it looked pretty awesome take a look Johanna got everyone up here with a few people still down there watching me we're gonna first start by putting in some ladders on the side then adding in the beds together yes you need the coalition check game paths to do this you can always just put a bigger bed but I don't think you can put two fences now I'm going to be putting in these fancy pillars for stands or to hold it up and that's pretty much it [Music] and Here I am with these at that SS aesthetic I did it oh my gosh I said it I don't know if I'm gonna put that in oh well I think I might with these lights I felt like this looked aesthetic and tumblr that didn't make sense did it who knows okay [Music] then I thought it would be cool if I added in like a backsplash with the decals that I'm going to be inputting also if you are still listening to this and then just give to the tour hello there human okay someone has asked me when I was building if I can put in the codes in the description yes I will and I'm also going to be leaving like a mini note at the end saying that I put in the codes in the description let me know if you guys want me to do more of that if you perhaps like the cause and or want to rebuild the things that I show you for this top floor I asked what to build because I had no idea then cupcake gave the amazing idea of a tea room so that's what I went with all credits to her on the idea I just got the things and put them together I was also thinking of putting it dull images or toy images but you'll see what happens after yep here I go I'm sorry I forgot to put in the decal codes and this is me touring it and take a look at this I'm so sorry it's now let's continue I also added in some railing for protection because you know me I would literally fall down the stairs I don't know why I didn't put fencing all on the back of the house because I didn't have a wall I'm actually surprised I didn't do that [Music] me thinking I'm smart I had it in a mini-fridge in the my choice because what was in my mind I thought that I could make tea out of the microwave then before the speed field I'm like how do you make tea again and my hands are like get a kettle and I would pull up wait a second I need to remove this microwave and put in a kettle of tea because oh boy I couldn't make tea so sorry I didn't show that in the video [Music] I didn't know what to put in here I'm sorry I was trying not to put slam this whole time and then I got a little bit carried away but hey hey this is just a bookshelf and I added like four more other plans during the build so now counting the Roses the roses down count because I usually don't use them and also people said to you like unicorn boys all card toys so that's what I put into bookshelves because I didn't want them to be empty and to finish it off I put in lots of books okay I put in lots of boats out admit that who doesn't love a good rating time with some books yeah most likely you guys are thinking what is wrong with you I sometimes like to read but since i started youtube I haven't read for a while but I might get back to it but who knows do you like reading I doubt it because you're watching my video right now instead of reading right are you a good child and going to read right now please don't please finish this video if you still don't but then you can go read after you finish my video why are my jokes so bad I'm sorry why are you still listening to me I'm sorry I keep apologizing why am i calling like I read like no one's watching this like this people do it now right now let's go Eddie's bookshelf screen because who doesn't love a good green [Music] also during the speed build you see me unfollowing and then following back some people because they were telling me that the fall of what tune wasn't working but I thought it was so I was a little bit confused on that also if you see me in the game you can ask me to follow you but I can't friend you sadly because I have over so many requests and I'm only allowed to friend 200 people on roblox so I don't want to be fair to everyone else new to this channel and whoever joins the panda land habitat so I won't be friending any more people unless I have a good reason I'll be following you only if you ask me in a game [Music] I also didn't want the dollhouse they have the same flooring on each horse I just decided to put in this carpet I wasn't a huge fan of it at first but I asked the people outside watching me if this looked good and they said yes so I just went with it I also felt like this space can be empty so I asked also what should I build and they said like a kids area so that's what I did here the famous cupcakes she's looking at her tea room idea [Music] [Applause] [Music] okay I'm sorry I know I'm adding you more clamps I felt like it needed more shape in nature so that's why I did I also added bushes I'm just saying that and I asked the people watching me does this look okay are you sure that I can add plants they're like yeah looks fine just leave it so if you don't like these plants I'm sorry it's not my fault also I'm obsessed with you fight as you can see I literally put them everywhere I'm sure I'm going to be putting them in every single build that I use from now on so heads up on that that's my new addiction speaking of addiction someone has a comment also said that they said my strange addiction I am addicted to clamps they said I should go on that TV show because of this they were making a joke out of it and I took it in the funny way so whoever clones are that perfect I loved it I just thought in this room I'll just put a table where kids can literally draw an easel to paint and then all add in some seating areas in case anyone wants to sit down [Music] I also went with some pastel color going kind of with the theme of the house and added in some brightness I put in some plants too because I didn't want the shelves to be empty [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] here I thought it would be kind of cool to add in one large painting because this wall was pretty plain [Music] right now I'm just adding in some decoration to make the areas a little bit less empty [Music] I also thought we needed like a quote room or a coat rack so that's what I added down here and I made it like a little doorway that you could just walk in put your coat or clothing or shoes anything away and you can go right into the house right after [Music] as you can tell I'm kind of obsessed with these carpets too so I'm sure you'll see more of them in my future bills [Music] and here's me fixing the patio area once again [Music] some of their messages were off because they change the house as I built so I'm going to be fixing that right now [Music] I kept asking my fans what to do because I like involving them and I feel bad if you're just standing there for over like four hours watching me belt so I added it like a little play pond in the front and I asked them what else should I add so all the outside decorations were their ideas and who doesn't love a little rubber duckie with the bathroom carpet I created a pathway to the house [Music] here I'm asking what I'm missing outside and people are giving me ideas [Music] and here we go something simple you're getting bored in a pun okay why not your wish is my command while editing I got this idea what if someone to spend me with $1 donations while I was building and recording I think I'm regretting that idea now I can't oh my gosh this might happen now also thanks for that $1 are me pickles and this is another suggestion lots of flowers [Music] and someone also said do a picnic area so that's what I did when I was almost done building my screen recording stopped and I didn't notice please forgive me all I added was the more decor and a garage [Music] before I keep going please keep in mind I added a 18k arm and I also added a bicycle so if you remove those off then the house of a bit cheaper [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] thank you so much for watching have an amazing day sigh be in the land this if you enjoyed this video click that subscribe button to be part of the panda land habitat and click that Bell to be notified of when I post could you be the first to comments can the girl is out thanks for watching bye
DaPandaGirl
UC3s2gS8SgIGEETZeHGPKlfg
2018-07-29
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
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2,938
14,535
X8cOGR8M9Qk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X8cOGR8M9Qk
Biblical Preaching (Homiletics) | Lecture 8 : BC204-BP-20220825
okay okay let's um let's just pray and then we'll get started um i just want to read you know that very family of us hebrews 4 and verse 12 um talks about the word of god being alive being powerful living and sharper than any two-edged sword and able to pierce even to the division of soul and spirit let me just read that and uh just invite the work of the holy spirit um to bring the word to us right that he'll continue to speak the word to us um hebrews 4 12 for the word of god is living and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword piercing even to the division of soul and spirit and of joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart let's pray father we thank you that your word is living and powerful your word is sharper than any into it so yes god we we believe that god dividing even to this division of the soul and the spirit lord this morning we we just ask for more of your word we ask for the work of your holy spirit in bringing the word to us and quickening the word to us lord this word lord and which we lord right now we we just want to highly esteem in our own lives father god treasure it cherish it god in our own lives father god and um yes master we pray or even as you speak maybe maybe receive maybe believe and uh or even as we a word says that it will profit those who receive with faith and maybe be such a people when we hear your word and we hear your quickened word that we will reach out in faith and we will receive in faith and may your word bring about lord a word that was released to us um do those things with the purpose for which you release those words god bring change in us lord stir up things in us awaken things in us god and bring revelation understanding conviction conviction of sin [Music] conviction of the truth let me do all that god we thank you we give you all the praise at this time and we give you all the glory even as we invite the work of your spirit in our hearts we thank you in jesus name we pray amen amen okay um [Music] let's um let's look at what we yeah um what we looked at last class we looked at how the lord jesus ministered uh the word right how how he ministered the word um and uh we looked at those nine things you know and and and the reason we studying you know we study how the lord jesus ministered the word is you know he's our example to follow and the way he minister it will be good for us to follow uh to observe and to emulate in our own lives in our own ministry so um so we looked at that okay and today um we are looking at how we can prepare ourselves and how we can uh to minister the word of god right how we can prepare ourselves and we're going to look at a few things that um a few a few things even as we look at preparing ourselves about the word of god uh being ministered by a human being you know when we look at the word of god we see that it's eternal we look at the word of god we see that it's it's uh you know all that we read it's living alive powerful and so um in the heart in the mind in the in the lips of someone who is finite you know who's called to minister you know how do we do that right um so um some of those things we're going to look at right so um we see that the lord jesus himself you know he is the the eternal word like he's the word which became flesh and who dwelt among us and john chapter 1 verse 14 talks about that that he is that word who dwelt among us the eternal word the word became less and john very beautifully captures that in john chapter one uh says uh you know in the beginning was the word and the word was uh with god and the word was god and he was in the beginning with god and all that and uh you know i'm going down to verse 14 and the word became flesh and dwelt among us and we beheld this glory the glory as of the only begotten of the father full of grace and truth so we see that the eternal word became the word who became i mean he became the word uh became flesh and dwelt among us right see um and in that in that fragile human body you know the the eternal word became the living word or uh was the word that became flesh sorry the eternal living word became the word that flesh so whatever the lord jesus did whatever he ministered or we see it was we can say that he is the word of god and this is word of god in action right and well with the word of god the word which went forth from him was untainted or unimpaired by all that you know as a human being when he ministered he ministered the word he spoke the word and he was filled by the holy spirit and he ministered the word the word went forth from him teaching you know all that he taught line up online etc it went forth from him so we see that it was untainted okay untainted by human emotion untamed by by the fact that he was he was in the flesh well there's a difference when we minister the word because uh you know we know that he was sinless we know that he was perfect um and the word which went out from him even though he was you know in flesh the word that went out from him was untainted by the flesh well it came with the emotion it came with the human personality but it was unpainted by the flesh when you say untainted it was you know uncontaminated it was not contaminated by anything of the flesh okay whereas we as human beings we know that we are works in progress right our thoughts emotions imaginations uh sometimes inspired sometimes you know we we indulge in works of the flesh and so despite all that god has entrusted us with the work of ministry which itself is fascinating right that god would entrust us as human beings and say okay you know you go forth you do this you be the spokesperson you be the ambassador you represent the kingdom which itself is fascinating right but our responsibility is to ensure that um this perfect word this living word this quickened word goes forth from us you know the way it is dropped into our hearts you know so we are in fact you know delivery persons right we can be tempted to change it we can't be tempted to you know do something with it but we need to be faithful to the world we need to be faithful to minister the word the way we have received it right so so that's the thing now so uh in doing that um well well god just says okay here you are finite being but i'm going to put my word in your heart here you are a finite being but i'm going to put my word in your mouth you speak it okay so first thing we see is that uh our flesh needs to be worked on meaning well the flesh wants to dictate certain things okay galatians 5 talks about that okay let's let's turn there um galatians chapter 5 right and verse 16 okay walk in the flesh oh sorry walk in the spirit and you shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh walk in the spirit for the flesh lusts against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrary to one another so that you do not do the things that you wish okay so this this is a reality for a believer this is a reality for a minister of god okay now the truth is this that this is still applicable if we walk in the flesh then we will not fulfill the desires i'm sorry if we walk in the spirit we will not fulfill the desires of the flesh the only way to put to death things of the flesh is to walk in the spirit verse 17 is as a reality for the spirit or the flesh lusts against the things of the spirit okay so the flesh lusts against the things of the spirit so our fleshly appetite our unrenewed mind everything is against the work of the spirit it goes against the spirit now in a believer yes in a believer okay in a minister of god yes a minister of god is a believer as a human being so the thing is that our thoughts our feelings our imaginations our ideas have to undergo change right now it could be fleshly inspired it could be uh you know fleshly led motivated you know we say oh i think i think i should share this it's it's fantastic i think it'll be good great right and the think is that it needs to be tested it needs to be tested um the motive has to be tested um you know by the spirit of god and uh we need to reflect and say okay you know why do i want to do this why do i want to share that right is it to make me make me uh or project me in a better light or is it to you know is to bring glory to god right so that has to be there all all the time and our flesh has to be so that is what we mean by saying our flesh has to be worked on so uh the thing is um the motives of our heart okay some see when we say the flesh has to be worked on we look at maybe sometimes we look at pride we look at ego we look at things like okay something that we project ourselves and bring focus to ourselves and we look at all that right but the opposite of that is also true when we say that i'm not worthy enough or i'm uh i'm you know when we lack i mean we are called and and and then still we say okay i'm not ready i'm not you know i i don't think i can do it i don't want to you know all that is also the work of the flesh because the flesh is flesh is afraid fearful anxious that is also the work of the flesh as much as pride is as much as you know you know selfish ambition is as much as all this is true and it's a work of the flesh so also is fear so also is intimidation right so also is like withholding holding back and saying okay i i don't think i want to do this this is also the thing i don't think i'm i'm equipped so you know every time you know many times we feel that way you get up you know as a minister of god you know you might be so experienced you know sometimes you just wake up and say i wish someone else would preach today i don't feel up to it emotionally i feel i don't feel up to it you know physically i don't feel up to it right so it has to be it has to be tempered by the spirit of god it has to be worked on by the word of god right so it becomes suitable so that's part of the preparing a preparation process you know as finite beings as new creations who have the indwelling spirit of god and uh who have been called to be new testament ministers like the dispensation okay so the second thing that we need to understand is that god will use our thoughts feelings our you know unique personalities and he will use that the fact is okay who created us so uniquely you know with all these life experiences and with all these personalities and it is it is uh it is god who created us so do i have to hide all that you know do i and bring it under the category of the flesh you know this is a physical thing so i for example i i remember you know i i used to sing in a choir in a church uh in a back home you know in home church where i was in a different town different city but i grew up so i remember one of the uh you know one of the persons who was who i was singing with uh he was a very experienced person so he was talking about you know how uh in certain places and certain uh he's talking about some monasteries and where the monks would sing in the same tone okay much like a chant sing without any inflection without any change because they don't want to add to the word that was being sung okay because if i sing you know they don't want to distract they don't want to add to it they don't want to they were afraid that okay if i do something if i add my ability to it or if i add my you know my talent to it then it will change or it'll distract or it will not bring glory okay so we're just talking about that i was reminded of that you know the fact is that god has created us with all this and when the word finds expression through us right through human personality okay maybe you're you know very the way he's created us you know he's very intellectual very academic very academic oriented and you know we are bent of mind is that right the way god works with us is that you know and he wants to want to wants us to speak and then we always go into the why and the how and the where and all those questions and we go to the depths of it and uh and we minister the word with all that right so i'm sure you've noticed you know some people would go to the the scientific part of it will go into that you know every illustration is somehow linked to that right uh answering a lot of questions right and that's how god has created them like personality wise and and and and god uses that their natural abilities he reduces that or if you can think of human personality well okay maybe some people are funny some people are very serious right and they you know they're serious right from start to finish but god uses that right and some of them cry is so moved emotionally right by the spirit of god they are just they just read a verse and then they can't hold back the tears god uses that you know does that mean that god will not use no right so despite all that you know he uses the thoughts he uses our feelings he uses all that okay so you don't have to be afraid at the same time we know that we bring all that under the we bring all that you know we submit all that to god we bring all that you know human temperament personally everything under the leadership of the holy spirit and so that is refined so that brings glory to god that that finds expression in bringing glory to god rather than highlighting man okay so don't be afraid you know just be yourself you don't have to copy someone uh in order to bring the word of god you don't have to you know oh i need to speak like that man of god i need to speak like that you know person no just be yourself god has created you uniquely god has formed you fashioned you uniquely you be yourself and you share the word of god you know how he has created you the unique style that he's given you you do that okay okay um which is which is what the third thing is you know it's delivered through human vessels through human elements okay if you're following in the notes we are looking at uh chapter eight ministering god's word and we're looking at the uh the topic new testament ministers um yeah okay so um so god's word is uh delivered through us as human vessels so we have all those characteristics it has to be dealt with the holy spirit dealt with um the the work of the holy spirit that's for sure okay so the thing is that uh if i have wrong ideas if i have uh if i've gone through certain you know bad certain hurtful certain bias certain certain experiences in life you know so it has affected let's say my the realm of the soul right my thoughts my my outlook perspective uh it has been touched right so i need to be careful not to let those hurts not to let those hurtful experiences maybe contaminate or taint the message now for example you know the thing is this that let's say someone has been someone has had a very bad marriage okay um bad marriage so uh just give me a minute sorry i just want to plug in the laptop just a minute quite a release yeah it can be on things oh where is the okay uh excuse me just a minute please guys okay this was the charger this is this is the port this is it no okay i think i'm carrying a different um can you do me a small favor um this is diana's charger so you can give this to her and then get kieran's charger please okay um just give me one more minute sorry um just get the charger and then we'll just continue okay we started uh back on thank you yeah so um so let's say you know if someone has had um let's say a bad marriage you know a hurtful experience and um and so it is all it is possible when they minister the word word of god and it's uh maybe it has to do with marriage it has to do with finding a life partner it has to do with you know something on those lines it is possible if they are not healed if they are hurt if they are still carrying anger or maybe against their spouse then that will find expression in the in the word in the message right it could be in the way of in the manner of of a you know maybe in a joke where the joke is you know just putting down the spouse or it could be some statement you know putting down the other person or maybe they've been hurt by a certain group of people you know let's say a language group an ethnic group and they've still not got over that hurt okay and they still have that kind of a bias in their heart in their mind so that comes out as well now that you know they are maybe talking about that particular group and they are you know about someone living in that particular state or country or speaking that language and and then you know it just comes out right so in these man in these ways the message the word which uh you find that okay it's tainted by the flesh by our bias by our hurt right so so so in all these things you know we need to really uh bring ourselves uh under the subjection of the holy spirit you know it's very very important um and say lord you know first let me you know deal with this please deal with these hurts and uh just really ask god to heal us um strengthen us in those things and so that even when we mention those things when we talk about you know um talk about the scars you know you know it does not come from a place of hurt okay so it's it's very important that we do that okay um then the thing is that um the word of god the message um the lord jesus when he talks about it he says that you do it yourself okay so it's okay let's let's say the word god gives us a word god gives us a message uh and uh many times we we say okay you you know we we turn to our audience and god is asking you to do it god is asking you to do that god is asking you to repent god is asking you to change right but the very fact yes it's true yeah but the very fact that god has given us you know we first apply the word okay um we apply it to our lives and say lord you know is there something that i need to change how you are um there's a direction maybe to repent there's a thing that there's an instruction here now god you know what do i do with it first right and then we teach so which means that the word goes through us the word goes you know what is part of us in us it goes through us and changes us even before we teach so we receive the word first we believe the word we receive the word we follow the word and and then we teach okay so this is what the lord jesus says matthew chapter 5 and you know the lord says this let's read uh matthew 5 and verse 19 whoever therefore breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches men so shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven but whoever does and teaches them he shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven you see the order whoever does and teaches okay matthew chapter 5 and verse 19. um so of course the context is that okay they are breaking that commandment and they're also teaching the wrong thing okay but the lord is saying you know whoever does and teaches now that's the order so it's it's not only you know i i understand you know certain words certain prophetic words could be for a group of people it doesn't apply to you you know it's for that people it's specific for that people yeah there are you know instructions like that and there are you know maybe a word of warning is is for the you know maybe for someone in the um you know congregation it's not for you right it's it's it's a word for them right but at the same time the values or the the truth of that word applies to us also the standard of that word applies to us also right the the truth is eternal it applies to us right so we also need to hold ourselves to that standard standard of the word you know when we say okay you should not live in such a way you should not be doing this uh it applies to us also that i should not be doing that you know i should be living in in in this manner as the word prescribes so um so we need to understand that okay um so it applies to me matthew 5 19 whoever does and teaches them he shall be called great in the kingdom of god okay then another thing which will actually set us free is this of many times we put a lot of unnecessary pressure on ourselves like every time we go there to minister to speak we put ourselves on the grape unnecessary and unwanted you know pressure okay what is that every time we want to minister the word okay we want to give a new thing a new revelation okay it's a good desire right god you know you're you're infinite your wisdom is infinite your understanding is infinite um so lord you you show me you teach me and i want to you know bring something new for the people and i want to show you know i want to um bring something that is that is beneficial for them right it's a good desire but also understand that when the word when when god ministers it is also to give something or it one one of which could be a reiteration of truth okay a truth that has already been laid a truth that has already been established in people it's a reiteration of that meaning it's god is re reminding them again okay many times god does that he reminds me did i not speak this did i not say this i'm reminding you of this that you need to walk right so god brings a reminder of truth the other thing is also that he adds to what is already established it's not something totally new totally out of the world uh which can be which can be you know which is possible which is which is really you know which is how god works but it also could be adding more light by adding uh something to what is already established okay so the pressure we don't have to put ourselves under pressure oh i don't have any new thing you know god you're just telling me to speak the same thing i've already spoken at god well it's it could be a reiteration or god you know it's just adding to something you know just one more point you're saying you know i've already you know preached about these five things but then you adding just one more thing you know just be faithful he's adding to what is already established in people's lives and that is exactly what he wants to do right so and you may be surprised sometimes right we we share this you know the simplest of messages and then we've maybe shared it many times and then uh you you do so much of hesitation god should i do this i don't have anything else okay god i'll just go and then and then you get the feedback you get the response that oh wow this is exactly what i wanted and you're surprised really and and that's how it is right so be faithful in whatever it is you know don't put yourself under unnecessary pressure yeah so the word is intended to be repeated uh and each time you know there is a fresh anointing that comes from god um you know a fresh facet of that truth so so that so don't be you know don't be afraid right share that okay so the thing is this that we always uh the the other side of that is okay um like we've you know somebody gives a topic somebody shares a topic and says you know can you please share on this okay or you yourself okay okay i think i'll share on this you know i've preached on this many times so i'll share you know and then we are confident we're saying okay i've preached on this many times i don't need to even spend much time preparing you know points one two three i know it and i'll just speak it like even if it's something that is repeated what we need to understand is that there you know god gives a fresh anointing upon it right um every time it's a fresh anointing a fresh revelation he brings to that same word okay what you're repeating what you're bringing it again and as a result of it okay it produces there is fruit right and it's not the same as before but it's something else god does a new thing right he annoys he brings a fresh revelation he brings a fresh anointing and it's a fresh perspective some and though it is repeated so we so that for us it's we depend on him like we go back to him we depend on him and we receive uh a fresh anointing right so so the thing is also that you know when it's a topic that is that has already been visited uh many times we become a little complacent right we're saying okay and maybe we depend on our own experience and learning and and not so much on god saying i've done it god you've taught me a lot and i'm so good i'm just going and teaching right and we're not really depending on him asking him to anoint us afresh asking him to show us uh what more god what more or in the same thing what is the emphasis what is it that you want to emphasize on right um like we were looking at the message that just that one verse you know the lord is my shepherd but god what is it that you want to emphasize about that and the lord will clarify and the lord will show right okay the next one is that we receive revelation and then we share that revelation so god quickens the word to us we receive that revelation from him he reveals things to us he's a spirit of truth he's a spirit of revelation and truth and wisdom he reveals these things to us and we speak out of that okay so when we look at galatians 1 uh and 15 and 16 so this is paul talks about how he was called right a please god who separated me from my mother's womb and called me through his grace to reveal his son in me that i might preach him among the gentiles okay to reveal his son in me that i might might preach him among the gentiles um i did not immediately confer with flesh and blood so that's what he says though i did not immediately consult with man but god chose to reveal his son god chose to bring a revelation about jesus to me and then we know you know the revelation about the cross the revelation about this new dispensation the revelation about you know everything justification sanctity all about the gifts of the spirit and everything you know we see as in broad so he revealed his son in him god revealed his son the father revealed the son brought that revelation and he ministered out of that so what do you see here is that um you know we see that he um he he he chose to reveal right verse 16 he revealed his son in me that i might preach him among the gentiles right so the purpose of the revelation was that he would communicate that revelation that he would proclaim that revelation okay so he revealed his son that he might proclaim so that's the order uh so we can ask for revelation that we might proclaim right so that's uh so we receive that um revelation and when god speaks when god reveals there is an assurance in our heart right there is an assurance in our heart that god has spoken and with that assurance comes that confidence and boldness like you don't care and we don't you don't care when god has spoken you don't care how intimidating that audience can be how learned how you know whatever be the audience whatever be the number of people you don't care you reach that place you don't care in the sense you know i i'm saying it's not like you you know you don't you're going to be you know disrespectful or anything but you know you're not intimidated how did you reach that place because it was a revelation you know you received that revelation of the truth and that produced in in us that that will produce in us such confidence and boldness that we don't mind the situation that we don't mind the kind of audience nothing seems to intimidate us because we've received the revelation so we have the privilege of receiving that from god you know when it comes to communicating a message we have that privilege of receiving that uh we have a god who reveals we have a god who you know who's just willing right willing to reveal those things just as he did to paul we have the same holy spirit who wants to reveal that and you know that's his characteristic so we receive that and we minister out of that okay um so so we we there is a the boldness that comes as a confidence that comes also you know when we uh just look at one other scripture you know so also um when we have walked with god so once we receive the revelation there's that boldness that confidence right you know god has spoken okay and boldness and confidence also comes when we are in his presence uh when we have been in his presence okay if you look at let's say mark chapter 3 okay mark chapter 3 and verse 14 okay mark 3 verse 14. this talks about the lord appointing appointing the 12 disciples and you know this is what he says right three and maybe we'll read 13 and 14 also says and he went up to on the mountain and called to him those he himself wanted that and they came to him okay verse 14. then he appointed 12 that they might be with him and that he might send them out to preach right that they might first of all be with him and that he might send them out so that's the order he called them he appointed them that they might be with him okay so we see being in the presence of jesus being in the presence of our lord he is appointing them and saying okay first of all you be with me okay that's the first thing not to be neglected and that he might send them out so that's the order okay so when we go to acts chapter 4 and verse 13 right acts chapter 4 and verse 13. um you see this except you know at a testif testimony of that okay what we read just now a testimony of that a proof of that is what we see in acts chapter 4 verse 13 okay accept before verse 13 now when they saw the boldness of peter and john and perceived that they were uneducated and untrained men they marveled and they realized that they had been with jesus so they were uneducated untrained but they were in the company of jesus and that was unmistakable okay so the lord's lord's purpose was this they he chose them he appointed him he called them appointed them that they might be with him that he might send them out now here is the thing people saw the change people saw the difference that they had been with jesus and what was that change what was that difference you know the the boldness with which they spoke right they were so convinced um they spoke with so much boldness they spoke with so much sincerity now and authenticity right um so that is what we that is what we see here so if you look at the words of the of peter uh before that you know um so they are surrounded okay they're surrounded by the high priest they're surrounded by kefirs and john and alexander and the family of the high priest which we see in verse six they were gathered together they set them in the midst they asked by what power by what name have you done this verse 8 peter filled with the holy spirit said to them rulers of the people elders of israel if we this day are judged for a good deed done to the helpless man by what means he has been made well let be known to you and to all you know in the name of jesus christ of nazareth and then verse 11 he quotes from the old testament right he goes from i guess he says this is the stone which was rejected by you builders which has become the chief cornerstone and or is there salvation in any other for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved and after all this they saw the boldness the courage with which they spoke and they realized that they had been with jesus they had been in the presence of jesus right so so also for us uh we we realize that you know yes on one side the revelation that comes that gives us the you know the boldness and the courage and the revelation we receive from our personal walk with the lord right and then when we when we receive that and then we minister that uh it is with so much of boldness it is unmistakable right it finds its impact okay then um this receiving revelation about something about some topic about some uh you know some some about a truth in scripture is not a one-time thing it's a continuous thing okay it's uh okay let's say god use you know we say okay lord you've taught me about this you've taught me about faith you taught me about maybe the works of the spirit you taught me about this now we don't have to be satisfied with that or we don't have to plateau we don't have to stop with that right there's more and we will receive continuous revelation and with continuous revelation comes continuous ministering because like we saw in paul you know the the purpose of the lord giving the revelation is that we might communicate that is that we might proclaim that right profess that truth share that so with continuous revelation comes continuous opportunities and you know moments when we share that and so we say you know with continuous revelation comes continuous ministry right so um it is it gives birth to continual ministry where you know we're just excited yeah this we just want to share the lord has put it in my heart and i need to share it so and he's creating opportunities and you know uh environments and maybe it's with one two groups whatever but he's giving those uh revelation to be shared so we you know we know that continuous this is a continuous process it's not just a one-time thing right we go for fresh anointing uh a fresh revelation of the truth that is already shared with us and that gives birth to continued ministry okay so without the anointing enlightening and the revelation uh of the exposition of scriptures you know um if it's just the natural mind then well god will still use it now god we know that god will use anything you know because it's the word uh god will still use it but you know as a new testament minister is this so much more right there's so much more um if it's so we don't have to just be satisfied with just the human mind just the human reasoning there's so much more as we dig in deep there's so much more as we depend on the revelation elimination of the holy spirit right there's so much more right okay so we will stop here and then we'll continue in the next class thank you god bless you bye you
APC Bible College
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2022-08-25
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Righteous Among the Nations | Wikipedia audio article
righteous among the nations Hebrew Casa de um whatta woolum Casa de amid Hollen righteous plural of the world's nations is an honorific used by the State of Israel to describe non-jews who risked their lives during the Holocaust to save Jews from extermination by the Nazis the term originates with the concept of righteous Gentiles a term used in rabbinic Judaism to refer to non-jews called ger Tasha who abide by the seven laws of Noah topic bestowing you when Yad Vashem the Shoah martyrs and heroes remembrance authority was established in 1953 by the Knesset one of its tasks was to commemorate the Righteous among the Nations the righteous were defined as non-jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust since 1963 a commission headed by a Justice of the Supreme Court of Israel has been charged with the duty of awarding the honorary title Righteous among the Nations guided in its work by certain criteria the Commission meticulously studies all documentation including evidence by survivors and other eyewitnesses evaluates the historical circumstances and the element of risk to the rescuer and then decides if the case meets the criteria those criteria are only a Jewish party can put a nomination forward helping a family member or helping a Jewish person who converted to Christianity as not a criterion for recognition assistance has to be repeated or substantial assistance has to be given without any financial gain expected in return although covering expenses such as food as acceptable the award has been given without regard to the social rank of the helper it has been given to royalty such as Princess Alice of Battenberg Queen Mother Helen of Romania and Queen Elizabeth of Belgium but also to others like the philosopher Jacques LEL and to amsterdam department store employee Hendrika Garretson a person who is recognized as righteous for having taken risks to help Jews during the Holocaust has awarded a medal in their name a certificate of honor and the privilege of having the name added to those on the wall of Honor in the garden of the righteous at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem the last is in lieu of a tree-planting which was discontinued for lack of space the awards are distributed to the rescuers or their next of kin during ceremonies in Israel or in their countries of residence through the offices of Israel's diplomatic representatives these ceremonies are attended by local government representatives and are given wide media coverage the Yad Vashem law authorizes Yad Vashem to confer honorary citizenship upon the Righteous among the Nations and if they have died the commemorative citizenship of the State of Israel in recognition of their action anyone who has been recognized as righteous is entitled to apply to Yad Vashem for the certificate if the person is no longer alive their next of kin is entitled to request that commemorative citizenship be conferred on the righteous who has died in total 26,000 973 as of the 1st of January 2018 men and women from 51 countries have been recognized amounting to more than 10,000 authenticated rescue stories Yad Vashem policy is to pursue the program for as long as petitions for this title are received and are supported by evidence that meets the criteria recipients who choose to live in the State of Israel are entitled to a pension equal to the average national wage and free health care as well as assistance with housing and nursing care topic righteous settled in Israel at least 130 righteous Gentiles have settled in Israel they were welcomed by Israeli authorities and were granted citizenship in the mid-1980s they became entitled to special pensions some of them settled in British mandatory Palestine before Israel's establishment shortly after World War two or in the early years of the new State of Israel while others came later those who came earlier often spoke fluent Hebrew and have integrated into Israeli society topic other signs of veneration the righteous are honored with a feast day on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church in the United States on the 16th of July a righteous from Italy Edward facher Eenie was beatified by the Catholic Church on the 15th of June 2013 in 2015 Lithuania is first street sign honoring a Righteous among the Nations was unveiled in Vilnius the street is named CIMMYT street after ona CIMMYT a Vilnius University Librarian who helped and rescued Jewish people in the Vilna ghetto topic number of awards by country as of June 16 2017 the award has been made to twenty six thousand five hundred thirteen people topic see also European day of the righteous individuals in groups assisting Jews during the Holocaust list of Righteous among the Nations by country righteousness virtuous pagan Z Goethe
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2018-12-07
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Rear Parking Sonar 2014 Toyota Highlander
okay jack so you thought only superheroes had ultrasonic powers huh the 2014 highlanders rear parking sonar has four ultrasonic wave sensors on the rear bumpers solar wave sensors nice so you know the location and distance from obstacles behind the car okay so to use the rear parking sonar the driver needs to turn it on by pressing the button just to the left of the steering column and you'll also see confirmation that the system has been engaged by a light with the sonar logo on the dash when you shift into reverse and when your speed is less than 6 miles an hour the sonar graphic will appear in the multi-information display the speed of the warning tone and the color of the graphic in the multi-informational display will give you an idea of how close you are to an object or obstacle a constant tone and a red indicator means you're very close pretty cool huh thank you 2014 highlander i salute you toyota let's go places
RaniaCar
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Join the Fulbright Association
the Fulbright Program for me it's like a pebble in a pond it makes a lot of ripples even though it's a small pebble so the Fulbright Program the way I tell it to folks is that it's the best year of my life I really wanted the opportunity to immerse myself in a different culture in a different country one of the things that the Fulbright Program does it breaks down stereotypes of people there's no better way to understand a culture than by going somewhere understanding those people understanding where they're coming from and being friends with them those unique experiences can have longer lasting effects than you actually think so I got a plane in Bangkok and it was just overwhelming and then woke up the next day and was just surrounded by a constant heat and beautiful architecture I was the first fulbrighter in my town and so I really had to break down a lot of barriers they never had a foreign teacher before and so they didn't really know how to act generally know how to communicate with me the ins club was my way of breaking down those barriers with my students even if they didn't feel confident in English they were able to connect with me in a way where they did feel confident we made a music video highlighting their dance moves then we performed English camp and science day and a bunch of different assemblies at school Thailand is so focused on being a team I came back with that sense of succeeding together I have three children and my wife all went with me to Scotland my wife who is a musician got a chance to sing in some of the choirs in Scotland my daughter took Highland dancing she started kindergarten and we have her ledger books that are filled with counting sheep my oldest son was involved in studying Scottish fiddle music it was a great family experience I was pretty busy with teaching my classes but I did spend a considerable amount of time writing music and I wrote a song cycle on the poems of Robert Burns the great Scottish poet who says in one of his poems to see ourselves as other people see us and that is what I was able to see a new view of the United States through some other people's eyes [Music] Kairo is completely different it's like it's like a beautiful chaos it's loud it's crazy people everywhere many Egyptians I met had never met an American before at first they didn't really know what to do with me because I'm some Arab American guy coming to Cairo to study Arabic calligraphy my family decided to come visit me and even my grandparents came and they really hadn't been outside the US before and so when my grandfather came he's from Iowa comes from a farming community salted Earth kind of guy X Air Force when he came and saw my interactions with my roommates Egyptian roommates he was pretty amazed and he set me aside and said we're here if we could do this on a large scale we'd have peace all over the world if people actually talked to each other I wanted to make a point to join the Fulbright Association when I got back from Thailand because I wanted to share those experiences with other fulbrighters the Association can offer a range of programming for different generations of fulbrighters the Fulbright Association has allowed me to connect with people from all those different backgrounds and continue what I think my Fulbright experience is the Fulbright Association provides kind of this network for your professional career and also socially advocacy has really become a core component the association we were going to be the ones who will have to advocate for this program to be sustained for the next 70 years my school has actually been cut from the Fulbright Program that really hit me really hard because I you know spent my year really breaking down those barriers in that person-to-person contact once you have a friend they just can open up the society to you it's amazing to have those experiences to talk to those who have the power to decide whether or not the Faubourg program continues the impact that these programs can have on the individuals but and also the communities that they're in I think the case for the Fulbright Program and programs like it is incredibly powerful go to your representatives field office in your city or in your local town and talk to them talk to their staff members thank you for being a friend of our community being a friend of the Fulbright Association and always being there for us we are living in a time of not being open to each other to different cultures to different people advocacy for the Fulbright is important because the world needs it you [Music]
Fulbright Association
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Responsibilities mountain refuse to bear By Ustadh Majed Mahmoud
[Music] Allah oh I feel horrible it says please do not touch the mics and that was the first thing I did let me put it back all right with the topic of this afternoon regarding the trust of Islam and when we read the description of the topic it's regarding DAW and being proud as a Muslim and how to convey it to others and inshallah the way I will be delivering it by the will of Allah subhanahu wa taala is through five tips regarding da and handling this magnificent heavy load of trust Allah has given all of us here in this room inshallah so are you guys ready inshallah say inshallah inshallah number one you have to believe that conveying The Message of Islam is your job said he says convey about me even if it's one verse one Hadith one statement tell people about it go tell the one that you saw making s prostration how is the camera okay perfect the one who was making s like this is that right or wrong wrong how is the right way yes you should not make this touch the ground if you're making s correct so if you see someone doing that and you know for a fact that you learned it in Sunday school at the in the Masid your parents they told you and you know this is the right way to go this way you should tell them so we got that task inshallah with utmost respect as we add more tips subhana waala the second matter regarding handling this am and giving da to Allah subhanahu wa taala is to realize when you do that it will help you out one more time when I advise people to become more practicing when I advise people to correct their actions I become a better person just like how we learn if you want to master something what do you do you teach it one more time if you master something you teach so if you want to master something you teach it and that's how Allah subhana wa T made us for example he said have mercy on those on Earth then Allah will have mercy upon you Allah says forgive others then Allah says he will forgive you allahar so when I help someone I end up helping my own self just to give you an example he said the example of the one who fulfills the commands of Allah and the one who does not is like a group of people divided into two going onto a ship one group goes to the top the ones that know the right from the wrong pretty much and then the ones that go in the bottom does not know much so when they go to the bottom anytime they want water they go to the upper deck to throw the bucket get the water and use it at one point the people in the lower level of that ship they said we don't want to disturb the ones on the top we don't want to irritate them you know we give them some peace so how about we drill a hole into the lower level of the boat can you imagine that drill a hole what's going to happen to the ship it's going to sink so the prophet sallallah alai wasallam says if the ones on the top pay attention if the ones on the top do not stop the ones in the lower level they will all drown and if they stop them from drilling the hole and they assist them they will all be saved so therefore when you tell the guy to make S and go this way it's not just his Salah becomes better our Jama as a whole becomes better this person now teaches his children who is your children's classmates you see how it's a full circle Subhan Allah not just that even even under the second tip is to motivate you to give da is how you will benefit even from Wise every time you hear that name say what he says whoever calls people to guidance to the truth and that person ends up doing it you the caller you get the reward for their actions and their actions will not be reduced in reward for them Allah abbar how many of us in this room without even the need of raising hand hands you all would many of us would love to have passive income right you want to sleep you have income coming in you want to go on a vacation and you get that deposit in your account because some rental property that you have you love passive income it's just so beautiful but to get it you have to put a lot of effort similarly you want passive hassat passive hassat income so you do this work you write this article you do this video you upload it you share it you advise and every time while you're sleeping you're eating you're vacationing you're getting hassat why because of that person you advise at the workplace allahar so don't just think of D but also think of the de and lastly under that second tip about how this motivates that there will be benefit for you is that if you really want to physically look beautiful it's in da I don't understand how can that even make sense this is like a Halal makeup tutorial all right he says authentic narration he makes Dua Ya Allah make the one so beautiful in the eyes of the people make him so beautiful who is it the one who hears from us a statement and he conveys it the way he heard it allahar so when you narrate a Hadith the prophet Sall alaihi wasallam said this you will look better 1 two and three it will look better so Subhan Allah we think may Allah make protect us that there's no new Behind These stuff sometimes right like oh being religious doesn't mean I take care of my physical features and so on and so forth no not just you should even da itself that's the reward of giving dab may Allah protect us and make us beautiful inside and outside so number one what was it it's our job to convey even if it's one verse number two remember the reward that you get when you call people to Allah number three make your da convey this am this trust within your capabilities the call of giving dawa does not mean you come to this main stage it doesn't mean that you have to give Friday it's much more than that just if you noticed the session was slightly postponed did you notice a little bit was a bit delayed what was the issue was a mic issue do you think I fixed it no way it was some group of wonderful people in the back may Allah bless them they fixed it someone else had to put this uh projector someone is now recording us may Allah grant them that which is best someone right now if you guys don't see it I can see there's a timer I have 12 minutes 47 seconds left so it's a what what just what am I trying to say we all have a job to do so we all compliment each other and don't limit da just to public speaking it's a lot bigger than this every single one of you here young and old male and female just recently been practicing or for the longest time every one of you is gifted you have to truly believe in that I'm telling you I'm gifted and you're gifted and all of us is are gifted but what many of us have not yet done is unwrap the gift you're special about something may Allah allow us to know what we're best at say a mean when it comes to conveying in the best of abilities the people get inspired by him and I'll share with you one story there was a German boxer a champion at during his time in which he was invited to Riyad Saudi Arabia to be honored for his achievements that was many many years ago more than 20 years ago and then he came to real they honored him gave him a prize and everything like that and there was a sister in the Gathering she was a n sister and she really wanted to see can we give him da like this guy is so influential she noticed perhaps that no one is really being very much involved her capacity and capability at that time was to do what give him a Quran translated into German language so she said Here We Go sir this is a Quran translated into your language he took that book who's the narrator of the story The Boxer but let me tell you when he says I went back to Germany 20 years later I was cleaning my library and then as I was cleaning all the books I don't want this I need this I came across that book and I remember this was given to me by some Muslim lady in Riyad in Saudi Arabia they didn't say much except give me this book so I said you know after he retired got the Quran and start reading and start hitting his heart start to read and start to get impacted start to read and start to get convinced until he went to the Islamic Center in his city in Germany and he asked how can I become Muslim and he accepted Islam what did he do the next day next day he set up a table in one of the busiest spots in his City what did he have on the table he had pamphlets he had books he had matters that of the dean to tell people about so whoever sees him all what they want is a selfie true story oh can I have a picture with you he's like yeah sure but on your way out please take this with you take this with you take this with you in one year how many people accepted Islam 104 104 people accepted Islam from that brother all of that reward is in whose scale that sister 20 years ago in riy Allah so you never know that seed that you drop how much fruit it will bring about so number three you go within your capabilities you're a physician you have an office you have a waiting room they put GQ magazines what are not GQ magazines tell me some beautiful book maybe maybe something about who is Jesus in Islam stuff that we really appreciate maybe something creative may Allah reward all of you who try to do that which is best for Islam say a mean within your cap capabilities number four out of five con and give da with humbleness and respect it's very important to deliver it with utmost Allah says in the [Music] Quran Allah says call people to the path of Allah with wisdom and kind advice and if you want to have a discussion or a debate then make sure it's with best of manners allahar this is what and Allah is teaching us look to this wonderful scary but optimistic Hadith in same time he says bad character ruins the deed the action the same way vinegar ruins the honey I never tried putting vinegar in honey but I trust him if you put vinegar in honey it ruins it even if I never tried it or you never tried it we believe inam but that's how your action is ruined the good stuff you're doing by doing it in a bad and bad character for example let's say actually true story I was in another very far away City and there was a brother who was setting up the chairs for the lecture wonderful brother a big he has a big family he works very hard a full-time uh work in one of the big corporations he's coming on a Sunday volunteering the hours beautiful guy but the manner in which he was talking to the remaining volunteers was very demeaning he I get the bring the chair what's the matter with you f you're so slow bro I should have never called you like you see how why you're doing great job and this Behavior ruins all your sacrifices you were you were better off staying at home doing nothing may Allah forgive us so here we learn to do in the best of in one of the beautiful examples he sent a group of the sahab because there is a people around Medina they're trying to spy there's a lot of enemies towards the prophet sallallah alaihi wasallam lo and behold this group of sahabah they captured the guy he was a leader he was like a king in n in the N area Central Arabia so when they captured him his name was this man when he was captured and he was brought into the mid of the Prophet sallallah alaihi wasallam it's like a jackpot kill him he wants to kill our own people destroy him so the prophet sallallah alai wasam when this man was tied to the pillar of the mid so yes he was in the Masjid this cfer man at that time the prophet told him what do you have what do you got for us what's the deal he's like the deal is simple I have three options that's the enemy of Islam look what he's saying he said option number one if you want to kill me then know that my blood is very expensive so he's threatening the prophet while he's being tied to the pillar like you kill me you know you will not get away with this number two you forgive me then I'm a very grateful person I will pay you back for it and I'll never forget that favor if you want money option three I'll give you all the money that you want you know how rich I am so the prophet like he basically he left him then the next day the prophet s says today what do you have he's like just like what I told you yesterday I tell you again today three options you kill me I have a big backup of people that will take care of me number two you will forgive me I'm very grateful number three you want money I'll give you everything that you want and the prophet left him I want you to realize where was he all these days where was he in the Masid so he s he sees the sahab interacting he sees who was an Abyssinian slave someone who is disrespected very much in that area being someone that people looked up to him you know what the people used to say about bil who was a slave so worthless they said worthless in the eyes of people people but he's very worthy in the sight of Allah they used to say abak is AB Bakr is our master and D is our master and the way they said it Abu Bakr is our and he freed our Master look at the respect and the love so he sees that he sees the prophet sallallahu alaihi was the wonderful im a great example the IM should be the best example it's a lot of pressure but the IM should be the best nonnegotiable this is a position that Allah will hold us accountable for the prophet reading Quran may Allah make you all hear the prophet reading Quran in J so he sees all of that maybe some jokes some comments some this some Third Day the prophet sallam goes to him says what's the deal today day three he says the deal of day three is like day one like day two number one you kill me there's a lot of people that will fight back number two you forgive me I will be very grateful number three you want money I give you whatever you want so the prophet says release him what release him kill this man he's a leader who wants to eliminate us from this Earth release him let him go this is the what happened left the mid no one touched him there's even a narration that says that they fed th the food that was being done to the prophet sallallah alaihi wasallam to honor that prisoner so then when this man left he went near a palm tree took a shower came back took a shower why he came back and when he walked into the M he said excited this is amazing accomplishment the king of the area in N became Muslim allahar this man look to what he says he says yeah Muhammad there's no face that I hated more than your face and today you're the most beloved face to me yeah Muhammad there's no religion I hated more than Islam and today Islam is the most beloved religion to me yeah Muhammad Medina was the ugliest and worst and most city that I don't want to even pass by and today Medina is the most beloved City to me yeah Muhammad from now on I will never deal with any business with the kufar and this and that until you give me the thumbs up the green light that yes I can do this it's Halal or no I cannot do this cuz it's Haram allahar then the prophet sallallahu alai was am gave him the Glad Tidings the good news what in the world did he see in 72 hours not just to be neutral he wasn't neutral you what you guys are not so bad no you're the best from the worst to the best within 72 hours this was the character of Muhammad sallallah alai wasallam number five and last one convey and give da while focusing on the effort not the result focus on what the effort and not the result he says if is taking place I want you to imagine the sky is being ripped the oceans are turned to fire the light of the sun is fading away the Moon is getting closer to the Sun chaos the Earth is cracking and you had a plant what would you do like run for your life who's going to eat from this plant what's the point the prophet says if this is all happening the eruption of Earth is taking place the sky is being destroyed all of that stuff you have a plant plant it what does it tell you you take the means leave the results on Allah subhana wa ta'ala who will eat from it that's not your business how much will it take to grow leave it to Allah waala who will benefit from it leave it to Allah you put the effort because if success is based only on results then some of the first ones to go to hell would be prophets because some prophets they come not a single one believing in them but they are the highest in Jenna why not results effort Allah says your efforts are appreciated Allah did not focus on the results there when it comes to the effort many parents are here no was he a great father or not without waiting for your answer no was one of the greatest fathers and Par par That Ever Walked on Earth he's one of the best five prophets ever but his own son was not a bad Muslim his own son does not miss one or two Salah his son was a straight up cfer this does not make him a bad father because your success should not be in the hands of the people your success should be in the effort that you put and Allah is your ultimate judge so give dawa is our job to give it number two do it while remembering the reward Allah will give you do it within your capabilities and capacity number four deliver the da with utmost respect and good number five focus on the effort that's where your success is at leave the results on Allah subhah wa tala I got 12 seconds left Sal
ICNA
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2024-02-16
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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Easy Korean BBQ and Skillet Corn | Food | Fork n Fly
hello I am pouring the owner of walking flag these other ingredients I was gonna do this this classic chicken gravy what I did before I like actually like the turkey gravy I'm not going to use that what I'm gonna use is this Korean barbecue I use it on my meat even though it says beef got my pink Himalayan salt pepper corn I'm gonna put that on a pan and like kind of skillet it I got a couple rice and I got my ground turkey don't mind my now so it's still quarantine right here I have a pot of two cups of water with a tablespoon of butter about to boil I am heating my pan this is actually a nonstick skillet pan and if you don't have it I would suggest you put some nonstick cooking spray or some butter but I don't have to go delicas love the meat let that cook and then you're gonna add your what you call it you're gonna add this when it's a little bit of cook I put the corn in closer to when everything is ready because the corners take that long the meats gonna take like I was saying about 15-20 minutes the rice alone is gonna take 15 minutes once it once I put the rice in there so just kind of time everything so everything to be ready at the same time and no I'm nothing to show my faith because we're still quarantine mom I don't keep on saying and my hands not done nor do I have just a little clothes on I just raise the meat a little bit more in the pan so to cook more and not like oh it's all piled up on top of each other [Applause] you can season the meat but I'm not gonna season it because the sauce that I have alone I'm sure it's pretty good cuz when I put it on the salmon it was good but that didn't marinate overnight so I might just put a little bit of salt and pepper plus the sauce we'll see [Applause] my bracelet [Applause] anything I'm a sprinkle some salt and pepper on here [Music] you want to break this up nice and good but when the source comes in here then they'll like make the meat soft and easy it's a break before you put the meat on the sauce and you want to make sure that the pink is gone from the meat and a lot of people say that because you want to make sure that it's fully cooked you don't want to have pink in here and then put your sauce or whatever it is and then the only boil it you know cook it more for like two three minutes and then you still got for me so you want to make sure that whenever you read instructions they always they let your meat Brown and then move forward so you want to make sure that you meet Browns before you add anything to it that you can't see the color of the meats or like you know if you want to add vegetables or whatever else to it I don't know if you I know that but that was like a little tip [Music] with the corn we're going to put the corn in here look like a tablespoon of water because of this frozen corn and we want to like kind of boil it but not boil it because we're not in a big pot but we want to get a soft and then we're gonna have butter and toss it and skill it making always saying well if you don't know it's a cooking is for fun well wait it would baking is a science cooking is fun is that much smoking after that but you know what I mean cooking you don't have to measure baking you have to measure it if you don't measure you must guess something's gonna be messed up so cooking is just you know our boy [Music] you want to put this on a simmer give the rice stood in going actually know what we're gonna cover this something similar nice and good okay that's too big but it's gonna have to do anything so now let's move you over to the water I have butter in man you wanna [Music] put a cup of rice um so I have 2 cups of water a cup of rice I don't know why people don't know how to me grace I'm actually gonna add this little bit of rice to it to finish out the pack mix that once it comes to a boil you cover it lower the heat let it simmer for 15 minutes okay so with the rice you see how I don't know if you can see it started bubbling up just lower the water don't lift it if overflows and of course lift it but if you ain't got that lift it up don't lift it what the neat touch do I could bring this up a little bit what the meat is then like the sauce is thin probably gonna have to add some cornstarch a little bit just to make it thicker because cornstarch and water it's like a thickening agent and I want it to be not drippy see how it's dripping I want to be a little thicker so it's it like hold onto my rice and stuff so we'll let that cook out and then later we're gonna add some crushed or switch and we're gonna put the corn what am i doing okay so let's get it actually you know what lift my dresser corn I told us what that my clothing I've used I've always used it but I haven't said in a while so that's why for that but it's something like you know cooking is more of a sign I mean bacon is a song it's cooking is anybody could cook bacon is a science I think that's what it is I probably waited below if I figure it out so like alright I'm doing I'm i ball and everything and I'm just gonna take a cup of corn of corn and now water I think 1/4 of water cuz you could always add some later and let's click it and see what that turns into this is my first time doing this kind of meat this is my first time doing this kind of me and this way cooking corn so look that was frozen yeah learning experience hmm [Music] maybe add a little bit more water there's a water click look out maybe that's too much water I have it on almost like high heat I have the rice on somewhere and I have the meat on low because meat is done you just want to like incorporate the sauce so while the rice is cooking which is the longest we're gonna cook that like a hit see right now with the corn with the water you basically deforesting the corn if that's the right terminology boil in the Quan yeah well them to leave it at that if you like these cooking videos give me a thumbs up leave a comment below tell me what recipes y'all want to see or like give me an ingredient that you want me to cook with and I'll go from that cuz everybody you know everybody acts like Oh what kind of recipe you want to see people give like the basic and stuff I want to be different give me a item that you only cook with like or two items like I want you to cook with chicken and garlic or you know rice and garlic or rice and broccoli or write some salt says you know just something like that don't just give me like a recipe like I want you to make macaroni and cheese so you know might have to drain this let's salt the walls in the water my love after it now I'm thinking about it I could have had less water because the cat keep on my psychology but corn is frozen and the corn is has water it's learning experience the rice would be done in about five minutes let's check on us I have to thicken this I want to see what seems like Oh wake it up too if you have big chunky pieces break it up a little more try it okay yo old and dirt tell me one come on camera just say how good it is those Rice's I mean just corn is bubbling up which is good to know about to drain it but if you don't cover something the water will evaporate now I did with cornstarch you want cold water and cornstarch you don't want to put corn sauce directly into your dish because you don't have the clumpiness you want to mix cold water cornstarch to liquid and then slowly pour it to the before or it might be too big if you do slowly can you kind of go with it and see how thick you want it so what I'm thinking with the water and cornstarch Nexus it's not Felipe suppose me you know liquid oops can you see that so a little more and I could dip the spoon back in here because all of this is water the only harm that's doing is now is sticking more to the spoon wait let's check on this Quan okay yeah the water good we're gonna take a tablespoon of butter add it to the corn let that cook we're gonna move the coin okay so now here we are with the meat the meat is still thin we're gonna pour a little bit let that keeps above it yeah look it's already looking thick it depends on how thick you want your sauce I don't want to do what you think I just want it to stick the rice should be ready in about a minute and I just lost oh I'm not gonna get that cuz I'm gonna run my side I'm gonna cook the rice down and put the meat down and put the corn just enjoy yeah rice is done turn the rice off oh I just like what is that sweet smell like it's corn when you cook it it turns a sweet car that's bubbling let's see you mr. toasted to say we won't yeah now it's not like yeah this is thick you see how thick came like not too thick but like thick would stick into the meat and it's like a sauce and not like a water everything is just so break up your meat look it's thick the sauce is sticking to the spoon that's good this is the race oh yes let me show you the rice fluffing up look at that there it already get the rice the meat the corn stay tuned we're about the plate we got the right and if you want to be fancy with the rice you could have put the rice in like a cup let it sit flip it over put it on a plate lift it up it would have been like the molding we got the meat oh yeah look at that Wow and now the beautiful skillet corn look at that I'm proud of the corn like it's good it looks good and it's good put a nice hot this is a meal my mother always to make back of the day but she we used I agree with our job and it was like the best dinner ever oh yeah [Music] I know it wanted to because I mean it so we want some rice and a some meat and some corn oops if it were folk yes come on stop drunk okay let's see mmm oh yes some yes I'm handsome so I can see my face and say my mouth sorry can't see my face but this is another recipe coming from me if you liked it give it a thumbs up if we're gonna try it give it a thumbs up if you did try it leave a comment in the comment box saying how it was if you have problems if you switch anything anything leave it in the comments as always like comment subscribe hit that notification but my next upcoming recipes and just videos in general see you on the next one stay safe
Fork n Fly | Travel Consultant
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2020-04-09
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ag401bPp8JM
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger 3 - Gameplay - PS2
[Music] tie Sharon I have some bad news my friends Oh No what's happened as boss Cass was escaping from prison in your world an ancient evil descended into the Dreaming the bunyips need your help ty you must come with me to the Dreaming [Music] what are those things they are evil spirits known as Christian they have infected this the most sacred of places with their senseless war so far we have been unable to cleanse them from the Dreaming now worries all reckon arcattack Yvonne that would lead to a needless sacrifice Quinn can are mystical beings with unfathomable power save for one weakness only by using the rare shadow Bunyip stone will you have the power to counter their evil in the tower it waits in the form of the bunyip gauntlet for the one who can wield its power you beauty Marian is guarding the gauntlet until your arrival let's go possum [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] let's don't I [Music] it's like a glove toy who you I am a lien on your protector of the gauntlet until your arrival cheers for that you are now armed and able to fight the quicken hurry to the Quinten vortex atop the Citadel began I will be watching you from above that good one well let's go see what that bunion gauntlet of yours can do [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] I am glad I found the two of you I am see Ghana I have come here to warn you that the vortex is shielded by mystical klinken stones the bunyip gauntlet has not enough power to break them although they're really something that can nice landing Sharon come with me hi you must continue on alone [Music] to the vortex and destroyed that which was never meant to be [Music] [Applause] my lips are forever in your debt now words with the new power this gauntlet bestows upon you it would be wise for you to stay in train with us for a time you know there's a bit of a holiday possum a little Ripple [Music] your training is complete you look so different to stop thanks a lot daddy Gilly let us return you to your own remember all Atlanta that you never need to use it [Applause] [Music] we're Jezza these dick supplies Oh No get behind me don't worry tiger I've got you covered what are you doing out here on your own you must either be incredibly stupid or worse who are you in here my name is of that form zombie thrills meet mr. boomer ever used one once the twice will make death three times we gotta protect the team quicken yep they're after the general but they're going to have to go through us time for plan B [Music] let's see if those quincas could get through the town come on [Applause] protect the generous Lily there I've got this protectors Jen Lily there [Applause] [Music] viola general chase most good effort there tiger not bad with a rang for once or twice what's going on where's Barrow magic bear emoji made this is bear emoji or what the Queen can left of it the names reach I would have been decimated on the whole town along with me but wasn't for the general the general the most brilliant tactical mind in all of history his bravery and strength in battle is unsurpassed in all of southern rivers he is revered feared does he have a beard he is what every man aspires to be well who is he he is the general general [Music] toy toy the tie sir when you got rid of those naughty Queen King from The Dreamtime they fled here two sovereign rivers I had no idea whose rescue put up a valiant fight but twinken spewed army of possessed zombie free booze it just couldn't hold them off cap Olivos gone for six months it's not your fault tie but since Duke Mori and Julius left bush rescue has disbanded leaving me in charge of the war effort toy toy you're alive welcome back bro Oh possum I thought I'd lost you in the vortex yeah we thought you were dead it's been so hard without you we fought as hard as we could but it's okay sure sir I'm back there's only one way we'll even stand a chance of fighting off these quicken will have to reform bush with you Howard but what are we gonna do about Mori Julius and Duke no worries I'll take care of it we've tracked down Mori well now I don't have time to explain but if you ever want Mori to rejoin bush rescue you'll have to go and beat him in the big race but what are you waiting for [Music] hi don't tell me you've forgotten me I'm Naomi Shaz is a little sister what I knew you'd pick that one see you tie hey bro she also seems pretty happy that you're back you know when you weren't around where you we are we thought we'd lost you you know oh yay my little cub is here look I thought you'd like that one come and see us again soon as it goin tiger [Applause] ah if you don't stop Maury from winning the big race they'll retire for good and never rejoin Busch rescue [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] Mauri I'm glad I caught you you've got to come back to Bush rescue my time 8 we thought we'd lost you but no way not after what he did to me got a better chance of cooking a sausage on a cold Barbie than getting me back there but Morrie I've made me mind up I'm gonna win this race and then retire [Music] Wow [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] Wow [Music] sorry completa could [Music] Laurie from clever coat [Music] Mauri I'm glad I caught you you've got to come back to Bush rescue my time eight [Music] lucid lemak did you go and do that for I had been watering hole riding on that race I didn't know Dennis didn't say anything about famous that stinker I suppose now he thinks I'm gonna rejoin Busch rescue why did you leave in the first place why don't you ask Dennis you stopped him that's good news but I've also got some better news for you Maury what if sound sequins into the rest of me shirts I said I was it's all yours [Music] you had this planned all along didn't you sure why not thanks guys I can't believe I nearly retired instead of helping southern rivers it's good to have you back but but good news doesn't stop there I'm also redecorating your watering hole for you right now your velvet drapes are being fitted them so I'd better run off and make sure that they match your new future coaster [Music] stand one two Oh time this is just terrible when bush rescue disbanded jurgis was kidnapped by his evil uncle Carlos and he's been forced to work for him ever since we finally tracked down Carlos Isla and it's not pretty he's put no thought into the interior decorations at all you simply must save Julius from that ugly place [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] cytosine caught I'm such you're dead you wish Carlos I'm here for Julius he works for me now you guys have him well I'm not leaving without it I have something thank you if you can survive my battle Reed and I may just consider let him go The Fool won't know what hit him [Music] [Laughter] hortence that is not possible we had a deal Calais with Julianne over time good night you okay possum yeah thanks for keeping Carlos busy well I broke Julia's free ah no worries good plan hi uncle see you at Christmas [Music] so then I said oh time we can't reform Bush rescue if we don't have our pilot that brave little Kiwi Duke was on a mission when he was forced to land behind enemy lines your mission tie is to bring Duke back alive [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] hello my little cub come and see us again soon my high seas hi [Applause] as a Gowan tiger [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] the project back a month the project back em up [Music] joke die is that you I knew you are dead welcome back sir you fought gallantly I'm very uh this really isn't the Turnpike Tommy the whiskey just forwardly I can't make its tie I've Valeo gone and sprained my ankle you'll have to go on without me sir go on yourself okay wait ty you're supposed to say I could never leave you or not on my watch or some heroic line or other and then you save me go on without me save yourself I could never ever leave you battle - come on let's get out of here watch out sir incoming evasive action so Claire chick let's go [Music] Tallyho [Music] home tell my choppa [Music] you're a real hero sir tell my choppa I love her come home we've got to make it time tell my choppa I love her carry home we've got to make it time you're a real hero sir [Music] my ankle we've got to make it tied tell my job [Music] come home [Music] you'll reveal here a sad tell my choppa I love her ankle got to make it tie [Music] don't leave me [Music] [Applause] [Music] me [Music] he'll tell me ho don't leave me you're a real hero sir don't leave me my ankle carry home [Music] we've got they make it tied [Music] tell my choppa I love her [Music] we've got to make it tied carry her don't leave me my ankle [Music] don't leave me [Music] my ankle carry her [Music] we made it yes we made it we made it to the top of an idiot no worries I got shares that have made us oh thank you sir I never seen hi mate I just received an emergency intelligence report apparently the Queen can have secretly been growing a weapon called a Flying Fortress and they just taken to the skies luckily we've been developing a little something of our own on the sly go and see Duke and he'll brief you on the capabilities of the new Daniel [Applause]
MurdockEx Raw Gameplay
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2019-07-31
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L1ccXr13aFc
Goodwill Outlet / the bins haul to sell on Poshmark and Depop part 1
well hello guys it has been an incredibly long time since I have done a video and I decided to try a haul video I recently got back into selling clothes online it's probably been a good maybe four years I was doing a lot of other things I was selling t-shirts online doing graphic design and and I just felt like I wanted to get out and source again so I recently went to my goodwill outlet I live in Central Florida and we have the closest one for me is in Orlando and I just want to show you that just because you may not have the best bends in the world does it mean that you can't find things to sell and maybe this will give you some ideas different things to look for and then also where you might actually sell them once you get them home so whoo I must knock everything over so the first thing I want to go over is my receipt it's not really clear but I bought twenty-two pounds that day just about a week ago and we are pound it's a dollar 39 so whit tax I spent $33.32 and I think totally I counted my pieces and it's about 19 pieces so I'm not too bad a little over a dollar piece so I think it's worth the the effort to go to the bends and then the next thing is I want to show you where I'm currently selling now this love list is very long I think my gut feeling says that in another 3 or 4 months if not sooner I will be cutting this down probably in half but I wanted to see what each app or site did as far as what's sold how long it took to sell you know how long it took for me to get some traction and some interest in my items so the first one is Poshmark I think a lot of people know what that is I saw both men's and women's items depop is a app that it was originally based out of England and it now is worldwide and it is where I sell my what I call my street wear and my vintage items Grail is strictly for men's items it is a high-end fashion app but it also I put my street wear and my vintage items and it is a learning process I haven't really gotten to take a cent I haven't really gotten used to grilled so that was definitely a learning curve for me Macari I don't know if I'm gonna stick it out I find that it is for very low priced items and I'm not sure that it's worth my time for the effort I'm putting in eBay everybody knows eBay I personally hate a bay but I've put a few things up there and a few things have sold so I don't want to count it out but I just think that for a very small seller eBay can be very difficult to work with and lastly I actually don't have anything yet up on Etsy but if I get a decent amount of what I call true vintage items I think I mean probably have 20 or 30 items really well photographed and well priced to to start working with that see but that one may replace so many others I'm not really sure but anyways it don't give you an idea of where I'm selling and I will also tell you where I'm gonna put the different items that I show you today okay so so the first pile I mean what is what I'm going to call my deep hop pile so everything here is vintage or street wear right now there's a really huge resurgence and interest in vintage Polo Ralph Lauren as well as Tommy Hilfiger and anytime you can find sort of the classic Tommy Hilfiger flag logo on an item it's pretty much something you should consider picking up this is a pair of men's jeans a 30-30 has a nice little ribbon accent here and on the back it has the leather Tommy Hilfiger it doesn't have the big logo but I still think these will sell so these are gonna go on deep pop and I probably will cross post these to Grail two to begin with these are really nicely worn and there's some staining but I always describe everything in my description as well as try to take really good pictures all right the next one is another vintage Tommy Hilfiger it has the big logo the flag it's the sweater is in really nice condition and has the embroidered emblem on the front if I had bought this at Goodwill it would have cost me $7.99 which I don't think is terrible but it's not great and that's why I like the bends now one thing you're going to notice is some of some of these items actually have tags on it which means that they were in the stores they didn't sell they pulled them and they brought them to the outlet and then there's gonna be a lot of items you're gonna see that I'll have any tags at all and my only assumption is is that it was donated and they just brought it immediately to the outlet ok sorry I have a really bad throw right now so I'm probably going to be drinking some water so beat up my now here is another brand that's getting a lot of attention for vintage or sort of that 90s 80s treat where I'm almost positive this is a real item it's just I think there's just too much war on the tagging there's some on the inside it's been wiped out washed out but I'm gonna do some more research it's fairly large but this what they call the 3d embossed embroidery is really cool so that will go up on deep pop as well and I may put this on grilled now one thing you're going to notice is that there's always some kind of stain it just comes with the territory so a lot of this I will work on getting some of the stain out and washing it and getting it as pristine as possible based on the item and then anything that I need to notate I do vary I always put that in a description and I try to take photographs so people know exactly what they're getting now here's an interesting piece this is a very cool definitely vintage item it is a leather bomber and it is from chess King and what I think is really cool is the the the labeling I'm gonna have to do some measurements it does say 46 but you can't go by sizing in the past with sizing today it's just completely different we live in a vanity sizing world everyone wants to think that they're smaller than they really are and so I'm going to do some research I'm gonna have to take some really good photographs but I think it's a really cool piece for somebody who really wants that vintage look now here is a piece it's kind of your prana like why in the world did she pick this up so there are people that like to you where older graphic tees and usually you can tell if it is older if it actually has a paper or a fabric tag unless the newer t-shirts are they're actually putting they're actually pressing the logo like this onto the back of the shirt so tags are basically gone and most t-shirts today now this isn't as old as could be this actually has double stitching the the much older t-shirts are just a single stitch but I believe this I think this double stitching came in in the mid-90s so but you can do some of your own research this isn't in the greatest shape there's some some holes and some stains I'll have to work on that and I'll notate them but one of the things you want to look at is there are groups of people that really like this sort of 90s graphic design it's a vacation shirt it's from the West at West and most designs will have some kind of dating on it so I don't know if you can see this I hope you can and let me hold this up a little closer so this is says wild wild west shirt company in 1997 so this does fall under the 20 year mark they actually established that vintage is 20 years old so it's 2019 so 20 years ago was B 1999 so this falls under the cost and I think this will do okay you know there's somebody out there that likes this style and this look and they will buy this on depop alright and then the last but not least now this is really cute it's actually a romper and if you can see the bottom it was made in I have to believe the 60s maybe the early 70s the name of this company is Vicky Vaughan and what is torn off down here in the bottom is junior so this was one of their junior outfits it is definitely that polyester that we all remember back in the 70s and it doesn't have a belt and it's definitely got some staining and some spots and I'm gonna work on those but I think it was it was just too cute and too super vintage and rompers are really in right now so I couldn't pass it up I actually a lady that I met at the bins make friends at the bend as they say and she found it and it just wasn't really her vibe and says she handed it to me so that's really really nice - shut up - Rhonda anyways so I'm gonna work on that and then I'm gonna get this up on D pop all right now I'm gonna redo another pile and start on things I would I'm gonna sell on Poshmark
3bagsfull
UCPoSXF0PbCrVwr_MRtyacaQ
2019-03-14
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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fmd2noYf5HM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmd2noYf5HM
Alzheimer’s Drug Approval (Likable Science)
[Music] here we are back on monday morning at 9 o'clock this is think tech hawaii i'm jay feidel that's mike to work dr mike to work he's our chief scientist here at thinktech and we're talking about the approval of the alzheimer's truck this is very important because there's a lot of people in this country that have or will have alzheimer's and it's a very tragic experience very hard on everybody involved it's awful if you know anybody who has somebody in the family who has alzheimer's is progressive and ultimately it gets you anyway mike um we've all been waiting for news about alzheimer's drugs um i know so many people you know who follow it they want to know every step in the science and now we have a step in the science but it's a disappointment can you talk about it sure sure yeah i happen to be the primary caregiver for a alzheimer's patient um alzheimer's disease affects something like five million people in the united states two-thirds of them are women um and uh more than you know two-thirds of the caregivers are women you know when you talk about home health aides daughters sisters wives this is a this is a huge a huge problem and it affects women disproportionately affects men too for the elderly alzheimer's patients about half the caregivers are husbands and half were spouses when you look at spousal caregivers so this this affects a lot of people it's a devastating long-term debilitating disease average time to death from diagnosis is like 10 years although some patients can determine with horrible disability ongoing so yeah it's a serious serious problem and it's getting it seems to be getting worse you know there's some slight evidence that the incidence is starting to level off that the incidence isn't growing exponentially the way it was we'll see how that plays out in the coming years risk factors include obesity diabetes ocean turns out sunlight sun exposure um so well we can go through the some of the slides and talk about some of the some of these issues um yeah we have the first slide up it's and it was approved and that's your first slide yeah that's the title so on the i'll talk at least one measurement of how you measure cognitive decline alzheimer's is a whole bunch of different ways to measure cognitive decline um and you can't use just one um well there's several systems for measuring uh cognition in patients with dementia uh mmsc the mini mental state exam is one of them there's a couple flavors of it the original one by dr fulstein so one that the cochrane committee who looked at these uh tests you know used um there's a maximum score it's a paper-based test simple questions like what day is it what time is it what year is it where are you um can you say a complete sentence can you remember a few words can you copy a drawing basic test of cognitive function the maximum score is 30 points usual cut off for dementia's 24 but that's very dependent upon the person in their history if i scored 24 i'd be absolutely terrified um because you know the cutoff should be higher for people with a higher educational level or people have received good privileged care through their lives um so it's a useful test but it can't be used by itself to diagnose dementia but where it's really useful is in determining the rate of cognitive decline comparing someone from year to year and how their state is going for people with medium onset alzheimer's disease it's about two mmsc points per year lost and it's a subtle difference two points can be a subtle difference you would almost have to live with a person just to see just two points um but that's it's useful then um so on the next slide i'll show you one of the problems you have with doing alzheimer's trials the next slide should be saying uh alzheimer's seasonal variability turns out that you lose on an average two points per year but the difference between summer and winter can be five years worth of decline and these range is about two to eight years some people between the worst worst state in the winter and the best state in the summer show eight years equivalent uh improvement um the the overall trend over the long term is inevitably down but that's um it's seasonal effects pretty big which means you have to do trials over many years to make sure you're seeing a real effect um the ado cannon map trials were seven and a half years i mean six and a half years which is about what you have to do um and the effect is really large um and and this also might explain some of the anecdotes you hear about oh my auntie took this drug and my auntie felt better in six months well when did she start taking it you know it really depends you you can't just use a few months worth of data because of the seasonal effect so but is this telling us that that it's it's it's less of a decline uh in in the uh the summer i know in the in the fall and the autumn and the in the in the uh winter or or yeah so well okay so spring you hit your bottom it's like the it's like the weather the the uh the climate lags the day length so you start to go up again uh say in march or april you hit bottom in like march and then you start going up again as the days get longer and longer after the after the equinox and then over the summer your cognition improves and hits top sometime like september typically and then starts to decline again so in the autumn early autumn you see a peak in the early spring you see the the nader so there's a big sunlight effect and so you've got to account for the seasonality when you do the trials and so these multi-year trials that's they're expensive they're lengthy but that's what it takes um the next slide i talk a little bit about the geography geographical effects of sunlight it turns out that um the the closer you are to the equator the less likely you are to get alzheimer's disease at least in the northern hemisphere southern hemisphere there's fewer people fewer trials trends are less clear new zealand is clear but some other countries it's less clear but in the northern hemisphere it's very clear farther you are from the equator the more likely you are to get alzheimer's disease and it's not mediated by vitamin d because vitamin d supplementation seems to have very little effect unless you actually have a deficiency so there's something else going on with sunlight or day length that's causing cognition to decline if you don't get enough of it so if you do a clinical trial you've got to have controls and test subjects match geographically as well as with time of year as well as probably racially it turns out that you know because the sunlight effect the known extra risk that african americans have for alzheimer's disease may partly be because of the sunlight exposure on the skin but also may be caused by other things like poverty for health care pollution other known risk factors but the point is you gotta match geographically and you've got to match season-wise and you've got to match ethnicity to do these trials properties that make some very expensive time-consuming trials but lucky lucky we live hawaii you have to have alzheimer's disease so y is probably one of the best places to have it because you have a lot of sunlight you've got good first world health care your decline will be a bit slower but still inevitable yeah so let's this is all background so far so the next slide says amyloid plaque hypothesis and in my opinion is failure beta amyloid plaques are correlated with alzheimer's disease that's data that's true a risk for developing dementia is twice as great with amyloid than it is without it but the risk of developing dementia with amyloid plaques isn't 100 a lot of people even in their 80s about 40 percent of people without dementia in their 80s have amyloid plaques and they don't have dementia 40 of the non-demented people have amyloid plaques without dementia so that's an unproven hypothesis and every drug that they've tried that can actually affect the amount of amyloid that they can test for in the brain in the spinal cord has failed it's failed to show clinical improvements in cognition even when it has cleared amyloid and in my opinion these adrehelm trials also failed or at least they have not proven what they're claimed to have proven um so can i have can i have alzheimer's without having amyloid plaque uh there are people who adamantly say no you can have dementia without alzheimer's plaques they will not call it alzheimer's without amyloid plaques so there's plenty of cases of dementia without amyloid and therefore they don't call it alzheimer's disease which to me it just shows how ignorant we are what the underlying real causes are um i think that underlying other hypotheses alternate parentheses need to be explored more and all researchers are doing this professional alzheimer's researchers are starting to do this the idea that amyloid may be a reaction to some other underlying cause of disease for example there's just been a recent paper that uh pure iron and copper nanoparticles which are known to be toxic have been found in the brains of alzheimer's patients hypothesis is that the amyloid plaques may be the brain's way to try to protect itself from these toxic metal nanoparticles hard to do the studies it's a hypothesis that needs to be followed up there are other treatments that don't attack amyloid directly that have been shown to have a modest small effect like lantamine which preserves acetylcholine which is a very important neurotransmitter has been shown to reduce the rate of alzheimer's progression by about 10 percent which so you're looking at two points per year versus 1.8 points per year cognition loss it's a very small effect but it is proven and these acetylcholine ace inhibitors are less side effects than the adrecanomab that was just approved so in the next slide i actually talked about this trial this drug has to be given intravenously medical supervision of course you can't just take it put pills at home it's got to be done intravenously benefits are only seen at the highest doses in the least impaired patients so the average mini mental state examination score for patients that showed a benefit was 26. so that is sort of above the cutoff for alzheimer's but other tests you can do could say oh yeah this person's starting to show alzheimer's and of course they also tested for amyloid so they knew they had amyloid plaques which i could say is um not necessarily going to always go to alzheimer's dementia so um so this is an evolving story wikipedia article is getting updated almost daily so that's so that's a good start place to start for the source information ninety percent of the patients in these trials showed adverse events um some of them were very severe like these uh amyloid-related imaging abnormalities they were required to do mris twice a year on patients getting well they did on both placebo and patients getting the drug and if you showed these imaging abnormalities in your brain which could lead to serious damage if they were allowed to progress dosing was stopped for those patients when the fda approved this drug they gave no guidance at all on mris and testing for these aria these amyloid-related imaging abnormalities which i in my view is just a gross negligence they also gave no guidance on the stage dementia at which to give this drug how to select the patients anyway so there were two trials they called them emerge and engaged they had about 1600 subjects each they were identically designed engaged the control or placebo patients declined slower than expected that trial showed no effect no statistically significant effect on cognition engage the control placebo effect declined faster than expected it showed an effect but only at the highest doses in the least impaired patients and on top of it they changed the high dosing regime part way through the trials so that the patients on the high dose regime weren't exposed to the same dosage as the whole trial normally you would use those data and say let's do a whole new trial with the right dosing regime and normally you would combine these two trials to get better statistics that's not what was done they did a sub analysis on just the engaged patients in the high dose regime and this has the appearance of cherry picking to get a desired result yeah the the the results are so ambiguous the studies so i and in my opinion poorly done that the fda advisory committee would attend nothing to reject the approval of the drugs wow they wanted them to go back and redo the trials at the dosing regime they were claiming had an effect the top brass of the fda overrode that recommendation and why did they override it let's go to the next slide yeah uh so oh i do help it should be out of helm sorry about that that should have been abu helm on that side um the uh this drug costs 55 000 a year so there's a big financial incentive for the company to sell it medicare is not allowed to negotiate drug prices thanks to our wonderful congress so we're on the hook for it and they'll get that doctors get a of the drug price so i i don't know how many doctors will prescribe the drug out of financial motive i hope none but there is a financial motive here and if i match a motive for bean counters and hospitals to try to get this drug into practice in my opinion it takes money away from other treatments but people are so desperate so just for anything that might help with this disease that there was a lot of lobbyists on the side of the patient advocacy side pressuring the fda to approve it as well as of course the company pressuring the fda for you know to approve it what company is this michael uh i i not sure i think it's biogen i i'll have to look that up though okay um yeah so the um is but the the benefits even with generous interpretation that's justice because you give them the benefit of the doubt on the one trial that may be that really high dose regime that they went to for part of the trial really will show an effect even with that generous interpretation the benefits are modest the risks are significant and this is probably a false hope i i really i really think that this whole amyloid plaque hypothesis as the cause of alzheimer's has to be questioned and other causes looked at i mean they've been beating this amyloid hypothesis horse for decades and so far there's been no and it my opinion not even this drug has been shown to do it there's there's another underlying cause for this disease that we have not yet sussed out and found a way to prevent or treat by the way it is biogen biogen okay yeah um well okay i mean this is this is not a this is not a pretty story now of course it's really terrible to reject a 10-0 vote of your expert advisory committee um but what's worse worse is that you're subjecting people to not only the cost and that sounds like an awful architecture but but also the risks of side effects and bad side effects pretty serious business and you know it's just it's an awful story um you wouldn't use it you wouldn't recommend it and certainly from this discussion i wouldn't either but the problem here is this is this is the federal government the federal government who who did whatever it did in the case of coven the federal government uh you know who has done a number of drugs that maybe weren't so good now we have all these protocols all the science all these very heavyweight guys who are there um you know holding the public trust and approving drugs and and the problem here is public confidence don't you think right i agree i agree i mean they did such a good job with the covet vaccines making sure those trials were tight you know we had like 30 000 people in each trial very low risk of side effects very high efficacy it did such a good job on that emergency approval and this was not an emergency proof this is a full approval for a drug that shows at best modest effects serious side effects very expensive i i just the difference is astonishing between the two cases different organization right this is this is the fda rather than the cdc right well i know the fda had to give the emergency approval for vaccines so it's the same organization same organization um wow so i mean yeah it's now the advisory committee's recommended approval of the vaccines once they saw the data and the problem with this adukanyumab is that originally they were going to not bother getting the approval because when they originally did the studies they weren't showing any benefit until they changed the protocol halfway through and then did a sub-analysis on the subset of the data so there aren't peer-reviewed papers out there yet for us to look at i would love to see the actual primary source peer review paper with all the data presented as it was presented for the vaccines for covid um i mean it's just a very frustrating situation i'm sure so you know i mean you're not you're not the only one who's going through this kind of analysis and i really wonder what kind of pushback there has been from the scientific community the ones who look at the protocols and look at the internal workings and of the approval process what has come out well three of the members of the fda advisor came just resigned to disgust and there's been a lot of pushback from other researchers that you know this drug is expensive it's not shown to benefit the trials were not convincing that your child should be redone with the protocol as they had higher dose regime in place properly etc um there's other drugs like i say galantamine does show an effect um but it works differently it works by preserving neurotransmitters instead of trying to attack amyloid um i mean it's a horrible tragic situation that we're faced with alzheimer's disease but there's a saying that a drowning person will grab the blade of a sword that's where we are that's where we are offering a sword instead of a life ring to people and and they're going to be injured you know i think this drug takes us further down the bed i mean your description of um you know what we know about the disease leads me to believe that we don't know that much have a good handle on it i would agree with you on that i mean i'm not a professional alzheimer's researcher i have to read up on a lot because i'm a caregiver for an alzheimer's patient and i have some skills in terms of looking at peer reviewed papers um and i'm a scientist in a different field but the thing is that um we don't know a lot i mean there's so many different scoring regimes there's so many different staging machines we don't even know how to assess the stage of alzheimer's disease properly there's a whole bunch of different methods for assessing how the progress of somebody and what the prognosis is it just shows how ignorant we are of what's really going on it's not like the periodic table where we can look at row column and say yeah that's the chemical property of that element that wrote that column is probably this we just don't really understand this disease that's what i understand from what i've read and uh and i think the whole amyloid plaque hypothesis now they're trying to salvage the amyloid plaque hypothesis by saying oh there is a subset of amyloid called illegal amyloid that is particularly toxic but we can't test for it in a living patient that's like okay if you can't test for it how do you know that any treatment you give actually has an effect on and then understand whether that effect shows up in the cognitive scores so the gold standard shouldn't be amyloid in the brain or amyloid in the spinal fluid the gold standard for this should be cognition it's got to show a clinically significant cognitive benefit to be a treatment i don't think this doesn't really take us down the path very far in other words my question is is there any value in this line of research this line of this line of dealing with alzheimer's or is this just a you know a spurious bunny trail kind of exercise i i think from what i can under when i read what i understand about the al the amoled plant hypothesis is it's a bunny trail rabbit hole they've gone down and unfortunately we're going to find out by experimenting in uh on the population at large if millions of people end up getting this drug out in clinical practice and to start reporting back progress and side effects we're going to find out whether this drug when you test it on millions of people has an effect if it doesn't then that's i think the death of the amyloid hypothesis i mean they should just shut it down that line of investigation um well what about the government and you talked before about you know public confidence and this is certainly not a statement in favor of public uh confidence if you were now angry if you were running the fta um what would you do here if you were if you were a scientist you know expert and dedicated to this field what would you do i guess there have been peer reviews that have criticized it but query what do we do when we find the fda has made a gross error well the fda can resend their approval or again modify it with a black box warning or they can provide more guidance on mris and testing to make sure that the side effects are being monitored none of which they did and there's been calls to the resignation of the top three people the fda who were responsible for this approval um you gotta you gotta really follow the science you you you gotta have rigorous science especially when you're talking about something that millions of people could potentially be having to take as a drug um what about overseas expensive where what about our research um i have i don't know i haven't looked at any overseas trials i don't know if they've sought approval in britain or the european union or japan for this drug um i i would be stunned if the european regulators approved it um they are as careful as the american regulators usually so a very very tragic story and i wonder you know what is ultimately going to happen here it sounds like it's going to be a bust and what it reveals i think in terms of the approval process is that we have a a corruption maybe a series of corrupt corrupt phenomena that that work in this area one is that medicare thing where you know you can't negotiate with the drug company um two of the drug companies of course have huge lobbying resources and they play that out all the time and three that you know that that it works even if the drug doesn't work uh this is not a credit to biogen for sure right right it's not a credit to their executives for pushing this approval as opposed to starting new trial now a trial is expensive but you know people's lives are at stake uh you could be generous with the fda executives saying they were listening to the patient advocacy groups who were demanding something to help people you could say oh but it's a misplaced compassion it's a misplaced compassion and that this is a an uncontrolled experiment now they're going to be foisting upon these patients um yeah do they ever have trials after the drug is approved can they can oh yeah i mean it's like with the covet they continued the trials after the approval of the vaccines the problem with so you could they could they could continue the trials they could do a new trial um the problem with just giving it to patients is that only people who are showing symptoms the cognitive decline will take the drugs there's no control there's no control group to compare to really i mean because you got to do an intravenous infusion all the circumstances exactly the same except one group gets a placebo the other group gets the drug um because you know if you just get intravenous infusion that alone might give you a placebo effect that could if you're in the early stages help override some of the decline placebo effect is very powerful um so yeah the fact that this is an iv drug that it's very hard to do you you've got to do a real controlled trial in a clinical setting to have it working but now the drug's been approved who's going to sign up for a clinical trial where they might get a placebo that's just that's a good place it's just just it's just a whole mess let's assume there was negligence in the approval process let's assume there was a it was a corruption in the approval or a number of them um is this the kind of thing that that could ever be subject to a a class a class action suit by people who will have been injured sure i mean i i don't know how protected the drug company is with the fda approval they're more protected than they would have been um could they sue the government for approving it possibly um it's hard however i'm um a lawyer um so not being a lawyer i can't really state what the odds of a class action suit are if people are injured by the side effects this drug would you know given how the smallest benefits are yeah oh she was very interesting so from where we stand now last question where where do you think this is going to go both in terms of this drug and the name of it is uh and the street name is adu helm uh i do hell yeah where do you think it's gonna go and and the other question is where do you think when all this shakes out what do you think public confidence is gonna be in the drug industry and in the fda and the national institutes and the cdc and you know the government apparatus for approving trump this is yeah this is a national tragedy because it will harm public confidence especially if in clinical practice it really turns out that this thing has no significant clinical benefit and shows significant risk of harm i'm not recommending it for my dementia patient her doctor isn't recommending it to me either we're both appalled but there are other doctors in hawaii who aren't so appalled by this approval perhaps out of desperation for anything that might help my thought is that you know i'm going to do what i'm doing to get my my alzheimer's patient out in the sun as much as possible make sure she gets good nutrition because that's known to help try to manage the cognitive decline as best we can because the decline right now is still inevitable um you know i know some of these people you put them in a home or in a nursing home where they never get outside to see the sun well it's no longer no wonder they're suffering faster cognitive decline some of these facilities seem designed to enhance cognitive decline so treatment managing the care is where we should be putting our resources right now until we get a better hypothesis and a better class of drugs that might actually treat the cause of disease we do not understand the causes of this disease that's my takeaway and we should really be focusing on treatment that better palliates manages the symptoms and the decline and i'll tell you my takeaway from all of that is there are two problems that you describe that are that are very troubling uh one is that the the drug there's a disparity in the community and who gets alzheimer's i think that's clear um racially uh economically and so forth and it's just another reason to be concerned um you know that there's that these disparities exist and we can't seem to resolve them uh that's a problem for i'm sure a lot of people um and the other is um you know we've just had this crisis we are having this crisis over kovic and you and i have spoken about it many times and there's people who you know resist uh taking the vaccine they say you know that they have hesitancy some of them some of them have trumpitis um but the problem the problem is that this is not going to help in joe biden's efforts to get people to relax and accept the advice of government because government has been nicked on this and uh i think it's been nicked [Music] yeah agree the other the other thing is that you know you're a scientist um and you know you're also a caregiver so you're gonna delve down as obvious that you have um but what it tells us if if you're about to take a drug that you don't know about or more to the point that's a new drug with new approval the after tests that may you may find out are questionable or that are being questioned uh you read it you better do your research man um if you don't do your research you could be in the line of fire for something like this one which i agree is tragic so there's all kinds of and i have from this yeah and i'm lucky that i have the skills to do this research uh to understand the evidence a lot of people don't and a lot of people's caregivers family members don't so that's the real tragedy they're going to be exploiting people who can't evaluate the evidence yeah well thank you mike this has been a very valuable discussion i certainly appreciate your work and your willingness to share with us and i look forward to our next discussion together mike to work our chief scientist thank you so much thank you jay thank you thank you aloha you
ThinkTech Hawaii
UCZ5BKpljxXj4Y8Ut164GnSg
2021-06-22
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5tyRF_DiiI
The Second Update on Jesse
Jesse are you right there we're just looking at the where our taxpayer tax money goes we can call Jesse There is [Music] good evening how are you Jesse you're doing good I didn't even have my phone because yeah are you streaming today yeah I'm gonna stream a little bit later I I it's too early I I like my sleep schedule is slowly getting further and further like I wake up at like five right now why isn't there it is now I see you Jesse diet update same as last time we haven't changed anything well I gotta show you uh again I'm doing a sponsor thing so I gotta show you the menu I didn't order it yet but I have to order it soonish so I'll show you like what I picked I just gotta make sure which had helped though but yeah well uh you can uh this why is my camera so blurry it's because I'm not bright probably though because it's dark in the room ah it's a little bit better I saw Tick Tock and I suggested Tick Tock and started watching Camp Knute on YouTube and went to the gym for the first time today my man that's what we want to see Jesse we can we can talk about one thing before we talk about you and that's all the messages I'm getting as well I'm not sure thank you oh you're getting them well I especially because I like had like a sad day on Twitter yeah and then I don't know I was just sad but that people because I was already getting messages of people doing the diet but there was like a lot more people are like oh just by the way I started that diet because uh your stuff so I mean I I'm still going I I just wonder like if I just thought people aren't following my exact diet no not all not all of them are following your exact diet but it doesn't matter if they follow uh the the exact diet or if they just get inspiration to do do it themselves that doesn't matter that much but the concern I have is that I'm getting so much message messages from you young guys we're talking from down to 12 year olds asking for help and yeah that's pretty cool it's cool I think it's a bit do you know what I'm uh I'm saying I could have shipped a 12 year old a diet but what the hell it isn't a good thing right you never know about those if they go to school they have their school lunches you don't want them to go hungry no you don't know how much stuff they're burning a day like yeah that'd be rough yeah and like where are the parents to those 12 year olds or 15 year olds to you canoe it's me [Laughter] no oh this is what I have now helping young kids eating healthy and some more grown-ups like I have no problems guiding those who are a bit older just because but I couldn't I couldn't diet all of these people it would be impossible because there's so many it's just getting more and more and more and they're coming since you can't send them I think I'm a kid by the way people are saying I'm a kid yeah I know you're a grown-up I know you're right I think you're like helping like a 60 I am 25. and I just can't grow facial hair I don't know what it is it is sorry yeah they should have known that they saw the weed that yeah well that's that is something they're like damn he's really young to be smoking like that's a bad a lot of people think I'm vaping they think I'm smoking nicotine yeah I'm not smoking nicotine I'm smoking medical marijuana yeah and I'm allowed to have and I just you know that's my that's my copium because I used to smoke a pack a day just to give you a little ice when I was 14 until I was 23 years old I used to smoke a pack a day camel crushes I quit smoking at like 23 um and like cold turkey too like I I did vaping for a little bit I hated vaping and now I just smoke a bunch of Wheat and I'm good and it's better at least is it better we can always discuss this let's not talk about that it doesn't matter I think I think and then like the cigarettes I was smoking is and cigarettes are bad chemicals they decided yeah yeah so and plus I might I haven't even been burning it either I do it in my my thing and it's it doesn't have any of those like additives and stuff that people get sick by it's just straight distillate so yeah you're getting it from the pharmacy as well probably or Pharmaceuticals in Florida it's medical it's not recreational so you have to go and it's like a doctor's office yeah so yeah at least that's better than uh cigarettes um yeah I I have also thought about making like a advice list to those who wants to who should also need it because there there is such an llama Discord uh just say and it's active people are digestive progress Channel let me see I think they made one I don't know why I'm lagging by the way it's my end that's lagging wow I don't know why let me just close Google Chrome well that's usually the way to do it um I have a fitness channel too yeah that yeah they use a lot as well and there's one main guy that I saw like just shout out to him there's like this guy I don't know if you see the tweets do but his name is like Thomas obviously like the Fraser though like every day post like an update of him like just sweating covered in sweat he just did his workout he takes he's about like the same size as me too probably so he's like doing the exact same diet which would work for him yeah yeah and he's going hard bro so I see him like you know I gotta do my walk today but it's good that there's multiple people joining in because then it's like a group thing right and then it feels easier probably if you talk a little bit to them just anonymized application sit tight it's three pause sorry what is this computer is lagging and breaking right now and I don't know why so I'm just closing things slowly watch this good one I I have like there's actually thing that's confusing is I paid a lot of money for this and I built it yeah and it's [ __ ] breaking and I don't know why um let me close this all right here we go does that fix no no it works on my end right now okay can we go to FPS check the DVD it's a bit out of focus that's the only thing you know what I was doing the DVD right there no you ever see the DVD thing no that moves across the screen when it hits the wall yes a DVD that goes and it goes and it has to hit the corner as soon as the corner everyone yeah this is uh something you need to be smoking weed every day to look at [Laughter] sorry okay I closed everything and I only see me so now it seems good it seems good okay so so do you have any weight updates uh I am checked because I like the weak thing that you said because it was like bumming me out because like one day I just would be heavier than I say so I'm just gonna wait a week I haven't done it yet no but it should be in Vietnam that Monday yeah I'm pretty sure how was the cheat meal it was good and I looked forward to it all day but it gave me the worst heartburn ever and um I felt like [ __ ] the whole next day for half the day yeah and I was like that wasn't not worth it at all because I did um big old jumbo burger the thing I'd link to yeah in an empanadas and that messed me up I think it's just because I've been like only eating Health like good stuff yeah and my body just cannot take that [ __ ] anymore I I I know exactly the feeling you feel you feel you just feel bad it did not feel good like because I still did the walk that day yeah and and I like I the thing is is like normally I'm not super hungry towards the end of the day but like I was craving that cheat meal so I made it like the last meal of the day yeah and um yeah no my night was bad like I woke up I had art burn I was like if I'm gonna do another cheat meal I'm gonna make sure it's not something that's gonna affect me the next day like I'm not gonna eat pizza I'm not gonna do none of that I don't like what's a cheat meal that you do that doesn't mess your [ __ ] up if I were to cheat the meal when I wasn't really dieting I would probably choose just to let me die a certain steak meal a what like a beef with some sides like a half healthy but now I have I've eaten so much [ __ ] lately myself so this is not about that at all okay I wanted to eat [ __ ] like I I wanted to be like because that's all I've been thinking about was just [ __ ] let me just get out one meal but I don't think I'm gonna do it that way anymore I don't know what I'm gonna do maybe I'll just eat more there's no one of the meals that I like more what we can do is just add in some more carbs that day like to to eat smell some more rice and oats if you really just want that we can a product a little bit that day that's what I do when I the competition diet and I don't have cheat meals we have every fourth day I have extra rice and extra oats oh so you you schedule your you like your cheat meals though well then it isn't cheap maybe it's more like a refeed that isn't cheating it's the same food just a little bit more yeah because there's one meal I really like there's like this uh my sis my sister set it up the first time yeah it's that lean beef meal that you gave me but she makes it like all Mediterranean yeah so that's where like the olives and stuff and oh my I look forward to that so much but it's just not that much food no so like my cheat meal might be like a double serving of that or some some like one day or something you know more calories yeah you can add in more sides if you want to I well I don't eat anything separate I do like bowls but yeah yeah but I I didn't more to have some garlic bread beside of it or something it doesn't need to be anything insane yeah that sounded good that is I've had garlic bread in a while no chicken tenders chicken tenders I I think it is when you're getting all of that fat uh that's how at least when my stomach gets upset um when I have those cheat meals when I'm dieting it's getting all of that unhealthy fat that you're not used to oh yeah I just felt so like yuck because I like detoxed my body practically Plus I'm taking all those vitamins and all that stuff I mean who knows my body just felt completely different like I didn't feel the same anymore like I actually almost like couldn't remember even how I felt and then the cheat meal was a reminder of like holy [ __ ] I used to feel like this every day because as shitty as I felt it was very recognizable very recognizable that is how when I would feel shitty that's how I would feel and it was like I have not felt anything near that anything near that since being in the diet because I haven't I'd never cheated the diet once I've only had one cheat meal this whole time yeah but that's good at my heart yeah yeah but I think it was the cheese I think the cheese got me I think I'm like super lactose intolerant and I've noticed that because um I think I am because uh I like have completely cut milk practically out of the diet because it's not in my diet and um I just tried this like milk drink thing remember I told you I was going to drink chocolate milk yeah I drank I Yoo-hoo and I threw it up oh like yeah like and that has never happened so I don't know if my body hasn't had milk in a long time and it literally just treated that like poison it was like no like no joke so I might also just be lactose intolerant as [ __ ] and I've been eating cheese every day for years well if you ordered this diet at least will help you not having those problems yeah I I don't I don't know why I never just took a second maybe that's why my stomach is just so ass it's just milk like I think I'm actually just extremely lactose intolerant well it's not weird that you feel better at least but that's that's only that's only good it should be like oh yes I'm only I'm only noticing that I just want to feel good every day yeah and uh how is the energy levels going are they up they're the same is it does it feel like you're tired or I stopped taking the Gaba and I started having more energy okay I stopped for just like a couple days just to see yeah and I think it just doesn't mess really well my SSRI or at least just the way I do it because I I think it was just that like because my sister was telling me because my sister doesn't take anything like that but she was taking some of the God because she right up she read all the stuff that you sent me and she's like I want to try the Gabba she's like she is so chillaxed she's never felt so chillaxed in her life and I was like maybe there's been too much doing it yeah yeah because I'm also smoking weed all day I can't remember that I'm smoking weed all day I take an SSRI and I was taken to Gaba and I was like I was getting tired I would wake up do something for five six hours do the walk and I am I was beat I was beat I'm not even leaving the house and doing anything besides to walk and I was like done for the day that's why like I didn't stream for a couple days I was just so low energy and I was like might maybe be The Gather but I still think God was good I just don't know if it works like with me no but then you just don't take it it's that easy we pull out things that doesn't work then they'll just skip the Gabba well I like the Gabba though like I think Gaba would be nice if uh I wasn't trying to make my life good right now that's what I'll say like I think if you're stressing and you have a hard day at work and you come home I think Abba actually is pretty decent yeah orbit or if you can't calm down when you're going to uh to bed just to relax yeah the Melatonin really helps I love the the good sleeps because it's not even about going to sleep I can go to sleep I can lay down and go to sleep but it's about waking up a million times a night that you don't think about the Melatonin you just wake up and you're like how long have I been here or am I but you feel good yeah Mama that's good that is perfect so so we want to have that good sleep quality that is important is there more questions that I have done uh that I have well I I need to seriously send you the menu I mean I don't know if you want to do it on your stream and stuff because it's like my thing but I don't care if we live if we look at it well I know it's a sponsor thing but I actually want to like if I like it I mean screw it right of course because I yes uh well you're saying that for everyone that wants to see his diet and everything just go into my Discord there's a channel called Jessie updates in pinned messages you have the diet and you have the weight progression so everyone can see it there I said it to you um you can collect the different dates you don't even have to show it on stream I could just do this in private too I don't care if I show it on stream if it doesn't bother you no I I don't I don't care I just don't know so but the only thing I have to be careful is their sugar replacement and their stuff is they put coconut sugar and I'm allergic to Coconut so I I just see those in some of the meals yeah yeah but this is healthy meals so there's no problem just uh look at the calories and try to match the meals that you have now oh actually so it's I don't really even have to focus that deeply on the macro for the meal either because I just want to try it I just want to because plus I have to oh it's a bit different from what I put you on but it won't limit your uh uh limit your uh weight loss I don't want a full-on replace them or nothing I just like if one of the you know while I'm doing this like maybe it's one of them I just want to make sure I'm not eating one that's like super bad and off the macros or something and I think it's okay like this look at the black pepper and sage pork chop like that ah black peppers like that has cream cheese in it I see there's a lot of fat in this one yeah so you could take off some of that right if you had let's say pre-made though yeah but you can take out some of the cream cheese can't you oh yeah I had to scoop it out scoop out some of that these meals are high on protein low on carbs and high on fat most of the meals are and is that kind of what you're doing with me anyways no I'm I'm doing pretty oh high protein low in fat yeah low slash medium fat the fat that you need and medium carbs what about egg what up like that you see the Apple kale juice like are those anything I should ever do or no uh cold pressed juice pack Apple kale wheat grass juice my dad used to like do stuff like this when we were growing up yeah it's on that same thing once uh per serving 110 calories carbs 28 sugar 23. well it's not something I would recommend you to drink no then and never mind I'm good I just didn't know if it'd be good for me like in the morning or something the thing is this is almost like drinking soda actually is it really that bad yeah okay well I would guess as I don't know how big a serving is you might have to drink a little bit more uh but I mean I didn't order any I didn't order anything yet like I wanted to make sure with you that I was like because there is stuff that looks pretty Bare Bones in here too like yeah my my guess is this is probably from Apple and kale right so it is um it's probably a little bit more of the healthier nutrition in it as well like white demands and everything but at the same time you won't feel full from this and you you will get in the sugar so so that's I would rather skip those I would rather just have the meals and make them uh uh take out some of the fat in them if you could just scoop out whatever yeah because I don't do I mean there comes time is where I'm eating even some of the meals now which wouldn't have happened before I I eat all my food before yeah but there comes times where I'm like I'm full bro like I'll have a little bit there and I'm like I don't want to eat that no that sort of happens sometimes and that will happen with this I mean my I think my body will know that I won't eat the whole thing I couldn't even eat my whole cheat meal and I still had heartburn and regretted every second of it yeah I didn't even get close to eating my cheat meal I got you told me 1500 calories just like you know you told me 1500. was that a joke no because I didn't even eat close to that no it wasn't a joke I like 700 and I was full like so full I gave the rest of my sister how is heard about this going by the way she's um she hasn't like like super started yet because the holidays and she's still moving because we just moved and they're still going back and forth you know but she's gonna she's actually doing like the New Year's like waiting for New Year's and she's still making it for you not everything but she's been having fun with it yeah that's good she like he's getting so into it too she sees because you know I've been doing a twitch stuff but now that it's tick tock and like your kids see it yeah because like my nieces they'll be scrolling and then I'll hear my voice and it's us on their thing now and um I don't know she's just getting more into it like she's like she thinks I'm like extremely famous now and uh she wants to make a tick tock account called the Jessie asked mathi chef and I'm like Tina thank you I mean she can it's just it's funny it's funny how involved she's getting but I told her I was like at the biggest I'm the biggest inspiration for a diet is showing everybody your diet and your progress yeah you're not just doing it for yourself like you can't lie because then normally in a diet you're just lying to yourself maybe if you're with somebody like a significant other you can lie to them but I can't really lie I'm on a camera I can't like it's it's kind of the thing is there's nothing I can do I'm screwed screwed the the thing is there's no one else than yourself you would like for anyway right because it's your health it's yeah and I'm saying if I really wanted to cheat it you know I've had times in my life I've had diets and I go I go to work I'd go to work and tell everyone I'm on a diet and I'm doing good and then I go home and then yeah yeah I mean like yeah I can't do that and if I do that you know everyone will notice I will make I will send out The Tick Tock just see you'll notice at the weigh-in I will just hold this one up another camera and speak into it and I will say uh Behavior stream opened film it let's see that guy he's cheating his diet he doesn't follow the diet anymore he gave up I can't gave up look at him look at him no just kidding I'm kidding I I can't dude but you shouldn't want yeah and you don't want to either but I I get the feeling it feels like a bit you have to you really have to commit now well I do want to say though I don't know if this guy's watching but there was a guy showing sending me a picture every day of his walk and he stopped sending me those photos and I noticed what's up get back to your walk sucker let's see them works send that back just uh remember even though you don't get an answer every time we see the messages we see them we can't respond to all of them I read every single one yeah I really do I mean there's a lot of paragraph Andes in the uh in the diet world because they you know they want their story and everyone has like a story it's not just as easy as saying this this this that like usually when someone wants to diet there's a it's like a big emotional reasoning behind it you know like you want a lifestyle change so these people spill their beans bro and I read all of it I suppose I read the whole beans yeah I haven't been reading all tick tock comments I have to admit well I didn't see Texas it's just on Twitter just Twitter I don't got banned yeah but it is up but you know that yeah I know I did did it go back up they made a new one yeah no I I asked my manager I'm trying to get on band it got it got banned for I had an lsf clip from like a while ago it was just a joke thing um I saw it I saw it I guess the video that you had to turn on or automated videos on YouTube yeah yeah and and first off it was just a chemistry guy it was actually somebody that I watched it was I was just trying to make a good one and they banned my Tick Tock bro for teaching kids to make bumps for [ __ ] suggestions it was like it was like melting down metal for like like I don't know what the hell it was or it wasn't a bomb it was just I just made a joke but they actually banned me because I guess they believe the joke yeah so I'm not gonna post that one up anymore you know it's funny that's my biggest clip too on my channel and I that [ __ ] got me ban on Tick Tock yeah come on bro it isn't even uh they can't even see how to make a bomb from what you posted there it's impossible no no and they shouldn't Perma band they should tempt Bannon just ask they permaband they count what yeah it's ridiculous it is really ridiculous it's a hilarious clip though the one on Twitch I've seen it wasn't even in it it was on an accident yeah yes uh is there any change just you want to be the that needs to be done um I don't know I ever cheat meal I've been appreciating the diet more yeah I don't know if there's anything I really want to change did you put the I haven't checked the dock did you change the potatoes actually I've just added in see that how many potato I can actually eat um [Music] 470 grams is that like one potato though like a decent that's more than well oh really it's a lot let me see wait how many grams did you say 470 I'm looking up how much 470 grams it's about the pound oh damn okay yeah that looks good yeah and it could be any potato doesn't matter just really styled potatoes uh it's not sweet potato because that's a bit less a little bit less guy but I've been eating after the diet I mean is there a replacement for sweet potato I just know sweet potato is really good for you it does you can have potatoes there as well or uh I've been getting used to it honestly I've been like kind of liking it because I don't eat a lot of sweet things weirdly like my dessert for the day is a sweet potato and I kind of like it now like it's oh you're getting into today well things are starting to change because I'm not eating other things and I'm just kind of forgetting about how a Snickers bar tastes yeah and how a Kit Kat is and then I'm just now the Kit Kat is turning into that sweet potato yeah that's how that's the exact feeling oh it's happening it's happening no it's getting it now it's broken for life it will take sweet potatoes is candy in Spanish yeah it's sweet like I thought it was just like when they do the desserts for Thanksgiving and stuff because there's like sweet potato pie and they normally they put marshmallows all over that I don't know if you ever saw that it's like a marshmallows over like it's the most unhealthy thing ever when I eat a sweet potato now it tastes like I'm eating that somehow I don't know how but it does I think it's just because I'm so like my sugar tolerance yeah because you're done sugar you don't have sugar yeah like this diet coke I haven't had Diet Coke and while I've been doing the diet Dr Pepper but normally you know when I would eat out I would only do diet sodas but like every occasionally like if I ordered McDonald's I'd get a large Coke you know I mean like there's some places that just get their soda it's like the main thing but I haven't had that right I haven't had that at all so when I drank the diet coke this [ __ ] was so sweet like this way sweeter than a Diet Coke has ever been in my life I got it I had to like kind of look at it and I feel like some okay something was going on like they painted the can wrong and I was drinking a regular Coke because that's literally how it tastes like to me right now yeah I don't know and you you when you taste the normal sugar Coke it will taste horrible so that you don't even need to taste really yeah it's probably gonna be so sweet I will be horrible I'm saying nope nope I just would assume my body would hurt I think I even I was just eating all that every day and somehow my body was like getting used to it or something now when I try to double if when I double dabbled it's like oh at least that's again literally said no yeah yeah it's way better than I like this it will be healthier you will live longer and feel better I'm looking forward to one year in on this thing we go do you know Jesse you have signed up for at least a year with me you know that yeah yeah you're my uh yeah we got a year contract that's a year contract and uh so so uh I'm looking forward to see look back at this Clips in a year you're trying to get me ready for Camp canoe or something maybe maybe we start off a bit from front yeah if I if I hit I mean if I hit a goal weight I totally would go out and do a thing with you I think you would have been a good uh a good person to have on Camp Knute not that first one though because that was Heavy that would have been rough I would have been oh like it would have been hard I mean I'm sure like those diets you'd put on everyone too like my friends it was pretty similar to the one you have now wait really yeah it's pretty much the same oh what are they oh and they're babies yeah it's not that bad no the only thing is I thought the camping new one was like a lot more extreme really swapped Bro lakari went hard yeah but if you had added in Daily insane workouts to you as well things would have changed faster but of course lakari he had a little bit less to take off so it was so that you can see the change more but I think you would have changed more than any of them if you put in the same work for a month where am I even at right now are we a month in yet uh uh let me check first rewrite registration at 3 26. was the 26th so we're not the month in we're about two weeks or something oh my God it's only been two weeks wait let me just how has it only been two weeks it's two weeks in a day since uh since you were 26th I think no wait I actually thought I was like a month in it feels like forever yeah it does because it's hard bro when you do a walk every day every day starts becoming a lot [ __ ] longer bro when you go from days not doing anything like three days can feel like the same day but when you go three days in my life right now that's three walks outside that's a [ __ ] three walks is a [ __ ] I feel that [ __ ] all day all right well I've been going harder every day I'm not sure like when things start feeling better I just kind of push it a little bit more I just I'm constantly trying to be in that like I want it to feel annoying a little bit annoying all the time but not too bad yeah I want I'm always trying to like there's an incline in my neighborhood bro oh wait let me tell you dude they're I have a route and I figured it out it's like perfect yeah we're like the last my last like mile that I do is like half incline and half decline that incline is at the end and like every time I get to that point I feel like I'm getting faster on that incline but my legs are getting railed because I like I'm like feeling the burn but it feels good because it may the burn that I feel is like fixing the previous day yeah like all day that it hurts like it's like I'm getting in there and I'm like [ __ ] comfort of the muscles and it makes it just feel better yeah but then but then I feel it the next day then you made it till the next day oh yeah oh yeah but uh is it easier to just walk around normally now than it was just two weeks ago like we finished my walk I'm like things are so weird my body still feels like I'm walking yeah like fast like I like I don't know I never really noticed walking being hard and also I don't have stairs in this house anymore my last house I had stairs but the stairs were rough yeah stairs were light yeah I hated that um but I don't have stairs anymore so I don't really notice like every day moving ever being hard you know plus right when I moved here I started the diet so yeah so it's an oil change thing from from them yeah so this house changed my life well yeah because I never did webcam streams and stuff I used to like a long time ago but I didn't want to but it was like I kept saying I kept procrastinating that I would turn cam on when I moved to the next house and I finally moved here and then that's like you know just pushed me to do it yeah it sounds like you're just fighting all of those things you were holding back on before in a way how can I explain this how can we explain it in English was it Affair of having the camera on or why didn't you want to have it on [Music] there's an image that people already kind of have of me of like that I've been for years and I don't know I putting on a camera and someone coming in I'm overweight and stuff like some people are mean some people don't think their messages matter but even if your [ __ ] just drops for one second and you know there's people that I've noticed that that have been watching for years say some like [ __ ] up [ __ ] you know what I mean and it's like you know that that sort of gets to you and I I can fully understand if there's something you don't like like being overweight you didn't like that and there's coming in people being mean about it as well yeah because I I don't want it to I I consider myself a funny guy okay and I never had to sit here and be on camera and be fat and that's why I'm funny like I want to like do my own [ __ ] and I never wanted it to be a part of my physical self and when you turn on a camera you know you start you self-deprecate that's what fat people do to feel better so they self-deprecate so now my humor is starting to get mixed up with how I am and that's not how I am with myself because I don't have a camera and I now when you have a camera on you start to Super self-deprecate you use it as an outlet as a joke or something yeah but I never use this but I don't think you should do that now either no I I haven't and that's why the diet thing is good because if anyone comes in there and they want to joke about how fat I am or something everyone [ __ ] kicking their ass in the chat because the people that actually watch me know I'm working on it yeah right but if I wasn't working on it at all then they'd 100 have a reason to talk [ __ ] about it honestly I mean if you're if I'm showing it that's public right so [ __ ] maybe I need to stop making jokes about my hair now I haven't been insecure about it ever but I'm making jokes about it uh at the same time because my chat is saying I'm bald all the time and soon I'm coming I mean seriously though but that's seriously a thing right think about it though you really have to think about like that like if something isn't funny to you you don't have to make a joke about it if it actually oh then a baby actually think it's funny [ __ ] it oh [ __ ] it bro listen uh Jesse I know I'm not bald that's why I can make the jokes right yeah look at chat now I know I'm not bald but it's because that's because I can make the jokes good oh no [Laughter] all right but that that was something big too because like I would stream before in all my stream is is its music it's that like it has nothing to do with your diet like and now the only Annoying Thing I guess and which isn't annoying because you would think it's like a non-annoying thing but they come in and they ask me if I'm training or they ask me you know and it you would think by like oh that's good people are coming in but when you got like a lot of people that do it and you're trying to have certain content and do a certain thing you know you don't wanna you know I guess what you're saying you don't want the only topic on your stream to be about dieting or about being yeah how's the diet going you know what I'm saying I which I appreciate but it's also when you it can be too much yeah it's because it's not something I really want to it's not my weight isn't something that I really want to make content like this is just kind of happening and it's good because it's inspiration for people and I'm good with that and but you know there's a lot of stupid [ __ ] things people say there's a really big one is they don't don't be Greek you know I'm saying that's one that's one thing that people say that is so [ __ ] annoying because what that does is you got one fat guy that became skinny in his personality change or something and then anyone that's fat that they think is funny they're like they're connecting you not being funny to losing weight and I hate to break it to you as dumb as that might sound it makes you not want to [ __ ] lose weight like I it's like it's weird how people are like oh he's gonna be less funny like they actually connect that like that's a real thing like you're bettering yourself and you're gonna be less funny what is that twitch mindset is so dumb sometimes it's like ridiculous like they actually think that they think that's real yeah a lot of people come in and say that [ __ ] right oh it's so weird yeah I agree and what what do you what you have to remember that uh when uh every time someone says that you have to remember this is kids this is kids they they have probably never seen anyone lose weight except Greek and he was they thought it was funny before because they played he played a lot of he made a lot of humor on him being being a fat guy right do you remember and then he changed and he got a lot of [ __ ] and it probably got worse I'm not sure how it happened personally I think Ricky can be a good guy I uh I don't care if he has a bad Arc sometimes and says here's my take on it though and I think it's one to one with what I just said and Greek so Greek when he spear Tyler right like this serious yeah I can the reason why I know this is because I can completely put myself in those shoes him playing with Tyler he wasn't on a face cam he just said what he said and everyone laughed at what Greek was saying and then when he went on face cam he allowed his weight to become a part of his his comedy routine and his joke so when he lost his weight he lost a part of his comedy routine but the thing is is Greek had his own [ __ ] before he had a camera and he did all that stuff and people forget about that Greek's a funny person but he allowed himself to his weight to be a part of his comedy routine and that wasn't why he was funny at all and he just kind of forgot who he was and I just don't want that to happen that's that's a huge fear and sadly that's a fear because ah a lot of people make it a fear like they they come they seriously think if I'm gonna start losing weight for some reason as a trigger and someone's brain to be like well don't don't do Greek don't do the Greek thing like I guess what you're saying and I I don't want me to do the Greek thing that don't write that you know what I'm saying like it's so [ __ ] yeah we can we could also if you don't want to have those updates on your stream we can only do them here as well because then it will take you away a little bit from this being your content if you don't want that that's all up to you yeah I that's kind of like what I've been doing sort of yeah well I would rather I would rather that honestly because I I do like separating it because I know I I'm I've been a viewer before I was a before I did this and you can Paris you could really get committed to somebody's life right and like really want to see somebody do good and have the right intentions but just write the wrong thing at the wrong time you know that happens a lot and you know is it it doesn't really like super get on my nerves but I'm just kind of saying it to where like I feel like I can bounce it off because I feel like I kind of have like I kind of understand it a little bit more because I've taken the time to think about it but you have people that probably don't take the time to think about this stuff yeah and they won't diet they actually won't diet because they actually have people telling them that they're not going to be funny or half their humor that they have is their weight you know Nakato avocado you know that guy yeah I know that guy that's his whole thing that's his whole thing so he can't lose weight he'll have a fan base that's really happy for him but he will for ultimately the people that that laughed at his stuff will ultimately say he's not funny anymore because now they're not laughing at him anymore they can't laugh with him because all they could do was laugh at him you should never put in a position where you're being laughed at and on purpose at least not about things you want to change exactly yeah that is so bad it's bad mental it's so bad mental like I'm being laughed at as well but it's different things that I'm a metered I'm hairless I can't do anything about them so I will will be be like this all the time I mean bald bald yeah but yeah it it's a little different it's different when it's your hair and it's like your life like me actually being healthy because I a hundred percent I know it for a fact I know it that there is so many content creators their weight as comedy like that is like in the Normie world and you go on trending that's all the fact there's fat comedians that are comedians because they're fat yeah and that's it and they make jokes about them being fat yeah and when you build that up and you do that you're like super [ __ ] yourself you might be making a bag in that moment but anytime you want to actually help yourself and do anything you're only half those people are going to support you because the other half were laughing at you and one half was laughing with you and they were just find a new person that does the same or something but yeah it's gone yes yes that guy like self-deprecating is the easiest humor because it's like it's your conscious talking and you're just you know it to somebody else something might sound really dark if you say it in a room by yourself if you try to make this joke by yourself in a room it sounds really depressing but when there's somebody there that can laugh at it then it's a joke yeah so but yeah anyways sorry for ranting I'm high no that's fine oh wait we want your text we want you to let out all your thoughts sir that isn't that what we're doing yeah yeah I think it's good well there are emotional problems Jesse but about me and I was just literally like therapy that's good uh as long as it as long as it does good there's a therapist can do it no but uh we wanted to talk out so we could listen and what he said right now was a really good knowledge for everyone to have I think it was yeah I mean it's a niche it's a niche area because it's not like you're trying to be somebody a content creator and like it is a niche thing but I think it could be used in everyday life though I think if you're a fat person and you're going to work and you go to work and you're the funny guy because you're the fat guy and oh yeah I'm gonna eat all that food yeah and it might be funny and everyone's gonna think but how many times have you kind of solidify yourself with that character I think everyone has seen that character now and then that's you see always smiling a little bit fat person that is clowning on himself yeah because it's a it is really nice to be the one to make fun of yourself and not someone else if you beat them to the punch line they can't get you I mean that seriously that is how that's how it is yeah you beat them to the punch line they can't get your ass you already called yourself that yeah I am going to eat all these yeah but at the end of the day it's short term and it's good short term but long term it's bad it is bad because when you want to start helping yourself and start working on yourself and that part of you is gone you'll notice that people act differently yeah and that's just it just you realize that those were actually just walls that you built up and stuff and maybe uh you're you're not getting that positive feedback all the time that you were used to getting from making all those jokes about yourself yeah because it's like what about that dopamine High isn't it the reason why I think the reason why there's comedians I mean is because they just they like making people laugh that's like the main point of it because you it's them getting the dopamine yeah but then if you want to better yourself and you're not getting that dopamine anymore because people aren't coming up and laughing at your fat jokes what are they going to start laughing at your running jokes it's a lot easier to laugh at a fat joke than a [ __ ] running joke oh there's a lot of things I was jogging the other day like no one when you started I was jogging and I and then you start the other I was at Burger King and which one just sounded funnier you know what I'm saying like a meat Burger King listen that's the same sponsor you saw that video uh Professor Bro Science Life you should learn to laugh at that as well [Laughter] here's like well let's keep those separate let's just keep those and uh keep this out of therapy level that will be the next uh Arc of majesty no more changing changing my videos I watch You're Gonna Change My algorithm on YouTube yeah forced to watch workout videos yeah but it already is getting changed honestly I'm getting like a bunch of right now I get a lot of calories things like a lot of low calorie meals even I'm not making them I don't know why that's just it knows it knows but bro there's some good looking [ __ ] that's low calorie Mountain it is all of it has [ __ ] coconut coconut all of it and I'm allergic to that bro I can't do it oh how many steps I have done today it isn't many I was drunk yesterday when I came into it I just have to admit I was it was the first time I've been drinking uh in a long time except twitch you were [ __ ] posting you know like [ __ ] posting in my chat while I was playing Minecraft that's allowed I'm allowed to sit first edition you're like look at my last thing like you're telling me to scroll up I'm like can't I can't I don't know since my birth yeah since pasha's birthday of the body as well but I was more drunk yesterday than I have been in a long time if I ever comment this afternoon [ __ ] post it might be sober as well just take it as humor I like it you can ship us all you want it's literally all anyone does in there anyways that's all I know about twitch after reading my own chat I'm worse than my chapters so am I honestly and I know exactly what they're going to type too when I see something on the screen I know what they're going to spam yes I'm already ready it's so weird like there's just a it actually is so strange if you go watch a twitch stream you just know exactly where they're gonna type like a second before yeah and it always happens too it always happens yeah it's not it is the international language of twitch that's what it is yeah if you don't know yeah I feel like we really could communicate with just emotes like a hundred percent we could yeah hello hey you like uh you're a tech user though I'm okay Lord W user yeah I I I I like both of them but I'm just so used to the Keke at this point well I'm I'm just used to Omega walls like Omega walls are what you farm for you just want to well is it a Omega laws are the best thing to see in a chat like a bunch of them at once yeah look at those those are the you know that's a real dopamine yeah laughs yeah that is the best right there it has literally dopamine no or Hogs when you do something yeah it's pretty good as well hello e oh that one yeah of course isn't that a one I have to say literally yeah it is that one without teeth wait did I couldn't nute force him no I mustache dad I had the mustache at that point I think when you took that picture oh it's supposed to be a most I think that I've added in some extra it might yeah they added a little extra right there a little yeah is it your fault Pasha yeah personality is a friend of mine he lives in Sweden he's a chef so we um and he okay he was drunk with his family in Turkey on vacation and he came into shot and he's uh a little bit before November and he's a decade should we save a mustache for November yeah so he has had a full beard himself full full lone bear and I said yes view my beautiful bed you must you were rocking the mustache though I'm not gonna lie you could Rock a mustache you know what you should try you should seriously try getting like a beard full beard just once just to see yeah the only problem is that it's so it's you would literally but it's so much itching I hate I'm not being clean shaved yeah but there's people that like really take care of their beards and stuff too though that like where that doesn't happen like they got like like my I have a cousin that takes care of his beard like I know better than he takes care of anything else in the world you know what I mean and like better than to take care of his wife my cousin that's actually that's my gym cousin I do have a gym cousin that's built so hey that's probably why it does not have a wife because of that bear there's a giant he has a giant beard and he just goes to the gym and he wears uh Dragon Ball Z tank top are you uh is your cousin um that guy what was his name oh why can't they remember his name Chateau when the guy from the video yes tone uh the guy that is eating liver King [Laughter] my guys in the eats whatever he wants but he goes but he goes to the gym every day and he's [ __ ] just he's big it's a monster too but he's an hour away he hit me up he was like if you ever want to do the gym stuff he would he would drive about an hour away I would maybe go to the gym without I used to go to the gym with him a while ago he was good like you were he has a good uh he can probably help you out uh in the beginning when we start driving into weightlifting mm-hmm yeah I just every time I've ever been with them though I've hurt my back so yeah I can I can set up some exercises that will be easy for you to handle as well because you don't have to do that lifts and squats right you can do all directions I really don't don't back or something bro I I anytime I try to work out my back I throw it out every I'm just oh I'm done bro I'm done for a week if I throw out my back I'm done evident that there are exercises that would be easier and that you don't risk anything at all arrest nothing yet until I got like no but we can we can we can set the weight goal up front before we start thinking about the gym like two or nine two eight there's something in that area what do you think about that what is your first yeah I would download the 290 probably because I not right when I'm at a 300 because I'm not going to feel amazing when I'm 300 but I remember feeling pretty decent around 290 last time I went hard on our diet 290 280 ish was I felt good in a while because there was a time let me tell you I had I used to do um I used to do 10 was it 10 000 steps a day how much was ten thousands used to do 10 miles no I used to do 10 miles 10 miles a day yes yes I did that's ours yes huh that that takes some hours yeah yeah I did I used to do it in the morning and then I also used to work at Chili's and then I just I went too hard I got a little addicted like there that's why diets don't work because I just go too hard and I burned out like every time I'm like a super burnout guy and I just burned it out and then I also have like this weird thing where even if I feel pain and stuff I don't really care you know I can just kind of I deal with it when it comes to that that's why when you're asking me like if I hurt after the walk I kind of look forward to it like hurting right a little bit I get your points yeah oh there's there's some people yeah if you give up if you give up because you have a uh because you feel like you're going too hard then then you're going too hard yeah it was two 276 my last like time I went really hard but that was also keto I was doing keto and I was doing the 10 miles a day yeah and at first I used to do 10 miles in the beginning of the day and then which is crazy but then I would do five miles in the morning and five miles a night yeah and um hmm I my job will be also to hold you back so you're not overdoing stuff that you will so you will quit yeah I'm not in the same that's why I know I'm really unhealthy right now because even when I was doing that like I was fat but I was able to do it and I can't do it right now I got I did an hour today but I was hurting bro after that hour and I don't even I didn't check how I stopped checking how much I walked yeah because I don't really I don't want to do that because what I did was I walked really long one of the days and then the next day I didn't and I kind of felt bad about it so I'm just not even going to keep track of it I'm just gonna I'm just gonna walk go out yeah but that's enough yeah I I feel like that that is more than enough you don't need to track that to the to the seconds or how far you're going you can just just walk a little bit every day that's all yeah like yesterday I did the walk at the end of the day with first time I've ever done that because uh when I remember I woke up and I had it I wrote you that you woke me up yeah I I couldn't go and do the walk in the morning and I dreaded all day that I was gonna have to walk at the end of the day yeah all day so I'm not doing that anymore but I like I just kind of had to but I ended up doing the walk but that walk made me go to sleep so good so good like that's probably one of the best sleeps I had so so that helps your sleep actually walking in the evening as well I was like if I continue to get tired right now I'm not gonna do the walk so I was already kind of tired even going out there doing it but I just ended up doing it but I only did 30 minutes I timed it too and I was done but I did it I almost didn't do it yesterday though I haven't skipped the date yet no as I'm exciting if you if for some reason you're over asleep and you have to do something and you should for some reason skipped one day that didn't think about that as anything that can't be fixed yeah I just it just it just eats at me a little bit yeah I'm not sure what to tell you to make that stop but uh it should not I shouldn't [ __ ] you up it anyway it shouldn't make you feel that bad no I'm not I I definitely nothing with the diet like I had a sad day the other day but a lot of people thought it was the diet it didn't have anything to do with the value or nothing um no you told me that there was something else yeah yeah there's something else I didn't have to do the diet but um I'm sure the diet wasn't making it like better you know but nobody think it would have been better to just throw in some fast food that day what do you want to do but you think that would have made you feel better faster um no I would have [ __ ] my next day up really bad and [ __ ] but in that short term moment yeah I would 100 make me feel better I mean what if I won't lie to you I mean like short term you know like a hundred percent but I the next hour I'd be upset that I did it and the next two hours I'd start feeling that I did it in the next three hours yeah that's that's why I really feeling that I did it yeah that's why I asked instead of asking you would that make you feel better there and then as do you think that would have made you feel better uh faster like the next day would have been better no I meant it would only be in a really short term right now I'm just getting this because this is what I want to [ __ ] it um yeah and that's the thing is is I've done that like a lot before in my life so I know it does work for the second but I don't think it's worse yeah and then there's you regret it from a bunch of different angles there's a whole bunch of different angles that you could regret doing that's like you know why'd I break the diet for this thing why now not only that now I'm going to feel like [ __ ] now tomorrow is going to be harder because I just remembered how all this [ __ ] tasted and also I'm gonna feel like [ __ ] because my body is gonna have to digest this [ __ ] whatever the hell I just ate and no I mean it's only negative there's only downside to it besides just like that short-term you escape reality for a second like I'm not dieting I'm not doing any of this I'm only doing this but I didn't let it happen thankfully so I think I think I've had it happen before my of course you wouldn't have that experience uh or you did wouldn't know this if you uh if it hadn't happened before definitely happened before I'm just typing I'm getting a message there's a guy from the Jesse upstairs group that is uh that has made a documents about um let me read I think a document with a few details and links to websites would be beneficial to the flood of messages regarding the people asking for help I made a simple word document with a few websites and general advice I would love to share it here on Discord if you want so he is sending it to me uh so he has made like an advice document that can help others because that we can maybe give out to those who ask for more help so it's like a little guidance for people to start out yeah I mean I mean I think the the them is like what I'm noticing more and more is I was extremely reliant on you in the beginning yeah and um you know after the first week you know it all comes down to you it's all personal performance it's what you do yeah a lot of people that you know you're like oh God I wish I had a coach that would do that or like it really helps to give it gives you a lot of confidence and stuff like that but I think if you it doesn't even necessarily have to be a coach it's just like even a goal that you have it's a even with you as a coach it's still personal like I still gotta everything is on my own so there's a lot of people that aren't starting their diets because they don't have a coach or something but I don't think I I think you just need to find the inspiration I think what I can do is just make sure that what you're doing you know that what you're doing is the right thing that's what I can do yeah because because when you get that diet you're more secure that okay if I do follow this plan this will actually be a good thing I'm not just doing something that I have no clue about that's what I can help you with formulated the my thought a little bit better it was hard for me to understand what I was trying to say I was trying to say like they might think like that it that it's going at like because it's work right like dieting is where it feels like I'm doing a full-time job on top of what I was doing every day right now and just like I wanted to know even though I have a coach like it still work like if you there there's probably like you know I'm not gonna start dieting until I get a dietitian or I know exactly what I'm gonna do or something like that but you know it it isn't like that like it still ends up just being work no matter what on both ends of the spectrum yeah as you're trying to say it doesn't matter if you have a coach or not you still have to do all the work yourself everything is just you you're the one sitting there having to eat the meals you're the one sitting there having to not be tempted to eat something that you did before all the time that's all on you yeah just nice having you because you know if I don't like something if I didn't have you I'd have to go on Google and I have to go look through all this [ __ ] and go read all these opinions where I don't really care to see those opinions it's just nice that you know what you're doing and you just tell me what I do and I just kind of treat it like a job yeah and it's like okay this is my manager and this is my job and that's kind of what it is like and that's nice so I feel like if people need like that kind of format which I actually do but what I'm noticing though is what I'm trying to say is a couple weeks after it's like I feel like you it was really good for you especially in the beginning because like you pushed me you know what I mean and I'd never really got pushed by anybody like that like I've had my cousin that helps me go to the gym and stuff like that but you actually made me feel like you actually gave a [ __ ] you know if I if I like you know are you eating and you're not getting energy like before yeah of course you're not gonna feel energy you're not eating what you ate before you know that's the type of [ __ ] I would hear before but now it's like no we'll fix it it's kind of nice knowing that you'll fix it yeah but but because and that comes back to what I said as well I think we're 100 agree that the only thing I can help you with is like the technical issues right because I've done this multiple times myself I have done this so so you you're just confident in what you're doing is the correct thing yeah like I know what I'm doing right now is good because you said it's good to wear diets before you know like I did keto and I have to hear from I go outside and oh what's your diet oh I'm doing keto well let me tell you 15 [ __ ] reasons why keto is going to kill you you know what I mean or oh yeah I made the swap I don't drink regular soda anymore I drink diet soda yeah let me tell you this one thing I [ __ ] saw on the news like I don't [ __ ] care I don't care I don't care it's better than before and maybe the next step will be only water but this is the step two bro and I don't care oh yeah I like the guys that inside sometimes turning off your brain and just following directions is great yeah I mean you gotta that's that is literally that is how it is I I it's really hard for me to be my own boss like and you know I've had a freelancing phase I was a I was a video editor and it's really hard to do things on your own and not have somebody that's like looking over you like how many did you do this week I meant why didn't you do this many this week you know there was a time where I didn't have that so I get how like a coach helps with that but I think a coach and inspiration are the same thing like you are my inspiration you know what I mean I think you don't have to necessarily wait for a coach you can something can inspire you and you can get the exact same result that I'm getting right now that's what I'm trying to say of course of course and the the things that I'm giving you for a lot of people could have done that there's a lot of people with knowledge out there you could have you could have Googled around and found the same information as well if we spent a lot of time doing it you couldn't find it found it and uh that's that's just some easy things for me so you don't have to do that job yeah just shortcut shortcut yeah like you've you lived your life and you know exactly what you're doing and I what's good about the physical world is I could look at you and know oh yeah he knows what he's doing you know what I mean like if you were trying to give me advice you'd turn on your camera I mean you look like we got a mirror sitting here and then I'd be like oh man literally you know it you get it yeah so so you just gotta tell me which medications affects with hair loss there's none of them that affects with their hair they'll sit in your diet [Laughter] that your age just so I just say you have a 11 here I have 11 years old you just wait 11 years and we can see that bald spot growing I don't think I'm gonna bald I hope to God I don't my grandpa has a full head of hair and I look like my grandpa and wherever we're just gonna hope my grandpa was 95 93 years old when he uh disappeared from this world that he didn't uh have a even close to Bible about so just to adjust oh all right well that's what I tell all my viewers every time they try to bully me young [ __ ] stupid kids just wait you will have less air than me when you're 36. I I don't even I was gonna do the thing where you chat I don't even want to check my hairline I'm good I don't know what's going on right there I don't know why you can see skin there that's not supposed to happen but yeah um 25 25 still a young a little just a kid but uh I'm gonna I'm so hungry bro I want to eat my first meal so bad yeah but it was good having a little conversation again we'll uh do it in midweek or something okay I'm down just uh I will bully you and uh update uh when you have uh on the wait I'm gonna do it on Monday I want to space it out yeah but I'll let you know but have a good evening goodbye have a good evening I appreciate it thank you for the talks and stuff all right bye bye chat bye [ __ ] Jesse it's a funny dude I I like Jesse every time I talk to him he's hilarious dude he brought up a good point there about uh about uh what is that about being self-destructive in the humor I haven't thought about it like that exactly like he said before but it is uh yeah Kerry is a good guy [Music]
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2022-12-23
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Safety and Regulation of Ready-to-Eat Produce
now a house hearing on the safety of ready-to-eat produce or produce that comes pre-packaged at the store you'll hear about efforts to prevent e coli contamination in pre-bagged greens and other products among the witnesses officials from the fda and the agriculture department congressman dennis kucinich chairs this hour and 40-minute hearing committee will come to order i'm congressman dennis kucinich chair of the domestic policy subcommittee of oversight and government reform i'm joined today by the ranking member of the subcommittee mr jordan of ohio and today's hearing will examine the safety of ready-to-eat produce the successes and challenges posed by the california leafy greens marketing handling agreement and for the sake of this hearing we're going to use the acronym kalgma so when you hear kalgma it stands for california leafy greens marketing handling agreement and we're going to also be talking about the proposed nationalization of that agreement the hearing will focus on bagged or value-added leafy greens marketed as ready to eat consumers are quite familiar with those products and look at the role of private industry and government in regulating these products and the economic environmental and food safety impacts of that regulation now without objection the chair and the ranking minority member will have five minutes to make opening statements followed by opening statements uh that of other members not to exceed three minutes by any member who seeks recognition without objection members and witnesses have five legislative days to submit a written statement or extraneous materials for the record and without objection the chairman and ranking member will each have 10 minutes for questions in the first round after which we'll proceed under the five-minute rule pre-cut packaged leafy greens marketed as ready to eat have become increasingly popular capturing 70 of the leafy greens market americans appreciate the convenience of this partially processed product and are eating more fresh produce as a result that's a good and important development and will likely help to improve the health of americans yet as the popularity of bagged lettuce and spinach has increased so have rare but serious food-borne illnesses associated with it outbreaks of e coli 157 and other pathogens have occurred in relation to pre-cut packaged leafy greens at least once a year practically every year since 2003 regulation to prevent these outbreaks rests in the hands of the industry the california leafy greens handler marketing agreement kalgma was implemented to stave off regulatory action by the state of california kalgema ensured adherence to a specified set of good agricultural practices designed primarily by the food and drug administration to improve the safety of leafy greens in spite of its name kalgama is having an impact on farmers in all parts of the nation due to the requirements of compliance with kalgma imposed by national processing and retailing outlets which buy and market their produce the usda is currently proposing the creation of a national marketing agreement along the lines of kalgma there's much good in the kalgama initiative kalgma embodies private industries positive efforts to safeguard the american food supply handlers responsible for growers compliance with food safety metrics pay for auditors trained by the usda and hired by the kalgama board to carry out surprise and schedule inspections of standards adopted voluntarily by signatory farmers kalgma however has some blind spots as well it condones a processing activity favored by the ready-to-eat processing industry known as coring coring lettuce in the field and only suggests minimal guidelines for sanitary treatment of harvest equipment used for coring in spite of recent scientific research identifying the potential for transferring pathogens deep into the core lettuce where the subsequent washing process would be unable to reach kalgma is silent on the use of certain packaging of ready-to-eat produce known as modified atmosphere packaging the bags of ready-to-eat greens calgma does not require an enforceable standard of cold chain of distribution it does not impose tough requirements on packages and distributors relating to the best consumed by date that's stamped on the ready to eat packaging people have seen those so they don't have any requirements on those packages and distributors put that stamp on there now scientists tell us that if bagged produce labeled as ready to eat is not constantly refrigerated through the distribution chain it quickly becomes a perfect habitat for bacterial growth harmful bacteria such as e coli 157 multiply unseen and undetectable to the eye of the consumer legions of pathogens can thereby invade the unsuspecting consumers intestinal tract overwhelming his or her immune system causing severe and painful complications and in some cases death everyone who has experienced severe food poisoning knows what's at stake well it's largely silent on key questions applying to upstream processing and distribution of ready-to-eat produce calgma has a lot to say about farming practices in land stewardship small and organic farmers in particular have expressed concern about the costs and the scientific justification for some of kog'maw's requirements some of calgma's metrics are seen to be in direct conflict with environmental protection widely accepted agricultural practices in some cases streams have been contaminated wildlife refuge destroyed biodiversity threatened by farmers efforts to remain in compliance with calgary today we hope to address why calgma's regulatory framework has focused solely on farming practices to the exclusion of the rest of the supply chain it seems the farmers have taken the brunt of the burden of minimizing contamination when it may make more scientific sense to focus attention on the processing packaging and distribution of ready-to-eat produce consumers have a right to expect that the food they eat is safe it's in the public health interest that americans consume greater amounts of raw vegetables but whether or not nationalizing calgary as the usda has proposed is the best way to achieve those goals is a question of this hearing i look forward to hearing from all of our witnesses today on this important issue and at this time i recognize the honorable congressman jordan ranking member of the committee from the state of ohio thank you chairman i want to thank you for holding this hearing to examine the impact of leafy green marketing agreements most importantly we need to have food supply that is safe americans should be able to feel confident that the produce they buy at the grocery store or that to serve them at restaurants will not make them sick leafy green marketing agreements such as calgma may be an effective way to ensure safer produce however additional guidelines and regulations may be overly burdensome to some farmers especially small or family-owned and run farms i look forward to hearing from our witnesses about their experience with the marketing agreements the fda and usda also play key roles in food safety and agriculture marketing and i'm interested to hear how these roles may change if a leafy greens marketing agreement is made national additionally i hope that our witnesses can discuss the implications of h.r 2749 food safety enhancement act of 2009 which discussed would be voted on uh yesterday and and may in fact be voted on later today so i look forward to hearing how uh your thoughts on on that legislation as well and i also look forward to examining the pros and cons of making a national making national the kaugma uh uh agreement and thank our witnesses for taking the time to testify here in front of the committee today without a deal back mr chairman i thank the gentleman if there uh does the gentlelady from california have an opening statement i do mr chairman i want to thank you so much for holding today's hearing to examine the leafy greens market the role of private industry and government in regulating these products and the economic environmental and food safety impacts of the california leafy greens market agreement the hearing is happening at a very opportune time and since 2003 pre-cut bagged lettuce has developed into the second fastest growth industry in the united states grocery sales and you know i'm from california we believe in salads and so making it critically important that adequate precautions are taken an analysis conducted to endure that this increasingly popular food is not just nutritious but safe and we've taken steps mr chairman the state of california to regulate the sale of not only the leafy greens package but those in the bins as well 98.5 percent of the e coli outbreaks reported in leafy greens have been associated with bagged and pre-cut greens now the infamous 2006 spinach outbreak resulted in over 200 hospitalizations nearly 400 million dollars in lost product and three deaths confirmed by the fda in response to this and other similar instances industry leaders developed the california leafy greens marketing agreement to allow growers to join a voluntary regulatory framework which now encompasses 99 percent of california's leafy green business and is being considered for official nationalization and i chaired those uh committee meetings mr chairman when i was um chairperson of health and human services the c a l g m a cal ma includes a food safety inspection program conducted by the usda and the enforcement of metrics are regulations developed by scientists governmental officials growers processors and businesses to reduce microvolt contamination of leafy greens in the field to fork supply chain while i'm pleased that the farming industry has taken the initiative to create this comprehensive framework for food safety i believe it's important to scrutinize its effectiveness and its impact on the environment some have argued that the rules placed on farmers by calgam conflict with the movement towards organic and biological diverse farming methods and could be actually harming the environment furthermore it may prove to be a counterintuitive to create such regulations before that is there is conclusive scientific knowledge about how e coli makes its way into the leafy green supply so i would like to thank you mr chairman for allowing me to make this presentation i'm sorry i cannot stay they just called an emergency meeting of the progressive caucus to discuss uh the health care reform bill and it's at 2 30. i just wanted you to know that but i have staff here and i will be uh hearing from them as to the witnesses in their testimony so thank you so much i yield back i i thank the gentlelady and i'm sure she'll convey my sentiments in that uh meeting of the progressive caucus you can let them know that i'm given the responsibility of chairing this hearing thank you for being here with that opening statement if there's no additional opening statements the subcommittee will now receive testimony from the witnesses before us today i want to start by introducing our first panel mr mr michael michael r taylor is the senior advisor to the commissioner of food and drugs at the food and drug administration mr taylor welcome mr taylor previously served as deputy commissioner for policy and is a member of the national academy of sciences committee on environmental decision making under uncertainty he's held numerous positions in the field of food safety and research among them administrator of the food safety and inspection services at the u.s department of agriculture vice president for public policy at monsanto corporation he was also a practicing attorney in the field at the law firm of king and spaulding ms rayne pegg is the administrator of the agriculture marketing services ams the marketing and regulatory arm of the u.s department of agriculture welcome ms pegg prior to being appointed administrator at ams ms pegg was deputy secretary of legislation and policy for the california department of food and agriculture she's also served as director of international trade and plant health account for the california farm bureau federation's national affairs and research division and as a director of governmental relations to the agricultural council of california thanks for appearing before our subcommittee today it is the policy of the committee on oversight and government reform to swear on all witnesses before they testify so i would ask that you rise and please raise your right hand do you solemnly swear to tell the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth thank you let the record reflect that the witnesses answered in the affirmative i ask that each of the witnesses now give a brief summary of their testimony and to keep this summary under five minutes in duration i want you to know that your entire statement and anything else you want to append to it will be included in the hearing record mr taylor you will be our first witness and uh you may proceed five minutes okay thank you chairman kucinich and uh mr jordan i am michael taylor senior advisor to the commissioner at the food and drug administration which as you know as part of the department of health and human services i am pleased to be with you today to discuss issues related to the safety of fresh produce as you know fda is the federal agency that is responsible for regulating most of the food supply except for meat poultry and processed egg products which are overseen by our partners at the us department of agriculture fda is committed to ensuring that the u.s food supply continues to be among the safest in the world president obama has made a personal commitment to improving food safety on july 7th to this year the the multi-agency food safety working group that the president established issued its key findings on how to upgrade the food safety system for the 21st century the working group recommends a new public health-focused approach to food safety based on three core principles prioritizing prevention strengthening surveillance and enforcement and improving response and recovery fda has been an integral part of the working group's continuing efforts to establish these principles fresh produce the topic of today's hearing presents special safety challenges as the chairman outlined and the number of illnesses associated with fresh produce is a continuing concern for fda the increased consumption of produce in its fresh or raw form including ready-to-eat bagged products reflects growing consumer interest in healthy eating as you indicated which is of course a desirable trend from a public health standpoint but these new consumption patterns and products challenge our food safety efforts fresh produce has the potential to be a source of foodborne illness because it is consumed raw or with only minimal processing and without generally interventions that would eliminate any pathogens that may be present because most produce is grown in an outdoor environment it is susceptible to contamination from pathogens present in the soil in manure used as fertilizer due to the presence of animals in or near fields or packing areas or in agricultural water or water used for washing or cooling produce also may be vulnerable to contamination due to inadequate worker health and hygiene protections environmental conditions inadequate production safeguards or inadequate sanitation of equipment and facilities fresh produce is produced on tens of thousands of farms and contamination at any one step in the growing packing and processing chain can be amplified throughout the subsequent steps but we also know that the possibility of harmful contamination can be minimized by understanding these potential entry points for pathogens and by implementing preventive measures wherever possible throughout the system thus in keeping with the obama administration's prevention oriented food safety strategy fda intends to improve safety of fresh produce by establishing enforceable standards for the implementation of science-based preventive controls throughout the chain of production processing and distribution these regulations will capitalize on what we in the produce industry have learned over the past decade since we published our good agricultural practices guidances in 1998 and they will tap the best science to develop appropriate criteria or metrics for ensuring the effectiveness of preventive controls in particular in particular production and processing settings in the short term fda will issue commodity specific guidances for industry on the measures they can implement now to prevent or minimize microbial hazards of fresh produce fda will soon publish draft guidances for improving the safety of leafy greens melons and tomatoes three specific commodities that have been associated with foodborne illness outbreaks the guidances describe preventive controls that industry can implement to reduce the risk of microbial contamination in the growing harvesting transporting and distribution of these commodities it is not enough of course to issue regulations and guidances we must also ensure that the preventive measures they call for are widely and effectively implemented to that end fda will work with its federal and state partners to plan and implement an inspection and enforcement program program aimed at ensuring high rates of compliance with the produce safety regulations fda recognizes the importance of leveraging the expertise and resources of other federal state and local agencies to be sure the industry understands the new requirements and to help them achieve greater compliance one way we can leverage resources is to work with the agricultural marketing service as they consider and implement marketing agreements and orders by incorporating fda standards and voluntary marketing agreements and then conducting audits to ensure compliance by those who subscribe to such agreements ams contributes to the goal we all share which is widespread compliance with modern preventive control measures we believe that ams by incorporating fda's produce safety standards and marketing agreements or orders can help ensure high rates of compliance with fda's standards in addition to highlighting measures that the executive branch could implement to enhance food safety the white house food safety working group also noted the need for congress to modernize the food safety statutes legislative authorities for fda that would enhance the safety of products include enhanced ability to require science-based preventive controls enhanced ability to establish and enforce performance standards to measure the implementation of proper food safety procedures access to basic food safety records a new inspection mandate and other tools to foster compliance and other provisions the food safety enhancement act h.r 2749 being considered by the house today addresses these needs and the obama administration strongly supports its passage thank you again for the chance to be here mr chairman look forward to answering your questions thank you very much mr taylor ms peg you may proceed thank you hello mr chairman and members of the subcommittee good afternoon and thank you for the invitation for me to appear here before you today i appreciate the opportunity to share with you a brief overview of our activities regarding marketing orders and agreements for fruits and vegetables as mr taylor stated fda is the federal agency responsible for food safety of fruits and vegetables at usda the food safety and inspection service holds similar responsibility for meat poultry and egg products the mission of ams is to facilitate the marketing of agricultural products ams is not a food safety agency we are an agency with a long history of working with producers and processors on marketing programs that involve inspection of product product quality and verification production processes under the agricultural marketing agreement act of 1937 marketing orders and agreements assist farmers and handlers by allowing them to collectively work to solve marketing problems these pr programs are industry initiated and subject to pub public review there's a seven step process in initiating a marketing agreement the industry petitions yes usda which recently occurred on the national leafy green marketing agreement usd usda holds public meetings which we will be having on the national leafy greens marketing agreement in september and october we review all comments and either terminate the proceedings or publish a proposed rule in the past we have terminated proceedings of a potential marketing agreement or order usda publishes a final agreement and appoints a committee the committee develops best practices those best practices are sent out are published for public comment and then usda publishes a final metrics or best practices marketing agreements only applied apply to handlers who voluntarily sign an agreement fees are collected from handlers to cover local costs of administering these programs the act provides authority to regulate the quality of commodities through federal agreements usda considers the harmful pathogens of toxins to be a characteristic of higher quality products federal marketing orders and agreements include minimum quality grade requirements which can identify with the presence of mold insect infestation for material or other contaminants the marketing order for california prunes has an inspection and fumigation requirements relative to live insect infestations since 1961. since 1977 california raisins have required the absence of dirt insects and mold and beginning in 2005 pistachio handlers were required to test all nuts destined for human consumption for afatoxin which if president if present would be lower would lower the quality and market value of pistachios on june 8 ams received an industry proposal for a national marketing agreement for lettuce spinach spinach and other leafy greens the purpose of the proposed agreement is to enhance the quality and increase the marketability of fresh leafy green vegetable products through the application of good agricultural and handling practices requirements implemented under the proposed program would be science-based conform to fda guidance to minimize food safety risks and be subject to usda oversight the program would only be binding on signatory handlers the program would require signatories to verify that any product handled comes from producers or handlers using verified good agricultural and handling practices the program would authorize unannounced audits and apply to imports any product deemed an immediate food safety risk concerned by usda inspection would be reported to fda we are aware that there are concerns from various groups on the proposed marketing agreement we welcome comments from those parties and other interested parties and will carefully consider them to conclude mr chairman i would like to reiterate that the federal food safety policies for fruits and vegetables fall under the jurisdiction of fda however ams does have significant experience in the design and delivery of marketing programs including marketing orders and agreements the process for potentially establishing a marketing order or agreement is an open and transparent process in which ams carefully considers all viewpoints i'm happy to respond to any questions i thank the gentlelady we will now proceed with 10 minutes of questions uh beginning with myself and then i'll turn it over to mr jordan i'd like to start with mr taylor mr taylor ready to eat is a marketing slogan assuring that the salad in the package is safe for consumption without requiring further washing or cutting by the consumer the california leafy greens handler marketing agreement kalgma is a voluntary industry-sponsored means of ensuring quality and safety of processed leafy greens including those to be marketed as ready to eat it was developed to preempt legislative regulatory action from the california state assembly has kalgma made pre-cut salads safer than they were before and if yes what's the basis for that opinion the mr chairman the practices producer practices embodied in that agreement if implemented make a contribution to making the food safer i think we all understand that the the safety the product ultimately depends on what happens not only at that point on the on the production end but through processing and the way the product is handled throughout when you say contribution what do you mean well is there what's the science behind that the the safety of the of these products in the end depends on preventing contamination they're pull that mic a little closer with you sir sorry thanks the the safety of these products really depends uh fundamentally on prevention of contamination in the first place for a raw fresh product we don't have processing steps that decisively kill pathogens so prevention throughout the system is the key to safety and so the point is that the on-farm practices embodying the agreement make a contribution but isn't it true that uh since calgary went into effect there's still been food borne illnesses traced to the bag leafy lettuce produce the the they're absolutely they're the the safety you remember some of them the uh romaine 2008 romaine lettuce outbreak remember that yeah i was not in the government then but i'm aware of these outbreaks you're aware of the iceberg lettuce outbreak also in that year i think well isn't it true that nearly every case since 1999 outbreaks of food-borne pathogens that were traced to leafy greens involved pre-cut packaged leafy greens not whole leafy greens mr taylor yeah no improving the safety of these products is a work in progress mr chairman let me just mention another way you didn't answer my question though i mean one of the things about being in this in front of this committee it's a lot easier if you answer the question you didn't answer the question please answer the question if the question is whether the marketing agreement has solved the problem of fresh produce safety no the answer is no of course it hasn't well i i asked you a question though you didn't answer i'm going to repeat it just to make sure that you heard it i asked you that isn't it true that in nearly every case since 1999 outbreaks of food-borne pathogens that were traced to leafy greens involved pre-cut packaged leafy greens not whole leafy greens yes or no yes thank you now mr taylor doesn't that suggest that the processing of leafy greens is a significant factor the processing is a significant factor in causing outbreaks of food-borne pathogens there are features of that process that do create an environment for pathogen growth is that a yes or no yes okay now according to the ceo of kalgma the fda reviewed the good agricultural practices and metrics imposed by kalgma and the usda insists that its marketing agreement program is consistent with fda guidelines and regulations one thing we've noticed in our review of calgary is that a lot of requirements are imposed on farmers well comparatively less burdensome guidance is suggested to the processors who buy the greens from the farmers and turn them into pre-cut package salads for marketing to the public i mean even when i look at your testimony it's you know you're still pretty heavy on the farmer's side now for instance when kalgma prohibits farmers from planting within 400 feet of a hedgerow on the questionable basis that wildlife poses a significant risk of contamination kalgma allows the processing activity of coring lettuce in the field an activity the fda acknowledges has a potential for contamination with only minimal guidance for washing and storing of the knives used to core lettuce seems to be a double standard mr taylor is kalga's kalgma's imposition of detailed requirements on farmers but only suggested guidelines on handlers and distributors justified by the science on how to make pre-cut salads safer the science says we need enforceable preventive measures throughout the system from farm through distribution and that's why the food and drug administration is going to issue regulations that would do exactly that the science says that but what about calgma's requirements on farmers as opposed to guidance on handlers and distributors what you're saying then that there's a there's a gap is are you saying that there's a lot of work to do to improve the safety of produce absolutely mr chairman in fact doesn't the fda's 2008 guidance for industry to minimize microbio microbio food safety hazards for fresh cut foods and vegetables incorporate specific standards for processing packaging and transportation of leafy greens that calgary does not isn't that true yes okay yes we're making progress now today yeah i can't tell you how many times farmers especially small farmers have told me that the usda represents everybody but the farmers let's hope the new administration succeeds in changing that impression in the next panel we're going to hear from a farmer who has a lot of criticisms of kalgma and we're going to hear from a survival a survivor of e coli poisoning related to pre-cut lettuce that she ate in 2008. as you know usda is actively promoting the nationalization of calgary what is the usda's position on kalgama's apparent double standard in that it prescribes specific if not always scientifically supportable requirements on farmers while it condones questionable processing protocols that benefit the processing companies such as coring lettuce in the field we do not have a position on the current national leafy greens marketing proposal that's before the public it's at the very beginning of the process the hearings will begin in september and october what do i what do you think what do i think what do you think i think at the end of the day the program needs to work for small producers it needs to work for different cultural practices regional differences i think at the end of the day that's the only way you're going to have the best national program at the end of the day do you think the processing companies ought to have protocols that are protective of the consumers i processors yes should everyone has to play a part in food safety including processors not just the farmers processors as well yes of course okay now miss peg if calgary becomes nationalized there will likely be increased costs on growers farmers as they take mitigation measures to be in compliance with the kalgama requirements these costs will be both financial as well as environmental such as cost of turning areas of land that might have been previously wild and empty lots and the associated land erosion runoff stream contamination that follows with this in mind do you believe that the usda should consider environmental impacts when promoting marketing agreements regulating food production yes we must we must consider environmental impacts we must we must make sure that it's in compliance with state and federal laws i think the other point that point that you bring up is right now what farmers are facing and i just got an email last night from a farmer i know in california is they're facing buyers are requiring good agricultural practices and so even without the marketing agreement you're seeing buyers demanding good agricultural practices of farmers let's talk about a specific issue that would matter to the processors as opposed to farmers isn't it true that the best at best consumed by expiration date that stamped is now 15 to 17 days after the produce leaves the processing plant while only seven years ago the best consumed by date for fresh cut produce was more like five to ten days i actually have no knowledge of the best consumed date i think that may be an fda issue so okay you know let's go to mr taylor then uh she she deferred to you now sorry did you get that did you get the question we're our partners here mr chairman i i see that partnership now i want to find out how good of a partner you are can you answer the question those best consumed dates are really a company uh measure those aren't an fda requirement and they address uh product quality okay well you know their company measures but isn't it true that the best consumed date that was that stamped right now it's about 15 to 17 days after the produce leaves the processing plant right is that right or not i don't personally have those facts at my disposal good to have you i don't have any reason you're the guy you've got to have them it's 15 to 17 days after the produce leaves the processing plant but a few years ago mr jordan the best consumed by date for fresh produce was more like five to ten days now you know and i'd i would ask you mr taylor to take note of that because wouldn't it show you that you're you're making uh you're closing a window here a little bit on on issues of safety you're opening up the possibilities of contamination especially if these bagged leafy greens uh become hot houses of contamination if there's not consistent refrigeration and this is where again preventive control science-based preventive controls are all about understanding issues just like that what what is the the likelihood of growth what are the conditions that would reduce growth and what's an acceptable holding period uh for products so in doing our preventive control regulations that's the kind of issue that we'll need to address okay one final question and we're going to go over to uh my colleague mr jordan uh miss pig kalgma is silent on the selection of best consumed by dates doesn't require processors to reverse the trend of longer and longer best consumed by dates isn't that right i i don't i really don't know on that and i don't know what correct the correct answer in this case was yes okay okay we're going to go to mr jordan thank you mr chairman let me thank our witnesses again for uh for being here let me just pick up where the chairman was um uh mr taylor you said you didn't know the 15 to 17 days and then what what a few years ago was five to ten days um is that that you personally don't know or is that something that the usda does not track and does not have any knowledge of well i'm with the food and drug administration i i definitely first excuse me i person i don't personally though i i'm confident that our experts uh you know technical experts could would have that information and we can certainly share what knowledge we've got with you for sure okay but but is it well i guess miss peg is is that uh would you would you say that the the chairman's statement was was accurate that's that's in fact been what's happened over the last several years that that date has went from 5 to 10 to 15 to 17. you know i remember a lot of discussion about this in 2006 when the outbreak occurred but i i don't know what the guidance is or where the trends have gone so i don't have any information on that right now okay let me ask you we're going to have votes in a few minutes and one of the bills we're going to be voting on is mr dingle's legislation at least it looks like that give me your thoughts on that piece of legislation because i know many in the agriculture community are concerned about that miss peg i think you in your in your introduction uh at least to the chairman have a background with uh california farm bureau so let's start with you your thoughts on that bill that looks like it's going to be on the floor um here in just a few minutes well the bill clearly we support we do support the bill and we we look for looking at what the working group produces and looking at other as they review current statutes and regulatory authorities and seeing how we can move into the 21st century i think what many of these measures let me ask you specifically about some of the concerns we've heard from uh folks in agriculture i got a long email a lot last night and in particular uh your former employer the farm bureau do you think that do you think they're way off base or do you think they you know again recognizing where where you worked before do you think they got some valid concerns you know i i think that we have to i think in working with fda and usda we have a good partnership where we can both educate one another about what happens in the field and they can assist us in giving us guidance on food safety practices so i think it's a good partnership that's why i personally am not um do not necessarily share the concerns of my former employers mr taylor would you like to comment on that bill i mean i think the the core strength of this bill is that it would have congress mandate uh the shift to a prevention strategy and empower fda to set and enforce standards for preventive controls that will make food safer throughout the system for produce it would of course direct fda to issue regulations to establish enforceable preventive controls and importantly direct fda to take into account the diversity of the grower community to take into account environmental impacts i mean these are all factors that have to be considered in order to get it right in terms of of you know having an abundant safe supply of fresh produce which is an important goal uh that we all share with respect to the the concerns of the agriculture community i mean we've looked at the bill really hard i think the bill has evolved a lot in fact now very much focuses fda's authorities with respect to on-farm activity to those areas such as fresh produce where there is going to be a science-based sort of risk-based justification uh for establishing standards and so i think it's a fairly focused building this is a practical question the the the family out there who this time of year sets up the sweet corn stand um makes you know makes a few extra dollars for their family tell me the impact the legislation on the floor today or what we're talking about here in this hearing tell me how tell me how they they might be impacted well in developing regulations like this for an industry that has that degree of diversity and in my background i remember dealing with this back at the state house and it was an uproar when there were some some changes in in the state of ohio on how we were going to address um truck farms or whatever the official title they're given in their high revised code and we heard from mom and pop produce uh uh businesses all over the uh all over the state so give me something so business activities like that i mean are it's very hard to envision how a federal regulation could establish a meaningful preventive control regime for an operation like that and so again taking the command of the bill seriously we would look at where the appropriate exemptions how do you put the boundaries around these requirements so that we achieve the food safety objective but also do it in a feasible realistic way i mean that's that's the command we hope we get from congress and we plan to do that miss pig well i think he does bring up a lot that you have to take into consider into consideration what happens on different scales and i think we'll be working a lot with fda on the implementation of it and providing our experience and our guidance there in that area so okay absolutely mr chairman i have no further questions thank you i'm going to uh go to a second round of questions and uh should be a little bit shorter let me go to the next panel mr taylor if you stretch out that best consume by date on ready to eat pro produce it's a benefit for the processor it obviously facilitates long distance transportation you know instead of 5-10 days 15 to 17 days best used by but isn't a shorter best consumed by period in the interest of protecting the public south mr taylor again the the question is what what are the holding conditions for that product what's the nature of the product and i think that you you've got to have a scientific answer to that question and there's no question that if you have pathogen growth potential and you're not having cold chain sort of safe handling practices then you the longer you hold up the product the greater the risk and so i think we need a science-based answer to what what's right there well let's look at let's look at a science-based case in the case of the 2006 e coli 157 outbreak that affected at least 204 people has the fda correlated the location and date of the consumption of the tainted spinach and the date of illness with the date of harvesting yeah okay harvested best used by 204 people with e coli you've done the correlations again i i don't know the answer to that i started four weeks ago i can find out what investigation was done and we can brief you on and give you an answer later well let me okay well then since you don't know the answer it started four weeks ago and lovely to have you here will the fda submit in writing to this committee for inclusion in the record a spreadsheet with that information for each of the known victims of e coli 157 poisoning namely the location and date of consumption of the tainted products the date of illness and the original data processing can you do that we will provide you the information we have and we'll if you could if you could do that we'd really appreciate that and as a matter of fact while we're at it can you do that for all produce related outbreaks since 1999 you know which ones they are we've talked about a few of them just create a spreadsheet shouldn't take too long to do since you already have the information put in a usable form for this committee so that we can it can help us in our deliberations about this issue of the transportation time and the best use by date which so many consumers use as guidelines as to whether or not to consume something for the uh one uh final question for each of the witnesses mr taylor again given kalgma's purpose to protect public health by reduce health by reducing microbial contamination leafy greens quote from field to fork distribution supply chain unquote wouldn't it be more consistent with the purpose of calgma to include science-based restrictions on the packaging distribution and marketing practices of ready-to-eat produce rather than kog'ma's current near silence or lack of specific requirements on those issues i can't speak to the scope of of the permissible scope of marketing agreements at usda but the answer to whether we need standards at each of those stages along the way that are enforceable and set by the food and drug administration the answer is clearly yes science based yes sir just to differentiate too the california marketing agreement is based on the california marketing act we're looking at a national program and i think that through this process as well as a public process we can ensure that a final program does include all those components well i want to uh before we conclude this i'd like to go back to mr taylor i want to read you a few opinions about the effect of the packaging used to market ready to eat produce it's a quote because of the higher relative humidity of ready-to-eat packages the risk of pathogenic growth is higher each degree over 40 degrees will increase the rate of pathogenic growth this is from larry boucher ph.d center for food safety university of georgia here's another quote the problem comes when leafy greens are coming home and ready to eat bags if they're left anywhere when temperatures are above 50 degrees fahrenheit it's widely known they can become breeding grounds for bacteria unquote mr r atwell phd western institute for food safety and security uh another quote it's a perfect environment for all kinds of things to grow unquote elisa odabashian west coast director consumer union publisher of consumer reports mr taylor isn't it true that all confirmed incidents of e coli outbreaks since 157 outbreaks since 1999 i have been caused by pre-cut packaged greens as far as i know and the only qualification is because i'm under oath and just don't want to mistake i sure recognize mr jordan do you want to take five minutes i'll be brief just take a quick question on the on the bill again that's going to be on the floor here in a few minutes um the according to what we've looked at in the bill this gives the fda pretty broad authority to regulate how crops are raised i mean in in effect and i'll be interested to hear i know we have a farmer on the on the next panel in effect dictating how farmers produce their crop is is that your understanding of how the legislation is going to work there's no sort of broad authority for fda to tell farmers how to grow their crops there's a very specific authority that if we we based on science can identify a commodity that poses risks that can be addressed through preventive uh control measures uh such as the industry itself is is implementing then we are empowered in that specific case to establish enforceable standards but it's not a broad uh preventive control amendment it seems to me though as the chairman's went to great lengths to point out and i think appropriately so that the problem doesn't seem to be with the farmer producing the crop it seems to be elsewhere in the in the supply chain elsewhere in the processing of transportation or what have you um not with you know that that's my concern the farmer knows how to produce this crop let's let's not over regulate overburden this guy who's producing the food let's certainly not go out there and and make it difficult for the mom and mom and pop who are uh setting up the wagon and selling sweet corn to the neighbors into the to the neighborhood but we just know how government works i mean look we were told uh last year that we're going to just have one small little bailout we promise it'll just be one little bailout uh and this thing won't grow and and you know we don't want to get in the private sector and what we've seen what's happened in the last year just in the in the financial industry alone and let alone the auto industry so these always start out with great intentions but we know the pattern of government and what what typically happened so that's my concern i think frankly it's in a large degree the chairman's concern and certainly lots of folks in agriculture they're concerned because they just know the nature of government it's tough enough many times for folks in agriculture to deal with the state department of agriculture and other regulatory agencies at the state level let alone now big brother in in washington uh tell them how to run their farm how to run their business so that's my big concern and um we'll continue to watch this whole process relative to the bill and and the issue we're addressing here in the committee but that i would yield back mr chamberlain thank you mr jordan we're going to go to one uh one more round here uh before we get to the next panel uh miss pig here's another example of something farmers have a problem with calgma identifies a number of sources of potential pathogens that must be avoided for certification these include birds feral pigs and other wildlife as well as cattle to comply farmers are paying for measures such as the building of large fences to thwart wildlife but the signs highly conclusive ms pegg the wildlife was a likely source of contamination let me go over that again the science is hardly conclusive that wildlife was a likely source of contamination in the 2006 spinach contamination isn't that cell well in the 2006 actually in the outbreak there was maybe fda can speak to this but there was concern about wildlife in that outbreak that did occur um wild pigs was was the wildlife in question are you saying are you saying it was concerned that is that evidence-based is it uh or is it conjectural what's the basis of that concern and was it conclusive or was it conjectural or was it was it science-based what was it um i'd well maybe you can speak to the investigation but if you've been to the salinas valley and that region i've been in salinas valley okay there is that area there is known some wildlife activity now the california leafy greens marketing agreement does look at other potential risks and they also do rank wildlife as high risk or low risk i would like to i would in order to facilitate this hearing i'd i'd like you to supply to this committee the information about the bait the basis of your statement uh that wildlife was somehow connected with this i'd like to see some scientific uh backup of that okay okay i will get it for the now for the 2006. right exactly now outbreak a leafy greens miss pega leafy greenfield's proximity to cattle is a high-risk circumstance for e coli contamination does kalgma make distinctions between high risk circumstances and lower risk circumstances such as the presence of frogs or other wildlife does kalgma prioritize in other words high-risk circumstances while de-prioritizing low-risk circumstances i believe it does and isn't it true that all farms have to eliminate riparian areas hedgerows if they're within a calgary specified distance from a crop edge i'm not i'm not positive i want you to look at this slide on the screen the staff put the slide up okay the aerial photo above was taken before kalgma you can plainly see a strip of green between several fields where trees and hedges are and where birds and wildlife can take shelter now look at the aerial photo below taken after kalgma here you can plainly see that the strip of trees and hedges has been eliminated no wildlife there now isn't it true miss pig that calgman would have required the cutting down of those trees i i don't know if i can speak to that because i don't know if they're kaligma participants or if they're buyers which has been one i mean this has been a huge issue we have discussed this since since 2006 is that how do you deal with are there real risks or not and i was talking to california fishing game this week about it you're the nation's advocate for farmers does it make sense for the usda to advocate for a processor-based framework that requires all farmers to spend heavily to prevent low-risk events such as contamination by wildlife while the higher risk but rarer circumstance of proximity to cattle and a known risk associated with processing and packaging leafy greens are more significant contributors to the problems kalgma intends to address any program needs to address the risks and look at high risks versus low risks i think what we're we're looking at in terms of any program is looking at all chains in the process and how to reduce the risks so who should pay for compliance with kyogma the farmer the processing industry should the cost be shared under the marketing agreement i believe they propose a per carton assessment that the handler pays to cover the cost of the marketing agreement so who currently pays for the measures adapted to comply with kagma i think for the california leafy green marketing agreement that's a per carton assessment that pays for it farmers uh well their handler signatories so handlers pay it farmers okay i think we're i think we're completed with questioning of the first panel we will be in touch with you regarding the follow-up on questions that we've asked and we appreciate your cooperation with the committee and your presence here today those buzzers that you heard are the reason why i'm going to have to recess this meeting until after votes how many votes do you there are three votes and so i'd like to take uh a half hour break and then we're going to come back with a second panel and we'll take testimony from uh those who are here to talk about their experience i want to thank the representatives of the fda and the usda for being here uh we look forward to working with you on these issues so that we can help the consumers across america have uh more confidence in the safety of our leafy green packaged foods thank you very much thank you the committee stands in recess for a half hour i'm going to vote be back in about a half hour yes uh before before we begin i i just want to uh acknowledge the work of us our staff on both sides who have helped with this hearing we appreciate your work and to make it known that we have one of our staffers charity who has done a lot of work on this she could not be here today because of an illness we look forward to her return but she did a lot of great research and i just want uh to acknowledge that for the record actually so thank you and we're going to go to our second panel of witnesses and i would like to introduce them we'll start with ms kelly cobb welcome ms cobb kelly cobb is a survivor of e coli poisoning and has come here today to share her story with us her husband matt cobb serves in the united states marines and their parents have two young children mr scott forest fall i pronounce that right is the chief executive officer of the california leafy greens marketing board mr horsefall has served as chairman of the united states agricultural export development council was a member of the agricultural trade advisory committee for fruits and vegetables and is past chairman of the produce marketing association's international trade conference mr dale koch welcome mr horsefall mr coke welcome uh mr coke is a farmer and a member of the community alliance with family farmers mr coke is also the founder and president of coke farm a produce cooling storage and shipping company located in san juan batista california which represents local california organic growers and selling throughout the u.s and canada he's also a partner in jardine's a diversified organic farming operation growing on approximately 500 acres in monterey and san benito california counties the sixth generation of his family born in california to work in agriculture he pioneered spring mix lettuce and was instrumental in developing its market miss caroline smith dual is that the right pronunciation uh welcome mr wall is the director of food science at the center for science and public interest where she is a leading consumer analyst on reform of laws and regulations governing food safety since 1999 she's maintained and annually published a list of food-borne illness outbreaks organized by food source that now contain over 15 years of outbreak reports and as presented at numerous conferences she's the co-author of the book is our food safe a consumer's guide to protecting your health and the environment and has authored numerous papers on food safety i want to thank the witnesses for their presence here today it's the policy of our committee on oversight and government reform to swear on all witnesses before they testify i would ask that to rise raise the right hand you solemnly swear or affirm to tell the truth the whole truth nothing but the truth thank you very much let the record reflect that each of the witness witnesses have answered in the affirmative as with panel one i ask that each witness give an oral summary of his or her testimony i'd like to see you keep that summary maximum five minutes in duration any testimony that you want to add beyond that your entire statement will be in the record and then you want to send it as committee within a few days we'll get that in the record as well your complete written statement will be in a record now miss cobb welcome i'd like you to uh be our first witness and would you please begin and i would uh before you start just pull that microphone a little bit closer because we want to make sure we hear everything you say thank you there you go in may 2008 i was busy as a stay-at-home mom to my two children liberty who was three and matthew who was one at the time we were in washington visiting family from california i'm gonna i'm gonna interrupt you i'm gonna ask staff to take the responsibility of making sure that the microphone is close enough so that the witnesses can be heard and frankly i don't want to have to bring that up in a hearing again this direction so you have to do you want me to start over and just please speak uh you have a very soft voice and but we it's really important that we need to hear what you're saying so why don't you begin at the top okay in may 2008 i was busy as a stay-at-home mom raising my two children liberty who was three and matthew one we were visiting family in washington from california we were there without my husband because he was serving as a marine in iraq for the second time on may 10th my mom invited me to go to a banquet dinner with her and some of her friends little did i know by accepting her invitation i would be changing my life forever that night i ate a salad that was contaminated with e coli my mom my children and her friends that were there with us happened to sit at the same table i just happened to pick the seat that was contaminated my children were there with us my son was on my lap but luckily he didn't eat greens at the time on may 10th i was getting ready for our drive back to california i went to bed that night with the stomach ache and woke up on may 16 with diarrhea in the most painful stomach craps that occurred every ten minutes until my stern my stool turned to blood at about five o'clock i then proceeded to go to the er where they just said that i had a bacterial infection and i went home and was unable to hold down water the medicine that they gave me and i returned to the hospital two days later i was told that i had the e coli and that was the pain that was the cause of the illness that it wasn't the bacterial and well it was bacteria but not what they thought i was discharged from the hospital only to return a couple days later because i developed a condition of hus and was told at that time that my kidneys were only functioning at 50 i was then started on plasmapheresis where they cycled out my blood and put in the the new stuff over the time that i was in the hospital i had over 50 blood draws two ultrasounds a cat scan a colonoscopy seven ivs a central line in my neck and four units of whole blood and 80 units of plasma both my husband and my father were in iraq at the time i had to send a red cross to my husband to let him know that what was going on he was unable to come home i had the kids i was the only caretaker with him being gone so my mom took over that responsibility and set up child care for them while she was at work they came to see me at the hospital every day and they didn't understand why i wasn't able to go home with them why they couldn't stay with me they were so young that they don't they didn't understand what was going on there were several times that i didn't think i was going to make it because of how sick i was i remember on one day i think it was the 28th i had an allergic reaction to some pain medication that i was given and i got intense chest pain and i remember blocking out and not really knowing what was going on and i honestly thought i was going to die right there the hospital bed my husband was in iraq my father was in iraq the kids were at home and that i wouldn't be there with them anymore and with that i was able to really focus on what the nurses were telling me and they gave me another medication to help with the reaction um from that incident from the e coli i no longer eat any produce that i can't see being washed myself i've gone to restaurants and asked them how they prepare their salads um i cut everything or i clean everything from a bag of lettuce to a watermelon because when you cut through it it's going to hit your you know your fruit the time i have with my family means so much more to me now because i know that any time it can be taken away from you i i was i'm honestly surprised with how sick i got that i'm here today if anything i would want the parties that at fault in my particular case to know that you know they took me away from my kids for two weeks and that's a time that they'll never get back my son was one that's you know he developed every day that i was gone he came to the hospital saying new words every day doing new things and i felt the pain that nope i can't i can't describe to you the pain that i was in because i don't have a comparison that i could give to you i would rather you know i said i'd rather break bones than go to that you know i'd rather have a broken arm right now than go through the pain that i felt in e coli because i don't have a comparison to actually give to you on what i felt and um you know it could be their family it could have just has been easily been one of my my kids and had it been i it would have been devastating to them what i went went through thank you very much for coming here to testify uh we're certainly going to be having some questions of you when we go to that phase of this hearing at this point i'd like to ask mr horsefall to proceed for five minutes thank you very much well before you proceed i want to welcome some of our visitors here from china macau thank you for being here so please proceed thank you and good afternoon chairman kucinich and ranking member jordan um i'm happy to be here i am always happy to talk about our program i'll get to my statement i i would express to ms cobb that what she went through does not fall on deaf ears in our industry um shortly after i started this job uh the the usa today ran a recap it was a year after the the original outbreak and they presented the stories of the the the four or five people who had died because they ate spinach and you know i i know because i work with this industry that they they take that to heart they are trying to do everything they can do so that there aren't more victims so that we can reduce that risk as much as possible um so i i've used part of my time but but uh the the leafy greens marketing agreement was established in 2007 it is a mechanism quite simply for verifying through mandatory government audits that farmers of leafy greens follow a rigorous set of food safety standards we are an instrumentality of the state of california and we operate with oversight from the california department of food and agriculture in the although the leafy greens industry had always prioritized food safety in the aftermath of that outbreak in 2006 farmers and shippers and processors recognized that more effort was needed to protect public health uh the question was how to do it and a lot of different approaches were looked at including regulation at both the state and national level uh marketing orders uh and and a marketing agreement and the decision was ultimately made to to to go with the tool that was most readily available which was a marketing agreement um it is a voluntary organization but it does have the the force of government behind it uh our members when they do join it is mandatory that they follow the uh the the rules of the program um and and the the idea was to to use this marketing agreement it also has a flexibility to change and amend the program as we get new research and as you've talked about research a lot already this morning and we are keenly interested in research that's being done so that we can make the program better that flexibility is actually one of the key benefits of the lgma structure our program is focused on prevention on preventing the introduction of pathogens into leafy greens fields and farms we applaud the obama administration and the president's food safety working group for their focus on prevention and their approach to improving food safety uh on july 7th in their press conference we're happy to hear vice president biden and health and human services secretary sebelius talk about prevention as job number one i was asked to talk about where our metrics came from as the lga was being developed there was a parallel effort to create a set of food safety practices and standards sometimes referred to as good ag practices or metrics they were developed by university and industry scientists as well as other food safety experts farmers and shippers those standards were reviewed by fda and usda and other state and federal health agencies they cover the major risk areas that have been identified by fda and other food safety experts practices include careful attention to site selection for growing fields based on farm history and proximity to animal operations appropriate standards for irrigation water and other sources of water prohibition of raw manure and the use of only certified safe fertilizers and of course good employee hygiene and fields and harvesting the uh our members are subject to mandatory audits by the california department of food and agriculture to ensure that they are in compliance with the program those auditors are usda trained and the process that we use is a usda certified audit process our members face penalties if they are not in compliance up to and including decertification from the program which can lead to serious significant economic repercussions for the company from july 23 of 2007 when we first began our auditing we have done over 1 000 government audits of our members and those continue today even as we speak we all know that maintaining food safety vigilance is crucial to the future of the produce industry and while there is still very much to do and we're not done i believe that the the leafy greens industry is doing more to provide a safe wholesome delicious product now than they ever have before thank you very much thank you very much mr horsefell mr coke you may proceed for five minutes thank you good afternoon chairman kucinich and ranking member jordan thank you for inviting me to here here today i've been asked to address the impacts of california leafy green metrics on farming practices for growers in california it's estimated that the economic impacts are on the order of about eighteen thousand dollars per year on average per farm it'll be higher for larger farms and possibly less for smaller farms growers have to of course do testing of water fertilizer soil amendments and anything else that goes on to the crop they have to document all of this they have to be aware of animal incursions pay attention to vegetation and then also provide some kind of traceability traceability is not such an issue for growers like ourselves organic growers have had to do be able to trace product for years there's also been prohibitions against manure use for organic production for years in compost there's no sewage sludge or other kinds of toxic chemicals you use but organic growers are facing significant issues with the push for the regulators to have to ban you know wildlife and non-crop vegetation things like wind breaks and habitat which are things that are supposed to be encouraged by organic laws that pertain to maintaining your certification the environmental impacts often vary depending on the inspector and his interpretation of the metrics there are certain companies that use their own metrics which call super metrics in the industry wildlife non-crop vegetation and water bodies are normally viewed as food safety risks a lot of environmentally positive projects have been abandoned or by growers who have been threatened with a loss of the ability to sell their crops windbreaks vegetated filter strips tail water re-use reservoirs grass roadways vegetated ditches have been removed to comply with you know the inspectors they come out to check on them on the crop many fields have deer and pig fencing some also have frog and rodent fencing even though those haven't been found to be a vector of pathogens some of the fields for leafy greens use traps poison traps for rodents secondary poisoning of raptors and owls can occur with this and a lot of these practices are more based on the processors having problems pulling them out of the harvested crop because of the nature of the harvest of the crop then it is has to do with being a food safety issue practically this has been a big step backwards from environmental protection i was just starting to move forward on farms there's a lot bit more money and time that farmers have to spend trying to comply with these metrics and document this the majority of the disease related outbreaks food disease related outbreaks that are associated with leafy greens come from pre-cut processed products there's some kind of failure during that process to make it ready to eat or to keep make it clean enough so you don't have the pathogens salad processors tend to point to the fields as being the issue it's very difficult for farmers to grow in a sterile crop in an open field you do have you know we have always had employee hygiene we're concerned about our compost and we don't use manure we test our water and our fertilizer as many farmers do just to make sure that you're not part of the problem um leafy green farmers are now in the unenviable position of having to pay for and comply with a roster of unproven safety metrics and attempted attempting to grow pathogen-free crops and being held potentially liable for it the california leaf green marketing agreement is made steps in the right direction i think for the processed product that it should be representing i don't know that marketing agreements are an appropriate way to provide food safety whether they be a state or national they are in my mind there are something that focuses on marketing product rather than on actual you know conditions of growing product this being said um if this were to be moved in that direction if the focus on was just on processed food you would reduce a lot of impact on there are a lot of farmers that don't grow leafy greens that go into into bags and they would be eggs you know if the focus was just on the processed arena you could exempt them right now the and i was there when they started having the meetings to decide about leafy greens in california they included specific vegetables and i asked why those why they were just including a few vegetables there was no answer because they didn't differentiate whether it was a whole head or a bunch product it was just we're going to include these vegetables and the only reason i can come up with is that it's something to enhance their competitive edge because it gives them a marketing advantage if you need to adhere to these metrics and you kind of raise the bar a lot of farmers might not be able to make that i i want to thank the gentleman for his testimony your entire statement will be included in the record and as someone who's been so involved in the development of of this industry we appreciate your presence here the chair recognizes miss smith dual for five minutes and after your testimony we're going to go to a round of questions of the panel you may proceed thank you very much chairman kucinich and also representative jordan uh my name is caroline smith dewal i direct the food safety project for the center for science in the public interest cspi has concerns about the increasing use of marketing orders as a vehicle for regulating safety 15 different agencies administer 30 different laws that regulate food safety in the u.s today and marketing orders really represent a further fractioning of this already widely fractured system food-borne illness outbreaks linked to fresh produce are among the major public health problems when it comes to food safety and leafy greens and salads are among the top food categories along with beef poultry and seafood that caused both outbreaks and illnesses in addition the average size of outbreaks linked to produce tends to be larger so they tend to affect more people the importance of robust and reliable food safety practices on the farm cannot be understated leafy greens once contaminated can support grow and spread pathogens until they're consumed chlorination and other post harvest controls can help reduce cross contamination between different lots of salad for example but they don't make contaminated product product that comes in from the farm contaminated truly safe to eat in fact scientists have shown how bacteria can inhabit the washing systems used for bag lettuce and transfer bacteria from a contaminated lot really onto a full day's production of leafy greens of salads while fda has jurisdiction over on farm food safety it really has not acted as an effective regulator and they've been using for at least the past 10 to 15 years the the concept of guidance unenforceable guidance to the industry instead of regulations but the absence of of enforceable rules leaves a significant hole in the fabric of food safety allowing and even encouraging the industry to weave standards of its own design the agricultural marketing service has served as a friendly regulator of choice when food safety problems arise at ams the food industry can draft their own rules called marketing orders or agreements to best suit their needs but ams is not equipped to monitor the safety of food the primary focus of ams is with the promotion of food products and the mechanisms that it uses are limited in terms of their geographic scope and and often they're completely voluntary these are voluntary systems and farmers have to agree and the handlers have to agree to comply so they're limited to u.s companies sometimes they're limited to companies just in the state of california and this is particularly troubling when you consider that consumers 13 of our diet is from imported produce so a huge amount of produce is never going to be subject to these marketing orders ams oversees marketing orders for 22 different commodities including things like almonds and shell eggs and these programs can really instill a false sense of security both for the industries involved and for consumers because they really are quality programs they're not based on safety but given the absence of rule making at fda it's not really surprising that in the aftermath of the 2006 spinach outbreak the leafy green industry turned to ams to create these stronger rules i just want to note that these standards really do create uncertainty and they give rise to the private standards which are actually the complaint of many of the growers today the growers today are saying these private these standards are too burdensome but let me be clear these aren't mandatory standards they're not fda standards they don't apply to imports so it's critically important that we actually get a system in place that will protect the public the food safety enhancement act which is before the house of representatives addresses this issue head on it requires fda to consider both the food safety and the environmental impacts when promulgating regulations for food production it requires the standards to take into account small scale and diversified farming wildlife habitat conservation practices watershed protection and organic production methods this is all in the legislation that's before the house this provides an appropriate focus on public safety it gives the farmers and consumers both an opportunity to weigh in these on these standards which we don't have today with the ams standards and it would protect the sustainable and organic farming communities that we all value these are the type of standards that consumers cannot live without thank you thank you very much by the way just an update the bill that was voted on did not receive the required two-thirds so it'll end up going back for some work and some of the concerns that were expressed by members who voted against it is that they were concerned about the effect of the bill on small farmers and organic farmers so i think that um the center which endorsed the bill uh needs to take heed of the concerns that are expressed and i think if if we don't if we do that perhaps when a bill comes back out to the floor we can see it pass thank you well that means uh we'll have five minutes each of us for questions uh hold on a minute house democratic local two is five bells 4 24 p.m advised members they have 15 minutes to record their vote on suspending the rules and passing h.r 3357 to restore sums to the highway trust fund this is a 15 maricota boat this will be followed by three pre-postponed well that that really does mean we should move this along i i just want to um thank miss cobb how are you feeling by the way um i'm fine now how many years ago was this it was may 2008. and do you have you found any um after effects other than the fact that you're not really keen on eating no yeah other than at home no there's no i am at a higher risk of cardiovascular disease later in life and urinal type issues urinary tract but as of right now i've had none of that since that same summer we're glad you're here thank you i think people need to there needs to be a public face of somebody who's dealt with this and you've dealt with it and takes out the courage to come before a congressional committee to relate your experience so we appreciate that you're here thank you i appreciate it the other thing i want to i want to note is when mr horsefall began a statement i i was impressed that you said that miss cop's testimony doesn't fall on deaf ears that was a real you know what i saw as a uh unrehearsed response to hearing what you had to say and i just want to know i appreciate that because sometimes we get people come in here with a story that can be very difficult and the individuals who may have some responsibility generally in that area seem to be impassive about it and you've showed that some concern and i think that's uh uh that speaks well i i'd like to i'd like you to address the uh concern about some of kalman's metrics and the arbitrariness of them your auditor must find that the adjacent land to a field of green must be free from compost operations within 400 feet of the crop edge what only requires that the adjacent land free from grazing to the lands domestic animals within 30 feet of the crop edge what's a justification for allowing domestic animals the animal waste products of which are a component of compost to be closer to the crop edge than a compost operation the the lgma program is you know the metrics are based entirely on risk assessments um and and and i think that's in keeping with fda guidance and and well well i know i'm getting to it pardon me um the the the compost operations are considered to be a very high risk situation in terms of pathogens we also have you know significant buffer zones if there's a confined animal feeding operation where you have a large number of animals of risk in in a field that also requires remember you got domestic animals closer domestically than the compost operation because the the the risk assessment tells us that there's a lower risk involved if you've got a a a couple of animals on a farm let's look at the 2006 spinach incident isn't it true that the field identified as the source of a contaminated spinach was less than a couple hundred feet from where domestic animals grazed and shaded themselves uh i don't know that for sure but let's check it out okay let's see if we can look at that maybe we could come to some kind of conclusion if there's any contradiction or isn't it true that calmer's auditors would not today find any problem with growing spinach intended for the ready-to-eat market growing a couple hundred feet from the land where cattle grazed exactly the conditions present in the 2006 spinach incident i it would depend on the number of cattle that were there uh and and i don't have those numbers in front of me but uh uh in that particular case the uh the final report as i recall you know the the the feces that was found that the same fingerprint was over a mile away should can would be tougher on the processors who make the bag lettuce than it currently is i think processors uh if i could address that processors are under the jurisdiction of fda they are about county inspections we're looking at possible nationalization of this should count should uh kalgman be tougher on these processors you've heard testimony here what do you think did you say should cattlemen should should should kalgma be tougher on the process i'm sorry i'm not used to that who makes the bag lettuce than it currently is i think that processors need to be regulated just as heavily as growers do and that regulation i believe is in place for fda i appreciate that i just want to do one more question here mr coke you're the father of the spring mix spring mix helped pre-cut packaged leafy greens become a vegetable consumers like and eat in increasing portions significant health contribution but you're also a critic of the ready to eat leafy green industry in your opinion is there a way for the american public to get the convenience and health benefits of pre-cut packaged vegetables without the harm to farmers you mentioned in your testimony yeah just the point of clarification developed the concept of spring mix never put it in bags and it was never ready to eat it was a field run product it was washed cooled and packed dried and packed into three pound boxes but it wasn't uh you know i always had serious reservations about how that product was displayed and i didn't ever want to go into uh what would be the long-term results uh mr coke in your opinion on the environment if kalgma is nationalized in its current form in its current form i think it'll affect too many growers of lettuce and cabbage and kale and chard the things that are traditionally harvested as hole heads or bunched items because they don't make a differentiation between it those things haven't had any outbreaks associated with them people they often have a kill step associated because people heat them up before they eat they steam them or boil them i've got some follow thank you i have some follow-up questions to uh miss uh smith dewa we're gonna put him in writing okay and i'm gonna go now to mr jordan thank you thank you mr chairman i'll be brief as well since we have a vote pending let me to thank mrs copp uh for being here and um how are you how the little ones doing they're doing fine oh yeah um they're matthew doesn't remember he was too young liberty still remembers and we'll talk about when i got sick from a solid she knows what it was from for a while she would tell people not to be afraid of a blood machine because she remembers coming in while i was having a transfusion done but overall they're doing they're doing well well then let me also thank your family for their service to uh to our country thank you all for uh for for being uh with us now let me just get a couple basically we're where's your home state mrs cobb um my home state is washington okay um and mr uh horsefall the the program is um completely voluntary is that right 120 people who represent 99 of the volume i'm looking at the i think this came off your website for lgma um 120 handlers 99 the volume of california leafy greens that they're all voluntary those 120 who join okay and is what's the what's the assessment how's that determined again we assess our members based on the volume that they ship it's a penny and a half per 24 count equivalent box and i just want to be clear are our big producers part of it or these are the people who where in other words are the farmers part of the organization or is it just the folks who take the farm product and then package it our members are handlers uh they are the people who would put product into commerce the majority of them are some of the majority of them are growers as well they're both yeah so some are both some of them actually produce the product and handle absolutely so right from from the field right to their operation it could be around the same premises and they sell to each other pardon and they sell to each other as well and they're not quite okay and since um since you've come into existence which was oh 607 what year seven have there been any any outbreaks of e coli or any problems there have been outbreaks that have been reported i don't know that i don't believe the health authorities have conclusively finished their investigations yet to say where product got contaminated but the there was a small outbreak in washington state uh that ms cobb was affected by uh last year there was an outbreak in michigan so can you definitively say that we've seen an improvement um in that there have been less problems since your organization has been formed or is that anyone's guess um i the answer is yes fewer people have gotten sick tied to lettuce and leafy greens in the last two years and say in the two or three years before that but but you know i i don't take that as a metric you know i i think we still if anybody's getting sick then we still have to figure out how to make the program better okay um and that's where the research comes in again okay now mr cook um are you a um you're a uh farmer and a handler i mean you are you part of this organization your farm your operation i'm not um we i have there's two different entities one is a um sales shipping cooling company the other is a farming company the farming company contracts with a handler that is signatory to that and we grow some crops you know cilantro dill and parsley in this case for inclusion in a salad um that they want to be grown under those metrics so we do that part otherwise we have a diverse crop mix there are only a few things that would be considered leafy greens um and i've i've resisted because i think it's you know the principle is wrong of this agreement and so i i didn't want to it's cost me the ability to sell into canada because they won't accept product even though you know we're organic and we test soil and water and they won't accept product that's not um if you're not signatory to the leafy green marketing agreement i i don't know i'm you know i'd prefer not to go there you don't have to i was hoping that something would you know become a little more logical so yeah you know focus on the process i mean this is a you know a country boy from western ohio who uh you know didn't didn't grow up on a farm but we live out in the middle of my wife's family's farm it seems to me the the problem is you know you think about whether if the product is grown close to composting so whatever i mean i remember when they used to spread manure on the field i mean so it's like it seems to me the problem has to be after the products taken out of the field i mean that's just common sense yeah maybe i'm no maybe it's your country and the product is got issues the the slide that you showed about the bagged you know it's a i mean it's a great concept to give people something that's ready to eat but it's it's a perfect incubator i mean how do you keep that if you if you can't sterilize it how do you know if you've got any little pathogen and you're you break the cold chain even a customer just taking it out to their car and then driving home you're it's potentially it's a difficult issue i mean a product to get to market yeah safely i think we we have to vote thank you all for coming i'm sorry we didn't get a chance to i want to thank mr jordan i want to thank the witnesses for being here i'm dennis kucinich chairman of the domestic policy subcommittee ranking member our hearing today has been ready to eat or not examining the impact of leafy greens marketing agreements we've had two panels the testimony has been very important we appreciate your participation this committee stands adjourned thank you next representative john conyers of michigan talks about health care legislation and justice department investigations at the national press club his remarks are about 45 minutes
HouseResourceOrg
UCuwpe69VxVzy4maI6ymmm6A
2010-12-28
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
15,457
87,735
nRN7EjyD-AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRN7EjyD-AM
SBIFF 2022: LEARN TO SWIM - EMMA FERREIRA
hi you were positively spectacular oh thank you truly you are great choice thank you right thank you yeah totally who who is it or it's like it's club monaco baby it's just like off the rack like i'm out here doing a diy yeah [Laughter] wow um please please tell me your personal last name emma ferreira i'm here with a film called learn to swim as directed by tyrone tommy produced by elona metzer and starring myself and thomas anthony elijah we're from uh canada from toronto um and my co-star is actually tonight he's been he's been nominated for like the canadian version of the the sag award the actor award and the canadian oscar the canadian academy award as well so we're having our u.s premiere here and it's been it's been a great great time yeah tell us a little bit about the movie about the film it's uh yeah learn to swim it's a surrealist romantic drama um it's a meditation on grief loss and love told through the milia of jazz music specifically the contemporary jazz scene in toronto it's a stirring film it's a it's a beautiful film and i'm just really grateful to be a part of it are you a musician i'm a it's funny i you know before the film i would never have called myself a professional singer but through the film i i got to kind of uh craft myself as an artist musically and that was a really incredible experience so yeah i sing i i've done spoken word poetry my whole life i got to write a song for the film uh and a spoken word piece for the film as well so that was really great yeah yeah wow so you'll learn how to swim and sing yeah yeah exactly yeah yeah it was awesome and i just hope to continue to be able to do it yeah yeah when is it showing or has it shown we had our premiere last night it shows again on the 8th um and then i think it might be playing a third time for the festival as well you know where it shows on the 8th sorry do you know where it shows on the 8th on the 8th i believe it shows at the fiesta cinema yeah about what time our show on the 8th is at fiesta at what time 8 o'clock it's at the fiesta cinema at 8 o'clock on the 8th of march 8 a.m 8 p.m i believe 8 p.m 8 a.m 8 p.m p.m all right congratulations thank you so much thank you yeah you're a rising star oh they really are thank you so much thank you i expect to see you here again oh well i hope so i hope so thank you thank you
Lyn Fairly Media
UCRUQaKw9apN9AXBiC_VwzQQ
2022-03-07
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en
metadata
en
477
2,347
tPJ4jaoMSSI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tPJ4jaoMSSI
What child is this - A Christmas carol (subtitled)
What Child is this who, laid to rest On Mary's lap is sleeping? Whom Angels greet with anthems sweet, While shepherds watch are keeping? This, this is Christ the King, Whom shepherds guard and Angels sing; Haste, haste, to bring Him laud, The Babe, the Son of Mary. Why lies He in such mean estate, Where ox and ass are feeding? Good Christians, fear, for sinners here The silent Word is pleading. Nails, spear shall pierce Him through, The cross be borne for me, for you. Hail, hail the Word made flesh, The Babe, the Son of Mary. So bring Him incense, gold and myrrh, Come peasant, king to own Him; The King of kings salvation brings, Let loving hearts enthrone Him. Raise, raise a song on high, The Virgin sings her lullaby. Joy, joy for Christ is born, The Babe, the Son of Mary. What Child Is This?
RelaxArt
UCQJy7DNnHMOoyNGFr4TEKrg
2022-12-19
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
detection
en
149
803
ZMqKgfiUbks
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMqKgfiUbks
2 Chains - show his inside of his crib
[Music] okay don't play kobe rest in peace you signed this jersey when it was on my back bro all star man y'all know this [ __ ] wasn't nothing like a shoe box when i got in here y'all acting like i ain't having all this [ __ ] man the core drip talk to him tony [ __ ] is wrong with y'all superhero tony gucci canvas you see the canvas trump andrew painted on gucci chair [ __ ] what wrong with levi chairs made out of my old levi [Applause] got sun roofing the flats there's so many more places it's mo this whole wall gonna be black [ __ ] bear brick tony what else so for some 8 000 yeah big heavy duty [ __ ] i'm gonna need that um y'all did this too i know [ __ ] so you can you can sit here you know what i'm saying see this oh shannon a little crazy and amazing too uh what is the architect digest or something like that y'all need to call me man this is actually two coffee tables i put together to make it appear like one large one yeah i turned this way and i got scream piece of art my play upon the game [ __ ] crazy ps5 loaded geeked out ready to go they spot more crazy sciences [ __ ] didn't even know they was names glasses oh
real_solid_ tv
UCyx2Di9MWncw1epZpQ-ulYw
2021-05-21
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
227
1,233
HV93qGWyph4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HV93qGWyph4
Using Sphinx to create multi-language multi-view DSL tool environments
ok so comical okay so okay come this good move okay there's no video of narmada nice there's nothing else okay ok hello everybody I would like to welcome to my talk about using Sphinx to create a multi-language multi-view dsl tool environments would like to briefly introduce myself my name is Stephanie bullet I'm from Germany but I'm now living and working in France vitamist and I'm basically a modeling guide and so here's what I'm going to try to talk about today so first of all I would like to look a little bit at the problem field system engineering tools then i would like to like to explain you what the Sphinx partek is about and what you can do with things in order to create system engineering tools more conveniently and yeah more better ok so here a quick retrospect about system engineering I have to say that this is related to the automotive domain but there's a similar development in other domains as well so the stone age was we had specifications waterfall model and be no it's an error it be implemented the code by hand ok the next step was that we introduced modular concept model based software development model driven software development so we had a specification we created simulation models we could detect arrows very early in the development process and they started to generate code the next step is that we have to handle more and more increasing complexity there's not only a single vendor on the market who is working on the device but if you look at the vehicle systems there are many manufacturers and for second tier suppliers involved and at the end of the day all the different pieces of software and hardware have to fit together so they'll also need for a common architecture and for a language for defining this architecture this was the autosys they're not which came up and that was this is warmer used in addition to the purely functional modeling of the behavior of the system and nowadays this is still not enough they are not more issues coming up there's a new standard ISO 2626 too and this has to be incorporated into the development processes in order to dees to do so we need even more modeling languages on top of it so we need on top of the modeling of the software architecture which we can do this autos are we need another language east atl for modeling a functional architecture which is independent of hardware software and you're also more and more doing requirements engineering in the model-based and model driven way so what I want to say here system engineering is great because there's a lot of modeling to be done so what it means is that they have met we need tools were all kinds of different modeling languages get incorporated get put together get federated and of course we need an integrated tooling for all these modeling languages so if you're in a situation like me now i'm creating modeling tools or i'm helping people to create such then this is the common problem you have a eclipse already some modeling language is being used and you want to integrate yet another one in the Eclipse environment and you have to take into account to high-level requirements the first one is of course you need to create an adequate tooling for that modeling language in Eclipse and the second is that the lettering language once you have integrated it you have it has to be well integrated and to be interoperable work the other modeling languages that are there now because we are not anymore any longer talking about an autosar tool or about in UML tool you won't have a tool chain where you can do both and where you can switch from UML to orders are or vice versa so and then you have of course the option to do the tool support for your modeling language from scratch that's clearly possible the disadvantage is that you have a quite a lot of work to do but there's also quite a lot of support around and the Eclipse especially in the Eclipse modeling project but that really becomes difficult is with the interoperability with respect to the other modeling language because if everyone who wants to integrate a new modeling language in a clip space toolchain comes up with its with its own technology stack then it's very unlikely that the different modeling tools are really very well fitting together at the end so the second option and this is what we are going to address in this talk let's thinks because this is a project which attempt to help you in exactly this use case so what's things from a perspective or 4000 meters so first of all things has the objective that it becomes that you have to put less effort in your development of your modeling tool and imagine the situation as follows you take Eclipse and you want to create some modeling tool for some modeling language could be autos offering since then you have to create a metamodel implementation for the standard you could also imagine that you don't have autos are but the proprietary diaz all which you really design according to your company internal needs then you need to implement this dsl in some way so you can all do this today with eclipse but when you have done this then you will detect there's a big gap because if you compare what you get out of eclipse and what the end user needs then there are plenty of things missing and what we try to do with things is to fill this gap we are not at the end of the work but we have started to do so and of course and then they have done this for one modeling language the objective is not to provide this only for authors are by the by the way Sphinx has been created in exactly this use case because things originally comes from the art of project and the auto project is therefore providing a platform to more easily develop autos are based design tools but we found that given that a whole bunch of the functionality that you need internal top of the metamodel implementation is purely generic we found it a pity to leave this pieces in our top and so we attracted this part from our top and it became the Sphinx project at Eclipse and this puts us in the situation that we can today reuse things for the modeling languages currently their activities have to implement easty ideal in the forum in the similar form as autosize been implemented in our top and rec EF this is another Eclipse project which rocky f is an OMG standard which has been implemented in a other already existing Eclipse project it's the RMF project and you could also come up with your own deals oh and the idea is that instead of reinventing the modeling platform technology stack you use things to get along more quickly and of course if we use the same infrastructure across different modeling languages then we have fairly better chances that the different tools are more interoperable so this is a high level objective of things and now and I'm going to go some more into the details and make a tour of the framework and show what we are able to do as of today so what things is in more detail so the high-level summary is here and now I want to show a little demo and focus on one first aspect of things which is to provide an integrated modeling tool environment for a given modeling language ok so first thing is i go to my development work space and i stir up as always ss1 that's almost always in a new modeling project I take the library example which is pretty well known and so we consider that the library example of enf is a modeling language that we want to support in the Sphinx framework so what I feel in my workspace is this is directly the the example project as they come from enf I haven't changed anything and I've provided to yes sphinx or IDE integration plugins and so these plugins contain very little amount of code to create some cause some sort of IDE experience for the library model so let's just have a look at the extent of the code I don't go into the details here just want to so that you that we have one class here with a couple of lines it's not so long and an extension point contribution well this metamodel descriptor is basically contributed to things and in the second plugin which is responsible for the UI contribution there's no code there we have only extension point declarations that we make some extensions to the common navigator framework and to the form editor so this is all what you need and in the very into this in the easiest case at the beginning and if you switch to the runtime workspace then you get this so we have a little perspective where we have a model explorer the model explorer is the equivalent of the project Explorer but in contrast to the project Explorer you can of course navigate into the file so it doesn't stop here and when you do this then things automatically loads the file and you can see all the elements that are there you can also see the properties of the model elements and the properties view you can shine change the properties then the model becomes dirty you can save it you can create new elements inside this model and so on and so on so this is one thing and what you also can do you can as usual open the file which contains the model in an editor and here this is the editor that we have contributed from sphinx this is not so much surprising because it in a way different or not very much different from the editor that you normally generate when you use just enf except from the fact that it is a form editor but the interesting thing comes here because traditionally eclipse is pretty much file-based but when we are dealing with models we want to have the same primitives of the ide also available for model elements not only 45 so that means that i want to be able to go to that model element here and open the model a limit in nature now and here you can see what the difference is so in open the other one the other no I cannot I have to go one level deeper so I can open this model them in the editor and then instead of instead of exposing the whole model in the editor it the editor route is just the element the model element which is inside some somehow deeper inside the model structure and I can of course go to another model element and open this other model element in an editor tool and so yeah do what imma do with a model which I what I normally do with files let the ID here of course again here you have the properties you and you can you can change also the model from from here and save the model and so on yeah so inverter what we can see also here is some another example for primitive which is very convenient for files it's this synchronized with the link with editor button now because if you have opened up plenty of modern elements in your IDE then you have you don't you completely lose track of which editor belongs actually to which model element and what you can do then is to do to activate this button and then you can select the editor you right who you would like to and see the corresponding element which gets automatically selected in the model explorer and the other way around it's also true if you click on a model element that prediction or editors open then this editor gets automatically activated this is nothing surprising very surprising but this is an example of what i meant before when I said there is a big gap now because users when you ship a tool to the end users users jet expect this kinds of functionality panic button eclipsed by default it's not there and therefore we have implemented that because he needed that for those are but the generic the functionality of linking editors with model event is pretty much generic it snowing in a way out is our specific and therefore we put such kind of functionalities into the things rain work because that they have the potential to reuse the same functionality for any other modeling language net we want so this is a quick tour of the basic features now the next thing is that we have set we want not to integrate only a single norling language but multiple language modeling language so let's have a look what this looks like in practice Oh plow so so we have seen the nice kind of support that you get more or less out of the box when you integrate your modeling language XYZ and you can also see then what we have done in autosar here we have an auto star project now where we have an auto sapphire and if I open this one then I can navigate into the autosys truck turn you can see here I've completely different model elements but the same primitives are available so i can open here the the auto saw model element it's a software component definition in the form editor again and you can see how of course the form editor it behaves in the same way as though you can also activate this link with editor button and end this link with edit of functions for autos on the very same way as we have seen that for library but you can of course customize it to the UI does not need to have the only three basic in and at any form pages that you want because we are of course extensible so you can see here we have this support for autos are and we have also done this for demonstration purposes and integration with the UML to metamodel which is already available as an eclipse project so we have as we have done it for the library model we have written to tiny swings integration plugins for you now and then you can if you like it open your mail models or your model elements in in this form editor I mean this is clearly not the end objective to edit your mouth in such a form editor that there are more likely to be edit graphically but we don't go further here because there is already an eclipse project which is taking care of all that here we just wanted to so to show that the generic base functionality which is reusable can be applied toward different kinds of metamodels so these are the basic features of things and another thing which is very important especially from the point of view of the automotive industry is the fact that the models can become pretty big so so far we have just played around with some very little example models and there many things are functioning really nicely and are quite fine but when it comes to deal with many megabytes of data or many files in the workspace then things up likely to become much more difficult so the Emir's reason in terms of big models then you have to take into account basically two things there's not just the amount of data which you're processing in the model there's also the question of how many files over how magnifies the model is split now and you have to be able to cope with on both of these challenges and here I want to come up with a representative example so here we have a reference model which has 60 megabyte of X and all data and it spread over five thousand files so if we go back to the Sphinx work space to the right one then we have it here so this is our reference or autosar reference metamodel eco and if I open this then the more loading starts so here and right now it doesn't start yet because this is just eclipse here because the files are inside this folder and there's a number of five thousand files in the folder and now eclipse is building all the tree item it takes to display this yeah in the UI I mean normally you would not put 5,000 file as a flat list into a folder then this would be much quicker okay and once and this has be finished then I can navigate into this fire yeah I know it's starting okay so here we go okay so now the process is finished so it has taken yeah now that loading is finished that has been the model has been loaded in the and the background normally you see a nice progress bar it didn't appear here because while eclipse was refreshing the tree view the whole you I was blocked and if the tree items are already available and you only have to reload the model files then you normally get a nice progress bar but anyway now we have loaded the model and you can I will quickly select all the files so you can see down here let me have five thousand files and now I can go into any of these files and open the model in the tree viewer change the name a plow save the file back and it behaves s with the little models with little example models let the head before okay so this is a big model and another important thing here is if now we have managed to load such a big bottles mid five thousand files and so on and when it comes to handling this files in the IDE we do not want to do what is being done traditionally in eclipse because if you open an eclipse an editor then this editor loads its own model instance into its own private resources if you open a second editor then the second edit or creates again a model instance in the memory but here we have seen it son okay it's not so so bad but it's already taking in quite a lot of time to load the model just a single time and it of course occupies a lot of memory and therefore we have in stings the service that we call workspace management and this service makes the models available in the whole workspace a single time and that means that all the editors and all the views which are operating on the model are working on the same model instance if maybe I've seen before in the demo when we changed a thing in the model explorer then also the editors became dirty immediately and this is due to this fact because the editors that be open they are basically just used on the model instance that is that is managed centrally and this is also an important aspect which it is necessary when it comes to dealing with models that are bigger than just little examples okay son of the thing some of you might think that so what we have seen so far just trees and forms and so on but system engineering is of course much more because in system engineering we need to support multiple use and what you think this necessary is to have aside from tree based in form-based textual representations and graphical representations of course again all this in eclipse so here we go let's see how things can deal with graffiti and gmf so I here prepared a little example project wherever where we have a modeling language which we use as example throughout things and it's called hummingbird dislike alter thoughts about modeling components and interfaces but it's much much less complicated in Odessa and the metamodel has much less model elements and so we have here the possibility on the one hand to specify component types and the f2 possibility to specify in sentence of those types and for defining the times we have created a graffiti based diagram editor it's not very feature-rich in terms of graphical editing but what we wanted to show here is the integration those things because again here the same plate panel applies which I have just explained before this editor does not load its own model instance it works on the central assured model instance that is managed by Sphinx and that means if we go here into this instance model file a node in the party in the in the type modify then they can see here the same components and interfaces yeah here we have instance the interface BB and if I change it now here in the model explorer then you can see that the change is being done and the graphical editor synchronously and at the same time and ask the model explorer also the graphical editor becomes dirty and I can switch to the graphical editor and here we haven't supported the properties you so I cannot change anything but what I can do I can add for instance another interface here and say interface see and if you do this then the interfaces it automatically appears also the model explore view of course you can then also save all this and then you're fine and instincts we don't have any preference for what technology is the best for creating graphical editors you know there's a graffiti framework and there's the older gmf framework and empty but it's interesting fact that you have the possibility to to do graphical editing in synchronized way the form based in three base editing and so they provide the same support that we have just seen for graffiti also for gmf and so here we have fun an instance model editor so it's not longer about editing component types but component instances and here the principle is pretty much the same so you can see here I have my two components component instances a and B I can here with a GM f at a third one so GM f comes out of the box mid some support for properties you so I can go here and change the properties when is the name of my component instance is directly in the graphical editor and as we have seen in with graffiti the model explorers or the centrally managed model that changes automatically along with that yeah so that's how we can support graphical modeling at the next aspect that you want to have of the model is textual and here also a tiny little demo of that so here you have a project now you can again edit the hummingbird model and what you can do normally in X text you have a pile in the workspace and you cope can open it with traditional X text editor where you have code completion and and all that stuff but as usual in Eclipse this editor works on the complete file this is totally okay if you have a file with just a few model elements and the things are over easy to oversee but if you have files which contain six or seven thousand software component definitions then it becomes less convenient to deal with all of them in a single file and therefore what we want to do is to be able to say okay we go to the component type that we are interested in and the open that guy in a textual editor and so here we have basically a textual editor that is integrated into a form editor and you can again here in the model explorer we have these the component type has some parameters which you can configure instantiation time and then you can go for instance here and say get a new parameter let's say new data type root and the coma so now we have again a valid x text model and if you go back here then you can see here this new parameter type immediately popping up and normally hope that works if i delete this parameter again here then you have seen that this parameter goes immediately away in the textual editor again i have not hit on the Save button or anything so here this text x text-based textual editor is perfectly synchronized with the rest of the Sphinx framework yeah there might still be things missing the answer is clearly yes because system engineering is even more than that we have seen so far additional aspects that have to be taken order to ground is certificate certification and longtime support or voy a long time support but what you have seen here is that the Sphinx is already it's not addressing and has not the objective to addressing all the aspect of system engineering but you can deal with multiple modeling languages by the way also with different versions of the same modeling language we can deal where far not the really big data in terms of petabytes or something but at least with models that are having quite a respectful size and they can create multiple different views on the same model that is managed in the workspace and for the other aspects they are industry working groups at eclipse that are dedicated to system engineering one more focus on automotive the automotive industry working group and the other one for policies and so if you're interested in those aspect go to these industry working scoops and then we can have an ID collaboration about all these topics yeah this is the end of my presentation I thank you very much and yeah would like to answer your questions thank you
Andrea Ross
UCAEx6zhR2sD2pAGKezasAjA
2012-11-03
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
4,426
23,597
SbBSEMo-cY0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SbBSEMo-cY0
Level 4: Skill 2 - Standing Tucks
[Music] alright next level for skill we're gonna be learning standing tucks so where you have shipowner show us the sanitary most important for a staying tuck is a really really solid backward roll I know it's a level one skill but all we're doing in standing tuck is jumping doing a backward roll in the air and land it back down so Connor you show us it really is all back control notice as he's rolling over he's using a hit his hips to get him up over his shoulders they just making a little bit of separation with his hands to get his head through but the big important part is singing the nice tuck shape and keeping those hips driving over the top our next drill is going to get us ready to start rolling in the air so what car is gonna do he's gonna jump up in the air get his hips up laying on his back on the mat and then a whole as he's jumping he's pulling his hips up to the ceiling so that's really important in initiating our flip if we start to initiate without our hips you're gonna get stuck halfway our next drill is gonna work on our jump to being explosive with our hips so what Conner is going to do he's going to start in the eighth position and he's gonna jump up to a catch and then rebound to tuck jump notice as he's standing up he's really focusing on a keen explosive through his hips and getting to a good hollow body position before jumping so now we're ready to start working on our standing tuck as we're doing this anytime you guys keep in mind they're kind of scary getting over that initial fear of it but it's really about throwing it and throwing it safely so if you can find somewhere soft to land like Matt's we have Matt's here at the gym to piñas onto your bed but really focusing on safety and getting comfortable with that jump and roll motion okay so that second drill that we did really focusing on getting our hips up and rolling over to carve a new state [Applause] [Music] notice as he's jumping he's not swinging straight up in the air we don't swing just past vertical still well made a nice hollow shade threes from the side to send a swinging right here we're gonna swing there's a little bit more open this is so we don't do it gainer so what happened if we swing here and drive our hips up you'll actually trap on the wording your time well with what is going up here and then our hips go up to the ceiling okay we're still focusing on our hollow body shape but our hips are pulling us up and over the top that's where we can actually get that tuck where it's a it's in one spot I hope these girls were helpful in learning your sting tuck really focus on being safe guys I know this is a big skill for cheerleading but we got to focus on being safe and going through these progressions get really comfortable with the drills really work on your explosive speed off the bottom and you should be ready to do that same time [Music]
Empire Athletics
UCKb1cHMyz4OdFTMn8ygLHhQ
2020-04-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
562
2,883
ODeF9AAjt4I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODeF9AAjt4I
The Weeping Prophet Jeremiah 44:26-30 God & Adversity
hey good morning will god stand against the rebels for adversity our reading is the last part of chapter 44 of the book of jeremiah verses 26 to 30. therefore hear the word of the lord all judah who dwell in the land of egypt behold i have sworn by my great name says the lord that my name shall no more be named in the mouth of any man of judah in all the land of egypt saying the lord god lives behold i will watch over them for adversity and not for good and all the men of judah who were in the land of egypt shall be consumed by the sword and by famine until there is an end of them yet a small number who escaped the sword shall return from the land of egypt to the land of judah and all the remnant of judah who have gone to the land of egypt to dwell there shall know whose words will stand mine are theirs and this shall be assigned to you says the lord that i will punish you in this place that you may know that my words will surely stand against you for adversity thus says the lord behold i will give pharaoh halfrock king of egypt into the hand of his enemies and into the hand of those who seek his life as i gave zedekiah king of judah into the hand of nebuchadnezzar king of babylon his enemy who sought his life although god respects the free choice that he's given to each one of us it's also true that by creation and after we sin then by redemption twice over we belong to god i mean he has rights to us as being our creator and our redeemer even though he's given us free will i mean think about it he delivered his people from egypt they didn't deliver him but he delivered them so then when they rebel he god is within his rights to bring adversity upon them for their perfidy perfidy is one of those words you never hear anymore perfidy it means basically to be unfaithful to be disloyal when we think what god has done for us and then the way we often have come back and treated him in response perfidy is a pretty good word for that it's an awful word to think that the god of heaven that we would treat him with perfidy but look this is what god's going to do to these people they've broken his covenant and then he says there at verse 26 you know i'm going to take my name out of their mouth the the name of the covenant god he says they're not going to be using my name anymore they have broken the covenant they're out of the covenant they've thrown it away and yet he says also he's going to preserve a remnant there will be a group who turn back to him and are faithful and he will get them back home it gets kind of complicated sometimes when part of the people are faithful and part of the people are unfaith but god is fair and he knows what he's doing how he treats the different parts the different parts of the kingdom of judah here it's wonderful news that god always preserves a remnant praise be to his name mercy and thanksgiving to him let's pray together your father in heaven help us to be faithful instead of unfaithful help us to be true instead of untrue help us thank you for hearing our prayer thank you that you promised you'll save a remnant help us to be part of your remnant and so lord these these are things we're asking for because of jesus in jesus name we pray amen so always remember god is still developing a remnant of people men and women who are willing to put faith into action and allow him to change our hearts god be with you today
Larry the guy from Michigan
UCXGSWFpL8sZfXEc1skaeD4Q
2021-10-31
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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677
3,400
RqC9vRtmXwg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RqC9vRtmXwg
Daily Market Review: Fed Bets and Geopolitical Tensions Are Back in the Spotlight
jft just fair and direct good morning everyone and welcome to jfd's daily market review for february the 15th i am haralamus pisuros head of research here at jfd and i will talk about yesterday's main market movers what's my opinion moving ahead or that what are today's important events and how they could affect the markets but before we start let's read our disclaimer the content we produce does not constitute investment advice or investment recommendation should not be should not be considered as such and does not in any way constitute an invitation to acquire any financial instrument or i will leave you a few seconds to read the rest and then we will jump into our analysis okay the us dollar traded higher against all but two of the other major currencies on monday and during the asian session tuesday it it lost ground versus chf and jpy while it gained the most versus the euro the aussie and the kiwi now the strengthening of the us dollar in the safe havens frank and yen combined with the weakening of the riskling dose and kiwi suggests that markets traded in a risk of fashion yesterday and today in asia indeed telling our guests to the equity world we see that major european shares were a sea of red with the negative appetite albeit software rolling into the u.s and the asian sessions remember that at the beginning of last week investors had been adding to their risk exposure but we stayed reluctant to call for a long lasting cavalry ahead of the cpis and the looming job political tensions in ukraine indeed the picture changed after the u.s inflation numbers exceeded their own forecasts and after the white house warned that russia could attack ukraine any day now fed bets and your political tensions remained the main market driver yesterday as well uh with regards to the fomc and its future plans yesterday saint louis fed president james bullard reiterated his view for a faster pace of interest rate liftoffs adding that the central bank needs to ratify market expectations about its upcoming moves in our view this means that bullard may be in favor of a raid path faster even when the current market pricing even then then the current market pricing suggests let's not forget that last week bullard called for a 50 basis points hike at the march gathering according to the vet fund futures market participants are now fully pricing in more than six quarter point rate increases by the end of the year with some of them indeed betting on a double hike in in march now with regards to the ukraine saga president uh vladimir zelansky urged you urged ukrainians to fl to fly the country's flags and sing the national anthem on wednesday uh the day some media some media have seen it as a possible start off of a russian invasion this may may have prompted participants to reduce even further their research their risk exposure by seeking shelter to safe havens so unless we get reliable headlines that the resolution is more probable than an attack we see the case for a quiz to continue drifting south and safe havens to stay supported besides headlines surrounding the federal ukraine overnight we also got the minutes from the latest rba monetary policy decision while today during the early european session the uk released its employment data for december the rba minutes just confirmed the message we got from the meeting statement namely that although inflation has picked up it is too early to conclude that it is sustainably within the target but so with that in mind investors have barely touched their bets with regards to future rate hikes as for the uk data they came in slightly better than expected with average weekly earnings including bonuses accelerating somewhat instead of slowing as the forecast suggested although this could be a sign that that deflation could continue trending north and that faster hikes may be appropriate by the bank of england the pound did not react perhaps investors prefer to wait for more recent data like the cpi's for january due out tomorrow now as for the rest of today's events from germany we have the zdw survey for february the current conditions index is expected to have risen to minus seven from minus 10.2 while the economic sentiment one is forecast to have inched up to 53.5 from 51.7 as for the eurozone as a whole we get the second estimate of gdp and the employment j and the employment change for the fourth quarter the second gdp estimate is expected to confirm its preliminary print while no forecast is available for the employment change so that's it from me thank you very much for watching and listening for those who are interested in learning about the main events of the week much earlier you can subscribe to the weekly market outlook webinar which i'm holding every monday at 8 o'clock am gmt you can find the link in the description below so goodbye have a great day a great weekend exuni uh have a great day and i'm looking forward to seeing you here again tomorrow jft just fair and direct
JFD Brokers
UCvSb27uzIbuWdIudH1vpaaQ
2022-02-15
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
884
5,005
JfT8tcx5D4A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfT8tcx5D4A
Exceptional Keto Gives You Unexpected Results in a very Short Time!!
to be on a low carb diet not necessarily keto diet because when i'm a keto diet i just don't feel like working out hard and i like working out hard another major problem with people who go on a keto diet and sometimes on a dirty keto diet right uh they do not understand the whole concept of medicine so when we treat diabetes we are not just trying to bring your blood sugars down that is just maybe one in a 10 goal but when you don't know about everything your goal is about okay i need to bring my blood sugar down but that's not everything when you have diabetes that is end of the story it's like you're or the insulin resistant you already have underlying possible cardiovascular disease your blood sugar goes up at the end of the story so it's like you know after the storm comes over you're trying to fix things but the thing is you really need to pay attention to everything else that goes around diabetes what are they cardiovascular disease heart attacks and strokes so if you're controlling your blood sugars without reducing your risk of heart attack and stroke then you're probably going to die young with a wonderful blood sugar that's not what we want right so you want to bring the blood sugar down along with the risk of cardiovascular disease statistically speaking again that's that's numbers numbers talk then numbers are generally right two or two thirds of diabetics die from heart attack and stroke before they become they go blind before they become dialysis dependent or they before they lose their feet and stuff like that so your primary goal when you have diabetes to avoid heart attacks and strokes before you worry about dialysis so if you're gonna keto diet right and then you start eating bacon or red meat all this animal fat you are going to have a major problem with your cholesterol now not only that on keto diet you're not able to exercise well because your muscle mass go muscle mass goes down your muscle needs glycogen and glucose so you end up ignoring the exercise part just because you're enjoying the weight loss and all this good stuff your blood sugar is down you're enjoying this but what you don't see your ldl starts climbing up because of the animal that you're eating your hdl which is the good cholesterol goes down because you stop exercising hdl only goes up when you do cardio and enough cardio it's not just walking the dog and you know going to the park and having a mile or two you know the hdl will go up and that is a very important protective factor from heart effects is that you have to keep exercising now exercising for an hour cardio for example is not just going to be easy when you're in a keto diet so when you're on a keto diet make sure your doctor monitors your cholesterol and make sure your ldl stays below 100 and your hdl stays above 50 possibly better if it is about 60. so if you're not paying attention to your l
Baba Jee Sialkot
UCKDgP-IXGTZ3Xrj_pJGyFqw
2020-12-20
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
538
2,894
BjjOSmAM0fI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjjOSmAM0fI
Sweet Home Chicago Acoustic - Eric Clapton Blues Guitar Lesson
hey there sharon your guitar guide helping you find your sound and if you wanted to learn how to play sweet home chicago eric clapton style well that's coming up sharing your guitar guide helping you find your sound thanks for joining me in this lesson of sweet home chicago where we learn the ending of the song in the style of eric clapton [Music] hmm [Music] now that may not be note for note but that'll get you finished so where we're going to start it basically starts as it began but then he throws in we've got so that's all the same as the beginning and if you didn't get a chance to check that lesson out check it out right here because this is a four part series slide from seven to nine on the g string pick the eighth fret of the b string the second string and then we're gonna bend from ten [Music] bring it down and pick it again bring it down and pick it then pick the b string again at the eighth fret so [Music] now we're on the g string at the ninth fret then we're going to the d string we're going to pick 9 8 7 [Music] slide to 5 and then seventh fret of the a string [Music] and then we're gonna do the walk down to the b [Music] ending with the e chord [Music] so to do that we've got that we're starting on the fifth fret of the a string the fifth string we're picking that we're going five four three and at the same time we're gonna hybrid pick using a finger to pick the e string so we're picking the five and the e string at the same time [Applause] play that b7 ending with the e chord hey if these lessons have helped yet can you tell me about it in the comments i'd love to hear from you click the like button so that other subscribers and people be able to see the video and don't forget to watch that lesson there thanks stay safe
YourGuitarGuide
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2020-10-07
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
355
1,764
83vKEQa7VrM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83vKEQa7VrM
World's most powerful wind turbine installed
world's most powerful wind turbine installed and one rotation of its blades can feel average UK home for a day the turbines are each 191 metres tall with each blade being eight metres long while the 164 metre rotor has a circumference larger than that of the London Eye the world's most powerful wind turbine that can fuel a house with a single turn of its blades has been launched in UK waters that in fall confirmed the first of eleven turbines in its European offshore wind deployment Center out had been put in place off Aberdeen project director Adam is amol said the giant device is so powerful that one single rotation of its blades could provide enough electricity to power an average UK home for a day the turbines are each 191 metres tall with each blade being eight metres long while the 164 metre rotor has a circumference larger than that of the London Eye the Aberdeen Bay Development which will be Scotland's largest offshore wind test and demonstration facility and will trial next-generation technology has been hit by delays including legal challenges from Donald Trump who claimed the turbines would ruin the views from his golf course at balmy day but the installation of the initial turbine comes two weeks after a giant floating crane successfully installed the first of the Foundation's with these using a new style never employed before in a commercial project the turbines installation marks the first time a 8.8 megawatt model has been deployed commercially in the offshore wind industry the development will have two of these together with nine 8.4 megawatt turbines with the developers saying it will be able to produce the equivalent of more than 70% of Aberdeen's domestic energy needs mr. is amol said the first turbine installation is a significant achievement and credit to the diligence and engineering know-how of the project team and for it to be one of the eight point eight megawatts models makes it an even more momentous moment because it further endorses the out as a world-class hub of offshore wind innovation we are very excited by the cutting-edge technology deployed on all the turbines and it is remarkable that just one rotation of the blades can power the average UK home for a day Jeanne Morrison chair of the Aberdeen Renewable Energy Group areg said the outgas leading the way in terms of innovation for the offshore wind sector and will help enable the next generation of offshore wind it's a real coup for the region to have the world's most powerful turbines on its doorstep and cements Aberdeen's position as a major global energy city it also will lead us to a greener future Stephane kanessa policy manager at Scottish renewables said Scotland is home to approximately 25 percent of Europe's offshore wind resource and projects like vatten Falls European offshore wind deployment center in Aberdeen promised to harness this potential on a massive scale this groundbreaking facility leads Aberdeen's ongoing transition from fossil fuels to renewables and reinforces Scotland's global energy status as the windiest country in Europe with some of the deepest waters we should be proud of Scotland's burgeoning offshore wind industry with many more promising offshore wind sites on our doorstep we hope to see similar facilities deployed in Scottish waters in future so we can fully utilize our country's natural resources
Александр Юрьевич Чукланов
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2018-04-10
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
567
3,376
2sR6Bo8DR-8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sR6Bo8DR-8
I'M CHANGED | SISTER SUMMER
hello guys welcome back to Sister summer Lula is joining us today and she is attacking my bear we'll just let her be but hello guys I haven't done a talking clip in a while because I have been gone for this weekend so lots of things to catch you guys up on really quick so my voice is a little bit gone from this weekend at the festival but I am confident that it's going to return I just got back my flight got in a couple hours ago and I just got back to Atlanta from Electric Forest which was in Michigan I have so much to like I guess say about it but I don't want to take up like this whole Vlog with that so some of you guys were asking if I could do an experience video on it and I think I kind of want to do something cool where I take the footage that I did get I think I want to take that do a voice over over it add some music and make it kind of like a cool video that I might upload to this Channel or I might upload to my other channel so um yeah but I kind of also could do an experience like a more like storytime experience video on it I think that would be really fun as well um because I do have a lot of like funny stories and just like cool stuff that happened um but I do honestly feel like a like a changed woman my Bun's crazy today I'm looking like an insane I got a bit sunburned yesterday so my I'm just letting my skin do it's thing but uh in summary I will just put it as I have never felt such love connection Unity to people and to um a place in my entire life than my experience this weekend and it truly is a magical place um and a magical thing to to be able to have something in your life that makes you feel so alive I'm getting emotional um I had moments this weekend where I broke down in happy tears because I feel so lucky to live the life that I do oh my gosh I feel silly right now but um that's what this weekend made me feel like I hope that you have or that you find something in your life that makes you feel so alive and so happy that you don't worry about anything else in the entire world I guess it's just something you know when people say that you can't really understand it unless you've experienced it that can obviously go for a lot of things but yeah that's how I feel so I just want to have more new experiences and I just want to try a lot of more new things and this has been a 4minute clip so um yeah it's kind of later on in the day now I didn't really I didn't have time to start the Vlog until now my suitcase was buried I mean my camera was buried away in my suitcase after this weekend but I am honestly just going to lie in my bed rest up probably look at the footage that I have from this weekend which I'm really excited about and I'll talk to you guys a little bit later oh I forgot to show you guys my last pair of Rihanna slides came in the mail today Lula take it over here my woman oh now I have the white pink and the black cuz I'm insane and I ordered every single color but honestly these are the comfiest freaking shoes and I wear them now since I've gotten them I've been wearing the black ones like every single day every place I go they're so soft and comfortable and easy to slide on these ones I think are fake they smell really really really like I don't know if it's like plasticky or rubbery or whatever it is but they feel different than my white and black ones and I think they're fake I got them all from eBay I honestly don't really care I still think they're freaking awesome and they fit and it's not really that big of a deal to me I don't I don't like going through the process of like exchanging and returning things and then check it out guys I got this hat it's a modon merch hat and it just came out in bubble on pink I think Megan has this hat in white I mean what am I saying she has it in Black I saw it came out in pink and I was obsessed with it happy to be here I wish I had gotten it in time for this weekend cuz I totally would have worn it but I got it today and that's okay so I'm real excited about that there's so much pink going on right now with like my bed my cover I got this it's called cool hottie I was supposed to get this before um Forest as well but it came in late when you really just got that issue can't scratch friend Leah told me about this and she says it's like with um what does it have Vitex and geranium and you can kind of put this in a spray bottle and then like with some water and like Mist it on yourself and it really makes you cool down which I guess is why it's called cool hottie so um that'll be nice for future festivals and stuffs remember when I showed you guys my wristband last week look how dirty it got this weekend like this is how yellow it was and then it got it got so freaking dirty that's wild wow dirty girl I just took it off it feels it feels good it feels sad but it feels like it's time my hair is a freaking mess but I'm wearing my new hat I'm also tuning in to ins the um Creator Town Hall with Hillary Clinton it's actually super cool a bunch of YouTubers I'm like recognizing my friends on the screen um were able to have this talk with Hillary Clinton and just ask her questions about you know what she would do if she was elected and super cool I was actually invited to go to this um I got invited really late last week though and it was very like last minute for me I wasn't going to be in La again yet it's in La it would have been awesome to be there but I'm really um you know enjoying listening I just decided to put my hair all up because I was looking a bit crazy but I am going to just have a little girls night so I'm going over to my friend isel's and we're just going to have like a wine night maybe do some baking I'm bringing over some cookie butter because cookie butter everyone I feel like needs to try cookie butter in their life if you haven't you can get this one this is just the best cough one you can get it at Target or you can get it at like Trader Joe's I'm going to go now I'll talk to you guys when I get home cuz I just want to have some quality time with my girls hello guys I just got home and I also just realized that I think my whole Vlog was in my room today so that's pretty boring and I apologize that's like really lame um it was honestly just I didn't really get home until like 3 something p.m. and then I just kind of chilled all day honestly after just like traveling and being out this weekend next Vlog will be I think it's going to be the end of um this month I think what is the date today I think it's like wasn't it the 28th today yeah today was the 28th now it's Wednesday June 29th at 1:42 a.m. and I'm running out of batteries thank you guys for watching I love you a thumbs up if you enjoyed and you're happy that sister summer is back and oh I wanted to say that my Vlog I announced this on Snapchat but I wanted to let you guys know that my Vlog from this weekend is going to um actually be transformed I think into like a cool video from this weekend because I just really like the footage I got and it's going to be made into a video but it's Pro it's like going to be up later and it might be up on my main channel so yeah little Gap in Sister summer I definitely like still film this weekend I just realized I want to put the content into something besides a vlog um but it will be coming and I'm very excited about that video so yeah watch out for that and I will see you guys in my next Vlog on Thursday bye
livinlikelindsey
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2016-06-29
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,542
7,431
QVzNjpNHe0k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QVzNjpNHe0k
C of C 1-10-15 CHANGE Illinois Coalition for Honest and New Government Ethics
okay this is the College of complexes for any of you who just wandered in for the food or whatever uh but we have tonight with us uh Ryan blitstein who is for change Illinois Y what kind of change is it we're going to he's concerned about honest and new government ethics on right yeah the one we are ready now the one with the poor English on it having heard from all our announcers right from our professor for the day uh r all right thank you thanks for thanks BR thanks for having me here um I really appreciate the opportunity to talk about this these are these are serious issues but they're not simple issues so if I go on too long on anything I I apologize and I also wanted to thank you for having me back so to speak um I wasn't able to make it last time so I'm really glad to to be here um I hope everyone has one of the handouts that Charlie was so kind to uh to print out um the front side just so everyone knows it's not numbered is what Fair honest democracy looks like but let me just get started and talk about what I'm here to talk about so my name is Ryan blitstein um I'm one of the leaders of change Illinois which is an organization that has a really simple Mission um we have a vision of an Illinois that is a model state for fair honest government let me say that again we have a vision of an Illinois that is a model state for fair honest government that everyone Across the Nation and throughout the world looks at Illinois and says this is the most Fair most honest most open most well-run effective government in the world as you know we are very very far from and so what I'm going to talk about tonight is where we are where we could be and how to get there so let me start with with the problem I know that um we heard tonight that we're number one in terms of uh the bond rating and the finances and everything else let me start with corruption so no secret illino is pretty corrupt it's estimated that we pay a corruption tax of something like $500 million a year so if you run the numbers on that every man woman child of any age in America in this state pays something like 40 bucks a year just lineing the pockets of corrupt officials that is literally money that's going to somebody that's connected or takes advantage of the system and it's coming out of our pockets and the taxes that that we pay we're number three in public corruption based on the number of prosecutions of of criminals and Chicago is actually number one in America the number one city for corruption um it's it's no secret to us so we all know this and there have been some polls done you know does state government do the right thing most of the time um 15% of illinoisans say yes the other 85% of us are like you and me and realize that it does not do the right thing most of the time unfortunately um I I'll be honest I'll share a bias I am not a let's get rid of all the incumbents every time kind of guy I think there are some good people on both sides of the aisle trying to do their best unfortunately there just aren't enough of them and they're stuck in a system that does not work and it makes it so hard for them to do what they want to do to make things better for all of us throughout the state we're ineffective financially we're ineffective in terms of educating our children we're ineffective in terms of our approach to the environment regulation pensions you name it there's a reason to look at it and say this is broken and it's not the democrat's fault or the Republicans fault it's the fault of an entire system that's been built up over the last couple hundred years um since the founding of the state when it was a territory since the birth of Chicago and and Co County so I'm going to talk a little bit now about how we got here and and why this is so our organization does a lot of policy research but I'm a a former journalist so I spent a lot of time kind of reviewing the media reports on this and what researchers have to say is how do we get here why is Illinois so bad why are we number one or number three or number five depending how you look at it so here are my top 10 reasons that Illinois is one of the most corrupt ineffect states in America number 10 from our founding Illinois was essentially a swamp both metaphorically and geographically and people came in developers investors political leaders looking for a fast buck and they got it and that became the culture very early number nine and this is related to that because people were looking for a fast bu and because it was a SW politicians were not people who were had some sort of noble calling like the bers of the nation that we were talking about earlier they were folks who saw an opportunity for advancement they saw a way for them to run for office get elected make some money for themselves their families and their friends and that ethos isn't unique to Illinois but there were many more people who had that sort of culture in Illinois and it just got baked in over time over the last couple hundred years number eight is money we're a victim of our own success here Illinois is one of the most successful states in the nation and has been in terms of producing economic growth we have more infrastructure than most of the other states in the Midwest and it turns out that when a lot of money is running through a place there's a lot of people trying to snap up bits of that money for themselves and line their own pockets and so again we're a victim of a lot of the successes the Illinois has had over the last few hundred years particularly during the middle of the 20th century when things were really booming economically number seven a criminal political Alliance so unfortunately as we all know Mobsters gangsters pimps and prostitutes they were all uh connected to the politicians here in the state over the last couple hundred years it's not as bad today as it once was when you know you had guys literally running for office running for Alderman current Alderman having their political fundraisers hosted by pimp gamblers prostitutes um we don't do that out in the open today but there's still a lot of Nefarious stuff that's going on and the remant of that culture are really still there number six is a different sort of Alliance and that's an alliance between the political class and the business class the word that's often or phrase that's tossed around is pinstrip patronage you know after World War II in a lot of States throughout America the business Community stood up and said you know what we're powerful we've got money we have influence in this community we have seen corruption we've seen patronage and we're not going to take it anymore and it needs to stop and so there were these alliances of progressive Folks at the Grassroots and Business Leaders many of whom were quite conservative and free market oriented who tried to push and make corruption stop they were successful in many states but it didn't happen in Illinois why the simple reason is that the business Community was bought off so the politicians said well if you let us have corruption and keep lining our own Pockets then we'll make sure that you get the right development deal we'll make sure that you get the right tax braks we'll make sure that your large businesses are able to succeed and make sure that there are barriers to entry so no one else can come and disrupt you and you can continue to make money from here until Kingdom count and again as in many things in terms of corruption in Illinois not as bad as it was 50 years ago or 100 years ago but it's still here today in in development in tax policy and everything else so we're halfway through the number five reason that Illinois is one of the most corrupt states in America is racism during the 20s 30s 40s and 50s um many in the power structure the political power structure were were able to essentially say folks particularly in Chicago State of Business Leaders and other Civic leaders you know we need to keep this White City we need to keep this a segregated City and if you allow us to stay in power we'll be able to do that and you guys continue to fund us so we'll stay in power and if you look at the the histories of 30s 40s 50s 60s and everything from the way that the districts map District Maps were drawn to housing policy Road policy infrastructure policy um unfortunately it benefited a very small number of people and the the racism that was a remnant of uh both Illinois's past and America's past um really affected the way that these policies were taken into account the number four reason is the dynasties I don't think it's a surprise to folks the daily family the hin family stroer family the Madigan family it's not that any of these people are bad people necessarily it's not that these families are any worse than any other family it it is the case however that when you have a small number of people having an outsized amount of control things aren't going to change very quickly and we've seen these very powerful very strong uh dynasties of political families that are able to hold power work the system and perpetuate the system as it is whereas in many other states you've had new political classes new business classes new Elite classes and also new movements coming up from the Grassroots that changes who is in power it just hasn't happened in Illinois you know one one example you know love him or hate him agree with him or disagree with him our current mayor in in many ways is just the next logical step of the daily family um he came up as a fundraiser within the daily machine he was very close to the uh younger mayor daily many of the people that he hired came out of of of that group again it's not to say that that he's a bad guy or that that his policies are good or bad it is to say that um we're just continuing the same sort of power structure we continuing One Foot In Front of the other instead of stopping hitting the reset button and bringing some new folks and new ideas in the number three reason is that that we've got just a seriously labyrinthine set of governments here in Illinois um if you look at the numbers we have more townships more units of government more things like the Mosquito Abatement district and Metropolitan Water Reclamation District than any other state in America and when You' got confusing government it's very easy for the people who control system to continue to work those levers of power and very hard for people like us at the Grassroots to take the time and spend the money to understand it to move things in a positive direction it also means that there's a lot of stuff going on behind the scenes or behind closed doors that we as Citizens don't really find out about or get to be a part of and there's a lot of money that flows through those Mosquito Abatement districts and we don't know where it's going or how it's going but you can be certain that someone is taking advantage of it and the we're talking about tens of thousands of units of local government all of which or many of which overlap and many of which don't really need to exist to be perfectly honest and only exist because it's in the political interest or financial interest of a large number of people in policy and those that really manage the system the number two issue and this is less of a problem than it used to but it was a big problem up through just 10 20 years ago is disclosure and the lack of over this and see in Illinois government there's still a lot of stuff going on behind closed doors we can be sure of that but it used to be much worse everything was behind closed doors citizens couldn't see what was happening and so when stuff is behind closed doors you we all know some sunlight is the best disinfectant when there's no sunlight things get really nasty here in the state here in the city here in Co County and it just was bad bad bad stuff you know as far as the eye could see and then the last one and I think this is a big reason that I come out to speak with groups you know as as much as I possibly can is us we the citizens the residents of Illinois were the reason that things are so bad there's enough information out there now there's enough knowledge out there now there's enough good people who want to run for office there's enough knowledge about how the system works that if we all stand up and said you know what I'm going to tell five people how broken the system is and I'm going to get all of them to vote and I'm going to spend time working with my friends and family to get good people elected and to to hold them accountable once they are elected there's a lot that we can do I I don't want to critique people in this room because I know you're all folks who really pay attention to this stuff and think about and spread the word but there are a lot of us who just become too cynical because things are so broken you know the really good news is that things are a hell of a lot better today than they were 20 years ago or 50 years ago or 100 years ago as nasty as they are unfortunately not enough of us have stood up to try and make change to move that cycle more quickly to make things better faster so we were able to reach that Vision that I talked about earlier that sounds crazy but might happen in 5 years or 10 years or 20 years Illinois as a Bastion of fair honest open government so I want to talk a little bit about how to fix this and then we'll do some some questions and and I I really want to hear what you all think about these issues so if you pull out the handout you see the details of of this vision and you know as pie in the sky as it is it turns out that it breaks down to some pretty reasonable Common Sense systems you know you want a lot of transparency and information out there so we can all get access to you want voters to be engaged and and looking at that information and hungry for that information and making decisions based on then actually voted you want elections to be clean so no one has an size impact on it so it's not a couple people influencing what happens you want voters to be able to register easily you want them to easily be able to vote in a system that is both high integrity so there's limited or no fraud but also simple and user friendly so anyone who is eligible to vote is able to walk into a polling place and make their voice heard you want the policy makers to be honest you want them to be doing things based on their conscience and based on what their consti want as opposed to how to make as much money as they can or what the leader of their party or whoever their political Patron is wants them to do you want the lobbying process to be ethical so you know we think of lobbyists as these evil bad people who are influencing policy and they're all special interests but what lobbying is really is groups of people making their voices heard and if it's done in an open honest ethical way and it's a fair fight then On Any Given issue if I'm a legislator or I'm the governor or I'm a cabinet official I'm listening to what one side says and what the other side says and maybe there's 50 sides to the issue but if it's done in the right way then I can make an intelligent decision based on my own conscience and based on what I think the people of Illinois want and what's in the best interest of all of us when that happens you get rational legislation that's common sense I think there's a lot of us who if we looked at an issue it might be really tough but we make a decision that made sense to us based on the best interest of everybody the average legislator just isn't able to do that because the system is unfortunately so broken you want Fair Contracting so the best contractor you who can do the best job for us at the lowest cost gets the contract you want smart Ru making so business isn't punished but on the other hand if the corporate Community is doing bad things to hurt citizens that they're held accountable for that you want effective regulation in this the same vein you want services to be high quality I mean obviously if someone's going going to the the welfare office or someone is going to the DMV you want it to function well and you don't want money wasted and then the last piece and this is sort of basic political science theory but it's also real you want the rule of law and Justice if if if I'm being hurt by the the state or I'm being hurt by another citizen I want to be able to go go to court and I want to be able to make my case and if I'm someone who's been accused of wrongdoing or crime I want to be able to go to court and be able to make my case and if I'm right if if you know beyond A Reasonable Doubt no one can say that I'm guilty I want to continue to have my freedom so these arguments people who are far right and far left can look at these and say okay well yeah this is what democracy looks like it's not about how high are our taxes it's not about what's the right Environmental Policy it's not about what's the curriculum that our children should be educated by what it's about is creating the fundamentals of a democracy so all of us can put in as much as we we can and get a lot more out so if you flip the page over you'll see what Illinois looks now and I'm not going to go over these one by one but essentially it's the mirror image of what you want you know instead of having voters that are really engaged you've got disengaged C cynical folks instead of having contracts that are are fair and honest you have corrupt ones instead of a judicial system that makes sense and follows the rule of law you have a politically motivated judicial system we we just spent millions of dollars to get a Supreme Court Justice elected so each part of that statement that I just made is absurd first of all we shouldn't be spending millions of dollars on any given election it doesn't make a lot of sense um the people who spent that money are really two sides it was the the trial lawyers spent a bunch of money and the the folks who are afraid of The Travelers the business Community spent a bunch of money those are the only people who care about this even though we all should care this is is a Supreme Court Justice the fact that we're electing Supreme Court Justices based on r& D also is crazy it just doesn't make any sense and Most states and basically every Western modern country doesn't do it that way anymore but in Illinois the system is just perpetuated so I want to talk about what can be done to fix all of these things and the nice thing about having this model or this structure is that you've got kind of a mirror image so you and think like how do we get from limited access to Civic information to Great transparency of information um you you've got how do we get from heavy special interest lobbying to a fair lobbying process and so you know I'm a a former engineer that was my training I sort of think of things this way it's a system it's it's a machine how do you get from place X to place Y and in between there's a bunch of stuff you can do so the three tools that that we use of change illino are educate and um I'm sorry do research figure out what's in the best interest of citizens or what what people think makes sense what the best ideas are we don't necessarily say this is the way but we draw this is the universe of things that are possible so we we do the research then we educate folks we go out and we say look you know we're not exactly certain what should be done here are three or four ways that are possible you know you want to fix the Finance system maybe small donor public financing is the way to go maybe contribution room the way to go maybe we should just have a lot of disclosure maybe all three are important we want to make sure people know that these options are on the table and then the last piece is advocacy we go down to Springfield or we ask constituents and citizens like you and me to go down to Springfield or go to Cook County or uh city government municipal government and say I believe that we need to change the system in the following way here's why and here's what makes the most sense and so to take a step back in terms of what what we do um for each of these there isn't necessarily an obvious solution but there's a set of options on the table there are a set of things that have been done in other states that have worked and there's a set of things that are politically realistic so when we're thinking about what we do you know those are sort of the criteria it's okay what's work elsewhere what seems applicable to Illinois um what's doable for someone and then what's doable for us there are some things that change Illinois is good at and there are some things that we're not so good at um I'll be honest we're not uh expertise our expertise is not working behind closed doors to work the system and work the machine our expertise is working in a very public way to communicate to as many people as possible what needs to be done um we're not experts at litigation to try and change things we're much better at working with you know getting the smartest folks in the room from across political Spectrum to say okay what's the right Amendment here or or what's the best possible compromise on legislation so I'm going to before I close up just give you an example of a couple of the things that we've been working on um in 2009 Illinois was one of five states that had no limits on how the campaign finan system works no limits on how much money a person or Corporation could give to uh Representatives so for instance if I were running for State Rep and Corporation X wanted to spend $5 million to make sure that I was elected because it was in the interest of Corporation X they could spend $5 million could do the same in a gubernatorial election State treasur anything Statewide we're one of five states that had a complete lack of limits everyone else made changes to fix that after Watergate Illinois did not why many of the same issues that I spoke about before and so what we knew we needed to do we knew there are a lot of of changes to make in the The Campaign Finance system the contribution limits was the number one so we worked with a broad Coalition diverse folks from both sides of the aisle Business Leaders labor leaders Grassroots Community leaders um from throughout the state representing all geographies of demographies going down to Springfield making phone calls calling folks and partly as a result of the work we did there was a a bill that was passed that Governor Quinn sign that created contribution on this didn't fix everything but it severely decreased the outsize influence of big money in elections and increased the power of people like you and me who can write a $20 check or a $50 a $100 check to actually make our voice heard you know I I agree on many things I'm I'm a liberal but I I agree with the conservatives on this you know money is speech um if I want to give 50 bucks to help someone say something that's translating spe speech that's not the same as saying well I want anyone to be able to spend a billion dollars to have their speech have more of influence than mine but we want people to have the freedom to be able to make their voice heard whether that's voting telling their friends writing a check to somebody volunteering whatever it is and so this this campaign Finance reform was a really significant thing it was a long way to go but it did prove the model that if you bring a lot of different people together you can start to make changes on the system the second thing that we did which is really still ongoing is an effort to change the redistricting process so I don't I don't know if folks here are familiar with it but um every 10 years after the census in all 50 states the State Legislative and state senate districts and the congressional districts are all remat so you'd think there'd be some smart nonpartisan you know basically census demography type folks who would be redrawing those Ms it turns out out that in many States including Illinois it's actually the maps are drawn Behind Closed Doors by the political leaders of whichever party is in power so I know this is getting way repeat that can you can you say that again yeah so so the maps are drawn Behind Closed Doors by the political leadership of whatever party is in the power and thisly that it sounds wrong and intuitively angers you but let me talk about what that actually means so that means that if I'm say the speaker of the house and I don't like that I don't like someone on the other party I could draw that person out of his or her District so I can redistrict to get rid of it if I'm the speaker of the house and there's someone who's actually in my party that has not been Towing the party line that is an independent minded thinker that doesn't listen to me on every single issue then I can say you know what I'm going to draw that person out of their District if there's someone that does tow the party line that agrees with me on everything and votes the way I want him or her to vote but you know the constituents in his or her community don't really like him and it looks like he might not get reelected then I can draw a district map to increase the chances of his or her reelection it is literally the politicians choosing the voters as opposed to the other way around it is insane it is backwards no other Western Country does it this way it's actually illegal to redistrict this way in England punishable by fine and yet it's the standard operating procedure here in Illinois there are a number of states that have made changes to this this policy um and based on that progress Illinois has started to look at the possibility of making the change here um one thing that change Illinois did was we created a model Amendment based on what's been done in California Arizona you know blue States and red states that have made these nonpartisan reforms with bipartisan support we put together this model Amendment we did a lot of public education around it yes for independent Maps which is a ballot campaign was started about two years ago to go out and try and get it on the ballot unfortunately um despite raising millions of dollars getting thousands of people supporting it bigname folks from David axlerod to ad Stevenson to uh Governor Quinn you many other folks coming out for independent redistricting didn't quite get over the pump why for legal reasons basically uh the other side spent a huge amount of money the other side being the political machine for better or worse spent a huge amount of money to get it knocked off the B um in Illinois the way things work is it's really tough to get something before the voters to amend the Constitution but once it's before the voters you've got a real good shot at winning and so you know a lot of folks within the reform community are taking a look at seeing whether 2016 or 2018 is the right time to give it another shot regardless of whether there's another ballot campaign change Illinois is really committed to making sure that people know about this issue understand it understand why it's broken and no matter what the next redistricting process is in 2021 making sure that people understand it well enough so that they can advocate for their interests so that it's a redistricting process based on citizen needs and the needs of residents and real people not the needs of a handful of politicians the the last piece and this is something that we just had a big win on just over a month ago was on voting rights so you know if you look at the normal story of voting rights it's the Republicans want voter ID to make it harder to vote and the Democrats want uh tons of access to make it easier to vote and forget the what's good for the world and what's good for for presidents um it's seen in a political way way we don't think of it that way we think of it in a nonpartisan way as I said before it should be simple user friendly and high integrity that's what the right election systems should be anyone who is eligible to vote and wants to vote should be able to vote easily one time and the way our system works is it's extraordinarily Antiquated it's paper and Pen based there's nothing digital it's not modernized where we've been way behind other states and most import it's very difficult to register and everything has been based on arbitrary deadlines so we were able to work with a very diverse coalition to go down to Springfield and advocate for changes we were victorious in December and so now the system will be modernized it'll be more digital it'll be more high integrity um the the voter roles will be based on real people real data real information so no one can vote twice and fraud if it was ever a problem which frankly I don't believe it is here in on if it was ever a problem it will not be a problem again because the system will be better and many people particularly young people communities of color and seniors a lot of mobile folks who move from place to place are still able to correct their registration and make their voice heard on Election Day so these are three things we're working on there are many many more that we'd like to do and again these are big problems this is a 200e problem we're not fix it in 10 minutes or 20 minutes but I I think if I leave you with anything excuse me tonight I do want to leave you with an impression that these problems are addressable we don't have to completely solve them but if you take a big step back and look at the last 500 years of human history the general story is people with the Grassroots gaining power the elites giving up power more freedom more ability to express our more more power in which government is more responsive to what people want sure we've had ups and downs and Strikes and cters in that area but overall the general story is that things have gotten better and it's our job here in Illinois a place that is worse than a lot of other places but first of all catch up with the other 49 states of the union and also to start to move ahead become that place that is seen as a model so that others can look to us and help move things forward for everyone all citizens all ages all demographies so thanks for having me here and and I'm happy to take question that's all right let her go first all right marry better okay I have this Theory isn't the Crux of the problem the way issues are being covered by mainstream media in the first place the old the old line if it leads it leads and uh and issues that could affect a community not to think of an entire city it's not even covered and that is a large part of the problem I'm kind of shy no all right it's it's a a great question and as a a recovering journalist um you know I say guilty is charged I think that unfortunately the the media doesn't always have the the time or the resources to cover things move another way reporters don't always have the time or the resources to cover things the way that they want to be covered and so what you often get is things that are based on what's the best way to sell as many papers or get as many viewers as possible as opposed to know dealing with really important issues that said I I do want to say that the media in general in Illinois has been extraordinarily supportive of these reform ISS I think the Chicago Tribune in Chicago sometimes particular but also papers in Poria Rockford carandale and throughout the state over the past few years since I've been in this role have time and again the Daily Herald out in the suburbs as well time and again highlighted these issues and and the editorial Pages have said this matters we understand how corrupt our state is this really needs to change so I I I take your your point as as very legitimate these stories aren't written about as much as they should be the day-to-day reporting doesn't reflect it and the the what's on the front page unfortunately doesn't on the other hand the editorial boards have been really supportive and and I do think you know as a former journalist it's tough to write about these issues because you know the redistricting process is a 10-year thing that no one's paying attention to right now but if we're not paying attention to it right now then the next time it comes around it'll be caught flat footed again and we'll get these you know disgusting Jerry Mander Maps we won't be able to do anything yes yes so you think it's if okay see you know I'm from former Union from Russia okay I know it was different system and everything but we never heard of it like somebody member of the government give job to him to his wife or to his husband or to his daughter so you think it's normal and it's really eligible like some husband give job to his wife like I I don't want to mention names but I guess it's you know like you know like okay for instance fine I will tell about Medan or whatever the name Medan and his daughter and and other people reacted do you think it's fear for in another people who really don't have job and who try probably can give good service to the public and to to society so I don't think it's right like to promote wife or husband to give job you know govern it's so the the issue of of nepotism has always been a problem in political life it's always you know how can I get this person a job who I know how can I take care of take care of them I mean that's the family business is part of it and as I said these dynasties just perpetuate themselves yeah but this is not business it's government job and my very quick question if I may sure how people can how people can fight about it how people can arguing about not to give job to spouse and daughter and be the same and ha they so happy and people you know like and they not really do too much for society you know they met with public and they make believe they do something but you know I was in several meetings because I receive by mail you know um in the patients and they was like they're not here they like thousand miles away with their mind so how it can be corruption I call this corruption can be fight for okay what your opinion no so so my my opinion on this is that NE nepotism is sort of symptom or a microcosm of much larger problem which is the the problem of incumbency and incumbent protection and the protection of the the ruling class of the folks who are powerful which is that I will take care of my folks it doesn't matter to me whether someone's hiring uh his wife or her husband or someone's hiring their golf buddy it's it's all about is someone being hired or given a contract for a government job or a government contract that isn't qualified in the place of someone who is qualified who more deserving right and and unfortunately it happens all the time I I do think the good news is we have a very powerful not just um mainstream media but a you know a blogosphere and Twitter sphere and other places that people are paying attention to this much more than they were before and unfortunately there aren't specific laws in a lot of cases to um to to push these things out way so the way it needs to happen is uh someone pays attention by going to a public meeting and tweeting about it or a reporter writes about it then more people find out about it they spread the word then there's outrage and anger and then then there's change um again I don't have statistics on this my belief is this is less of a problem today than it was before and the reason for that is because of Greater openness but it's still an issue and you know I'm not an expert on the former Soviet un I'm not an expert on many other places including Illinois frankly right you know there are other people who look more deeply at these issues but this this is a problem and the only way that we're going to get rid of this nepotism issue is if people stand up and say this is wrong it's it's got to change and that's not to criticize any particular son or daughter or husband or wife it's just not toote next time for yes that's right okay okay Trish I just had a question and you guys had tackled you know some three big issues know the state of Illinois and yet we have um questions about how open the media is and um just curious as what your group has been doing at the Grassroots level the community who are really feeling this effect of a lot of institutionalized whether it be racism or illegalities with with voting what are some of the Grassroots efforts that sure so I I I do do want to say that um I talked before that there are some things we're great at and there are some things that are not our expertise um we're we're not a Grassroots organization the way we work is we work with many partners um dozens and dozens of them from ARP to social justice groups on the West Side to tea party groups down state those are the groups that are really doing the work at the Grassroots so we you know we take a cue from them in terms of what folks are saying at the Grassroots but also you know help provide them with resources is whether it's monetary or technical support or ideas to help move things at the Grassroots level so you know one one example is a lot of our partners do a huge amount of voter protection during Municipal elections and Statewide elections to make sure that that if there is whe whether it's racism or just generally trying to hurt one party or another um that that's stopped and that there's lawyers there to stop it and that there's Media or um you know individual Advocates to stand up and say this is wrong this this needs to stop um you know another thing that's really important to us is making sure that it's not just people like me who work down town going to Springfield or going to City Hall to say we think this is wrong but really to engage our partners and their folks down at the Grassroots to stand up and say we think this is wrong and this thing needs to change so it's something that over time you know a big goal of our Coalition is to broaden and diversify the the movement for political reform right now there's probably I don't know 50,000 people in the state who really deeply care about these issues and we need to get to 500,000 um 500,000 would be about one in 10 voters a little less than that and once you have one in 10 voters then you've got a real constituency and then you can really move things and and to your point you're right the only way to get to 500,000 is to start doing serious work at the Grassroots and so we're working hard with our partners to help them try and um move grassroot folks to to care about that I think part of the issue is that the average man or woman on the street they're not thinking about these issues right they're not they're not interested in ethical lobbying or the redistricting process they're interested in is my community safe is the school I send my children to a good school what is the environment look like um is my small business stuck up in red tape and so one of the things we spend a lot of time doing is working with our partners to try and connect these you know day-to-day bread and butter issues with the deeper issues of the structures of government and the fact that the reason they're having so many problems on the day-to-day bread and butter issues is because the structures of democracy are F and that if we can only fix these then the day-to-day issues like education the environment um we can come up with reason compromises that work for as many people as possible okay you know you've been talking a lot about reforms of the state um possible methodologies for reforming the state can you give us some examples of countries states or municipalities that might be doing it right that we can take a look at research and base a model off of what good governance could be sure so I I think think here are just a couple examples in in our area so the the redistricting reform that we've been pushing um that was modeled on what's done very similar processes a little different in each in Arizona and California so in California uh that was a state that like Illinois is a blue state that has a very large number of Republicans it's similarly diverse um it's it's a similarly um diverse business type state so the there's a lot of similarities between Illinois and California a big difference of course is is that we're an older State um and they have much more immigration but they're similar in California they had a lot of the same corruption issues a lot of the same pension issues a lot of the same tax issues uh environmental issues education issues that we have they pushed a redistricting reform in 2008 they pushed a couple other reforms too that were done at at the ballot and you got a different type of legislator coming in it wasn't more Democrats or more Republicans that changed things it was a different kind of democrat a different kind of Republican no matter how far to the right or left they were they were willing to walk in and say let's get something done together so that's not to say bipartisanship for bipartisanship sake makes sense or that the middle solution always makes sense it's that no matter what you believe you've got to be thinking what's the best thing for the entire State of California and and they were able to get major uh pension reform passed education reform passed tax reform environmental changes and in addition the Sacramento Kings got a new stadium which everyone was really excited about but what's amazing is that these changes were supported by labor and 19 of the 20 were supported by the Chamber of Commerce um the only one that wasn't supported by the California Chamber of Commerce was a law that taxed people who made more than a million dollar year which was supported by you know the vast majority of people within the state of California so that that isn't to say we need to be exactly like California it is to say that when you make these structural changes you start to see a change in the way the legislature works in the state capital um on the campaign Finance issue I'll just give one example um New York is starting to do at the the city level a small dollar public financing so essentially what that means is I'm a candidate uh if I raise a small donation that's matched 4 to1 or 5 to1 or 6 to1 so increases the power of Grassroots donations because you know this there's this weird situation now it's the case in Illinois even with the limits we have is if I'm running for office it's worth a lot more of my time to go out and ask one person for a $5,000 check than it is to ask 100 people for $50 checks but if the $50 checks are suddenly worth 300 or $400 500 then it starts to change the game a little bit and that really has just started there there's a lot of city-based and Municipal changes that have been done in Oregon and other states that we're seeing really good things come out of and there is I'll be honest there is no perfect state but if you talk to folks in DC or New York who really look at this nationally state byst state or in the National Council of State legislatures there's a consensus as to things that work and things that generally don't work and the the quibbling or the arguments are really around the margins or the specifics of the reform not around the you know the big headline of what needs to be done what's a good website to find this stuff at sure so um there there are several different so one as I mentioned the National Council of State legislatures I think has a lot of good stuff um there's the bipartisan policy Center in Washington DC is an organization that does a lot of work on National reform particularly on Election modernization issues another one and and full disclosure this is a liberal leaning Progressive organization is deos they they do a lot of work on these reform oriented issues and it'll have a progressive slant um but I think the work that they do most of it uh Republicans and Democrats can agree on Independence as well would you repeat the other ones uh de yeah we have so many illegal immigrants in this country last 10 or 15 years what's the big issue with this voter identification why the big fight over this I mean what's the problem getting a voter ID I mean this is 10 15 years been talking about this thing and we still fight over it for what what's the purpose of it should we let the illegal immigrants control some of our local elections I mean is it possible so I I I do want to be clear that our organization and our partners Advocate C currently our our focus is is not you know every single person who is here in Illinois today can vote our focus is that PE everyone who is eligible to vote can vote so if someone has come here as an contenting the law you know as as an immigrant they're not eligible to vote if someone has come here legally and is a legal resident but they're not a citizen they are not eligible to vote so our Focus really is on ensuring that everyone who is a citizen of this state is able ble to vote and to be clear a lot of our partners believe that legal residents and even know illegal immigrants should be able to vote it's it's not we're a broad diverse Coalition but our focus is on if someone is eligible to vote and the state says that they're eligible to vote it should be easy for them to vote and if you look at how difficult it is for many people particularly low-income folks to even get identification and get to the polls it becomes a um very it's just a very difficult process for them so even just to go to the DMV and get a state ID you know may may cost $20 $30 $40 what whatever it is um if if you look at the data there's the groups that are hurt by these voter ID laws are disproportionately people who vote Democrat so for forget um whether you are a Democrat or Republican doesn't doesn't matter if you look at the facts um these voter ID laws are pushed by Republicans they are never pushed by democrats and when when they're pushed by Republicans no matter what the talking points say all of the Research indicates that there's a certain class of people who have these difficulties it's you know the the illegal immigrant issue is um not relevant to focusing on citizens right if I'm a citizen of this country and I have a right to vote my my belief our organization's belief is that it should be easy for me to do so that doesn't mean that I should be able to vote twice and it doesn't mean that that someone who is not a citizen should be able to easily vote but it it does mean it should be simple and user friendly to do so in a high integrity way and the the difficulty for many people of getting the ID getting to the pole registering right now makes it very difficult for them to do so I can't see the difficulty of this's what I mean talking about this for 10 10 years now 10 15 years I mean you can't somebody get an ID in 10 15 years and I I went to Vault and they didn't even ask me for my I could to show my ID they don't even want to look at they even look at it that's is that right I'm not going to been an illegal voter so so ask me for my so you could have been but there are there are many States including Wisconsin that has a republican Governor that have done extremely extremely detailed investigations looking for fraud and have not been able to find it so if if Scott Walker who clearly is a very conservative guy who is a strong supporter of voter ID laws was not able to find fraud in his State I think folks would have a hard time showing that that the fraud exists yes how the state is in dire Financial U problems uh it's practically bankrupt would you go through the history of that and the causes and uh the the possible uh relief sure so I I want to be clear that we're answering an area where I'm not an expert my my experti really is much more focused on the the structures of government democracy and how it functions but as as you said because the state is practically B the financial situation of the state affects everything we do in a way that is it may as well be a structural issue so I I think the the organization that I personally trust most that I'd recommend folks um take a look at on these issues is the Civic Federation which is based here in the city um they have very detailed reports on both the state finances potential options for reform as well as the history of of how we got here um I I don't think it's any secret how we got here essentially we spent more money than we could afford and we did it for a very very long time and the people who made the decision to spend that money either did did it for political reasons because it helped them get reelected um they did it for reasons to help themselves to edce their own pensions or the pensions of of their friends or or they did it because they knew it wouldn't really affect them I mean if you think about it let's let's say I'm the whatever it is whether I'm running a city agency or I'm the State Legislative committee that's deciding how much money um we're going to give the CTA bus bus drivers this year it's pretty easy to be able to say well you know what we're not going to give you a raise because we don't want to put more money into the budget this year but what we're going to do is we're going to give you more money in your retirement and guess who pays for that taxpayers do but not for 1020 30 years and that conversation multiply it by a 100 times and then multiply it by a 50 or 60 year history with a handful of Corrections over time you know there's some work that um Governor Edgar had done in the 90s um there there was uh a consensus pension excuse me pension Bill last year that a lot of people on both sides of the aisle supported but we still have a really really rough time and I think the last reason that this has happened is that Illinois is not as strong of an economy as it once was we have extraordinarily high unemployment rates business is not doing well as as it was um we happen to have some sectors of the economy that Illinois relied on things like manufacturing that just aren't as strong as they were 50 years ago and some of these forces are Global in nature and there's nothing we can do about but some of them are are things that people made bad decisions whether it was in government or in the private sector and I I personally believe again I don't consider myself an expert on this but having looked at the numbers as much as I could and talking to folks to our experts I'm confident that we can get out of this mess with the you know right intelligent thinking um whether you're a Democrat or Republican there's ways of looking at it basically we either raise more Revenue which is either taxes or fees or we start spending less money and we can either pull the bandaid off quickly or we can pull the bandaid off really slowly or we can do something in between and I think reasonable people can disagree as to what the right way to do it is um you know the the current or or incoming governor was elected on a platform of essentially pull the bandaid off so it very well may be that the state finances if not being fixed they're in much better shape two years from now or three years from now than they are today if that's the case there will be a lot of pain on the other hand it may be possible that um you know what what soon to be Governor rer um promised during the campaign he's not able to deliver for whatever political reasons or because the state legislature has a lot of power um this isn't going to get solved I I believe the financial system isn't going to get solved until these structural democracy issues are addressed we don't have to fix everything that's on this sheet but I think the sooner we start addressing several of the things on this sheet the easier it will be for citizens who care and and leaders in the community stand up and say this needs to be fixed and for government actually respond do you um I wanted to ask you about what else besides redistricting could be an answer for getting more voices in um elections elino is very difficult for third parties to get on the ballot redistricting is not going to solve that and uh the the um major parties just make more rules for other that they have to follow in order to keep them off the ballot so are there any solutions that you see that could help more voices get into the debate so it's a really good question and it's something that I've looked at a fair amount we don't have anything currently on the table that we're working on but here are some ideas that um folks have talked about I think a big one is for third parties to just get better at doing what they've been doing so you know I I I don't want to say well the green part's fa they're not on the ballot but it is the case that when the green party or libertarian party or other smaller parties in the state raise more money organize more people have a strong message um they are able to get on the ballot and compete in a legitimate way um we've seen that happen in many other states that again I don't want to lay at the foot of the folks doing it because the system is very very biased toward Republicans and Democrats but that's you know solution number one is just go out and do a better job in terms of changing the system I I think one is that it's very difficult to deal with the election law and election codes in the state getting people knocked off the ballot for petition signatures issues is a blood sport and you know I was involved in this B initiative campaign independent Maps last year that really had that that issue that it's just very difficult to collect signes in the right way and have the right lawyers and understand the law when you're going against people who do this every day and are much better funded and literally wrote the law so they know the in sees of so I I I do think that finding a way to alter election law and that election code in know to for for instance make it simple to decrease the number of signatures necessary to get on the ballot um that's that's something that that would be significant I do think if um uh independent parties or third parties whatever you want to call it non non um major parties were to pull together and start spending more money on lawyers to figure out how to take advantage of these codes and then they could really compete better to get Fs on the B um there are a lot of folks who are big Believers in what is called multi-member districts also rank Choice voting you know the idea we used to have this before the cutback amendment 1981 that you know there would be instead of three districts you would have one district with three different representatives and there's a lot of experimentation in that now out in municipalities like there's some in the western suburbs and that's that's so that I can actually vote for say the green party first and if you're doing rank choice I can vote for the Republican second or the uh Democrat second and if if my person wins that's a big deal and I haven't wasted my vote but if my person loses then I get my number two and so there's a lot of folks that that are looking at that I do know that the Joyce Foundation which is a change illo fun has made several grants to nonprofits to do research in that area and how it works in other countries and other states and how we can bring it here to Illinois um what about the Australian or weighted ballot so I'll again we're moving a little bit beyond my expertise but my my understanding is that's a specific form of rank Choice voting where you can give um three votes to one person or one one you get three votes you can give three to one person or prioritize your the list of candidates you vote for uh a certain number of candidates and U then your votes are counted uh by their weight yes yeah and there's there there's also you know another variation is the instant runoff that instead of you know as we have in in Chicago where if the mayor doesn't get 50% of the vote there's a runoff this would be if the mayor doesn't get 50% of the vote then um the if you voted for someone who's number one you're number one and they're number three in the the finishing it goes down to your number two person and your number two person then gets gets added in and you know the these are a little more complex than a simple All or Nothing up or down I'm voting for this guy or this gal but it turns out that if if you add a little bit of complexity and you explain it to people in a common sense way they understand it and it does increase the power of not just third parties but also um minorities and I me that in the the broadest sense of of the term communities of common social and economic interest so folks who believe something economically or or come from a specific demographic group or racial or ethnic group are able to increase their chances of having influence whether they win or not isn't the biggest issue it's whether they have influence over whoever wins or who is running for reelection Tim B all right I'm just curious what about your own background uh do you do this full-time or are you part do you like do this as a part-time job uh give us you know a little bit about your background I mean just just so that the internet audience can know a little bit more about who you are sure so um I I consider myself very lucky that I get paid full-time to do this work and you know it's it's due to the generosity of um institutions like the Joyce foundation and the cormi foundation and also a lot of private individuals who you know a couple days ago we got $10 on credit card from woman on the southide on stuff and you know because folks want to invest in this work and move forward reform um you know a small lucky f you people like me are able to do this work fulltime and and it's it's not just an an advocation on the side it really is what we do as our day jobs um and I think the the strength of Reform Community is based on the fact that there are people who can really um dig into this in in a deep way me and and many other folks um my my own background is that I'm a a fifth generation um Illinois so my family's been here a really long time um my wife's also from here and and our our son was born and he comes from a long line of of folks who are here um and it's it's the state is really important to me personally and that's a big reason that I'm in this role um I I studied um something called symbolic systems which is sort of like artificial intelligence information science um and so I see the world in that way I also studied journalism as well and I was a journalist writing for places like time and the New York Times um Chicago Tribune um immediately before this job I worked at a foundation in education philanthropy so the sort of through line here is that I I love looking at really hard complex systems researching them figuring out what's wrong with them and how they can be fixed and then um organizing people to move towards systemic change and I really see Illinois as a broken system and a system that could potentially be rationalized if we all just stand up and say hey we don't like how this is working and it's possible to make it better I have a question no I believe it or not I was rejected from medil and I went to Columbia in New York M was my first CH Cubs are socks fan there are a lot so question is do you believe do you believe in UFO and some like Naza life and the different planets do you believe in you so I've never I've never been asked this in a public for asking do you believe in UFOs live in in different civilization perhaps in in different planets so I I'll I'll be honest it's an area that I haven't looked at a lot it's very it's very clear to me as it is to most people that there are unidentified flying objects out there bunch of aliens in Illinois That's How Rel I we were crazy oh Mary Mary Mary for question is that okay as a follow up to the previous question about you know where your financial s you know donations come from can you tell me is it more institutional is it more Grassroots where does change Illinois get the bulk of its funding sure so um actually all of this is is public information um it's on our audited financial statements in 990s that we filed the IRS so um you know we we believe in transparency and so we live transparency every day the vast majority of our funds are from institutions um the two biggest donors that I mentioned are the Joyce foundation and the Robert McCormack Foundation um you know these These are major Civic actors in Illinois um you know no one would accuse them of being fronts for Democrats or Republicans or any other party um they they really are led by folks who are diverse and nonpartisan and really want to move things forward for the state um they fund us I I think particularly in the case of the cormi they fund us for the same reason they fund civic education um in high schools which is that they want the state to be a better State no matter what people believe politically all right Charles yeah I so we adopt all these wonderful changes and then Alec comes along and gets themselves a legislator and puts a piece of drafted but law in front of them what are you doing to stop that so I I'll be I'll be very clear um our organization is is nonpartisan we don't take a position on any issue other than these structural issues of government and so um we're not at all focused on what do we do to stop Alec or the co Brothers on the right or Tom sty and George Soros on the left from pushing any legislation on on any issue um our belief is that if you get the rules of the game right and you get the structures of government right that the government will be more responsive to what the people want um so I I we're not doing this to protect people from Alec many of our Coalition partners are and they're doing a lot of work that that is um nonpartisan in nature but more focused on Progressive issues many of our Coalition partners are doing nonpartisan work that's more focused on conservative issues so I don't want to paint us as something that that we're not we the reason we're able to do what we do and the reason we're actually able to make progress is that we're not specifically saying this is the solution to the pension crisis this is the solution to the education crisis these people are right and these people people are wrong our Focus really is about um creating a better democracy and once we have that better democracy then it's up to other folks to work to Advocate on one side of the other yes to just according to the most recent Illinois data from muon there was over 3,25 UFO sightings or reports in Illinois last year Charlie now we all know the info but this is my question got a question okay yes D what what do you say about third party uh do you have anything to do with third party initiatives so um so as as I was saying in response to the woman's question just about how to make it easier for minority parties or third parties to get involved um you know our our Focus really is on a government that is fair honest open and responsive to what citizens want and so if the structures of democracy are working well and the people of Illinois want a third party or a fourth party then if the system is working well it's more likely to happen it it may be you know there are many functional states where it's Republicans and Democrats or uh labor and Tory or labor and conservative I I think that our Focus really is about how do you make the structures of government work and I don't want I don't want to punt on on this one but it's it's just really not our focus our our work is really about making the system better um and it's up to others to advocate for their party or or their political yes Charles yeah you recommended uh the Civic Federation and I've been at public hearings where the Civic Federation they always speaking before I do and they recommended that senior citizens be made to pay Transit Fair the transit Fair gets increased and that the unions get busted and thrown out of public transit is this the kind of organization that I should take advice from so I I don't want to um just to be clear I don't want to recommend the policy proposals of the Civic Federation we we as an organization do not Advocate on specific policies pensions or education or anything else um I I do think that people on left right and Center no matter what their proposal or solution is agree that the Civic Federation has solid data in terms of how State finances function today so um again I I don't want to take a position on where they are whether you should trust them and what is to be done um I I do want to say that my belief is that the facts they have are accurate what would you agree that they're not one of the darkest or organizations in the state you're asking are they one of the darkest organizations yes if not thees and I'm going to get financial advice from them so so just to be clear your ticket is um you know as as is often said we're all entitled to our own opinions we're not entitled to our own facts and the number the numbers are there clear as day in terms of what the problem is what the solution is I think we can all reasonable people can disagree over um I don't I don't want to come out here and say trust this organization on how to do senior Transit fair or how to deal with labor unions um I do want to say in terms of the actual numbers um they're one of a very small number of organizations that has put the time in to take advantage of of the data that are out there and and present it in a simple way there's another one that's part of the um University of Illinois a a school of government and public affairs um that that has similar though um more detailed data and if if anyone's interested in that you can email me Ryan change.org and I'll send you the name the the senator Name Escapes Me Right Now theil questions we will have to move to our rebuttal rebuttal period so I feel like we heard some rebuttal let let's thank our speaker one more time Illinois how many have rebuttal remarks madey oh me yes I will give remarks want to go five or seven off five minutes or seven minutes Bram five up to seven minutes all right okay well Pro it's quite fair to uh Reb rebuts in fact uh the our Speaker gets a chance to reut rebuts uh at the end of uh the rebuttal period so all right um I remember my first impression of uh Chicago politics or at least it was a fairly early one I heard the late great uh Bernard Stone uh the alderman 50th Ward was the longest I think think serving Alder speaking at a reelection Forum 49 for and he was defending nepotism you said nepotism was a pretty good system because you you know uh the person that you're you're hiring and uh at least they they're they're going to be uh reliable because I know that they got their job of from you and you can trust them uh however somebody else uh if if they come through civil service you don't know them they might not like you and they might be sabotaging you and you don't want that so I think that there is some sense uh in in even in nepotism uh and uh I agreed with Mr Stone to the degree where where uh offices are elected uh uh there should be some uh leeway uh in in uh hiring uh people who might support you or might not support you uh and who are uh concerned and interested in the uh functioning of the office all right uh however civil service is generally the the answer to uh nepotism uh but that doesn't work all the time either uh of course civil services you you make up tests and some tests are are oriented towards certain people and uh not others uh who you can use just about any system elective or otherwise redistricting uh uh uh slates uh whatever uh suppose you elect your Congress people from across Illinois while they're not going to represent particular District so much as particular interests uh that uh get them elected and that might be uh quite extraneous from Illinois uh so uh the slates are drawn up by parties uh and uh that means that uh you may have multiple parties representing multiple of particular interests that doesn't need since it's impossible I mean to to as a voter know what is good for the library the sanitation district the Water Reclamation District uh the police district the uh all the different districts in your your baileywick uh it's yeah uh how does the voter get informed and uh uh Express their interest in a way that unless there is a system of every Bonafide candidate that is eligible candidate being able to directly inform every voter uh and the voter go through all the choices and questions before the uh candidate uh the voter is at a loss to Be an Effective uh voter on all questions one has to select what questions are most pertinent to you uh and that's generally uh uh those are boiled down to economic and social interests all right uh which is yeah Mary yeah I would like to all right it's not so much a you know all right all right right get up and start your formal remarks they got seven minutes and go okay it'll take less than uh seven minutes to be sure again as I said in my opening question I think it really comes down to our all the candidates let's take an office like mayor where Ram Manuel has been all over you know the airwaves and and where do you get information on the other candidates that are running it's zip that is really the Crux of the problem why could we devise a system whereby if what candidate a gets this much exposure we will give by virtue of the fact that the Airways really belong to the public give exposure to Canada B C or D so they have an equal chance in getting their message out and I think that's where we can begin is perhaps doing that and maybe get around that disaster citizens united you know decision that has so poisoned Politics on the national level can you explain what that means citizens united we don't know what that means it's it it's that horrible Supreme Court decision that equated money to free speech give all the money you want yeah all the money that you want so if so if candidate a gets $1 million cand b c and d get that same amount of money that might cut down on some of the nonsense you know out there so when we send a political contribution someplace it's usually to put some kind of AD in which half of it is lies anyway as the hell of a way to keep the public informed ahead all right go ahead I believe all right all right I believe that the electoral process in Illinois definitely needs an overhaul and that first priority should be to make the process more fair so that there are more voices um and more choices on the ballot um I want to give you um a couple of examples first of all um the election law itself is controlled obviously by the two parties which shall be name unnamed right now um everybody knows and so every time anybody makes uh anybody's allow out on the ballot or surprises them and gets on the ballot they simply change the law so that you can't do that anymore um it happened in 2006 when the greens surprised the Democrats and became an established party so they were then allowed to slate candidates across the state so even if they got all their lawyers out and I was one of the people that they challenged when I was trying to get on the ballot for State Rep they brought they brought their lawyers out and knocked me off the ballot even though I had plenty of signatures but I had hadn't the manpower to go out and gather all the affidavit to rehabilitate those signatures in especially in what a 48 hour period um to get 300 affidavits um uh signed by those voters saying that they had actually signed my petition all they did was they changed the law so that the next time around you can't just just be slated by your committeemen you have to go out and get those signatures again the same amount and then be challenged again over those signatures so all they do is they change the law every time um there's another voice on the ballot and so you have to stay five steps ahead at all times um the um in other states the the State Board of Elections is there to facilitate elections their mission is to help people get on the ballot in this state it is entirely different in this state they act as if they have nothing to do with elections you brought those papers in we have nothing to do with that I'm going to give you an example this week I've been challenged just to try and get on the school board um just try and get on the ballot for the school board in ciso Berwin area Okay um I've been challenged before and knocked off the ballot to try and run for school board before in the same area and uh there is a form that you have to submit called the statement of economic interests all your petitions can be fine your statement of candidacy everything notorized as it's supposed to be but if you um somehow put that that form in wrong which is provided by the State Board of Elections then they can knock you off the ballot for that okay I'm being challenged because I submitted what they call the state form rather than the county form the one that's supposed to go to the county rather than the state form although they they're almost identical um one says you have you um done business with a local government and the other one says have you done business in the state of Illinois okay it's a simple syllogism if you're doing business with the local government you're doing business in the state of Illinois I don't know got mayor cut off the microphone I guess so anyway so now they the the others that were are running also that are not connected with the city of Cicero those people are being challenged for Illinois and um third parties can get behind because basically it's just talking about this challenge system how how broken our election system is if there is such a problem with B access for any individual even if you're very organized even if you go out and get thousands and thousands of signatures you can still be thrown off the ballot in a very unfair process it and it is not reflective of the national Trend um we are one of the few states where it's very difficult to get on the ballot so I think that um uh this Federal lawsuit is something that hopefully everybody will know about in the state state of Illinois um next summer when it really comes um to court and um I'm hoping that uh it's something that actually we should have a forum about here so that you guys know about it thank you we have an open else there all right three more people we often talk about the ways that we can reform government about new systems in place that might work or not work I appreciate our speaker's work in what he does but I really believe that the only real way to make any change is to bring new blood into the system all right in in the federal government I according to a recent book on uh by Michael melom and George Freedman on uh why and that and why why them was us they I'm sorry and that was us in their last chapter they recommend a very good very simple way to change government and that is with the advocacy of third parties if you remember real maybe many of you remember the election when Clinton and Bush and we had another guy by the name H Ross pero running for president of the United States almost did it yes he almost did it and he did introduce both candidates to be a little bit more open and transparent about what they believed in for example in that classic debate parole was all anti-nafta Bush was all pro- NAFTA and Clinton was the conciliator in that debate we've also seen several reforms from previous third party candidacies amongst which from almost a century ago as Theodore Roosevelt Maul Mo Party eight hour days sick leave other labor reforms things like this you the Washington has been gridlocked under under a third under a two-party system for many many years and I think still the quickest way to ocate change at that Federal level would be with the introduction of a good plausible Third Party candidate and it is state of Illinois it may be the same thing and it Al has everything to do with ballot issues getting rid of the status quo anytime you have a little bit of competition that's fair and open you're going to get a much better result Y and sometimes in the F especially in the federal level where we have our entrenched congressmen a good shaking up from a good third party might be the way to really get these entrenched Poli politicians out of out of there right now the Republicans are so entrenched in their extremist positions the Democrats are established and entrenching their extremist positions that nothing gets done perhaps it may be time to bring a third- Party candidate or candidates in an established third party that might just shake things up I don't say they'll win but they will shake up the status quo enough that it'll really firmly I believe bring out the true the uh true motives of the established political parties once a third party candidate gets in and he shakes it up enough usually change happens pretty fast and pretty quick thank you I would agree with that part whether it's the Republican part party in the 1850s progressive movement in the turn of the century in the interest of full disclosure I should perhaps make it play Move the move the mic down in the interest of full disclosure there that sounds better I should perhaps make it plain that I am a lifelong Chicago and coook County Democrat if some of you have a problem with that that's just tough I agree with most with what our speaker said the legislature has been gridlocked for far too long and it's been run by what Mad Magazine used to call the usual gang of idiots alred Newman for president but having said that the following should be noted I do disagree with what you said about redistricting for years the Republicans had things their own way and all of a sudden the Democrats get in there and all of a sudden you hear this Pi is bleeding about how redistricting is bad or at least the way it's currently done is bad and that we should throw the whole thing out it kind of seems to me not necessarily so much from the people in this room but I've heard the same arguments made by Republicans that um we this the whole system is bad well it seems to be bad from their point of view only because the Democrats now are running the system and not the Republicans and I think that's pretty much what redistricting seems to boil down to it all depends on Whose Ox is gor um the other thing that I was a little concerned about when you said that you advocated ideas that would prohibit people from voting twice what's wrong with that uh uh suffice it to say that I am a long time supporter as I have said of Co of of Chicago and C County Democrats and double voting oh vote early one fool at V early and vote often right but having said that I agree with most of what our speaker said and he is to be commended for coming out here par in such a cold and uh for that I thank you all right all right how do we get going how about those proxy voters at Rose Hill those proxy voters at Rose Hill is this yours yeah all right let's thank our speaker again coming out on then he didn't re Frost the evening here and I got a lot of time here tonight he didn't rebut the rebut yeah well all right I like the scene in that movie where the guy is the incumbent candidate seeking reelection and he and he runs on a campaign of Reform reform we need reform that's Cy I just love that reform I always say that U my only exper recently in state politics was to go to the state fair and then I objected because the Department of Natural Resources had a shooting range for children and I wrote some letters for the local newspapers and I was informed by some of the gun people never to go back to spre field out of get out of no go south of 80 or something like this uh thank you very much for the handout here I find it singularly amazing that the state of Illinois is is imperfect in exactly 12 ways and can be corrected by exactly doing 12 things well I guess that's the way things turn out yeah just 12 things wrong and 12 correct let's see um the I I must confess that you know I'm I'm a Quinn Quinn guy my buddy was a Quinn man and uh uh he's given a lot of time and effort to the state of Illinois and if anything regarding the current elections I really don't know that much about this state things most of my stuff is at the federal level but I I really don't know how the state is going to be served by this carpet bagger he's actually a criminal he should be in jail the people Bel are going end up in trouble I don't I I don't know what I mean Quinn goes back along way the Constitutional Convention I was in college was working with them but uh no I I I can't I can't go along with that um this thing about getting on the bell and Rita was talking about um yeah the system is rigged by the established parties against really they're writing the rules um some people don't know this the only reason Barack Obama was able to succeed and get on the ballot and get started on this and I'm absolutely totally certainely certain about this because I know the circumstances you talk about somebody who knows the rules it was a it was an elderly couple senior members of the independ voters of Illinois who liked him and they thought he was a nice young man and Lois is a friend of mine she was a southsider and they steered him through the oral process they really did and she knew it better than anybody in IV her and her husband knew these rules like this you were talking about they were the absolute experts that we all want to CU they spent decades out it and they like the as a matter of fact they ended up getting a little upset with him because he got made friends with our daily and actually ended end up having some words with him but they took him under their wing and steered him through the electoral process um towards that let's see but um you know this thing about the voters I don't understand these M motor voters it used to be and this guy was talking about it it used to go around that you had to go around and we used to verify how many people liveed in a building how many were registered voters things like that it it's not defe people didn't vote but man we we made certain everybody was registered and I don't know what happened but no I used to go out on evenings like this and we had the list and the addresses and in the dark trying to see who was there and make certain ringing doorbells are the new tenants and things like that but that was part of the political process was to go out and register those people and votes like that that was part of the how a party organized and did accomplish this thing was to get the voters in that fashion uh we the other thing he spoke here earlier and I just got an email this week matter of fact it's really kind of scary uh Mark Lis spoke here uh and he's a veteran in the election process in city government and even he's having difficulty uh getting on the ballot he sent an email out there that didn't look positive and yes it's amazing that even people who are seasoned Veterans of the entire process can effectively be kept off the ballot I I just find that amazing he's he's spent years at this they for about early and off you know and there mobile voters I I'm not too certain you know I mean um yes we we don't want to deny anybody one the right of franchise but then again I do think there has to be some hardore responsibility here I don't I don't know what the honorous part of registering to vote is uh and then again that was the responsibility of the political parties to see to it that all voters within a particular jurisdiction were in fact registered in current voters and things of that nature so there was there was a somebody there to system I don't think the mobile thing takes care of that as a matter of fact I'm I'm not even certain I'm not up on this issue but um I don't know if it's necessarily thing last of all uh regarding your your close affiliations with the Civic Federation I already articulated my views regarding them um the Civic Federation and I have been spiring their representatives for a number of years um the last time encountered to representative of them I suggested that the guy cross the picket line because it would make him feel better some indication where they are he thanks a lot we appreciate your coming out tonight and go up the green BS some Greenies any more speakers any more speakers we have an open mic if there's no more speakers we'll have our last guy re last is our speaker go ahead okay well well thanks again for having me out and I I just really appreciate that you're engaging with the the material on these issues and they're just so important um I really wanted to put a fin point on two things or three the first is is that I agree with you that the media generally isn't covering the other candidates the independent-minded candidates the third party candidates just because uh someone has a low chance of winning doesn't mean they have no chance of winning particularly in the Merl campaign and do think the Press has just not done a good job of paying attention in this current municipal election to the the folks who are um you know particularly in the maral campaign to the folks who currently aren't mayor um it's something that that we as readers need to ask them to do um and if they're not then we need to use the power of the blog sphere and social media and everything else and email just to let our friends know about what's going on um on the issue of ballot access I I agree I think it's so extraordinarily important um I I would again as you can probably tell from hearing me earlier I'm not a huge advocate for third parties what I am an advocate for more broadly is for independent-minded thinking and whether someone is a republican a Democrat or from Green libertarian whatever they are I just think it's really important that we make it easier for people who are smart folks well qualified or frankly unqualified but passionate to be able to get on the ballot if they do what it is legally necessary to do to get on there the fact that every day every election people are knocked off for no other reason than they're not sticking with the party line is just a real problem in the state and I think that um a big issue is the Illinois State Board of Elections um I quietly the torch was passed and we do have a new executive director of ISB now um for better or worse he was the former general counsel under the former regime but he seems like an intelligent person it is possible that things will change um the person who had run it had been in the ISB for something like 28 or 29 years so hopefully things will get better and it's up to us to push for changes again if there's there's one theme that I want to leave you with tonight it's there's a lot of stuff that's boring but important but just because it's boring doesn't mean it isn't very important and we need to just Elevate these issues and then on the redistricting issue I I do think you're right that a lot of Republicans were fine with redistricting here in Illinois during the um early '90s when they drew the maps a lot of Democrats weren't happy with it there are a lot of Democrats who are unhappy with maps in North Carolina or Mississippi or Texas who might have been happy before I think those of us who regardless of party just think that citizens deserve to have a right to vote for people that represent them that the politicians should not be choosing the voters that we should be choosing our Representatives want to change the redistrict system whether it's in Illinois or any other state and and I agree with you there's a lot of political stuff here but just because there's politics doesn't mean there isn't a right thing to do for all of us no matter what our political beliefs are so I just wanted to say thank you again it's really fun to come out here and debate with folks and hear what you have to say so thanks again I just need is statistics that I heard from the U 2014 uh midterm elections is that uh the Democrats receive 5 million more votes than than Republicans yet Republicans control the House of Representatives yeah that just came out yeah they scale more votes by quite a lot 20 million ain't that all yeah
Tim Bolger
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2015-01-21
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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16,971
88,447
6nxuVTs1EAQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nxuVTs1EAQ
My Heirloom Bags | TAG Video | AKBBags #heirloombags
do you have bag accessory heirlooms that you want to pass down to your family members that you think that they will love or may not love but you still want to pass them down anyway I have some heirlooms that I want to talk about that I hope my daughter wants we shall see stay tuned [Music] hi my name is Andrea welcome to my channel and thanks for joining me in the Babe cave and today is a actual video idea of my husband a so he is the creation behind this video he had came up with the idea I'm a dog mom and and a kid Mom this is Daisy she's not really in the video so yeah I'm wearing my mama bear shirt and she probably got stuff all over it but today's video is do you have any handbags or accessories that you want to pass down and just be mindful that my daughter may not want any of these she may have a different Style by the time she's older and has my bags that I want to give her so these are just ones that I want to give her and maybe she'll keep one or two who knows Trends come and go bag colors combos big small little they all change from year to year but what I do know is bag Trends tend to come back so I hope that maybe these access accessories and bags come back when I'm dead and gone and not using them anymore that she might want to use them or sell them for the re the new edition maybe I don't know so these this is a a tag video I want to tag a bunch of people and I will put you down below basically what bags or accessories that you consider heirlooms for the next generation for your kids for your whoever whoever's going to get your purse collection what do you what are you going to pass on to them so I tag a bunch of people so check down below and again my daughter is just now starting to get into purses because she has a cell phone and we told her you know if you take your cell cell phone anywhere it has to be in your purse so hopefully she'll start the love of handbags like I do but you never know what a kid's going to do but these are what I'm going to pass down once I'm dead and gone of course that she will get these and it's up to her what she does with them but I feel like these have value and will have value when I'm gone for her so let's just start off with listen I have to give her my Louis Vuitton Never full you know I'm going to try to give her different size bags in case you know the trend come and go you know of big and small and totes and top handles and cross bodies but this one you know the value of these by the time I'm gone it could be way higher than she'd ever want to pay cuz not everyone wants to pay thousands of dollars on Louis Vuitton so right now I'm going to carry them and enjoy them because well I'm a collector but yeah she will get my Never full mm for sure and these are all bags when I was younger that I always wanted when and I didn't have the money so I am of course going to pass down the the mirami the white with the multicolor it's not in pristine condition by any means but she can throw this around put it on her shoulder it's got a nice comfortable shoulder strap drawring lots of room inside it's stuffed with air paper here's the bottom and this is the uh petite no way in the multi color and I I honestly think she will keep the the multicolor ones cuz she likes a lot of colors like I do but I just feel like Louis Vuitton comes out with colorful you know things like this all the time but this is to me this is my what I wanted back in 2007 and8 so I want to pass it down to her and you know I'm going to put this one in there I I hope she would keep this one but I'm okay I'm either either she keeps it or sells it you know I'm I'm not around to enjoy him so she can do whatever she wants with them but this is the black Speedy 30 my unicorn from back in the day that I always wanted I wanted the white I wanted a white multicolor and I wanted a black multicolor so I have it so I can enjoy him right now but this is one that I will definitely pass down another uh let's go with an SLG is my Louis Vuitton mini poet and it's the Vivian in uh Italy on a gondola with the blue interior I won't show it I show this all the time these are handy little accessories for a bag but I feel like one I know she likes blue a lot and the interior's blue so I really think that she will love this for Years After I'm Gone So and sometimes these these prints right here get a little scratch but I've used this a lot and I've had zero issue with the the print on it so this is one that she will get to go along with my black multicolor Speedy 30 I had the matching Sarah wallet again it's a big full size who says fulls size wallets won't come back around again because if you're going to carry a bigger bag you want a bigger wallet right typically so this will be hers has the hot pink interior all the card slots all the colors definitely handing this down to her I'm handing them all down but these are ones that I hope she at least keeps one or two right and this one is the toilet tree 26 they redid these this is the old version has no you know little pouch or chain this is just a team teu chain I ordered this is uh to me one of those things that I got for a really good deal at the time if she doesn't want it she could probably get double the money back you know back for this if she wanted to sell it but she could put her makeup in it whatever this is the toiletry 26 pouch another one that I know so many people people that love the poet ssis and I need to use it more myself I do not like the tiny strap that comes with it I add a gold chain to it or I also have a new uh vetta strap that I put on it to make it crossbody but this one I feel like if she's wanting to grab and go something this this is the perfect little pouch well it's it's not a pouch it's a purse poet esis but I feel like this is a a good little bag that she'd probably treasure the canvas is in pristine Condition it's just patina a lot you know from but I you know this is a fashion file purchase I believe so who knows how much this would be worth so I feel like she'd probably keep this one um and maybe pass it down to her kids you never know another pouch of course the mini poet in d a bean I looked on the website so many times to get this purchase right here every time I looked on it it was sold out sold out sold out and I got this right before another one of their price hikes so now these are really ridiculous prices but you can still get these for decent on the secondhand Market but my I actually bought this brand new online it popped up for the $340 or whatever it was so I got a new piece so I feel like I wanted some something new from Louis Vuitton so this is my new piece here's the little tag inside you know you've all seen the the D Bean but I was so excited when I got this and hopefully she watches this video cuz I worked looked so long for this to pop up online cuz there's no store near me and it popped up and I added to cart so fast so this is I hope one that she'll Cherish cuz it was new and it's only been mine same thing with this toiletry pouch I got lucky online and I bought it brand new so I hope that you know you can tell I bought it brand new by the the tab here so this is one I hope she she knows that I'm the only one that has purchased or only one that has used these two right here the rest I bought used which there's nothing wrong with uh I'm going to throw in a coach because I can and I think that she'll love this one day it's the coach Cassie the full size they need to bring this back the full size is where it's at I'm sorry I know people disagree I think they need to bring back the coach Cassie full size it is perfect to carry crossbody love it so I definitely hope she will keep the pink one she can get rid of the black one whatever but this pink one I feel like is it's going to be hers and she'll love this one so one more and this is one that I hope that she keeps but again Styles change I have a different style than her she's going to be unique to her what she likes so she may sell it but you know I I hope that she keeps my tavoli since her dad my husband got it for me and it's basically like new condition I'm not the only owner of it I bought it off fashion file but there is sentimental value here so she may or may not keep it but I consider this an heirloom and I won't get rid of it either so yeah I want to see your heirloom bags or accessories let's you know if you want to throw in some jewelry if you have some fine jewelry you know from any of these Brands like Gucci Lou Vuitton throw them in um but I just went with my Handbags and accessories uh for this tag video and thanks to my husband yes he is that sweet and he does comment on my videos and I love it but anyway uh thank you for watching and joining on this tag let's keep it going I want to see the bags that you'll pass on and your reasons why you know you want to pass it on you know like I said she may get rid of all of these and I won't care I won't be here it won't matter to me but I would like her to hopefully cherish a couple of them maybe that reminds her of me and maybe she'll come back on this YouTube channel and check out this video that I did and for all these bags that I want her to have so maybe she'll come back to this so it's a little memory that I have capsulated also for her on YouTube so anyway thank you again for watching again I will tag some below so do it it's a good one don't forget to hit the like subscribe comment down below and even if you're not a content creator tell me some bags that you want to pass on to your loved ones or whoever you've got that you want to pass something on to your heirlooms and uh thank you for watching and I'll talk to you soon bye
AKBBags
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2024-01-25
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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2,042
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fqpzcxPKzIM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqpzcxPKzIM
Western GeoBuild Low Carbon Devon Case Study
foreign [Music] ERS of green Walls we understand construction materials are very high in their carbon usage I've been looking to try and reduce our carbon footprint and change the materials that we can use in order to be able to benefit the environment and we believe that green walls are a good way of doing that today we've got Tom and Jess from Plymouth University Tom is a research fellow who's got some funding from low carbon Devon we've been taking some photosynthesis sufficiency readings and we're looking really at testing the different types of soils to try and improve the soil moisture conditions for for plant performance well we actually kind of let them grow if you're okay with letting them go that would be really good yeah whatever's in the best interest of sites yeah we want to make sure that the benefits of a green wall are maximized whether that's its insulation qualities or being able to improve biodiversity to the area a little beef just in the flower having those pollinators in urban areas is going to be really really important particularly you know where you don't have the greenery I mean that's why I think it's a bit of a no-brainer isn't it having these groomers we're in a climate emergency at the moment and we need to change the way that we operate both in society but also our business it's great isn't it yeah nice to see it's really really great to work so my Mac he's obviously got a passion for what he does and he's ambitious for making his business a success in environmentally sound low carbon way let you guys do your work it's actually relaxing collecting data yeah
Sustainable Earth Institute
UC8KJxDsi-DQwGayReSZqZ_g
2023-02-09
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
290
1,614
JT3Xb8_yoQE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JT3Xb8_yoQE
Sure Cuts A Lot - How to turn a jpg / png to a SVG
hi my lovelies i hope you're all well so today we are going to do another sure cuts a lot tutorial and we're actually going to be taking a jpeg or a png image and using shortcuts a lot to turn it into a multi-layered svg really nice and easy to do this now you are going to have to think about the images that you're going to work with if they are quite solid in the colors then it's going to be nice and easy if there's a lot of color shading it's a little bit more involved and it doesn't matter whether that sure cuts a lot or any other third-party program you'll get a lot easier results with solid colors than something that's got a lot of shaded colors it's just they take a little bit more time to do but your cuts a lot certainly does make it a lot easier now as we know with design space if we're working with a jpeg we come in and we have to remove the background if it's a png the background is already removed but if we wanted an image like this we would tend to just do it as a print and cut we can do it as individual layers but it's very involved it doesn't always work again it depends if there's lots of shading and it can take a while to bring in all those layers individually so we tend to just keep them as print and cut but sure cuts a lot will allow us to easily change this from a png or a jpeg into an svg and it's the same process for both be a jpeg or a png it's exactly the same process so i'm on creative fabrica and i love these llamas but they only come as a png so i'm going to download it i can then open it up and i'm going to choose the llama file and then all i'm going to do is select one hold my shift key down and use my arrows on my keyboard to select them all and i'm just going to move them across to my pictures so that they're easy for me to find so once i've done that i can come into shortcuts a lot and i'm going to use the trace feature so trace is up here next to our library so i'm just going to select trace and i can choose my image so i'm going to select this one here and open the only thing we really need to do there's two things we need to do if we come to image settings you'll see there's mode if we click that drop down menu we've got monochrome color layers and single color you want to make sure that single color is selected the other thing is that down at the bottom here it says prompt to continue tracing we want to make sure that that is ticked the reason being is that if we don't do that every time we do a layer this will close down and the layer will come in to our screen we then have to go back to trace choose the image again make sure that that's selected and then do the next layer because of the way some of these are created they can either come in straight on the canvas which makes it nice and easy or if they're really big they'll come in and you have to then resize each layer and it can be a little bit tricky to then line them all up doing it this way means that they'll come in all at the same time so if they are huge you can reduce the whole image down even though it's separate layers it will all come in together so you can reduce it down all at once rather than having to try and puzzle it together so make sure that prompt to continue tracing is selected i'm going to double click on this color block and it will then come over to here and you'll see when i come over my llama i can then choose the colors to select so i'm just going to select all of those bits first and they'll highlight green and then i'm going to go okay and it'll come up because this is selected here it will come up and say would you like to continue tracing this image to add more layers yes so now i'm going to select that box again by double clicking it and it will come over here and now i can choose the next color i want to do so let's do the body so the body is now going to turn green okay and yes double click this and now i can choose the next thing okay yes and double click that and that's what we're just going to keep doing so i'm going to do the ears and now i'm going to do the feet make sure every time you want to change the color that you double click this box i'm going to choose the other feet because they're slightly different shades again i'm going to double click that box let's do his little nose area and this should be the last one so when we get to the last one would you like to continue tracing we're going to say no oh look at that that's so cute and if you do miss a part all you're going to do is go back into trace choose that image again open and then we can double click that we've got a little bit of white that i seem to have missed there and i can select okay and i'm gonna say no because i want to do this a layer at a time and there you go it's filled it in there but you want to make sure that you don't move this until you've got all your layers because if it comes over here you want to get all the layers done and then size it down and move it across so i'm just going to select all those layers by holding down my shift key and i'm also going to hold down my shift key so that i can reduce the size and i'm just going to make sure that it's within the parameters of this mat i'm then going to go file export i'll give it a name so let's call it llama svg and save and we want to make sure it's design space compatible okay i can then open up design space go to upload upload image browse and it should automatically have saved in your photos we can select llama svg we can give it a name and tag it and save select it and insert image we can size it up and then i'm going to ungroup and you may find that you've got two lots you need to ungroup and then what i'm going to do is actually start looking at my layers so i can see because i know that i bought the two eyes in separately and the nose and the mouth separately and i actually want them to be all one cut so if i come to my layers panel i can select the first eye and i'm going to hold down my shift key and then using my layers panel i'm going to select the other eye the mouth and the nose and then i'm going to weld those together you could attach them and then you can of course unattach if you weld and you save you can't then unweld but i am going to weld them because i'll always keep them the same color and then i'm actually going to change the color to black just so i know that i would cut it out in a black vinyl the same with the hooves they're two separate because they're two slightly different colors so i'm going to select the first lot and hold down my shift key and then the second lot and then i'm going to i'll probably just attach those because i do want them to have separate cuts if i weld them the back one here is going to become one complete cut and actually i do want that line going through it so i'm just going to attach those because i've attached them they'll now be the same color the same with the two outline of the body pieces here i had to do those two separately but they are the same so i'm just going to select one hold down my shift key and select the other and then i'm just going to i'm just going to weld those and then the rest of it because i did it in colors the rest of them are exactly as i want them to be so i can then go to make it and i could cut this out in vinyl iron on if i wanted to do it in cardstock i can nice and easy to do i'm going to show you again using a different file so again we're going to come to trace and choose image and i'm just using again a png that i've got from creative fabrica let's go with this one because that is pretty cute we've made sure that single color is selected and again you can use the drop down menu just to select it and we're making sure that the prompt to continue tracing is selected i can then double click that color and let's start with let's do the outline color first and again it will go green okay and yes we want to continue adding more layers double-click that color block and this time let's select the body color okay yes double click let's do the ear color okay yes double click that color block and let's do the eyes yep double click let's do the nose and mouth oh they're separate so we will need to weld those together but that's fine yeah more layers double click again and we can select the mouth okay yep continue tracing double click let's do the nose area yep double click let's do the outside of the mask okay and then last one is the green pom-poms okay and then no we don't need any more layers there we go how amazing is that i just think it's it's fantastic it is a lot easier if you're working with solid colors rather than a lot of shading but it's just about taking your time but i absolutely love this so i'm just going to make sure that that is within the realms and it is but i can obviously move it if i want to and i can then go file export it wants to save it as an svg so let's call it llama head and save make sure that design space compatible is ticked okay we can open up design space go to upload upload image browse give it a name and a tag and save select it and insert to canvas we can then resize it so let's just make that a bit smaller and if we look at the layers we know that the mouth and the nose and the eyes we did as separate layers so we're just going to ungroup this and then we're going to use our layers panel to find the nose hold down our shift key and we can add the eyes and the nose bit and the collar and then we can either weld or attach them let's just attach them there we go nice and easy to do and we can then go to make it and we could cut that out in vinyl iron on cardstock whatever you want to cut it out in i absolutely love that you can do this so easily in shortcuts a lot it's fantastic and you can do that with jpeg or png it's the same method please do give the video a thumbs up make sure you're subscribed to the channel and you hit that notification bell as always thank you so much for joining me if you've got any questions please do leave them below and i'll see you all again soon bye
Crifty Crafty
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2021-02-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
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PgJ965_YDu8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PgJ965_YDu8
(a) Find current through each resistance. (b) Find current flowing in branch `AB`
upon resistance to 60 volt upon resistance six so this is 10 amperes similarly current in my tahoe 3 ohm to 20 amperes similarly current in 60 ohm 60 on the current so 60 upon 60 60 volt [Music] upon the resistance to potential nicola many four volts to four upon resistance five plus ten plus five you need twenty so four upon twenty is equal to one upon five amperes to one upon five ampere current foreign plus one upon eight plus one upon sixteen plus one upon sixty so yeah v x y upon resistance n is 16 so four upon 16 yarning one upon four ampere say i one v i naught v or v x y v so this is our complete solution super
Doubtnut
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2020-08-16
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
128
626
xVUsbkam9h4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVUsbkam9h4
Land of the Broads | Ernest Richard Suffling | Travel & Geography | Book | English | 5/7
chapter 13 of the land of the Broads by Ernest our suffering this LibriVox recording is in the public domain the broad district in spring March April and May the earth in robes of Verger now is clad and nature smiling makes the whole world glad some people hold that spring is the best time in which to visit the Broads but I must for various reasons take exception to this although it certainly has its advantages it is a gloriously exhilarating sensation to find oneself on a fine spring morning after a long winter in town careening along before a gentle breeze and upon a fair tide amid the early loveliness of bursting bud and blossom but at the same time the spring months are very treacherous in the way of weather rain is more likely to fall now than in these succeeding months and the days are shorter and the mornings and evenings often very cold and raw many of the fish are out of condition and accordingly very poor in appearance flavor and sport on the other hand the weeds and the rivers and broads which have withered and died down have not yet had time to grow again so that there is more freedom for the anglers tackle then later on during mid spring some of the Primrose banks are worth going miles to see presenting an almost unbroken front of beautiful sulphur colored blossoms some of the fenman might do quite a stroke of business in these flowers with the London markets especially on the anniversary of Lord Beaconsfield steth but these men know nothing of smart business dealings and appear quite happy in their life of simplicity we will not say ignorance and retirement let us inquire more closely into the manners and customs of these people Lord Macaulay when asked to give an account of the manners and customs of the New Zealanders did it in an extremely concise fashion thus manners none customs nasty this cannot be said of the fenman for although at least a century behind the present energetic age in business matters they will be found very civil and obliging if illiterate and unsophisticated the Fen man is shown with his tousled hair and unkempt for he is in his goal address ready for a water frolic as they call a regatta on the Broads and a very different object with his smart hat and double-breasted long-sleeved weskit to what he appears if you could see him on one of his workdays then early in the morning he is up with the Sun and away through the long dank grass covered with its jury burden regardless of rheumatism or IQ if foggy a muffler is wound round the lower part of his face and his hat-brim turned down or round so that only the tip of his nose and his eyes are seen very likely if he has far to go his legs will be cased in leggings of hay bands or twisted sedge to keep off the wet are his spirits damp like the weather not they for he knows that in a short time the Sun will burst through and disperse the fog the dew drops will glitter like diamonds in the Sun the Lark will and Carol far far above his head the cattle will rise from their damp couch and low in the sunshine and he himself will whistle at his work with a serenely car mind with nothing but his present labor to think about or care for the fen man has little regard for the future the present is all to him has he not a snug cabin a nearly new eel net two or three suits of clothes good health and an equally good appetite what more can a man wish for nothing he is happy when we know their mode of life we cease to wonder at their simplicity and their plotting ways we will go to yonder eel set and have a chat with its owner as to his mode of life his home is simply a large boat with a rough cabin in it which is furnished with a bed a little table a wooden seat or box a piece of broken lookingglass and a locker containing some dilapidated crockery the boat has been drawn up onto the bank and is probably so old that she would not float if she were placed in the water his nets are hung to dry upon a row of stakes driven into the ground the pitcher is completed by a rustic pooling of wood which together with weed and rushes encloses the little plots planted with cabbages and potatoes surrounding his dwelling here he lives the solitary life of an Alexander Selkirk paying no rent or taxes and owning no landlord for the little plot a few yards square has become his by right of possession for did not his father and grandfather and great-grandfather live here before him without hindrance and why should not he the landlord upon the edge of his property he is located does not mind his being there at all for our fenman always has an eye to the grazing cattle can always be relied on for a helping hand and is generally employed by the farmer during hazel and harvest during late winter and spring when the weather is suitable the fenman are busy cutting and carrying sedge and read the latter is cut from the boat tied in convenient size sheaves and then taken to a meadow and put in shocks just as is done with weeds it is here allowed to stand and dry for some time and is afterwards stacked to required for thatching purposes in the summer some of these men are experts in the capture of wild fowl which has sent to Norwich markets and sold at a fair profit while dark Mallard teal widgeon wild goose water hen coot plover heron grebe and ruff all fall to the gun and decoy of these men while another at toys profitable branch of their calling his netting larks at other times they are busy among the fish especially during spring while speaking of the fenman we will for a short space disregard the season of spring and see how they exist through the whole year June asurs in the hazel or hay harvest when our fenman lay aside their nets and handle the scythe cutting meadow grass for the winter food of cattle and marsh grass or fodder for littering them down in the winter for this service they receive pay either by the de acre or load according to pre-arranged agreement now comes a pause till the corn is ripe when if our friend is lucky enough to secure a harvest he earns from six pounds to seven pounds in from three to five weeks according to the weather this is his best stroke of business during the year and indeed this is the only time at which he indulges in what he terms butchers meat during the other 11 months beef or mutton rarely tickles his palate pork and fish being the usual food the harvest finished September is here and this being the best running month for ales a fen man is busy with his nets Diane Knight mending and fishing his spare time is now taken up with gathering mushrooms which however fetch but little here where they are so plentiful still as he says they aren't to be had for the gavurin and half a crown a bushel is not to be sneezed at neither is it but what back-breaking work it is to be sure turfs or hovers as they are called are cut at any time just to fill up a few hours when there is nothing else on hand the hovers after being stacked up to dry in large mounds are then ready for sale in the accompanying illustration we have a set of implements used by the fen man in his many branch calling there is his marking out spied and his long cutter for digging down the whole length of a hover about two foot then we have his curiously set size for sedge and gladdened cutting his red hook or sickle his hooked staff for dragging in stray reeds so that he can reach to cut them and lastly his thick fingerless leather gloves called an axe these are a necessary protection against the sword like boulders and other broad-leaved grasses which become very brittle and will cut like a knife then comes the fall of the year when sedge and Reed cutting commenced again and so year after year the same round of dull duties goes on offend man being quite indifferent to the things of the world beyond his boundary of life the river and adjoining fens it is a strange life no doubt and when talking to one of these real natives it is very difficult for a town man to find a theme of conversation which will even be understood much less appreciated it has been calculated that the English language contains from 40,000 to 50,000 words and out of this vast number only from 800 to 1000 are used by the fen man to express all his wants and engage in conversation with his brethren it may be noted that of this number many are obsolete words that is obsolete to the towns man and many of them although used in polite life have quite a different signification to what they originally had it is clear then that politics the sciences and fine art are beyond him and altogether incomprehensible so that a conversation on anything of the kind would be to him Greek still as a chat with a native will be found interesting and instructive I will tell you how to approach one and draw him out tobacco is the key then talk to him a fish reeds and boats and you will soon get him to tell you all kinds of River and broad yarns in his own peculiar dialect poor fellows they often have a hard time of it in the winter when everything is snow clad and ice bound and it is a hard matter to keep the wolf from the door sometimes during hard Frost's they will lie in wait for a whole morning amid the snow for the chance of a shot at a wild fowl for which they will get perhaps six pence or a pants returning to their icebound homes with their shaggy beards and unkempt hair tossing in the wind like old norse kings awakened after a Rip Van Winkle sleep of a thousand years but we have arrived at winter before completing spring so we will put back our clock of the seasons and see what more we can say of the latter the pike Fisher's best time is in the early spring on open days with not too much wind fishing either from a boat or the banks sitting in a boat is certainly cramping and cold work at this time of the year and requires two persons one to row quietly and slowly while his companion makes his cars the bank Fisher can keep himself warm with a good thick overcoat and the exercise of walking along the boggy ground knee boots are an absolute necessity or wet feet will be the result do not on any account miss seeing the gulls and their young during light spring it is a most curious sight to see the young ones in their downy coats looking much like puff balls before they arrive at the estate of feathered 'm the number of cuckoos here is surprising and as everything is so quiet their notes are to be heard for a great distance they make their appearance in April and mark their and by turning out the eggs from a hedge sparrows or other bird's nest and depositing their own in it having done this they contentedly go about their business of crying cuckoo leaving the eggs to be hatched by the unsuspecting foster mother who does not find out her mistake till the young ones are larger than herself I am afraid the school urchins are sad Raiders during the spring in the way of egg stealing for they appear to take all they come across from that of the tiny Tom tete to that of the lordly Heron the district is thoroughly searched for rare birds eggs by naturalist from various parts of England who not only take eggs and nests but the very branches they are built upon this exemplifies the title to Shakespeare's play loves labour lost for the contemplative man or one who likes to be like Robinson Crusoe monarch of all he surveys spring will be the most suitable time to visit the Broads as the sportive tourist is not yet about and the fish and fowl after a long winters rest are not so shy as they will be later on end of chapter 13 chapter 14 of the land of the Broads by Ernest our suppling this LibriVox recording is in the public domain the broad district in summer June July and August summer comes with cheer and gladness every heart is gay and free nothing speaks of care or sadness everywhere is mirth and glee so says the poet and so say we now is truly the time of enjoyment everything is at its best flowers fruit fishing and weather all combined to make this the most delightful quarter of the year in which to visit the Broads long and bright days so suitable for camping out and short and warm nights which present only a minimum risk to delicate persons of taking a chill are now here and the opportunity of a most enchanting holiday for those fond of the water should not be lost the wildflowers in some of the reaches of the Bureau between Horning and Roxon and even as far as I am are a sight to be remembered some of the banks are a veritable blaze of color and although all the colors of the rainbow and many more are represented they have a most harmonious effect a friend of mine before leaving home provided herself with two or three old books and during the trip gathered with great patience examples of all the leaves and flowers she came across these she most industriously placed in albums and formed in pretty groups on cards during the evenings of the following winter it was wonderful what pretty results were obtained by a little patience and skill in arranging these specimens this is a hint for ladies who wish to know how to fill up their spare time water lilies may be had in any quantity both yellow and white and are to be found in greatest luxuriant on some of the smaller Broads and dikes such as Stalin Calthorpe womack etc do not allow these beautiful plants to be wanton li destroyed by any members of your own or any other party these lovely flowers are quite a distinctive feature of the Broads and although there is no harm in gathering a few of them there is no occasion to pull them up by their long tuberous roots and then fling them away to decay as some seem to imagine leave them for others to see and enjoy fruit may be obtained in abundance at most of the villages at a very trifling cost and makes a very nice addition to the regulation regime should you be near rolls be in July take a stroll through the village and notice the acres of raspberries growing there under careful cultivation and do not fail to taste them for they are accounted the finest obtainable in England both the size and flavor another hint to the ladies the carriage of a bushel of this luscious fruit is very trifling and for a small outlay you may send a large hamper up to town what are not immediately eaten may be turned into delicious homemade jam for the small fry during the winter during this season fishing is at its height especially during August and late in the evening you may see the enthusiast with his float hardly discernible straining his eyes and still angling to get just one more and then we'll pack up fish frequently bite quite eagerly as the Sun is sinking and the gloaming coming on so that the angler gets quite excited and naturally wishes for more daylight but as this wish cannot be gratified some of the more knowing ones have recourse to artful little aids to angling in the shape of forest it floats or floats that have received a coating of belma's luminous paint or some other patent telltale very expert disciples of the craft are however independent of any of these darkness defying floats for they have by experience become so keen to the sense of touch that they can fish without a float at all the morning swim should not be omitted and may be indulged in early before the ladies are stirring take the jolly-boat or dingey and pull to a secluded spot where you may indulge in a delightful bathe and swim to your heart's content and bodies welfare at sunrise there is frequently a thick white mist hanging over both the water and land and as I do not think this damp atmosphere calculated to do any good to the uninsured it will be advisable to allow the Sun half an hour to dispel the vapor when a bath may be enjoyed with greater safety oh yes it is an old joke this vapour bath and I was near repeating it those who cannot swim should be careful where they go in for they will find the water very deep in some places it should also be borne in mind that the water is always during summer much warmer in the Broads then in the rivers and that the shallow of the broad the warmer will the water be there need be no fear of tides or currents except within a radius of say seven or eight miles of Yarmouth towards which place without exception all the rivers tend a better opportunity than this for learning to sail a boat cannot be had so the amateur yachtsman should embrace it and if he commenced with a small boat with a single working log sail he will soon become initiated into the mysteries of luffing tacking making a board going about etc if the nautical aspirin happened to be alone Hickling broad is about the best place for a first attempt for should an upset take place he can from almost any part Waukesha as this broad is very shallow or he may write the boat climb into her bail her out and start again it is advisable for many and obvious reasons to have someone in the boat who understands the business and can instruct others I would give one caution to be observed when sailing never under any circumstances make the sheet vast for one of the sudden puffs of wind which occur frequently here on even a calm day will overturn the boat before you have time to cast off the turns with which you have fastened it the angler will find July about the best month for angling in these waters as by this time the fish have recovered from spawning and are again in good condition from four to eight o'clock in the morning and after 6 p.m. to dark are the times to make a bag and the middle of the day may be devoted to sailing visiting the local sites and the various amusements which present themselves during early spring after Bali and late wheat sowing you will notice as your boat glides by the arable land a boy in charge of several fields to scare the birds your ears will also be assailed by his clapper and song first he makes a loud rattling noise with his wooden clapper and then commences his war song which always ends in true Indian fashion with a terrific war whoop here is the Norfolk bird Boys song cadiz and crows take care of your toes for here come the clappers - not yet down backwards so hello color the clappers are constructed of three pieces of half-inch board of oblong shape the center one being elongated to former handle the two side pieces are fastened to this by a string running through two holes in each board near the bottom the wood is strung together loosely so as to produce a loud rattling sound when shaken by the bird scarer another contrivance used for scaring birds from newly sown or standing corn is the buzzer this is a flat piece of deal not more than a quarter of an inch in thickness about two inches wide and eight inches or nine inches long the edge of this piece of wood is not deeply all the way round and sometimes square holes are made through the body of the wood to produce more noise a hole is then drilled at one end through which a string as fastened when the buzzer is finished to use the instrument it is only necessary to whirl it round at arm's length as quickly as possible the result being a buzzing sound like the highly accentuated drone of a bumble bee cricketers should make inquiries of the village ins for news of any cricket matches in the vicinity the games are stubbornly fought and great enthusiasm is thrown into the inter village contests they are not above receiving aid from visitors if they are good players end of chapter 14 chapter fifteen of the land of the Broads by Ernest are suffering this LibriVox recording is in the public domain the broad district in autumn September October and November come malai Walton with thy morning mist by Laden orchards and nine Eve sunkissed by days now shared a ruddy glow around and with a leafy carpet strew the ground September in East Anglia is frequently one of the most pleasant months of the whole year the weather is generally warm without the sultry nurse of July and August and the evenings are generally gloriously calm with brilliant sunsets the one drawback is that the days are not long enough as by the middle of the month night draws its dark vile air seven o'clock has chimed this is the month par excellence for eels and as night lines are allowed providing they are not armed with more than one hook some good halls may now be made by those who have patience to bite and lay a couple of dozen of these lines the eels are principally brought up by one Yarmouth firm who at intervals send boats to the various rivers and broads and collect them from the various eel sets or netting stations one noticeable feature on the Broads in August is now conspicuous by its absence and that is the ever gliding swallow which does not return till the spring comes round again these pretty birds who nightly muster in immense flocks during the summer months have now deserted their haunts and flown far away south to their winter quarters in Italy Spain and the north of Africa how strange it is that these birds after an absence of several months not only returned to this country with unerring instinct but in some cases at least actually to the very nests they had occupied during the previous summer this has been repeatedly proved by Birds being caught and marked and then released when upon their nests being visited after dark during the following summer the same marked Birds have been found the stalks of Holland migrate in the same way as was proved by a Dutch gentleman in 1885 who fastened a parchment band to a storks leg requesting anyone who might catch it in the winter to attach his name and residence in the spring of 1886 back came the bird to Holland and on being captured while asleep and examined was found to have another docket upon its leg bearing the words in Italian I have wintered at Florence at the house of signore a during the whole of the autumn if the weather be open and fine fishing may be indulged in especially for pike as these fish do not go to their deep winter habitations until the waters become cold and ice makes its appearance when the weather is cold fishing from a boat is very risky work unless one has an abnormally strong Constitution and I would not advise town dwellers to try it if they must fish let it be from the bank where shelter may be obtained or a sharp run or walk indulged in occasionally to circulate the blood perch and Rud are caught in large numbers during September and October and frequently during these months the weather is exceedingly calm and mild as most of the tourists have finished the holidays the Broads are again very quiet the visiting season is during the months of June July and August during the other nine months the place is very quiet at the commencement of the shooting season in September the sportsmen sometimes packs away his rod and lines in a dry place and unpacks his gun which has for so long lain idle now is the season of the dogs delights for they will assuredly have plenty of work to do to retrieve the birds falling amid the reed runs and which would assuredly be lost but for their valuable assistance the navigable rivers being public highways are free to all but many of the Broads are preserved for private shooting and person shooting wild foul on them may be prosecuted as trespassers the closed time for wild fowl is the same here as in other parts of England but I am sorry to find that the law is frequently infringed and that with impunity a shot at a crested grebe or heron seems to be an irresistible temptation to some of the river men especially as they find a ready market for any of the rarer specimens of waterfowl they may get even in the off season money to a poor man is at all times a great temptation and especially is this the case here for these men see money swimming and flying around them all day long in the shape of fish and fowl only the sheer 1886 a wery was stopped by the preservation officers who upon examination discovered a large net dragging astern as she sailed and in her hold a ton and a half of freshwater fish destined for the Midland market there are now several persons who carry on quite a trade in illegally netted fish with Birmingham Leeds Sheffield and other Midland towns and who although repeatedly summoned and fined repeat the offence as it pays them great quantities of freshwater fish are consumed by Jewish families during Lent in certain marshes mushrooms are very plentiful in the autumn so plentiful at times that I have known them fetch only half a crown a bushel September is about the best month for them especially if it be fine with not too much rain there is no objection to anyone gathering them on the marshes as they in many cases only spring up to rot again the marsh men very seldom gathering more than enough for their own use what a place for an Epicure tender juicy steaks and mushrooms for a relish growing on the same marsh october sees the brewing of some splendid isle which seems to be very much liked by tourists at Lake ins brewery in Yarmouth it is of quite a different flavor to London beer rather sweeter and strange to say with a decided taste of malt and hops which is so hard to distinguish in the London production one of the sights of Yarmouth from August to Christmas is the going out and coming in of the fishing fleet which is without exception the largest and finest in the world twenty years since it was difficult to find fishing vessels of more than 25 tons burthen but now they are built up to 75 and even 80 tonnes they are moreover fitted with appliances of quite modern construction and invention most of the large vessels carry steam engines for hauling the trawl net pumping and other laborious work thereby saving much time and manual labour the abolition of the cursed Cooper's or floating public houses and the advent of the mission smacks have greatly contributed to the improvement of the social condition of the hardy and brave North Sea fisherman who away in the wild ocean formerly had very little to look forward to except incessant toil and hardship Yarmouth autumn races one of the closing events of a very busy season are held on the course between the beach and river near the Nelson column the autumn fruit and poultry market is exceedingly well supplied and the neat way the Michaelmas case addressed is a sight seldom to be seen out of Norfolk they are picked so clean that it seems hardly possible to imagine they have ever been guilty of a downy existence August and September witnessed the landing of some tonnes of oysters which are brought in by the deep-sea trawlers they are large but of a good flavor and cheap seldom more than one shilling per dozen of course nobody thinks of leaving Yarmouth without a few of the celebrated bloaters as presents for their friends they are at the best during September when well cured without billets they are delicious end of chapter 15 chapter 16 of the land of the Broads by Ernest are suffering this LibriVox recording is in the public domain the broad district in winter December January and February come skaters all your jovial Prince a door king frost his icy court doth rule once more come glide come gleam in moonlights cold pale ray come make the young blood tingle and drive dull care away ye are suffering dwellers in towns who are fond of bodily exertion in the form of skating and other ice games are but too little acquainted with the advantages the broad district offers in this respect here the skater may de sport himself over hundreds of acres of ice varying in thickness from a few inches to three thirds which has formed on the overflowing marshes no dread of death by drowning need haunt him here for he may exercise the graceful gyrations of his fancy and feet without risk of running against or being run into by other skaters and if he choose he may select a sport all to himself and there indulge in his favorite sport to his heart's content for the bolder and perhaps more skillful skater there are scores of miles of river to be traversed though with the drawback of 15 feet of water if he should go through this very rarely happens however as any tyro can tell when the ice is safe to practice upon in hard winters the Broads are frozen over when slaying and shooting are freely indulged in anyone having a friend in the district who would let him know when this occurs might hastily get-together a party of ten or a dozen all of whom should be skaters and proceeded by an early train from Liverpool Street next day to Norwich whence they could select their own locality for a day or twos good skating a good plan is to have a pair of stout leather boots made with the skates screwed on the soles the ions are usually made on the pattern here shown the boots should be strong lace-ups as they give a great deal more support to the ankles then side springs they can be carried in a small bag and put on or taken off the feed as occasion demands on some good stretches of ice if the company is numerous booths are erected fires lighted steaks cooked and refreshments vendored at a reasonable rate the ends of these booths are left open so that skaters may glide in and anchor themselves on upturn barrels which do duty as seeds and order any refreshment which they may stand in need of sometimes parties are formed to visit a village on the river some twenty or thirty miles distance and while luncheon is being partaken of the straps of the skates are unbound from the feet of the skater or skater s as the case may be so as to give ease and rest skating matches are a frequent occurrence the course usually being half a mile out and home the turning point being generally marked by a barrel filled with snow and with a flag fluttering from a pole thrust into it it does not by any means follow that the first round the turning point wins as it often happens that a competitor having obtained as they say the length of his opponents that is found out his capabilities will make a waiting race of it and only put forth his energy in the last hundred yards or so when he will dart past his opponent like a flash of lightning and win by a yard or two what are the fenman doing during this arctic weather well these are really hard times with them as all Labor has to be stopped and they can only snare and shoot wild foul this they accomplished by fitting a flat-bottomed punt with runners of iron or hardwood and filling it with fodder or marsh hay to lie upon and keep themselves warm then in the fall part they erect a screen of Russia's furs or twigs with an aperture to see through and an arrangement of cross sticks upon which to rest their fowling-pieces their guns are old fashioned muzzle loaders with enormous Li long barrels and look as dangerous to the sportsmen as to the birds let us watch I gunner and see how he sets about his work see here he comes out of his boat Hut from the chimney of which curls the thin blue peat smoke indicating a cozy warmth in his little home he is warmly wrapped up an old white cap has pulled down over his ears a white comforter is folded round his throat and drawn over his clothes is a long white smoke reaching below his knees this is his uniform in his mouth is the inevitable stumpy clay pipe i nose warmer about two inches long and as black outside as in over his shoulder is a rope attached to the bow of his punt which he now commences to drag after him over the ice after first carefully depositing his trusty fire lock on the cross and before mentioned presently he comes to a likely place and leaving his boat creeps quietly along to a reed bed and peeps at some objects two or three hundred yards off having satisfied himself as to the identity of these dark objects he comes back to his pond and enters it kneeling in the stern with his face to the bow he then from under the fodder bed draws out two stout sticks shot with iron and taking one in each hand thrusts their points into the ice and quietly propels himself along as he approaches the reed rond by a circuitous route he keeps himself all the time well hidden behind the screen in the bow of his craft when within 50 yards of his unsuspicious victims he lays down his propellers and rests his gun in such a position that it points a couple of feet over the backs of the dogs so as to just catch them as they rise on the wing he then gives a tremendous war-whoop and at the same time pulls the trigger of his gun then comes an exciting scene as he chases the wounded birds and rings their necks some of them having been only slightly hit and giving a long chase before being captured or escaping he then returns to the battlefield collects the dead throws them into the boat reloads his gun and pipe and taking his boat in tow looks out for a fresh shot during any open weather that may occur after Christmas Reed cutting is commenced and continued till the work is completed in the early spring it is in fact carried on until the SAP begins to rise and the young shoots are just appearing the cutting is done either by men who wear large waterproof boots standing in the water or from flat bottom pants or read boats a plank is used which either projects over the bow of the boat or is laid flat on the stumps of the cut reed which easily support the weight of a man in cutting an upward stroke is made with the sickle the reed being held in bunches by the left hand and care is taken to cut the reed as far below the water as possible as I sighing prevails that an inch of reed below water is worth to above it this may be accounted for from the fact that the green part below the water turns when dry to a rusty black becomes as hard as horn and is consequently much more durable when placed upon the roof of a house in the form of thatch with only these hard buds exposed to the weather when the boat is properly loaded it is propelled by a long pole called a quant to the landing place or as it is here called stave and the read carefully landed the read is then tied into bundles or sheaves of such a size that five of them are of the aggregate circumference of six foot hence the reason of read for thatching purposes being sold by the fathom the method of propagating read is to separate the root beds of the cutting time then drag them to favourable positions and anchor them there by means of stellt wooden stakes the roots quickly fasten themselves to the bottom and very soon the reed spikes are found striking upward the greatest enemy to the young read is the Starling which is fond of roasting among it before the stalks are sufficiently strong to bear its white it sometimes happens that a reed rond which apparently presents a good crop is found upon being carts to be almost worthless in the interior from the damage caused by these and other members of the feathered race besides read the fens grow various other useful plants which are utilized for many purposes there is gladden a coarse kind of reed with broad blades and pithy stem this also is used for the purpose of thatching roots but from its more soft and spongy nature is not nearly so durable as the lordly bowing reed there are also various kinds of sedge and rushes used for thatching Bullock sheds and outhouses or as litter for cattle as well as coarse grass which being to rank for cattle preventer is used for bedding Marsh hay cut in the summer is consumed in large quantities by the cattle during the winter having exhausted the store of above-ground profitable growths the natives are in the summer often seen going even below the surface for a remunerative article this is turf and it's lower brother Pete this peat or as it is here called hovers is when properly dried a capital and economical substitute for coal it gives off a blue smoke when burning and this as it rises from the Coty's chimneys wafts a rather pleasant perfume in the air which is a great improvement on the soot Laden evil smelling smoke of the metropolis a peat ground properly managed is a rather valuable holding as may be gathered from the following statistics the peat blocks when carts are about four inches square shrinking by drying to about three and a quarter inch by from two foot to two and a half foot long the depth of the boggy surface soil each square foot therefore produces nine hovers h square yard 81 each rod two thousand four hundred and fifty and consequently each acre the enormous number of 392,000 hovers as these are retailed at from one shilling to one and six per hundred a good profit must be realized in open weather a great deal of coursing goes on as the Norfolk hares are said to excel all others in size and speed the latter probably owing to the openness and flatness of the country these hairs are greatly sought-after for turning out at the various coursing meetings held in different parts of England and their flesh if we may judge by the placards of the London poulterer's who make fine Norfolk hairs a speciality is highly esteemed fen hairs grow to an enormous size and are noted for their power of jumping and their endurance over heavy ground multitudes of P wits plumbers and wild dogs find their way to the London markets also and realize good prices during the hard weather I would point out that during the prevalence of east winds the broad district is bitterly cold and two persons at all week in the lungs I would certainly say go south rather then to these snowbound regions it will be seen by a study of the meteorological tables that Norfolk is one of the coldest counties in England during January and February and one of the hottest during July and all first for the robust winter here is a most enjoyable time especially for those who can shoot or skate and also for the angler February is considered one of the best months for pike but at this time the scenery is very time flat and colorless flocks of wild ducks and geese are frequent visitors to the Broads during very severe weather especially on Alton and Braden on the coast line fishing from the shore for coddling is a capital amusement 80 yards of line with six or eight hooks attached baited with lugworms are thrown out from the shore during a rising tide and drawn in and examined every few minutes good hauls as much as a man can carry are often made in four or five hours now having glanced at the attractions presented by the district during the four seasons I will leave the reader to select his own time and amusements but I am certain that whatever month he chooses he will always find something to attract and amuse him in the land of the Broads whilst at the same time he will be recruiting his health end of chapter 16
Priceless Audiobooks
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2017-05-19
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dKl2evyc2w
June Moon 2011 - Elixir & Nils Fredland
[Applause] right yeah some Peter bro fans out there that's Peter New Hampshire my home state all right ladies to the and to the and B gentlemen turn by the left and pass your neighbor ladies pass by the left and swing your partner now hands for Circle left three places round with your neighbor alaman right once move on to the next one and Alam left once round come back to your original neighbor swing face across ready ladies here we [Music] go [Music] gentl jent turn by the left pass your neighbor ladies pass the left shoulder swing your [Music] partner hands for Circle left neighbor Al right once and a half on to the next Al [Music] [Applause] left ready ladies here we [Music] go pass your neighbor ladies pass by the left and swing your [Music] part neighbor El on to the next [Music] El [Music] El [Music] n [Music] like [Music] h [Music] oh [Music] the [Music] [Applause] [Music] the [Music] what [Music] pap [Music] yeah [Music] WR [Music] now come in come in come in now come in [Music] now [Music] now [Music] [Applause] w [Music] [Applause] yeah wo all right
Dave Pokorney
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2011-07-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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Crash the Wonderbird does not approve
apparently crash disapproves of my snacking selections no I know you're not allowed to have any so I just got finished uploading where you Wednesday and I figured it's snack time you know it's Jewish in the afternoon in Ontario time where I am and I'm like I think I'm gonna have snack so I grabbed a snack and normally when I upload a video he's quiet you might say the other thing but so I'm eating you have an opinion about this I see and he immediately just search whoa dude um apparently he really disapproves with my snack do you want some but you cannot you can't have this see you all get to see him all nice and polite and well-behaved and he's really a dick you're not allowed to have this nope yeah cocktail life are you done my friend are you done not sure if you want some or if he thinks it's going to attack him I don't know wedge anyways I just thought I'd share that with you because it was kind of funny I'm trying to have a snack and he's proverbially losing his all because of a chocolate jelly roll big thing are you done I think you anyways you guys have a good day and I just thought I'd share this little moment of crash the wonder bird disapproving of my snacking selection I'm gonna cook control have a great day
Stroke Assaulter
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2020-01-30
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5pJ5u-MF8ZY
Forza Horizon 5 - Forzathon Guide - Future Classic - Nissan 240SX
[Music] hello and welcome back to the channel and today you join me for this week's forzathon guide called future classic which wants you to own and drive the 1993 nissan 240sx se to complete all of the challenges with now this is the car in question and it will set you back 25 000 credits so it's very very cheap and of course you can get it from the auto show or the auction house now as you can see i've got two variants there because i've got two different tunes now we're going to be using the race tune throughout this forza thumb guide but there is also a drift one which i will come on to later now the share code for the race tune is six one five three seven eight eight zero and like i said i've stuck with this one throughout all of the challenges now the first challenge here just wants you to hit a top speed of 175 mile an hour so you will definitely need to tune the car in order to get this now i recommend for this one specifically heading over to the horizon drag strip normally i would recommend heading over to the motorway but this area will definitely come in handy for the second challenge so this is why i did it for the first challenge as well it just saves sort of crossing across the map sort of thing so once you've hit 175 mile an hour for that first challenge that's that complete now the next one wants you to earn 10 ultimate drift skills in your car now like i said i use this race tune to complete this challenge it was fairly easy enough to be honest but for those who might struggle with drifting i have got a drift tuned for it so it is there called drift tune and the share code for it is nine two 822-1924 two seven and that should hopefully help you guys out if you're struggling to drift using uh another tune or using the race tune that i've provided now the ultimate drift skill like it says it doesn't necessarily want you to get an e drift skill which is where you use the handbrake to initiate the drift just wants you to get a normal drift skill now what i would recommend if you're struggling is to start off by getting an e drift skill and then the second you change trendy transition and direction you'll be getting standard to drift skills instead of e drift skills so it is fairly easy to do it doesn't take that long although i'm pretty sure it was racking up the ultimate e drift skills i was getting anyway but there's that challenge super easy to do and like i said i ended up doing it back on that drag strip just because it was easier there now the next challenge here wants you to win four street races now again this is really easy and i have created a race for you guys to use but for those who haven't yet unlocked street races you need to unlock the horizon street scene which unlocks all of your street races there now the race i chose was the costa rocosa um the reason for this is it's just one of the easiest street races to do like i said i have created a specific race for you guys that you can use um i tried creating a small brew print which didn't actually work so this one is what i'd recommend doing so it's called forzathon easy it is the full race unfortunately like i said i tried creating a shorter version but couldn't uh share code for this is four two nine four one zero seven six four what i've done with this one is turn the ai driver tiles off so you'll just be on your own which will make life a lot easier and the good thing is you don't actually have to complete this on any specific difficulty it's just a normal forza thumb now like i said i tried to create a race it was about i can't remember half a mile long or something and it didn't count towards the overall challenge total which was a bit frustrating so i had to do this full race now the good thing is it takes just over two minutes so it's really not that long to be fair and like i said with the ai turn off it makes life a lot easier so there you can see after the first run of that one it's counted so i did it three more times and you'll end up picking up the sort of route anyway so you'll know where to break and start learning the route layout pretty quickly and then by the time you're on your fourth one you'll be cutting down your lap times and you'll have it done in way less than 10 minutes and it's a really easy one to do now once you've done all four of them that will be the challenge complete so it's a nice and easy forza phone may take a little longer than usual but still very easy to complete now if you're struggling with anything please let me know down below in the comments of course i will try my very best to help you out if this did help you out i'd very much appreciate if you could drop a like and subscribing massively helps me out as well but apart from that folks i wish you all the best make sure you stay safe and take care
EverythingGaming
UC1uwkI8OR8fmAUemLuUqnNg
2021-12-09
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMzqrHBI4b0
Faculty discussion and entire group discussion
thanks very much um first we're going to see if there are any questions specifically for you and then we'll have the other two faculty members come up for um questions for the whole panel okay um any questions okay well if steve and michael could come back to the front please any questions now oh come on you guys haven't been shy yet here okay thank thanks and i'll get right to you yes um i had a question from michael um i know that in your presentation you mentioned that you started to see a decline in the quality of the scholarship you were receiving or a decline in maybe journals being submitted now that you've gone to open access have you noticed a change in the kinds of scholarship your journal is receiving uh because it's it's fairly early in the process i don't have any empirical evidence of that however we now have an opportunity to kind of change the way that we present our journal as a potential receptacle for really good scholarship and i think the most compelling case we can make to find scholars to publish in our journal is that someone's going to read it it's getting into the classroom your article will be downloaded it can be searched individually we can we can guarantee i mean i'll show them the number of you know the first 10 months of downloads and if somebody were telling me that i had an opportunity to have an exposure to potentially 100 000 downloadable online journal i don't want to be published in that journal so um if you invite me back in a year maybe i can throw some empirical evidence that in fact we have increased the quality of the of the scholarship i will and of course we'll measure that by the number of manuscripts that we receive and our acceptance rate but which currently is it currently it is at about 60 about a 60 acceptance rate so we hope to see that as sort of the penultimate uh transformation not simply distribution or wide dissemination but that we really are the journal for top-notch scholarship that has something to do with uh our area of specialty so that's that's the real question that i hope we'll have a favorable answer to in the next year so okay well i have a question about society membership while you all are collecting your thoughts and coming up with another question um kent we just heard from steve that his society's student membership is really increasing but one thing i hear from society publishers a concern they have about open access is that students and postdocs and new entrants into their professions will not feel a need to be a society member if they can get all the journal content either open access or even through an institutional subscription would you like to comment on that on behalf i'd be happy to because because i have experience with several societies actually and and so i have to say the botanical society of america is like steve society the botanical society of america our student memberships are doing extremely well but the reason they're doing extremely well is because they cost almost nothing we charge our students only fifteen dollars a year ten dollars a year if they renew early and they have access to the online only version to the online version of the journal they don't get print subscriptions uh and so we've made it very easy very friendly from the for them to be part of it but we can do that only because we have enough revenue from other sources to keep the society going another another society i'm familiar with which is roughly the same size the society for the study of evolution has been less aggressive in um trying to recruit and retain its student membership and it's kept its do student dues at a more traditional 35 to 40 dollars a year and actually they're losing both both full-time professional membership and student membership largely because they there is less loyalty to the society per se and they can get the papers they need to see online anyway and that's that's true of many societies and so it does say that there is a real challenge for societies here um regardless of whether there's open access or paid access through libraries that if the if the materials are available online to people um that the societies have to find new ways to appeal to their membership that go beyond simply getting the journal thank you and steve's going to comment as well and i think that you know to add to what kent said i think in science small scientific societies we rely on volunteers in service for the peer review process and without student membership and that feeling the need to pay back articles don't just appear the review process is pretty hefty and time consuming for lots of individual scientists and they don't feel the need because there's no loyalty to a society or to a journal it's easy now especially with electronic reviewing no you don't even have used to be you know the article would show up on your desk and you felt this need to clear off your desk and get it done but now you can just say no and if there's no loyalty you there's no need to review without a review process there's no journals there's no need to have scientific journals if it's without a review process and i think that that gets and i we don't pay anybody it's all volunteer and you know it's self-fulfilling you say no or you do a lousy job you don't get asked back the young folks do great jobs in reviewing articles because it means something to them and i think the cheaper and the reduced cost of membership and easy access to the journal is our only way of paying them thank you do we have another question anne well it seems to me that the societies actually have a whole different set of issues going on that has nothing to do with open access i think if you talk to a lot of individuals who are involved in organizations of almost any kind whether it's the local garden club or the society that represents their discipline they will tell you that many of these organizations are faced with declining memberships declining levels of participation as people have taken time to other things their lives so i'm concerned that the societies are looking at at open access and saying that's the big threat to us because i think in fact 08 may present a challenge but it is not the only concern that you should have with attracting and maintaining memberships the second point that i would make is that it seems to me that some societies and i hope not to generalize have become kind of like our state governments who've become dependent on them the income that they get from the lottery that what became a noble we will use this money for education and all good things now as an income stream to be used to support all the stuff that state government must do and i think that this is something the societies have fallen into as well they look at that 50 percent of their financial base coming from institutional subscriptions and they don't want to risk that threat but you are asking a whole lot of organizations that don't have any other connection with your society just to support the mission of your society okay can't did you hear the question i could get pieces of it but could you maybe just i heard that yeah i'll try to recap it was a two-part question um and correct me if i get off track the first part is that the decline in membership is society-wide and across many kinds of membership organizations so tying it to oa is perhaps not the whole story yeah absolutely okay and the second part is um i think this is maybe i think you were the one that showed half of your income comes from institutional subscriptions and she was saying that kind of like state and federal government societies have gotten accustomed to having that large share of income coming from institutions that only have a marginal relationship to your particular discipline and that maybe you should rethink that okay yeah okay yeah i'd be happy to address both those points first um the the person who asked the question is absolutely right that the decline in memberships is not specifically related to open access i i tried to say that but it may not have come through the decline in membership to the to the extent associated with publication practices at all is associated with a change to online availability of publications rather than open access per se because many members i know a number of people for example i'm also a member of the genetic society of america and i know a number of people who used to be members of the genetic society of america who canceled their membership once the journal became available online at their institutions and so it was just a matter of they were members because they needed to get access to the journal they no longer be need to be members to get access and so they stop and that's independent of whether the journals are open access or not so that's i agree with absolutely with respect to whether societies have become complacent with respect to the degree to which they depend on institutional subscription there is i think there is some degree of complacency um having said that i there are there are two things i would say about that first as steve said many of the societies other than the really big ones like the american chemical society the american physical society or aaas are almost or entirely volunteer-run so that there are people like me who are faculty members at university who have full-time jobs teaching and research and then in addition we do this service to the society and try to make it run and there simply aren't enough hours in the day for us to think creatively about alternative business models or and and at least their ham admits so that's one one just sort of functional challenge the second thing i would remind you of is is that in fact the the journals and is to just distinguish a bit among professional societies in their behavior towards publication because there are certainly some professional societies that we could all think of little large ones with with large professional staffs and very fancy buildings in washington dc who behave as if they were commercial publishers and then there are other society publishers like i think the society that steve represents in the societies i've been involved with that are either independently published or unfortunately one of the ones i used to be involved with is now published by wiley blackwell which i was very disappointed when they went that way but still a relatively small society and so as i say the the american journal bond need to take one particular example an institutional subscription to any institution is less than seven hundred dollars a year for one of the most highly cited journals in the field of plant biology and it is barely half the price of journals published by riley blackwell or other commercial journals and so while it's true we depend on that income it's also true we provide a very good value and if the botanical society ceased to exist which it would if we didn't have those other programs you'd have to pay a lot more to get the same content thank you kent i'm going to ask our our first set of speakers our society speakers to come back to the front so we can have 15 minutes of questions with all of you um can't i i'll introduce you virtually to your fellow panelists um you've already met steve and michael this is bob and ken so i will so i will try to be very careful and say ken or kent okay yes um yeah can ken is going to comment just back to the the membership question it's it's um just even out of the realm of academic uh scientific and technical publications just membership in general but when i was in uh graduate school in the 1980s there wasn't a question as to whether i would be a member of the american meteorological society the application was stuck in front of my face and by my advisor i was told to write out a check and send it in and almost all the faculty were members of the ams this is the department of meteorology at penn state a big program and it's things have just changed and now a very small percentage of the faculties or meteorology faculties are members of the ams and people want to know what's in it for me what do i get out of it and i don't want to be judgmental about that i think it's a really good question and it gets back to what kent said earlier that societies have to start thinking about other benefits to members beyond publications it can't just be hinged to that so that was my point thank you well there are a couple of things i could i mean i could take the direction to talk about the role of aggregators non-profit like bio one and commercial like proquest and ebsco in also contributing to the decline in publisher subscriptions but that's not really oa um so i think i won't do that that means somebody else needs to ask a question hillary and alita will bring you the mic i'm going the wrong way my question is about back files digitizing back files and making those open access bob i i know you at the aps have done some of that i i believe all of it yes and i was wondering if the other panelists could comment on whether that's something a direction that you might go in if you're not already doing so and if so what the funding model for that kind of project would be uh we've done it back to issue one volume one through the current issue uh it was part of our and i think that kent alluded to this part of our subscription fees regardless of how we pay for the journal helps other educational costs and we funded the digital digital it's like meteorology all right we put everything on online going back to volume one issue one and we self-funded that yeah in our modest little journal for uh has all of our archived articles digitized and the boston college library provided that service uh and it was no cost to us uh and and i funded that out uh five years ago to find out what that would be and it was a prohibitive cost even five years ago so again thank you to the library partners right and while we're waiting for the mike to reach ken um in steve's case i suspect high wire was able to get a great digitizing cost for you because they sort of serve as an um as an aggregator or did you do it independently i think they helped us with the bid process okay so high wire helped with the bid process and found an overseas provider so so yeah we're digitized um all the way back to 1862 and the project was very expensive it was about four hundred thousand dollars to do and so for a number of years we did charge for the like we call it the legacy collection but with the promise that once that was paid for we would stop charging for it now in contrast to that we have the massachusetts turnpike which some of you drive on and that was also based on the same model once the world was paid for which by the way was 30 years ago the tolls would go away well they haven't gone away but our totals have gone away that is interesting i've done some pricing work for client publishers and most of the commercial publishers will not sell you a backfile you may only subscribe to it you know you get your perpetual access for whatever you've subscribed to but a back file is not perpetual access um kent would you like to comment on the back file question from any of your multiple perspectives yeah well so so the the back file um so bio one doesn't provide back files per se it provides only access to content from sometime publishers joined um the three societies i've been most deeply involved with all have complete backfiles to volume one number one because they they're through jstor and so jstor did the digita digitization as a matter of fact if you look at the issues of evolution from 1996 back those are all my personal copies that were digitized um that it does raise a related issue that i thought i'd mention though uh that i think we're too frequently ignoring talking about open access which is that there are styles namely for example the botanical society of america we make all issues of the american journal of botany available one year after the publication free of charge so that anybody anywhere in the world can access the journal regardless of whether they have a subscription if they simply wait one year that for us actually works pretty well i suspect it would work well for many scientific societies that that would simultaneously preserve subscription income and provide wide access at some with some delay thank you do we have an yes um ellen who needs we've been talking a lot about society's moving potentially to open access journals but i'm wondering if all of you that have been on the various panels could address the issue of allowing authors to do self-archiving of their manuscripts immediately and in repositories both subject and institutional repositories and personal websites because we see a wide range of responses from societies about whether that seems very threatening to them and they prohibit it or whether they've been allowing it for many years as i know the aps has without seeing any impact on their business model i can address it first we've adopted a self-archiving policy a pro archiving policy in 1994 and we allow authors to archive and put online their version of the manuscript anywhere up until recently we allowed them to put online in their institution or their own website the aps published version of the article uh and now with the creative commons thing you can put it anywhere anybody can do it but we've always been in favor of self-archiving and by the way back in the earlier conversation the journals program of the american physical society is almost completely independent of the rest of the society as far as finances are concerned although we do purchase you know overhead kind of things uh personnel and and so forth but for the most part meetings aps programs and so forth are not funded by the journals and we have 170 people working on the journals right why don't we come this way and then i'll come around right now you can put a copy of the article on a personal website but university depositories you need to pay the open access charge and primarily according to our copyright attorneys we hold the journal holds the copyright and that's an issue whether we address it in the future or not um i think it depends on people's loyalties you know i think if you take an assistant professor they've got to guess whether they're going to be at that institution long enough to worry about where they keep the archived copy i've been published in the journal of animal science since 1982 and i've never had an issue with having access to my data and now with email an author can send me a request to use their information and unless it's a friday at six o'clock on the east coast because that's when they close up shop in indiana they'll have access to their own material within 24 hours and while the right journal does not represent a society it is the only journal of catholic education in north america that addresses issues k through higher ed and we also have established a principle by which the author has has the favorable copyright availabilities up we allow any and all requests from the author uh to have access um in whatever format i just gave uh official approval for uh it wasn't the author's own uh website but it was to actually publish in a edited volume of issues related to his article and we gave permission as well and there's no cost it's just a matter of sort of um appropriate protocol to follow small servers and departments and that kind of thing so and it has not affected us adversely in terms of our business model okay do we have another question oh one one more point for me then debra has some of our journals are 100 archived before they're published yet the subscription model seems to work the citations work the downloads work would any of the panelists care to pick it pick a year maybe 10 years or 20 years and tell me what your thoughts are on whether you think there will be still be journals as we know them and whether libraries will be paying for them okay i'm gonna pick on you yeah so you can start us off um i so i guess it if maybe it's just because i have had difficulty predicting the future but it's hard for me to imagine a future in which something more or less equivalent to journals does not exist because the the function of communication for which they were originally created can be largely substituted with blogs and on online archives um and certainly there are fields like physics you know where the archive preprint archive plays a tremendous role in economics the same way and the published journal pays pays plays less of a role but but academics is also a very conservative profession and these the sort of certification that publication in peer-reviewed journals plays both for tenure and promotion but also for the role that peer review plays in how public policy is determined just think about the debates that have happened with respect to climate change and the different impression you would get if you read the peer-reviewed literature on climate change versus if you get read what's in the blogs and which of those we should base public policy decisions on there will be some role for something like journals and peer review as far as i can see into the distant future and it would seem to me libraries will have to play some role in ensuring that that exists whether that can and whether it's a subscription model in which libraries play a role as consumers or an author pays model in which libraries help faculty authors to publish their work one way or another institutions like universities are going to have to remain committed to ensuring that the products of their research is widely available thank you at the american meteorological society we're supposed to be able to predict something um but i don't know if it makes sense to this question however i will say that when bhs came out that was the death of movie theaters uh but that didn't quite work out um and the newspaper's supposed to be dead a long time ago i just picked up a copy of the wizard telegram um and prince should have been dead six or seven years ago according to what i what i was hearing so i agree with everything that kent said and just look at other predictions about how things have would disappear and and apply it to this case when i first came to aps the university chief ed peterson said to me that uh you know if the journals aren't worth doing we don't see any reason to do it however the dissemination and the peer review and so forth and the insertion into the corpus of literature seems to be worth it so far so we'll do it uh following uh ken's analogy the cylindrical record doesn't really hang around too much anymore you can't go down and so the point of that is that information whether it's music physics research anybody else's research is still a viable entity in the world of science and somehow we're going to do it uh whether it be the printed journals of these scientific society or probably not although there are there's a lot of that really people are but something will do though and i think it's the role of the society to be involved in it to make it happen and to do it fronting and by the way we'll continue to print as long as everybody wants it so um one thousand predictions i'll leave it to my colleagues here who are much smarter and kind of know what's going on in the future but i do agree that the receptacle of scholarship the communication of goods peer reviewed scholarship yes i believe to a great degree uh on the institutions on our universities and colleges to look for new ways to do that um i will comment in terms of predicting the future from my own experience with this journal is that since we've gotten open to think about how it is that we can utilize this new exposure um our managing editor's position and our staff positions with their job sort of content and the skills with which they need to perform are going to change drastically so i just did a search for a new managing editor and the qualifications for that person are significantly different from when i did the search for the managing editor even three years ago so someone who is much savvier content based but also knows how to do electronic um and he has a better sense of the marketing with regard to electronic and we also can work with authors not only on editorial content but how can we think of new modes of expressing our data and our conclusions so i'm trying to push our managing editor uh i don't have to push him but push our authors to think more responsibly about multimedia types of presentations of their uh of their work so an online static journal is really interesting to me and i don't think that's gonna move us to the next level it's more interactive biological conversational multimedia a lot of color videos you know i think that's sort of uh the rule that we're thinking about our publishing experience in the next 10 years i think what's important in 20 years i'm going to be retired and i'm not going to worry about it that much i i think it will change i think that we can't look at the library as a silo universities and creators of data or their bosses will in some way have to contribute to the costs of creating and disseminating information i think at our institution and i have this discussion with carolyn on a regular basis and the library committee it's a silo and it's a matter of which budget's going to help pay for the publication or the dissemination of the data in whatever way that dissemination occurs and as institution within institutions fight over budgets those silos are created and that's really what has to change is the model to support research and to support the dissemination of the research because if we fall victim to the blogs i think kent's point was very important bloggers can be well heard without having any data and that'll be the death of our fields and not really good for our policy makers or for the for our future i think as we make policy based on real peer-reviewed data okay well i want to conclude us with a little more optimistic note um you know i think in the information explosion more and more content out there we're trying to come up with better richer metadata and more discoverability and all of that well the editorial process that gets good stuff into the pipeline first i think will get even more important and we'll find ways of recognizing that and supporting it going forward so i want to thank deborah linares for a terrific closing question thank all of our speakers our organizers and all of you we're going to go into lunch now but thank you very much
ACRL New England Schol Comm Interest Group
UCgOdvzyUH0kgIucyg1UKqag
2011-12-09
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4MqFOGcfSA
n00b Gardener 002 - Vanishing Vegetation
well it's about six o'clock and i'm feeling pretty tired now been working on this all day all the big bits of gun and the blind weed and and all that sort of stuff had a few toys emerge and just general rubbish like ice cream tubs and I don't know the kids play out here so anything can happen really I've given the grass its first sort of good going-over and with an actual marecus I've been doing with the strimmer up until now and it really is quite patchy so that's something I'm going to have to look at the seat down it's a shame really because with the weather we've had if I'd done it a couple of months ago it be lovely by now but I wasn't to know how to see and it was going to be good like everybody else did and another news on killing gastropods big fat slugs like that you can't see them to you step on them and you're thinking on solid ground and something there's this pop you only just exploded a slug as lovely isn't it I think the order of the day tomorrow is just going to be tidying up I've got a lot of digging over to dig but I've had enough for now so I'm going to go have me dinner and I'll be back 2morrow there's one thing I did forget to mention I did them sort of prune this a bit this tree thing it's not actually a tree it's a hideously disfigured privet I've got no idea why it's there pretending to be a tree but it is I don't like it one bit i wish it would go away because it just grows out in all directions it's very weird the odd thing down in your garden there we go
Ben Currington
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2012-09-01
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3By6t-w0FYw
Davvy Unboxes the City of Mist ultimate set!
howdy boys girls neither both and in between and welcome to christmas i know it's only november but as a member of the black friday erosion squad i feel the compulsive need to celebrate it early for mariah and wouldn't you know it indie tabletop company son of oak agrees in my thrashing of the christmas nda and has given me the greatest gift of all product placement so today i'm going to be shaking things up by unboxing the ultimate set of their hit game city of mist and i'm going to do a video reviewing their actual game when i get three or four players to lock in my basement full disclosure son of oak has sponsored me to make these videos but they don't get to touch the script so i can call them a cotton-headed mini muggins and they still have to pay me but with that out of the way let's begin alright uh i don't actually know what's in these things so this right here is the move this right here is the city of mist core set which comes with the player handbook and the gm's guide called the mc toolset assistant help uh yeah here are the scissors that i have right next to me but i'm asking you to do it instead oh i cut it open yeah thank you appreciate it full disclosure i've played exactly one game of this entire rpg so like i said players guide very fancy book for you and the master of ceremonies toolkit as well as a dm screen or as this is called the mc screen assistant hey thanks that's so like have you just did you go to a job to know how to do this as you can see it comes with all the things that a good dm screen should have so all of the important little markers a little cheat sheet for you so that you know exactly what you're doing when you're playing the game now give me a sec because i want to see how this is formatted one of my big pet peeves about rule books is and this is what world of darkness does all the time is they'll put like preambles in between all of the chapters uh luckily it seems the core set does not do that not only is the table of contents at the beginning of the book but it actually tells you what things are i know that table of contents aren't the most interesting thing but trust me after buying so many rpg books i'm thankful that these guys got it correct uh so it says that the lead artist is marcin saban i don't know if i'm pronouncing that correctly but hey good job marcin as for the player's guide it seems to do a lot of the same thing table of contents is right but at the beginning of each chapter they put a little comic strip getting you excited for each section of the game but like i said i'm gonna do a review of the actual game in a different video but that is what's in the core set uh which you can get in the ultimate pack in addition you can get the expansion pack they call it the into the mist set assistant this is supposed to be a jump cut look at that look at it it's just so it's so clean now the expansion is most of the reason why they wanted me to do this sponsorship in the first place uh and that comes with two little adventures you've got the knights of payne town and this book comes with nine small neo-noir adventures that all culminate in a tenth big adventure that lets you decide the fate of the city and in addition to that book you get the shadows and showdowns expansion it's less of an adventure and more of a splat book something that gives more options for players and dms to do when they're exploring the city of mist once again both books are artists by marcin saban i still hope that i'm not butchering that name so you've got that same comic book feel that the rest of the books have and to assist with the knights of pain town adventure this comes in the into the miss expansion it is a board map of payne town i can't open this myself assistant please oh my god this is huge cameraman zoom out it's beautiful it's like manhattan what else is that what else is in here a city of missed confidential it's a album it's got some other stuff in it oh my god these are all clues that you'll find in the adventure i'm trying not to show them a whole lot because if you're going to play this game you're not going to want to see these right away this is very interesting so when you play the knights of paint town expansion i assume uh at certain intervals you'll be able to find things that you'll be able to collect and put on the main map you'll be able to put them there and stick them to it so that you'll know where you found all of the clues and they'll help you piece together the mystery that will eventually culminate in the final adventure get back in there assistant and in addition to the core rule book and the into the mist expansion uh the ultimate set comes with the starter set for new players looking to get into city of mist for the first time yeah you know what to do i don't even have to call you now uh one thing to note immediately the starter set is a little bit more flimsy than the core rule book and the into the mist expansion uh it can be pressed into pretty easily so stacking it on top of all the rest of your stuff is going to be kind of weird you're going to want to put this on top and that isn't going to be a problem for most people if you slide things in bookshelf style but for someone like me who just likes to stack all of his books on top of each other this can get crushed fairly easily but on the inside you have let's look at you oh oh this is so much oh this is so weird these come with two dice one is purple one is gray they have some symbols on them that involve the city of mist are they good uh the starter set also comes with a bunch of tracking cards for you to use during your games despite the fact that this starter set comes with the corset it still has the two flimsy like basic versions of the rules for both the players and the dungeon master in this case the keeper of secrets master of ceremonies these are a little bit superfluous because you've already got the big versions but if you're only getting the starter set then these will be useful uh these are yeah yep as i thought uh these are character cards posters uh for the pre-made characters now city of mist allows you to make your own characters but they also come with a very interesting list of pre-made characters uh that help you get into the idea of how you're supposed to make your person i appreciate these more than i do in dnd because we're whereas in d d you have the impression of part of the fun is making your own character uh city of miss that's also true but it's a little harder to conceptualize how a character is created in city of mist so i appreciate the pre-made characters a lot more in this one than i do in the other ones so that comes with talalock lily chao job detective and kidu and baku it also comes with a bunch of tokens to help you during the server set and a bunch of double-sided maps to help you because the starter set comes with an introductory adventure called shark tank and then here's the other map and the other side and then also included in the ultimate set are some character folios for pre-made characters in case you just don't have an active imagination got excalibur flicker post mortem rocket raccoon declan lestrange mitosis salamander scarlet fun fact this is the one character i've ever played my read conroy my red red carnoy hmm baby new copyright infringement lance sullivan bassy and bode and then finally this wasn't included in the ultimate set but it was still sent to me so i want to review it you've got a bunch of maps to help you when you play in your game one thing you might notice right away is that these maps don't really have grids of any kind and that's because city of miss relies mostly on a storytelling system unless on a battle simulator system so you wouldn't use these things in something like shadowrun but to have a visual aid these things are really good i pretty much require a visual aid to understand what the hell's happening during my games so i always really appreciate it when the dm goes out and gets something to let me look at and it seems to me that all these maps were made for the knights of payne town expansion but the actual maps in the book are like blueprints because they're supposed to be abstract so you can kind of just do whatever you want with them but it's really nice to have a concrete thing to look at to accentuate your games i don't have anything to say for this one map oh and i missed one small little thing from the starter set uh this is an introductory crew so all of your people are in sort of the same gang and so this card doubles as both a pre-made crew for you and then on the back it's a template for you to make your own crew and that is everything that is in the ultimate box of sun evokes city of mist all of these things separately cost around 350 but the box itself only costs 220 and for the time being they're running a black friday special which is just under 200 and one more time that includes the core set which comes with the player handbook and the master of ceremonies guide as well as a dm screen the into the mist expansion which comes with the knights of payne town adventure module and the shadows and showdowns what's up the into the mist expansion set which comes with the knights of payne town adventure module and the shadows and showdown source book as well as a bunch of random other and also the star set and all of its crudely packaged glory overall i am a pretty big fan of city of mist and not just because they're paying my rent while i've only ever managed to play one game although that might change very soon the game that i did play was right up my alley it's a very abstract kind of game where instead of having very strict rules that you have to follow uh you have concepts and you get to kind of choose how those concepts play into the game and work with the other players to do it as opposed to a solid handbook that says this is exactly what you can do with this skill and nothing else it's definitely not the kind of game for players who want to kind of let the game run on autopilot with minimal contact from the dm this is the game where collaboration reigns supreme and a lot of it is actually convincing the dm that your skill works the way that you want it to which can be really fun or really terrible depending on how good your dm is but that's my unboxing of city of miss ultimate set i hope you all enjoyed the video uh be sure to check out all my social media in the description below and if you're interested in buying any of this please check out the referral link that is in both the description and it'll be the first comment that's pinned at the very top of this video but yeah davey out
Davvy Chappy
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2021-11-20
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VWTA05zAm3Y
Fast & Powerful 17kW DIY eBike|Electric Bike|Wheelies, Drifting, Acceleration
hey I'm Lodi and this is ebike one old one [Music] these strongly bugs are brand-new category of Transportation it stands somewhere between a bike and a motorcycle you can use it as a regular motorcycle just by adding throttle and choosing one of three power modes you can pedal just like on any other bike just with the white difference it's made out of a frame battery motor and BMS that stands for battery monitor system on this particular model with 3.2 kilowatt hour battery I was able to do 80 kilometers per charge on the highest power mode [Music] these are strong a friend of mine has a prototype that does 17 kilowatt peak power he can do wheelies when riding 60 kilometers an hour drifting passing cars and leaving motorcycles behind is achievable because of its light weight every weight is around 65 kilograms and torque is incredible you don't have to change gears so acceleration is just insane top speed depends on what motor you have but it's common to go up 210 kilometers an hour one cool feature some bikes have is the ability to recharge the battery with regenerative braking this battery has 18 650 cells same standard that Tesla cars use on average I charge with 1400 pots that takes around one and a half hours to charge for I charge for my solar panel slowly the entire day the biggest benefits of these bikes is cheap transportation electricity is affordable and available everywhere you can charge at home work at Fay's or public charging stations for cars ebikes don't require too much maintenance either most maintenance is similar to any other bike you need to lubricate a chain replace brake pads or change tires [Music] the price of these e-bikes can vary because it depends on which part you want and hotels it for you these powerful ones sell somewhere between four thousand six hundred and six thousand three hundred euro if you're interested send me a message and ask we develop them so sometimes we have you for sale [Music] you can definitely build these bikes yourself it's important to keep in mind you will need sufficient knowledge of high voltage distribution heat management mechanical skills torque distribution batteries and preferably have a bike or motorcycle background remember if you like this knowledge you're risking multiple fire hazards explosions and electric shocks [Music] if you do decide to build an e-bike you might appreciate a chart I created of all the parts with corresponding prices and links send me an email at the address below and I can share it with you for a few dollars it's an ideal machine for a local exploring commuting or just hardcore writing it's quiet and feel sophisticated compared to motorcycles my special love carrying them in our van and using them to explore new places for free during the day they stay under the bed to charge via our solar panels or we can charge faster from the alternator when driving this way the bikes are always charged for our next adventure [Music] we travel with these e-bikes full-time and if we want to see where we are writing them at this point follow my girlfriend Margaret's instagram is curly hair campaign I'm a photographer so I mainly use them for location scouting and fun riding sometimes together and you can find me on Instagram a spanner on my man thank you very much for watching and see you next time in another video you
Ladi & Margaret
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2019-06-02
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5th day PACE on Innovative Pedagogies 23-05-2023
after that namaste my channel face professional advancement and continuing education please [Music] okay Central University [Music] good evening foreign [Music] foreign [Music] student s advantages [Music] thank you for uh giving us your valuable time uh we understand that you have uh great expertise in pedagogical Frameworks so we thank you for pre-sharing your learning because on behalf of the District administration and all our teachers we thank you again for your valuable time uh Telugu by any chance [Laughter] [Music] one second thank you uh I only asked to know which language to address you in because most the millions as far as I know are extremely intellectual with South Indian languages and I assume you would speak Telugu but uh thank you again but as an introduction for today's session for all our teachers we have so far finished four sessions in which we have dealt on the need for change in the current educational practices particularly in government institutions we have spoken about our clientele which is our students who come to our schools with Great Expectations often from backgrounds where school is the only opportunity for them to have a better future to escape cycles of poverty and to escape cycles of deprivation so we understand the duty of all government officials as part of the mobile course to ensure that schools become environments where Transformations or children happen in this conversation we've also spoken about why historically our education system has focused on road learning and how the World of Tomorrow is going to start focusing on innovation self-learning accessing information while also processing it towards a very useful end often we have understood that we are not able to tell students what to learn but how to learn that is how we want to approach the future so in this context uh our esteemed speaker for today is going to share with our teachers how pedagogy can be changed in such a way that we accept our role in this new world towards creating self-learners towards creating innovators towards creating entrepreneurs towards building a country that moves away from doing what has already been done towards a country that knows what has to be done and leaves it to our young children on how to get there so with these words I also um uh anchor coordinator for arranging this session today over to you uh Bhaskar garu please stay forward the session and thank you for your time thank you thank you thank you very much sir on behalf of the whole department of education and now uh I would like to present my today's keynote speaker but before that okay brief introduction it won't take more than two minutes over to my screen foreign slideshow yes it is isn't my screen visible PPT only make it presentations sure is it okay now [Music] and again stop sharing my screen [Music] I think now it's okay yes yes it's okay I'm sorry for the little inconvenience Center Regional Institute of Education myself foreign with expertise and Science Education ICT educational research and statistical analysis and curriculum design low videos foreign thank you sir thank you thanks a lot uh all the dignitaries joined in this online meeting so first of all let me thank every one of you who are all uh became the part of this to get me a chance to interact with a great initiative phase that the Telangana state chidpur district has initiated so let me record my appreciation and congratulations for this kind of revolutionary uh changes I can say because we know that everywhere the trainings are going to happen but just for the namesake but here even during the vacation time the teachers are engaged preparing uh themselves to address the government school students who are all most of the time we say deprived of the festival so let me thank everyone and let me congratulate everyone for all uh joined here so basically without wasting much time they will move to the topic for the day so let me share the screen so that you'll have something on I hope you are able to see this yes your screen is better so basically I have taken the topic what uh been discussed as pedagogical Innovations in the digital domain the the time we are interacting we know that every second there are changes in different aspects especially technology the technology tools environment platforms all these are getting changed or I can say getting advanced that makes the teachers to think of updating every no one there the second reason for this is our students however may be deprived of in terms of the gadget in terms of the access to Internet in terms of the power or even in terms of the family setup somehow or the other I feel they are all one step ahead of us in terms of dealing with technology and also processing the information hence the teachers need to be updated basically the students used to ask a question earlier we used to obey the teachers for most of the topics were learned because of obedience when a teacher says 2 plus 2 is 4 we used to admit it but now it's not now even if there is a small mistake our students are in a position to point it out our students are in a position to check real time and even our students are in a position to access whatever information we are discussing inside the classroom and some of them comes well prepared so in that situation I would say teaching is not so easy earlier we used to make a complaint that teaching has been seen as the last resort for anyone or everyone but now we know that teaching is not so easy it is 24x7 accessible to students and getting updated earlier we used to say the doctor made to get updated every now and then but now we know the teacher's job is getting updated and upgraded in terms of everything not only technology in terms of handling the students in terms of providing a learning environment so now let us look into uh the agenda for the session I have some small agendas like teaching learning in general and we know that even I hope in uh Telangana also the CRT might have taken initiative to look into the implementation of outcome based education and there is something called digital learning and the methodologies and tools so these are some of the uh topics maybe the subtopics which I would be covering and to you let me present this small analogy because every teacher every day I feel need to ask a question why do I need to teach today should I teach the students today or why am I teaching today so if any one of you are asking this question you can always remember what is the role of the teacher the role of the teacher is taking the students along with you like our assistant collectors are brightly pointed out guiding the learners in a conducive environment create an environment where the Learners can experience so that they have lifelong learning through the Mantra WhatsApp was telling learning how to learn even our new education policy points out the role of the teacher is to make the Learners how to learn a Chinese proverb if you are meeting a child who is having hunger never ever feed the child rather make the child to fish it's a Chinese proverb similarly let us know try to disseminate all knowledge or dump all knowledge to the Learners so that they are compelled for the road learning or wrote memorization rather let us make the child understand analyze apply so put them into experiences provide them experiences which they are not able to get out of the school so it's a kind of core managing where the teacher take the seat it's not the teacher is the knowledge of our house earlier we were thinking that the teacher knows everything now let us remember vygotsky where we say that the teacher is the more knowledgeable other m k o because we agree that even our students know so many things so we take the students along with us show them the path and we are the Learners as well as the teachers or the wheels of the bicycle both the wheels should go in this in the same way or synchronously both the wheels should work they know only the vehicle will move so if the child want to make any progress in the learning both the wheels should work together while the teacher has got the handle in the handle the teacher handles the problems in the classroom the problems related to The Learning the problem related to the emotion and also the teacher selects the tools there are different tools what the teacher can make use of and the teacher immediately or wherever necessary the teacher shifts the gear so that the pace of the learning process can be managed the teacher creates the teacher addresses different Christians either posed by the learner or the teacher will be putting the students into the question scenario RTE if you remember happy says we are not supposed to assess the learner rather we need to assess the learning ability so we are bothered about the evaluation or assessment which should be the part and parcel of our teaching learning process so in that way the teacher leads from the front most of the time and at times the teacher need to shift the role there are children who are able to manage who are able to present the learning content in a different way so that sometimes the teacher allows the Learners to drive so let's keep this in our mind we are taking the Learners along with us to a journey towards excellence so when you are aspiring towards Excellence let's do it together that would be the the classroom environment what we can think of whatever we are talking in terms of innovation now what is our mission when you design your teaching learning when you encompass all types of learners I'm not using the term all inclusive because we know that there are different parameters we need to consider we need to consider all sorts of children to the classroom who are all deprived of who are all gifted ultimately our aim is the lifelong learning whether the child can learn beyond the classroom whether the child will get interested in continuing learning because we used to say learning is a continuous process but what to learn how to learn where to learn when to learn all these questions if the child can keep it keep on in their mind obviously we can say the lifelong learning will continue now what can be the philosophy as a teacher you might have developed different teaching Style and I consider all of you as the experts we know any teacher need to be a Content expert a method expert and even an expert in assessment so I consider I respect all your expertise but let us some of the philosophy that we can focus on one the learner-centeredness even nap 2020 emphasizes on learner-centeredness it's not just keeping the learner at the center whatever supports you can provide in terms of resources in terms of environment in terms of even emotional support so whatever support you create whatever support you delegate to the learner including the family support create an environment where the learner feel comfortable and satisfied in progressing their learning for that we know ncf 2005 even the latest curriculum framework emphasizes on constructivist learning it's allowing the learner to construct so when you consider the learner at the center providing all kind of supports all kind of resources setting the stage for the learner putting the learner into scenarios situations where the learner can experience and construct their own learning is what constructivism focuses there are different types of constructivism I am not going to those theories but let us remember about Piaget vygotsky even critical pedagogy where the Learners take part into social problems and now we are not dealing only constructing knowledge let us focus on constructionist which is nothing but there are n number of Technology tools it it's not like earlier period where the students prepare lots of things they present lots of things maybe in paper and after one year the paper goes as a waste now we can digitize it even even the the Ministry of Education putting different kind of efforts converting all the resources into digital format which helps the learner to reuse deeksha nista there are n number of platforms wherein the digitization comes in now what do we need to do I know most of the Telangana teachers are well equipped in preparing the different kind of resources it's not only we prepare now slowly let us start make our Learners to construct maybe a drawing maybe a mind map maybe a small program maybe a infographic whatever because we know that they don't have the conditioning in their thinking they are very fragile and very Innovative in their thinking because they they don't have a condition so allow them to construct let us take whatever their constraint and put them back maybe for the same Learners to use we have social constructionist philosophy we construct each other both the learner and the teacher sit together discuss together debate together argue together negotiate together and construct new knowledge because we know when you follow national wide curriculum we have richness of Heritage the regional Heritage cultural heritage so all these can be constructed by even our learners so this can be the philosophy what we can keep in our mind and what should be the focus the focus is achieving the outcome I hope scrt might have taken initiative to redraft or reaching to the teachers based education details what ncrt has prepared so each one of us focus should be smart outcomes when you say smart specific measurable achievable realistic time-bounded because we don't have the luxury of time within the stipulated working hours now even I hope sert will be looking into the national credit framework slowly it will be coming to school education also the the number of learning hours a student need to go through now even if it is 1200 working hours a child supposed to go through in school every single hour is valuable for them so if you want to Value each hour for a learner we need to have a smart design smart design of teaching learning so for that we can remember the taxonomies Bloom's taxonomy you may remembering Anderson and Kratos revised it taxonomy you may remember wherein you need to consider not only the cognitive domain now slowly look into the effective as well as the psychomotor domain earlier in school education we were emphasizing cognitive domain only and even the recent researchers have clearly mentioned us there is a challenge of emotion most of our children are having emotional problems earlier some of the senior most teachers may be able to agree with me earlier the students were very open openly discussing their problem openly discussing their learning but now they are not emotionally they have different different challenges they need something to do and even we are looking for skill based work based education so considering all these I would humbly submit before you that when you design your teaching learning I'm not emphasizing you need to become Innovative when you design your teaching learning in a smart way that itself make sure that your teaching learning is innovative recently we had a discussion about Innovative teaching methods so we were wondering what methods we can have as innovation then we could conclude that almost all methods are being tried out by teachers now what Innovation I feel Innovation is that you can bring in using even any old method the way you use the method will make sure your Innovation not the method as such there is no not a single capsule which says that okay you take this use it in the classroom this make sure innovation no Innovation is the way you design in any old method even a lecture method you can bring the innovation even in your demonstration you can bring the Innovation because now we talk about the multiple resources earlier when you talk about lecture method right now I am lecturing to you but in front of you you have a visual in front of you I can provide you an interactive website that the way you use the method make sure Innovation so hence let all the teachers let us decide to become smart be specific what we supposed to achieve what the students supposed to achieve and specificity can easily come when you stick on to the taxonomy the taxonomy gives you specific actions specific action verbs the cognitive processes effective processes psychomotor processes and what are all the things we can focus this is what where we can bring innovation the first point we focus on the disciplinary knowledge in any school classroom we focus on what is there in the curriculum converted into syllabus that is being reflected in the textbook and the content is being discussed made the students to go for an applied reasoning but that alone is not enough if you want to become an Innovative pedagogue focus on the communication skill let it be in Telugu not an issue let the child feel comfortable in his own her own mother tongue and the competency in the mother tongue will give confidence for the learner even to approach any other language so focus on the communication skill make the children to become a critical thinker almost all of us were struggling to have three R's or four r's Reading Writing arithmetic when computer can be have added computer now later on we have added life skills out of which critical thinking is most critical let the child approach the content not only to accept by heart let the child put a problem let the child pose certain questions analyze it why should I maybe in the next academic year you may have a question from your classroom maybe suppose you are teaching Earth as a magnet you may have a question okay sir of Madam let Earth be a magnet tell me why should I learn let it be a magnetic why should I learn it you may teach a plus b whole square is equal to S square plus 2 a B plus b square the identities you may teach there can be a child who stand up and ask okay this I will learn but why should I learn it so the role of the teacher is convince the learner not consistency for example I remember almost all of us Pi is equal to 3 2 by 7. and a student may ask a question why not any other number the answer would be no Pi a is equal to 22 by 7 that is a constant how many of us try to make convince the learner that why it is only 22 by 7. we teach Ang Wilson Property when you add any the three angles of a triangle you will get 180 degree well and good The Next Step would be there are three types of triangles right angle triangle obtuse triangle acute triangle in all the three it will be same now as H I'll ask a question if I have a triangle as big as the building of the school will it be true because style never thinks about the conditions I I think big the child may think that when the size of the triangle gets increased the angle size Also may get increased hence it may not be 180. it's a challenge before the teacher how are we going to convince this is what the kind of challenges waiting for us so hence as a teacher as a change initiator focus on the critical thinking even if the child is not posting this kind of question post it across them make them problems always focus on analytic reasoning focus on research related skills not at the the PHD level kind of research a biology teacher teaches about protein carbohydrate nutritious food can you think of an activity what the students can do as something called research I still remember around 20 years back when I was teaching in in a demonstration School of ncrt I was dealing this biology component by the end of the unit one student came with a notebook and yes told me he said this is what I have done I just opened it there were certain food wrappers food packet wrappers like biscuit wrappers corlix wrapper what he has done he has just noted down the ingredients the amount and you know that in any food packet it will say maybe if you use 100 gram what are all the advantages you have how much energy you will get what is the carbohydrate content what is the protein content somehow over the other the student felt that yes I can look into this is what the research we can bring in even in school level it's not something that that can change the entire world but it is that's something that can Engage The learner even outside the school even in the kitchen even in the Paddy field they may be supporting the parents in the field even that time give some input which he can keep on thinking why is it like this why should I change the manual why should I change for organic farming what should be done what what happens to the soil when water is not there what happens to the soil when water is more what happens to the soil that thinking if we can ignite he will bring that to the classroom and be ready to accept this kind of challenging questions let's not negate saying that these are all out of syllabus and the syllabus for any child is his life when you focus on lifelong learning your syllabus is just formally you have a syllabus but beyond that like earlier cbse has given a circular in the schools junk foods are banned and even based on that in government schools we may have the government may be providing the the maybe midday meals team or breakfast scheme whatever it may be in order to make sure every child has got at least some of the nutritional support meanwhile we know majority of the students are behind the junk Foods now how many of the students stop it why should I stop so let them find out make them to find out that is what the research related skills that we can focus scientific reasoning very interesting provide them experiences take them to the field I still remember we were taken to a school where this the teachers have made some Corners like how can I take the oil from neem seeds neem oil how can they extract inside the school and the students are knowing that okay this is something that you can get from neem oil name seeds neem oil and they themselves find out what are all the different uses of it a school should become the the activity center a classroom can become it's not like you have some 10 benches and uh desks and benches and you have a smart board that is not enough let them do by themselves let them do small small projects when they do small small project when they observe their surroundings they will start their reflective thinking also let us don't remember information and digital literacy because our students are exposed to lots of materials from internet even our teachers we are we are confused which material should I use whether the first one I get from Google whether the second one so we need to find we need to develop the skill of analyzing comparing and critically evaluating the information that we are sharing that we are getting shared so these things will help you to think of the methods when you focus on digital learning because everything becomes digital even our pedagogy now can be shifted into a digital learning environment what is digital learning it's not simply using some digital tool it is the set of educational methods so the entire educational method including the planning of a lesson transacting in the classroom assessment all these and even the students involvement participation all these should come together wherein you make use of the scope of digital Tools digital environment hence we can call it as it is a digital learning it's not just the students are getting connected in a Google meet no and now in a learning environment which is becoming digital the learning can happen through virtual classrooms almost all government schools now are planning to have all sorts of supports wherein at least you can provide and I know that because some of my friends from Telangana in the school they are doing fantastic work and I think that that's made the The District administration to think of such a program wherein it becomes a learning ecosystem support each other so provide the virtual experiences you have simulated Labs even the Ministry of Education has got V lab or lab now the other side the teachers May complain knows that the students may not be able to access no need you show them provide them some opportunity we have mooc we just talk we have social learning and adaptive learning so depending upon the situation in the school and even now the schools are providing different kind of support those who are not having maybe a gadget they are providing the gadget I won't say everybody need a gadget but at least for the learning to get started the learning to get involved they can have some kind of supports and we can think of M learning it's a mobile based learning wherever they go they can learn even it can be a what we used to suggest see in in some states they were having the libraries in every block in every month you may have a library the library can be supported with some kind of digital tools where the students can go and sit and learn together social learning instead of you are you are lending the books maybe for a week a child can be lend with a tablet or a mobile wherein the educational content is provided on a rotation basis even in school we can have a rotation basis access to the gadgets especially those schools wherein the children are deprived of even they will learn lots of values sharing caring responsibility accountability so that even everybody can have the the latest experience including the technology and slowly we can think of Blended learning like at the national level we have 32 channels now every school may not be able to have TV in every classroom but at least you can have one TV in every block the teachers can go through the schedule and wherever you have the best episode the teachers can take their children to their and they can have they can sit together and watch the session in soy emperable or even need not be so important whatever resources now I hope acrt would be now thinking of starting a teacher portal a a platform where the teachers can share all their resources which can be shared across across the schools Any teacher can make use of any student can make use of so that slowly we can provide the ubiquitous learning learning happens anywhere everywhere every time so Innovation comes like this now specifically into pedagogy I would say as a teacher as a school teacher it may not be easy to focus only pedagogy what is pedagogy we know sit along with the child sit aside by the child but we know in terms of their thinking in terms of their experience a child is not a child they think like an adult so somewhere we need to have adult learning strategies which is nothing but experiential learning provide different types of experiences wherein the students are involved the students are immersed because now we started hearing the term immersive technology allow the students to be the part of the learning experiences let them learn because every child can learn one or the other thing so andragogy we can some of the components of answer Gogi we can use another one is don't worry about the word yutagogi is nothing but you remember how a learner plan his or her learning this is what the the additional work a teacher need to think of maybe when you start your Academic Year every teacher go to the classroom for the first week do some testing of your students one multiple intelligence there are n number of free tools available have a test identify what kind of intelligence are there in your classroom why according to that you can decide you are learning experiences second another teacher can just find out what is the learning style there are different types of learning that your students follow now when these can support according to the learn style this will be engaged the student feel feel happy get encouraged get motivated so that they can plan their learning they can regulate their learning suggests self-regulated learning some of you know some students whatever distractions are there they will say no sorry I have to complete this then only I'll come there are some students who wait for any chance to stop learning so do the first make the child convinced that why should you learn it how should you learn it let them learn they can prepare a time table in the first week he can have a discussion in the classroom allow their children to come up with their timetable 20 for us split into meaning Flash and let them decide how many hours I am preparing you need not impose recently even even in in a degree level I started in the first semester in the semester first week I had a discussion for sixth semester students because they have to start their internship what I have told we had a discussion what are all the qualities of a teacher by the end of this semester you are going to start as a teacher so let us discuss the qualities three groups discussed came out with essential skills essential qualities essential values their prepareds are pasted in the wall and we came to an agreement that they are going to start a small Journal entire diary kind of thing 100 page book every week Saturday they will analyze themselves and they may Mark against any of the skill or quality whether I have achieved it not 100 percentage and every month they used to submit I just go through that the students are feeling happy may not be 100 percentage this even we can start in our school what are all your achievement milestones keep it in terms of all the skills what I was sharing with you you can have a profile every week ask the student to mark what is their level by their own can be practiced another is peera Gogi is nothing but you know in any curriculum some 10 percentage any Learners can learn by themselves the other 10 to 15 percentage they can learn through their peer group their own friends but most of the time they may not get the content that they can learn among their peer group so what you can do you can in the first week you can have the learning groups identified it need to not be the same throughout the year or semester in every month you change the group there are different types of grouping ability grouping mixed ability grouping there are different types of groups so try one or the other grouping strategy provide them maybe a group based project which covers at least one unit which they can take it for maybe one week now what happens when you assign a project when you give a project after giving the topic the teacher may not look into that But the teacher will look in only at the last don't do that when you give a project discuss how are they going to complete the project what are the different steps what are the different phases they are going to complete after each phase the teacher involved provide the feedback find out whether they are doing accordingly whether they are doing right are they getting diverted don't wait till the end so the learning groups can work better and the last one is whatever methodology that you follow when you use a cyber tool so this way we can create it can bring innovation in your teaching learning maybe I'll I'll take another five minutes just to give you how to design your teaching learning follow these five steps though it is meant for e-content development or any course development let's have learning ecosystem in our school every teacher support each other every teacher share analyze the learner analyze your context analyze the task that can be given to class seven student class 8 student plus nine student what kind of task they are capable of it's not that what kind of task I can assign sorry what kind of task that they can do that you you will have maximum involvement because that is Our intention it's not that some 10 percentage of the Learners can do that no you start with an activity or a task wherein maximum Learners are getting involved appreciate even small successes meanwhile have the proper feedback your feedback can make changes but what kind of feedback we are providing please remember my dear teachers don't end up with saying it's good it's great you are excellent sorry if you give always only positives they will not be able to cope up with their small failure so please remember in any methodology that you would like to follow to bring innovation your feedback should have four components one have a positive struck with a positive word excellent very good you have done well don't put a full stop have the second component what is that have a diagnosis suppose a child is doing a presentation the child is explaining something after the explanation the child may come to you and ask her how was it excellent but the diagnosis part come here but the teacher says your vocabulary need to be improved you need some more words this is what I have observed during your presentation so when you do a diagnosis what is next don't stop there the third component is remediation when you say your vocabulary is not up to the mark which I'll expect okay then tell me how will I improve my vocabulary so give a remediation look you take in English paper read one news item every day find out minimum five new words find out the meaning of those words using a dictionary or you watch a English news if you are focusing on English three components positive stroke diagnosis remediation and don't stop most of us may stop here after that what the child is doing will he or she go through the newspaper and find out some new verbs and new words if you are not having the fourth component the student may feel that this teacher every time give these kind of comments why should I follow show them that you are sincere have a follow-up have a follow-up fourth component is follow-up have a follow-up next day when you are meeting the child informally you just ask how many words you you could find out every day informally the child will feel that oh this teacher is so sincere that is tomorrow he or she will ask I should have an answer have this kind of environment this is what we can bring innovation and the next one will be bringing innovation in bringing the different tools including technology tools we have different categories of tool some tools like I don't know what is your comfort level in using augmented reality virtual reality AI tools most of us may not use that because I don't have much knowledge about I don't have details about that that will not stop you you can use those tools as an operating tool you know just to operate maybe some 10 years back how we started using a PowerPoint we used to click Slide by slide but now those tools have become integral part of your teaching learning like video audio simulation applets now it it became the part of your teaching learning so slowly you focus more on integrating tools also you can have transforming tools so the selection of the tools when you want to bring innovation in your pedagogical methods the selection of the tool should be categorized you decide what kind of tool you need at different phases of your teaching because a teaching learning process if it is for 40 minutes there are different phases so those different phases should be supplemented should be complemented with the different types of tools different types of resources so when you look in this way I would say that more almost all of you would be able to bring changes bring something new in terms of the learning culture in terms of the education in our government schools so that if you continue that we will bring a great change among our Learners even they'll be able to compete with the so-called International level students so with that I'll stop at this point now as I was informed uh we will have the interaction now uh us any questions so actually we have around 152 participants right now in the live Zoom meeting but uh it is being streamlined in YouTube so uh we have the adopted one mechanism that uh the Youtube viewers can send that queries to certain WhatsApp numbers yes so we can nowaday the questions to you so it's a great sir I should congratulate every one of you and even all these teachers even during this vacation time they are spending at least this time every regularly uh saluting thank you sir thank you uh sir WhatsApp numbers YouTube WhatsApp number three questions [Music] foreign sir good afternoon sir yes sir please doctor visuals are this is one of the wonderful session to improve our digital skill in teaching learning process I have some one-to-one questions specially in live sizes if digital platform is a too dependent why because live thinks some experiments are doing handle experiments to live session only but so many teachers are depending upon the digital platform only uh is it right there or you can fulfill the research research oriented skill by using the digital only number one second one uh the content is a number of content is nowadays we are dumping on the students pages of pages PDF or whatever that's the digital content unlimited digital content the teachers are sharing to the students without hesitate why because there is no parameter is there any suggestions to how to uh improve the digital content to send these students but because number of us are this is one of biggest problem we are going to face face in the platform of digital content how to select and what to send to the student why because there is a limited time but unlimited sources is there how to use wisely being a science teacher thank you very much sir thank you sir see the first question what you have raised is uh over dependence on technology especially in life sciences sir that is where I would say we uh you you decide how much they can because we cannot uh control them those who are having access to these kind of digital sources we cannot control but what would I suggest let us plan such a way that let them use it but let them have some uh uh maybe guidelines how to use it where to use it when to use it like see somewhere some schools may not have appropriate like Laboratories so in such cases yes we may have to depend on simulated Labs there are different types of labs especially in life's biology there are dissection Labs there are different types of labs so either the teacher demonstrate show them how to use it second or those children maybe who are all having the access to that put them into some problem situation let them use it as a problem solving tool this is what because we have two advanced first second point is again a very important point in terms of technology related teaching learning there is an information overload we are dumping or even they are getting maybe if they can spend half an hour they may get thousands of pages so what I would suggest that the teachers can validate one one is validating uh some of the selected resources one second decide on we are going to use those resources which are from academics or or some institutions or we can have oer open educational resources which are specifically for Education purpose okay otherwise I would say for example if you look at taxonomy you can see that thousands of pages are there thousands of people are giving different different explanations so which one would be authentic so what we can do sir as teachers as a group learning groups you can just go through some of the links and validate it that can be shared to the students second maybe you can console a compile different resources put together customize it I would say customize it and provide to students this is what we can do thank you sir thank you very much thank you sir good afternoon good afternoon sir you can speak I think there is some Network sir good afternoon sir hello what's up um sir good afternoon sir good afternoon sir it's a very nice good evening to you sir for giving a very nice uh system in pedagogue new pedagogy uh but I want to ask you sir whatever you think our four sentences are four questions number one sir number ones are whatever you said digitalization uh digitalization when the digitalization is introduced in our schools the decrease of the uh decrease and in role of the teacher is increasing day by day but we're at the same time students role is decreasing a teacher's role is increasing teacher student role is decreasing uh one thing second thing is whatever you said UAE UAE means the teacher going to the class with better preparation at the same time 220 is not come to student is not coming to class with a better preparation so at that same at that time have it is possible teacher must received along with the students and discuss closely with the number three is number three I don't know about the other states in the country but coming to our state a lot of many years back the digitalization is introduced but it never reached to the student I uh number three number four also uh the government is going to introduce the new digitalization our new computer system with green boards with the TVs something something extra but whatever you say whatever is working working hours are preparation is debate increasing to the students to those teachers sorry to the teachers but there is no risk in in a present education upon the students that is why Dave and compared to the previous education in uh years now teaching whatever you said uh systems in the classroom yes sir thank you sir thank you uh for raising these kind of concerns I would say Sir uh rather thinking how how is it possible let us bring some changes in the way we see I won't say digitization alone is the uh way to include our Learners sorry digitization now we cannot avoid because our students are getting different kind of experiences so they also need a different kind of experience one second as you said I completely agree when you start transforming into digitization when a teacher wants to come create this digital resources we have workload our work increases but once we have put that effort for it for a year we can reuse those kind of resources in the coming year with a small modification so that is what we have seen during the lockdown almost all the teachers have created different kind of resources now some of the teachers can use so I I won't say that yes the the students interests are getting diverted over digitization May create problems why because uh we say the technology as a tool as well as that may act as a disruptive which may distract the learning true I agree so that is why these kind of uh interactions we where we decide how much we need to digitize even if you have all digital supports how will we make use of it it's not that's a uh uh in in Kerala State they they have made all the classrooms are high-tech classrooms where they have Smart Boards all these kind of gadgets now what is their focus it's only infrastructure even if you have infrastructure if you can make use of them wherever necessary and focus more on students learning providing them different types of experiences so what technology by itself or digitization by itself alone cannot bring changes so we teachers need to decide how do we use what way we can use for the benefit of our Learners like uh sadasa was telling we need to guide them even some of the students may be mobile addicted what are they doing whatever they want they do but if the teacher can give something related to their learning maybe some gamified content or some applications through which they can learn something tomorrow I will monitor it so slowly they will come to know yes this mobile is not a time wasting machine even I can use it for learning so that is where as I have told you teachers as more knowledgeable other will discuss some protocol of digitization some protocol of bringing technology into the classroom and let us work together wherein technology act as a support not as a disruption so I have one question from one of the participants from YouTube uh the teacher is asking what is mooc and spoke yeah mooc is the massive online course that is familiar to most of the teachers which is at the largest level see for example we have a SIM portal in India in the soyan portal if you just go through that at the school education level a class 10 student can take up a course so this course has been served with entire class 10 students of the country and outside the country now for example Telangana state would like to serve for Telangana students small private online course this is what's popped or or in every District all the see for example I have seen some mathematics teachers maybe from one District they sit together they decide that okay we will have some offline content which the students can use so they create a course for a smaller group that is what Spock thank you sir and I got one more question from one of the teacher what is ubiquitous learning obicities learning is a term that we use to represent Learning Happens Every Time anywhere see wherever we go we can see uh now I would say in in some Metro cities the the even the school going children may have their earphone what are they listening recently we have seen most of these private FM stations have come in almost all the states so they listened the music and all instead of that if a teacher creates some audio files related to some content MP3 maybe for three minutes three minutes three minutes then give to the students they can learn it so even when they are going to school the learning is happening even they go to a picnic the learning can happen so the learning happens anywhere anytime is a wicket is learning uh thank you sir I got one more question sir from one of the teacher or the question is like this why lot of syllabus when to implement all these techniques okay so this is one question most of the teachers ask in fact even at the national level we have the same discussion uh something called content overload curricular overload so that is where I think even um ncrt may also think of when you have your state curriculum framework uh we have some guidelines where we can have certain percentage flexibility one second you may divide the entire content into term wise so that the term wise only content need to be so content overload or the curricular overload I would say it is a policy matter even at the national level at the state levels the discussions are on now uh I have uh what is the andragogy basket sir there is a chat so I will answer that yes I told pedagogy is the Art and Science of teaching school kids is the arts and science of teaching adults so other is when you deal with the adult there is a difference right now I'm talking to Adele so almost I talked almost one hour and all the adults may not received everything why because adults are more selective in nature some biology teacher might have looked into is talking something related to biology social science teacher may look into is there something on social science so adults are very selective one second adults learn better through experiences so some of these components we can use in our classroom provide them experiences through the experiences let them learn I won't say everything can be experienced but some of the areas the teachers can select those content wherein the students can have first-hand experience or virtual experience this is what andragogic principles I just mentioned and we have so many officers here in the zoom meeting live Zoom meeting we have some mandal educational officers and complex Headmasters as well so these are all our first level modeling offices so uh coming to this digital pedagogical uh Innovations like what would you suggest to what would be your suggestion to our monitoring officers okay now they can act in what way they can build a support system they can suggest the teachers yes so like what I was into in my talk sir in the first first week of the uh session starting the teachers can make maybe as a team they can just check do some testing on the students like multiple animals something like that so that we will have some profile what is their level so once they know the level the mundle offices or these administrative offices can think of some supporting system can suggest some profile which they can keep on checking it one second sir in the assessment some of the assessment may be uh the administration can have a small session on assessment rubric see most of our teachers are very good in creating tests question answers but the qualitative way of assessing observing assessing the performance can be done through assessment rubric so the teachers can have some self-checking mechanism which the the bundle offices or District education officers can interact with them discuss with them there can be a feedback mechanisms like some teachers were asking when are they going to reduce the content so there can be at least every semester if you have a semester system the teachers can have a reflective reflection come back to the offices because uh these officers are taking care of the policy changes and modification so they can have a system in school every month let the teacher maybe write a paragraph about their reflection on that particular subject they have taught for one month and that can be discussed at the school level from the school level that can come to the bundle offices so the model officers can compile it because this kind of because nowadays though we say that data is most important even for any SAR t or District education officer or mental education officer they cannot decide on Wacom so the teachers need to be ready to give some inputs back to the stakeholders have a very informal mechanism wherein Any teacher can put a maybe you can have a Dropbox like in some schools uh they they may have for girls from drawbox where they can put their concerns so similarly in every school maybe the Headmaster can have a box where let the teacher at least once in a month they sent they drop a small list maybe their reflection maybe their experience may be the suggestion so this way we cancel that is one second if the digitization is happening let them let every school has got a log book it's not just to mention which teacher uses which Gadget no how does that particular device that particular system has been utilized for teaching learning that is most important it's not that how which teacher operated for how much time no maybe every three months they can have a small report what way it is helping for improving learning this is one another is have the informal visit or even there can be selected teachers or a mentoring team in schools mentoring like uh uh um maybe a a a group of 10 teachers it need not be senior most 10 teachers who can support the teachers the in-service teachers providing some good resources providing some maybe arranging a workshop kind of thing once in a month for one hour um sir please please go answer please yes so this mentoring system uh in school mentoring system among the teachers would be better so that the the stakeholders will get the correct picture so maybe the intern decisions interim suggestions can be given maybe um after two three months after six months there can be a small progress report kind of thing but what support you have needed what kind of improvement you have done so this kind of mechanism would help we've been having around the use of technology in classroom like very rightfully a lot of our teachers have pointed out that Telangana has taken the lead in providing digital Tools in classrooms yes but a lot of the times we see that the mindset required to use technology among teachers themselves students are a second part this mindset we have not provided enough training because most of us I mean including me I I have just entered my 30s but even me I have seen a time which was prior to the internet even I don't understand the mindset of children today who continuously around their phones use internet use technology a lot more than we used to when we were children so my specific question is have we also tried to provide training to teachers not just on pedagogy but on their interaction with technology and how that technology can be liberating for a child in a way that teaches themselves because of a generational Gap will not be able to fully understand um has some effort been made in this direction and apart from this extremely good session I've been attending for the entire 90 minutes of it and even extremely informative and once again I thank you for taking the time thank you sir thank you sir you have rightly pointed out this question even at the national level when nap was formulating they have discussion that is why nap suggested 50 hours of continuous professional development for any teacher now over a year they need to complete 50 hours so let it be there because we know that what is the status of these kind of compulsion but if as I was suggesting if we can have a mentoring team at the school who can organize maybe a small kind of workshops especially in technology so what happened one is the mindset second is even if I use it am I going to get some benefit because the other teacher who is not using technology uh so getting the same kind of support if I spend much effort on technology I am also getting something so at the policy level itself we can have some system to acknowledge the effort that the teachers are putting one second yes that the teachers can have small small uh continuous training it's it's not that today there is some trainings maybe we can plan a training course which spread across maybe 10 months in every month some three days maybe in the beginning or at the end of the month some three days and that three days training they have to implement in their classrooms before coming to the next three days even it can be an online it need not be like this where every teacher put together he can have maybe the zonal wise or mental wise categorization so but this continuous because we know that some of the teachers they might have used different types of tool during the lockdown and once the classes started they have stopped using that now even they might have forgotten because technology is like that the time how much time you are spending on that that much time that much easily you can make use of it so I would suggest that there can be a continual training programs it's not just disseminating information rather focus on those training which make them to use immediately after in the classroom thank you thank you thank you sir uh you can ask your question sir um very good evening sir very good evening sir I have I have a small query set same before starting asking my question I want to just say that before coming this mobile phones uh we would have memorized some 50 to 60 phone numbers in our brain but after this mobile coming we have lost that memory so in the same way uh the heart that is hierarchical patients uh which which were very abstract coming from the children uh these days we are losing it because if we are asking something yes they are going and Googling it so is it the technology helping the children and us to grow or to move damage us sir I will see in this way uh somewhere I would say see suppose when I am asking a question which if the child can get directly from Google then I would say I have to stop asking those kind of questions I have to frame the questions or the assessment tasks such a way that they cannot get directly from any of the site that is the challenge we teachers have right see for example we used to say they can go for open text based assessment they can refer the text to book and write the answer so what is even during the lockdown what we have seen when you have given some Google form never browsing in the Google itself and answering so here that the the kind of questions we frame the kind of assessment methods that we design should take care of itself yeah and one more you have given a very great that cycle uh pictures are when I was just going on seeing that picture there the student role is a very passive isn't it sir that is what see any classroom as such it can be passive so how best you make it active how best you create environment wherein the students feel that yes I have to import for example suppose uh you you might have read a book written by Bruce Joyce and Masha bill which talks about models of teaching wherein they are giving a scenario a teacher when entering into the classroom the students are playing football it is nine o'clock the the class supposed to start when the teacher was entering they were playing football now he was asking a question what a regular teacher will do a regular teacher will enter into the classroom stop the playing and start the class what what will happen we know that the students might not stopped their thinking the player may be going on in their mind they will not be able to attend in the class so he was giving a suggestion that the teacher also involved in playing along with the children it may take another five minutes and suddenly he took the ball and stole that time up as a referee now what happened in the minds of the learner the play got over now the teacher says now let us start so similarly when a teacher presents something which makes the child to think related to their environment then I would say their involvement would be there sir one more question sir according to the Bloom's taxonomy what we were discussing we have a cap that is cognitive effective and psychomotive romancer but when we are going through this technology I is it not that it is going uh you know opposite direction sir that is psychomotor is coming first then the effective is coming and at last we are going for the cognitive again I would say see we see that the children are doing a lot what are they doing can we give some tasks which may which they have to make their higher order thinking skill so then the operation will get reduced now they are getting addicted to the screen they are getting addicted to the gadget because they are operating that a lot now the the kind of tasks that we are assigning see for example I can give a project suppose I am giving a project that the quality of drinking water quality of drinking water even a child right now can do the project completely with the help of a computer with the internet so if I just give the the project title they can get it rather we discuss we formulate maybe I will present the problem situation they sensitize what they can do and they take accountability of what they are going to do it's not so easy to bring that change but let us let us create a discussion where the students feel that sir this I can do it this is what I can do so that accountability we need to develop so uh nagaraji sir has asked a question is it possible to prepare special evaluation and assignment for each topic to student for proper use of digitization I would say sir it need to be multiple forms of assessment repeat in the next month I am not going to repeat the same method in every month including the method of teaching and method of assessment but again the teacher may come with their question sir then what about the departmental assessment because we have to follow the departmental assessment structure and we have to give the data accordingly let it be there but personally the kind of assessment method I am using I will try to bring some changes so that I can maximize the participation of the learner now when digitalization has occurred uh what is the role of the parents because I am working in a primary school uh the baskets are always easiest to use every time we are trying but we are unable to success because of the uh what not supporting from the parents trying to read the primary schools are when the teacher is insisting to do some Zoom meetings some maths of recordings these are all digitalization not only from minor to Major so many digitalization techniques will be then what should be the role of the parent and how we should make them to away uh using the cell phone cell phone means not only for charting not only for seeing WhatsApp and YouTubes uh so many eyes you said sir that so many of my friends have completed so many certificate courses through the swear I'm the one of them then what should be the role of the parents how should we make them away to use the digital technology to make the students as I said that's a few parents we are shifting the responsibility of the teaching learning process towards the parents now education has entered into our bedroom yes God answer is your question finished yeah okay so this is a I would say the meaningful concern what we have there are two sides there one when we shift maybe when when we give equal opportunity for their parents to participate one side some of the parents are not able to participate because they may not have these kind of knowledge the other side they may have all the gadgets and they may have all kind of knowledge now one I would say we need to have some kind of interaction continuous interaction with the parents like Sada servers telling some orientation may be in the beginning of the academic session they can have some orientation wherein it's not that we just talk about everything the teachers should go to the orientation with the planning of the year what are we what are we going to do wherein where and where and all we are expecting your participation one second how to take care of your children behavior maybe over accessing the gadgets or over usage of the mobile how to use it how to handle their problems and how exactly you can support so some of these in terms of maybe some messages some notices or some orientation program we need to because even the parents are now in confusion what they say because of the school my child is using mobile every time because the children will say that my teacher sends these might so our teachers need to reduce sharing resources on social network like WhatsApp emergence emergency very very emergency information only you share with the mobile phones or social media Network because now we have complete face to face so or higher level learning resources or tasks you can put it in their social media Network otherwise something which make them completely engaged avoid it one second uh give the task such a way that the parents need to involve we say partnership [Applause] [Music] parental partnership program some some maybe awareness campaign or a program at the school level which can be implemented so that even the parents because most of the parents are having the complaints now so we need to have some uh initiation [Music] yeah I am going to ask one question and last question then the mic is given to Chandra shekar with that I think we'll close the ginger the question from one of the teacher is the uh you mentioned about emotional well-being of students but what about teachers well-being we have to address the emotional well-being of the Learners parallely we say what happens to our emotional well-being because we the teachers are under stress anxiety trauma because of the different kind of roles so I would say one each one of us let us think of how best we balance it this is this much only I can say how best we balance one second at the uh policy level at the stakeholders level they will try to maybe I would say streamline it wherever there is some uh over uh compulsion or anxiety or stress whatever possible within their limit I think they will take some initiative to support make sure that there is a mental health and emotional well-being of the Learners sorry teachers please sir sir namaskaram said uh mobile usage is having both positive and negative directions but your speech is wonderful and we are taking in in positive way this total speech uh I am trying to express in a small poem is your permission foreign okay to be on the digital platform and they have to this uh creating Library resources right to appreciate the students whenever the student answer you in perfect way whatever we are experiencing the same words you said but nowadays many poor students are not having mobile phones and they are far to technology I am working in model School nearly in each class 100 students will be there but 25 to 30 students are unable to use the mobile phone if we force them to purchase the mobile phone again it is a it becomes a financial it's you also but anyway every point in today's meeting is wonderful sir thank you for giving me this opportunity thank you thank you it's not about usage of mobile phones by the students who will let us language and now it's time to close the session and uh first of all uh very very thanks wishes are our being kind enough and for like starting your valuable time for statistics and we would like to convert gratitude from the cartridge debated from the district education office is depend on wherever the user and additional Collective sir and uh I I would like I would also like to convey my sincere thanks to additional collected sir and you for being very kind enough and for being very suggestive and for giving his guidance always all the time and participating is valuable time until throughout this session and uh teachers um we are closing the seconds and thank you very much thank you thank you thank you thanks a lot and it's my pleasure to extend my support for any kind of uh uh educational activities here thanks a lot sure sir definitely we are looking forward for wonderful uh what is collaboration with user will definitely come up with it thank you vinod I will close the session yes and I'm gonna feedback yeah um
SIDDIPET VIDYA MITHRA
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2023-05-23
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLEGPt62ZAY
10:30am Confirmation Service of Worship (9/27/20)
good morning it is very nerve-wracking doing this with people in the sanctuary it's been a while it's so good to see this people in the pews today and to be here on a special day like this is such a joy and a blessing to i hope it is to you it certainly is to me and it is to our church um we will be recording this service and it will be available on our youtube channel for all of our church members who want to see that and if you have family who aren't able to be here today please feel free to share this with them we hope they can celebrate with us in this way just one quick announcement for this morning we will be having church in the park again next sunday also on the 25th and we will be gathering back together in person for worship on november 1st so we're excited to do that i want to keep our announcements brief this morning and ask as we step into this special time if you would share a word of prayer with me so let's pray together our gracious god we give you thanks for a joyful day such as this we pray for your holy spirit to be among us as we celebrate these young lives as they are dedicated to you bless these families bless this church and may we do the work that you call us to do with glad hearts it is in christ's name that we pray amen [Music] foreign [Music] so [Music] let us pray our gracious and loving god we give you thanks for days such as these days that are full of celebration and new beginnings we pray that as we begin this new step of our lives that you would be with us that each day we would grow an assurance of your love for us and your presence in our hearts we thank you for the love that you have shared with us that stays with us at all times and at all moments we thank you for your grace that shows that your love and your presence is with us even when we do not deserve it and we thank you for your forgiveness that allows us a fresh start at each moment because of the sacrifice of your son gracious god we ask that as we step into your promises today that you would remind us at every moment that we are your children that we are a part of your larger family that you call us to live lives worthy of your purpose and we pray that as we seek to live in this way that you would remind us that your son jesus christ had came to serve as our greatest example in ways of living and in loving bless these young people as they begin this new time in their lives bless their families as they support them and bless this church as we work together to further your kingdom on earth it is in christ's name that we pray amen if you join me on page 34 if you have one if you're a young person that has one in your hand as i say your name if you would stand so that you can be recognized through confirmation and through the reaffirmation of our faith we renew the covenant declared at our baptism acknowledge what god is doing for us and affirm our commitment to christ's holy church i present these names for confirmation in the church cameron claire alley audrey catherine hale ella brooks hardin elizabeth jackson aaron marie moore campbell faith owsley riley juliana panzer andrew ernest ramy joseph roman nicholas brooks sweeney and rowan elizabeth ziegler and now i'm going to ask you all to stand up again and you'll see these questions on page 34 in your hymnal will you join me in the renunciation of sin and the profession of faith on behalf of the whole church i ask you do you renounce the spiritual forces of wickedness reject the evil powers of this world and repent of your sin if so say i do do you accept the freedom and power god gives you to resist evil injustice and oppression in whatever forms they present themselves if so please answer i do do you confess jesus christ as your savior put your whole trust in his grace and promise to serve him as your lord in union with the church which christ has opened to people of all ages nations and races if so answer i do and now to our families will you nurture these children in christ's holy church that by your teaching and example they may be guided to accept god's grace for themselves profess their faith openly and lead a christian life if so please answer i will and now on your bulletin will you join me in our conformational vows congregational vows which will mirror what we've just promised with god's help we will surround these persons with a community of love support and forgiveness that they may grow in their trust of god and be found faithful in their service to others we will pray for them that they may be true disciples who walk in a way that leads to life now i will introduce clinton wheeler to you as he leads you through our affirmation of faith good morning like rob said i'm clinton wheeler and i'm the new youth minister here um i know that i've met most of you but if i haven't met you i would love to meet you and get to know you after the service um i'm going to now lead you in the affirmation of faith and the responses are in the bulletin so if you'll follow me do you believe in god the father i believe in god father almighty creator of heaven and earth do you believe in jesus christ i believe in jesus christ his only son our lord who is conceived by the holy spirit born of the virgin mary suffered under pontius pilate was crucified died and was buried he descended to the dead on the third day he rose again he ascended into heaven is seated at the right hand of the father and will come again to judge the living and the dead do you believe in the holy spirit i believe in the holy spirit holy catholic church the communion of saints the forgiveness of sins the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting we invite riley to come forward you may be seated we invite riley and her mother to come forward now for her baptism kneel here i told her i would put it on the back of her head not to mess her hair up so very special moment riley juliana panzer i baptize you in the name of the father and of the son and of the holy spirit amen god bless you and she'll return for her confirmation in just a few moments bless you thank you [Music] take my life and let it be consecrated with me take my moments and my days [Music] take my hands and let them move at the impulse of thy love take my feet and let them be swift and beautiful [Music] take my lips and let them be filled with messages filled with [Music] my mercedes and make it shall be no longer mine take my heart it is [Music] thy royal throne take my love my lord i [Music] take myself and i will be [Music] thee [Music] oh [Music] scripture reading this morning comes from paul's letter to the philippians the first chapter verses three three through seven i thank my god every time i remember you constantly praying with joy in every one of my prayers for all of you because of your sharing in the gospel from the first day until now i am confident of this that the one who began a good work among you will bring it to completion by the day of jesus christ it is right for me to think this way about all of you because you hold me in your heart for all of you share in god's grace with me both in my imprisonment and in defense and confirmation of the gospel the word of god for the people of god thanks be to god well good morning beloved it's so good to see all of you today so compromise raise your hand for me so i can see where all of you are to get the sermon started i need some help okay um i'm not up on my movies as well as you all are now this week and talking to clinton our new youth director he is very much up on his movies and he is he told me he's kind of binge watching the avengers anybody like the avengers y'all like the avengers no don't like them all right well maybe i just need to start a different place i wonder if you can name i'm going to name the avengers and if any of you if i miss one of them then help me with that and maybe clinton can help me so i'm going to name the avengers iron man thor the incredible hulk captain america ant-man the black panther spider-man and the black widow so is there any really smart comfort yes which one hawkeye missed hawkeye is that the welding one i missed so who is the arch enemy of the avengers the superheroes they know that i've only read this clinton maybe you can help me out here is it loki no um okay so anyway there's this battle between good and evil and the superheroes each have their superpowers but as i understand it in the series one of the rally calls of the whole series of movies is avengers a symbol i hope i'm right about that i need to go back and watch but it's a really cool concept of each one of these are superheroes with their individual powers but they're called together to be partners to fight against evil and to basically demonstrate good or defend good in the world so it's a really neat concept so i want to use that just as an example for our compromise of kind of a stretch but what the church is like do you know that the name church the word church actually means assembly it actually means those who are called out of the world to assemble to be a community of faith who are loyal to jesus so that's the meaning of church and so on this very important today for you i want us to think about what it means for you to be of this age and be responsible for your participation in the christian life as a christian disciple and maybe it will remind all of us what that means as christian disciples followers of jesus so this is a big big day it's a big day in your life this is a day you will always remember and parents and grandparents you started them on this journey so this is a great day of accomplishment for you you've gotten them this far everybody all parents and grandparents say hallelujah that wasn't very enthusiastic but it's a hallelujah day because you've got them this far it's like you have entrusted them with a treasure and it's the treasure of faith and faithfulness and so compromise now what today means is that you are now becoming responsible for that treasure in your life that's what really today is all about you've been given a treasure we call it grace the grace of god god is continually loving god's continual loving action in all of our lives god is gracious and that's embodied in the flesh in jesus so we receive that treasure and we place our faith in christ and we have fellowship with god through christ and the work of the holy spirit so parents you have entrusted maybe grandparents you've entrusted this treasure this legacy of faith and faithfulness and compromise now you are taking responsibility for that treasure in your life so the question is what will you do with that now i i was confirmed uh when i was in the fifth grade you are in the seventh grade you're much older and wiser but i have to confess that we had classes and it was a lot of information and i i kind of got some of it some of it i didn't understand and i never really was overly concerned about that in the fifth grade but i knew something really significant in my life was happening so i didn't have all the answers exactly straight but i knew who god was who jesus was i had that sense of the reverence for church and in church that it was sacred it was of god and that this was something bigger than me so my impression of my confirmation was it was like a big yes to god my chance to say yes to god you see god says yes to us first god steps toward us and embraces us first and that's why we baptize infants and people of all ages that's god's yes to us god's grace god's love so god steps toward us first and so this is at your age this is your big yes to god and i had a sense of that in the fifth grade we had a great big tall preacher he was taller than i am he had dark hair had these humongous hands and i had this vivid memory of coming up like you were going to in just a moment and i knelt and his name was brother appleby brother bill appleby great big tall man huge hands and i remember that huge hand coming down on my head i remember the weight of it maybe you'll feel the weight of some hands on your head in just a moment and it's weighty there's a significance to this moment it's your big yes to god and it's the church helping you say that yes so that was my impression of of my experience of confirmation was that preacher's big heavy hand on my head and so that meant that i was a participant now in the life of the church in a different way that i at age 11 in the fifth grade and you now in the seventh grade i was now responsible for choosing to follow jesus be a disciple and to participate not only in the life of the church but in god's life i had been invited to participate in god's life and so it was a big day and a big deal and i remember the weightiness of it and so your big yes today is about so many different things so many layers to it it's confirming in your life the work of god's grace god's love in your life all along it's about you're saying yes to jesus as a christian disciple a follower and that as you we all come to christ we look at that cross and we receive forgiveness of sins through his sacrifice that's the centerpiece that's why that big cross is in the centerpiece as the centerpiece of our sanctuary so it's like a focal point for your whole life that cross so you're always oriented toward the cross so we understand that our sins are forgiven and that god is a loving and forgiving god again we call that grace and so well what's my response going to be and so through what god does we then speak of our recognition of salvation of being in fellowship with god now forgiven of sins and the promise of eternal life beyond this life and you have a whole long life ahead of you but we have that assurance of eternal life and that treasure is ours now your parents grandparents gave you that treasure as a gift and now it's yours you get to be responsible for it so it's your big yes to god today and that's important that's weighty so that's the first thing your big yes to god so the second thing is as a participant in the life of god through jesus you are a partner now have you ever been a partner in something ever had a kool-aid stand with a friend down the street or some project that you were doing you're now a partner did you hear what scripture said the apostle paul was speaking to the church and he said i thank god every day for you and the partnership the sharing in the gospel that we have together so you're now a partner in the gospel you're a participant in god's life and god's work you may or may not have heard this i ran across the story a long long time ago about a little boy named danny who lives in california he was eight years old and he was given an assignment explain god so here's just a few pieces of danny's answer to explain god i wonder what you would write explain god and so danny says god's very busy god has lots of work to do god has lots of work to do but he has helpers and so he said one of god's main jobs is making people he doesn't make big people he makes little people because big people are too hard to make he starts with little people so one of god's big jobs is making people to keep the earth full of people the second main job of god is to listen to prayers and danny said there must be a whole lot of noise in god's ears because people pray all the time but god hears our prayers and then he said the main helper of god is jesus and jesus went on the road and he helped people and he forgave people and he healed people and he walked on water and so jesus was a great helper a partner with god jesus went on the road and was trying to teach people about god but danny said most people really didn't want to learn about god and they treated jesus very badly they crucified him and so danny said so god you know jesus said you know these people are wrong but let's forgive them anyway and at that point after his crucifixion god said you don't have to go on the road anymore you can come on home so jesus went to heaven but jesus is god's main helper and so the exciting thing is with jesus we get to be god's helper we get a get to be a partner with god and so now you're responsible for that you have all these opportunities to be a partner with god that's part of what today's all about so your big yes you are a partner with god and all of god's work in the world and the last thing i would say to you today is this that it's a big adventure i don't know what you like to do best what your big adventures are what would be your greatest big adventure well the thing is today as you are confirmed in the church today you profess your faith in christ that i trust christ for his love his forgiveness and my life is no longer my own i know i don't just get to do whatever i want to do on my terms anymore my life is part of something bigger than me now do you realize that so you don't it's not your life only anymore it's you share it with god now with christ so just like me in the fifth grade you can never imagine what the adventures will be and god will place before you these opportunities to get involved in god's work and be a partner with god in the world to do good and to to share his love and even to offer prayers and even offer forgiveness and healing to people that are hurting so you get caught up in that whole big adventure and you never know where it's going to take you so i could have never imagined in the fifth grade all the places all the adventures that i would have and it's actually this is the fun part because god will give you big adventures as you follow jesus so it took me to church camp which was a great experience i don't know if you all go to church camp it kind of opened up my world and met all these new friends from all these other places it's a great adventure and then in college i went to a christian college and i met all these other people from all these places and they were christians and we began to share our life and our faith it was a great adventure i could have never imagined the friendships that i was going to have then i got to be a counselor at camp and that was part of my calling into ministry which became a whole other new path in the journey and the adventure so you just never know where god will lead you as you have probably some of you have already worked in our in our god's grace food pantry i did that where i grew up and you get to meet people who are in need that don't have things like you do and don't know where their next meal is coming from and so that service we imitate jesus the servant that's part of being a disciple but there are other places i got to go i got to go to southeast kentucky and and i got to crawl up on a roof and re-roof an 80-year-old woman's house and it was the most exciting thing that had ever happened in her life she had a leaky roof in her little home and no way to fix it and all these strange people came from all over the country and crawled up on her roof and fixed that and i got to crawl up on the roof and swing a hammer it is a great adventure so these adventures you never know where god's going to lead you and the things that you'll do when you follow jesus i got to go to nicaragua and i saw a little bitty children there with only a t-shirt on no flip-flops no shoes just a t-shirt and we fed over 800 children a day through the united methodist church and it was rice and beans and a vegetable and we serve them on paper plates and we notice that the little children even little bitty children they would eat about a quarter of the plate or a third of the plate and then they would get another plate and cover it back up and you would see these little children walking down a dirt road and they were taking the rest of the plate back to their family because nobody at home had any food so they ate their little portion and they covered the plate up and they took it home and so i had that image of those children walking on those dirt roads back home how many of you like coca-colas or sodas i don't even know how much a soda costs now probably close to two dollars the people in nicaragua they live on less than a dollar a day the whole family can you imagine less than the cost of a coke is what they live on every day so in this adventure with jesus i got to go down there and we serve the little children but then they would take part of their plate home never saw that before so it changed how i viewed a lot of things it changed how i looked at my plate at home or at a restaurant when i got home i had this big full plate and so that's what jesus does for you and so last i i got to go to haiti after an earthquake and we worked on a school we rebuilt the school and the school was the only standing building left that was intact in the community but it had cracks in the walls so we worked on the school so the community had a safe place to gather so you never know what adventure jesus is going to give you from this point forward but you are a participant and what i want you to hear today is that by answering these vows saying your big yes to god and to the church you say i want to be part of the big adventure of jesus and i know that i am responsible my life is no longer just mine i don't get just to do anything i want just for me anymore because i follow jesus so it's a big adventure and by saying your big yeses today i can't wait to see where god will lead you and the adventures that you will have so paul says in that scripture that i am convinced i have confidence that he who began a good work in you good stuff in your life will bring it to completion in the end so there's a whole lot of new good adventures to come and god will do good things for your life and so today is a great big day of big yeses to god and we love you and we pray god's blessings upon all of you so thank you for being here and being part of this moment in your life your journey but in the larger life of god in the church so thank you and bless you so in just a moment we're going to call each of you up for our confirmation time we spoke about this earlier but we will call your name and we will invite you to the place where your name is and the families are invited as well as dr kevin said we you will place your hand we'll place our hands on your confirmand and celebrate this time with them not to take anything away from what dr kevin said but i mentioned to some of you this week and as i've met with you i've known some of you since you were so small you couldn't see over this uh over this rail um and just personally i want to say to you and on behalf of the church congratulations we think this is a wonderful day and i hope that you know how wonderful a day this is not just for you but also for our church that you'll be a part of it like this okay so i'll first invite cameron ally and her family if you'll join us up here cameron clear alley may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen congratulations there's your certificate and audrey catherine hale let me say after the conclusion of our service ak will be baptized in wesley chapel and you are all invited to come share in that moment with her and her family and we hope that you will place your hand upon her audrey catherine hale may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen ella hardin if you'll come join us up here and your family ella brooks harden may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen elizabeth jackson and her family if you'll join us okay okay just place your hand on her where you can reach there we go elizabeth jackson may the holy spirit work within you that having been worn of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen aaron moore if you'll come i like your mask okay see if you can get to a place where you can there we go lay hands on her aaron marie moore may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen riley panzer you come join us riley juliana panzer may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen and faith housley if you'll come just get where you can lay your hand campbell faith housley may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen andrew would you come please okay andrew ernest ramey may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen joseph roman joseph roman may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen big sweeney there we go nicholas brooks sweeney may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen and rowan ziegler rowan elizabeth ziegler may the holy spirit work within you that having been born of water and the spirit you may live as a faithful disciple of jesus christ amen so as you have uh said yes to these vows this morning and declared your faith before the church now that you begin this life of faith know that you do this in conjunction and along with the church and so now we will step into the time where we declare our membership vows to the church both to the larger to the larger church to the united methodist church into this church so will our confirmance please stand and if you'd like to join us join us on page 38 if you but y'all also uh you can also repeat the answers that i encourage you to give as as members of christ's universal church will you be loyal to the united methodist church and do all in your power to strengthen its ministries if so answer i will as members of this congregation will you faithfully participate in his ministries by your prayers your presence your gifts your service and your witness if so answer i will members of the household of god i commend these persons to your love and care do all in your power to increase their faith confirm their hope and perfect them in love and on behalf of our congregation i respond to your vows this way we all give thanks for that for all that god has already given you and we welcome you in christian love and as members together with you in the body of christ and in this congregation of the united methodist church we renew our covenant faithfully to participate in the ministries of the church by our prayers our presence our gifts and our service and our witness that in everything god may be glorified through jesus christ would you pray with me god of all grace you have called us to eternal glory in jesus christ and we ask that who has established you and we may strengthen you by the power of the holy spirit that you may live in our lives through grace and peace it is in christ's name that we pray amen may be seated we're going to go next door to wesley chapel for aldrich kate's baptism and so again if you would like to participate in that we would certainly welcome you to do that thank you for being here this morning again just another reminder we'll be in the park again on october next sunday october the 4th then the last sunday of october the 25th and then on november 1st we'll start an informal service in the gym at nine o'clock so if you like the park or informal worship uh that will be at nine o'clock in the gym and then 10 55 here in the sanctuary we've really worked hard to try to keep everyone safe and this is a sustainable way that we can once we start worship we can sustain it and move forward from here and so we look forward to seeing you in worship uh with every opportunity that we have to gather together so thank you again for being here and let's stand for our benediction god pour out your blessing upon us guide our steps each day to be faithful to the vows that we make and remind us that we become the promises that we keep and so fill our hearts and minds with the inspiration of your holy spirit that we may have faith and trust in you that we may walk daily as instruments of your love and peace and may share the goodness of your grace and the story of grace with all those whom we encounter each day and in our journey and so now go in peace and may the peace of christ rule in your hearts always grace and peace to you amen bless you thank you for being here [Music] um [Music] so [Music] foreign um [Music] hmm [Music] you
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2020-09-27
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVI1KiqlrcU
Face off - Bouncer vs Armz
[Music] my bro just gave me a breakdown i beg you just send my [ __ ] this thing saw this annie now she thinks that a man's gone clear now i'm a bay man still right here put this rambo to your mango you get peeled right there yes and we've got big bounce i'm blessed i'm blessed good to see you again good to see you man i know the last time i saw you was a bit of a roll rumble you nearly [ __ ] popped my shoulders things get very heated very fast yeah i know i feel like yeah it got heated a bit very fast do you think that wasn't the plan man that wasn't a plan when a plan was there to go to talk but i think that's the first time we seen each other from all the talking [ __ ] on the internet and then you got he's from water on me it's a coward move so my reaction even though i've approached him i i put no hands on him so my reaction it just kicked off in it do you think that was the heat of the moment of the kinda the stress levels go through the roof everybody watching a big crowd there yeah a lot of eyes come on up a lot more pressure i think it was the heat of the moment um obviously now we're here it's more relaxed you know i mean we can talk like men we can get our points across you can listen to each other yeah i think the crowd yeah this is a face-off man i've got arms waiting on standby to come in after you and have a chat as well like a lot of people your backstory is amazing like grown from the streets of london been in prison a few times spent over 10 years behind bars to then doing what you're doing you've now got the wicked and bad out you're making documentaries you're a manager that i take my hat off to you brother it's phenomenal for the young ones watching that you look up to yourself for inspiration the same as arms he's got a lot of hidden talents as well but how's your training going for this fight yeah my training is going amazing obviously um i train out of three gyms first gym obviously um boxing booth my main coach um h boxing my brother you got me um and my other culture allowed them to they work on my bots and my stand up my strength and conditioning then i got gb top team my other coach ashley grimshaw um actually grimshaw and brad pickett's gym i've known them for a number of years since i think 2012 where i used to fight for team titan when i was at titan so i know them from there and they're just strict good brothers like you know i mean they're they you know about them they they the mma world knows about ashji grimshaw knows about brad picket and um lempinis you've got world champions mutai world champions and i'm i'm from like that's the that's one of the gyms that i trained for my other coach dean hawkins and and and that's the stand up but i know that they're tired um i learned some jiu jitsu there as well so i've got three gyms that i train out i go back and forth daily how hard is it from having a tear up in the street what's the difference actually from having a tear up in the street to then preparing for one in a cage because it's totally night and day yeah it's totally different um 2012 i was training two three times a day i i mean i was out doing my entire kettle's gym and i was like i was fighting for team titan so when when you go into it's not like a tear-up on the street it's not like throwing hands like that it's very very you got to learn wrestling you got jiu jitsu you got boxing you got tired you know i mean you you go all around mma and then you've got strength and conditioning you can pick up so much not so much injuries then you have to focus on your fitness focus on your mental well-being like in terms of just making sure your mindset is at the right place and and you don't walk in the ring with ego there's no egos in the room you spawn i mean shake hands you doing jiu-jitsu don't be ignorant your arm will snap just tap you know i mean you just tap and everyone who i'm training with they're ten times better than me ten times i don't train with beginners everyone who i'm trainers are ten times better than me so i improve i improve i improve how much do you learn about yourself when you're training for a fight you learn you learn a lot about your mental what what how you feel even when you're in the boxing ring when you're sparring these your sparring experience pro boxes you know i mean and you look at things and it's what i do clock with like social media people are so quick to judge and say do this and do this until they're actually in the ring and they'll see how hard it is you know i mean and you learn a lot and it makes you more humble as a person like it makes you more respectful you go to any gym nearly everyone everyone's respectful you know i mean that's how that's fake started though because somebody tried to give you a better coaching on on the comments yeah arms mentioned that comment that's what i respect about you both though you could you never took it to the streets yeah these are taking turner cage which is a manly thing to do everybody's a coach can tell you to move your hips and twist and your thinking shut up but that's how this started with because arms made a comment on one of your videos yeah um and for me i i couldn't care it was like a little skinny boy said that oh yes therefore flipping ryan from cheshire i don't even care i don't care you're probably 12 sometimes people say triggering things but it's like hold on this big fella is saying something bro i will smash you up don't like yeah give me your physique you like you you look good but bro don't this is don't get twisted bro that that you can't lift weights on your face you this is totally different punch power this is a totally different ball game so that's how it's kind of started and that's how yeah we're here now arms was very not sheepish but he was hesitant of taking a fight on but now he's he's writing bars he's in firing the buff he's he's going full steam ahead like i know you've got bars on you as well you are you're gonna do uh this back from if i only buff the arms down i'd be honest with you with arms i i thought the fire in the booth was a bit personal you've done it um we will talk about it when you come yeah i'm i'm a man and i said to deal with it um arms is not in my world you know i mean he's not in my world he's not from the roads so some of the stuff that he's speaking about is like you're not even from the roads how dare you even talk about the roads but i understand he he's trying to do his music career so i understand controversies it sells um there will be no come back no discharge for me i look at myself i'm more i'm i'm i look at myself more i'm i'm behind the scenes i'm the guy that pulls the strings you know what i mean i'm i'm not the the rapper are you gonna that's fight with a game plan of course i'm gonna fight with a game plan i've got game plans you know i mean we've got game plans and i and i've got i got more experience than him so i've got game plans and yeah i i honestly think i'm a better fighter i i honestly think that my punch power is better than his so yeah are you looking forward to it i can't wait i can't wait um usually even like talking in front of people i'm nervous i don't like talking in front of people but as i've done podcasts and got used to it i found it a bit better i can't wait for this maybe on the night i feel i will feel a bit nervous on the night like oh my god it's happening but i can't wait i'm loving every bit of it even when my man talks rubbish i just take it out on my train and then i'm just like yo i know what i need to do but i think that shows your personality you've found an angle how you make some money and promote your brand all as his business is important you've created a fight made some money from it and no doubt i believe you'll probably get another one after this it's just just to hustle and make some money i know you've done your own podcast you've also got a documentary kind of about your life and your training yeah i'm going to have you on one porn cast where we can get into so much more deeper stuff but definitely obviously i've got arms waiting in the sidelines this is just short and sweet just to get a backup story and then we'll get arms on we'll tell her story and then we'll get they both they face off for the first time since the night in manchester when things went pete tong yeah cool good luck brother and i'll see you in five minutes you get me so i'm grateful for every day man i've heard i've had all the water off the table yeah you know what this drink is national no water yeah wicked and bad how's your training going brother it's going really well man it's going really really good um obviously since it's been what five months now coming up to six months since i started doing the mma training whole different board game whole different discipline and i'm taking it pretty well you know i'm saying it's really good i'm enjoying this it's like i just love to train in any type of training that puts me in my comfort zone and challenges me mentally physically spiritually i'm there for it so i'm just soaking up as much information as i can you filming the last time we met king did a shot at the finals i thought it was old jokes and laughs but then [ __ ] got real like yeah yeah you've got serious and how are you feeling today for the first time at facebook yeah i'm finishing again yeah i'm feeling good man i'm comfortable i'm happy man i'm i'm happy to be here obviously last time um at the press conference it is what it is man you know i'm saying um emotions come into play and people just you know i'm saying obviously we've been bouncing what we do we do what we've got to do um in terms of the fact that it's our fact you know i'm saying i feel like people just have more respect for what he's trying to do and um what the organization's trying to do as a whole but at the end of the day we move past it and make sure that it doesn't happen again and yeah man it's so good to feel me i think it done its job in it you know i'm saying at the end of the day yeah it went viral yeah yeah yeah i mean i was getting free about the [ __ ] ring i just seen two absolute monsters running towards each other none of that smoked me i was like come on your backstory as well that is phenomenal like i've got massive respect for both you which i'll touch on you both feel it coming from ghana and as a kid then like you've got massive talents like your artwork is absolutely phenomenal i appreciate that manchester united street grandson like you're probably not what happened wait how'd you bro listen i'm the [ __ ] don at what i know everything that you know the dancing actually started in um no first london that's that's what i'm originally from in it so i was born and bred in ghana um straight away came to the uk shoved into um northwest london nw9 and then that's where that i just started i started dancing first actually you know i'm saying i i just and then um after that it was sort of the art stuff again um while i was in primary school that's when a lot of i started developing my love for the arts and i'm saying so dancing ah um it wasn't until later like i said um i was not first and it wasn't until late at all the music started coming into play and you know the the gym stuff you know i'm saying that my mom moved out went went to the countryside and then i was i was in and out of it for a while you know i'm saying back and forth back and forth and then um during that time that's why i developed my my my passion for fitness you know what i'm saying but yeah i stopped a lot of things man but the art the drawing stuff i kept on continue doing it picked up music started doing it then the gym stuff came into play that took over a lot of stuff but i never stopped and i'm saying so i just never knew what i could use it for but it's coming it's become useful you know i'm saying so yeah see some of your videos you're doing cartwheels summer so yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah i've wanted to be so many different things throughout my life man i wanted to be a dancer an artist scarface at some point this is why it's so important though for the kids that a lot of people's going to watch this for inspiration because similar backgrounds as well but different paths yeah he's been in prison majority of his life you have tried through arts through everything to try and keep him out of trouble and keep you sane and yeah like but then you have created something out of nothing but to be honest the the the fitness thing which actually started um um in youth offenders i'm not gonna lie when i was 16 i got myself in a little bit of trouble and then um i had to go away for some time and then that's where i started the gym thing because i was training outside but not in a gym i was 16 then so i was 15 then so um i obviously i didn't know anything about fitness when i went when i went inside that's when i started training and i came out and i was like mom that's what i want to do and my mom sent me up to my first um my first ever gym and i never looked back saved your life yeah 100 that's why i love fitness so much people feel that raw it's a i go gym so much just to show off something or but it's like no it's not that it's done it's done something for me in a positive way it's helped me channel my mind you know my spirit like the physical aspect is a bonus in it you know i'm saying but all of it is just spiritual to me like when i'm in there it opens up a different channel to different places i'm able to be creative that's where i find my creativity when i'm training you know i'm saying it's it's crazy to say but in the midst of all that chaos when i'm in pain and i'm you know i'm saying i'm sweating and i'm like ripping muscles i'm like oh this is peaceful here you know i'm saying i feel like that's that's where i am because again it took me off certain things like bankrupt i went knee deep into certain things but because i spent all my time i dedicated my life to just training you know i'm saying i was i was able to do something with myself you know i'm saying so 100 is good man it's good how much have you found yourself being inside that octagon now and training hard how much have you really connected with a different part of yourself you talk about spirituality but this is a whole different level for yeah it's not dancing it's not and throwing up weights like you really find out who who you are and what you're made of when you're yeah under pressure from combat sports how much have you found yourself advanced doing this kind of stuff um so with with like getting into mma i'll say it's a like again it's a whole different ball game and it's not for the faint-hearted and um i've had so much growth in terms of i've learned a lot about myself because i've been put in the deep end so many times and i've done things that i would have never pushed myself to do and i've come out on top you know i'm saying in the moment it's like i'm literally going to die brother you know i'm like yo i can't do this you know you you have these doubts in your head but then it's like nachina i've got this in my head i've just it's just like it's nothing that my coaches say is mine never matter if it doesn't if you don't mind it don't matter so just just do it you know i'm saying that the same the same attitude i've had towards weightlifting is the same attitude i have towards this type of training and like i said i've learned so much about myself in in a sense that um i'm not a quitter you know i'm saying um i'm always up to the challenge and in terms of growth i'm learning new skills you know i'm learning how to um like fighting as a whole it gives you a whole different type of confidence and i'm saying it's knowledge on how to defend yourself and obviously how to how to that can be used in day-to-day life you know and not on our egotistical thing or on a on a intimidating thing because i i'm not out here to intimidate or be egotistical from my way around but it's like you know you have these skills and it's like wow that it's it's an art form in itself when i'm watching these guys spar and they're doing all these movements it's it's like a different type of art for me like i said i love the art so i see everything as an art but personally it gives it gives me a whole different type of confidence in it you know i'm saying and it's it's great man it's great it's great yeah man there's nobody obviously bouncer before your name yourself annie you get you both on my podcast separately because we need to go deep into your stories but yeah we've got bouncer waiting in the sidelines how are you feeling about coming face to face for the first time oh man it's calm man i'll relax i've had all the knives there's no guns i've ever ever been surviving that the thing is i don't i don't hate money i don't hate my name it's a fight in it i don't i don't like that's a brother right there you get me i don't hate him you see mans challenge me so challenge is a challenge and at the end of the day um despite despite all the body madness after the fact that's gonna heal him up you know what i'm saying be like yo boom like shake hands whatever whatever the outcome that's the way it should be because yeah even though we just had your finger your beef online that they could have went to the streets easily people aren't gonna be incorporated but these have done the manly thing with these are taking into account i can feel them eagerly breathing in the sidelines here wait for it come on so we'll shout bouncer and we'll get this show started boomerang [ __ ] me guys this is that uh that's the day because face to face i'm here man one's here face to face in it face to face thanks god he did the last time very heated a lot of people watching in the crowd then like to be fair you started that you you did walk towards it you started throwing the water and started then [Music] how are you feeling across from each other now and the fight's coming close um yeah man shit's getting real the fight's getting real trainers getting real camps getting real you know i'm so real yeah you know i mean this is business this is business um we had an issue on on online we've took it to um the cage took it to the cage um yeah man my fingers we took it to the cage i want to knock him out you know what i mean um are we ready i can't wait for this one um i can't wait just with the shoulder you seen it use that it's not always the knife and stabbing people sometimes you can have a straightener obviously you're not meant to promote violence but it's better than taking livestream you can have a straight no i'm sure that by support at the same time you get me yeah i've got i says this to both years that i've got massive respect for both he's coming from the streets as well you've been in prison a few times you've done over 10 years in prison to then doing what you're doing you've got your wicked and bad drink you've you've been a manager and stuff yeah you've got the street dancing you've got your you've just done a fire in a booth and you've released a bad boy diss track i'm sorry about you i had to come for him still you know you know you've been talking too much online it was a bit personal you get me was a bit personal i got personal stuff i'm not going to say i'm going to be the bigger man he gave me it was a bit personal but you know i know i know i know you're coming through the music scene so i i'll i'll take that one in the i'll i'll get me i'll hold that one and fight night you're going to get tonight no research when he called you you seemed about hesitant but now you seem as if you're finding your form you seem to be going full steam shout out to charlie slaughter yeah yeah and then fire on the buff it's one of the biggest out there you seem to be going [ __ ] mentality that yeah because you're very quiet at the start but now it's a case of yeah at the same time with me i'm just i'm not really high up in it i'd rather like just let the actions do the talking in it but i understand the kind of game that i'm in now so and and and the hype sells you get me so is that ah who i got i can flick the switch and just go into a different mode didn't it and but at the same time i can come back to just being calm and come and relax the next not every day hype hype it's like cool when the time calls for it i'm gonna release the beast in it and then do whatever there's no beast getting released you're sure sure i said no no he's getting released bro there's gonna be none no you get me i don't care about the game plan all i know is i'm going to come for the works yeah bring your a game in it because i'm ready for this one yeah yeah that's right let me ask you a question is it venom page even training you because he's got a big fight coming up where like i don't even think he's training you he needs to focus on he doesn't need to change his i think huh you don't need to train me whoa there's your coach there's people there's people there's people that yeah that's never had a fight before you should oh what are you sure austin all right they had a fight are you sure wait hold on does it make sense all right coaches have they've had a fight before london shoot fighters yeah ask them have they've had a fight before awesome all right cool smack cultures do you want to know about my cultures check it though check it yeah why would an individual get into something that they haven't experienced themselves bro they've never had a fight before they've never had fights before answer them when you after this answer them where's the cameras what's the comment is it yeah michael venom page he's got to focus on his fight bro he's going to focus on his knockout remember he's knocked out you gotta focus on that that's fine that's fine you don't care about you no more he doesn't need to care about me though he don't care about you no more bro i mean who do you think's favorite for this fight arms is favorite for this fight are you taking about i don't think i am digital if there was a book whose arms would be favorable for this fight no way that's that's it they love you do you know why no it's not about they love me they don't love me because i'm i'm the guy that rants on the internet they can't wait for me to get knocked out but arms is their favorite for this fight no no at a press conference that wasn't what was getting on though forget the con people are on your cell phone yep that's the president i don't need the people on my side i just need to come and do my job and just go you get me you get me so you're not doing no job on me i have friends say no more that's it we're here we're talking about the confidence you're not doing your job on me that's it that's 100 confidence when we end up when we're in yeah yeah yeah that's it it's me and you hundred percent me and you just catch you already wait for a tear up make sure you're ready yeah forget about am i ready for a tear up make sure you're ready bro be ready chest move bro chest move bro make sure you are ready watch the rules for that how many rounds how many minutes there's our elbows five three five three minute rounds and full mma rules so uh so you see he starts with that acrobatic [ __ ] you will come unstuck you get me here you know what you got you know them instagram them don't do that in the don't do that in the cage bro you can't do that don't want to don't do that bro not with me bro your comments you'll come unstuck i'll do it i'll still do it yeah you'll come unstuck unstoppable definitely not i still do it okay can you come in with a game plan again the game plan is just to go in and just give him the works that's it bro he's got he's he's got he's got a game plan what's my game he's got a game game plan he's got a game plan he's he's a bit like he's a bit scared like last night this week i filmed i filmed my training doc why arson why did he cancel his why did you cancel why did you catch your dog bro well you don't want people to know how you train us oh you can see how i train i don't need to get into it in it i don't need to get into it okay next week they're gonna come and film me cool if it's personal reason i heard that obviously i saw in your story that same day you canceled you was in training so obviously you know what i'm trying to say i keep that's massive like is that two trying to understand you might have got a few dms of you know like the the people the coward people man get me no dm gaining your head no but that come in this big but it's personal what i'm trying to say to you it's not game planning yeah game plan is just to just do what i need to do and come in there and show you what time it's from everyone how's it going because you keep thinking yeah everyone planned to get the [ __ ] out no no mike tyson they get me but boom check it there ain't no game plan for me there's no game plan i'm just coming to just do my thing yeah oh there's a game plan your coaches are training you and there's no game plan bro you need to sack them there's a game plan they're good they're good we're doing mma ball yeah wrestling jiu jitsu yeah watson yeah yeah there's a game plan yeah what's yours i've got a game plan i've got a few how they go isn't it gameplay go in there you've got a game plan i don't think you i don't think you're better stand up fighter than me that's fine that's fine that's fine you can think that you're strong your punch power's not better than mine that's fine that's fine your face is bigger than mine that's fine you got big nose that's fine you get me yeah yeah yeah yeah that's it [Laughter] how are you feeling after the live press conference when [ __ ] got real and and people could seriously hurt um to be honest um obviously i wanna i wanna apologize on my end you know i mean because it was my people and you know what i mean it escalated and i don't like things like that because whatever's going on between me and him going on between me and him whatever goes on up there if me and him start swinging we start swinging whoever stops it gets stopped he shouldn't be no one else should be getting involved you know i mean um i'm happy that we've certainly everyone saw that that meant you know what i mean and they're sorted now and that will never happen again can i play you for that how was your response after because you were quite you were outnumbered arms if i'm honest yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah you only showed up you know um is that yeah microphone and there was hundreds there for this car that's blessing it doesn't mean anything to man's store about the numbers now you get me but on my side um i wasn't phased to be honest because it's just like i said um emotions in it emotions run wild and people just start um they don't use logic you get me and um what happened happened and on my side it's like it's a bit peak because the press conference could could obviously gone longer and more could have been said there and you know could have been a banger still about what like i said man just flows in it whatever how it happened is how it's supposed to happen in it um and obviously i'm just glad that my brother didn't get hurt and again i'm saying obviously certain people on on his side tried to hurt men or not but he still held it up he feel me and you know um man's apologetic and whatnot which i respect you feel me and obviously moving forward some people that everyone deals with obviously your your brother was you see me i i i don't know i do i do with the trolls in it so i don't care if a man tells me to [ __ ] myself and i'll be like i walked that way you know what i mean i've lived that like life not everyone deals with someone saying oh [ __ ] bounce or [ __ ] you hurt me especially when like you know what i mean but it's done now and it's it's done it's done do you know me they spoke everyone spoke afterwards it's finished do you feel a sense of billion did all the emotions come in from the past that night um i don't i don't even know how that fast yeah i don't know i don't know i can't say i don't know what was said i don't know what escalated it i can't really we was in the stage in it so yeah all i knew is in the beginning everything was blessed them two was cool they were talking and then next minute this is what's happened bro obviously your coach your your strength and condition they're snakes broth that's it do you know what i don't know why there's snakes here bro yeah this is why they're snakes bro you see wicked and bad i own the show bro yeah so when i was fight when liquor man was fighting the previous show with saleem i hired them yeah to train local man i could have hired anyone i put their logos and everything yeah i hired them and then afterwards bro yes i know the story here boom michael van impe that was in the gym they checked the same guys ben and whoever and they're training you bro that's that's snakey bro because i've hired you i've i've made you have i've made them have a little name for their self do you know what i mean now training but no it's not any ticket it's not but but it's not you're not getting it though i hired them yeah su super's friend super before you see before super was the command's manager i was the commander manager so super had to answer man and i respect super do you get it so so out of loyalty bro out of loyalty bro you shouldn't do that that's their businesses no it's not business bro because you shouldn't do it out of loyalty that's that's that you just don't do that you know what i'm saying bro so so obviously when i've come out and i'm saying right man's a snake and then your other bridge and my man you gave me bro i know the i know ma'am and he's being rude it's like bro like i understand like my culture is saying look let's not get too gassed here in it like like just not get this is between me and you don't come at the back and tell a man to you get me especially when there's but it's done now on it obviously there's snakes [ __ ] bro i'll tell my ben that [ __ ] then bro like [ __ ] the comments bob because they're snakes you get me they're your coaches they're your colleagues didn't you call up ben to apologize me yeah but about my son's life i'm not i respond to ben since what are you saying apologize about what was it it was a one thing you need to understand bro because you just you're saying oh don't you ring man to apologize bro i phoned the butt my people and said it's done it's done do you get it bro because we're this is not ruined our thing so you see when you're saying ring up man to apologize don't ben's from oxford he's he's bro he's not about that bro so don't don't don't say that because you know what i'm saying i've spoken to my people yeah and i'm saying look i don't i'm saying look if it ain't you know [ __ ] them bro and there's no hand shaking because that might have snakes no no no no [ __ ] [ __ ] then that's what i was watching for the newcomers how did this beef actually start it was you'd had a video on laying in arms was fighting online i'm just posted it my men come and undo it you get me obviously he's the big guy he's a big guy on instagram bro don't comment about but it was a skinny guy from cheshire called tom it doesn't matter i don't care it doesn't matter because it's him he's a big lad you think you're so you've got it okay cool hold on wait wait you see what you're seeing people no it's not eagle what's this no it's not ego because i bro i've bit my tongue so much times but you see when it comes to now fighting and we can you're telling me what fight me well we can go in the ring boom you're saying i'm stiff just fight me then yeah but it's just feedback in it on your team from saying right you're stiff as i would say to my bridges like right brother you're stiff just loose it up a little bit but obviously because it's it's in a public forum you thought some type of way in it on the eagle thing from your own side you tried to embarrass me there's some menace behind what you do as well he's insecure i have more contacts and i'm hearing there's six figures to be winning this fight obviously you don't want to disclose that but from what i'm hearing there's a lot of money on this fight which is does that give you as the incentive to then work harder as well as the fear of getting you see for me i do it for the merit so it's so when i say i do it from the merit i mean this is a project for me everything that i work on is a project me training hard my game plan and i execute it it's a project after i win i'm going to talk about it you get me it's a project you get me that's fine you get me that's cool that's cool for me i just love the training i just love that guy in hard in the gym i love a tear up you get me i'm not [ __ ] do you really love a terror up though huh do you really love the terror well come on man i don't need like i always say have you been punched in the face yeah you always ask me that question come on man love you you should hashtag have you been punched in your face you should say that t-shirt have you come on man i don't need to speak anything you can't answer the question that's fine that's fine arms always keeps his cars close to his chest and a lot of viewers insecure we've got nothing to prove within a certain bot yeah what's that noise let's use it is that free-for-all by being heavy wait anyway 10k close to each other yeah yeah so it's 10 10 is 110k 10k over 10k under we've been there these both i don't do well with people and i like intimate stuff like this you give me some i can just think straight and just you know you're empty you get me obviously we know we're gonna fight you know i mean we know how serious serious it is um i don't hate him like he's i don't he hasn't done nothing he hasn't done nothing to me but i'm going to knock him out hey i can't wait you know what i mean it's just and there's no one there's no that crowd is it's just you know i mean it's more relaxed so we need to talk like adults we've got a point or we've got an issue we can talk about it over here why did you change the crowd for a few thousand to then five hundred be worried of the backlash of people fighting with each other yeah seriously andrew was worried about um kovit because we just don't know what happened like if you end up spending a lot of money on a venue and then covered like another lockdown happens or something happens it's just like we just don't know what's happening with the government at the moment so i feel like if we do it behind closed doors and then do it 500 and we just it's like that i think it's more safer and more sensible people will be there in it how extra pressure because the live press conference went viral millions of people watching that me getting through about the ring like it's not exactly the meme you want to be but there's more pressure on you guys because if one of you get knocked out you know he's a [ __ ] for years later he's going to be tagged in everything for all those memes like i used to be more pressure than me i don't have any though i'm the little fat kid on the block remember the fact beats up this muscle man he's the hero i'm the hero i know that size and muscles don't win fights you know what i might say it's just for sure you know so i don't i have never for once thought like weightlifting or them things there will aid me in this fight and nor am i trying to hold up um this fight for any gym man community i did not give a toss but the gym man communities behind you i see some of them i see some of them trolling me and i feel like i'll just come to your gym and [ __ ] you up as well but i'm just saying but no but i'm just going to deal with the the the main man in it why he's not why does none of you want to take their favorite price tag why is none of you what is this listen he's a favorite isn't it i don't think i'm my favorite people i've just been doing more on the install like i've been creating content since what um late 2014. you understand and people have no you're an influencer in it i'm not an influencer fitness guy for me get me man do you think that's fine no but um you you influence loads of people to go to the gym and get in shape like your influences like coming from your background which you'll touch on again yeah the kid from ghana being bullied and like you've got so many hidden talents you are you are very creative like you are a genius in some do you get embarrassed no it's not it's not an embarrassing thing it's just like because um i don't want to be put in that in that category i don't even want to be put in a box like cool if um i send out positive influence to people and whatnot whatever that's cool but you know the title influencer because stereotype around that is not great influencers are too entitled they think that they run things and they should be given certain things certain sort of treatment i'm not like that i just do these videos because i enjoy what i do and i post it out there and if people resonate with it that's great and that's your respect you know what i'm saying but i wouldn't go as far as a man is a bodybuilder or an athlete or cool i do athletic stuff but like i said i don't want to be put in one category because there's a lot of stereotype even bodybuilding when i came in i've competed a few times but i wouldn't call myself a bodybuilder you get me because again the stereotype around it that's not me though i don't fit into that i understand i'm my own person you feel me so like that back to the back to the person and make cool being a favorite person people already like me because of how i portray myself and the way i portray myself is the same thing in real life you know i'm saying um like i said it's not everyday like hype hype i'm no i can't have a good time you feel me so it's like cool people like their personality wherever wherever and they gravitate towards that they get me but i always say because i've had people dm yeah man's going to knock you out i'm not cool that's fine man you hit me so i don't feel like i'm the one the favorite and again i pressed people was on his side more than me but that's the pr there's no pressure on him how are you dealing with the trolling from because there's always going to be support 2014 later i've had my instagram and i've been online for since 2014 so i've had all sorts of stuff i've had i'm talking to this day to this day let me to this day i started getting like a little a lot of [ __ ] man so how do you deal with that arms i just because i know like behind the screen people can be who they want to be i understand in real life are they really going to chat to me like that no you understand so that that don't it's just online stuff i just let it go it's cool whatever do you deal with the bro they're man's getting trolled by 12 yards no but i'm just saying you'd like 12 year old with a fake account don't take it serious i go into instagram for for work like i'm in the jungle like boom do the work we're going to get that i swear to you huh you're going to get that work concept in my team though are you mad bro i swear to you on on the in the real world congratulations progression there's no one no one's not saying so you can't take it you can't take it serious but at the same time we're human beings in it so you know i mean it can take that's why you have to have like i've got someone that my my brother beans he he runs my insta certain times because mentally you have to be we're training two three times a day do you know what i mean so that's one of the ones so he left him mentally weak huh he said you're mentally weak in that you're going to do it i'll show you mentally weak in that cage brother i can't even handle a surprise oh i'll show you mentally weak in that cage when i dip you right in your nose what do you think you need to prove in this fight and how do you need to prove it to me he's got more things to prove i don't have nothing to prove why do i have more things to prove i don't know brother you know big bad bouncer in it right nobody can chat to you whatever i can chat to you though everyone knows me as the music manager who wasn't there do you need to move to anyone or prove to yourself uh this is a project i'll go in this is business i'll go into the cage and i'll show you my skill and i'll show you afterwards i'm when i'm when i'm giving you ground and power don't be am i stiff now that's it you can show me the mean face i can see right through you it's not me face i don't care well your coaches your coaches ain't had real fights mpv he's not he's not he's not there for you no more mvp a little correct [Laughter] you're just a joker that was in school that's fine so what did you were you offended over your heart yeah it was person he said some things that's personal but it's i get it look look i get it maybe imagine if i was popped down now or i had nothing you hear me i don't know he was vibes into it don't let him you get me imagine i was popped down i don't want to obviously i don't want to say some certain bad things but you got artists that you get me yeah he took man's dough but where is he now where you get me looking man packed he's back to cov where's look where did he before before we were doing break checks look who man was going viral where's look at my nose he's got his page where what what what's going on where am i what am i doing to highlight that thing what am i doing that's a hell like that hold up you thought you stopped we fighting for the culture we're fighting for the culture right twfd get me until we [ __ ] die okay then so so so so that's it in it that's it who's the boss now who's the goat who feeds who who feeds everyone around me me i'm the boss i respect this thing so don't worry about people dusting out they've got their things what they've got their platforms what are they doing with it that's the number nothing bro none of my business correct then so it's me and you in that ring me and you me and you you get the job done we're coming for the job done we're coming for the job we'll get it done bro just make sure you're ready i can't wait do i have a rematch on the contract someone wins well there's no reason if he wants to happen if i okay cool foreign [Laughter] second round they get me you see that laughing second round bro arms what's your protection prediction predictions because he's not he's like secretive towards everything that's me you know that's his word no way everyone knows about these gym but there's no ufc fighters there's no there's no ufc fighter oh my god you do your cf shoot fighters if it doesn't yes he fights for bellator but he's still mma though yeah cool mpv is mvp [Music] we shake hands but these are up to me just like the rest of them that's a lie give me a shoulder cause they have this mvp mvp yeah whatever say what you're saying in the mvp so you get inside the information in your gem is it just oh he definitely has no information because for him to say that there's no fighters in my gym or there's no well you're just living over him my coaches don't fight or whatever answer the question who they have they had fights they haven't answered no questions they haven't all right then no but i'm telling you that's fine that's fine that's fine you tell me what you want to tell me cool cool i don't give a toss i don't know where i'm at she finally where you at get me who do you think you'll feel the pressure first on fight night is it again who do you think will feel the pressure first on friendly arms i don't know man arms will feel the pressure all right then you feel the pressure you will feel the pressure you going out in the front of people i've done it once before i've been in front of people i've got i've gone out i've been in the ring in front of people i've i've done it once before so i feel like you will feel the pressure i've been in front of people that's the thing though i'm not saying i won't but i'm i feel like yeah i've been in front of people the thing is here my man ain't gonna um portray this hard man whatever wherever there's always gonna be nerves or pressure because you wanna perform more you understand you always wanna um you know go in there and and do your best but regardless when you have to like look past that and me i've been i've been in crowds i've been in situations where i perform in front of hundreds and thousands so it's cool like the life that i've lived and the things i've been doing it's given me the privilege to um perform and express myself to people so it's like even instagram itself it's like it's a it's a stage for me and people see what i do so i don't i don't in on that side there's no pressure there's no nerves there's nothing it's just for me personally right okay cool i'm gonna go do this guy make sure i do my thing and i don't you know what i'm saying i don't i don't match up you hit me simple that's that these are both doing your thing and i've got like i've says numerous occasions i've got massive respect for both you's especially stepping into the ring business plan that you're both passed and what he's doing now is unbelievable he's now leading a blueprint of how to make changes and how other people can then make some money and listen i take my hat off to you just before we finish up would you like to to finish up with any any words about defeat yeah um i'm going to knock him up knock him out right here wow that's my man right there it's gonna ah well farms would you like to finish up on anything yeah no i can't wait for the fight man um i'm just gonna enjoy myself you feel me um i love the training uh listen i love to fat man he hit me like he's keeping asking me about him punching the face there's a reason why the man don't call me arms you understand i'm gonna bring arms house to his house you know no one's there so i was gonna do this thing i like that one i'm happy i like that one you see you i like uh what's his name johnny depp film i don't act i just do me something but you get me i can't wait for the fact man this has been a nice peaceful chat lads fair play make sure you get your tickets i'm going to leave the link in the description two great guys come support them i don't think that's over the last we'll see over them especially after the first fight but listen guys good luck to both users guys man keep reaching for the stars god bless [Music] i bet you just sent me
Anything Goes With James English
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2021-09-01
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Alabama Smart Yards: Pervious Surfaces
- Welcome to Alabama Smart Yards. We're creating beautiful landscapes that protect natural environments. Why? Because it's the smart thing to do. Today, we'll talk about pervious and impervious surfaces in the landscape. (gentle music) Solid surfaces, sidewalks, patios, and driveways, are commonplace in city neighborhoods. Did you know that these contribute to water pollution and reduce overall water quality? These impervious surfaces reduce rainwater infiltration, heat the storm water flowing into streams and rivers, and allow surface pollutants to be carried away in runoff. So what can we do? Slow the rapid flow of storm water and allow the soil to filter and neutralize pollutants. Point rain gutter downspouts toward plantings that flourish in these conditions. Shrubs like pawpaw and wax myrtle or flowers like lobelia and goldenrod are just a few. Place a rain barrel at one or more downspouts. These collect rainwater that can be used for any garden. Make landscape paths with a layer of mulch or gravel. And always remember to sweep grass clippings and fertilizer back into planting beds. Or maybe you want to dig in deeper? Pervious pavers are concrete or brick laid into decorative patterns. Set into sand, gravel, or structural grid base, these work for a variety of uses. Pervious concrete is best for smaller applications. Flagstone is attractive surrounded by low ground covers or gravel. Or build a rain garden. It holds water for a short time and grows plants that enjoy both soggy and droughty soils. By implementing one or two smart changes, you can make a big impact on your local environment.
Alabama Extension
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2021-08-19
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Cycling Biomechanics | Dr Wendy Holliday
hello and welcome back to this thoughts biomechanics lecture series supported by the international society of biomechanics and sports and sponsored by vicon i'm stuart mchurley naylor from the university of suffolk and today i'm really lucky to be joined by wendy holliday and wendy is well quite a broad range of skill sets really we were just talking about it but wendy is a physiotherapist with a phd on cycling biomechanics from the university of cape town in south africa and she also works as a clinical bike fitter at science to sport so hopefully with today's topic of cycling biomechanics wendy's someone who's really well positioned to give a broad overview of some of the real topics um yeah relating to the biomechanics of cycling so without kind of me talking for too long i'll hand over to wendy and we can get into the interesting stuff so thank you wendy perfect all right thank you so much stuart and thank you so much for organizing these talks and they really have covered a large range of topics which have been incredibly interesting so i'm sure everyone has enjoyed that and today we're going to be talking about really the basics of cycling biomechanics what muscles work when what the normative joint angles are and some tips for future cycling studies so let's get into it first of all when you're going to be doing cycling research you really need to look at the bicycle and the cyclist it's two components that work together the machine and the driver and you can't look at one without looking at the other so today we're going to be looking at the cyclist basically their muscles and the joints the kinematics as well as just an overview of the bicycle and what you need to consider when you're doing some research as well as i'll be sharing some tips that i've had along the way with my research so to start off with um you get different categories of cycling and every discipline will have different demands if we look at your time trial a huge factor is the aerodynamics and that itself is a talk on its own so we're not going to be discussing that today um most common would be the road cycling and this can either be for commuting or for sport and for racing and then there's mountain biking which has its own characteristics such as cross country which is quite technical and marathon racing for the purpose of today's talk we'll be discussing road cycling as a competitive sport and the reason that i mentioned that the bicycle and the rider need to be considered with research is that the rider has five contact points with the bike so we've got the saddle the two hands on the handlebars and the feet on the pedals and changing any of these will have an effect on the cyclist with regards to their performance and their comfort on the bike when you need when you start off with cycling and cycling research and cyclists you need to be familiar with the components of a bicycle and there's certain terminologies that you should understand such as your seat tube your down tube your top tube handlebars all the different components that make up a bicycle and just being familiar with the jargon that comes with cycling so i'm just going to cover some of those um the most important components of configuration uh would be the ones that i'm going to discuss now and there are many different methods in which you can measure these so the important is to choose one method and stick to it okay don't change things find something that you're comfortable with that you have the equipment to measure the bicycle and then always measure it the same so if we look the most common one would be your saddle height and that's measured from what we call the bottom bracket so in the middle of the crank up to the top of the seat of the saddle okay it falls along the seat tube angle this is your seat tube and one must consider that that seat tube angle on different bikes will be different most of the geometries of the bike is 72 to 74 degrees but it's important if you're going to be using a range of bicycles to measure that angle and ensure that you get the same distance the same angle when you're taking your measurements the other one is your saddle setback and that is measured from your bottom bracket perpendicular up and the distance behind sometimes in front but usually behind the bottom bracket and just consider that you've got a variety of different saddles and they also come in different saddle lengths so you need to take that into consideration we also talk about your handlebar reach so how far your handlebars are away from your saddle and your handlebar drop so how low are your handlebars compared to your saddle and different cycling um disciplines will be in different positions so a commuter bike usually will have handlebars that are above the saddle whereas when you're racing you're likely to have your handlebars below your saddle in terms of aerodynamics so these are just the main measurements that need to be taken when you're working with bicycles and we'll get into those a little bit in more detail a little bit later but just getting you familiar with some of the terms we also need to look at your hand position so if we discuss road cycling there are three main hand positions we've got your hoods which is where your hands are in a bit of a groove there near your brakes we also have your hands what in what we call the drops so they're lowered down and then on the top bar so it's important to know these different positions as they can change the shoulder and the wrist angle as well as your thoracic spine obviously dropping from your hoods to your drops is going to put you in a lower position through your thoracic spine it's important to keep consistent as these changes in the body angles can have an effect on your metabolic costs your power as well as your comfort and then we talk about your pedal revolution so this is when you pedaling your foot action going around on the pedal you've got your top dead center or zero or 360 degrees your first quadrant to 90 degrees and then bottom dead center which is at 180 degrees 270 and then back up to the top it's also known as the push and the pull phase um it's not as clear-cut as push and then pull but in simplistic terms we talk about the push phase and the pull phase so especially when you clip in onto the pedals as one leg pushes down your other leg which is fixed onto the pedal can then pull up and help you um to get a stronger force through those pedals to turn them over quickly so we talk about your top dead center and your bottom dead center all right which muscles work when and this is obviously influenced by intensity and fatigue and for today we will be discussing normal steady state patterns of muscle recruitment and as my phd study was determining what happens at different writing intensities i'll also be showing you some slides on how riding intensity affects the muscles this is just an overview of the muscle system so here you can see your pedal revolution so your top dead center and your bottom dead center over there and you can see the glute max when that works your hamstrings are working when your quads are working your calf muscles and then your tib and which is your bright pink muscle to pull your foot up and over the top dead center really just a quick overview of which muscles are working when through the pedal revolution here's a it's quite a simple um video of of when the muscles work and not a hundred percent accurate but but will give you an idea of when they work so your glutes your quads calf muscles on the push phase tip and working hamstrings your hip flexors on that pull phase to pull the leg back up just gives you a good overview of when those muscles are working and if we get into a little bit more detail this this is your glute max it's a powerful hip extender and it is active during the push phase from the top dead center to approximately 130 degrees of the pedal revolution if we look at the research you can see that it works from your top dead center to 90 and then down to the bottom dead center and as the intensity of your ride increases we can see that this is the quadrant quadrant one where it works the hardest and that was where we had significant changes from 60 to 80 from 60 to 90 percent as well as from 80 to 90 percent intensity and the other mass the other quadrants were also significant mainly from 60 to 90 intensity but you can see where this muscle works the hardest in this quadrant and that's where we had the most significant changes um in muscle activity your bicep fem it's a biaticular muscle so it crosses the hip and the knee and it works to extend the hip and to flex the knee we can see here it works from top dead center down to bottom dead center and that's where we saw the most significant changes with the change in writing intensity so from 60 to 80 to 90 percent and it controls the knee flexion so from top dead center it works for hip extension and then in the second quadrant it starts to control that knee flexion if we look at your your quads your vmo and your vlo they work to extend the knee they're activated just before top dead center and they terminate at just beyond 90 degrees so this is the quadrant that they work in in the most so that's top dead center to 90 degrees and you can see the blue corresponds with the blue and that's where you saw significant changes as the intensity increased so they work from the top dead center and they're pushed down to straighten that leg your rec fem is also about biarticular muscle so it flexes the hip and extends the knee this muscle is active from 270 to 90 degrees and we can see as the intensity increased that the hip flexor was pulling the leg up and over the top dead center and then it was working to start straightening that knee as you started pushing down and we can see the significant changes with the riding intensity on that tip and this muscle works to dorsiflex the ankle and it's active from 270 degrees to lift that foot up and over the top dead center and then it terminates shortly afterwards you can see here this is where it's mainly active and that's where we saw significant changes from 60 to 80 as your writing intensity increases so as the riding intensity increases that tip and works harder to pull the foot up and over that top dead center gastrocnemius also a biaticular muscle so it works to plantar flex the foot and to flex the knee it starts at approximately um just after the termination of tib entered about 30 degrees and works until 270 degrees in plantar flexing the ankle and therefore forcing the foot down on the pedal so as the as the ankle plantar flexes it forces the foot down onto the pedal until the beginning of the knee flexion and that just helps with the force going through the pedal as you're riding so we can see here that this is where it's working hard to push down on that pedal and we didn't see any significant changes through the different increasing riding intensity and this may be due to the fact that the medial gastroc works even at low intensities and it works to stabilize that ankle in order to transfer force through the pedal we didn't observe soleus in my studies but it has been demonstrated in other studies that celius also works hard to stabilize the ankle and the foot to generate force through the pedal so there might have been significant changes in cellius um with the writing intensity but we didn't find that um in the in the main quadrant that it works for um increasing writing intensity so just to give you a recap glute max works as a hip extensor from 340 to 130 degrees and its peak activity is at about 80 degrees vlo and vmo work to extend the knee from 300 to 130 degrees of the pedal revolution with their peak activity at 30 degrees rec fem works as a knee extensor and a hip flexor and it works from 200 degrees all the way around to 110 degrees of the pedal revolution with its peak activity at about 20 degrees soleus and gastroc ankle stabilizers as well as a knee flexor and that works from 340 to 270 degrees with their peak activity at between 90 and 110 degrees tib ant ankle stabilizer and confliction works throughout the pedal revolution with its peak activity at 280 degrees to bring that foot up and over the top dead center hamstrings they work as a knee flexion from 10 to 230 degrees of the pedal revolution with a peak activity at about 100 degrees and if we look specifically at bicep fem it works as a knee flexor as well as a hip extensor from 350 all the way through to 230 degrees with its peak activity at about 110 degrees so this table is found in the so it's all paper from 2005 and i have given stuart a list of references so you will be able to pick that up afterwards it's really nice just a good summary of muscle action during the pedal revolution always good to recap on which muscles work when during them during cycling so that was the general patterns for muscle activity during cycling but as always humans are individual and we see different ankle patterns during cycling so most commonly is dorsiflexion of the ankle before bottom dead center and then just before bottom dead center they push into plantarflexion to give them that extra force as the pedal hits what is commonly known as the dead spot all right just to keep it simple that is where the area of the transition occurs from the pushing to the pulling phase so as you're pushing down obviously with biomechanics and levers they get a point where there isn't maximum force on the crank and the pedal and that's what we term the the dead spot um some riders will ride with a dorsiflexed ankle throughout the majority of the pedal revolution and they tend to activate celiac and tib and earlier on in the downstroke so that helps to keep the foot into that dorsiflexion and then they push through with dorsiflexion throughout the pedal revolution you also get the pointy toed riders so they ride with plantar flexion throughout the pedal revolution and one needs to evaluate if this is their riding style or if their saddle is too high and they're merely reaching for the pedals at the bottom dead center so we get all these different um ankle movements during the pedal revolution and just something to observe with your with your cyclists so they're quite a few studies on muscle synergies during cycling and the impact of intensity of riding position such as sitting or standing as well as different fatigues on the muscle synergies so just to summarize it in five short points you'll see that single joint muscles are concerned with a generation of positive work where two joint muscles are responsible for the fine regulation of the work wreck fem is assists with hip flexion during the pull phase it also works with knee extension in the push phase gastroc is a knee flexor in the pull phase and an ankle stabilizer during the push phase so the co-activation of muscle pairs may serve to protect the joints and if one is too strong it may put strain onto a joint and this is important to balance muscle development when you're designing muscle training and rehab for the cyclists because you don't want one muscle to be dominant and then you put pressure onto the or strain through the joints um as they're riding so just something to to bear in mind um it is a fascinating um if you want to deep dive into all the research there are a lot of articles on on what happens during muscles um when you're standing when you're sitting when you're fatigued when you're sprinting so we're not going to get into all of those details now but just to remember that the synergies do change with cycling all right if we look at joint kinematics so for my study we used vicon this is an early video of the vicon and you can see our cyclist having a drink of water and this is one of our study participants with all the vicon markers with the emg we also had um the metabolic cart so we're taking a whole lot of measurements you can see they were all wired up it took us about 45 minutes to set up each participant um i'm sure you're all familiar with that process all right so there's some general guidelines of where the joint angle should be when they're on the bike um the ankle and the knee are measured at bottom dead center and the hip is commonly measured at top dead center that's just a recommendation that's what previous research has done so just to keep that in mind and to take note so that you can discuss your findings with other studies you don't want to go and measure at three o'clock and then you don't have anything to compare your results with so usually the ankle and the knee are measured at bottom dead center and the hip is commonly measured at top dead center or reported so it's measured throughout but reported at those points of the pedal revolution if we look at the ankle approximately 5 to 15 degrees of plantar flexion at the bottom dead center but just to remember to take into account the different pedaling styles that i spoke about earlier and your ankle plantarflexion dorsiflexion is obviously affected by your subtle height as well as your cleat position just some things to bear in mind your hip the hip and the shoulder are controversial joints and anyone who has heard me present on this before will know it's the one thing that i keep going on about so the hip previously has been measured from the knee to the greater tricanter and then as an angle parallel to the floor now physiotherapy was my first study option and if you're a clinician you'll know that that is not a clinical hip angle so it's a really nice angle to measure parallel to the floor you're done but that doesn't measure true hip angle and the same with other methods where they've measured from the knee to the hip and then across to the shoulder joint that completely eliminates the spine and the you know the thoracic curve the lower back curve and they measure the shoulder angle through there so what we did is we actually measured a true clinical hip angle and a true shoulder angle and you can see the difference if you just take a straight line how that angle is different to a clinical angle for the hip and the shoulder so we've been very fortunate and recently there have been some papers on how to calculate hip center so we don't need to drill the vicon marker into the bone anymore um this study not surprisingly only had one participant where they actually drilled the marker into the hip bone to get the hip center so thankfully we don't need to do that anymore and some clever people have come up with calculations to work out the hip joint sensor so going back to this at this stage there are no recommendations for the shoulder angle um on the bicycle that is changing there are some studies coming out the elbow angle roughly 20 to 30 degrees and that would be with your hands on the hoods okay so remember we spoke about the hoods and the drops and the top bar that is measured with the hands on the hoods and then your torso angle is roughly between 30 to 60 degrees and you can see that that changes if it's a recreational rider a fast road cyclist or just a casual cyclist that obviously has an impact on aerodynamics and you know what is the aim for the cycling is is it just to is it a recreational cyclist or do they really want to get into an aerodynamic position what you can also notice is that all of these recommendations are based on personal experience and as i said more and more research is coming out to give us more scientific recommendations for these angles okay but what it comes down to is more the rider's comfort and their performance on the bike as to where within that range they should be positioned this um chart is also in one of my papers um that has been published so you'll be able to get that if we look at how the body position changes over intensities um i haven't gone through each graph one by one as i think sometimes we get a little bit bogged down with all the graphs but you can see that there were significant changes in the majority of the joints from 60 to 80 to 90 percent and if i just give you a little video you'll be able to see so this is one of our colleagues and he was riding at 60 really fast and then at 80 and then down to 90 percent and you can see what happens to his joints as he rides at different intensities which is why it's so important to take the training intensity into account when you're configuring a bicycle um as the extended knee position and the forward thoracic lean may place the rider in a sub-optimal position when riding at higher or lower intensities something also to consider with your research is that if you're going to get them to ride at a higher intensity those angles that we spoke about earlier might not apply because it changes with the intensity okay so bear that in mind if you're doing any research and then the bicycle which is obviously a very important part and the aspect of bicycle configuration open to the most discussion has been the saddle height and consequently has been the focus of most studies to date regarding body position on the bicycle we can see here there have been many studies on optimal saddle heights these are just the popular or the trusted methods of setting saddle heights i'm not going to go into all of these and this is from one of the papers that dr swat and i published and it is included in the reference list so you'll be able to go through that but what you need to ask is what is optimal so these are all based on you know optimal saddle height but what is optimal is it optimal cycling performance is it optimal efficiency is it to optimize muscle activity is it to reduce the knee-joint forces or is it to prevent injuries from occurring and so you really need to work out what is your aim with that saddle height what do you want to do with that saddle height do you want to prevent an injury or do you want them to get into the fastest position that they can get into um the consensus at this stage is that static knee flexion angle should be between 25 and 35 degrees at bottom dead center with dynamic measures ranging between 30 and 45 degrees of knee flexion depending on the riding intensity so what's nice is that technology is really advanced um this study had four vhs video cameras okay can you just imagine vhs video cameras which they placed around the cyclist and they called that 3d so nowadays we're really lucky to have vicon where we can get an accurate assessment of 3d motion we also have subtle pressure mapping and force vector pedals to really measure all the components of cycling we need to remember that cycling isn't a sagittal straight line sport as much as you think the knees just go up and down movement does occur in other planes particularly at the knee and at the pelvis and with some systems such as vicon we can now measure that quite accurately so in this video you can see how that knee is moving in towards the frame and then back out so you can see that it's not just a straight line movement rotation does start occurring so now that we have the ability to test in real time previous studies and normative values that were all based on static measures and ongoing research in this in this field um and was kind of more towards dynamic and different intensities and that was the main part of my thesis so we know that there's a difference between the static and the dynamic measurement systems such as measuring with a goniometer or one sagittal camera taking a still shot compared to 3d motion capture that records during the cycling action and we also know that it depends on the intensity of the ride so more research is needed to evaluate the optimal angles for the different intensities as well as at that dynamic capture and then once again we need to work out optimal for what for performance for injury prevention for aerodynamics we really need to ask everyone talks about optimal but optimal for what you need to really um define what optimal is for you so when studying an aspect of cycling it's important to take both the cyclist and the bicycle into consideration because changing one part of the bicycle will have an influence on other parts of the of the bike so just some tips for for cycling studies as i said if you change one aspect of the bike it will have an effect on other parts um as well as on the rider's position sorry this slide always comes first and then does that so let me jump to there um if you're changing any aspect of the configuration you need to give the rider or the participant adequate time to adapt the new configuration and this will depend on how many hours of writing that they are doing so some studies um that i've reviewed they did not give adequate um adaptation time and saw the participants sliding forwards on the saddle to gain a more comfortable or more powerful position and this negatively affected the results because the rider wasn't where they wanted them to be for for the study um a few of the studies have allowed the participants to wear cycling shoes and running shoes so some participants had running shoes some participants had cycling shoes as well as some had cycling shorts and some had running shorts and you need to take these into account when you're doing research cycling shoes are much stiffer than running shoes and they would probably have cleats on so the foot is fixed on the pedal which means that when you when you're doing particularly if you're doing testing now and then at a later stage they come in in a week's time if they don't have those cleats their foot might move on the pedal they might not be putting their foot exactly in the same place and this can influence your results whereas if you've got a cleat when they clipped in they're going to be in the same position on the pedal and the same with your cycling shorts so cycling shorts have got padding and yes it's only a few millimeters but this is important to consider when you're doing a scientific project so you can't have some cyclists or participants just in normal running shorts and some with padding because those few millimeters can make a difference if you're looking at kinematics you also need to take into account their riding styles such as that pedaling style that i discussed earlier so you need a relatively high sample number to normalize your data as as everyone has will have a different style of writing and then you need to record all the components so a change in the saddle angle of only one to three degrees can dramatically change the rider's position and participants will also be used to their width of the saddle and saddles come with cutouts they come with relief channels they come in different lens so you really need to just record all of these components um if you're if they're using their own bike and handlebars also come in different widths and different shapes and which can have an impact on the torso the shoulder the elbow and the wrist angle so if you think of a petite lady riding a bike with wide handlebars compared to a lady who of the same height but as a wider or broader shoulder span she's going to be more comfortable on those bars compared to the petite lady who will be out there so all of these need to be considered before you start out in the study and and we all make these mistakes i'm hoping to share some with you and just consider all the aspects that are movable on on the bike such as your saddle and your handlebar your handlebar angle handlebar itself and then lastly to design your protocol based on individual heart rate or power output so one person riding at 200 watts might find that an easy ride for them but somebody else might find that quite a maximal effort so what we recommend is that you start with the peak power output test to determine their max and then set according to a percentage of that so that everything is averaged out all right thank you short and sweet just covering the basics of um cycling biomechanics students brilliant thanks wendy yeah it's really good you're so short and sweet it was definitely sweet and yeah i really liked that i think there were a lot of kind of not individual moments but really useful points i think my personal favorite i said before i really like your graphics where you've got the muscle activity of different muscles all the way around the revolution you can really kind of intuitively see that and personally i really like those graphics but then at the end i really liked the kind of implications for the design of future studies and that's something that's you know really good to show especially with kind of students watching it or anyone really thinking of conducting their own study and yeah so thank you um yeah have you got the next slide there we go brilliant so yeah thank you just while um while i give people chances i know there's a bit of a delay on the youtube feed if you've got any questions then type those in the live chat on youtube um but yeah just while we wait for it to catch up um that's just a bit of a highlight of what's coming up in the next four weeks starting with a really hopefully really exciting talk next week on engaging youth such as school children in biomechanics and using biomechanics as a stem outreach outreach vehicle actually i'm really looking forward to that one and yeah so i think as wendy mentioned all of the references are below the video in the description so if you want to find out more then um yeah feel free to go and click on those because i put the links there to each of the papers and i guess before we get into questions if anyone wants to contact you wendy with any is there a best way of kind of finding out what you're up to or getting in touch with yeah sure so i'm just going to jump back to that slide um reachable on twitter um and then that's my email address if anyone wants to email me more than more than welcome to throw some questions at me um yeah go for it brilliant thank you um yes i think in terms of the questions there's some on youtube but i'm going to be selfish and kick it off with one of my own and i think one of the reasons i really liked that talk is that it ties in with a topic i try and teach but don't do anywhere near as well so as part of our ergonomics and sport module i try and talk about the interaction between the cyclist and the bike in one of our lectures um but just to touch on one of the things that you kind of hinted at could maybe go into a bit more detail what kind of role would the actual course play so say if it is a road cyclist when you talk about the activity of different muscles how would it make a difference pedaling uphill compared to downhill or say out on your own compared to within a bunch of other riders so so you you'd need me here for about five more hours to go into into detail on that um what's quite nice is that there there have been some studies um on that and your muscles definitely change from a sitting to a standing position your joint forces also change so you need to take that into account um so when you're riding uphill you tend to if you're going to be powering up let's say you're going to be standing you're going to be standing up and driving forwards so so the muscles will be working differently and versus when you when you're just sitting and kind of grinding up a hill um it depends on each of the rider and how um quickly they fatigue because we know that that pattern changes when one muscle fatigues another one starts working so i can't give you specifics as i said you would really have to go into detail but in in short there is a change from from riding uphill to riding most of them are going to be freewheeling downhill but the other thing that comes into it is your road surface so so that will also make a difference um i just think with with cycling there's so many elements that we need to to look at so it's not just the the rider but it's also the bicycle and and the the surface where they're writing whether they're writing gravel or or tar so so we can we can delve into some more details on uphill writing but there are some studies out there that show that there is a big difference with the muscles um muscle recruitment patterns for that okay brilliant thanks i think yeah really interesting i think that further highlights why it's such an interesting topic where you've got all of these different factors kind of interplaying whether it's the human the bike the environment all the races tactical aspects and it all has a role on which muscles are being used and i guess and you throw in aerodynamics and kind of your team time trial and the aerodynamic effect of that of where you positioned in your team and how much aerodynamic advantage you get or win factor um you get so that that's also as i say um a whole talk on its own but also very interesting very fascinating yeah definitely i think i'll um i'll stop hogging you and i'll go to some questions and someone else has asked um yeah ron judge has said and this was early on so you kind of touched on bioarticular muscles after the question had been asked i think it's still a very relevant question he said biceps femoris is a bi-articular muscle when strength training these muscles do they require a specific stimulus compared to mono i think what you need to look at is the and this was the aim of the talk was which muscles work where during the pedal revolution and then come off the bike and strengthen them in the ranges where they work so if it's going to be um to flex the hip and to extend the knee then you want to work both aspects but you also want to work on the other side so that you're not really tight into hip flexion and weak into um hip extension you really want to try and balance those so you need to understand which muscles work when and then strengthen within those ranges off the bike um i hope that answers the question yeah i think it does definitely and i think i think yeah the question's probably on the along the right kind of lines where what you're just talking about becomes even more complicated when you throw in by articular muscles because you're not just saying put the knee or the or put the hip in the position that it that that muscle works in but you're saying you've actually got to position two different joints um yeah yeah okay as a physio i i highly emphasize that off the bike work um i always say to my clients you know if you are cycling in a bad pattern you're just strengthening that bad pattern so you need to do some off the bike work um to strengthen those muscles where they should be strong and stretch the muscles where they need to be stretched okay and yeah talking about different patterns um i guess it kind of links into bioarticular as well around the ankle this time and something i found really interesting is when you talked about the three different almost patterns of cycling kinematics at the ankle then i could immediately sort of imagine myself as a terrible cyclist doing one or two of the different patterns i wondered is there any indication of which pattern is best or maybe if it's participant specific how can you work out what's best for different people i think your your best you know it's so hard to change somebody's um peddling pattern as such or their peddling style but it has been done um your best is is really to work with um a power meter or you know your your pedal power meter because then you can measure how much force is going through the pedals and is it better to for that person to ride with pointed toes or is it better for them to ride with dorsiflexion and then push into plantar flexion as that pedal comes down to the bottom do they get a more powerful advantage with different styles and then start teaching them to ride in those patterns um so they i i personally think that you lose a fair amount of power if you plan to flex the whole way through but i have been proved wrong so um my my kind of go-to would be a normal movement within um what we call kind of swiping the mud off your foot at the bottom so going into that little bit of plantarflexion at the bottom and then coming through i find riders who use dorsiflexion throughout the pedal revolution end up with really tight calves and tib and the tip and gets quite sore because they're pulling up into dorsiflexion almost throughout the pedal revolution and and they end up with quite tight carves and and often pain so it's good to get that free ankle movement and then really just pushing down as the pedal comes down to that bottom dead center but i have been proved wrong so as you say all humans are individual definitely and um yeah i really like the cue of swiping the mud off the bottom of your shoe as well um so yeah another question that's come in from reece mcdonald he says wendy what role does the rider's flexibility play when bike fitting so is it important to assess their flexibility prior to a fitment yeah so so that paper that was one of um i looked at intrinsic factors related to bike fitting or bicycle configuration was one of my chapters of my phd and will hopefully be published soon um it's with the rev with the reviewers at the moment and flexibility has a huge role so you'll usually find me standing and demonstrating um but because i'm on a camera and i'm not in front of an audience it's a little bit difficult but your flexibility not only your hamstring flexibility but also your spinal flexibility makes it um important in how far you can get your handlebars away from you and down to get an aerodynamic position particularly in time trial and positions and your hamstrings so if you've got that hamstring flexibility you can push your saddle higher up and we know that a higher saddle gives you more power obviously it gets to a point where you start losing power but a higher saddle will give you more power so if you've got that hamstring extensibility to reach the bottom of your pedal but not start tilting your pelvis because your hamstrings are pulling you back being able to i wonder if i if i do stand if you'll be able to see me because i always demonstrate this you need to be able to lean forward and have that flexibility so almost like you're doing a um reaching for your toes and that position that's how you cycle that's the position that you would aim for with your hands on the handlebars and lower down so flexibility is very important and i would definitely measure it before doing or as part of your if you're going to be doing a bike fit definitely measure it as part of your bike okay thank you thanks for that i think probably the last question unless any more come in while we're quickly talking about this but i don't know the answer might be no but is there any scope for [Music] thinking out loud but any scope for using position on the bike or the setup of the bike um in a rehabilitation setting so say i've torn my hamstring and i'm starting to cycle because i'm not allowed to run yet um is there any scope for playing around with the position and setup of the bike to either offer the hamstring or stretch the hamstring more or less so so that's that's where my my passion comes in where i can combine my physio and background with my phd cycling bike fitting background and i work with a lot of cyclists who aren't are injured or are in pain or don't have the flexibility and and changing their position so they don't fit into those normal ranges of that 25 to 35 degree knee flexion angle for example but i've got them into a position where they are able to ride pain-free without putting more stress onto the hamstrings um so things like itb hamstrings the tip and pain we do change the saddle to account for that and it might not be a permanent change it might be as they're going through that rehab process that you know initially because the hamstring is injured and it doesn't have that flexibility so we drop the saddle ever so slightly and then as they progress through their rehab and they're able to ex flex and extend through the hip more freely and more comfortably we can start lifting that saddle a little bit more a lot of people with i know the question is more hamstring related so so yes definitely we do change the saddle height and to accommodate that but another example would be neck pain and i don't put you know your eldest your older cyclists who have a history of neck pain either osteoarthritis or tension headaches into a very aerodynamic position because i know that that's going to put strain onto onto their neck so it is working within each individual and setting the back up for them so they might not fit into those normative values but for them they are comfortable and and that's what's important and it might not be their forever position as they work through their rehab and as they get better um we can start changing it it's an ongoing process okay thank you yeah i think i think that's a perfect example of like evidence-based person-specific kind of holistic practice so yeah really kind of everything we've talked about then putting it all together and actually considering the individual to help them out really and so yeah thanks ever so much wendy yeah it's been a brilliant talk so thank you so much for joining and giving the lecture um thank you thank you for inviting me to come and speak no worries and then yeah all that's left are things for me to do that i hate doing the horrible youtube a bit where i say if you want to find out more remember to subscribe and click on the bell thing next to it and then you should get notifications um when other lectures are happening so to stay stay up to date um but yeah just thanks again wendy and yeah thank you
Stuart McErlain-Naylor
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2020-08-13
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXlff8Db32E
Stickman Jailbreak, Horror Clown, Eyes - The Horror Game, Ice Scream 4, House of Slendrina...
foreign [Music] thank you foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] thank you friends off with us when I go outside [Music] thank you [Music] all right [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Laughter] [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] foreign [Music] muscle [Music] bye [Music] goodbye [Music] okay let's go [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] let go foreign [Music] foreign [Applause] foreign [Laughter] [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Laughter] [Music] foreign huh [Music] let's go foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] hey what's going on in here huh let's go get back here I said get back here you little bastard [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] wow foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Laughter] [Music] foreign [Music] [Laughter] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] let go one day [Music] foreign [Music] I see you [Music] okay [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] oh [Music] my God [Music] foreign [Music] [Laughter] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] do I really have to kill all of them yes you do yes I do [Music] [Applause] oh my God oh my gosh foreign
Horror Gameplay
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2022-10-30
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NR2Xpli53OY
6 Fallowfield Drive, Savannah GA, 31406 - Isle of Hope Redone Ranch -
hey guys ed jeanette here and a beautiful sunny day in isle of hope i am standing right in front of one of our featured listings here at six fallow field drive let's uh run inside and take a look at this beautiful house it's a completely redone it's got a new roof it has everything's inside it's pretty much brand new floors cabinets paint job bathrooms it's um it's a pretty spectacular remodel let's let's run in and check it out back of the house kitchen dining room back there living room up front this front of the house features one of the dining room area [Music] as you can see it's wide beautiful kitchen times the cabinets granite countertops [Music] the stainless steel appliances everybody loves here's the dining room second fireplace that's the door to the garage out there it's a really nice oversized it's a beautiful florida room the side windows do open so you get a great cross breeze in here those big side windows open all the way [Music] let's go run inside and check out the rest of the house across the house it's wide open all the way beautiful color scheme [Music] so [Music] hey guys thanks for watching i hope you enjoyed this tour of this beautiful house here on isla hope at six fallow field if you have any questions please reach out to me on any of the social media sites or feel free to call me or text me at 912-844-9000 again that's 912-844-9000 again thanks for watching
Team Yannett
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2020-12-11
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The Rise of Data-ocracy
good afternoon i'm jennifer Shanker editor-in-chief of the innovator a global magazine about digital transformation and very happy to be here today with a super panel to discuss the rise of the Dyna khakhra see history is replete with examples of over reliance on metrics which have led to unfortunate outcomes today we are relying more and more on big data and algorithms for our decision-making to solve big problems to evaluate people and predict outcomes you could almost say that big data and algorithms have become a kind of religion and so today we're gonna ask the question is our faith in its accuracy well-founded and to discuss this issue we have with us here today Igor Stravinsky who is the head of a five billion dollar hedge fund called world quant that uses algorithms to predict outcomes we have Union who is the founder of a company called Yee sites which was a world leading cost language big data analysis platform we have Frieda Polly who is a award-winning Harvard and MIT trained neuroscientist turned CEO and last but certainly not least we have dr. Hillary captain Cottam who is a social entrepreneur and the author of a book called radical help so I now like to get right into our discussion and start by asking our panelists what the new opportunities that advanced technology allows and start off with you a guard tell us a little bit about how you were applying algorithms and how this can help Society yes let me give you a little bit of background world quant asset management is an asset management firm were quantitative we're global in the twenty twenty seven offices in 16 different countries but what makes us unique is the fact that we have about 19 million algorithms that we use to predict security prices so I wouldn't call this world of data accuracy I would call it an algorithm accuracy because data is growing exponentially and you know anything that grows exponentially becomes commoditized so it's really the algorithms that derived the meaning from this data so well let me give you some examples of something that we've been doing outside of our main business we have a joint venture with Weill Cornell Medical Center it's called the world coin Center for predictive medicine and one of the things we did I think everybody in the audience knows somebody who has was unable to have kids easily so they go to in vitro fertilisation and that's a very heartbreaking process sometimes because you cannot tell easily which embryos are viable so we have developed an algorithm together with a Weill Cornell which can pinpoint with 90% accuracy the viability of embryos by looking at the image of the embryo so that's that's one example another example I'm sure everybody in the room has heard of a astronaut twin studies where the idea is we you know everybody wants to space travel but it's important to see what happens to humans in space in particular what happens to human genome in space so one twin was left on earth one twin was sent into space for a year a ton of data was collected and we've developed an algorithm that will predict what happens to a human genome as you know when you sent into space basically so these are three examples okay so Union let's let's talk about how you've been applying algorithms you've also worked in the medical field and you're also applying them to fake news so let's let's hear about that all right actually judical music company getting awfully like a beetle kara everything the big data some machine translations and also with special recognition and they give me the recognition but when we talk about the big data what I mean the big data is a it's not just simply like a because JIT economy Chinese company but we are not mention just that Chinese that data us and what what do we mean is a machine called data when we put in the search engine before we put a keyword appala Google you're about to find out the older the news or data's informations are in English but it's supposed to be half of the data English Chinese Russian German we are everything that one we mean the matinee code text and also the content of the audience and also the content of the images and we try to leverage you in the machine learning our piece to calculate so the three different type of the like a format of the data and also what is the most important we just would like to propose a new concept like when we talk about data when you talk about news for example mm-hmm we think it is only three sleep status and the first one is the data second one the alternative alternative data that one is a mirror data and that could be no thickness what I mean a that if the theory's are no choose standing out and the thickness could be there for real for one month for one year or even for ten years so we try to calculate the three status of the different the three status of datas and to try to find out the balance and try to tell whether people to make that adjustment and also we have a company who focus on the medical imaging areas called the product and as we all know China's enjoys the largest population in the world and the Chinese are people one year need to have like a 1.3 feelings a city could scan clearly in China we still haven't got a sufficient to qualified doctors to review things there's a CT scans so we try to let the Machine to learn the the medical images right now the parallel that I able to diagnosis that lung cancer liver cancer brain tumor and pathological analysis take the lung cancer Adam example the machine already learned like a 100 thousands confirmed patients cases I each patient as we have a 200 to 400 CT images that means the sick cities that the machine already learned that much that many images for doctors when they graduated from a medical school eiffel how is his whole career life a doctor only can see like a 2,000 patients but the machine already learned like a 100000 confirm lung cancers so so clearly algorithms are helping us solve some huge problems but there's some there can be some downsides to this and one of them is bias because we are training algorithms quite often historical data and that means biases can be baked in so I want to turn to Hillary because her company has actually invented a technology that audits algorithms to ensure there is not anybody so Hillary tell us a little bit about that so pi metrics is a company that uses our artificial intelligence and behavioral science to help in the recruiting process recruiting in other human capital processes and I would actually argue that you know machine learning is like any other technology neutral it's really up to us and how we deploy that technology that makes the difference it's just like any other technology in the world genetics all these technologies can be used either to advance causes that we believe in or actually bring us backwards right and so if you think about current hiring processes there are lots of ways in which humans introduce bias into that process right and so when we speak about algorithms using bias training sets those bias training sets often were created by humans right of course so I think that this juxtaposition of biased algorithms versus you know the straw man of unbiased humans is just a straw man or strong woman sure so I think that actually there's great potential for machine learning and algorithms to reduce bias they can augment bias if we're not careful but they can also reduce bias because a human all of us here are all biased there's no way to make sure that Igor or you is unbiased there's just no test for that whereas you can actually audit algorithms right and that's what pie metrics does is we've created a technology called audit AI that essentially looks at the output of any recruiting algorithm that we build and ensures that from a statistical perspective there are no biases with respect to gender with respect to ethnicity those are the two biases that people care about the most in terms of hiring and this process that we've developed can really be applied to any algorithmic process and so we've open sourced it on github but I guess the broader point that I'd like to make is that I think unlike humans we can develop technologies that will audit algorithms and as a result I think it can actually be a powerful tool for reducing bias that having been said I think on tested or unaudited algorithms can and will often lead to increased bias so again it's really about the design of the algorithms and the humans that are creating these technologies and how they choose to both design and then implement them that really will determine whether something is a biased technology or not that's kind of our position as a follow-up I'm one of the things I find interesting about your technology is it it's supposed to also be able to identify high potential individuals who may have been overlooked so how do you how do you train an algorithm to look for high potential and you know even define high potential great I was just gonna say that so I think historically we thought of high potential as being a thing that you could say across the board is universal we actually don't believe that I think to be a high potential person in a certain sphere may be very different than being a high potential person in a different sphere so we actually work with companies and we create custom algorithms using their own employee base to identify what high potential means in a particular context so again it's much less about creating a world where certain people have high potential and others don't it's really identifying what area of life what area of career will you have will you demonstrate high potential in and matching you to that high potential field and I think that the reason that we're able to identify it in you know people that previously have been overlooked is because we're not relying on markers that are often tied to socioeconomic status you know where you to school other things like that are often a pedigree that's associated unfortunately oftentimes with socioeconomic status so we try to remove that from the process and in and in doing that really allow for a broader set of individuals a much broader set to be matched to opportunities where their ability to have high potential will be maximized thank you so now I'd like to turn to Hilary so NGOs and and and socially focused organizations are becoming under more and more pressure to come up with data measurements and I'd like you to talk about you know what are the pluses and minuses of this so I think there is increasingly in my world in the social world we're about social change and there's this increasing emphasis on what works which I think is a good thing you know there's not enough dollars to go around we need to make sure that we're investing in the right way but obviously the business of human change is messy and complex and so I think that there are a number of challenges with this emphasis on measurement and I kind of belief in certain types of measures so I think one of the things for instance in the social world is that there's been a recent meteoric rise of the randomized control trial that that is the kind of ultimate gold standard and money is following the RCT but that's quite complex it costs around 10 million dollars to do a sort of half-decent RCT which is the almost some beyond small organizations and also these kinds of measures can only measure certain things that we see an emphasis on certain kinds of intervention that are very easily measured some of these are good again you know immunizations a good example bed nets for malaria it's not that these things aren't good things but that we are focusing very strongly on some things that can yield good data at the exclusion of other things and as you say not all organizations can afford to pay for this kind of gold standard and then I think you know another challenge is that with the RCT in particular is that to get the right kind of measures you have to have very short-term you know your data panels have to be very short-term to make sure there's not so much variation and one thing about human change is it's very long-term actually and that humans move backwards as well as forwards and that's kind of part of the complexity so I think it's interesting to think about what kind of different measures we can have for different contexts and what kind of new measures we might develop for what I would call a kind of complexity paradigm of of human development is there a danger that we can draw wrong conclusions from data around especially in the in the social sphere well I think the the actual data itself is often I mean so one of the things about human change is that it involves talking about things people don't want to talk about if I ask you for instance are you lonely you're not going to put in a survey that you're lonely which is one of the reasons that this kind of global problem was overlooked for so long because there's no data on it nobody's going to confess that they're lonely but this is a very big problem on the other side I think that you know we could be measuring the wrong things because the it's very easy to have data around problems that you can manage but it's very what actually creates change might be something else so princess relationships are absolutely core to human change to encouraging people to change to sustaining change and of course relationships are extremely hard to measure so I think it's more that we're kind of focusing we don't have data about the things that matter and then the other thing I think is that all insight and data is not the same thing is it and so again this goes back to your original question about small organizations so I think what's important about small organizations is that they should be allowed to be radical to start pushing forward work a lot of the measurements we have relate to all paradigms here we're talking a lot about the fourth Industrial Revolution the world is changing very fast and we don't have the right kind of frameworks to measure so very good example that would be health where we have a lot of data around infectious disease but not very much around chronic disease so we begin to kind of sort of have measurement systems that force us to look backwards rather than forwards very often and I think that that is also a big problem around what we measure I mean in my own work you know I say that if traditionally we kind of work most social science works in the kind of big part of the bell curve and I try to work at either extreme actually because I think that if can kind of design things that work for people who are at the the outliers then it will work for everybody but again that's a data challenge because the data is all about kind of the middle of the bell curve yeah and sometimes there was an interesting article in The New York Times over the weekend that talked about how the US should introduce new ways of measuring the economy they said you know the the employment statistics and the way we measure of GDP were were designed at the end of the 1800s and they don't necessarily reflect the reality today so ya might show we have record low unemployment but it doesn't reflect the fact that you have two parents working three jobs they don't have health insurance and they're living in the shelter because they can't afford rent so so for instance in the UK we have in work poverty we have between a third and a half of British families on benefits because they're paid too low to live on you know their wages are too low to live on they're not falling officially below the poverty line but of course this creates all kind of social and political effects because people actually don't want to live on handouts but another good example would be that in most countries in the world it's illegal to die of aging you have to be put into a category of some form of disease and of course this totally defines how we look at all the people that you are a body part to be managed not a human being to be taken care of and increasingly we're seeing both the kind of social cultural and financial implications of that kind of categorization so I think we see in the economy we see it socially we see it everywhere actually so let's examine some some of the other dangers about over reliance on data and and here Erika I'd like you to talk about the global risk study as we all know the World Economic Forum every year will release a report called the Global Risk report for last year's in 2017 in the 13 years report and actually this year we just base upon the big data and we generate our new reports or for the Global Risk report and the original report actually mirror the five key categories and their their there were like a thirty subcategories and the five peak categories is a politics at GOP politics the environment what has energies and the those different categories and we actually leverage like eight millions that data's global data's and the sink data and we take advantage of the Mercer learnings to learn those asset data's and the firm finally we actually use like a thirty millions of data as global data's to measure there is like categories and then we find out seven major differences from the original Global Risk report so same data set but seven major different versions of the original global risks a report released by the WF is a basic from the human interviews so every every years double year it will organize like a seven hundred experts as scholars from a distant different areas and to sauna to sellout the interviews and and to investigate there's five major categories and thirteen subcategories that to have the feedback and to generate that overall reef report but we leverage there the big dealers and what what I mean is data from China in the stays it's a global data the multilingual data and the two we we let the machine to learn the data for number one when we talk about that extreme red weathers how people measured about the terrorist attack and also the uncomfortable inflation and we find out that the five major differences and which is a totally different deformity scholars so I think because another example sir we all know that is she is a consulting companies were released a hyper circle for the new technologies for the new emerging technologies and that face like a hyper circle is all with the same for the past 20 years that based upon the express opinions they said well this year the blockchain supposed to be there and the jury is going to be there but that all based upon the humans judgment but let's say what he would be able to measure all the data seen in the past 20 years and how many people are talking about the Jones in that hesitating yes and how many patents how many companies hope what is the skill of the market share and how many new products emerging in that market and actually nowadays because ten years ago apparently we were unable to we were unable to measure those data we don't know where but nowadays we are able to gather the data and we are able to measure to those data's and also the data is are able to use the in the in the FinTech for that racket we have the mock market psychology and we measures like at the market sediment take team like to project the mawkish the crew oil price and also the share price so that's very much what you are doing as well so to maybe talk a little bit about how reliable you feel the algorithms are and how you are relying on those them to make predictions and and then investing accordingly yes well there is a reason why we have 19 million algorithms and the reason is you want to maximize diversification because any individual algorithm is going to have a bias any individual algorithm will have its flaws but different algorithms are put together by different people different people have different biases so by the time you mix it all up and you know and look at all of them in aggregate the biases gets small and the signal gets large so this is this is how we deal with it extreme diversification ok so let's talk about how a focus on metrics can distort outcomes sometimes hilary you have a point of view on that yes i mean i'm concerned with the way that data can sort of lead to sort of different outcomes i'm I'm more concerned really with the way that certain data leads to certain kinds of programs and actions which which then of course lead to different so for instance one of the things I can give some examples so for instance in Pittsburgh there's there's a data system which has 131 points that decides for instance how you will behave with your children and whether you're likely to abuse your children or not so that's you know what you can't see in that data set is what kind of changes people already making their lives what kind of broader relationships they might have around them so this would be a very good example where you can use data to try and target families that might be in need but what you get out of that is you get you get a data set at risk but you get no knowledge of how you might actually then move in to support those families and what are the kind of good productive things that might be happening in order to in order to make that kind of change so I think that that's the kind of thing that I'm I'm concerned about and I mean one of the things that I've been doing is trying to develop different forms of metric around people's capabilities that are both measuring kind of external and internal capability so that we can begin to kind of count different things that matters such as relationships which I've mentioned before because we can see definitely in good longer to dnal databases that the strength of your relationships is highly determinant of your life but generally those are things that are very difficult to measure and well if you don't measure it it doesn't have a tension and then you don't act on it basically did you want to add to that I mean I would agree I think that if you have an incomplete data set which is really what you're describing then your algorithms or any kind of conclusions you draw are gonna be less powerful I think that's just the kind of basic fact of measurement is that if it's only half of the relevant data that you need you won't get a complete picture so and I think this is a good segue into the broader topic of we are people are being measured every aspect we now have algorithmic twins if you will and and so everything we do is being is being measured in one way or another and there's been a lot of talk in the press about the Chinese social scoring system where people are rated on their civic nests and and there are major consequences about you know where you can apply for a job or if you can have a passport and so forth but what I think has been left out of that conversation is that we have many similar type measurements in the West that are non-transparent people are scored on their financial responsibility they are scored by recruiters on the way they behave in social media there are many many different ways that we are being measured and they're not transparent we have no control for them we don't know who was collecting data about us what they're doing with it and if God forbid there's a mistake made we have no way of correcting it so I think it's interesting to discuss as a society as a global society how do we confront this how do we set some sort of rules or oversight in place to make sure that there is some transparency in some control who wants to take that on well I mean one thing I would say is that you know data is like a kind of modern form of mining isn't it I mean it's highly extractive and it's not just the sort of sort of bigger governmental systems you're talking about and the credit rating data and all of that that we also have in the West it's also that in social programs you are asked to give up a lot of your time and your data so that you can be measured but you don't own your data it's exactly the same as that the macro level so one of the things we could talk about is you know how this process becomes less extractive how you own your own data whether it is kind of credit data whether it's data you know in the kind of work I do which is data around how your health is improving or data around how your children are doing well data that's meaningful to you and you can actually learn from by owning it so in my world kind of owning your own data not only is kind of empowering but it actually means that you learn rather than the people with the clipboards who came to interview you learn and then that kind of promotes sort of exponential kind of social change which I think is really important in addition to things I would say in addition to that one is that you know in the West there's generally a little bit of a bifurcation of data that you've put out there in the public domain right like your Twitter feed or whatever it is that a recruiter may or may not be using and again I'm not saying it's a good thing I'm just saying you have put it out in the public domain versus you know your health information which is you know highly protected by a lot of regulations right so there is that difference and so we should just be mindful of what we're talking about when we talk about data right because that could mean a lot of different things and then secondly I think that you know again this this kind of gets into where political institutions intersect with thoughts around what you do with data right I mean in the EU all of the GDP are and data privacy laws that have come into effect really our response to this idea that data should be owned by the individual and you know as we all know there have been a lot of changes that technology companies small like pet metrics large like Google have had to make as a result of that right so again I think people are responding to these challenges in different ways and I think it does reflect the political climate of different geographies and and sort of not just political but the social norms of different countries and I think it kind of remains to be seen I think where this all Nets out I think do you do you want to answer that Eric yeah I think we need to be more time in the perspective of the data artificial intelligence and the big data and need a bit of time the companies or enterprise system need more time also the government they need a bit of time because that that could be a kind of the joint efforts especially because they as we all know that artificial intelligence is booming it could be are like last three to five years and when we talk a real big data says maybe in the past five years and due to that chip seat and the memories and calculating computing capabilities but those are the new emerging problems especially for the GDP are released by the European Union's but I think for that like that like that the the government you need to to have a real or like her management it's what the data privacy especially just now I mentioned like at the medical imaging the health care data and also like at the news a social media the same and for the company and the companies that like a need to have a common consensus on the like a data privacy protections and also need a bit of joint efforts to monitoring the whole process and also there need to be a like a like every weekend answer it's a coordinate because I think it all comes back to what Hilary said earlier about you know it depends on how the technology is used right so I don't know how many of you have noticed but across the hall there's a demonstration of voice recognition technology the Carnegie Mellon University is working on and the the voice recognition technology could play an important beneficial role in the sense that it can detect from your voice certain health issues and so the idea is that you could use this voice recognition technology along with telemedicine to to give people early alerts about medical conditions and potentially save lives but if this was used in a different way I mean I don't know how many of you have done it I tested it myself this afternoon but you stand in front of this machine and they they have you read like a paragraph and then immediately afterwards within seconds it tells you about what you look like guesses your age can measure different things about your health about your mental state at the moment about your personality whether you have leadership potential in a job so you could imagine this being used in different circumstances maybe for recruitment or something else that could be slightly disturbing and especially since at least for now the technology is is not quite ready for primetime and I can attest to that because it told me that I was man that I'm 20 years younger than I am that I am very tall and and and big-boned so there manok is as much faith as we put in technology and as wonderful as some of the predictions now are on on global risks or things that might impact the economy we we aren't quite quite there with all the different technologies yet and there are there are some things that we have to pay attention to some dangers so that I think it's a good segue into the next question which is to what extent to the panelists believe that we must marry human judgement with with the technology in order to have the right context and the best outcomes I think you all certainly that is always going to deny always for the foreseeable future is gonna be the case right I mean a lot of what we're talking about here is not general artificial intelligence it's narrow artificial intelligence which will always be applied by a human for a specific use case and usually in combination with some form of human judgement now when general artificial intelligence comes along and you know god only knows when that happens or when or what happens when that happens that's potentially you know a world-changing event but until then I think these are all narrow specific use cases that will always be deployed with the context of human judgment that's kind of my take on it yeah I mean I am very interested in how we develop what I would call that like a complexity paradigm I mean I would say that you know the algorithm is a Newtonian paradigm which is great when things are you know objective fireball linear but human change is not but then the flip side of that and the reason that you know I for one I'm so interested in measurement is that we have to have rigor like we have we do have to know what works and we do have to kind of exclude as much bias as possible so I think we we need to kind of balance data with human judgment and what would be wonderful would be if we could also put as much energy into the kind of sophistication of thinking of what those method of human judgment our which you know there's some really exciting developments around participate reads where people kind of cross check each other for example ground true thing where you spend time looking at things from different perspective but I think it'd be really exciting to develop those kinds of human judgment systems and think about what rigor is in those systems and set them alongside more quantifiable data systems I think sometimes you really exalt human judgment to be so much better than or somehow you know impervious to all these problems that we see in algorithms and I would just argue that there are many examples and I won't mention any specific ones but I'm sure we can all think of many examples of our human judgment has been extremely flawed leading to very catastrophic it that's right so I think we just have to be careful when we think about one being you know dangerous and potentially the other being a self to that because do you think that's because we're sophisticated around humans and we kind of understand bias and we understand cultural judgment and the problem with our kind of sort of almost or of data because it's so recent is that we don't understand how it's culturally embedded and we don't understand how it's biased enough and so that that's the problem isn't it's taking that kind of critical perspective now to the data that we might have about human judgment because I agree with you whenever a new technology comes around people think it's going to end the world you know I mean so I was a neuroscientist before I became an entrepreneur and you know when brain imaging came around everyone thought that oh my goodness you're gonna scan somebody's brain at birth and be able to like predict something about them and it's gonna become this Gattaca like future and now the same thing is being thought about with artificial intelligence I think you know change provokes fear in human beings which is natural and we always fear the worst and then you know and we also dream that these technologies are gonna just creatopia in future and in the end it's sort of like a disappointing middle ground where you know things get better but they're not quite as scary as we think they'll be and they're not quite as awesome as we think they'll be well I got this right because I think the last time the kind of data crafts were powerful was in the last Industrial Revolution when there again there was a similar kind of like bubble about data and you know sort of encyclopedias and collecting and making lists and then people saw the problem easily but yeah I agree what's your perspective on it sir machines will never ever displace humans because there is a one primary reason is that humans and machines are different and anytime you put two different things together you get something better so it's simply not ever going to happen okay and and so how does it work in your firm the human algorithm balance you know we have some algorithms made by humans we have some algorithms been made by machines we have a measures I I can say that at this point in time the algorithms made by humans are about 50 times better than the one made by machines but we are machines winners on the sheer quantity in the brute force and and the breadth of the approach you know what machines are just that machines machines make predictions humans make the judgment as machines bite off a little bit more of what the humans know the human judgment level keeps escalating and them and them going up and that's a it's a never-ending spiral yep okay Erik yeah I think it's a process of the converges definitely is a combination of the human person and the machine vanished I like like a take the machine translation as an example because I like a 15 years ago I was a simultaneous inductor right now we've developed a machine translation and in different eyes like a conference I will say I would say that definitely nowadays the message translation are able to replace the human translator but at very beginning you know two or three years ago no one believed it and even when I was when I was telling the stories in the in the school of the translation so no one should believe it but the things say that as we all know the Oxford Dictionary only half eighty-thousand worse but the message translation our master translation we have of five buildings high-quality sent sentence pear and and also people will argue that what if we translate that like a literature are there and I'm telling the truth say that what if we put the high quality translation versions with into the language model others whenever at the machine translation came across at that paragraph or that articles it generates there the best one it definitely much much better than any one of the translator others say but the truth is that nowadays the machine translation is not replaced with a human translator because nowadays the machine translation touch upon it definitely the data the informations or knowledge never ever been touched by human translators because nowadays the for machine translation for one seconds are able to translate like a 16-3 sixteen thousand words for one second it's it's can you imagined by the human purpose and also another another example even further like the particle medical imaging the same even nowadays the the medical imaging diagnosis system able to reach like in nineteen ninety two percent accuracy but only like a like a one percent mistakes could not be tolerated in any circumstances but it's definitely the combination the human doctors even nowadays the human doctors the accuracy is the only like an average one accuracy is like a 70% globally but definitely is a combination okay what do people in the audience think about this what are some of your concerns what would you like to ask who wants to start over here I'm I'm from Argentina my name is Laura say I run a translation startup so we're moving no it's fine we're moving into using the data that we have as translators have aligned all these phrases into using that information to position companies abroad because of the use of their own technical language and technical keywords that we are able to identify in different texts and about that combination of human and machine I think that about the data that we are talking about a lot about the amount of data but not the quality of the data and it's really important to understand that supervision on machine learning for us worked very very well and I don't understand why it's not being used much more what is your take on this I I remember Mechanical Turk having huge crowd sources of people outsourcing the supervision of the results of the machine and I think that should be used a little more to make it faster I mean we didn't have enough data and with the supervisor information we achieved a quality of results that we were not going to be able to achieve with with the amount of clients or volume that we managed what do you think about that yeah actually notice when we talk about the Big Data the big data says is a Hartley is a is a the big data has to size because like her when I think starting from 2016 the neural machine translation key map came out released by the Google previously users SMT statistical machine translation at that time the mission the language models need to be trained by at least athlete the water millions are centers pair but now nowadays with the help of the neuro machine translation in order to change achieve the same quality of translation quality of the message translation engines only ten million high quality service is sufficient so so I think it's a it's definitely the balance yes the high quality high quality of a dataset no matter the language corpus all the medical images and the same at the same time that the Arizona wisdom and before the Arizona and we need a human doctors or I mean I mean the human expert just said however that golden rules for example like a medical images and we definitely need the human doctor sax parser to to tell them that golden roses to diagnosis of lung cancer and then we ask the doctors to attack each piece of the images out there and tell them the symptoms of those images but on the other set are they are turn the the machine definitely have the absolute advantages compared to the human human beings sure absolutely viola I hear you see you shaking your head but do you want to just say and please introduce yourself sure good job Jenna fun and my name is viola Llewellyn I'm the co-founder of of Ambo solutions so FinTech platform that was created for african realities but one of the few companies in the world that has decided against some Western sentiments to involve tribal data into our risk models and built an algorithm to lend money to African is amis my comment and concern is that at the beginning your comment about the reliance on big data puts us in a very strange twilight whereby some Western investors who use data predominantly to make decisions challenge the fact that where we exist with no credit databases in in much of sub-saharan Africa we've had Chile had to take the time to send human beings to walk around to speak to different types of people in order to collect information to turn in to data using a/b testing machine learning algorithms and testing it with our own internal funding and have produced results that are quite indicative of what will we think is the next way in which to fund African SMEs do you ever run into these situations where the emerging markets have to use totally different approaches that are not classic by Western standards and how do you provide this same respect for the veracity of that data and the way it's being used which is very different to what we see in other places great question Hilary I actually we don't work much in that I'll turn it over to I I don't have that experience in Africa but I would say that I similar experience would be like 10 years ago saying that we should work on an issue like loneliness where there's no data but where you see by spending a lot of time living alongside people or knowing a community that this is a kind of huge issue that somehow isn't showing up in the in the data another issue that I've worked with is in Latin America where children are not registering for school and this is perceived to be a problem of that they can't afford school uniform or that there's no school meals and actually it's an issue of shame because you don't want to register your children if they're illegitimate they don't have an identity card and they can't go to school so I think socially I see and I think this is a kind of huge issue and ultimately although you can collect different data which is what we do it is then a job of politically lobbying to try and get this on the agenda to collect data in a traditional way around around the subject matter but I think it's a very big issue the lack of data and also from what I've read there's also cases of skewing of data in in in emerging markets where governments will release misleading or even if [Music] information and then that is cited as gospel by everyone and and that's a big problem too so over here but do you see any scenario in the next five to ten years where this divide that we see both social and economic is actually going to reduce because I mean I keep worrying and as human beings first we outsource the memory part to technology then we outsource the processing power and now we are sourcing the decision-making power so it kind of begs the question what's the relevance of humanity and and and if technology has taught us anything it multiplies faster than we can predict right I mean in terms of everything is getting faster it's getting smaller it's getting cheaper so none of us in this room can actually predict how fast air is gonna be you know evolved or embrace or anything that so Amazon trillion dollar apples trillion dollar like any country you can see the divide is just becoming widened so do you foresee any scenario that this divide is gonna get smaller and the benefits of technology actually will reach more people than it is currently just curious yeah I can take that I can tell you that you know i I've heard this point a number of times but in our company we have been automating we were so many things night and day and there's been no job reduction as a matter of fact as you plot the headcount versus what we can do with with time we just keeps growing and growing so automation baguettes automation baguettes more algorithms it gets more people and it's just the things that we need to do keep rising to the next level and it's a level that we can't over often foresee at a given point in time III we'll get to you in just one second I just I think that your question is a very important one the cause if I can just add averse comments if we look at what algorithms can do to help improve health the kind of thing that you're doing and we get closer to precision medicine where we can really you know treat disease in a super effective way we as a society will then have to ask the question well how how are we going to pay for this is this going to be available to everyone and that's a question that will have to be addressed seriously how do we make sure the benefits of this technology are distributed evenly and that is not clear today I actually wanted to speak to the previous question and then ask a question cuz I had a question before too but actually I'm working in the area of inequality and I didn't want to say actually Iran that isn't in every single country getting bigger globally inequality has been reducing dramatically and that's not only because of the success of China and of India but in Africa too most countries not all but most of the countries the inequality is reducing and it is because of technology is because mobile phones mostly a little bit of the AI but just gain the ICT out to the people and the incredible innovative things that are happening so extreme poverty has drat eclis reduced I mean there are still some people in extreme radical in extreme poverty but it's like 90 percent reduced it's amazing what's been done in the last 15 years and there's a great credit to the developing world there so it's not all gloom and doom although I agree and I also I'm working on the very high inequality in the OECD is a problem and it leads to great instability on the global level so I agree with that however that's not the question I was going to ask the 1i it was a little bit of the earlier discussion about data and I'm not an expert in data I know something about algorithms though and I know that one of the the famous bias cases which is supposedly based on data which is about recidivism in America no academic can do as bad as the commercial program that these that the courts were using so in this case you have to say what were these guys doing and were they even really using data and so when you talk about the the correct use and misuse of data it seems to me that accountability is a big part how do we even know if they're using the data they say these they say they're using it well I mean I think that there's increasing awareness of the issue of bias and data I mean Cathy O'Neill wrote the book weapons of mass destruction I agree but I guess what I'm trying to say is that the first thing we need is awareness of bias right in whatever algorithm you're using right whether it's in the data or somehow the instantiation of the algorithm and then I think you beyond that there are conversations around creating some sort of I don't I don't know if it's gonna be an ethics committee or if it's gonna be some sort of you know I don't really know but there's talk in the air of should there be will there be some sort of a entity that looks at these types of issues and I'm not sure that's gonna happen if there will be the will to make that happen or if it will be sort of a self-regulated situation but I certainly think that at a bare minimum awareness on the topic is I think at an all-time high and continuing to increase and I think that that's a step in the right direction that's all I would say so and I mean since the question had to do with her citizen on it you you and I were talking last night and you were talking or giving a great example of how data can actually aid in in making the case for great social projects yeah I think that would be yes talking about this I think it's called the bail project if anyone's ever heard of it it was started by a public defender in Brooklyn and her husband who basically put together a ten thousand dollar slush fund to essentially pay for people's bail because they realize that you know even if you have $500 bail you would essentially stay in jail for a week or however many days and you would you know lose your kids potentially lose your job a bunch of different things right and so what they did was they amassed all this data around if you actually just loaned people the money what would happen right so the repayment of these loans right which you didn't have to repay them you could have just gotten out of jail and then you know gone off was 96 percent right people were skeptical that it would reach any high number it was 96 percent and then the most shocking thing was if you didn't have money to pay your bail I think the the rate at which you had a criminal record was like 88 percent or 90 percent right because people just pleaded to whatever it was just to get out of jail so they could go back to their job and their kids and everything else if you gave them money to get out the rate of of getting charged with the crime was like two percent I mean and again this was a subset I'm sure of all of the people that were out you know they were in there on bail it wasn't you know probably the most heinous offenders I'm sure it was like riding your bike on a sidewalk or whatever it was right but it just speaks to you again it's just how humans use data that was obviously an example of somebody who had amassed a great data set to show the power of a very simple intervention around providing a free loan to get out of to pay your bail it was the data that made they may be this very more compelling yeah so we get it we can take one really quick question because I'm looking to have to wrap up actually actually my question would be read for the FinTech area for the especially the data from China and because my companies think I'm running a fin tech company for the quantitative trading system provide to the financial institutions in China especially for the to the work want and found and I just wanted to know because for Tonight Show data and especially for the work on it being over wide like for the worldwide for the investments but for the Chinese data besides the market data what do you think about the Chinese states a provider why is that are those like Chinese say the provider for example wind which is the official data provider are they sufficient for you to make the investment decision because like we are used to in the overseas investment banking we we create this company for like facilitate for Chinese institution but what we realized the data the standard of the data and it's not as good as the overseas I would say the European or US standard and you will affect the investment decisions especially for the quant for algo trading system so this is for a dress like that what kind of data you will use I would say that there is a hierarchy and equality of data the best quality of data for now tends to be in the US and then it goes goes down from there and that's just the way it's been structurally for historical reasons and and so on we are getting more and more data in China but it's it's a difficult process because the contracts have to be in Chinese and there are a lot of business and legal hurdles to getting it thank you I think we've we've done a good job talking about the power of big data but also some of the questions that need to be addressed and I did want to mention before we we finish that the World Economic Forum is creating a global futures Council on new metrics which will be launched in November and so the conversation is sure to continue I'd like to thank our panelists and also the audience for participating [Applause]
World Economic Forum
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2018-09-23
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbhiEKjfRnA
RTD Accountability Committee: Finance Subcommittee, Oct. 7, 2020
this conference will now be recorded i got it thank you very much matthew so again we've got rebecca white kristen trustman lynn geisinger dan blankenship and rupp bridges i don't believe i've missed any members if there are please let me know we've got some guests joining us today so i'm ron papp store transportation planning director at dr cogg uh doug rex matthew halfant from dr cogger also on the line uh we've got heather mckillip luke palmisano jordan sanchez natalie shishido jennifer brandeberry did i uh barbara mcmanus from rtd i see a mobile number shelly i don't know who shelly is uh shelly cook from the rtd board thank you thank you director cook um and then um rebecca did you want to make an introduction real quick before we get too far on the agenda i'd love to um so ron had mentioned one of our guests is natalie shishido but hopefully we won't see her as a guest for long this is a fellow that cdot has hired to help support the accountability group she's a graduate student at cu i'm in environmental management do i get that right natalie something close to that yeah environmental uh planning and management so she's going to be with us about 20 hours a week to the end of the calendar year and then hopefully full time after that um she's got a really great background and i think is eager to jump in so she's gonna be joining a lot of the subcommittee meetings uh and will be sort of going forward uh she'll listen for things that she can help with but please keep her in mind through our discussion um and think of ways that she could help us out whether that be research summarizing issues memos things like that i'd love to to tap her and give her a really great experience through this fellowship as well thanks rebecca um so i think that concludes introductions rut we i did include in the agenda packet um the meeting summary from the september 25th uh meeting so if members have any modifications or adjustments to suggest that you can bring those up now or feel free to email me and matthew and we'll get any corrections made but that's not an action item for the subcommittee okay i've got a couple corrections but i'll just wait and email them uh to you and matthew thank you rep sure all right so the next um agenda item was um mr bridges presentation to the subcommittee colorado's coveted crisis rtds risks and opportunities right i think you can take it away whenever you're ready great um this i want to start by saying that this is a straw man for a proposal uh and so one of the things i'm really looking for is input from the committee on things that you see that are problems or other ideas that you have or criticisms and critiques and all that are very much welcome so let me let me go ahead and dive into it one of the key accountability committee assignments from governor polis in the legislature was to determine how rtd can achieve long-term financial stability and growth while still meeting its core mission and we can talk about this now but i think the reality is that until uh until colorado overcomes its coven issue uh there really can't be a recovery for rdd uh those things are just too big of a constraint in a number of ways that i'll discuss so the the presentation really promotes rtd is having vital assets that are critical to achieving uh some of the real economic health public health and and uh economic goals for this state and so uh as as we get into that a lot of what i'll do is i'll say this is why we have these big challenges in rtd and here's how we might get past some of that so i'll dive on in uh if you have any ideas or thoughts please write them down as we're going through this and uh if we don't have time to go through all of them then email them to me right at bridgesfamily.net and uh meanwhile uh we'll we'll try to get through as much as we can at the end but uh hold questions until then so what are the big risks in in opportunities well if you look at the history of rt it really exists to move people and right now we're moving less than half as many people as as we did last year and as we have historically uh service has been cut 40 we've got a six billion dollar rail network that's carrying about a fourth of as many riders as as it normally would and sales tax and fare box revenues have really collapsed and combined with low ridership it forces of course much higher subsidies for riders so here's here's a graph you've probably seen before but it really gives an example of how much that tax revenue is collapsed and the board in the rtd advisors you know within rte really produced some pretty aggressive budget cuts in order to be able to get to the point that we're at right now including big cut and transit uh rider transit services but we still got about 215 million dollar shortfall and not a real clear idea of how we're going to get rid of all that it's a pretty serious challenge that we're facing this is um this is about covet and how it discriminates and it truly does if you look at the graph uh you're looking at three big categories here african americans latino and hispanic and native americans and they're at like four times the risk of white non-hispanics uh to be hospitalized and in terms of deaths they're also way up there but it's also true for seniors uh ninety percent of the deaf are people over 50 years old and uh and there's also the category of people with disabilities a lot of whom have pre-existing health issues and all that and and there really needs to be parts of this it's not a one fits all solution there need to be solutions that are tailored to different groups in in the community but our customers are disproportionately impacted by this coven virus so this shows just quickly the how how much it discriminates by age in terms of who dies these are the percent of the cases of covet 19 that die it's like one percent of those are under 30. so if you're under 30 you're probably not going to die from covet and you've seen that discussed but this graphic really illustrates it quite a bit and 95 of the people that die are 50 or older so understandably rtd is mostly focused right now on how to survive 2021 and there's some serious challenges there but i think there's a great value in rtd considering engaging with the state and a group of other organizations on how to get rid of the threat that's causing so much of our problems which is this this colorado coping crisis so we'll look at rtd's critical resources and we'll try to figure out how rtd can really play a vital role in this if they choose to do it and how we can fund it as well so what's going on from a statewide perspective is that sales and income taxes are cratering uh in the you know the legislature had to cut something like three billion dollars out of their budget at the end of the end of last year people are dying a lot of people have lost jobs we can't educate our kids the way we really need to and so rtd is a victim of this but it could be a real key part of the solution as well so let's take a look at how it's really impacting rtd ridership no big surprise here has really fallen off a cliff why there's a lot of people now that are working from home but they're also people that aren't working at all there's a lot of businesses that have closed i was at a fundraiser last night and i was talking to to a friend woman from that i've known years ago and she's a regular rtd user and she said she's scared to use it now because of kobe and so we've got a number of customers out there and it would be useful to poll and find out how many uh who's who aren't using it just because of their furocova the other thing that's kind of odd is congestion is not nearly as bad as it used to be and so there's a bunch of people now driving that were using rtd before so can we get back those customers we've got to figure out a way to be able to do that it's just essential that we get them back so code safety is really expensive when you look at what we spend on ensuring that that people are safe and a lot of people out there have no idea how the links that rpd goes to electrostatic decontamination sprayers we clean the buses really thoroughly they're plexiglas sheets and uh they're masks that are basically required for everyone and all that is is expensive but the really killer thing here is social distancing and before i go into that i want to throw an idea out here because of this mask issue we basically aren't letting people on the buses without a mask but if you lost one down below i bought a box of 50 of these for amazon people that don't have them in the end it will generate net income for rtd because what we get for them riding the bus is more than 25 cents i certainly hope so let's talk about social distancing uh on buses our medium buses are limited now to 15 riders and our launch buses are limited to 20 riders our light rail cars are limited to 30 as are the computer commuter rail cars but those rail cars for example if you look at the standing room and everything else when those things are are going you know at max capacity which is what a transit agency has to design for maximum capacity during rush hour those things would hold anywhere from 160 to 170 people and now they're down to 30. so we've got maybe a fifth of the capacity for moving people that we used to have if you if you look at this how are we going to recover you know all of a sudden everybody tomorrow said i'm going to go ride our tv back the way it was last year we couldn't carry those people because of because of the effect of social distancing so it's critical that we resolve that look at all the combination of these things you know what are we going to do we're going to go to the voters and say we need a tax increase but we got a recession that we're in the middle of we've got low ridership and we've got the copic prices it's hard enough to ever get a vote of for a tax increase out of out of uh colorado voters so rtu's recovery has got to begin when we conquer so we can talk about how that might happen but it's not really possible it will begin happening until we solve that bigger problem now how do we quickly end colorado's coding crisis well we have no control over what's wrong this is doug rex can i ask everybody i think uh folks that are on the phone specifically if you could mute your phones um we're getting some feedback thank you thanks everybody thanks john so so we don't control when we're going to get vaccines but the one thing we can do is make sure that when we get those vaccines we're really ready to start delivering them and to start back immunizing people there's this thing called herd immunity if you get 70 of the herd immunized then a virus will not easily spread within that within that herd and it's true for all of us other mammals too so the concept is creating a bunch of mobile teams i'll call them back screws and maybe five lines of people being vaccinated each for each one of those if you did that and you could vaccinate one person every five minutes you could deliver 144 000 vaccinations every day which theoretically within a month we could have everybody vaccinated that we need to get vaccinated just to get to this herd immunity level and that's one of the concepts of how we do it now there are some vaccines that require two doses but you get a fair amount of immunity just from the first dose so in terms of getting people back to work and getting people back engaged in society getting our kids educated that kind of rapid response would have a huge impact and especially for rtd because they really you know it's just hard to see a turnaround until we get past this so rtd has some vital strategic assets and i want to talk about those some here's a map of the rtd park and rides and that's that is a vital asset potentially for places that we might set up immunization stations or for places people can park if we can set up immunization stations in in buildings or or whatever that are near anywhere near this whole big uh network that rtd has so they're also underutilized transit services so we could give people rides to to get to all of these things on our on our light rail and our buses um and we and this is one of the the big things i i'm assuming here and somebody correct me if i'm wrong all of the buses that rtb owns are not being operated right now with this uh 40 cutback is that true anybody so assuming we have some spare buses uh that could play a role not just in the rtd area but in the whole state so we've got some people that are very confident that are motivated and that unfortunately are soon to be laid off employees and those are people that rtd is going to need when we turn this around and i think i've heard from other rtd folks that having to get rid of all of these people to get down to where we need to get our budget we're going to wind up having to hire people back and here are experienced people that we could we could use those people could engage in this process for immunization in different ways it isn't just people giving shots it's people organizing and setting up and lots of other things the other thing we have is population proximity and what i mean by that is if you look at our district half of the people in colorado live within the boundaries of rtp district and so we have all this infrastructure and that infrastructure is also where we need it to be to vaccinate half of the people in in our state so potential roles and again these are just ideas i hope other people will have other ideas as well but you know the maintenance staff for example could put together and test these back screws because there's a lot of equipment associated with that and uh and basically test them out at park and rides or interior buildings or wherever but the idea is you put together these all the equipment for these vaxpers and outfit the buses that can deliver the vaccines the staff and all the essentials that you need to operate not just within rpd but statewide rte planning staff managing and monitoring the logistics of these cruises is going to be a pretty significant challenge and the governor has a group of people that are working on some of these things as well so we sort of have to figure out how we can fit all this together and then rtd's transit and parking lots in the in the region that's a lot of opportunity there but it's also the buses and drivers i mean we need to keep especially some of these drivers turning around and laying all drivers after after all the challenges that we've had there would be an awful thing but there are there are support roles for them throughout the rest of the state too uh for all of these now hopefully it'll be in cooperation with all the all the rest of the state and all the local groups and things like that but some of that can come directly from assets within rtd so priorities for vaccination there are a lot of different organizations uh not just in the in the country but in the world that are saying who should be vaccinated first and there'll be a lot of demand for those first vaccinations believe me but there are some that are really obvious like your healthcare personnel you want to make sure those people get vaccinated first because they're on the front lines of of trying to treat people but there's lots of other groups too but if you look at it there are different things driving this one is saving lives but there's also the economic recovery all the essential workers and then ensuring handling and delivery of the vaccines is a challenge and how do we as rapidly as possible roll out these communities i think rtd should make a real case that their customer facing rdd staff should have priority for vaccinations but not just that if you look at who our customers are they're some of the most at risk essential workers out there and they're in contact with a lot of the public and so we should we should argue for priority for all those folks so what can go wrong that's always lots of things that can go wrong one is you need a vaccine that's got a high efficacy and that basically means if you've vaccinated 100 people 99 of them hopefully that vaccine will take and and they'll be healthy surprisingly the vaccines are not all all that necessarily high on their efficacy you probably know about the mmr vaccines measles mumps and rubella that kids always get well the meat the most part of that is really it only has an effectiveness against months of about 78 and so vaccines need to need to be we need something that's better than that they also need to last for years it shouldn't be something where you have to revaccinate every year like we do with the flu and there's indications that a lot of these vaccines are are going to be good for many years they need to be people need to be comfortable that they're safe and uh and we need a lot of doses if we want to get to 70 we need about 4 million doses and hopefully by the second quarter of 2021 and we want a vaccine that is not going to have as much political resistance and uh if if we could do that i mean mckenzie says it's probably more like late 2021 before people would states would have this hurt immunity but i think we could get there a lot faster than that so we need funding and we need preparation and we need execution too uh colorado just got about three million dollars from a cdc grant this was just for the planning process we should we should talk to the governor and to legislators and get their support and suggestions we should also talk to our u.s representatives and senators and make a strong lobbying case for federal support not just for rtd but for this vaccination process as well and then contacting local foundations and the business community we need to find out what the sources of funding could be and how we get access to that what is the real value if we could eliminate covet two months earlier than it otherwise would be eliminated so rtd really can be a key part of the solution uh and and this is a real threat to the future of rtd if this drags on for two years uh it's going to be it's going to be a very challenging thing to try to turn around fewer layoffs and the ability to retain some of those key personnel uh faster and more certain economic recovery for our customers because we need them to come back to rtd for their for their transit and then part of this is depending on how we implement it there's some little tricks we can do to start building ridership and start us as soon as we start vaccinating and then basically improving rte's image image as a value colorado asset which visibility of rtd engaged in solving this problem would go a long way towards doing that good luck for our new ceo as well as the board and the people that work for for rtd to to be appreciated by the public and the voters so the call to action is under the leadership probably cdphe is going to gonna lead all of this in partnership with the legislature with dr with local communities uc health and other regional health centers by mobilizing some of these rtd assets we can be ready to rapidly immunize colorado as soon as those vaccines are available and note that no one other than maybe the president really expects to see a vaccine by year end but there are a number of companies that at very year year-end or early in the next year uh believe they could deliver and begin delivering large quantities so i think it's important to ensure that rtd plays a vital role in making colorado safe and putting people back to work and i think that we have to get there before we can get rpd back on a track to full recovery five of the assets so you know the thing i i think i'd like to do is get feedback from the finance subcommittee uh and basically try to find ways to improve some of the things that are in the straw man proposal and get suggestions from rtd staff as well and uh and dr cog and wherever we can we can get good ideas and how we could find a way for our rtv to fit into this not for free with support with financial support but to capitalize on these assets that we have and how we can make a difference so i'm asking for the committee members to offer some thoughts and ideas and then we'll open it up to anybody else i threw a few things out but i'm not gonna i'm not gonna read through this i'll anybody that is interested in this not just the committee members but other people i'm happy to send you a copy of the powerpoint and hopefully get your feedback as well so thanks ideas folks what do you think is this a reasonable thing to try to do hey rhett it's kristin i think good morning i know i i in this i didn't go into great detail about the challenges for people with disabilities but it's got to be part of that plan they're some of the most at risk people out there we are that's why i'm stuck in my apartment uh you really hit the nail on the head as far as getting rtd involved because you're right there are a lot of rtd employees or assumed to be not employees that could be utilized same with the park and ride parking lots plenty of room for people to show up uh i there's just going to have to be a lot of logistics there sure is it needs to be i appreciate that and i also would say that you know it's i don't think a problem like this is going to get solved by just sort of businesses i think one of the things that the rtd accountability committee really needs to do is think out of the box some about how we get at some of these issues and i know this isn't a normal part of the business of rtd and it's not a trivial pivot well it's not the normal business of rtd and that's what we're going to have to encourage your right to think outside the box rtd is not going to get back on their feet they're not going to get back to normal unless all of these things happen so why not be a part of it and that is what we're going to need to promote and i noticed i noticed that lynn is uh looking to talk so good yeah and lynn's going to have to leave it in a little while so yeah then let's let lynn can i talk to you lauren lynn great now i'm i'm good for the whole meeting today i think i'm fine but um you know this is really some some very interesting and creative i think it's the big thinking you're so great at right um and uh i think that uh of course there's lots of logistics and lots of planning and i think you know you hit the nail on the head that it'll take funds and preparation and execution it's not what rtd does but i think it's um definitely worth you know moving forward to the next step i was just texting with heather mckillip and she thought it was interesting as well um and you know from from rtd's point of view the uh i'm just a couple of the big things that we need to be taken care of initially obviously funds as you mentioned we we aren't authorized to operate outside of our tds area but again that can be fixed working with the union um all of those things but uh um you know i think it's uh that you have some interesting ideas here um it will take you know absent something like this and and even with who knows it will take a while i think for um rtd to build back up its ridership and i think that our our staff is expecting that to happen over the next you know five years or so so it may be even longer than two years um i just it's sort of some of your background because this will come up again in the in the future with this committee and the other committees um i haven't seen them the leads projections yet and i'm not sure if um heather mckillop has them yet but we will be having them very soon if not but i think sales and use tax is coming in a lot better i don't think we're looking at 250 million next year which um i'm not saying this to reflect anything about your suggestion just just kind of putting putting that out there and um well i'm happy to hear that i hope i hope they come back like gangbusters but we'll see how the you know at the same time we had um uh a presentation last night from uh economists in this area and from a uh real estate firm and so saying that the occupancy and commercial real estate average metro denver now is about 17 so that tells you why our ridership is down so much um that's sort of just looking back at some of the some of your initial proposal rtd has been giving out masks um and i think continues to give out um masks but you know that is a big piece of it and as you said the social distancing issues are big but um you know this is uh i think the kind of thing that that we need to be doing your proposal is the kind of thing we need to be doing and and ours you know starting to do we had a proposal last night where we're starting to look at how we bring ridership back it was um you know not addressing some of these issues as well so uh kudos for me i think uh i think this is good thinking and let's um you know take it back to the team and and the ones who could could answer more specifics but i think it's it's clever thinking so thanks thank you hey hey rut can you hear me i can definitely hear you yes all right hey do you mind if i jump in on this just a little bit so this is julie duran moloka i just wanted to to call in real quick um there you go you give people a little bit better yeah well i just i just wanted to of course i just wanted to jump in on this because this is actually an area hold on i'm on the end line going north um this is an area that i'm actually really um familiar with i'm an infection preventionist at scl health and i also am on the board of tri-county public health and i think that this is a great idea so i wanted to first of all say that and i support that and we definitely should be reaching out to all of our local public health departments to figure out how we can assist in this i think it's important to plan but it's also important to realize that we essentially don't have enough information about what these vaccines are going to be like the efficacy of these vaccines so there's still so many unknowns when it comes to this i mean even for my healthcare system we were talking about this and i mean we have plans in place for when the vaccine comes but we have essentially no data on what this vaccine is capable of so um i think it's really important conversation to have and to figure out how we could be a partner in this but still we have so much information we need to figure out and um and so working with local public health departments could really help that way we're just in partnership with them i think could be a really good um place to move forward and i think it's absolutely essential that we'd be in partnership with them i mean we'd be crazy not to not to tap all the resources we can from all all the different places and knowledge you know i mean i don't know that much about vaccines but i've never learned a heck of a lot in the last three months and and there are big differences i mean one of the can you see these candidate vaccine slide that i just put up here one of these most of these are two dose vaccines and if they're two dose vaccines then it doubles what we have to do in order to get everyone immunized and some of them like that you know pfizer has made is really talked a lot about yeah we're going to have this thing out really soon and all that their vaccines have to be stored at minus 94 degrees fahrenheit and that's not your average freezer there it's really a pretty unique piece of equipment uh the one that i'm most excited about is this johnson johnson vaccine and you know i've been trying to learn all the differences between the mrna vaccines and the adreno vector protein driven vaccines and all that but this one really looks pretty exciting the early stages the efficacies that they're seeing are in the high 90s on that vaccine and it's a one dose vaccine probably not resolved yet i mean they're still they just went out to their they're doing a their second third level trials with 60 000 volunteers i'm glad to see the numbers of that most of these are doing 30. so but yeah there's which vaccine we wind up with is going to be critical and um the whole aspezinica oxford university one is all still on hold on uk vaccine so it's really the top three on this list that are really even possible i think at this point but there's 23 different vaccines being tested right now so who knows so this is heather mckillip make a comment um i just wanted to say as along the lines that one said is i'm just appreciative of i don't know if this will work or not but i'm very appreciative of the fact that you brought a unique solution forward that um really is an interesting concept of us being in charge of our own destiny right instead of waiting for uh things to happen around us that will help restore ridership that at least you're thinking along the lines of something unique and new and maybe how we can be part of the solution and so i i just have to say thank you um because usually we hear all the things that we're doing wrong and what we can't do versus um maybe thinking of things completely differently so like i said i'm not an expert in this area as far as whether this will work or not it will take a lot of coordination and a lot of unique things but hey in this time of pandemic we're doing all kinds of things we've never done before um so i just wanted to make that comment um not necessarily speaking on behalf of rtd but speaking on behalf of myself um you know i do appreciate you freaking totally literally outside the box and and how we can i think it changes the conversation right about how we can be a part of the solution instead of it just happening to us so i appreciate that thank you for the time you bet heather thanks for all that you do to try to keep this boat floating i know it's i know it's been tough times the last couple of years not just not just with this now it's really tough but you know part of what we have to do is think out of the box hey dan uh i was wondering if you had any thoughts about this because you you know you run a transit agency and and you know i don't know how practical being able to pivot in a way like this will really will really be it doesn't take very many naysayers to kill something like this roaring fork might do some parts of these things well it's it's it's really big thinking it was not something i was expecting to to consider as part of the finance subcommittee of the rtd accountability committee and uh it's it's very out of the box i think it would be challenging for uh rafter to do something like this because we are using all of our vehicles and all of our people to transport you know about one third of the passengers that we normally would be transporting because we're having to back up every bus and we're limiting the maximum capacity on a bus to 15 passengers that's not to say that we don't have park and ride facilities and other locations where people could come to get their vaccines and and anything that we can do to be a part of the solution i think we would be more than willing to do i guess my thought would be and it's it's you know was good to hear heather uh indicate that uh you know she thinks this is a good idea to uh at least consider and help be part of the solution and and take control of your destiny but um at some point uh somebody ought to reach out to the caller department of health and uh public health and environment and and uh share the concept with them and see what they think this may be an answer to missing a huge missing piece of their plan about well how do we actually distribute all of these vaccinations in a way that can be done in our lifetime and very rapidly so i would i would think it would be helpful to kind of plug them into either this group or at least give them a copy of this plan this plan and set up a meeting and you know start the discussion with them and then rtd needs to talk about it internally and see what their capabilities are as well right i know elise you know elise was on rack for uh for a long time the air quality side of that and i know she knows people over there i know some folks over at cphe and so hopefully we can we can get over to them before our next meeting and have a conversation at least as long as nobody at rkd really says forget about it you know i think rtd's got the veto and and all of this but i you know i i would think it's and and also jared paulus has got a group together that's focused on all things coven and so some of those people they're just a lot of people around the through the process the thing i worry about something like this is you've got to be pulled into the process you've got to have people that want you you can't put your way into this but it seems like that there are some real vital uh real vital special things that rtd can bring to the party here that it's exciting to think about yeah i if if i go to one other slide there's a couple other things i want to mention um i think that one of the things that rtd ought to say is anybody who gets a vaccination gets 30 days free rides on rpd it's not going to cost us any more really to do that and it's going to be one of the ways that we got vaccinated people coming on that we really can start the beginnings of rebuilding our our ridership and there are details of that but the the other thing is if we get start getting enough people vaccinated and we have a way to easily tell that they've been vaccinated then we can start having vax only rail cars in that group which we can totally fill up instead of having to socially distance those and we could have sections within buses or independent buses that were not socially distanced for vaccinated people and there's one other thing too i want to i want to mention that there are a lot of undocumented folks out there and it's just as important that we get them vaccinated as well and they're the ones that tend to be most suspicious of government and it may be a real challenge to do that so i've been thinking a lot about how you create a database and this is you you guys have probably seen these before their qr codes it's what you pick your phone up and click on if you want to you know go directly to some place on the internet but if if we had one of these associated if everybody and you can create way beyond trillions of these things you know the number of the of unique qr codes is enormous so creating a qr code that basically when you hold your camera up to it pops up basically that this person has been vaccinated and here's their name and and uh a photo of them if you want to talk about getting people back to work there are a lot of businesses that would love to hire people that have been vaccinated and if they had some very easy way to say here i've been vaccinated and they hold up a card that has a qr code an iphone or whatever smartphone comes out uses an app clicks on it takes the picture and up pops the picture of the person in their name and the date they were vaccinated and that's all so very limited information that you would have to provide some kind of contact information that nobody else sees it's just for the state so that if they find any problems in the vaccine they can get back in touch with those people but i think a very lightweight database is a critical part of this but i really like this idea of employers being able to say here's a verification that my folks have been have been vaccinated and we could give them that without being too intrusive many number of people are really suspicious of government databases and if you look at a lot of minorities i mean they remember all the way back to the tuskegee trials the simplest trials where they took a bunch of black people and used them essentially as guinea pigs to test how fast syphilis passed through communities and things like that it just there's a horrible history that that we have here and and i'm not sure that in generally in the latinx community they're real comfortable with government with our current situation or uh certainly native americans have got a lot to complain about in dealings with the united states of america so these are communities we've really got to think through how we bring them into the vaccination process in a fairly lightweight way anyway i i don't mean to try to solve every problem or challenge that's in here but i really would encourage anyone that can uh to send me an email here's my email address and say here's some other thoughts that i've got on this you may want to you may want to think about i'm looking for problems i really am you know what what are the fatal flaws in this idea so so that's it for me and i think we can move on to our the rest of our agenda now thanks rodney i did see that barbara mcmanus had her hand up barbara did you have something you wanted to say i just was going to say that mike meter in safety and security is the person that's in touch with the local health officials he also did let us know at some point that rtd employees uh particularly on the represented side are considered first responders and would be first on the list for vaccinations uh the way the structure is set up already terrific can you spend would you drop me an email with his contact information that's good news it's nice we've got one let's fight over who gets vaccinated to have to go through uh actually i'll just have him i'll speak with him have him respond to it directly to you um because i i certainly don't have all the ins and outs of what that looks like but i'll ask him to define that right one of the one of the things that occurs to me i think is kind of the vaccination rate and how quickly people will kind of rush to get vaccinated with a new vaccine that maybe you know people feel has been rushed through the testing and trial and certification process um can can should an agency like rtd uh can you mandate that your frontline employees get vaccinated i'm not sure you can but not my area of expertise what do you do if you've got operators that um don't get vaccinated or won't get vaccinated for whatever reason they have i think that's that's probably you know the obstacles that you talked about right during your during your discussion is you know the the skepticism how how willing the public will be to actually get vaccinated uh and how quickly that will actually happen it's challenge it really is uh and and one of the problems is that not only has it been politicized it's been highly publicly politicized uh obviously some folks want to have a buy the you know by election day they want to have a vaccine it's all approved and everything else for their credit though the fda has come back and said you know they basically got it directed from the executive branch that skip all this stuff you know give us an early authorization and they came back and said we're not going to do any such thing we have got a process here it has worked this is a critical issue and we're not going to to give in the early it's one of the reasons i say i don't think there's a lot of chance we're going to see a vaccine delivered before probably the beginning of the first quarter and even then you know you've got to build up the number of the doses you can manufacture in short order but nonetheless all out of sight there's plenty of people out there that don't trust and and i did talk about that a little in that uh last slide that was totally unreadable full of stuff that you really need to get people that are uh they're credible there as as uh representatives to try and get people to jump into this jump in it's probably the wrong term too but um there's the issue of multilingual a bigger issue is the public trust and willingness by minorities and others to accept the new vaccine endorsement ads by minority nurses and doctors other trusted spokespersons question mark republicans and democrats dogs and cats living together together in an ad talking about different aspects of this because there's it's amazing if if biden approves the vaccine a bunch of republicans don't like it and if trump attributes it a bunch of democrats don't like it this effort may need some funding though there are earned media opportunities as well so you're absolutely right that is going to be a real challenge and i don't say that to suggest that we shouldn't we shouldn't pursue this talk and kind of pursue this idea and prepare for how rtd might be able to play a role in in in part of kind of the vaccination of the public i think it's a really intriguing idea could you could you send me and matthew a copy of this and then we can get this out to the whole accountability committee membership so everyone has a copy of the presentation be happy to do that great thank you yeah and any anyone else who doesn't fall in that category wants one just send me an email i'll send you a copy of the presentation too but you'll be getting one indirectly anyway so great okay anything anybody else that wanted to make a comment before you move on good let's go one one final thing uh is that if this plan is one that the colorado department of public health and the environment views as being a viable option and they really want to pursue it i think you know we could reach out also the american public transportation association here it could work in many uh urban areas in in particular uh and uh they could lobby congress for some funding to help support because you know rtd's already got some financial issues that they're they're grappling with and uh and this could be a great way for the federal government to step in and provide some funding like cares act funding to help support these efforts throughout the united states it's going to depend a lot on and how receptive i think our state public health agency is to this kind of plan but if they get behind it then it might be replicable we might be able to replicate it in in other communities as well and that's one thing i thought about it is is you know colorado could really lead and hear the best practices for how to get this done as soon as possible that benefits the whole country and if we could get into that position then boy it would be great it would be great for the state and it would be great for rtd as well but it would help all the other states that have big transit agencies within them to say hey we hadn't thought about using these resources and uh so that's that's a great observation dan except figure out how to execute on all these things it's always the hard part you know brainstorming is easy and executing is hard anything anybody else then let's move on to the rest of the agenda great thanks a lot rud um given that yeah given that we only have a couple minutes left i think i'll just quickly introduce the two additional topics that were on the agenda today and then we'll just carry them over for discussion to the next meeting if that's okay with the subcommittee members so there were two two memos included in the agenda packet one is um beginning the discussion of sort of identifying and beginning the comparison of rtd uh with peer transit agencies and you know i i will say that i i cribbed a lot of feedback from dan blankenship thank you dan of uh really helpful for me to kind of start thinking through there are lots of different ways to identify peer agencies to rtd because every transit agency in the country is unique in terms of its size the population its territory the services that it provides how it's structured so i think what you've seen is a working draft way that we're thinking about trying to identify different peer agencies and compare rtd to different peers and different measures uh so we'll we'll continue to refine this we'll have more information to share at the at the next um subcommittee and we'll be able to expand on um that table um dan also did catch a a little error in that so the next version will be corrected in terms of the uh the rail system size of one of the transit agencies we're comparing all the other numbers were correct it was just that system size i also just want to real quickly um point out that another really really big uh and good source of information is the american um the um sorry after the american the association of public transportation agencies apta publishes an annual report that has uh various information on a number of the really the largest transit systems around the country so i included a link to that in that in that staff memo so you can start looking as as also another way to help identify some peer agency so again we'll talk a little bit more about that at the next meeting and then the second memo um it seemed like by the time i got to the second book some of it was behind a firewall you couldn't see all the numbers and all the data and everything else do you know if the most if if there's anything that's not visible there now i think there are there are certain there are certain pieces of information with that apta publishes that are not generally available to the general public um the document that i provided the link to is should be publicly available to everyone all right good yeah thanks and that so the other issue was that came up at the last subcommittee meeting was you know what sort of statutory authorities and limitations relative to rtd's finances um exist in state statute so that memo just includes a quick summary of some of the key statute sections uh from state statute that that in my first view felt like they had some direct or or fairly significant indirect impacts on rtd finances so take a look at take a look at that i i gave the um statute sites as well as just a quick summary of of each of those but you know there are you know there are there are requirements for rtd um or an allowance for rtd to provide a certain amount of their services through competitive private sort of services uh there's a fare box recovery ratio requirement in state statute there are some limitations on rtd in terms of how it can use its property around stations and that that can limit um kind of what it what it does that you know might not be the most kind of might not maximize their revenue recovery there's limits on charging fees at parking areas there's limitations on the levy of property taxes um forms of borrowing uh special obligation debt so just a starting point for the subcommittee on some of the statute of authorities and limitations related to the finances of rtd so that was the information that's included in the agenda with the subcommittee's permission we'll just plan on carrying those over to the next meeting and coming back to them at the next meeting which will happen on where's my date now yeah why you're looking at that date uh bear in mind that that we're chartered from the legislature as well as the governor and so one of the things we can do is we can go back to the legislature and say here are some things that that are holding our rtd back absolutely it's possible we could get relief from some of these things but i would i'd also say that are we within this requirement of 30 fair box recovery yes the the kafir report that we've provided that we spoke about at the last meeting rtd goes through a very specific um accounting process um every budget and does that analysis and they are they are complying with that uh fare box recovery requirement is that as of 2019 or that was as of the end of 2019 i i don't know if heather's still on the line and what what it might look like for uh 2020 i suspect that it might be a different situation okay this is heather mckillip um i haven't run that number yet based on the 2021 budget because it's been moving quite a bit but um after october for the november adoption we'll have run that number to see where we are we have traditionally been well within that number because of the way the calculation is done but as we have mentioned in the past it it is not a calculation that the industry uses the way it's done and um could limit the ability of the um uh board to like if they wanted to do um you know fair free days a bunch of them or um you know lower the the fare box revenue that could cause problems um i am expecting there might be some problems because we had multiple months of free fares this year due to the pandemic um but i just haven't run that number for 2020 yet because we don't have actuals and then we typically run it for the new budget which we haven't done yet so it could be problematic it has not been in the past but based on where we are today was someone speaking heather while you're still here um there's a thing called the service performance report that has a lot of the data that you need to look at at fairbox ratios and things like that i've got the 2019 one but is there an interim document that would provide any of that kind of information no we we only do that once a year and it usually comes out in the may june time frame because it takes a lot of work to put that document together we do report ridership though um byline and fixed route versus pair transit in our monthly financial reports that go in the board packet for the finance administration committee so that's reported every month is that one of the things that we have uh on our ability to go out and look at a variety of different financial information i know i did post an example of your our monthly reports and then um the i think the link will um update it to every month but i'm not sure but yeah i did post um or send through the process um an example of the monthly report yeah so nothing's available every month that it does link to the most recent ones um i will double check that i'm not sure how that ended up coming through to you guys so um i will go out and see if i can check to make sure that updates to the most recent link every month great thank you heather thank you heather that's all i got okay uh so uh the next meeting is october 21st 2020 at 11 o'clock same time same police will send out the agenda packet a few days beforehand and the meeting information and one thing i would ask is is elites add so much value to these meetings if there's any way that we can make sure we're not meeting when she's got her regularly scheduled uh boulder board meeting older city council council or county or whatever yeah i'm rut we at the you know if the subcommittee wants us to come up with another uh kind of dutiful for something that will work for everybody we we struggled to find a time for the subcommittee meeting that would work for everybody uh commissioner jones is not sort of her primary subcommittee assignment is not the finance committee so she's trying to as co-chair of the overall committee she's trying to attend as many subcommittee meetings as she can um but i i will just say we it's always a struggle with these groups to find a time that works for everybody i very much appreciate that uh but i sure do want at least a year because she's such a terrific participant i agree i think she adds a lot of value and i'll just make one quick statement about this the statutes and ron maybe we can talk offline is that a lot of these like heather was suggesting parking tod contracting farebox i don't think any of them are going to be a huge source of revenue but but i think that adding flexibility could make sense so i'll try to touch base with you ron this week and then thanks great i agree that's a bad release yeah is that it that's all we've got then we're adjourned thanks everybody thanks thanks [Music] you
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Nazism in Montana, Fascism's Rise in America
all right so we are live uh for the first official Corner live video uh on stream yard technically I've done a couple of these with um comrade net with Cara and Dr wisefeld but uh never won just simply for mine um basically I'm gonna I've invited a few other people on here if they want to join um I think I'm gonna go ahead and uh add a few more so give me a second [Music] so yeah wrong platform is foreign so yeah anybody who wants to join in on this thing um can do so um I've sent the invites to a few people and certain places but um yeah what I've been wanting to talk about is um the Zoe Zephyr situation in Montana a lot of you've probably heard about it through news outlets or through me or other people um they held a boat this evening or this afternoon and um yeah Zoe is now banned from the floor for the rest of the legislative session which I believe is for the next few weeks so it's not going to be very long but the point is is that she's only going to be able to vote from home she's not going to be able to speak on any bills so essentially um she's being censored from you know speaking out against the anti-trans legislation and stuff like that it's really you know this is what I and I'm putting a video out right now I'm actually waiting for it to process so I can actually upload it to YouTube because I still use Movie Maker because I'm an old [ __ ] and uh yeah um but essentially what I was saying was Nazism in in America is on the rise fascism in America is on rise these fascist politicians particularly on the far right like the Republican Party they are using the Bourgeois democracy to their advantage to their favor they are going by the same Playbook that the Nazis used and the the fascists in Italy used to gain power they are doing the same exact thing so yeah I don't know really what to say about all that this this is something I've been telling people was happening and was going to happen years ago I was telling people this when it first started on YouTube and you know or at least when I first started you know becoming an ml I was telling people things are going to get worse coding is not going to save you and how many times in the last year and a half plus have I been telling people voting does not work a Bourgeois system does not change it changes you we've been saying this for so long and this is this is the product of it when capitalism fascism is capitalism and Decay Bourgeois democracy is the result of capitalism in decay It All Leads to fascism plain and simple I've been telling people this for so long but you know the rules want to win so um yeah so yeah I've um sent invites out to some people oh yeah yeah hello hello I don't know if you can hear me ah why am I the only one in here no no I I can't be the only one in here no is that right that this must be a mistake all right hello hello can you hear me ah can you hear me I I can hear you hold on I can hear you I might have to put headphones on hang on can you hear me and my Audible I think so I think I can barely hear you oh [ __ ] um my equipment is not doing well I'm I I just got your invite for a moment I'm like you know [ __ ] I'm coming on why not yeah test this on my phone don't think anybody can anyway yeah um fascism I mean I think it's been here for a while but yeah I just had comrade net pop into the chat so I was gonna see if we can't try to get him on here to talk about it but right now we're having mic issues definitely having my kisses but yeah no as I was basically saying um we've uh just we've been having a lot of these anti-trans bills that have been getting passed and uh yeah we've just been and now we're starting to see the fascist right in this country slowly moving to remove political opposition so yeah can you hear me all right and I can't really hear you too well [ __ ] no why why my [ __ ] is terrible do you think the world will be ending soon if this continues no I don't necessarily um think that the work that the world's going to end necessarily it's one of those things where I think things are going to get a lot more um difficult for a lot of us we're seeing a lot of issues on in the um we're just seeing a lot of issues with like in just Twitter for example of them trying to ban you know essentially skirt people off of its platform same with Facebook same with a lot of social media platforms so yeah um what liberals and and fascists go hand in hand they love their their privatization smashing labor unions but yeah it's just what they're doing right now in what they've been doing in you know what they're doing in Montana what they're doing in a lot of these you know States like Tennessee and stuff like that it's just a growing thing so um yeah it is yeah it is terrible um but yeah no it's just what's going on in what's just been happening lately in Montana is just kind of par for the course it's just um you know I I was I was already expecting it when I first heard that Zoe was going to be uh censured by the Montana fascist caucus I uh realized that yeah that this was something that was that I was going to end up having to speak on and everything and I typically tend to like to avoid giving a lot of any sort of credibility to the Bourgeois democracy but I felt in this case it needed to be said because this was concerning a trans legislator not only a trans legislator but the first translator in um yeah all right uh I have no idea if you can hear me uh again just barely let me see if there's something I can fix on my end it's probably on my end because [ __ ] hasn't been working um let's say all right um maybe I can hear you now let's see okay uh testing testing uh not without putting it right to my right to my ear and even and headphones aren't really helping okay well then I will go I don't I don't want to distract your string yeah I'm sorry I I tried to get you on here I tried to be on I know sometimes with stream yard it's a little bit difficult all right well um I'll just watch your stream from all right foreign but uh yeah no it's um yeah see that that's one of the hard things about stream yard is sometimes that you in fact almost every single time I've we've been on stream yard we've had some sort of issue with a mic but uh with me with internet with wisefeld we've always had something uh but yeah no um hopefully a revolution will not be needed unfortunately a revolution it's always needed in my opinion I really do kind of think you know that that's the only true way that you're going to install socialism the problem is is that there's not I wouldn't say not revolutionary potential in the United States there's just a lack of it and that's one of the problems and the longer that we sit back and let you know atrocities like this continue to occur the closer we sent we seem to be getting to people like me winding up in the camps so um it's really a scary thought do I think about that constantly yeah I do but like I've said before I you know me and my partner were doing you know the responsible thing you know we've got Firearms we're trying to get more Firearms sometimes that's a little bit hard to do in the United States particularly in a lot of these liberal states which again we could go on that whole tangent about you know about how liberals enable fascism by taking away the means at which to protect ourselves but I'll you know I'll save that for another stream the um yeah it's just absolutely insane what is going on here but it's not unexpected it's not something that you know we haven't been blathering on about for years now what we haven't what we've been warning people for years about I've been trying to warn trans people about this since I came back to YouTube and you know nobody cares no one really seems to want to do anything they're all completely uh complacent with what they're doing now and the mic the mic doesn't work I know uh hello I will see if I can add a couple other people on here is anybody else's mics working mine works yeah I'm pretty sure mine works okay yeah I can barely hear anybody but maybe that could also be because I've got an air conditioner am I a bit louder now yeah you're louder now open Fort Lauderdale so yeah why I said I've been trying to adjust mics and stuff like that but it doesn't seem like it it helps that much yeah was it sometimes if stream yards you do have to adjust people's like mic sensitivity sometimes you'll tell people to do it and they'll turn it up too loud and then you have to come [ __ ] turn the [ __ ] down do you not have your thing on speaker sound there should be an option on the thing that should play it for you there should be an option on the thing that'll play it for your loudspeaker rather than for you maybe let me see wait what device are you on this is on the phone like I said my if if she was on a computer we wouldn't be using stream yard we'd be using uh OBS because it's just a million times better what does OBS stand for um uh open source broadcasting software oh okay let me see if I can throw headphones on and see if that'll fix it I think I'm the only I know because I know I'm using a computer right now healer yeah OBS is completely free and OBS is [ __ ] amazing like all right uh maybe we can try to get net back on now yeah it's not your mic now it is just it is just the it'd be the headphone situation in the [ __ ] yep no I fixed it I actually had to turn my media up so yeah that's that's an Autism moment if I ever saw that there was an Autism oh my God no don't even well like this I do silly things like this my ADHD brain I'll just get really like confused about the matter yeah why is this not working what was it we spent like 10 minutes on our stream last week or something like that it was before we realized that you're that uh there was no audio on your end gone for this whole introduction and then luckily red Pagan was saying a lot of the stuff in this time period but like I just gotten through my introduction and then like I I stopped mentioning [ __ ] and I got through this whole really I said it again fortunately without missing too much out but like I got it better the first time and I made this really good diorama on the situation that covered a lot of context points that I just sort of think of the challenge went um Curry Mike's not working oh yeah oh God my tits are Jesus Christ so comrade net testing testing one two testing we hear you just we can hear you yeah all right good oh cool I was working my my phone's bad behavior has traumatized me about All Electronics recently don't worry I'm not exactly tech savvy either you know but we're gonna get literate I need to literally call up Jason under or SMG or my wife my knowledge primarily stops around um when did Windows 7 come out oh Jesus to 2009 okay so like basically that I have like some knowledge that goes into like the 2010 2014 period and then like I I know some stuff about modern computers ish I'm more software and stuff like that is kind of over my head I'm having someone teach me a lot of stuff about it and I'm learning and I do want to learn more but I'm good with hardware and Hardware has not changed in like 20 years basically yeah no no no it's basically not changed since like 2006 shut the [ __ ] up changes of Hardware is how advanced that's all that's really changed yeah otherwise the architecture is still the same um I mean heck was still using the x86 uh architecture um which is what 1982 like 286. oh yeah because all my programs will spit something back to me saying x86 program x86 folder I'm like oh okay yeah because we're on the x8664 processors which is the the the the later um it's like the I think it's like the I think the uh you have the AMD were the first ones but then I think with Intel I don't think there were only like four eight sixes that were 32 but I think the five eight six sorry 64 a bit but I think the 586 was but I might be wrong um 686 but then you also we have the Pentium error at this time as well so who really gives a [ __ ] about those numbers um uh uh net you want to jump in there real quick just because I would like to reply to what you have highlighted here um oh yeah I think um I think one of the I mean I mean okay I don't exactly disagree with this but I I think that the the statement itself is kind of a misnomer um as socialism is actually literally economic war on capitalism and like for instance in the United States this is a settler Colonial Country so the first step is war on colonialism itself you know and everything falls with with that um yeah yeah like like to really emphasize that point we've got to look at it this way how was American capitalism built American capitalism was built on slavery it was built via the massive hoarding of slaves by the English and the Spanish predominantly but the French also had massive involvement in America as well people forget about Louisiana we haven't forgotten about Louisiana you little [ __ ] well I was gonna say too if you look at Canada there's also Quebec which has ties to Louisiana yeah yeah yeah it was a part of the massive plot of land that the French had when the French sold Louisiana Quebec basically ended up getting circled and dominated by the British but then um yeah and so you had this massive transference of slaves and they massively built what is made of America today they also built everything after slavery supposedly Ended as well not everything everything like I absolutely am not a proponent of the idea that there are no white workers like I think that's a bit silly but like we've got to understand that there are much more like propensity for a white proletarian to end up being a labor Aristocrat than there is for a black proletarian we must also look at whom has manned um the seats of manufacturing in some of the largest industrial centers in America it's like Chicago Chicago Detroit um Cleveland places like this where there are massive black populations and also massive industrial centers because while America wants to take advantage of the labor force that it can exploit the most that is plain and simple and so like a lot of people will try and kick this can down the road but like because slavery's ended and that there's been some form of reconciliation racism still exists and still puts black people down but they equate like that like black people are in like a more similar level in the proletaric to white people and that racism is just more of the rest of the people problem no no no no no white workers are still incredibly racist and it's not because it benefits them no I'm not saying there's some exploiter I'm saying that they do engage in that exploitation sometimes and mostly at their own detriment and so like when you look at it's like um uh Republicans manage to get white workers to literally and against bills that would benefit white workers all because the the that policy would also benefit black working-class people and especially black underclass people people in the lump and proletariat and so when this this this brings us outrage out in these very racist very very racially driven white workers like the idea that like America is like like turned a new Leaf since the Civil Rights era and is no longer a white supremacist country seriously go Google the world yeah it's [ __ ] [ __ ] go Google the words America police and black and just see what comes up yeah you don't even need to put past and it will come up with the stuff that I am referring to I guarantee you there will be a lot of racist [ __ ] coming up um you know with black people are massively targeted by the state apparatus but then if we also were to look at the current state of America as well within American society white like cult like white uh Colonial culture is still massively prop like uh profligated um by many apparatuses within the system and this is not just a republican problem the Democrats are more coveted about it but they do the same [ __ ] that Democrats are more are more like uh messed up about it actually no the Republicans are more messed up about it the Democrats are social Fashions no listen listen the Democrats are social fascists they are much lighter about this issue they are less crazy about this issue they are they give much more concessions yeah I'm still [ __ ] up but yeah they're still fascists but you know they're the moderate Wing So they take a more moderate position but they work with the Republicans nonetheless like yeah they haven't stopped working the Republicans get there are a lot of Democrats who have but the party itself hasn't turned around and gone let's cut ties of the Republicans throw out the filibuster and actually take a war against the party so there's no to happen somewhere I don't know I think that depends on what the measure is and everything you're describing yes but on other things there's times when the Democrats are actually more [ __ ] up particularly on the financial sector who got rid of glass-steagall that was Bill Clinton yeah but that was built while Bill Clinton was trying to turn the Democrats more Republican invasions on NBA with Pastor Obama genuinely Obama Started what was it three Wars two Wars um yeah yeah Trump himself got involved in conflicts and going on there but the more specifically on about the like racism towards black people the Democrats the Democrats absolutely are terrible because they were the ones who armed the police like a military however they are social fascists they don't say it out loud they're foxes not wolves a wolf will mole you a fox who has to wait until it can get you in the dark and so intrinsically they are more moderate it is like dealing with the sdp and dealing with the Nazis they will still [ __ ] kill you if you're a communist but one of them is gonna [ __ ] suck your dick until you unload enough that they will then kill you and it is not the Nazis that will do that yeah yeah the Republican Party intrinsically has engaged in Fascism and we can see this openly Nazism specifically not just Fascism and when we look at the Republican party they are where most of the Jackson Knight Democrats are there are still Dixiecrats in the Democrat Party don't get me wrong oh you're not the majority though what kind of Dixiecrats are in the Republican party and have been for the last 60 years and the other followers have said allegiance to the Republican party for the last 60 years too yeah it's also what brings me to that comment I put up from uh from base God flashy that says uh the guy that who formed the southern strategy openly stated that the idea was to get white workers to think politicians are screwing me but at least they're screwing the blacks harder not just the black the black you know population but you know as we've seen in the what you know just recently you know Screw over you know trans people in the gay community and also uh Brown Latino people that like okay Latino people of color not the not the Spaniards that change their mind just whoever they want to be seen as white or brown yeah Cuba uh Cuban Floridians oh God oh no God damn it like um New York can um [ __ ] is it New York and Cubans yeah I just no I might be wrong it's somewhere in the north there's like another Cuban population they just show they show the Miami Cubans for the touchy [ __ ] they are like you better [ __ ] like because because the thing is with the Miami Cuba like there are a lot of people in poverty that are absolutely not coming into this but what it really comes into is there's a lot of the Cuban um bourgeoisie and pedi bourgeoisie that escaped into that area and so there's just so much reaction uh within that Community when um and I can't remember which state it is so I'm not gonna stick by New York but I think it's New York there's a Cuban population and they're more predominantly lower class it's probably New York or Illinois if I had to guess you know what then yeah Happy New York it was not Illinois I'm just doubting myself because like America's really big city I can't excuse in New York City yeah I'm you're going a bit quiet but like uh yeah uh with um New York see I'm doubting myself because America's a big scary place you like the size of Europe country but you're right but like um yeah the uh Cuban population in New York is more predominantly lower class and you know as you expect class culture then comes into play in the situation and so like yeah you know they just they just show up the Bourgeois culture of Miami Cubans what it is and to be honest Miami culture itself is kind of [ __ ] it is [ __ ] Floridian cultures [ __ ] as a whole I mean the around major cities I'd say is more so what that problem is it's kind of like New York or or California it's like you can't really judge the whole state by like The Stereotype of the state because the cities are very drastic compared to like the country and the towns which yeah like the cities very much well yeah that's the thing I think I say too like where I live like take a look at Chicago you can't say that outside of Chicago and Cook County that the rest of Illinois is like that Illinois is my place yeah I still don't understand Chicago I haven't been there many times but every time I was there I I didn't understand what I was saying because there were random nonsense that would occur racism yeah that's all you need to know but um to kind of get back uh on the track of things um I was gonna say uh there was somebody that was saying what did I miss in the last you know since the stream started and basically the the point of this stream was basically to uh mention the thing about Zoe Zephyr because it has been uh publicized in most of the national news outlets what was that just net dot sound effect okay I'll put myself on mute until I speak at my house okay um but the point the point about this was essentially about Zoe Zephyr uh who um for those of you that don't know she is a trans uh legislator in the Montana State the Montana State house um she's a Democrat from Missoula obviously still believes that the Bourgeois system works you know whatever I'm not that's not the point I'm not my point of the video is not to debate the issue of Bourgeois democracy and you know blah blah blah my issue about about it has was has has and is about the fact that she called out right wing Psychopaths who were voting against uh trans health care and essentially we're trying to ban the drag shows and stuff like that and so the step the trans Panic that you basically been seeing in America and she stated that the people that vote in favor of these anti-trans legislations uh will have blood on their hands in response to that the Montana fascist caucus decided that they were wanting to um that they felt threatened by that and so decided that they were going to um bar her from the uh state house which now they have held a vote as of this morning and as because the Montana State Legislature is dominated by right-wing Psychopaths uh she has been uh banned from the floor for the rest of the legislative session which I believe only will be lasting a few more weeks anyway but the context is here that she is only going to be able to vote from home she's not going to be able to speak on any future bills and um and essentially this is the fascist mechanism This Is How They off their you know modus operandi they are basically uh using the Bourgeois democracy you know to their advantage this is exactly what the Nazis did in the Weimar Republic you know until they eventually gained enough power and strength and influence to essentially take over Germany we're seeing a very similar thing going on with both sides but predom but I would say predominantly with uh I I would say that the Republicans are definitely the ones that are a lot more outspoken about it and they are slowly you know turning this country into a totalitarian dictatorship and and they are and this is what we've been largely talking about for the most of the stream they are trying they're going after gay and trans people um they're you know they've always been going after the Muslim population since 9 11. they're going you know they've been going after Latinos for the last you know 10 years it got a lot worse under Trump um but now uh we're starting to see um I think we're starting to see a lot of the you know culminations of this this is when I said in the video that um should hopefully be uh uploaded here shortly um when I stated that January 6th was just the beginning it was it wasn't a culmination it was a coronation because it was essentially the beginning of you know the fascist rise to power uh in you know in the United States it's kind of the beginning to an end of one chapter and it's the you know and honestly once we get to the end of that chapter then yeah that that begins something that I don't think any of us are prepared for so that's kind of largely what has been said you know during most of this stream um it's just been it and it's not just going on Montana there's also going on in uh Nebraska I forgot what the person's name was um but she is a bisexual uh state senator there um who is now under investigation for speaking out against the anti-trans and anti-gay legislation that's been going on in Nebraska did you just say she's under investigation for having a position mm-hmm she yeah she that that she's currently under investigation for some somehow breaking like some sort of like legislative rules or whatever oh boy so yeah they're trying that they're trying they're doing this with Zephyr and Montana and they're doing it with this individual in Nebraska so this is I'm gonna just say this now okay all of us that are on stream to anybody who's watching this mark my words this is going to be something we are going to see more and more happening over the next coming weeks and months and probably going into the next uh presidential election because yeah I I I'm 20 24 is going to be a 2023 and 2024 are going to be a couple of years that are going to I think Define and weigh a pretty rough outline as to what the fascists in America are planning to do and probably will do because what's happening right now is you know it it's to me it's tantamount to you know and to uh the mobilization for war in this case it's a mobilization you know for a complete you know Purge of anybody that gets in the you know the way of what the fascists are trying to accomplish here it was more so that they're going a little further than that so their main measure is that they want to entice genocide against what is perceived as the Surplus population yeah not that they get in the way of like active existence of society hence why the social fascists aren't trying to kill off disabled trans or black people explicitly they still do it implicitly through the police through poverty through lack of accessibility decent thing but by their image they will still promote that these people should exist and there are like the good ones for the Democrats I.E people of privilege if you are a well-off disabled black or trans person yeah one of the good ones welcome to de facto whiteness yeah so like and they're going after Asian people since the covid-19 pandemic that's not a new thing really since like the dawn of the 20th century when they were coming over here to build the railroads and stuff yeah really the end of the 19th century but yeah yeah Chinese racism used to be a lot worse than World War II happened and Japanese racism got a lot worse and Chinese racism got less worse then the Chinese Revolution happened and you know racism all around guys um it's gone down the more towards racism again in the last 20 years but the um uh over here we're just racist to anyone who's Asian but um what's it [ __ ] um so like with this situation the reason why white supremacists want to annihilate the Surplus population which includes black people disabled people the underclass um trans people not so much gay men but lesbians are still people that are very much Under Fire same as bisexual people um gay men have found a recent prominence within patriarchal society is acceptably conservative compared to lesbians bisexuals or trans people um because what's it uh The Stereotype around lesbians is that like um the I the I the the the very feminine lesbians are like a supposed myth to men it's like some ideation they've created in their head a story to them even though it very much exists you get lesbians of all types just like you get straight women of all types they're straight women that are very very masculine just like how those The Stereotype of Butch lesbians yes there are very masculine lesbians out there too but because that's what's perceived as lesbians just as a pejorative they seen as like breaking Norms more than like the average gay man has been noticed to be acceptably masculine now to the Monday because I don't know if they've noticed but like most gay men of like bears like from my experience most gay men are pretty Burly geezers well maybe over there I mean yeah we've got some of them over here but the a lot of the gay men that I see at least maybe this is just largely more of a West Coast thing but a lot of them are just like your typical like everything like shaved sort of you know gay men you know uh they still keep in shape don't get me wrong but they're just one of those things where it's like you just don't see like you see more of what I would call the twin gay guys then you really do the the biggest yeah you see that's funny yeah you see that Chicago plenty two um so like when when gay get-togethers used to happen and um I can't what state was it in America that I heard this story from the East open at trucker yards and a lot of these people doing it were the truckers that were parked to put the Chucky hard like and they were these big Burly um like uh uh Bears I was hearing this one story from this one bear and he was involved in it and like the police turned up oh and the light's showing on them it showed like mostly just really really buff Burly geezers he was like really surprised that it gave him so much more comfort in his homosexuality because it's a big struggle for buff gay guys it's like well not buff gay manly like really like hyper masculine gay guys is they feel like the coming openly gay or like their masculinity and you know toxic masculine is problematic but there's no problem with someone like wanting to be masculine and being a like Society has created this framework where they're like pressured to be afraid that their masculinity would be put under threat which does end up causing toxic masculinity down the line and it's not effectively dealt with um and this is a big problem for like April like that but so when we get into fascism the uh the the Surplus population why do they want to get rid of it because it's seen as uh things that affect the Purity and the strength of the quote white race and quotes um uh the uh not to mention the quote white race is not in the majority anymore I mean it's in the majority in power but like when it comes to numbers they're no longer in the majority yeah I mean which is one of the things that messes with the British colonial culture that created America the America left the British to retain because the British want for America to end slavery would have challenged this culture and that is the idea that a colony should be more white than brown or black that was a policy that the British took a hold of when they invented whiteners in the Caribbean and then eventually got taken back home to Britain the bourgeoisie absolutely [ __ ] over it and it became standardized within British colonial um uh what's it uh British colonial culture and uh what's the [ __ ] word um oh well it doesn't matter but the uh so with the American fascists the Nazis the same rise up now they want to annihilate or at least massively reduce this uh what they perceive as the Surplus population to capitalism um and uh indignification on um the sovereignty of the white race and that's why there's also a lot of white people they don't want anymore uh what we call White Trash like there is actual useful use of that terminology because when you look at people who are more like lumper nice for the the underclass of the proletariat and you look at people who are um severely disabled and impoverished you know this sector of white people are seen as defective as um like uh uh like uh something that weakens the gene pool I can show you literal propaganda pieces from the Nazis where it goes on about the uh way in which um the the the disabled people have to be like sterilized because we have they uh poisoning the gene pool blah blah blah uh and like um weakening the the Aryan race and Malaki and so what was attached with this with the pen it was a eugenesis thing I think he said was going on in South Africa with the pencil with the hair I forget there was lots of tests they did like that's just one of them like they did genital tests they did the hair test um the hair test was one that was just like completely [ __ ] like it was so [ __ ] because like the actual validity is such a test structure is stupid because no matter how thick you like like um uh unless you lack unless you have extremely thick hair you are not gonna like uh uh you actually have a chance to fit in anything other than black but uh with black people because they've uh like they uh very typically have thicker hair than white people do this test is incredibly racist that takes advantage of the uh way in which we've abused the way um black people look as a way to um you know like their hair and how they present themselves as a way to push them down so your hair is different from ours so we're gonna use a specified stupid test to take advantage of the thickness of your hair so that you end up always designated as black because at the end of the day this pencil Test is stupid you stick a pencil in your hair and they Shake yeah like so well they just leave it first if it doesn't fall out straight away then you're either black or brown if it falls out when they shake you you're Brown if it doesn't fall out in the Shaker you're black this entire test predicates on very stupid ideas and for people whom like you know it could fail for other people and send them in the wrong ways and like if they don't think you should get that bad result oh yes they will do another test to ensure you don't get put into the wrong category because they gotta they gotta protect their fellow white people um but if you're perceived as black within Society you're going straight down and this is something we have done constantly with black people especially with the hair if anything we've done about a black person's complexion that has taken advantage of them it has been hair and it has been uh the uh what's it um foreign it's been the abuse of hair um uh what's it and then I saw the abuse of complexion skin toneage and color yeah uh there's also there's like weird stereo types about um like um like things like body odor and [ __ ] like that like there's some incredibly racist stereotypes um the uh mandolin just seems to scare white people that's the only suggestion of it because the reason why there's like these very like to be honest minor differences between us is because of menolin like um but nonetheless um when you look at so getting back away from the detraction of South Africa to what I was trying to get with America so they're trying to do this we've seen a beer hole punch we've seen an attempt to take over before that patch during the time of tram where they tried to do a prestigious passage of power it's completely take over the Supreme Court the Senate and the house they're trying to do it again under the pretexts of trying to obliterate the power basis of the Democrats within Arthur span the party yeah this is absolutely a mirror of the conflict between the Ordo liberals and the Nazis from 1932 to 1936 yeah this is basically something that uh that you and I kind of are echoing from uh the stream that we did on your channel last week so yeah if we look at this intrinsically the auto liberals and the liberal Democrats both represent liberalism and Decay as in they are no longer a liberal party I haven't been for a while um the um so look at it from the order liberals they they made um a liberalism in a sense and this actually became one of the ground bases for neoliberalism interestingly enough um the audio liberalism and neoliberalism are different they're not the same but it was one of the inspiring ground bases of it and actually after the war order liberalism surprisingly enough got a lot of ex-nazi party members in it and took on this weird amount of Nazi policies but the um nonetheless they they took on a lot of fascism to try and compete with the Nazis as well as still trying to mix in liberalism with it and that's why I call it illiberalism rather than just calling it fascisms [Laughter] although he's getting further and further to just having his Mussolini Arc recently uh if anyone knows what's going on over the Hungary in the last two months but the um what's it uh with um the liberal Democrats since 1993 they have been do they have been under a new um philosophy if you want to use that ideology is probably the correct term actually um new ideology um that is called the third way oh interesting name I know it sounds a bit like a third position um and it's a mixture of British corporatism from the 1950s to the early 70s it was a uh mixture of uh also social democracy from Europe around this era as well and a mixture of um uh American and uh British neoliberalism and this formulated the Third Way by Anthony gidons or Anthony if you're one of those funny types actually I don't think he has the H in his name it might just be Antoni either way Antoni Bonnie give me the beef but the um let's see um Tony not Blair um giddens uh there's definitely his middle name it's not Le um he's uh um he's the guy who inspired basically Tony Blair and uh Bill Clinton and Joe Biden Bill Clinton and Joe Biden started the Third Way Democrats I think it was 1993. um and they have been the leading like organ of the Democrat Party ever since a lot of people typically call the clintonites this position as um initially had a lot more neoliberalism involved in its platform and actually Blair himself got criticized by giddens who is a labor Lord for injecting too much neoliberalism into the Third Way But as we've seen time get further on they have slowly really really slowly probably slower than they should maybe they would have stopped the like hole oh no we might actually lose to the Nazis thing that they're panicking about right now if they hadn't had done this but they slowly have gotten more towards like this like they're still very neoliberal but they're doing a lot more Social Democratic stuff as well um Biden's buildback better policy before it was gutted by um uh what's it [ __ ] I can't remember his name uh oh yeah the [ __ ] was uh before it was gutted was actually a fairly Progressive bill as far as modern U.S presidents go uh and so so you have the social pressure trundling along in the same way that they did in the Nazi era the sdp had completely flopped by 1929. um the uh and the auto liberals which took up the Forefront were not very good at the social part of the social crashes so yeah Democrats sit neatly in between these two they're a little bit better at the social part than the other liberals by like the fact that they're not conservatives which is just like really scraped at the bottom of a barrel there um but they are still quite like not fully committed to like doing social fascism properly there committedness and they're trying they're veiling attempts to try and become committed or becoming more and more apparent and so as we see we have this block fighting between these Nazis that are very much ready to fight a war if they will not get their way and the Democrats that won't do anything about it whilst they have the power to do something about it yeah that's why I'm kind of wanting to bring up uh Matthew valente's um comment about uh not about the rise of Christian fascism see the thing is is that the rise of Christian I I wouldn't even say so much a rise of Christian fascism though there has been a significant rise in It in America over the last 10 20 years but here's the thing about the state of American politics as we've said previously both parties are Fascist in their own way the Democrats are just social fascists the Republicans are the Christian or the Christo fascists and the you know and right now the ones leading the charge against you know a lot of this you know trans Panic gay panic sort of stuff are the Christo fascists these are the same people that also led the charge against islamophobia you know since 9 11. so I think they might be similar to the Nazis where it's only Christian on the outside and another one is atheist on the inside Alex Jones is someone that kind of shows that there are maybe more crazy I believe so people in the in that end of society have I know that there is a massive Christian Bourgeois like presence in America as much as America is actually not that Christian of a country I hope people know that it's really not that Christian of a country it's like there's just massive pockets of it um there's people that do yeah there's people that say a lot of say that they're Christian people that you know try to say you know who uh make claims that oh I go to church every you know every Sunday it's just kind of like you know most of these people you know go to church maybe on Christmas and Easter they don't even know about them I mean like America is not a Christian country and is predominantly not Christian it just has a very loud Christian reactionary base within the white population which themselves aren't even a majority um with the black population like there's a lot there's a lot of Christians there's a lot of Muslims and a lot of atheists as well as all sorts of other different religions as well as people that try and reconnect and rekindle with African religions to get a greater sense of their own actual indignant indigenous indigenous culture yeah and uh what's it within America so like like with the Republicans like what I mean with the Bourgeois types is like whilst they are like absolutely Christian Bourgeois even believe in the Rapture they believe Israel is like the key to solving the Rapture if they send all the Jews there um there's some Christian bourgeoisie and Britain that believes this um quite extensively because we're actually a Christian country um but the uh what's it um and just like America it's only like half our population I think which uh that's Christian but the um what's it um or it might be lesson I got like 40 um but like with the uh us of a like you have to also people like Alex Jones that shows that there are people that pervade similar satanic beliefs to the Nazis the Nazis were not Christians not at all they were like Devil worshipers like read anything about Heinrich Himmler the guy believed that like there was uh the the the Giants under the Earth that needed to be um yeah the ice giants yeah Himmler um yeah Himmler was definitely kind of had a weird uh set of beliefs that were um yeah you know that were like a combination of a few things one of them was a bastardization of Norse paganism but it's just you know yeah yeah but this was like the ground basis of the Nazis nordicism is Nazism yeah and so they all believed in this um Hitler was like the leading ideologue um the so-called National Socialist movement um is defined by Blood and soil so it is very Teutonic it is very Nordic in its uh ideologue but it's but if you really look into a very ancient Greek based as well as well but it's all [ __ ] when you look at it [ __ ] the claims that like like if you get into those books like blood and so on it's all [ __ ] what's perfect twists is twists and turns I mean like what's it ideation of the [ __ ] Vikings is dodgy anyway but like let's be [ __ ] real like they made as much twists as they can um the movie 300 that's based off of Hitler's version of the the the the actual story which was so what actually happened back when was that there was a United Army involving the Persians and a United Army involving the Greeks it wasn't just the Greeks and the Persians fight anger was like there was multiple Empires it was a [ __ ] show it went for [ __ ] ages like it wasn't just like oh loads of arrows flew and a lot of Greeks died and then the war ended no this War lasted ages and it was one of the biggest like like hits against the Persian Empires push West um like and then Hitler just turns it into this story about 300 Spartans fighting the entire Persian army and treats them as this Asiatic horde um the Mongolians or something even though they're not Mongolians they're Persians silly mustache man but yeah it's just just what's going on in what's going what's been going on just in the United States in the last well we could break it down to to a lot of things that have been going on the last 10 10 or so years but what's been going on recently with all these you know anti-trans anti-drag laws and stuff like that it's just it's yeah it's all a product of what has already been in place and that's this rise of you know Christoph fascism which is kind of one of the things that I you know like yeah there's there's a a level of Christoph fascists that are definitely within the Republican party like you know they're you know you're gonna have those like you know what I would call like similarly to the austral fascists and stuff like that you've got that but then you've got you know your you know your neo-nazis you've got your you know almost um what would it be the equivalent to basically Italian fascism like a diagram between these groups because they all intersect and come together they'll blow up like a prairie fire and start fighting each other eventually but at the moment they've come to Unison and so it's like a Venn diagram they intersect so far as that they share ideas but even not only goes so far because some of them will only intersect with some of them sometimes only the neo-nazis and the Italian fascists will be involved sometimes all of them will be mixing together the Republican Party itself is the center of that diagram that's where they all mix otherwise they go off into their own little projects um and I mean a lot of the Nazis are not quite happy with the Republican party's failings to take power yeah 2020 uh one and so they're taking a different route but I mean was it at the end of the day we also need to get into this yep the eyes involved our boys has everyone forgotten like everyone forgets who was leading the proud boys that we literally came out when he was arrested FBI agent yeah yeah no I remember kind of vaguely uh when that came out uh not too long ago and I was just like not surprised about all that though is that it's the Jews everybody claims to be in some sort of clandestine operation but no strings doing the clandestine [ __ ] it's always white people yeah what's that well we have like what's as someone with with a pale complexion it is my right to blame all of my problems on another [ __ ] people that get it harder than me that is whiteness and its definition like [ __ ] like finding a way to give people like whiteness originally was born out of finding a way to give um house slaves a sense of superiority as well as also a sense of privilege over chattel slaves when prior to that they saw no like difference between their struggles and actually had more like more empathy and sympathy for what like travel slaves are going through because they recognized that they were at least inside a house and had a roof over their head but they were they were not given enough of a decent enough like time in there you know when you like with all the indentured seven system how slaves were treated like so much worse uh like like they were still treated pretty bad when they became indentured servants but they were you know they they were not as they not be earners much they were not shouted at as much they were not like demolished as much they were expected to behave within this strict discipline and be treated like [ __ ] gimps but like they were they compared to channel slaves at that point the indentured servant had so much like uh um like um so much to lose basically like they didn't just have their chains to lose in a fight um if they lost their life or if they were caught in like helping this they would lose their chance at definite Freedom which they had as a guarantee an indentured servant did not stay enslaved forever while a slave house or not was a permanent slave no getting out and so with whiteness this is the operation of it and this is what you see with anti-Semitism anti-Semitism is it in this framework of whiteness where white people find a scapegoat white Bourgeois and Betty Bourgeois people find a scapegoat within Society um to um all of the problems of society upon um Jews black people disabled people impoverished people elderly people uh people of color in general trans people uh we're a special demon right now and so like this whole situation is um intrinsically a part of the framework of capitalism capitalism um requires these formulations of oppressions you split and break up the working class and what's it just a really squash an idea around the black struggle as well that people don't get black people having their own nationalist based parties because of the necessity of their nationalists struggle for their Nation to be free doesn't technically separate them from struggle with us in any way like that like they don't we don't have to be in the same party to work with these with with these organizations I hope that is like blatantly apparent to people they have to bring up the Rainbow Coalition unfortunately yeah because everybody forgets that like the whole point in that is that like they didn't just go oh the the young you know you guys want to come join us they're like guys you should maybe change Flags or [ __ ] out you know yeah um we'll work together we'll come we'll come and you know be a a show of like the struggle of people of the different racial backgrounds for the end of America but it didn't negate the Nationalist struggle of black people it just brought together that anti-colonial struggle um with uh you know uh you know between white and black Brethren of the proletariat because you don't fight white capitalism with black capitalism you fight capitalism with socialism right intrinsically there are colonizers that absolutely can help in the struggle especially those in poverty like a lot of people get really really concerned when malice start going on about like decolonization because like we are pretty [ __ ] like we don't give a [ __ ] like if you're like someone who's like Petty Bourgeois like like really privileged and like you're claiming that you are a communist but then you literally do nothing for the struggle the response most maoists will give is go the [ __ ] back to Europe if you really think you like and then actually you'll have done some decolonization rather than like just doing nothing all the time I know people that are struggling to get back up off their feet after like having lost [ __ ] like major family members or dealing with a stressful interrelationship because of their own broken family and trying to get their fact up on their feet to get a job in their own degree and like they're also and also working uh uh takeaway at the same time delivery and they're still doing party work as much as they possibly can like you know there's there's no excuse for people who have mass amounts of privilege to not be doing party work when they claim they're a Communists like you should be learning and you should be getting out there unless you are like unless you're new unless you're new and you're still getting your bearings but if you have like the wealth and like ability and flexibility to actually be able to engage in these things you should now I know that's not simple because in certain areas there might not be an active that you can be a part of and so this is not some like massive indignant one of all like hit punch that you can apply to everyone but this is more soul for those people that are absolutely negating a struggle that they could be a part of and if we look in a market that is uh an increasing number uh numbering count in uh Communist party is um today even with the revisionist parties that are taking up a lot of the flock it would not be a bad idea to intercept some of these bigger revisionist parties and try and get some of the newer members out of there older ingrained members I don't give a [ __ ] about but like new people that are coming to Communism like should not be getting indoctrinated into these revisionist organizations yeah but like once said the mouse position is not like this against like proletarians to be honest even not really so much against labor Aristocrats and not some of us maybe because like most people don't have the money to do that [ __ ] even if they could and they're not really the problem at all they engage in the problem like they are part of it but they are not the problem like an absolutely are part of the solution and are a necessity in regards to an alliance and in their struggle the the black and white proletariat have to come together and like I said this is like Clash trailers are absolutely [ __ ] welcome in any setting is people that refuse to do like me yeah it's people that refuse to actively do class treachery that are problematic also um your mic is really loud I think somebody might have put on the headset but um yeah no speaking of people that are like you know Traders and stuff like that for you know in this case it would be you know people like that you know basically throw you know uh their communities under the bus another thing I actually want to address um in relation to this whole thing with Zoe Zephyr is um uh I've talked about a uh tick tocker and she's also on um Twitter um as a person by the name of Kelly cadigan who is another trans woman but oh yeah but is pandering this be you know the whole like right-wing dog whistles you know talking about the woke agenda and how she doesn't believe that trans uh people or that uh trans youth should have access to uh gender affirming care like hormones God even though she herself transitioned medically transitioned at 15. so it's kind of a whole a kind of a whole you know only for me not for ye sort of because they're in a position of power so they're friends that are trans and everyone around them this Trends doesn't affect them yeah it's like I got what I want so the rest sort of a balance yeah but it's also like as well that it won't affect anyone of their class as well so it's not even just them thinking about themselves it's like well we're all sweet and it [ __ ] the poor she um yeah she wound up on a um so there's another trans woman that she was in a debate with in a three-hour stream um and an hour into it Kelly cadigan also um ended up um basically uh was spouting a bunch of like slavery apology out like she was basically saying she was basically saying how you know oh but how do we know that some slaves didn't like being slaves you know white people I absolutely taken advantage of blonde white girl yeah yeah if if everything became completely illegal they can still do everything because they have the money to get everything done yeah and fly off to any country to do it or even do it in the country by paying yourself enough and assign getting enough non-disclosure agreement signed that no one finds out the um uh but what they don't seem to get is that like you know this could end up still back buying for some of them there have been the killings of capitalists within capitalism might be enough because they don't fit within Society Germany yeah the Jews sorry sorry uh World War II is on my mind and I got a bit of got a bit of the old mustache man stuck in my throat but the um we agree the what's it um with this situation um you know like it's just massively traumatic like oh my God like the amount of [ __ ] like Beauty it would have been if I could have gone on puberty blockers it never happens that's amazing and then a transition could have been perfect and see we're not even talking about the idea of like surgery we're just talking because surgery is gonna always you know be something that they're gonna tell you to wait until you're 18 for obviously they're just talking about the hormones you know you know it's no different than you you know needing to you know take like a vitamin supplement as a kid you know the only difference is these vitamins well they might make you grow tits you know so yeah and it's just and so yeah and the fact that she's um going out there and then she's basically regurgitating the other type of rhetoric that the right wing says that people that support giving hormones to these kids are predators she's regurgitating and literally called this other trans woman that she was on the stream with a predator to her face on that girl's stream and you know so and it just and she also got to a point where despite all the peer-reviewed studies everything that was basic all the science that was backing up uh all this um she basically came down to the it really came down to her saying you know well I don't really you know no uh matter of peer-reviewed studies or scientific evidence will ever sway me from believing otherwise it's like y'all are a bunch of predators etc etc and it's just like so basically you would rather live in your bubble of ignorance you know you'd rather live in their little petty Bourgeois Bourgeois bubble that's what they [ __ ] want yeah so yeah and so she and it was and it was just also hilarious because I I kind of skimmed through the stream just to see if it would get any better it didn't it was a train wreck this girl obviously was not prepared and not only that she's going up against you know a string the streamer who is uh gotta who is working on getting a PhD like um girl I think this person knows a little bit more about these subjects than you do and it's just and then she also had the audacity to tell this girl it's just like oh when you just use a bunch of big words to just make you and a bunch of scientific you know stuff to make yourself sound smoke all of those spooky smart people yeah to get the uh you know my private property I use this to make uh uh I'm not really I'm not really surprised though because she is You know despite regardless of the fact that she's trans is irrelevant at this point she's a blonde white woman from Florida I believe so of course she's gonna be like but you know what it's like the way I look at it it's like okay sweetheart let's see how things go for you as you know as you keep pandering you know trying to Pander to these people but once they start you know sending all of us to the camps eventually they're going to be reminded that hey you're trans too so you know what that means yep so you know I love these people that try that try to think that by getting in bed with the fascists that that will somehow protect them I'm sorry that didn't exactly work for the Jewish collaborators in uh Nazi occupied Europe or the homosexual members of the of the sa yeah because they came back for him eventually so you're not gonna be protected forever foreign I would say that all this stuff is surreal except I'm more Angry if anything because I was warning that this is the inevitable outcome of America and instead of voting we should start working on building gun clubs for the marginalized it's so weird you know I was told that I was crazy schizo and now everybody's saying what I've gotten too tired to say all of a sudden that's the selective outrage of Americans right there right I think the problem is is that they're Americans to begin with yes exactly exactly which regret which comes back to my old point about how americanism is is a disease and it needs to be and it needs to be rooted out yeah it is just a season you know I've noticed like for people that live here can be quite contagious I don't know what what made me so volatile towards it like I think I think it was transitional because I was never like I was wrong so America was large ago I knew except I was constantly reminded that I wasn't one of the American Americans yeah yeah if you are yeah if you are Jewish if you were Muslim if you are trans if you are gay if you have some sort of disability yeah autism are you I'm one of those guys are you one of those schizoautists uh r word types Oscar Carson on the Fox News Network he told me about your types see I I end up hitting everything that these right-wing psychos hate like I'm I'm pansexual or gay you know basically in that I am you know I'm uh transgender I'm autistic I'm communist like I basically I'm gonna be like taken to the camps and like brought just to the inch of death revived killed you know just what they're gonna do like this is gonna be like some science fiction experiment where they're gonna just revive me nor numerous times um it's kind of like that and I know I'm gonna regret saying this but it's gonna it's kind of like gonna be like something out of Dune where uh what's his name uh uh ends up killing uh Duncan Idaho like you know over and over and over again as my partner keeps reminding me because they're a huge Dune nerd um so yeah it's going to be like that they're going to just do that to me because I you know I have so many levels of uh you know I have so many levels that they need to uh eradicate yeah so many layers in a yeah in a feature class you are armed I hope though right yeah my partner and I actually uh have a couple of guns and honestly we plan on getting more and I'm actually uh uh their brother-in-law actually um as much as I have certain issues with the Socialist Rifle Association on you know differences and like philosophy and stuff um he's on he and he's got a couple of gun clubs and stuff that he belongs to and one of them same exact position you have about the Socialist Rifle Association yeah he um but they've got a compound uh up near um up in the mountains that I still want to go train with them and stuff with and uh because uh yeah at least they you know the one thing I will say about them is that they do know how to organize up here so I think um I think one of the things that um that um is hard for people to swallow still um on my that's just so funny I say those words swallow I think it's hilarious that I can't that I talk that way because when I think about I talk very vulgar and I I don't know how that but anyway um uh that's what it is in the southwest we talk vulgar that's what we do [Laughter] we're a bunch of freaking stupid reactionaries and we're proud of it but actually that last part is actually true um I think that there's been a protracted fascist war on the public for a long time and I say this because I used to see weird [ __ ] happen on Facebook and you would report a fascist group on Facebook you would get suspended and then a Zionist group on Facebook you get you and your profile would disappear that's what I remember I also remember showing like the biggest taboo was mentioning that the number one reason why Jewish people are against Israel is because of the talmud and yet that was always scapegoated as the reason for Zionism when it's quite the opposite and I remember having such a terrible uphill battle that's actually why I gave up on Facebook because that was my only reason for being on Facebook was defend the Integrity of the talmud as an anti-zionist text I really didn't care to be there people would drag me into [ __ ] you know I knew Dr weisfeld was there I knew a friend of mine Gary was on there I was like [ __ ] that's what I brought on Facebook utilizing through wow better at using Facebook than other people but I don't know like what I saw I sold groups on Facebook that would accumulate um like with 50 000 people at once which it would be dedicated to destroying Islam and Judaism while while Satan you're you're a friend of Israel I used to see that [ __ ] and you know you I remember saying that you know it's gonna be it's gonna come to a point where the the Zionist fascists and the Nazi fascists are going to be more openly associating with each other because they're already doing it on Facebook then it's yeah and then they're still denying that it's happening particularly I've noticed that I'm surprised that it's actually the white nationalists that are more embarrassed by this is not the zionists the zionists a lot of them are actually very proud to be associated with you which you would expect the opposite because because actually the way that they would spin [ __ ] is um and this is white nationalists that were doing that oh we're not anti-semitic we're just anti-zientist and I remember having to explain to people you do realize David Duke never left the clan right you do realize that that's that not only did he never uh leave the clan he is the leader the actual leader like you were being deceived you're idiots and I used to think that they were idiots but I was like no when I look back at it the scary part is this is what they actually wanted to believe because if anybody had been sincere when I had made countless Facebook pictures signed the download just the reason why we're anti-zionists I would I would make stuff like this consistently and I would just [ __ ] on by it for people for it and I come to realize I was wasting my time this is what people want to believe because they're white they're Christian very important part they're Christian and by Christian I mean western church particularly yeah Protestant yeah usually Protestant a lot of Catholics are more of anything embarrassed by the past than a little actually professionally consistently apologize to you whereas with the Protestants they're individuals so it doesn't matter they're saving Christ Jesus name I'm originally I'm originally from a Protestant Branch Christian I can tell you everyone in there would always try to whitewash the even their own individual actions just like their own Collective actions and that's a good reason why I actually turned against a lot of my so-called Protestant friends in the past and hence why I got to where I'm at now it's even more what I find the most annoying about Protestants is not even their their zionists and their anti-semitic Zionism which is what I've been described in the whole position of their faith oh yeah um I would say that that's not even the most defensive part because actually that shit's often hilarious when it comes from them um what is I what I find disturbing is their anti-catholicism because when they complain about the Catholics it's the stupidest complaints I've ever heard I find myself ended up it's kind of funny because dealing with a Catholic I'm like you're stupid shut the [ __ ] up I'm your Superior now you know basically reverse Eugenics language that's what happens to me it's part of my own trauma um but but then when the Protestants would start talking [ __ ] about Catholics all of a sudden I feel so defensive for them because these are the worst critiques I could hear oh you know you understand well like we have the same Bible as yours accepted and added New Testament and so therefore we're more like you you no I'm glad that they have the Maccabees you stupid idiot I'm glad that they have that in their Bible because we have that in our old traditions oh yeah but they have these icons your scriptures tell you to have icons you [ __ ] idiots just say that my boobs hurt it was our text particularly that had the homophobic references for tribal reasons I should make that clear for tribal reasons and yet we're not all up to set about homosexuals and stuff but the Christians are and Jesus never says anything about it Jesus says some pretty gay [ __ ] I I swear like Jesus turned around and says that like you can't condemn a man for being in love with another man or something like that I can't remember the original question what Jesus what Jesus said was a man who sleeps with boys is someone whom is a problem that's called pederasty a pederastian homosexuality have been confused for each other for like thousands of years I don't know why because there's a lot of straight pedophiles out there right pedophilia I mean pedophilia itself doesn't give a [ __ ] about like sexuality normally they find Targets they look for the easiest targets sometimes they do and that's the ones that have the weird ideation about things but that kind of mental illness pedophilia is actually not the most common form the most common form of pedophilia is from upper class people and it's about power and so yeah it's all about power over certain groups and so they don't really give a [ __ ] like a lot of them will be this like the straightest of blokes in their relationships but they will rape both men and well boy girls and boys but men and women like you know they will rape anyone that's below them that they want to subjugate under power and the big thing with Christian bourgeoisie is they find it very important to get a hold of women that are uh not that they have their virginity but are around the age where they should like between the ages of about 9 to 16 around those ages they will work for girls like that and they will molest them you know the Epstein books basically you know yeah one thing yeah because one thing I was gonna say is social media when I was um let's just say I was going after a problematic revisionist who defended being abused I pretty much noticed that all these people who who Prey Upon whomever it's it's pretty clear they go towards the most impressionable and most reactive people and that's where sometimes I can easily Trigger or easily get a reaction on these people and I say no you shouldn't be you shouldn't be submissive to this wrong thing you should be able to speak out against any wrongdoings you should be able to speak or self-defend yourself actually I don't know I don't I don't really think it's connected but this just calls to mind that um so we have this scare about this Airy trans person with the rifle or whatever but Max has not been penalized at all I've noticed this nothing has happened to me and that that's that to me to me that is a Scion that is a direct obvious yeah not to mention I've never met one of these Maps people in person they're always online or apparently they show up to a demonstration out of nowhere that to me that sounds like provocative I am going to go out and learn to say I think that things like maps are in fact in Scion what is Maps oh gotcha now but but but and I and I and I say that also I'm bringing this up because all right so Epstein every I don't have to go into Epstein obvious doesn't anybody realize that Q Anon came into existence just to water down what Epstein is because yeah it's not just Democrats and see this is where this is where I get frustrated with with people is that you have to anticipate that this [ __ ] is planned in advance I know supposedly short-term profits yeah yeah I'm not a marxistent I'll buy that I'm sorry no there are long-term plans that meet that economy because those long-term elements to capitalism but capitalism predominantly sits within a short-term framework because planning out capitalism is quite difficult because of those of the conundrums that go on with the market system a market system requires flexibility and this way even when you see people apply these like style and error economic plans they're always kind of different because they have to there has to be and this really really wide element of flexibility like without capitalism operates like a an unknown factor that you've got to be uh uh you know the market is left to do its own thing this is what Xi Jinping puts it puts it is the invisible in the visible hand it's basically having this like balance between the haptic nature of letting the market do what the market does but then also having this [ __ ] hand that then comes in and deals with it this is what fascism tends to do um and so like Hitler's four-year plans was an example of this um whenever I got that idea from um but the uh the um uh capitalism is a very haptic system it's a very it's a very uh um what's it it's a system that's uh prone to Evolution I mean it is is a system that has survived so much of its own [ __ ] Like You Gotta Give it at least that medal of [ __ ] honor it knows how to survive a [ __ ] nuclear war kind of [ __ ] exist but actually no nothing survives the nuclear war but I meant that as more of like a an analogy it's like a [ __ ] approach like it [ __ ] it you know it can go through the [ __ ] rim of it um okay you you pointed out that um which is true you pointed out that basically the feds run the proud boys the proud boy ideology is anarcho-capitalism but this would mean that Erica capitalism was always designed to separate people from ashes the whole point of the Tea Party Movement was to get Americans into fascism I know why do you think they're referencing George Washington did you not see the Nazi parades in the 30s in the 40s in America yeah why do you think Trump referenced Jackson and not Hitler this is them being intelligent because America has a wealth of history that can either be turned fascist or is fascist of relationships hence the fascists did have a protracted battle to take over the freshest word in power it was Nazis versus social fascists [ __ ] Roosevelt was the Mussolini okay semantics what I'm saying is it was always their plan for things to be as they are now and as they're heading towards towards further like back in those days um the Mussolini I tried to complete Monopoly over fascism in America Then That season That season no chance of actually winning in their attempt to take over in my opinion and I think that's one of the reasons why when Roosevelt was asked to take them out he just Shrugged it off and said no let them try what they want to try and that probably would be the case because I mean they were a lot more Communists in America these Nazis are made up primarily of veterans they did have an army but like what was that like a hundred thousand in the united front and there was like what 40 000 of these Nazis so like good luck really good luck on atheist said it should be called the fascist States of America true yeah what's it there have been times it's been liberal like that can't be forgotten as a Colonial Country fascism is always there in its policies but that could be said about any country like we've got understand liberalism and fascism are not the same thing and so like the police is a fascist institution always is it a fascist institution because fascism in its most basic form is the militant fighting force of the bourgeoisie now it is more than that because of social fascism that must be taken into consideration it's moderate Wing but primarily the recognition of what fascism is as Stalin defines it is the militant wing of the bourgeoisie um and the representation of absolute Bourgeois domination within Society the complete dereliction of Bourgeois democracy um uh and so like what's it but Stalin also points out the fascism can exist democratically especially in its moderate form yeah but the uh was but with fascist um it exists consistently within the elements of society the military is a fascist institution yeah Colonial garrisons fascist institutions yeah please fascist institutions um the uh what's uh the the way in which comprador systems exist as the neocolonial structures in society are also Fashions although more often you see um this uh conflict occurring between these social fascists with the Venezuelans and people like that against the more outright is the the previous Colombian government because I think Colombia now has social fascists then um yeah although they're even less good at doing social fascism than the Venezuela yeah and that's saying something Colombia's been more right wing for longer if I remember correctly yeah I mean they both had a problem with it because I mean they're both they've both been privileged they've both been privileged little boys because they've both been privileged little boys because they're high on resources and their key strategic positions in the region same as Brazil same as Argentina um and to a lesser degree a very very very lesser degree Chile yeah they've been treated like a dick flannel compared to the rest of those like it must be accounted for yeah I'm trying to um get to is that so you have these fascist institutions the Liberals absolutely profligate upon these and the liberal Democrats as much as they originally started off as a very fascist party Jackson was no liberal um uh what's it they themselves have had a long period of positioning towards liberalism after the I think it was the was it during World War One uh that would have been um Woodrow Wilson was well son well son and yeah yeah they had the reforms at the end which was the massive liberal reforms for America that made America actually more liberal and um you got the uh Britain actually changed its constitution based off of the Hoover reforms afterwards wasn't it wasn't over after Wilson after the war uh 1922 Britain changed the yeah keep in mind Wilson was also um who was um not necessarily uh a a he wasn't exactly a person that was he was basically a a little bit more sympathetic to the whole idea of the Confederates and stuff like that because when he grew up in the South um so he kind of he's kind of part of the reason why Lost Cause mentality is kind of like you know a little more popular in America yeah than it than it was back then but then like the economic reforms that he did the basically modernized the way liberalism was perceived it was either him or the president after him uh might have been the one after him after the war um but there was a key set of reforms that changed basically the way the British Empire and its government which yeah actually pushed back some of the fascist plays Britain run its government so they absolutely must have been more liberalism to what America would change due to what the British were doing at that time and like the British were the leading country of capitalism in the century before and they were by 1922 the leading country in capitalism again yet they were adopting these policies from the Americans yeah although that hegemony of the British one last um I would still say though that the draconianists that we see visibly was it was always the plan to have this come out I just I I I'm not saying that for a fact necessarily but I don't know like I saw the writing on the wall that this is exactly what we see today is exactly what was going to happen and I had said so in the early 2010s um what's to be known as the like um fascism took a more pacifistic stance after the war and so while liberalism was introduced within the politics of these societies I.E like power went into the parliament in Britain more so than it was before I mean the Lord still to this day hold a mass amount of power but before then the parliament was this weak little sort of spec compared to the Lords and the monarchy um the Prime Minister had a lot of power but like the actual Parliament itself was not as powerful as the other two houses yeah and a lot of issues uh the uh change of that Constitution altercated power more into the house of Parliament and was therefore a more liberal policy however the introduction of these liberal policies was not a restoration of liberalism as Stalin correctly talks about in 1921 I think it is um the uh commentary uh uh what is it like statements on the current International situation or something along that line and um Stalin very much talks about how like the pacifists have introduced more Bourgeois Democratic policies within the society to make it seem as if liberalism was returned but however these social fascists the McDonald's people like this their game is just to get people enticed in the war machine if people enticed in the capitalist system uh so in which they can re-envelop them in that's what the social democracy of groups like the labor party and the um what's the Social Democratic policies of to be honest it really could come from any party in America at this time the Republicans and the Democrats were not really much more right wing or left wing than the others and actually in a lot of cases the Dems took the seat of more right wing with the Dixiecrats being the dominant yeah the Dems it wasn't until the 30s that started to really change um the city Democrats that come from like the Roosevelts and people like that themselves were fiscal conservatives at the time physical conservative is typically used by fascists it's not called themselves fascists I must point out yep yep I I I I I actually didn't know that was a cover I thought this conservative was an openly fascist term it's a cover-up like um what's that other [ __ ] paleo paleo conservative yeah oh yeah all right well guys I gotta get ready for uh work so I'm gonna go ahead and uh put uh in the Stream does anybody have any like uh closing remarks that they'd like to make long live the Jewish County is conspiracy all right um uh Cara do you have anything you want to add I'm with you right there I'm sorry home girl all right well that'll do it for for this one I'm uh red Pagan Nicole with uh Cara with net Nick later see y'all goodbye
RedPagan Network
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2023-04-27
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Bridging HPC and Quantum Computing - Panel
me yes you can hear you yes okay great um well uh yeah hello everyone and welcome and uh thanks for for attending um so my name is James bashka I am a um an engineer here at nurse that's coming at this very much from the classical Computing perspective and I thought um helpful just to very quickly um sort of set the context for for this panel um uh so my my work at nurse involves um supporting um real-time data analysis out of experiments so imagine um you have a particle accelerator or microscope and you want a very rapidly analyze data so you can make decisions about the experiment um and so I'm this is also my perspective around Quantum Computing obviously I'm not saying that this is the only perspective I just want to set some context um all right and so uh we have an awesome panel assembled here um and I think it would be uh really helpful if all the panelists sons kazra who has already introduced himself um so it would be really useful to have all the panelists introduce themselves and just briefly um give their background um I don't know if uh let me know if you have slides that you want to show we have probably time for one quick slide per panelist so um with that said um maybe I will start uh with uh let's see is Alex on the line yes so Alex uh yeah I do have one slide let me share real quick all right sorry you can hear me right I can hear you I assume everyone well it's very nice to be here I I appreciate this invitation to participate uh my name is Alex McCaskey for those of you I haven't met yet um a little bit of background about me so my research Focus over the last you know eight nine years or so has really been on uh languages compilers and Associated software tooling for heterogeneous Quantum classical Computing so really thinking about like uh you know kind of moving away from this remote execution model that we're so familiar with currently and what happens when we do start to integrate classical and Quantum Resources together in a kind of more familiar uh uh fashion like we've seen in recent heterogeneous classical systems can we really use a qpu as an accelerator to an existing heterogeneous Computing environment that's kind of what I've been focused on um just to kind of go down the list here I got my graduate degrees in pure physics at Virginia Tech where I was focused a lot on modeling electron transport across single molecule magnets and so this was an opportunity for me to really kind of hone in on some interesting kind of qubit potential qubit Technologies but really to kind of build out uh a lot of my background in software engineering and computational physics that I that I have since leveraged kind of in future or uh jobs after my graduate degrees were completed so after that I moved on to Oak Ridge National Laboratory I was born and raised in Tennessee so this was a very good fit for me uh I uh I started in 2014 as staff at in the computer science and math division uh at Oak Ridge National Lab in the computer science research group and then later on in a group that was formed for Beyond more technology so specifically thinking about things like Quantum and neuromorphic I did a lot of work in leading kind of a lot of the software efforts around Oak Ridge at the time I was the software research lead for the quantum Computing Institute at Oak Ridge National Laboratory I also had an opportunity to lead a couple of research thrusts in different doe projects that ORNL had received funding for specifically the quantum Computing application team project as well as the advanced research and Quantum Computing project both of these were kind of the stack QC project from Oak Ridge and then the aidqc project and both of these really focused on the two pictures you see on the right here xacc which is a Quantum programming model and Associated implementation for this idea of kind of heterogeneous Quanto classical Computing and C plus plus and then Q core came kind of as a kind of building off of that Foundation as a kind of first of its kind C plus plus compiler for Quantum Computing and kind of a single Source programming context so then after Oak Ridge I actually have been at Nvidia about a year uh coming up November 1st it's been about a year and I'm uh the quantum Computing software architect here at Nvidia and I'm the technical lead for this new uh programming model called Coda the quantum optimized device architecture where we're really trying to learn a lot from the Cuda world and kind of apply that in the uh kind of quantum Computing world so so I'll go ahead and stop that's kind of my brief background and like I said happy to be here um next up we have Nate okay let me see if I can hear a slide trying to see where this stop sharing button is here oh I think Alex has to unshare oh there we go got it okay I couldn't find it for a second there all right okay let me know if you can see this and if you can hear me I can see in here it's okay okay so hi everybody I'm Nick kamuki I am the CTO at queera Computing so I actually could have slide together to introduce query Computing uh but I will say a few things about myself I'm an atomic physicist physicist by training uh so I've I've been doing that for about 25 years since I met uh Steve Chu who uh helped invent laser cooling that's one of the core technologies that we use to build quantum computers here at queer Computing uh so we actually do a range of different things the company started in about 2019 we're up to about 40 people now and we do basically the full stack of quantum Computing all the way down to the hardware and the hardware that we build is based off of neutral atom technology so you can see an example of that down the bottom left uh corner of the slide where you can see a grid of uh little purple dots each one of those dots is actually a single atom that's been laser cooled and held in an optical tweezer and then moved on a two-dimensional plane to form a kind of quantum register and so this is kind of you know a very nice scalable platform for building Quantum Technologies and in particular for doing uh scientific applications today in the realm of quantum simulation so we can build machines right now that have hundreds of qubits and we're putting them on the cloud as we speak we'll have some news on that and in probably about a month or even just a couple of weeks if things go well and basically everybody on the phone right now can access these machines once that happens we also build software and this is another place where what query Computing does intersects well with high performance Computing and with super Computing we also build tools that allow us to understand how these Quantum processes that are so large in scale behave most of them truthfully are above the simulation threshold they're not easy to simulate with classical Hardware but we do have tools software tools that will help you to simulate our systems up to the 60 or 70 Cubit scale we also have people in-house that work on designing algorithms and fitting to applications on the specific Hardware as well so if you call us up say that you are interested in particular problem we have a team of people that will think hard about that problem and how to implement Quantum algorithms on this neutral item architecture that we built so you know we have a very solid scientific founding we work very closely with research groups at Harvard and MIT the company was actually founded by people who came out of Laboratories of Misha Lucan vladen bulatich Marcus Greiner and Dirk England as well and you can right now start using these machines with us so our product lineup consists of their Quantum processor we're launching our first device which is called the killer over the next couple of months and then also the software tools that help with that so you can look online and find all of those kinds of things but I think I will not take too much of the panel's time up with more introduction for myself or my company and hand it off to the next thank you nice um next up we have Anna hello let me share my slide really quickly okay so all right so hello my name is Anastasia uh would call I go for Anna uh so I am a career scientist at the career texture group um at amcr lbnl um so I um just we'll quickly tell you about my background I don't don't have any background uh in Quantum Computing I got my uh digital design and electronics degree uh at uh National Technical University at Kiev uh and then I got a microelectronics master in Montpelier France and then I I had my PhD in um HPC architecture simulation in France as well so as you can see I don't not necessarily a um uh Quantum uh scientist but uh when I joined the lab I was uh I expressed my interest and and been lucky enough to be invited to participate in um Quantum projects so uh briefly my uh research interests are um so I'm I'm working on designing the uh control hardware for Quantum and um among other efforts my current project include the advanced Quantum test by uh where I'm developing Quantum Isa as kind of an efficient um software and Hardware interface so if you ever heard about Quasar so I am uh who is working on that um so I'm also interested in uh in the computer architecture group that is now uh lead by John shelf um so as you well know he he's working a lot in the Beyond Wars uh uh Technologies and architecture so superconductor and electronics is one of the um of the potentially promising technology so I've been involved in this so we have a super tools IR program and uh within this program we also exploring uh if we can you know do cryogenic control for Quantum uh the equation or something like that um and yeah so I'm also interested in different architectures at the edge um and uh and we are using a lot of fpgas uh and new technologies related to the fpgs to uh building the prototypes and uh um exploring different architectures so that's my broad background so here we go thank you very much um next up we have uh Ravi hey everyone let me just share a slide real quick can you hear me well I can hear you and I can see the slide great um so um thanks everyone for having me I'm Ravi Naik I'm I'm in experimental physicist uh by background and practice um I did my PhD at the University of Chicago uh in 2018 and um they're my work focused on multi-mode circuit Crown electrodynamics so specifically I'm using resonators as uh as a Quantum memories um uh here at Berkeley lab I'm the head of measurement at the advanced Quantum test bed which you heard about uh from Castro's talk um and so we'll go too much into detail there but just to highlight some of the research efforts that I've been involved in um as part of the aqt um generally three broad areas Quantum control so being able to enable the sort of Novel types of of control that are capable on superconducting Quantum processors including work with ternary Quantum logic and the multi-cubic gates that cash were highlighted earlier um uh furthermore we've also been working on understanding how uh how noise affects Quantum processors one of the most important issues uh in my opinion uh with Quantum processors um and along these efforts uh both being able to Benchmark Quantum processors and understand uh how these errors behave in the context of algorithms on cells um and along those lines uh we've been working on techniques to sort of optimize how these algorithms perform given the capabilities of our processors and also um the noise that affects them thank you thank you very much um and uh finally we have Norm uh one second I can see the slide you can or cannot I can I can't all right can you hear me okay hi I'm Norm Tubman uh thanks for having me on the panel it's great to be here um I'm a research scientist at NASA Ames I have two or three quick slides uh so uh a lot of people introduce their background my background as an undergrad was computer science I did my PhD in physics at Northwestern and then I did post-docs both in physics and computational chemistry uh all my work is more on the computational side uh so I've been working on algorithms to solve chemistry physics problems lattice models things like that things that have to do with hamiltonian simulation classically and in that regard uh you know I spent a long time working with HPC resources trying to figure out how to optimize these algorithms where the largest systems were the most complicated problems we can solve on the classical side and in the and I have some examples on the slide of various molecules we've looked at over the years we've done some having Benchmark heavy benchmarking some simple molecules like Benzene on the bottom left there we've done some more complicated transition metal stuff like our poor friend in the middle there and even larger like organic Frameworks and things like that so there's a lot of Material Science problems in chemistry and you know physics lattice models that you know I've been interested in in my studies a quick summary of what you know I'm working on right now in terms of papers and trying to understand how all this fits on to qualm computers uh you know I'd say probably I've listed some three questions here that have been sort of the focus of my research in the last few years and a lot of it's on where's this interface between what we can do with classical Computing and where will Quantum Computing really pick up and help us push forward into new directions and I have a couple papers listed here that sort of represent various you know activities that I do in terms of my research which is developing new classical algorithms an example of something we called ASCII which is a configuration interaction type method that we developed in the last few years we developed new Quantum algorithms in my group so I have an example here that I worked on with people on lbl that uses various applied math techniques to try and accelerate the way we can get convergence to ground States and other properties of chemical systems I do a lot of benchmarking with large groups of people who have their own classical or Quantum algorithms and we try and compare the efficiency of algorithms trying to understand what the state of the art is and I also develop a lot of Open Source software with various collaborators on the side which I have here on the bottom left an example of quantum Monte Carlo code we wrote called qmc pack a couple of years ago so that's a quick summary of me and the different research techniques that I'm involved with thank you um all right so um thanks uh to the panel for introducing themselves um I I've said in the chat that I encourage the audience to ask questions in the um in the chat as we now transition to the discussion part um I also I would like to encourage the audience to raise their hand if they want to ask a question and we can um uh you know Shepherd this um share with the questions um however maybe I will start by asking sort of somewhat of a broad question that's relevant to nurse to the whole panel um and so in the future uh what role do you see HPC playing um around designing building and operating quantum computers uh using quantum computers to solve hard or useful problems um and how do you see this changing when we transition from nisk to the for tolerant regime and so what I'm going to do is maybe I'll just call on one of you and but I encourage the whole panel to to join in the discussion I call on other people as well so maybe I will actually uh just start and ask Anna if if you have any thoughts on these points uh so I will start from the end so you you said what's gonna change um you know when we transition from this to uh something different so I think that the the important um the main difference uh is going to be that the way it's working right now and the way it's probably gonna work and the nisk most of the nisk uh air computers it's very experimentalist kind of oriented so it's different from the way that people are using uh nurse resources as I understand um so being like an experimental uh Computing means that that you need to have a lot of support from the experimentalist from the physicists so you cannot do this alone uh you need to have you need to have help um then uh yeah so there's no kind of clear uh protocols there is no clear standards most of the um most of the uh problems that I demonstrated right now they are oriented at like proof of concept and not in actually solving the problem um and um and the metrics that you know I kind of I used uh for those experimental Computing are also oriented into like uh exploring the quality of those computations and not actually you know uh Computing like solving the problem so um all of those you know uh points include uh we won't be able to transition or well not not because of that well and those are the kind of major differences that I see in between like the experimental Computing and uh like the regular Computing so um once we once we transition we'll we'll see like something different so I'll just stop talking here yeah I'll take all the time if not does anyone else want to uh volunteer to give an answer before I call on someone foreign I'm happy to say something uh I mean you gave a multi-parp question I'll try and say a couple things about the first part um so you asked um what's the role of HBC in designing building and uh operating quantum computers and uh you know I'm not part of a bunch of different uh collaborations uh we're part of you know one thing that I'm a part of is a a doe Center at fermilab it's called sqms and uh we're using various levels of computing not all of it's HPC but no uh no multi-core processors at the very least and some of it is HBC to do uh different parts of Designing a clone computer there uh one aspect I'd say is that uh we're looking at Material science questions and this isn't my expertise per se but people are starting to do density functional Theory calculation phase field calculations within our Center to try and help experimentalists uh build better Hardware to do better design of materials and I think that's that might not be underappreciated but it gets less press in terms of where HPC can really help out but they're definitely Material Science problems that we're interested in the other aspect I'd say that we're looking at now and this you know comes up a lot there's a there's a lot of different architectures out there and within our Center at sqms we're looking at QD systems and trying to design Gates and and you know efficient gate sets and the pulses for these Gates also takes a quite a bit of computing power so I just want to bring up those two things that uh you know have been really discussed within some of the things that I'm working on recently but there's certainly a lot of other places uh where some of the other panelists might discuss in terms of Designing new algorithms uh and testing out q-day architectures also yeah actually maybe I can follow up there I think Norman had a grab both of most of these points but I can think of kind of basically five areas that the quantum Computing and HPC or Superior Computing kind of intersect one is you know doing things with a quantum computer that you would otherwise do with HPC systems and I think there's some great pie charts from the usage of nurse facilities that that really help you understand like what areas to to attack or things like that the second one is and and people touched on this already simulating the performance of quantum computers and using them to affect the design and so forth uh the third is hybrid Quantum computing and um you know I'm not sure anybody's really put their finger on the exact use case or need for having massively scaled classical Computing working in tandem with Quantum Computing but I think it's probably not long before we do that um and you know that's essentially using high performance Computing to make Quantum Computing better in a sense you could also do hybrid in a different way which is using the quantum computer to make the high performance Computing better and I think there you might think of quantum Computing as essentially being a hardware accelerator that I'm very specific problems you know might be able to give an advantage obviously we're not quite there yet but the fifth one and I think this one is really interesting especially now is that supercomputing facilities form a great uh kind of framework for figuring out how to construct things like user facilities where you have you know scientifically literate people who are using these these kind of Novel machines but need a lot of interaction with the people on the ground who are building the hardware to try to find a way to make it work and I think that's that's actually probably the biggest asset that we have in working together is that we already have a preformed idea of how to make those interactions between the users and the hardware developers really work so that's my Spiel that's that's my five areas that's really interesting put that on I tend to agree with everything that you just mentioned uh uh I think that um when I see when I heard this part with this question first I thought all right building designing and operating Quantum Computing where does HPC fit into this and I think in the near term you're really going to be reliant on HPC and multi-gpu architectures to allow programmers to interface with that potential uh Quantum resource in an emulated way right and so uh starting to think about uh you know what kind of algorithms I can start to experiment with maybe they're kind of purely Quantum algorithms but maybe they are hybrid that incorporate some kind of pre and post processing on GPU resources GPU and CPU resources but the HPC system really sits in as an emulated qpu right and so you're starting to see this with some of the uh the simulation technologies that have come out in the last few years you know one that I was involved in at Oak Ridge was this tensor Network Quantum virtual machine simulator that kind of leveraged different you know tensor decompositions to kind of scale out how much how many qubits you could potentially consider in a simulation but now of course with Nvidia we have you know great back-ends for existing simulators with Q Quantum and Q tensor net and Q State Bank and so I really think that in the next five years five to ten years potentially that the HPC resource the classical HPC resource will be this perfect kind of you know uh testing ground for us early on in algorithm development but also in programming model development how do I interface users with that combined resource uh how do I interface with them and provide them an efficient programming model foreign [Music] what do you like to give maybe uh your your um uh more experimental oriented uh perception uh yeah I'd be happy to um so along the lines of I'll give this perspective uh specifically for superintendo doing qubit platforms um from our perspective um uh what makes I guess uh arguments different than uh sort of many of the the atomic type of qubits um is that all of our qubits are unique in the sense that uh they're macroscopic objects um and to do this they can have variation due to uh fabrication inaccuracy and really getting this uh designed to uh performance chain secure I think requires a really accurate simulations especially if you start going to scale and we quickly find that when we design these things if we try to lay out you know many qubits on a single chip it can quickly get uh very computationally expensive to simulate the electromagnetics of that system and you know we have proxies and we can do it quite well we can do it we think we've shown with our performance below the one percent level and even down to the point one percent but if we want to get to the point where we're making fault tolerant quantum computers we really need to push that even further and push that on scale even further and that can be a challenge I um will be able to do that with HPC I think we need to be smart without we need some combination of of proxies uh that can scale to larger systems uh and also be able to throw a lot of computer to edit so so what you say that that is the biggest challenge uh for scaling Quantum Hardware in terms of just number of qubits or gate depth um or are there other um scaling challenges that you foresee so I think you're pointing at what is the central issue is that um that we have good ways of understanding um how errors are at the local scale and we really have a good sense of of being able to optimize on that scale um and while we can push a bit further you know we're already meeting um thresholds on that uh for for uh for uh Gates and and Q performance on on the local scale however um understanding how errors uh transform evolve as we scale up uh it's really challenging um and in particularly for supporting qubit some because the environment for each qubit can be considerably different um and the qubits themselves can have variants um uh being able to predict how that will scale is it can be a real Challenge and if we're trying to build say you know a thousand qubits per logical qubit then transitioning to that that fault tolerant limit may be more challenging than just understanding what the local uh air landscape is right um thanks um maybe this is a good segue to uh Nate um can you give us your perspective about um neutral um atoms and why you believe in this technology yeah obviously I put a big personal bet on it so I you know I might give a little bit of a biased response but uh uh you know I in some sense um some of the strengths are are Robbie alluded to which is the uh with neutral atoms we don't have to work too hard to make every atom identical in fact you know that's that's the way they come by Design uh so you know we we don't spend as much time learning every individual qubit in fact we're prone to throw them away and uh every quarter second or so and and load up some new ones with the confidence that you know very much like the second is defined by oscillations and Adam's uh you know our qubits are that good we have other problems uh with scaling things up so I mean I I don't want to give you a too optimistic of a view it's very easy for us to go up to even now thousands of atoms is something that we can build today what's hard for us to scale up is is the control of those atoms and to do so in a way that that allows us to to get to High Fidelity gates with all of those qubits uh so programmability is really a challenge for us and so much so that the first devices that we're making now are not fully programmable devices we're using them for Quantum simulation things like that and in fact we don't have a single control Channel per per atom in our machine right now uh but we're working hard to do that so you know we we have a an uphill battle in that sense of um now that we have been able to find a way to get to very large scale uh now we have a different kind of engineering challenge which is how do you control all those qubits so we have to look into new uh Hardware to do that we have people on our team who are using integrative photonics which is itself kind of an edge technology uh to try to build uh laser beams that can control atoms precisely enough to do High Fidelity Gates and do that at scale um you know we've the technology is still moving very fast we had a big Discovery uh within the last year of how to move atoms around in real time and preserve their Quantum coherence uh that's that's huge because it does it means that we no longer need a single laser control Beam for every atom in the device but we can move them to the control means so you're starting to see some of the kinds of things that that were essential for making classical Computing move forward uh which is you know essentially how do you Multiplex control uh in a quantum computer and now that we're starting to solve some of those challenges I think we're overcoming the primary hurdle of scaling up control in in the atomic systems so I mean the simple answer is it's easy to go to scale um so big that you know we got to build the machine to see what it's going to do I think that's exciting it means that that every machine that we put out um you know it's it's Unique on Earth uh even super Computing facilities can't tell you what they're going to do um that's exciting uh but the next step is is to try to get the control in so that we can actually fully program the devices right thank you um and actually this is um there's a question um directed uh to Alex in the chat um and I think it can actually be generalized to to other people so please chairman if you have any uh thoughts um um so the the question uh sings the prices of cool Quantum um and then asks so then Kareem asks um uh if you can open source examples um and then also mentions that uh resources like the manual um uh scarce with um with these examples um so maybe also more broadly speaking um I think a lot of us in HPC have this worry that you know it's very hard to find resources about um learning Quantum uh Computing so maybe Alex you can answer the question and then if other people want to Channel with their perspectives yeah no definitely um so you know I'm I'm not on the Q Quantum engineering team per se I'm more on the coda programming model side but I do work with those folks all the time and I do know that there are public examples uh they're under GitHub under the Nvidia organization uh so you can go check those out the the figures that were the Benchmark figures that were shown this GTC I believe are currently uh in you know somebody else probably uh you know one of the product people could correct me but they're they're still internal um but I'm sure that they'll probably be you know open sourced at some point in the future um and I'm sure that there will be a you know python example for that as well no I think that the kind of overall documentation and textbook question for interfacing classical HPC domain computational scientists with Quantum is a really good question and I think that you're starting to see it with you know a few efforts here and there um I think that one resource I like to point people to is the the quiz kit textbook is a really nice resource for kind of learning a lot of the early uh kind of textbook algorithms and algorithm implementations out there and then kind of taking that and porting it to other Frameworks is relatively straightforward um but I think that it gets that more of a more general question about kind of Workforce Development um and you know kind of developing programming models that are at a high enough level that kind of get us away from the kind of core Quantum circuit construction kind of methodology and kind of bring it more toward the you know typical types that we're interested in like integers and floats and can I do algorithms on integers and floats in the quantum register instead of the classical register but then also kind of thinking about presenting being these hybrid algorithms hybrid Quantum classical algorithms in more of a application-centric way and abstracting Away the details of the underlying Quantum you know Isa essentially right like the the gate set you know those are things that we're currently working on at Nvidia and I know a lot of people are working on uh you know kind of across the field but that I think will be necessary to really kind of bring the existing HPC domain computational science and research community on board with leveraging Quantum co-processing in these existing heterogeneous workflows yeah thank you um any anyone else have uh perspectives on this if not I'm going to actually ask Norma question um are a variational algorithms ever going to work at scale and and with that we mean show Quantum Advantage um and and also are there alternatives to hybrid algorithms sorry are they alternative hybrid algorithms that are promising hi um okay uh this is I feel like this is a tricky question um and there's going to be a lot of opinions on this and I know cuera has some papers on this also uh where they've tried to do some variational stuff at pretty large system sizes so no pressure you're just gonna have to predict the future for everybody yeah um what I'd say is I think there's a lot of different promising routes uh in which variational algorithms might be uh useful uh right now I'd say other than well let's just say if we were to focus strictly on say quantum chemistry applications trying to uh see where things are right now on uh Quantum Hardware I don't think I've seen uh almost anything on superconducting Hardware at least that's more than like 10 to 16 qubits and if if that's indication it might be quite hard to scale up to order system sizes uh but that being said uh we do have a lot of tools on which we can optimize in the presence of noise there's no inherent reason we can't scale larger and I do think it's a fundamental algorithm that is needed now and might also be needed in the future even when we do have full tone Hardware we're going to need to do state preparation quite broadly there are lots of different algorithms to do it variational algorithms still might be prominent even as we go forward with Quantum Hardware uh advancing but I also think there's no part of the question was are there a lot of different strategies uh that in which you maybe change up the algorithm or change things a little bit to make these sorts of algorithms more useful I think there's a lot to be said by pre-training where you start making use of clever classical algorithms to get circuits that are are somewhat optimized they get you off Baron plateaus and these other sorts of things that have been talked about in the literature and then you use quantum computers as a refinement step there's also been discussions of using uh no uh decent wave function or decent State preparation as input into other sorts of algorithms out there such as Monte Carlo techniques and things like that so I am optimistic that we will be able to see some Quantum Advantage uh with variational algorithms and I'd say the main X Factor isn't necessarily whether it will be useful or not it's whether there are other algorithms that overtake it in some sense when we go to The Fault tolerant error whether or not you know and this is part of my research to some extent I develop new algorithms all the time other people are developing new algorithms all the time it's not a static field so if we're to just freeze all the other algorithms right now I bet variational algorithms will have you know will eventually cat will eventually be extremely useful in the future if people keep developing new algorithms especially as we move to The Fault on our error we might have a whole another set of techniques that we can use there are already a lot of other algorithms also that can be used in Fault tolerant error so it's hard to predict the future but I'm still investigating it and I know a lot of other people are still trying to push to make variational algorithms as useful as they can be for both near-term and fault tolerant Hardware right thank you um and and I also noticed that uh Kareem has turned this video on so maybe uh do you have a a follow-up question um and also would uh encourage the rest of the panel to chime in uh with perspectives on variation algorithms um thank you thank much I appreciated about that maybe if I follow up with the algorithm what do you think about qpe taking charge or replacing a variational uh algorithms at some point um I think the issue with qpe uh and this is you know I've written a lot of papers in this direction and I know there's even been some more pretty uh substantial papers that have come out in the last few months by other groups um we're gonna have to do state preparation to make Quantum phase estimation work uh to do state preparation you have to do something to get a good ground state it might be adiabatic State preparation it might be some form of qaoa it might be variational Quantum eigen solver I don't know but I know all of those have significant computational bottlenecks and it's not clear to me which one of those or if there's something else that comes out in the future if I'm missing something right now those are like three of the Mainstay prep algorithms I deal with on a regular basis I honestly don't know what's going to happen with those three algorithms in The Fault tolerant error there's a lot of discussion that you're not going to want to do variational algorithms because of all the measurements you have to make when you're in default tolerant error and that the time Evolution type algorithms like qaoa like uh adiabatics data preparation might be better but I still think it's up in the air a little bit and I still think the variational approaches might make even if you don't need them necessarily to make the shortest circuits possible your default torn error you can go as long as you want you still have other issues to consider like how long do your algorithms run just because you're in default torrent error doesn't mean that you're going to wait two years for an algorithm to finish so you might want still want short circuits you still might want to do the shorter circuit you can you might be only be able to get to that with a variational type of algorithm so there's lots of trade-offs that um there's lots of trade-offs to consider and I'm I'm still investigating myself within my own research to try and figure out the answer to that question no thank you um I think uh like looking at the time I would like to ask casra uh the final question and and perhaps this is a bit of a question I suppose that's a little bit more peppy so um I'd be interested to hear uh what your perspective is um so in for classical Computing um the bang for your buck I.E the return on investment has been proven and I would be really interested to hear your perspective what that would look like for Quantum computing um can you elaborate a little bit exactly what you mean by bank for your buck oh wow okay so the um so you can kind of Imagine a um this idea of an HPC facility is a user facility right so it represents a fairly large investment um of money and um it returns um both signs at scale and also science that can't otherwise be done um if you now replace the the um HPC the classical HPC facility with either Quantum augmented facility or a Quantum facility what does your return on investment look like um okay um let let me try to answer the closest question that I think applies uh it's um look we are and we have been over the last couple of decades in in very uncertain uh Waters when it comes to Quantum Computing right uh it took more than two decades since the proposition of quantum Computing for the very first algorithms to come out to start coming out in the form of Shores algorithm and uh search algorithms and whatnot um and still to this day the best quantum algorithm designers um don't really have good intuition for exactly how to design Quantum algorithms right this is basically we're still very much learning and uh the answer to your question really largely does depend on on algorithm development what we do know for sure is that there are complexity classes that kind of separate uh Quantum heart and Quantum Museum classical heart and and all of that and um there we do know that there are uh you know classes of problems that will be vastly easier solved through Quantum Computing um what we don't really know is exactly you know all of that landscape in detail where are the boundaries and especially in the nisk era and as we approach fault tolerance where are those boundaries where do hybrid algorithms uh lie what role do they play um and um you know there are a lot of people who have no go theorems and talk about how things won't scale and won't work out and the reality is you know history shows us that it always looks like that until somebody does it right and so uh we uh we're basically uh we're big Believers that we will be able to access those complexity classes and uh bang for buck will not be really a question um how we get there really is the question uh and and the process and that is not at all clear and we all have to kind of work together to figure that part of it out oh thank you I think I really like that answer um so um I think we are at the top of the hour um I want to once again thank all the panelists uh for that time and their interesting uh perspectives and their expertise um and I would like to thank the the audience for um you know having uh showing interest and and and you know just attending and asking questions all right um back to you Katie and Dan can I just say one thing so I want to thank all the panelists also this was a really great discussion and um I really appreciated uh a month many others the the one comment about a place like nurse uh and Department of energy having this infrastructure that that we have the the knowledge and the the know-how and and we you know we interact um with the end user with the person trying to trying to do the computation and the the people that are actually running developing and really have the detailed knowledge of the systems and so we do have a long history of that and I think that will be valuable going forward and I should have mention earlier one thing I forgot to mention when I spoke earlier is you know this um this is part of a larger effort that nurse God does which is looking at all kinds of advanced Computing Technologies from both the near-term and media term and the long term it's kind of the longer term outside but that group is led by Nick right get nurse and they really did that group really does excellent job looking looking at these things and so if you have questions in this area or even other HPC technology areas be sure to reach out to Nick it'd be happy to talk to you about it thanks yeah thank you Richard and uh thank you again to all the panelists and Johannes for moderating the discussion uh we'll have a 16 minute breakdown we'll we will be back at 20 past the hours for uh for our technical
NERSC
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2022-11-09
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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The Pyrenees Peaks | Freeride World Tour Andorra w/ Paddy Graham
[Music] welcome to our Dora this to facecheck for the freeride world tour in or dino or Kali's as you can see behind me this here is the face Quinta metros we're gonna go talk to some of the riders and see what they think of the conditions how they're going to pick their lines and as you can see it's snowing so there might be some good conditions coming up find out but do you like the face is a I mean it looks like it has a lot of features in that aspect it's really good because there's so many options mm-hmm a little bit of snow you can see a lot of different life choices this soup easy to finally take up the tricks and stuff no that's good to find like technical skiing because it's transportation yeah yeah it looks like there's just like these islands of features how do you sort of assess and pick your line I like to inspect the whole venue and look at like all the different features you could hit so then we show up here tomorrow it's like one side of the venue gets really good snow and the other one gets scoured by the wind you know what to do and you don't have to make up a plan on the fly so trying to keep like all your options open so you can look where the good snow is you ski it and not go where the bad snow is hopefully you come here and look at the face and do you like cheesy line stood here or do you like just sort of assess the face and then you go down and sort of do your homework definitely more of an assister homework situation hmm yeah especially here because we've thrown the shots that we've got like photos of the face and stuff are a lot better than what we can actually see right now so you've got so you've got drone photos just check out the aerials yeah yeah so we know what has takeoffs and what's just a rock wall mm-hmm there's so many little features everywhere but I think they're the trickier a bit is to find your line sometimes you get some big venues but it's actually quite easy to find an I now like there's so many places where you can go so we've got two starts for the venue what what altitude are we at here so the first out which is really at the top over there at the top of the crew ah it's 2570 meters and the one which is slightly lower which will give access all to the skis left of the venue is 40 meters right below so the face is about three end of our vertical drop [Music] so talk to Jess up the mountain and she said I'm just gonna come down and do her homework so gonna go find out what she's looking at and see how she chooses her line for tomorrow I've basically just been trying to line up photos that they've given us of the venue and yeah line them up with the the drone the drone photos as well so it kind of gives you more of a point of view situation so you can understand where you're going so I try and build a line on the main flake on the main bug photos first mmm once I've looked at everything nice and closely about possible here's try and build a line on the main face and then go to the drone photos or flip it around and kind of imagine myself skiing down it mm-hmm because like you can look at it that now but it's completely no use to you at least you have visualized yourself skiing it so you're building you're like doing a 3d model in your head from all these images and then yeah visualize your run and then it's it's go time and then it's car time any any pre-comp traditions not really I just have I have to make sure that my my harmonica and my poker chip and my evil eye are in my bag they Jones yeah they go with me everywhere we're at the base of the mountains thing we can't actually get up to the venue there's been an estimated 30 to 40 centimeters falling we've had a lot of wind so that means that the face the kingdom I trust is going to be filled in nicely which means even better conditions for athletes to perform in if we can get a break in the clouds tomorrow the competition is confirmed and with all this fresh snow it should be a good show keep our fingers crossed and hope for less wind
Red Bull Snow
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2020-03-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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Crips Gang Member Blue Boy Asked To See Him, (Sing Sing Prison)
i was in shame sing with blue boy and i thought you was talking about another blue boy but you talking about the the guy the same guy that everybody knows not that everybody knows but the blue boy i killed davis you know what i mean our shave man got to be one of the hardest inmates in new york state like that ass if you look at blue man he doesn't even give you the impression you know that this guy is the most dangerous dude who probably new york state [Music] i made a video that looks at this evening he looks honestly like some people see me don't see anybody and be like son look like a bird yeah but look so deceiving you judging a person just off a camera but when i seen blue i said the same thing he looked like a bird respectfully you know like not a bird but like he looked like a humble dubo what a gangster supposed to look like i always say that you know what i'm saying like that hardened look you know if you look at that dude he looks like a regular joe like a good boy yeah you know what i mean and dude this dude is the most dangerous dude man straight up and down to new york state and i'm going to tell you a story of why i say that you know what i mean yeah um um not only did we speak on on how bluish exposed me actually to to my culture and not only my culture all kind of coaches black cultures and all of that but the way i had it with him was that the way he had it with me rather was that when he let me materials for me to return it back to him i had to know the dates and everything about what he was ready to ask me and if i didn't know it he would send me right back with the materials and i had to make sure that i studied it if i wanted more material you know what i mean but she had [ __ ] loads and [ __ ] loads of good stuff even even i showed you you know certain things that he wrote um once i got here i told you that i have pulled out my jailbox and i was going through it and he exposed me to these micro films and these microfilms is faces of real revolutionaries man campos the f.a.f land louis barrios if you know those names you know what i'm talking about so he exposed me to these cases uh to raw library put in things like this um does this got a dictate on it does not have a date on it [Music] yeah but you get these throw library he put me on all of this man and uh he even wrote by himself right it says keep the struggle because without struggle there's no process all right and this is his own handwriting and he even signed it blue rebel which is what he was known for when he was machete now everybody knows him now for being crypt and there's a story that i heard i don't know how true it is but you know how when you're confined and the bloods get together and then they start doing the uh people almighty people they start doing that wrong i mean they say roll calls and uh you know blue was confined and that roll calls pissed anybody off i ain't gonna lie correct facts you facts respectfully you're doing the whole roll call and everybody's tight but that's how you know what they're militant there's a reason for that it's keeping their bros on their p's and q's and keeping everybody else suppressed you know what i mean that's a militant strategy and it works so i guess blue boy got tired of that [ __ ] and he just got up one time and was like yo shut the [ __ ] up i did the same thing before facts yeah he knows when he you know he's a smart dude you know what i mean so he know he's like you know what i'm [ __ ] who's just like what the [ __ ] you mean you clip yeah i'm [ __ ] y'all want b let's bring b i'm [ __ ] this this new blue made himself [ __ ] he made himself great then had the dudes of the real chris give him the lessons later on like well he said he's [ __ ] let me just give him the lessons here because he had the strength though he was putting it in so they were like himself he said yo i'm sorry you got [ __ ] i'm [ __ ] wash up like out the blue this is what i hear you know what i mean i don't know how true it is but i can see that happening because i think i heard him say the same thing yeah he's not just the type to to to being [ __ ] like that you know what i mean there's got to be a reason a movement behind it but he's a real strong guy man you know what i mean um i'm gonna give you an incident this story is going to blow your mind of how i really know who blue is so here i am in shinxing i'm coming out from the visit and the visit was somebody that was one of blue's partners in that jail at that time and the thing was um chino and chino used to hang out with blue and there was a right-hand man and this other um um chinese kid used to be with him and blues pops those who like the call now he should be in the flat short time so anyway i'm just thinking once time i'm coming out i'm coming out loose pops his father his father blue spots was in the same joint as blue in the flash right next to them it was there was neighbors dude they were neighbors so i'm coming up to visit and i'm with this docino now chino when we go into the block chino stops for a minute he starts talking with somebody in the cells so they had opened the a block you know what i mean so he can get in so when he he went inside there's a cop that's coming out right you know don't enter his block he's talking to somebody over here on the right side and the cop comes him in the cop kind of like went under you know where the gate goes at the same time so they like bump each other you know what i mean so the duke church like yo man [ __ ] and the cop is like what you know what i mean like he posted up on real real [ __ ] bad white boy like like a real [ __ ] you know what i mean he was one of those so he turns around and he's like what so as soon as chino was going to be like yo what you want a fruit though what the [ __ ] cop came as soon as he he didn't even finish his sentence cop came up behind chino threw him in a yoke shoot and took him down like in a second had his hands behind the machine staying like stuck like you know what i mean like what the hell just happened here they just do just in one second might do like bang they wanted them took them down [ __ ] right so she know they had took him he was like yo what the [ __ ] he's beating with the dude whatever but anyway they take him to the hole whatever the case may be they send me back when they send me back ecuadorian kid out that i was working with at that dr because i was working at the uh at the nut house at the infirmary well you know at the nut house right right so he comes over he's like yo he looks scared my [ __ ] he's like yo blue boy wants to talk to you i'm like yeah for what he's like yo we found out about the chino [ __ ] he said you was dead and he's mad at you to do nothing i'm like he's like yo he wants you to go down to the movie theater now you know sing sing you know what i mean it's a real movie theater you know real movies whatever movie came out friday friday since they were showing this [ __ ] i don't know what plug they had the bootleg so when the movies would come on all the doors were shut down because all the smoke would go up so the police would shut it back how to keep the smoke inside the theater you know what i mean yeah like you guys died right next to it was a little boy a chalkboard with a light and [ __ ] used to put their seat number that was selling the drugs they had the weed and and dog food and all that and be like i 90 got the dog food and they'd be flicking it so now you know that i-90 you look over there that's the dog food over there and then the one on the left same thing choo-choo b-25 i got that smoke b-25 is over here so that's how they did that [ __ ] you know what i mean so i go down to the theater i'm like already like boom the ecuadorian kid he's already i think he's salvadorian or something like that he's from long island and he was like yo blue once you talk to me find out you do not yo listen man you know this guy you gotta approach him different you know what i mean like he was kind of coaching me my [ __ ] on how to approach this dude and i'm like and shook him i got to be real i'm looking after his face and i know i'm in some type of trouble i don't know what the hell i did i didn't do [ __ ] i know i'm in trouble so i go down there and shoot mind you the other bros which was those the those that was in my block was either key block or wasn't even coming out the b side was the [ __ ] that was popping so all the [ __ ] i was going on over there it was it was crazy so he comes up and he's like yo so i go to the movie theater when i see him he's looking over his shoulder and there's one seat empty right next to them you know you claim sheets out there you know what i mean this is the kimchi this is the muslim stevenson you know what i mean so it's one seat that's empty that was for me so he looks over he sees me coming he goes like this he just into the seat he sits down and he's like what happened to my brother chino so i'm like yo you know i explained to him you know he was going in the pin in the cell she was coming out they bumped chino turned around before he could say something the cop just took him down and he goes uh but why did he jump the cop tells me like that my [ __ ] and i was like yo you know to be honest i didn't really see anything that was going on that was wrong i didn't want to make [ __ ] even worse he didn't do nothing you know what i mean i could easily be beat and he was like so if we send you us to be a witness for us on that are you gonna you know be a witness i was like yeah man tell them [ __ ] cops man put me down as a witness man [ __ ] [ __ ] up [ __ ] foul man are you gonna bump that man like that you know what i mean and get crazy so anyway make the long story short right i was i was he was like all right man so we're gonna do that then i got up and i went my mind i'm like i'm on my pj q's looking around you know what i mean she was a little too smooth so then yeah yeah the cop comes over once you know if you're going to be a witness so i come over here i'm going to be a witness they call me down there i've made my statement you know what i mean listen you know the guy was going in the cop was coming now he's like wait a minute the cop was coming out or he was going in he said no the cop was going now this docino was going in he was like okay the case got dropped the cop was out of place he didn't even that wasn't even his post you know he never explained what he was doing inside but he was coming out you understand what i'm saying so he he got hot by his his uh uh superior you know what i mean like yo what the hell is he doing there anyway you know what i mean what the hell is you know starting some [ __ ] for they dropped the [ __ ] on channel blue boy comes over to my shell yo they dropped on china chino man thanks a lot man i'm like yeah man you're welcome and he's like yeah man you know if you know you're doing this revolutionary [ __ ] you know what i mean you know you know when it comes time to pop you gotta pop man you can't get his [ __ ] no chances and i was like true that man true that you got it boom he gave me a little fish pump whatever and that was it you know what i mean but i was hot that close i got to being a victim without even realizing it without doing anything wrong you know what i mean just by being at the wrong place at the at the right time you know what i mean and uh yeah that that was my incident but even though even though no no i i heard a lot of stories about it but everybody always asked me if i ran into blue and all that but the times that i was the time that i was with blue was he i think he had came down to c95 or something and it was like real brief but he came to my door to look for me because i had the dog food right and i don't know if he wanted for him or for whatever but dudes are like yo blue want to talk to you and i was like well i don't care about no blue green orange whatever respectfully but i was wilding right but then i started hearing about who he was and all that i think we got to talk one i'm real bad with that but this is a long time ago it just it wasn't c95 in the 90s if i'm not missed even the 90s so i remember like that real brief when i think about it'll come back to me but i'm just stuck on the story what happened with you and him like you saying how close he was to to getting that yeah i mean he was he was let me tell you something man blue was a machete at the time you know what i mean my potatoes was like no hoes bar like straight militant you know what i mean his style was minutes and i remember one time i was coming down from the yard i was coming up if you know sing sing you have like this big corridor that comes down like a like a hallway that comes all the way down it skips some train tracks and goes into the yard right so as i'm coming down i'm coming up blue's coming down he's like yo what up he's like what up hey he reaches over and he goes yo what the [ __ ] is this and he grabs his hand and he puts it over my hoodie string and he's like yo what the [ __ ] is this he's like you got to chuck these in and he goes like this you hear me and he looks and he shows his [ __ ] like this and his man he was with his man chino with that situation and his mansion got his [ __ ] tucked in and i was like gangster good looks you know what i mean you're like yo this dude like he was on it like that you know what i mean but why why the thing is you know what i mean you own him with those rings you tuck those shits in so that he can't grab anything if you know if the case is going to be you know but just goes to show you how militant he was you know what i mean i mean like it was it was things like that that made me the way i was with bros wearing these flippers in the day room or even worse the yard which you know you're going to catch a fat move without catching it in the [ __ ] in the yard with the slippers you know i mean i was on the bros for that too all the time in the buildings listen bro you know what i mean this is one thing we're not gonna do everybody's gonna put on these sneakers and everybody's gonna observe what's going on and the element of surprise is gone so if we all have our sneakers on nobody knows what the hell is going on if we gotta pop nobody's gonna see [ __ ] coming because we already we natural that's how we are that's how we came in is how we left you understand what i'm saying autumn change the [ __ ] sceneries and all that [ __ ] you're just putting people on their p's and q's and police like that because they noticed that [ __ ] too wait a minute [ __ ] out here and strippers and coffee mugs now they out here boats and hoodies you know what i mean it's things like that man that made me aware of listen man environment that this [ __ ] can pop any time any day you know what i mean so and he bros didn't look at it like that you know what i mean [ __ ] getting too comfortable you know what i mean it's getting too comfortable and he's like yo and when you're a king or young gang member independent [ __ ] can go south from one minute to the next like one minute you chilling you got a vi coming next minute you're on the [ __ ] on the bus going to the box nobody knows where you're going you know what i mean so it's it's be ready you know don't ever get too comfortable yeah no matter how how dead the jail is because [ __ ] happens you know i'd have been in the chat i've been in the camp and [ __ ] popped off in the weight room and everybody called kokoda so then pieces of weight bing bang bang you know what i mean oh yeah the cabs the camps pop people people think it sounds sweet because they're going to the camp like oh it's sweet over there let me tell you captain got no fences man they got dudes got to walk down that that path in between them trees and stash them [ __ ] like this in the [ __ ] you know what i think yeah they got people that got their own people's coming and leaving golf balls and um tennis balls and [ __ ] back there they go you was you you you was one of them one time but when i was escaped oh yeah i mean yeah that was an escape like not in this dude just walked out never walked back in my dude there was a rumor that his girl came and picked him up at the softball field you know what i mean yeah you know you walk out because you i heard that a few people did that before yeah yeah you just break out and don't come back my dude and you know you'll be a missing person you'll be a fugitive and you played yourself because you had a little time when this guy escaped from georgetown he he had led somebody that was in georgetown one of his family's phone numbers that's how you get knocked somebody from from the front that knew that he was going to escape was calling his family and that's how they pin the [ __ ] on him and they gave him a new one you know he caught a case too you know what i mean just for that yeah like like yo you're gonna do that for me like paulie hitting him up like yo you got me like you went out there yo you got me and you got me knocked you know what dudes are crazy yo that story is crazy with blue with blue boy the way he grabbed your thing and was like yo put this in that's militant you're right that's being on point let me tell you something bro blue is definitely cut from a different cloth blue is he he is a piece of every gangster new york state is inside blue you know what i mean so the toughest [ __ ] is inside blue like he's he's a piece of everybody and he's the type that if you make noise you got a little name for yourself he could go two ways we could either be cool you join the force or he's gonna have to get you the [ __ ] out which is pretty much what he's gonna do you're a threat to his status you get bigger than than than whatever you whatever he is or you even tried him at him he's gonna gun you down he's gonna come for you oh he's so strong somebody else gonna gun you down for him you know i mean with it's blue ain't got no no no problem put in the network himself i never even heard of an incident where he had somebody done it which i'm sure he he had a lot of [ __ ] done in but he's a hands-on dude you know i mean matter of fact another incident my dude um i was on the visit i was on the blue with blue but blue was on the visit you know i mean we can't visits you know i mean he was on a visit and prior to that he had stabbed up some some god body dude like a week prior to that this dude comes out and he goes into the yard and he pulls out what he had inside him he had an entire [ __ ] knife that you fall down like this the click click joints the whole knife like [ __ ] take a little shank part or you take the little blade you know you wrap it up wait wait wait toilet paper when you you poof it this dude had a whole [ __ ] knife if i'm lying i'm i'm a whole knife like click switchblade in his eyes my dude ain't that busy and let me tell you something let me tell you how militant this dude is he goes through the [ __ ] visit with that right he'll go to the bathroom take that knife out my [ __ ] this is the most dangerous convict in [ __ ] new york state and he has a knife like this open when you open it sitting somewhere on his body around visitors you don't want to have beef with that dude when [ __ ] like that goes down you understand what i'm saying this guy he's going to take you he's going to chop your whole family head off with that [ __ ] my [ __ ] that [ __ ] that he had i seen this [ __ ] with my own eyes with that [ __ ] had you know what i mean the blue who's official you're not being hey listen man i don't know what it is you know it's probably the way i move but i don't know why or or how he took a liking to me you know what i mean but it was obvious you know what i mean that he was like yo my dude you know what i mean yeah i was good with blue you know what i mean even after the chino incident you know what i mean i was good with blue but uh yeah man i'll give them all the props in the world for number one is um i'm up to par with my culture because of him not only my culture culture in general my reading had jumped up for like a thousand percent man this guy made me hit them books man and not only when i was with him i took that [ __ ] to this date you know i mean there's times i take my ass to barnes and nobles and i sit there with a coffee on the floor my [ __ ] and i read a book you know what i mean like that and i'll credit that to blue man a lot of ways i think a lot of the ways i ran the bros excluding the hard you know the hard [ __ ] you know what i mean because we all know where that's gonna take you you know what i mean and uh you know i just i just took all the good out of it you know what i mean and blue is a very good dude man he's very he's very troubled because you can't be but so troubled man you got 40 50 years in my dude like you know there's no sanity in that you know what i mean and that's his house right now you know what i mean anybody else trying to violate that i feel sorry man i don't know what happened with larry davis but the word is man that he hit him real good and that he actually beat the case you know what i mean he actually that's what i heard you know that's what i'm saying that he actually beat the lady davis case i don't know how true it is you know but um you want gangster blue as gangster anybody out there want the most gangsters [ __ ] in new york state that's him you know what i mean that's him anybody else's they don't even want it with that [ __ ] like none of these dudes want it with that [ __ ] yo you
ON THE LOCKOUT
UCEqGonL-5JoKCEH-Iesn7qA
2021-09-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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4,543
22,432
hlzb7mywz8M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlzb7mywz8M
Global Learning Fellowship
foreign I am incredibly passionate about getting students interested in Global Learning impact the way a country educates its citizens I teach at a school that is incredibly diverse I didn't know about Global Learning Fellowship until my friend told me about it and she had just gone to China and told me how amazing it was so I knew that once I hit my three years of teaching that I was going to apply and I am so happy I did going into Peru really has changed my life in the way that I teach even though it actually lived and taught abroad I had never been to South America I know that next time I have a kid from Peru I'm going to be able to understand them a little bit better and so that just helps me be a better teacher that way my favorite experience so far in Peru has been exploring the market people shop and live in such a different way it reminded me of my students who take a math task and they solve it in all of these different ways it was a perfect reminder that diversity and differences our strengths this is my first international trip there was a lot of anxiety just the unknown but I knew this was an opportunity I couldn't pass on so to actually be here and to be with this particular group made all the difference in the world it was easy to connect with other people because we're Educators making those connections for the past year with other passionate Educators first through zoom and now being here I think I've learned that creating those collaborations is important even like looking at this I was talking with he was a math teacher about like oh it'd be cool to do kind of a unit that focuses on the geometry of this and also from the history lands and kind of like building units collaboratively the world is bigger than our classroom and our students need to be aware of that our schools are supposed to be a microcosm of what kids are going to experience in the world and so we want to be knowledgeable about issues here in the nation and then also around the world so that those next Generations they'll also be knowledgeable about you know what's going on the world around them during this weekend we had the opportunity to speak with past participants in the program who clearly were deeply inspired by their travel there's so much about the script that changed me we also heard from two educational experts I really enjoy hearing Dr Riemer and him speaking about a teacher Renaissance something we had learned from a speaker was that our students globally struggle with feeling value and that has made me feel so connected to teachers all across the world that I have never met more so than facilitating the workshops and the mentorships I think that the Nea Foundation has been integral in empowering all of us as Global Educators and that's probably the most important work that the Nea Foundation could do through this Global Learning Fellowship [Music] foreign [Music]
The NEA Foundation
UC7q6Q9HhBV2sesOrutfx8Hg
2023-02-03
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en
metadata
en
535
2,912
K7_NwX4G6yU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7_NwX4G6yU
California prison doctors sterilized women (eugenics)
hey guys linda here i was just reading a very disturbing article and um i'll show you the article and then i'm going to tell you my opinion as i go along with this and then you tell me down below what you think because we're really something's really wrong now watch this okay let's see california prison doctors sterilized women to cut welfare costs now california prison doctors sterilize almost 150 women over a four year period because they don't didn't want the state to have to provide welfare funding to any of the children they might have in the future one of the top doctors admitted this week so so obviously these women that are in prison didn't commit murder anything if they're going to be released from prison so you know we don't know the crimes they've committed yet they were forcibly sterilized um so i actually have a problem with this now california taxpayers spent 147 460 on the procedures between 1997 and 2010 over a 10-year period that isn't a huge amount of money dr james hendrick the ob-gyn at valley state prison for women told the center for investigative reporting compared to what you save in welfare paying for these unwanted children as they are procreated more heinrich's argument recalls progressive supreme court justice oliver wendell holmes jr who declared three generations of imbeciles are enough in the opinion he wrote for the majority in the buck versus bill in 1927 in which the supreme court ruled that woman could be forcibly sterilized this is getting scary isn't it we have seen more than once that the public welfare may call upon the best citizens for their lives homes right it would be strange if it could not call upon those who already sat the strength of the state for these lesser sacrifices often not felt to be such by those concerned in order to prevent are being swamped with incompetence unlike kerry beck these women agreed to the sterilization but only because they felt pressured by the doctors i figured that that's just what happens in prison that's the best kind of doctor you're going to get a former inmate told cir the doctors flouted a regulation requiring state approval for each procedure as the prison medical manager told cir she signed off on sterilization as long as heinrich documented it as a medical emergency now here's here's my problem with this um because these women are in prison and obviously they're going to get out because that's their their justification you know they that they so obviously their crimes i don't think might have been that bad and i was thinking about criminals now who are the worst criminals i can think of and why aren't there if if we're going to sterilize people make sure that their apples don't fall far from their tree and i was thinking about the people in dc who work in the district of criminals some of the biggest murderers and who work for their alphabet governments the cia the fbi for the mercenary groups you know are we sterilizing them even the men i'm talking about even the men need to be sterilized so they can't infect humanity with any more of their spawn so i find this deeply disturbing but what i found more disturbing was and we're going back to that if you know if you're a bad parent then everybody in your family is or if someone's mentally ill you know this happened back back in the 1900s where they were sterilizing women if somebody was born with down syndrome or or something they they decided that well we have to sterilize everybody in the family um they do they they forced to sterilize native americans african-americans and poor whites i mean that's who they picked on now i was reading the comments let me go here it'll take just a minute and this disturbed me more than anything california did something right for a change leave it alone what this is a great idea let's do it to men too um i mean this is this is excellent this should be expanded nationwide so some people are against it but a lot of people that are for it um i mean these people don't understand what's happened in the past i mean we're throwing people in jail for whistleblowing for god's sakes i mean should we does that mean we sterilize them this is this is insane and and they're doing this and i'm sure this will go usually you know in a lot of states california is kind of a test state and if it happens there it may start happening in other states and i say we put an end to this now you don't just forcibly sterilize women or trick them or pressure them into it and and i can imagine i don't know i've never been to prison but i've heard that you know it's it's not a good place to be i had a friend who was in there and i imagine they're pressuring women to do it it's probably just that you do it or you're going to go in the hole or something you know or will rape you i mean you hear about this on on a constant basis now women being raped in prison and what about men i mean you know they don't sterilize men who have raped women and then get out of prison and rape women again you know there's nothing talked about about men who have raped women and i i don't advocate for anybody being forcefully sterilized unless it's just an extreme case of maybe some psychopath who goes and rapes children and i don't even know then if there's some other way you could just control them i don't know about this forcibly doing anything to people when they're serving their time i don't think you can do this i mean if any one of these ladies had tossed their baby in a garbage can or something that would be murder i don't think they'd be getting out of jail so this seemed to be women who were going to be getting out of jail so they wouldn't reproduce imbeciles or you know unwanted you know that type you know people like me and you who may speak the truth because to me each child that is born could be the one that could save the world regardless of who they came from you never know i mean so i don't believe in abortion or or this forcible sterilization or i just don't believe anyone has the right to take another person's life or prevent another person from procreating that that is not the judgment of the human race we were all born to participate in in the creation of our world and it seems like the psychopaths can spawn as many of their psychopathic children as they want and they all seem to like kings and queens look at them and look what's happened to our world we really need to crush the empire system get back to humanity and stop some of this insanity i mean they're talking about infant side in some of these places where kill two-year-old children because you know you're not a really good parent and this child is not a service to humanity well how would you know i mean so just leave me your opinion down below it's just this just kind of disturbed me and i think this is just wrong i mean it is and how do they know the women won't go out and get a good job or maybe create something or figure something out while they're sitting in prison and and say hey i've got an idea i got a way i'm gonna start serving serving people i'm gonna go start feeding homeless people you know and or something you don't know what can happen so um you know i i hate their prejudgment it's like a pre-crime thing here and um i think it's awful and i just like you to leave your opinion below um i don't feel good today sorry if this video didn't come out that good i apologize but peace love and truth to everybody and yes i had a granddaughter but she was born on the fifth of july if anybody was wondering darn i was hoping the fourth but anyway peace love and truth to everyone and i love you all
EKENNYE
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2013-07-08
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en
metadata
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1,435
7,631
wvDUwor8Jyk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvDUwor8Jyk
Feature Friday - 20th anniversary Montana 3791
hello its timwas walnutrij RV and its feature Friday our feature today we're to the 20th anniversary edition this is the 3791 Montana just want to show you a few of the features as I'm walking over here you can see one of the great things about this is the extra storage that we have in the back you have a slide-out tray you can fit just about everything you want inside of here slides in and out very easily so you can take whatever you want kayak what have you going in here you can see you got on the side that's closed in so you have separate storage right here on both of these and slam latch doors and on the bottom you can see right here the level up system you got the hydraulic level up system really great gives you great stability when you get into your camp spot we have the frameless windows going along here very nice the solid step going up into the camper so it can hold great weights and be very comfortable as well and once again up here in the front we have even more storage it's all over the place folks there's storage everywhere so you get plenty of room here and it's even ducted and with heat to protect stuff and you got a central vac in this area to help clean things up so some really great features now as we go inside for 3791 right at the foot of the steps you have your kick plate for your vacuum and on the inside that you just set up and that will sweep things right in there get out you don't have to worry about in a main area here really helps open up with a slide on both sides we've got the island right here with solid surface countertops upgraded appliances and fury on and this is even bared mine at the house I think three big burner tops on it we also have the step up into the front of your camper with the quiet cool AC system right here so that works more like your house it's a return system you know makes it very comfortable quiet in this area double couches out here both fold out into sleeping you got the front or back one to thing excuse me your TV raises up when you're not watching you can have a lake view very very enjoyable to go with your fireplace which works as a heater as well so lots and lots of great comfort and feature just up here in the front there's a ton more from what we can go right here but going into our kitchen huge appliance on here in the frigerator samsung plenty of pants an area real backsplash going onto it going up into our main bedroom here I'll open this up so you can see it which shows your advantage of these opening doors they can still walk through even when it's open their to the full-size shower very comfortable very spacious right here in our main bedroom I said man there is only bedroom that full closet in the front another quiet cool a/c system when we open up that door right there you're gonna see that you also have the washer and dryer hookup along with the chairs as your spares right here in our slides we have the king bed with windows on both sides of it very great for creating a nice cross-breeze making a joyful camping trip for you so this is feature Friday this is Tim that walnutrij and we're standing side at 3791 Montana we look forward to talking to you soon [Music]
A Great Adventure
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2019-09-20
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en
metadata
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624
3,187
MpCU4SCu5lg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpCU4SCu5lg
Q&A (AFTER LIVE STREAM) - WILL POLYGON’S BIG ANNOUNCEMENT MAKES ETHEREUM UNSTOPPABLE? 7/20/22
it's been a long time so i'm in 24 minutes we want to stick around i'll answer all your questions to the best of my abilities and we'll go from there so if not i'll see you thanks for stopping by if not let's get into a little q and a ah time for modding let's see where'd i go that's weird doesn't give me the uh the stars oh well uh question number one always about flare token comments i we know it's the q a okay florida driving says what's going to happen to the flare token when they're airdropped since the bankruptcy was filed before the airdrop what are your thoughts they're going to keep it probably i mean look i'm not a lawyer i'm not a bankruptcy expert and i'm certainly not an exchange expert but um for this one i mean celsius is even asking the question should we be able to claw back your crypto that you took out 90 days before this collapse so if you think that they're going to give you a flare it's not happening that's just me i could be wrong yeah dad gummit what's the latest with mel i don't know i gotta get ken on here actually i haven't really been doing too much i really you know what let's we should do that right now let's see if i do this right twitter at labs hey like you know yeah let's just do that okay so let's just do that let's see what they say i hope that answers your question chris cardinal what's your opinion about moon river i have no opinion i don't really know what it is i don't know a lot of projects out there uh i just kind of stick to my wheelhouse that's it it's a great question it's a great question why are bubbles around i don't know if anybody can answer that but why aren't they square yes this is not one tan live tweet show beardy wants his plenty again oh uh oh yeah look again and everybody who asked like well i get it you want the me to answer that question look just because i don't know about moon river or invest in a moon river doesn't mean it's not an awesome uh project i've missed many projects and i'm going to miss a hell of a lot more so maybe it's awesome i have no idea but i can't give you any any feedback on that one hmm let's see yeah it's a good question that's a great question melvin says why is there so much fear with coinbase when they seem to have made a lot of good decisions with regards to 3c voyager and celsius it's because nobody trusts anybody that's what it comes down to i think you really have to look at why did celsius and voyager why did they collapse well if you listen to alex michinski and if you believe alex mashinsky when they were a part of potentially to bail out luna they said no we're not going to do it we're not going to put any of we're going to take all of the funds all the user funds out of the anchor protocol which from what he unders what i believe he said that on my you know what how about i should have him tell you that not sure if i have it i do have it hold on this is what alex said on my show i want to say i won't play it doesn't matter alex said that they pulled everything out of anchor protocol and they will it play this is what he said here you go look we we have usd and luna listed in our wallets and when people give us uh ust we stake it to earn rewards just like you would do yourself right so we do it on behalf of our community the difference between doing it yourself and us doing it for you is that we monitor it 24 7. and when we started seeing a d-peg we pulled everything out and we did that on behalf of our community and again we should get a badge of honor a medal or my team my security team my risk team should get a medal for being one of the first to pull out all that uh all these coins out of those protocols yeah so i know like you talked about he said that you guys had invested into uh and tara and uh you'd have been you know probably getting some yield when did you guys just decide or look at and go you know what this doesn't look this isn't good we need to get out of here so first we never invested in terror okay jump three error capital uh galaxy invested in terror celsius has never invested in terror i posted several tweets celsius network posted several tweet debunking the fud that celsius somehow gave loans to terra or invested in terror we don't do that that's not our business okay so that's what he said so remember so the question is why is there so much fud let me get out here uh for for coinbase so you got to take a look at why these places these exchanges they collapsed it was all because of really three arrows capital and some other bad decisions so alex just said that they pulled it out they said well you know we pulled it out of the anchor protocol we didn't invest in a tara sure okay right but then there was an issue with with these uncollateralized loans and voyager to the same thing so now the question is well did coinbase do any kind of uncollateralized loans well they wanted to remember they wanted to earn their own earned program they s they went in to the sec and said we would like to do this and gary gensler and there and his staff said you're not going to do that and if you do that we're going to we're going to sue the pants off you and i got to tell you i know no one wants to hear this but gary gensler was right and because he even took a look at the terms of condition and go look you guys are co-mingling your funds and user funds and that's what's happening over here we're not going to let you do it so now people are pissed off at gary ginza and all the things that happen with them but on one thing he was 100 correct sorry so if we take a look at that they haven't done any kind of loans is there any other contagion that could happen sure i don't know everything guess what i'm just some guy on my mom's basements with a really cool green screen talking to you about things that are going on but i don't have any insider information nobody trusts me that much and if they would tell me i probably wouldn't tell anybody else because i wouldn't want to get sued so i don't know anything that's just what's going on and uh let me know what you think about that that's what it is ah never trust the pull out that's true what the mellow managers dm on twitter go check it out what'd they say oh yeah you wanna talk to matt hold on so there he hey rob what's the tweet what's up with this map yeah people matt people want to know what's the progress smelled can someone go on the show do what he says look at that getting things done all right hey dez the simon indicator i'd love to have simon on again he was he was my co-host and we just went over the news it was pretty good i should i should ask him you know what why don't we ask him right now let's see um let's see here i need to share my screen hey it's simon you you come on the show and drop some knowledge everyone let's know why all you the simon indicator all right i'll go from there let's see what simon says anybody else thank you along i appreciate that it is a straight fire and this is from uh the community the these nuts community matter of fact they send this to me as a token of appreciation because i've had i i have one nft i treasure and that's the end that's the d's nuts nft if you have never and this is not a joke if you've ever gone to like their discord group it's fantastic it's like the funniest thing you're ever gonna watch and it's that kind of humor but it's hilarious so i should really add them into my description all the videos but yeah they sent this to me i thought it was pretty good i always wear this one so tonight over at union you can find me because i got this shirt on that's a great question michael payne says hey how can anyone uncollateralize that much money stupid and that's a good question how can you because i got to tell you when i take loans out i got to collateralize to the hilt 2x 3x 4x but apparently if i'm a billionaire i don't give any collateral i got a long ways to go for that though let's see oh simon scott says bubbles around because of gravity interesting jared jesus in the king of shall we trust i gotta say not my best decision to call myself the king of the show i should really call king of the promo but uh that's on me johnny says i don't know if this is true great interview with lawyers regarding cell alex will have to step down the next 30 days he is so squad again will binance and comey's have liquidity issues i don't i don't think that's is because they didn't do loans loans matter of fact i'm i have a conference call with somebody from binance u.s at in an hour so we'll see i'll ask the question i am taking i'm trying to if i don't do it now when are you going to do it i believe people drink soup chump the green skin it's tough one bust ah that's a great question i'm trying to get raw's perspective on what he thinks the future would look like when it comes to the projects will be in the top 10 i don't think bitcoin number one so a long time ago i used to do these things called price prediction videos and i will probably never do any of those again because they get people so the exuberance of people they think well you know dan said it's gonna go 150k so that's that's like rock solid and then dan said vgx is gonna go to 30 so i gotta get into it i will never do those things again because it just gives you this this false sense of like well one person said it so it might be a reality and i know for some of you that's like that's crazy but it's how some people think so uh in the future i don't know i don't even want to speculate i just think that uh we just take a look at we can't control the future the only thing that we can really control is how we how we react and plan for those future events so that's all i'm really looking looking forward to right now i'm looking in like a i mean i look three five ten years down the road and just go what am i going to do the same thing i'm doing today which is essentially talking to people like you uh following my rules understanding that i should never invest more than i can afford to lose in my mind going it's all gone and the reason i say it's all gone is because i want people to look at that and go it's all gone so when they go hey i need to take my entire life savings and put it on to moon river or whatever they're like wait maybe that's not a good idea because if it's all gone that's what it is it's a very aggressive step to say things i know some people say you shouldn't say it like that well too bad that's how i say it it's for me these are my rules not your rules next one is everything's a scam until proven otherwise you have to verify don't trust i don't want to leave anything exchanges anymore not even my three percent uh no leverage i don't want to do any of that stuff i've never done that before either and some people can do it but that's not me and of course i'm always going to remind myself to take profits me and mullet have had discussions about this we're going to be wanting to his backs to do those things take profits so that's that they don't sell the shirt i think there's probably like a copyright trademark infringement if you used if you if you did this that's right musket coin i got to stop giving out wrenches because people keep banning people and i and so what it is is like i'm telling people like i know people are going to be ticked off at me first you know because whatever so i'm like don't ban people just because they're angry that's not that's a recipe that's not a good recipe let them ah hey there's ken the ken from meld can blow the ceo i don't think i can show you this though since everybody else hey rob i see you reach out on holiday until 28th can we schedule one to call of course there's a link great so can the ceo from meld is on holiday until 28th and then we'll have them on so we'll have them on in august or so good great ah let's see sell is being accused of pumping sell price with customer bitcoin i don't know why they want to do that there's a big sell short campaign going on so i don't know well that would actually make sense they're shorting everything everyone gets a wrench [Music] krypto krypto jack lavery says regarding the 90-day clawback clause that might be a bad thing if they do that they'll be the most hated project of all time in all of crypto good job waves making things happen everybody it's okay uh i like metallica i'm actually pretty good with a real wrench no no you don't understand so i know there's one blockbuster that's open but the rights to the block muster trade blockbuster trademark is through a pretty big company i forgot who owns it but uh the blockbuster dao tried to get it from them i want to say it's not citibank it's somebody else so you can't use this intellectual property is pretty tough to to come to get through thank you capoh not your dad now that would be a great t-shirt um [Music] ah look at that there's a conference in denver are you gonna go rare bloom courtois comments number probably not i'm just not a i'm not a not a big conference person the only reason just between us the only reason i went to the consensus one is uh i saw some friends over in austin and uh just to play volleyball and then uh during the off times i went to the conference and just and the and the only big big reason i went there was i wanted to meet the ceo of nir and i wanted to talk to the ceo and the cto and everybody else from sweatcoin and i knew they're going to be there so that was it and then i missed charles hoskinson but uh because i went there to go play the level yeah all right it's funny i think that's it let's see what ken says super all right and uh sweet so good news simon says let's do it all right check your messages i could be him should be a good one and in case you guys don't know simon you is he's the he's the founder of uh star max and he's the one that's giving me some pretty invaluable insights into the crypt of marcus he's been around since 2014 and that's all i'll say because i don't want him to get in trouble and that's it all right so everybody uh i want to say thanks for stopping by i think we're good to go today if you're in el paso remember we're going to be well there's two things to remember please which is uh let me pull this up here first of all here's your in draft house it's on the east side there's a link in the description and it looks like that so you can go to the website and find the address and then also don't forget come with me in about 20 minutes twitter spaces with simon dixon they're going to talk about what's going on with chapter 11 and what the what the next progress will be i suppose and i'll let simon explain all that stuff to you so that's on spaces twitter.com blah blah blah and that's it so uh that's all i got for today thanks for stopping by and if you could just do one thing the like button that would be fantastic you don't have to subscribe i'm here every day so just stop by and i'm usually about the same time and that's it so thanks so much i appreciate everybody hanging out with me for for these 44 minutes uh so that's it thanks so much see you on the next one adios you
Digital Asset News
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2022-07-20
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This Tiny Fern Farm Is Insane! (10 000 items/h) | Minecraft 1.19.2
hey guys moose gaming here in this video I'm going to be showing you guys how to build a fern farm so without further Ado let's get into the video [Music] this is the fern Farm it is a really tiny design it is inspired by razors design but I have modified it to my preferences this Farm is made possible thanks to the new mud block here which if I F3 quick claim you'll see is actually uh 0.125 of a block smaller than a normal block thanks to the fact that you can place a fern on this new mud block you can simply use a hopper which if I turn on the machine it does pick up items I just added a feature so where you when you toggle nothing Falls in as you can see the shears are still there I have to get the fern so you can get the firm by or chewing it when you are in a spruce biome or there is I think an 18 chance of you finding ferns in chests in Spruce Villages for the farm you need here and the aforementioned ferns this Farm is extremely fast it produces tons and tons and tons of fern per hour so you won't be asking for more than a couple of minutes but I do recommend stocking up on some bone meal because this bad boy is first thing puts the fern into your offhand shears into your primary hand here like so and you need to turn off the front by flicking this lever if we stand here we point our cursor here in the obsidian and we break Place break Place break place and when you train this for a bit you'll get it faster like this these are the items that you need really cheap the subsidian block here doesn't need to be obsidian you can switch it up with something else but it needs to be quite a durable block so you don't accidentally break it while you're farming alright so I like to start things off by placing the chests so I'll place it here like so you need to place a hopper facing into the chest like so you can see that by this little stem coming out of it you need a the mud block up here place a temporary block here here and here break these two place a dispenser and place redstone dust on top of it now here behind the farm on the side of the mud block here you place your sticky piston now you need to place your Observer oh sorry wrong way pointing at this like so so the eyes and the face of the Observer is on the top here and now you can just casually place this as you can see it is already beeping to avoid that you press place a lever here flick it and it turns off the farm here we place our obsidian block or the block the other durable block that you chose and the last thing for this tutorial will be this wall block of course now you come here you put in some bone meal for the farm of course I do recommend [Music] enchanting your shears it does help with the durability and these shears really wear off quite quickly so yeah I would really really recommend enchanting your how your shears which at least I'm breaking and mending rights great in the farm the durability is way higher really a nice add-on to the already great foam design s guys I I do hope that you enjoyed this video it was a ton of fun to make and I hope this film friend will help you decorate your SP medieval Spruce base with some Greenery anyways guys next next week I'm going uh to take a break for a week so I'll pre-upload a video or two for you guys so you can still enjoy this beautiful content stay tuned for some great projects that I have in coming three of them are actually in the process of creation while I am speaking right now and yeah really looking forward to that anyways guys I will see you in the next one bye bye [Music]
Moose Gaming
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2022-10-31
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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Slo4n TRIED To DEFAME Bob Saget! Speads FALSE Information!
so about two to like four days ago i saw a video i might recommend it which is now deleted off the platform now i'm going to show you a clip of it on twitter that somebody asks because a youtuber whose name is sloane aka michael sloane hooks he has made a video which is now deleted [Music] and i'm going to show you just about now after reading this the way bob saget's the first episode was literally just his close friend and cass making jokes about how he molested hate mary kate and her entire childhood and literally no one cared they watched it and left like it's funny you know if every single one of them joked about his philippines that is a sign that is not a joke he has done these things not to mention that he practiced no lessons at all literally how he was allowed to do just that [Music] sloan on youtube has a he has a video on bob saget which is now deleted this clip is in context of a life like the green hero [Music] the stuff [Music] video a lot of it was truly important more than one of those happenings was purchased purposely taken out of context so now so i will now be watching some live caution i was disappointed with that video i don't fully blame him because i'm sure he gets a lot of people requesting topics and sending in links to certain clips yes you could easily be skewed with the way buff's comedy is i just hope he dives a bit deeper before posting he's obviously just trying to get attention he doesn't even care about those things or not if he truly cared he wouldn't have to take these things out of context and would have just covered the actually gross stuff and i agree with all these points now as of almost a week ago since he put up put up that video about bob saget which is now deleted he still has not made an apology video and just went on as it's like normal again i mean this is kind of ridiculous he just went on as franchising for about five to six days like this isn't good i found this called the endy trivert which is which was written by somebody named anton sawyer it says online influencer sloane privatized video using bob's nugget of inappropriate behavior so i'm going to read this i'm trying to understand how this ad faceless claims earl towards comey legend bob saget by online influencers sloan and now privatized youtube video titled bob saget's inappropriate relationship with meows and twins were able to gain traction with the cancer culture movement though i've heard about cc more than i would have liked over to like to over the last couple of months the piece today is about how misdirection and conjuring is are trying to plant seeds that of that movement towards the tv and stand up gummy star thankfully i saw the video and was able to get direct quotes before it was privatized but it seems some of the though it seems some the damage was done if you're not feeling enough alone if and what has happened over the last few days long as your channel considering saggit it's pretty breathtaking it is the blueprint as to how might it is right when opinions are presented as fact when it comes to trying to take someone down from both real and perceived demons from their past let me know that i am not in any way about secondhand i like this show full house but that was about it it was the it was this family friendly hit along with him becoming the host of america's funny song videos his standing as america's purest dad was sentiment the reality of who he was as the comedian was something foreign to me this is why when i saw the movie had bait and found saggit had the speaking role in it which included the line i used to sucked it for cocaine my mind exploded that one segment he had in his late 90s storner comedy was a complete shot to my system night when me showed my feelings of surprise to friend i was watching him he had to give me some context i would find out my friend wasn't wrong when i heard of some of staggered material you see this filth land dietary was pretty far from the course when it came to saggy tumor at the only time he wasn't doing this humor was during his tenure of full house and a f hb when you go back to the beginning of sagittarius korea his routine from the early to mid 90's was rifle blue material once he got the role of jenny tenor on full house everything changed in the next decade he lived that life professionally since leaving that friendly hemp friendly house in 1997 he has done movies obscene language and has done a few successful tours there's stand-up routine and that show bob saget is slash was outside of his 1987-1997 has been pretty well established it doesn't appear that way for youtuber personality slow [Music] in the video that has now been made private you'll find out why the moment he is playing hunter conjecture now as someone who values journalistic journalist integrity please check the particularly opportunity if you have any documents i got the direct quotes from his video prior to its privatization when i watched it it had been up for 21 hours by this point it had over 107k views of over 200 comments if anything i write about here is incredibly inaccurate then i beg sloan to make the video available to public once more so they can see if i'm misquoting him in the event and that does happen i'm including a link to his video that you're not saying bit me officially so let's get into the meat of this video it begins to snow watching the coming central rail speed of the second if you have never seen a combination of the worlds they can be seen they can be some of the most vile planet exhibits you'll ever witness people i know who find offensive humor enjoyable have even said certain segments make them ill like the time when amy schumer made a joke to stevo about his recently deceased friend ryan dodd it is no hole spared typically it appears slow was completely unaware of this one part of that is worth mentioning where jeff ross is set up number ever tasteless blackjack joke that the punchline means that side hit on the ocean starting at h8 and stopping at 21. slowly start it with he claims that bob hit on these girls from 8 to 18 which is a bad joke but honestly probably younger than 8 which is the worst part of it all not only did some misquote the age in the joke here but he also presented the information in a way that implies that there's absolutely no way sagan is innocent that is a fact this isn't the worst of it during the roast comedian frank posen made a joke about how old house kept pedophiles off the streets because three of them were on the show referring not only to sagging but also his co-stars dave cool year and john stamos using the same crack detective work as slow one would know then that all three of them sexually assaulted the young girls on the show yet sloane only mentions quality or what he intercut the interview in an interview on ellen the awesome twins had done where they talked about the shower scene this call here during which both twins were laughing he made inferences of inappropriate behavior there as well about anything more than conjure he never mentions things again i'm guessing he didn't get enough of her examples of hearsay admit that minimum amount to guarantee judgment of someone else i understand when it comes to the internet you can be sucked in your own world and be cool i have experienced it up in myself when i speak different i speak the friends of mine about musical artists that everyone seems to know but me they're right i'll check some i'll check and see that some hip-hop or cake pop artists have over a billion views all while being someone i've never heard of this is also how big ideas can seriously theories and other madness can flourish so well online the thing sloane is missing is that just because he recently found out about something doesn't mean it was common knowledge to those who stick their heads out their shelves thankfully twitter shutting down which will help in stopping the spread of this i'm not sure who contacted sloan and slash or his people but it seems to have addressed swiftly even as quickly as it started to turn on social media was quickly as advanced sloan's twitter was recently set private and the video was privatized as well not long after i witnessed it there are these are all good steps but it never should have gone to this level in the first place it's truly terrified not only there were about 80 percent those in the comment section on his side they also immediately wanted blood the fact that this video hit nearly a quarter mil of a million views in about a day in half along with sloane's fan base cheering on it is the complete encapsulation of why people not only hate but are also terrified of cancer culture saddest part about this is when you have seen sloane's other videos they are always fact based he had always had receipts sure he does throw them into dirt at points but he makes sure that if he says an excursion is a fact he has a video threat quote or like to substantiate it his pop second video had done that the fact that acuminia made me taste this joke that he hit unused twits from eight to twenty one and sloane comes in immediately if honestly probably younger than eight is absolutely horrific there has never been an accusation made against pop second been rumors of him assaulting anyone well that's not true bob saget hat has had to defend himself before the simula accusation in 2020 shortly after the premiere of corey feldman filmed by truth the break of two quarries the room is spread that it was tagged again based entirely on his racy history quickly twitter used to begin to tweet that second was not named in the documentary and that the statement was false it eventually died as it should have but it still set a tone there were people who believed this and were willing to end sagging's career i hope this is a learning experience whether it's throughout like influences politicians or anyone who has any kind of personality behind them they're hated well people need to realize that any accusation you throw out there needs to be rock solid if you only know in your heart this happened it most likely didn't we need to regain our intellectual status as a leader in this world we can't know something is right in our heart and wrong especially if you have a lot of neither he nor his horde can truly learn from this mistake i generally i genuinely think that sloane was in the wrong for doing that the fact that he would say some things about bad bob saget about even providing clear amount of evidence seems so so so inappropriately stupid of him to do like come on if you are going to accuse somebody you need to have crucial evidence to back up your claims fact that you just rushed this now is completely disgusting dodgy and above all irresponsible you did this as a cash grab how could you like come on you caused this i mean look at all these tweets you caused this mess people have now believed a word that you say which which could be more raw because john stamos did not john stamos or bob sagan did not do any of these things and now plenty of people most likely girls are prone to believe not bob's second did these things which is completely untrue to a certain extent we all know that bob saget has a good has a clean record and you chose to make a stupid video which got everyone talking [Music] if mom seconds name was trending on twitter five days earlier i could have seen it and everybody would have known about it right now but thankfully you did take down the video because you knew that you did a dodgy thing and you cannot get away with it just by fucking uploading these videos about an explanation so if you're gonna whip about content is normal like nothing happened nice try but i'm not allowing this you need to get off your ass and start apologizing do now you guilty motherfucker doing now no wonder you probably twitter account you can't be trusted to do anything like for real it's time that you start apologizing so stop moving up these types of videos that you just worked out a few days ago and even tonight and just make an apology video now because you caused this mess and by the time you don't apologize soon enough i'm saggy's name retraining and it'll be all your fault come on i'm waiting on you to apologize [Music] [Applause] [Music] you
Real Talk With Ricky Paquiot
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2021-03-23
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winter '22 trends i like and pieces i want to thrift
hello guys welcome back to my channel I hope you're all doing well today we're going to talk about some of my favorite fall slash winter Trends and pieces that I'm looking to Thrift for my wardrobe so let's just get started the majority of these pictures are coming from Pinterest because it's my one social media Splurge first up this is not specifically like fall or winter but I really want a black maxi dress like high neck I have some potential fun plans for this summer so I would love to have just like a gorgeous sleek black dress like that with like because you can style it with boots and a coat for like fall or you can just do that with like some platform sandals for spring summer so we'll see second thing is a bit more practical as well but I really want just like a black tube top or bandeau top because I have a lot of like lace or mesh tops that are either off the shoulder or kind of like strapless and so I want to have a bandeau to wear under because I feel like that just looks better than having like the straps if that makes sense next thing I'm looking for any like solid color or like basic long sleeves first of all I need them because at work it's so cold so I need to like literally layer it under my t-shirt and then also I just feel like that there's such a good tool for layering just having like Basics because I have so many long sleeves but they are more statement pieces all right now this has been on my mind for a while I want a plaid maxi skirt so bad I have tried upcycling one that I found I have tried making my own from scratch let me tell you sewing and folding and ironing pleats literally the worst thing in the world and so much harder than I expected in the meantime I loved a thrift one but I'm not even picky at this point literally just a plaid skirt that's longer with boots and a sweater and a leather jacket love it now this is something that I've seen a lot in men's fashion and that's wearing some sort of like fun graphic T-shirt with a solid colored cardigan over top I just think it's a really cool look again I like the layering I used to really hate on Cardigans and I think I definitely don't like the fitted cardigans but I do really like the idea of like an oversized cardigan in some sort of fun solid color like red maybe or even green and then be able to like wear it over t-shirts I'm also just on like a crazy jacket wave so I really want some cool new jackets and I'm not saying it needs to be a Carhartt jacket but like those sort of like quilted on the inside and then like canvas outside jackets just like men's oversized black basic goes with everything and just like doesn't have the same look of like the cropped puffers that I have next is fun sweaters I'm very picky about my sweaters and what I like and what I don't really like and my main thing is they need to be heavy they need to be like thick knit sweaters because I really need them to like keep me warm which also means that they're so damn heavy I have an orange sweater that I swear is like probably five pounds but it's like a good quality sweater so those are just great and they can be fun for layering with a turtleneck or a button up underneath I'm also looking for some fun like printed hoodies or crew necks I really like I just throw it on with jeans and it just kind of gives like more of a put together like cool outfit and so I think I need to like Purge my closet and go through and get rid of the sweatshirts I don't really wear and then maybe bring in some new ones also another Trend that I'm loving lately is fleece I just found this from Vinted it's this really cool just like it's fleece zip up you guys can tell I just have really been liking fleece because it's so warm and because there are a lot of cool fleeces out there next up this might actually be because I just finished Gilmore Girls for like maybe the fifth time but I really want a nice Raglan sleeve top long sleeve um preferably because I have a few short sleeve ones but those who don't know if it is it's like the baseball tee kind of style so it's like here is one color and the sleeves are a different color I just think that they're really cute and just like a nice way to sort of make a long sleeve more interesting next up is a black midi or maxi skirt I have a white one that I love and I just love the black one to mix it up because the thing with skirts is like you can throw on some like tights I have these fleece line tights that are super nice and super warm throw on those tights and boots and a sweater and a jacket and like sequels on of wearing pants if not warmer and that's something that I've been looking for again for years so I don't know what I'll come across one but I know I already mentioned this a little bit but any like off the shoulder sweaters I love sometimes I think they're the ones that kind of fold over and I don't really think that's what I'm looking for but maybe just like oversized sweaters that can kind of be like slouchy or off the shoulder I like this I would love a pair of pin straight pants I think they're so cool and just like a lower waisted tight around the thighs flare out around the knee perfect this is something that I've been looking for pretty much all summer but I really want to find a white peasant Cottage core kind of dress I saw this picture and then I just like was on this crazy hunt of different dresses like I don't know if it's like Smock kind of dresses or like what exactly you would call them but they're just so cool and I really want one just to wear with like big black boots and like kind of accessorize in a way that's like in complete contrast with like the light and flowiness of the dress I think would be so awesome I also have been looking for a denim mini skirt either a denim mini skirt or a pleated denim skirt but the score would obviously like have shorts be great much more of like a summer spring kind of piece but the pleated skirt if it was just like a plain skirt then I could wear with like tights and stuff and that would be really cool so that's pretty much it that's just kind of what I've been enjoying and liking recently in fashion wish me luck when I go home to Thrift these things because I would love to and also look at this beautiful little sunset on my window
Lakin Maria
UClXMRBI3qljIFENzmHL_gnA
2022-12-17
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,247
6,289
-oxdPM5fkFM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-oxdPM5fkFM
Visage - Part 12 - NOW WE'RE GETTING SOMEWHERE 🤔
good everybody my name is Perry song and crazy things begins here and there but there must be a link to all of these mirror things so I'll try to solve the puzzles one by one and I think I'll try first the Dolores tee and this must be tricky because I don't have a hint or anything about that Hey oh hi Dolores Hey whoa what was that what the hell was that what the freakin freaky Frankie god damn it what the hell you must be kidding me you must be kidding me oh my god okay it's this puzzle here there is about here opened our what the hell was that about I didn't like that a bit I'm telling you not a bit I actually hated it okay let's see here if there is Oh a floating candle I'll take that okay we have space there must be Hin with these numbers oh also I have casts what store items okay I can store them alrighty alrighty okay uh-huh yeah why not so let's see if I can so I see down there 50 clearly a 50 and the other number you think it is three seven three okay you see there on the left corner down 53 seven three I think this is clear let me let me write that up okay 53 73 so we have that we have that this must be a code for something I don't know what year so let's take play can i play that uh-huh can i okay the lord Caesar for an observer and their symptoms I think this is what I didn't hear okay yep come on can I with a really crappy controls closer divorce male Bowman severe psychosis okay she loses contact with reality for long periods of time uh-huh she hardly remembers me anymore mm-hmm she's lost her trust in me and it's becoming harder and harder to administer her treatments she sometimes forgets where she is or even the fact that she has to wear clothes hmm raging her nails are banging her head on doors Whoopie she murmurs gibberish sentences and roams aimlessly around the house great the other day she even accused me of trying to poison her I'm on the edge I don't think I can take much more of this how am I supposed to work take care of the baby and deal with her dementia all at the same time what baby wait a minute who was the baby okay that there must be some something I missed in these cassettes right there must be something I missed or was that play that play play there examine okay flavor plate freakin flavor I I'll kill you bringing giving you your symptoms are aggravating doctors tell me it's become very hard to pinpoint the exact disorder mm-hmm they tell me she's got symptoms of schizophrenia bipolar disorder some cases dementia and more okay stop crying tell me tell me what to do things worse today she told me she often hears her own voice whispering a sequence of five numbers through the baby monitor uh-huh she said it's the key to her in her house Oh what does that even mean I think I know what it means I supposed to do okay and where was the the dddddd no nope no fear for the baby okay she has become obsessed with him uh-huh she said she could always hear him cry over the baby monitor even when it's off she has trouble differentiating him from the dolls in the house once she threw it all away realizing it wasn't the baby I'm horrified at the idea that she might do the same to the baby thinking she's holding a doll I've got rid of all the dolls in the house okay she keeps on calling in them never remembering where he is all right I have to keep a constant eye on both of them the only time I can get some work done is when she's sedated okay so I've read the description of the game again and I think it wasn't saying the same before but now I think they gave us a little of the Lord here so I am an investigator I don't know if I just forgot that if I already saw that Maria I'm an investigator and I'm investigating the mysteries of this house so now I don't know if there is a connection between the stories I mean the girl with the jaw thing and here Dolores I don't know if this baby is hair the Gator Sophie but Sophie had had a brother I don't know I don't I know I know now this thing here I'm very positive I'm hearing it sane very close to me sane screeching clanging okay creepy I think this thing here is the link in the painting mural room oh hey oh hello hey this must be a bit confusing well no worries the game just crashed and I got to do the recording another day so if you see different things from what I had before my venturi or rather things this means that I had to do this all over again so here I am sewing again oh this was faster than before huh let's get a good see of these things here get a picture yes goes it on the remember whale picture Ricky okay thank you and go now you see there no she's not good then light up being okay ah sure shall we go for the shall we go for the big down there with the paintings to do this I think this is turned off why is it making sounds like it's turned on oh you wanted to I knew it let's get down there and make that happen hmm I almost forgot how creepy that was this is gonna be trippy let's find those paintings so we have we have we have this what was that is this this is it yes this is it I can't store this item ah how dare you but again okay did I did it that okay this is there now I need them me to face you are creeping me off sir where's that first oh this is going over there I don't care if you say that I am cheering this is not cheering my memory is a bit blurry I dare you to remember everything and recording at the same time and play this freaky oh it's here I didn't know I okay I was just wondering there and talking to myself and why do you know things just find themselves there I remember the sheriff Delores early seem cell fusion bugs missing oh I got it right here [Music] I found a son toy Oh baby what's that for what okay I guess I'll find a way to do things from here now what yeah I know I know I was about to find Dolores de pinky de Paris what yes yes what everyone who lives yes [ __ ] up anyway [ __ ] him let's move on did you see what the batshit crazy old [ __ ] did yesterday wants to hear it from you or you posted brain anyway obvious she's been walking around the house completely naked like a [ __ ] [ __ ] you're stuck with me don't you remember reads and with freezer you can't trust him I tell you Oh put your why did big guy let us hear about the news I heard and saddle up it's big news uh I heard that the old woman murdered her husband in cold blood my son be worried I just experienced okay I don't know if I have left we've run the hell out of here so mr. freeze ah thanks sir okay all righty uh-huh I don't know I just something moving their fingers or something moving there what do I do now you are having a close for here do I don't remember do I I don't think so also I need to find pills and fast I'm in need of pills here nada oh yeah it was a baby no I don't want anything to do about it okay my brain is B R we take it okay all right oh yeah oh yeah oh so I did that uh-huh yeah there was the other one up here be able to pray oh he's got him hammer keeps me out when I turn oh oh they were talking about you yeah why didn't keep over here or something I think yeah do i maybe no okay then I don't have it so is the seven nights yeah mm-hmm one two three four five six seven Evan no it's not seven it's not seven oh maybe oh my god oh oh that was the scariest thing I ever experienced in my life in a game wait a minute I need a break that was so creepy I was a lot of creepy am i doing the season here shut everything using my words oh my god I'm seeing nightmares without tonight I am very sure about that oh my oh my heels come work these paint peels what's that I did that okay all right wow that was that hit me hard I must say Raghu downstairs was in there near here yeah okay let's go then let's go down Oh trippy repeat repeat repeat repeat repeat repeat I'm not in the dark I am NOT I am NOT in the dark a little too cozy for my taste and I'm down yeah I know creepy yep yeah yeah creepy three give me control hey give me control yeah yeah yeah give me that no don't the candle just give me that yes yes yes I can give me that too hmm appear and I remember Oh didn't I have what's that this for the tea still in my hair this is the garage okay and what's that this is basement okay okay all right I didn't have that okay let's go here okay [Music] ah I didn't know there was another one here okay them very cute Oh how what Oh ha ha huh okay hmm giving me a lighter do I need them what I cannot store this item yeah I know no I cannot doing it later I'll take the lighter what what I do what what am i doing by getting somehow there I think I'm hearing a bio Lane very creepy violin oh my god oh my god oh this is not good what the hell you know what I don't think I need there anymore so I would just repeat will go air okay and do my merry way oh why why why no no no wait no no no no oh no no no I'm not no I will not okay like maybe with that maybe with that with that with that with this with it no I don't want go back there I don't want to go back there why is she creeping in the house why is she doing that to me I really don't know what to expect hey I'm going I don't know why but I'm going hey hey oh yes yes hey yes Dolores haha creepy I'm not well I'm not well maybe you noticed but I'm not well take a Pew picking up here what time can I take that hammer it seems useful Oh oh yeah likey what like you they're very very like and I don't think I need anything I'm here hey don't like your me is no what do I have to do where do I have to go I think it's up from here I don't know also what about it what about it yeah I'm getting like again with this map we go Vegas at this point I'm blind i okay yeah Anglo's bring me my child yeah yeah I will as soon as they find creepy though before over let's see what I got I got a toy I get it ah I got a toy oh yeah right baby okay the baby baby's room nope nope [Music] I'm dead end it I'm dead I'm dead I'm dead I'm not looking I'm dead I'm dead I'm dead I'm the hundred hundred hundred hundred bucks go to the safe room I'm going to the safe room get the hell out of here Delores Hey okay put that there huh did that David David okay oh I'm I got that from but that was from the other puzzle don't think I want that now all I got is this oh okay thank you for the tip I am going to the grass to the grass we go the grass and a book the Koran maybe this one this one egg one maybe this one but Oh Oh aah that kids don't try this at home without protective glasses and a parent home yeah wait wait a minute wait a minute for that before this a tap you save it appeal yes thank you examine examine it breathe okay oh okay okay all right okay take that go now I know what was that now I know what to do what's that sound Oh oh okay oh you will not attack me here in these rooms as I noticed and I think I'm safe here let's see that let's see that so this is the opposite this is three and a half and this is well this is digs okay I think I got it okay this is but okay okay okay okay this is three this would be creepy Oh oh come on oh and this is 1200 okay locked in place this is oh the chandelier only the middle only how convenient I've got okay what do you wait a minute wait what drops okay pick the light god okay it was only the middle one also a bit of infuriating okay so this window and [ __ ] again okay but I don't think the other one unlocked something chandelier I hope I'm right till that one the gear is facing the right way the other the left way and okay this is arms oh oh where is it [Music] oh don't don't pity me pity me [Music] both hands need to perform this action okay what I'm sure [Music] aha beautiful this is just getting better and better and you know what I think I'll stop here please hey I think it's getting on me I think starting to getting on me huh so thank you for hanging out with me and we will meet again in my next video whenever this is see ya [Music]
Perisome
UCP3y7qpsbRte3WL2GrXdsrw
2020-05-18
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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2,480
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Y_X4oPfyz4c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_X4oPfyz4c
Andy Valdivia Artist Talk
so i want to welcome you all tonight to believe it or not our very first in-person presentation in the sabbatini gallery in the last two years so you were in the newly renovated space uh we didn't get to play with it very much during the last year because of coped and so we're very excited that we were able to bring you all in here today and today we're going to uh be enthralled by andy and all of his great wisdom and art and i don't think i need to introduce him to any of you so i'm going to step back do a lot of learning um and then before we kind of finish tonight i'll give you a little more information about what we're doing throughout the whole exhibit so you know more of our programming with that being said i give you mr um most of our i've seen all these except this last one um i you know in the last few years i've gotten into heavily with murals so uh what i want to do is basically const i'm going to show some slides of what i've done and murals that i want to do but focus on the art history has gotten to be a kind of a art history subject or movement that i'm trying to get down in the basement of the activity center basically you all seen the centerpiece this is the it's all going to be titled our history then it's going to have a colon and that's called our history the one i just finished in july if you haven't seen it in the basement is and then there's another wall to the to the right side i don't know what direction that is but i want to continue with this one called our history body was and i'm trying to focus on basically five burles oakland east pika and i even have if you notice it's very getting started that as north topeka up here bottoms you just see it they'll show up more neutral right anyway all the five girls and things that match up from way back uh from like for example right now we're all the face mask uh spanish blue which was in 1918 and this is a picture from 1918 of people wearing masks a lady would be she could be here today says wear a mouse to go to jail uh so it's very pregnant uh to uh covet now so all right let's get with this i know how to run this thing uh this is a dave matthias he's a a photographer older gentleman took all the pictures of our family reunions and we got to be good friends i've done a lot of work for him and he does a lot of work for me he did this presentation for me um so thank dave for that this is one of the when he when i was doing this he took some shots this is one of my homemade little table there and i tend to go uh yeah if i say something i told my wife to give me a signal or something uh this is the first one this was and i have that if you want to um just for your information on this thing zan made a copy of my book here but all these every all these images i have a sheet like this and they they their number so you find whatever image you're interested in look on here he has a number and this book has a a paragraph definition so it lets you know what's what you know you can't tell the players about a program there you go okay and this is the hours uh quite a few hours and it's kind of interesting i'll get to that that one section i did over there and this one that i just finished even though this is more than three times the size of that it took me longer to do that one go over that why all right um this is the first one this was the uh parochial it was 2006. that's when i started yeah the funny thing is at the end of 2006 i thought i was done you know you know and the story and i think a lot of you've heard my wife get nauseated by this but when they did this in 2005 they were just finishing the building there was a bulletin a um [Music] call for artists to they wanted four areas that could be art can be put on so this is one of them uh so i did this like in september august of the 05 and i didn't hear anything um yeah you know five yeah because we went it was about december or sometime in there i called and i asked whatever happened to that contest um i don't know who i talked to back then but i said well you want it how many people entered you're the only one oh anyway it down but oh this is what i came up with um the measurements were wrong that's the reason why there's this somebody ever wondered why i have that brown bar there the measurements i was given was 21 by 11. wow it's actually 18 by 11. i think if they're counting there's this little little thing up here this and that i think but anyway so i had to adjust it that's the reason for that questions this is this um the original one um again i did the middle part um 2012. i finished that started in february of 2012 and finished in september 2012. this is 665 um a long time and again i thought i was done finished but now i kept getting comments you don't have anything on the uh 51 flood or uh the war the world war one world and there's a bunch there's a list it kept getting bigger and bigger and bigger so i decided to add a little bit more any questions on this one so what i did to the left i added uh this this is actually seven and a half by well seven and a half feet by six no actually square it fits in right from here i mean from that end forward no no no never mind there it is right here yeah yeah it ends the original part ended right about here the reason i put these lines here is to hide the line if you go to the basement and see it you can see where one started and the other one begins the same thing on the other side anyway this has a lot of the aztec uh information uh the snake god i keep forgetting all these things and the states of all of mexico where most of people down there can figure out or see where they came from so i thought it was kind of neat any questions on those on the other side i did more was today this one is only seven and a half feet by seven and a half feet that was seven and a half by 29 this took me um 682 hours that took me 628 hours so it's kind of why because of all the people the oh all these people there's quite a few this is the original one notice that up here there isn't that many people um i'm kind of breaking away from what i was started the reason i do this motif this mortise board of images just thrown up there because i can take them out or put them in at whenever i wanted to that's exactly what i've been doing none of these have ever finished the way i i intended to work the way i began during the process it's changed this is going to be the same way i'm going to a lot of things and i'll get to this later i'm going to change i put all this stuff on here i'm going to be told and hopefully i am that something's not right it should you know [Music] the one of the buildings is wrong or whatever so or something else should be putting in or for example i wish i could get a picture of um a pie you know the old guadalupe hall any of those if i if i get one of those then i will switch something here i mean that's that's because bama pai is a big part of our community or it was uh so but anyway the reason like this see this one and you'll you'll see it a little bit along that here see all those that were not they were not there on the original one and those are classes of 32 38 and there's like four or five of them so there's all kinds of people um from the first graduating class of larry guadalupe in 1928 to the last class 19 2006 when my nieces was in that class i originally put this is uh whoa that's it again very good ah anyway uh my sister aurora is actually in that class now she's long gone now and so is my sister-in-law um angie valdivia they were both in this 1928 class which i did not know so a little bit of history and i do have because people said about 51 flood the korean war forbes air base the happy days group i got them all in there i hope this doesn't get how do i get this back down just touch it again pinch it oh man that's why you make the big bucks sure yeah oh all right anyway that's the um this is the toltec warriors you see in mexico uh i have to count those that's six feet of you know there's a wall here two feet and this one's my brother abel and carl so the guys who they're the ones that helped me with all of these no i can't thank them enough in fact their names right there this is the one i did in the gym um there's actually only four places where i've done murals the stairwell at the gym downstairs and in the church and i'll be coming up but those four are made up by 26 pieces like for example right now this is four you'll see a little bit i extended it 16 feet on either side to 92 feet by 7 feet and this took me uh a total for this grouping and then the two end ones totaled 881 hours a lot again uh abel and carlos again in fact i'll show you it will be something here um this is the first leg of it i guess we call it um what when i was doing this and i worked out if you've been in our gym they got a little utility room and the door is only like seven foot not even 7 foot because i can't get i can't get slide the pictures through i had to work in that little cubby hole again these are like i said 15 15 feet by seven so they're monsters um but somehow we got it done uh while i was working on it a lot of people would come in and tell me things like this i think i'll touch it well things change again always they're always changing the mexican villages have all have wells so voila put in the well um among some other things oh you see this next one second one um on the village uh oh i had these cactuses and they had i think they call them dunyas the top of the cactus i have to put these in these are actually the mexican um the eagle that they're symbols uh i think it's called the carcada they have this kind of uh like mohawk on their head they also another thing that they told me that people would come in while i'm working says well you have to have a vegan they always have these little statues that people sat around there's that one and go back this there's these little villages i put in i forgot how you call spanish [Music] a lot of drunks to get a lot of trucks so what they do is put these slats on the windows and doors that made it in jail we did that the church this is actually the style of our lady guadalupe with you can see the doors and that thing on top but for what i understand the original church which was 1947 was supposed to have two peers two columns but they ran out of money from what i read and that's why you only have this one this one just stop questions or tell me i'm wrong or tell me i'm right [Music] oh the other thing was these all these little things came from people talking to me the windows all these these these uh what you call them cactus they were used in the mexican mexican villages as a guard a burglar system so they grow them under the window so that they uh they're going to have to go through a lot of pain to get to um them mariachis i had to change these twice because they told me that in the heat of mexico where the villages they don't wear black it's too hot so i put them in white and also i don't know if you noticed that's in reference to my mom and my dad uh she always wears she had a bun and i was thinking your favorite color was blue my sisters were telling me it was i mean um yeah it was green so well the um again this is the the two new ones the extensions that the extensions were uh last year may and july these two there's two of them that took 393 hours that's part of that 800 hours but uh carlos carlos respect to carlos lapercia eduardo there's a church up here so i got and i got there's different things cousins just referenced to someone here in topeka um anyway that's pretty the the problem with this well i'll get to the next one here and keep going quick here if i'm going too slow tell me this is the nice thing i'm just trying to get again uh homeless uh every i'm trying to the the things that a lot of people don't see is what again i mentioned abel and carlos where they come into this the attachment well let's i'm gonna well let's go back and forward this one i'm not crazy about this is the it's maybe it's because it's too long and uh dave tried to put them all together there's six panels here uh the middle four are 15 feet and the last two are 16 feet wide but there's no edge it's hard to see or and when you're making canvases out of lumber and you if you've ever i'm sure you all um a lot of you may have stretched canvas when you put gesso on it it shrinks the canvas that's what makes it taut uh uh like the military throws those quarters off the bed locks whatever the anyway we there was some issues with these uh but um under the um uh 18 they figure we a couple of times we have to undo the canvas because i was already stapled down there we had to undo it take it out work something to do make it so that there wasn't a big gap in there and they worked out this last one here it's right in here i mean these were the problems that i had to deal with and that's why i got to get these guys to help there was a gap that went from nothing to like three quarter inch to nothing to a six foot long so we came up with the idea of putting a a shim from nothing two quarter inch all the way down and it worked perfect and we glued it in taped it down re-uh canvassed it voila it went down great and you can't even see that my next problem after that was done was matching the colors because some of these are like five six years old and it it worked out pretty good i actually cheated on some of these i like these colors here i i uh actually painted this oh and i painted the old one to match the new one so i don't have to um i cheated and it will tell but oh come on this is the back of our ladies church it's 15 pieces this is the nine feet three inches nine feet i think by 15. um we had a lot of issues again when carlos comes in putting it back there because there's vents back there it was meant to be bigger but you can't cover vents and put putting the framework because this used to be windows back there now it's like these things uh um tile seating and we have to put some kind of framework back there because these each one of these 15 pieces and you don't see any gaps i mean it just it fits perfect i even painted the screws black so you don't see them but each one of these are screwed down [Music] in fact i may even have just you want to go through this uh took some pictures of what it what it used to look like i know you can't see it from there but you're welcome to come up and look at these but it gives you an idea of my nephew helped the daredevil he actually had to get up there you only have no yeah about 18 inches of space up here and it was dangerous sometimes but anyway he got him up and it worked out pretty good and the story of the pieces oh um have you ever seen i'm sure you have a lot of we have a ladybug loopy pictures if you see it lady gaga there's always four images of the four apparent uh uh four appearances uh father um paramill was the one who uh peter asked me about doing this and he said make sure you mention five apparitions too they also appear to her uncle uh bernard bernardo so that's the story of the five apparitions uh that's do i start with five operations questions uh okay this is what like we're starting off with this is what starting this this thing i've had some issues with this but some people like it some people don't but i'm trying to try to get as much stuff on here as i can and i have john mendoza eddie uh gonzalez and especially tom rodriguez um those those i depend on those guys their opinion quite a bit and they're the ones that helped me with this and john's wife of virginia they're all very a lot more in the know than i am about their history anyway that's that this one took me what i tell you 628 hours that was started in may 20 and finished in december 20. anyway this now here's what the change one of the changes big changes you know they say carpenter should measure twice cut once i did this originally this was it it was supposed to fit in the 29 foot wall by seven and a half well seven and a half was fine but i was more like 23 feet so i had to if you notice the ends here this end that and especially this end there's a lot more different stuff the uh manifest destiny i needed the fist six more feet of uh material so again energy there's all kinds of material you can put on here this thing which is very much today and i i i went to my it's the uh what when they uh you can only get three percent of the people whatever within in the united states that that on that day uh what early 1900s three percent of it was uh immigrants could come in so and that's something like what we have today as far as the problem of immigration it's constant problem never has always been with us i don't think it'll ever go away this is the wall that i did this is again where even carlos comes in they help me tape it jesuit i use a grid line one foot to the drawing one foot to the inch that's how i get started this is the sketch this is done on tracing paper it gives me an idea where to place things and this is what i have a opaque projector i know i can draw and i can draw everything that's what i did on this thing that's why it took me so darn long i had to draw every single thing i got smart finally and i used the opaque projector and i just shot them up there but you have to arrange it to whatever has your specific size because everything fits i'm trying to get there's a movement here same thing there's always there's some kind of movement in the images so there's a reason some of these are placed in so there's no dead spots but anyway so this was the drawing before i started painting and then i get started and just this is a one week or whatever whatever keeps going and going and i didn't feel any pain on the floor i think a lot of you have seen this it's a flag red white and blue the underneath red white and green from mexico and i took it and it was a square i made it into a a simply because i use the word analogous which is a what they're similar things that are similar the eagle their eagle which is the karakata which is like ours the eagle the they're both from the birth both birds are both from eggs their colors are red white and blue in fact this border going around here is red white and green for the mexican side then here it blends to red white and blue the american side i still have i'm still thinking of going back even now and inventory if there's always change i don't think this is green enough so i may go back when i do this one to have carlos and abel gotta help me with uh making it greener right it's just one of those things it's just getting your head you got to get it done it's like an itch so that it's just not green enough so just a heads up that might change anyway um i did get some complaints that you know i wasn't born in uh i was born here in america uh take that out i was told to take that out but again difference of opinions this kind of stuff always draws that so i expect it that kind of let it flow off and these are just pieces of this i just took some pieces of it uh eddie oligar don and these things i actually if you read like these little bits of the paragraphs i have it explains about the fencing the the the border wall the fencing the sanctuary cities just all kinds of stuff and all i'm trying to do is get it out in the open and get talk about it but i've been using these this this one's here and it's right there right in the middle right next to the uh rosie there the i use the ad this the street signs actually send in chandler is uh my latitude and longitude of that's what this is that's the the epicenter and everything around it is what this is with the people around it uh i have it over here but it's chandler and crane because accident used to be i think accuracy was crane because if you go over the bridge gabe alcala's one told me he's extremely intelligent man he was telling me a lot of this history i wish he could be he gave you a lot of that history but he said that if you follow crane from the other uh east of brown i mean sorry west of brown and come it would be accuracy is that right yeah anyway while you've given me the floor i can't attest to the fact that there is a method to copies of madness and it's actually genius when you talk to pokey his inspiration his motivation for different scenes that one in particular depicts the era of the chicano movement which inspired mexicans to learn their history which part of the mural depicts and also lays the groundwork for our future yeah and yet amongst all this is our religion that meet him our inspiration as a people and it's affected by that right there the five pieces well i mean while you're yeah yeah you i think you're the one who started halo yeah that's in here somewhere looks like it's small too small but there's uh metro i remember metro from k-state yeah that's in here um yeah and going back to this piece uh it's not coincidental that most of us already were depicted there went out and spread the gospel of chicanismo gloria corona rodriguez george vega jay garcia who ran for uh commissioner of transportation for the city and on and on and on so like i said there is a lot of history and maybe something sometimes you can discuss the inspiration or motivation in explaining some of these scenes too well i think forever though yeah well when you one of the things that got me i told the very first one with uh rokia the very first one in the stairwell did that and that that was in 2005 or six that was like a six year before i did the other one the first one i did was 2006 the next one was the basement the center part that was in 2012. there was one idea called history his story you know i was trying to get a play on the word history his story which was my uh what do you call my uh portrait but i didn't do it as a painting of me i did it as when i thought i was a tennis player i went and used crawdad my doll wino um the first vikram my brother brought me raymond and they bought me a i wanted a 24 inch i mean little things like that but i wanted a little cheap bike like 250 and he gets me a schwinn three speed i mean it all our marriage all kinds of things or football team i mean that's it was my history i think that grew into the register says our history and i think i think it just evolved from that life but i talked too much hey cokey yes sir so um is anybody capturing oral history i mean as people come in and [Music] how as you mentioned that you're uh uh guadalupe jaramillo was one of them he was when i was doing these uh lupiharmio uh john padilla uh and they're both gone now they were their minds were sharp um and they were all these stories about sales some of these places i don't even remember there was a place called sales i wish we could get them videotaped and just hear them um gary was telling me there's a discipline the house right across the street from the church gonzales used to have a bar on top above just different things that i found interesting and that's i think what kind of fed me into uh well that and then i started googling uh like i would google civil rights movements from 1800 1900 to 2000 and and they'll give me year by year by year different things that happen there's thousands of things but you pick and choose that's where i got a lot of this stuff and that stuff pick and choose which ones go in there that's why i said i could fill in with all kinds of different things and it's i don't know and it still wants me i still want to keep it going uh now i'm kind of down with that and i'm just going to show you a couple of others you know if they have any questions i was part of this about 26 of us who were did the brown versus board wall i actually did a well i did a painting but michael toons he was a lead artist great man i mean i really like this man he uh he was a talker he was very good he explained himself a lot better than i can but he's the one that did this now where i come in on this all these were these ideas came from this was 2017 that's when it started anyway there was a art 501 schools great school of high school were doing a martin luther king art i was one of the judges myself and i forgot the other gentleman and uh hill larry hill one of the owners of this this is the hill plumbing company right across the way from monroe's school in fact it's south of the monroe school it's 30 feet long tall and 130 feet long uh these images were from the art contest from first grade to 12th grade um and which i was lucky enough to be one of the judges of and mr hill maybe that's why they use them because it was hill who was one of the judges and some of these are that year there was one of the why so many masks i've been how can we get all these masks in here uh once one of the schools were studying african mass so voila that's the mask all this is part of that stuff um what we were supposed to do originally each artist was supposed to take a photo a picture of one of the student works like this lady's face yeah i think that's uh yeah um and this could have been second grade third grade fourth grade or whatever so you can imagine what it might look like and to have an artist have to try to work they cut it in half and then last long and the artist kind of cheated over and took over this side so a lot of this was that's what i do here i did martin became [Music] there you go oh this is the thing with the name and i'm gonna tell a story here because there'll be one at the end of the police department there was a lady when we did this i was retired and all these others are pretty young just working so i can come anytime i want anything you've got to give me a key paint with at so i and my nephews joey and jacob work here uh so i kind of had a nail in the building too so it worked out pretty well but i would come early in the morning and start painting i'd get about my truck put a ladder on my truck and then go up they did have some um lifts but not for long anyway um while i was doing these this lady lois name was lois uric she was an older lady and she came in a van but she couldn't walk she can get out of the car open the door she'd get a wheelchair and she'll come out she came every day at least the everyday hours that she was there and she didn't have anything so i had to get her set up with paint eventually she bought her own paint painting somewhere walmart or something and she would go because she was in a wheelchair she had to just paint down here somewhere right in here and i put her name down she wow i'll get into that a little bit later come back to that this notice that it kind of ends i don't know if you noticed this that all of a sudden about right here it's kind of empty he did you know talk about measure twice cut once they didn't measure quite right so it's actually a lot of people don't notice that but it's anyway mike is a pretty uh sharp guy this thing over here i don't know if you notice i didn't touch it [Music] yeah oh it's three-dimensional it's three-dimensional it's it's actually cut out of wood the women inmates at the prison did since i was at the prison i used to work with them i went with uh i was proud i had to work with them there you go thank you i'm getting better at this anyway those are actually cut out of wood uh one of the great school kids wrote a poem a line is something like uh the only thing that should be a hung should be separated by color is laundry or something like that i don't even separated by color the audrey that's the words that are up here and there's the pair of pants i've got a dress shirt whatever and then you actually use a wire but they had to drill into the concrete into the cinder blocks with bolts and keep them away from the wall they wanted some gap between the wood and uh um but anyway so the inmates had like a week or so to paint those then we had to go pick them up and then these guys would be on the list and we put all these names on here one of the names on there is uh lois ulrich she's not an artist she's just a lady that showed up every day but she got to know everybody and they all decided we all decided to put her name up there and the thing is about two weeks after this was done she passed away so there was another uh she got one of the artists woody woodward was one of the other cat said got really tight with her she was like just a nice little old lady and all she wanted to do was paint uh this is the police baseball uh dave dave was everywhere dave matthias he took this picture and i had this whole uh west wall um and that stuff is rough you put your hand around great bricks on i think it was tough but anyway all they wanted was people um the public were supposed to work out here and that's the thing about the arts connection it's a public thing public gets to work there you know i did not do this the red shoes and the blue pants and red ties and i don't know what the thing's about so i had to come back and so we let them paint and they go away and then come back and finish it up but it was it was fun that's this was right here awesome that little ghost that's i i drew in there anybody know anything about that the police department [Music] he wanted to paint her so if you go there she'll be there and i haven't put a guy being operated on so they said they wanted they got god coming out of the hole in the ground ditched i got a greg digger so when they said put all uh professions out there i did and i put lois on there i think one more these are just this is what i did for 501 professional building used to be um 31st of march um [Music] they wanted uh this portrait um they told me you know to do it okay then they told me they're going to put a refrigerator on that machine they haven't so that's that's that's good and i was doing this one at the same time i was doing it with the police department so that was i had to quit one that's why i put the system going yeah yeah air ducts up at the top oh yeah [Music] [Laughter] it was harder settling on the subject than i was painting it because you have all these religions all these lifestyles i even had to change this because i had a cross on this take it out nothing to do with religion so anyway this is uh this is about 10 feet by 20 some feet i had a couple of inmates help but again they're gone i have to catch up [Music] this is when i i went to genesis i'm into tennis i got the history there's actually the word tennis and i'm saying the idea here t e n n i i just about tennis and i got uh everybody you can think of it started as jadab something of the hand the handball pinball became tennis went from there the original ladies championship uh wimbledon they had they had an odd number of players what i mean by that you know if you have 13 players you're going to get 13 and you're going to get six well six in here six in here and you got one in the middle that's what happened here it wasn't odd that weird but actually there's 13 players and it came down to when it came down to the final four the two winners played whoever was left there was uh it was just a strange uh uh setup they had an odd number of players and they should have they should didn't have buys back then at that person i knew it um anyway i approached uh rodney stevens the owner of genesis uh they actually kept it for about a week or so this is about six feet tall it's a specific gua i asked if i could paint it on there and i would if they would pay for it they would pay for the paint i would do it for free but he bought some really warm human prints and that was the end of that this is the brown versus board this is what was my idea for the brown version board that's the reason for the shape of it 30 by 100 and it has again same idea i and you can see h when they're bigger you can see them a lot better and this close you can't see them but i have a dr am and it goes from a slave and this was the year was the backspace approximation um when he freed the slaves that date i think of january 1st 1863 is that right oh man to november 4 2008 uh daniel and i'm the radio black man the president so it kind of was kind of neat the thing was this i worked with joan wilson she was a head ranger at uh uh i started doing these and they have like this much she said well that's good but you don't have anything on the mexicans the caesar child the orders and the rich oh that's good you don't have anything on the indians banks and a bunch of others muslims it covers the rainbow of lifestyles at least i try to anyway um i think i think that's it oh i know wait wait one more time i'll tell you i'm going to get back to what i'm trying to do now this is what i've done in the past this is what we just completed uh this is what what i'm trying to do is if you remember the basement that's in the center this is to the left of that i want this to be at that far end where it bends it goes into that utility room back there but i'm trying to get um all the uh i don't know if i mentioned this earlier it says north topeka up here uh neutral and then bottom oakland and east topeka and then have like uh i know my mom always grew year about winter uh spearmint i think that's what it is so voila right i'm kind of middle of that area the back there was a rock and tom rodriguez i had his book here uh i got a lot of my information from that and i asked him if i could use it anywhere you want perils rock and roll i even put zoro in there um any suggestions or not suggestions unless there's a picture with it you know i get i get tons of suggestions but no no help [Laughter] i even have the uh two of the guys that um with the spanish mexican stars and finney anthony anybody known uh it's in the book i got all these uh i got a lot of notes and stuff i just don't have the order i usually do the book after i'm done um i've got all the streets i'm gonna ask abel or carlos uh with this this is more of an engineer thing and it was called a lot of people i was talking to uh sarah fazel today about they're talking about the police being moved out that area was the same area that affected key way which was the the um renewal it went right through where we're talking about with the police so they're doing it again you know like deja vu all over again the up at the top you say a good place to dig potatoes isn't that what that's the name of topeka i mean that's supposedly according to tommy's book and i saw that too before topeka the word topeka is also right here a good place uh big tomatoes potatoes so i try to get like the princess theater with the show spanish films but again if anybody has pictures like that i'll take this out a minute and put something else in there anybody i even have see school kid in their potential i don't know it's a filler you know but it's also part of our history there's so much things i can throw on here it's just a matter of choice questions no no well i appreciate you coming and zan thank you [Music] [Applause]
TopekaLibrary
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2021-10-05
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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7,209
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CdNfYOnvAmc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CdNfYOnvAmc
LG Optimus 3D Walkthrough With Content Clips
rest one again don't outline stop bottles all the games are actually pre-loaded so all the games are created by gameloft which will drive you into a portal whereby you can actually purchase additional games so I mean heavy games like spider-man the ultimate spider-man you got avatar actually available on there which I've actually downloaded got another game for fishing Kings as I've got here apps are free us a real football 2011 oh there's the prices that there and yet at the moment they're ninety nine pence artist promotional offer for the time being and yeah at the moment is doing quite well actually there's a lot of downloads actually from this site morning with regards to sort of how the hands of doing in the embarrassing to other devices at the moment at the moment is at the moment assisted we've kind of like some free knowledge free car from where so a moment of tracking quite well and will you be launching on your devices or more retailers yes so a car phone being the first front of you will actually come through as well we've got everything your voyage I got three as well see ya the only people is missing is phone ok and how well is it doing or do you think it will do against the kind of deal for life the other dude world advisors um well I think it will definitely stuck up basically with the others bearing in mind as I said is it's a very powerful smartphone you know with the unique architecture the point of difference being in 3d which is hopefully going to be the book Helius elven exactly exactly but um so we were expecting obviously some good things for this LG optimus 3d got a nice 4.3 and stereoscopic LCD obviously to display your 3d content to 5 megapixel cameras actually on the back here we've got a unique 3d button here to actually take you into kind of like yard cool 3d space was 3d menu the first thing I need to state obviously before actually going to the 3d element of the handset is this is actually cool very very powerful smartphone it's dual core handset or the unique architecture which features dual core dual channel memory well that means basically you'll have very seamless multitasking para fish enhancer bearing in mind obviously what it's under its underpinning obviously the 3d technology study can really get a seamless seamless transactions or seamless motions necessarily when you're watching video so let's let's go into I was kind of like the let's go into the actual 3d itself obviously which is pretty much what everybody wants to see anyone yeah so this is the actual 3d menu it's a bit difficult to see obviously on a tuning this blow and then obviously the sunlights actually in the back so i'm not sure if you're getting this well enough but so here obviously you've got games and applications area you go into this area here obviously it initiated the 3d camera for you good good gallery so any content obviously that you created whether the videos are stills will be placed in this area we've got unique partnership with YouTube 3d so any Content any video content you've created you can instantly upload without any additional kind of like software and any content that's actually made available from YouTube you can actually view directly from the player on this handset also the unique thing about this as well obviously we've actually created a guide on this handset as well to allow you to or to show you how to create you and share and how to connect obviously to any TVs or and computers basically should you want to view that helps well it is hdmi compatible it's a micro HDMI compatible so and it literally kinda like mirrors the content on the TV watching from it up can you watch some any I know wouldn't be amazing quality we could you feed on the 3d TV you can do that on a fruity TV yeah okay and providing obviously like saying you've got a full length movie basically informal 1080 basically on the handset in 3d you can actually show that up actually on the TV any coding content you created bearing in mind constantly create in video can be fully captured up to 720 in 3d on this answer and 1080 in 2d so tell me a bit more about the concert and I'm quite familiar with the games I just had a little look and there was a concert on there there's a bit of fashiontv you really push it it's like the PDS have just launched a 3d channel on the eco hoping that this is going to be similarly bad so yeah I mean it'll be the slight difference obviously bearing in mind this is obviously a mobile handset which is obviously everybody will actually have a phone in their pocket so i mean you still have the functionality of an android device we can actually get into the marketplace person continent but yes we actually have 10 pre-loaded video clips actually on the device to actually get people going essentially so that can actually play about with that should they need to we are speaking with a number of partners actually to see if we can actually get a movie movie store in place as well it's a later date but for the time being any content you possibly might have basically the invention of oil in your car enhancer yeah that's actually captured in 2d we also have a real-time 293 any rendering actually on this device as well okay so what did you take it yourself voltage it could be footage you taking yourself basically and then you've got it on a micro SD card from your previous answer you stick it in here any pictures and videos basically that you've taken you can literally just press the green button I'll show you now I should go yeah so I'm going to come out of the 3d area basically now and if i go into the main gallery wonder it's fun to I found a 2d image right and instantly what you'll see it's not in 3d at the moment but that's a 2d image that I took with a different photofit phone okay yeah and I press the 3d button and it will take it into 3d for me that's pretty impressive it existed I've said a lot of 2d to 3d conversion that's pretty impressive for a phone furthermore you can actually control the depth is life yes I didn't realize I just go in there actually a bit like the seediest I doing exactly so it's set to maximum anyway but obviously depending on with students strengths you are you can actually kind of like a change that should you need to obviously using the actual def control okay and finally just this is an android phone isn't it yes so if they read you think people are new you're hoping that people will develop 3d games 3d video pups in the future to sell and make money themselves so at the moment we've had we've had offer ye SDK basically which is held within our own space basically even then from from mwc we've had up to 300,000 downloads of our SDK we've now actually published the SDK basically free Android library which is available as we speak so yeah even now people should be able to come up create a 3d games basically as long as they're actually an OpenGL but even further than that and a little Capet a little kind of like a thing to kind of like wait for actually once we actually because at the moment enhancers running on android 2.2 me when we actually do the gingerbread update will deliver a further 2d 3d conversion so while we've only got pictures and video at the moment but will be able to do to d3 and conversion for gaming as well as long as it's programmed in OpenGL language trusting well thanks so so much no I you
3dfocustv
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2011-07-18
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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1,380
7,391
N-sxtOBA0gY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-sxtOBA0gY
99. Gradual Release Part 1 Overview
[Music] you general Titian was the foundation phase who quasi isn't Kayla okay he isn't eating to draw from them here and don't forget Langdon confident guy you don't reach I come back I look familiar Y Sigma was awesome NCP what number one good evil and Ghani ap numerous amenities wazoo dogma it could be in lamb mr. Kang Gilligan John Maserati I banged one Inka members of a salad maintaining a purpose of cellulous to rob us of Salome bought lungi of course it's hard to snag a wazoo kuba who's aqua fun design channel in general fund but I look here Jana Jana Jana Yahoo from South wound isn't it at some chance of finding my man like you in general fund Sydney come back a code now what doesn't can know my Melek is I imagine a car oppa fund along with tisha remove a Goliath Oh Paco no sport Mandula paya vocal chords in jack is in beam as name fake 800 Paco no sport that is salad with Dolapo equal to I to my god opposite meaning good fundamental very good and understand you get something done in my case sit down is it ow as his season and Busan I see as this is sea salt is in ambush and Benghazi as CICA CICA is in and booze and a seesaw see SSO seen and booze and America is sustained and Busan Jamieson - an album in a pub and wannabes album evening but at enrollment stable a buffoon departed fundamental back to the Sun and it it buffoon mannequin is to bind by buffoon [Music] yattaman you the funda gang who declines funding touching or tonight under your arm I shall apply a nice fidelity above like a megabyte at inviting what we've done in Delacroix's new food [Music] Godiva window but also lapa in Lusaka in Quebec egg yolk in Toyama general because colloquy in Sicily Lindo pomp of Missourians and abandon the mechanical pets - de la muchacha de poco funda new Teixeira Runanga Micaela Lucas Linden begins in bulbs from the Lord as Conant and episode phalange effortless and over time table yeah [Music] you
Funda Wande
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2019-08-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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366
1,932
5IVyHFf6FP4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IVyHFf6FP4
KID COSMIC (Season 3) - Trailer Reaction Video.
hi there this is matthew montan welcome to another trailer reaction videos today we're gonna look at kid cosmic now craig mccracken he's a great cartoonist hands down in my opinion that is and he created the original powerpuff girls back in 1998. not that jokey reboot and also he created uh foster's home for imaginary friends back in 2004 and as of 2013 wander over yonder and now he's doing kid cosmic and this show is worth watching although i don't have netflix you have to pay for it but why aren't you watching it it's worth watching i tell you if you have netflix give it a watch so this is matthew lamont saying this show has reached season three and i believe season three is the last season so season one was called kid cosmic and season two was called kid cosmic and the intergalactic truck stop and now what will season three be called so let's get craig mccracken with the third season of kid cosmic we get to monitor [Applause] yes [Music] [Applause] [Music] how are we not there [Music] how tt's [Laughter] what you know the cats always land on their feet things i'm hyped for it are you hyped for it well just give it a watch and uh don't forget to like and subscribe because it has great music great animation good storytelling pleasing through the eye and i just love this in so many levels so this is matthew bond telling you don't forget to like subscribe comment down below and have a nice day
Matthew B. Lamont
UC2ah3rlIrV54nh3Y0a0nDdQ
2022-02-03
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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264
1,415
9qEWfAG1OdY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qEWfAG1OdY
NEFFEX - Tough - (Lyrics Video, No Copyright) Nimash🎵
[Music] i'm taking shots at the enemy i'm gonna make it to the top leave a legacy if i got something to say you better let me speak turn it up a new degree you ain't seen anything i pop off with the new rock electronic bloody sonic rule i'm too honest when [Music] [Applause] it's everything i've been chasing all here i think i've had enough diseases [Music] ah [Music] me to win large and plenty i like to play fast never change back coming coming out on payback cause i'm great at that all [Music] don't wanna test your luck with i think who are [Music] you
Nimash
UCfEnItt0wNgUMBceMy32L2w
2022-02-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
109
560
NYCsd2seMZc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYCsd2seMZc
STAND UP DECKSETS UNBOXING!! Gramgrace, Favrneel, & Orfist | Cardfight!! Vanguard
hey guys welcome back to another unboxing video and today we're going to be opening up the Vanguard deck sets the triple deck set with orus gram Grace and Fa Neil so we're going to be opening up each one I want to say a quick shout out to our sponsor 50 cards for providing these boxes 50 cards if you haven't heard of it already it's an online store where they have bundles for both Vanguard and Shadow verse decks playmat sleeve everything you'll need for both Vanguard and shadowe are available at 50 cards and be sure to use code Nexus to get 5% off as well so thank you to 50 cards for sponsoring these boxes and for sponsoring the giveaway as well that's right you heard me we're giving away these boxes there's going to be three random winners and each winner is going to get a random box assigned to them details about the giveaway are going to be posted in the link below the goal is to get to 200 likes so once we get to 200 likes the giveaway is going to go live and you guys will be able to sign up to participate and possibly win one of these box boxes and without further Ado we're going to jump right into the unboxing all right I think we're going to go in order here starting off with the Graham Grace one and kind of work our way up to orice so a little handy box cutter here got the wrapping off go ahead and take a look at the box so we got Graham Grace on the front and we got some deer days characters whose name I completely forget as kind of like the main lead for the grand Grace deck and this is supposed to be a storage box oh yeah look at that so we just slide this piece out so after sliding that out we got ourselves a storage box so you can keep your deck and stuff in so that's actually really cool so I'm going and open the flaps up and woof that looks nice so it comes with a deck box as well as the deck I'm going pull that deck box out first real quick that honestly looks really really nice this is really good quality deck box honestly I was kind of skeptical at first about the price of this product and why it was like kind of like MSRP at like $40 but this is a really good quality deck box and a really good quality storage box so like the fact you're getting all this in one product so it comes with sleeves as well so that's really really cool so you can sleeve your deck you got your main deck you got your box like you have everything you basically need starting off playing this game so I think if you're interested in playing ker dark States or Brent gate this is honestly a really good product to get started with I'm going to go ahead and put the sleeves away I do want to open this deck box up though this is the Box got a little velcro sticky got enough space in there I would say this is probably enough space for a double sleeved uh 50 card deck maybe even more for like tokens this is a really good size deck box we're going to put the storage box away and then we're going to go right into the deck going to slide this out just going to Fan this out real quick it looks like all the cards come common so there's no foils in this so let's just kind of go ahead and dive into what comes in the deck they start you off with your four gram Grace one of which is going to be in your ride deck then you got the Divine sister gatam Mouse that's how it's pronounced then we got our incision Angel which is our grade one and then our starter which is starting magic star Lily regular starter the incision Angel is when it's rote upon choose a card from your hand and you discard it so and then you can draw a card so draw then discard so it's a good drop and draw and then the grade two is when you would ride from the ride deck you can ride with soul blast one instead of discarding one just to kind of save yourself some hand so that's honestly really good as well the fact that you can just Soul blast instead of discarding kind of helps with the deck as well especially if you have certain cards that maybe you do want to Soul blast like Maple is your you know grade one ride instead of the grade one so this might be pretty good for that as well so here your full play set to gram Grace a pretty good ride line that's pretty good to start honestly let's go into the rest of the main deck going into the rest of the main deck we do get two copies of feral which is a really good support card for gram Grace I think most players are going to end up running this at a full play set but it's nice that it comes with two you know when you're using gr Grace skill to put this in the back row it can attack and after it attacks you you know give your Vanguard or your gr Grace an extra 10K in a drive so they go off really well together so this is probably going to want to be a play set and then it also comes with two copies a Fado which is also really good cuz you can throw this in the back row and you know you can swing with it to you know get some counter charge some soul charge and then you can move it to Soul to draw a card which is nice so these are both really good cards for the grand Grace deck so I'm glad we got some decent reprints out of this next up we get a full play set of I think this is a new card I don't think we've gotten this card yet Knight of soaring refinement defin uh when your grade three or greater unit in the center column attacks if you have anger Grand Grace the attacking unit gets 5K so your back row unit front row when this unit attacks if you have a vanger or gr Grace and your units the center column attack two or more times this turn so your back row and your Vanguard you counter blast one and this unit gets 15K not bad it's just a 25k beater and you can give the unit in your Center an extra five it's not like broken but it's not bad we do get two copies of CAD Wala so that's actually really nice so this was from the youth BG trial deck also got reprinted in the festival booster so nice to see that we're getting some catala action back so what catala does is is at the end of the battle that it attacked you so boss one retire it look at the top three choose one from among it and then you can put it into your hand the rest are going to be shuffled and if you didn't add anything to your hand has to be a great two or greater you can draw a card it also comes with for language hat which I think is actually really really cool just because language hat is a card that lets you boost uh if you have a grade three in the soul which you pretty much will because of the gram Grace effect to move Mo the center unit back to the soul so this will be a 15K beater or booster which is really nice so I think this is a really good addition to the deck I think this is the biggest plus is the four drilling angel that come in this thing so drilling Angel is just a really really good ker Sanctuary card in my opinion the fact that you can put anything from drop into soul and then maybe call something off the top of your deck from the top three if it's the same name is the card that you put in the soul this is a great deck great card in Thea uh it's a really helpful card in manura so this card is pretty sought after so the fact that you get a full play set in this thing is really nice so this is going to help a lot gram Grace does use soul for its cost so being able to um help with that is really nice that is it for the grade twos it comes with three copies of sin bler must saying that right so what this does is it's very simple if your opponent's at grade three it gets 5K so it's a 13k booster or beater so can't go wrong with that you know just a simple boost two copies of painkiller Angel which eh I feel like they could have given us the four I don't know why just the two was fine but you know I guess it's better than nothing but uh painkiller is still good and a battle when it boosted Soul blast retire it get the draw a card so this is actually actually really nice it comes with four copies of the good PG most of these trial decks are start decks are going to come with that kind of wonky PG where like oh you still have to discard no matter how many cards are in your hand but this one is the one from db06 where if you have one or less in hand you don't need a discard so that's actually really cool I'm glad that they brought this back so you get four pgs in the gram Grace set and now we're just going to move on to our triggers starting off we got the designated overt trigger which is armar tooa which kind of makes sense because you have grade three rear guards you have a grade three in your back row that's going to attack most likely so checking this with the drive checks and then being able to get another twin dry from the back row is nice then for the rest of the triggers it comes with four more vanilla crits then another four vanilla crits uh it does not come with the nice um blade feather Dragon unfortunately same goes for the draw triggers we get three copies of operating Angel so and unfortunately it's not the uh the one that gets Shield but then it also also does come with four copies of palpitation Angel as your heal trigger so very simple vanilla trigger lineup you're obviously going to trange out these draws for the better draws the ones with the shield the crits you can honestly kind of stick with I always say that the blade feather dragon is like not really necessary but it does help so you can kind of get away with it so that's it for the main deck it does come with these extra cards which I'll get into so it comes with one copy of tunar uh so tunar is nice because it helps with countercharge so if you have three or more face down cards this moves the soul you counter charge uh so it fills your soul and it gets you counter blast back we do get one copy of kyri which is really cool cuz this is a really expensive card um it does suck that we only get one copy though because kyri is such a good card it's when in place count of BL one so blast one top three choose a card from among it that's grade to or less and call it and if you didn't call it you can add it to your hand so you can add a Grade Three to your hand or you can add an order to your hand which is nice so this is still really good cuz it helps fill your board and it helps add grade threes to your hand for a Persona ride we get get one Wayward therapy Angel which is when it's discarded if you have a grade through Vanguard Soul blast one you can call this to rear which is nice cuz you know you are going to be discarding somewhat for the skills of f feral so feral does have a discard cost so you can discard Wayward therapy just so you can call it back which is nice one copy of latched I think this is interesting I think this should have just been a full play set in the main deck back row and the end battle that you Vanguard of grand Grace at the end of the turn if you have a Vanguard of grand Grace you retire it choose a grade three in your soul put it back in your hand I think this should have just been a play set for the deck but you know it comes like as a little extra card and lastly we get one gratus Gale that's just because Persona rid is really important for the gram Grace skill so you want to make sure that you can you know get off your persona ride if you don't have another grade three in hand uh these are really good reprints I'm just kind of sad that they only come in as one ofs but you know what can you do that's it for the gr Grace unboxing the goal of Graham Grace is basically to Persona ride your persona ride activates in the back row as well and has the actability to you know call a card to the back row your back row card can swing so and then at the end of the battle the back row card attacked you move it to soul and draw a card so there's a lot of like big big number and multi-attack with gr Grace which is kind of fun so I think it's a really this is honestly a really good deck for entry level players in my opinion all right we're opening up faal which is finally making its debut to standard going and slide this out and take a look at the deck box this also just looks really sick this is such a cool storage box in general so go and open this up we got our faal deck box which also looks really sick got the clear back really good quality box we got the fail deck and we got our fail sleeves don't I'm going to go ahead and put the sleves aside going to open that the deck box it's got the same velcro opening good quality this doesn't feel flimsy at all this is such a good storage box in general this is also just a really really really good product in my opinion so um then you got your sleeves for your deck and we're just going to go ahead and open up that deck so we're going to put this aside slide this out and do a little quick fan out we got the one fa Neil but you'll notice that that is it there is no other copy of fa Neal and if you don't already know what the card does you're probably wondering why but we're just going to go ahead and get right into it fa Neil's first skill says you may only have one copy of purgatory Dragon deity FAL at the beginning of your main phase your opponent chooses one of their rear guards retires it and if you did not ride this turn this unit gets 10K in a crit when your opponent rear guard is retired during your turn you can put a card from your hand into soul and draw a card and then the other skill is at the end of the battle that this unit attacked if the sum of the grades of dark States cards in your soul is 13 or more you can counter blast two to stand this unit and it gets Drive minus one so you get a restand you get 10K in a crit and it's a rander so we're just going to go ahead and jump into the ride line our grade two is gear rhinoceros of barreling impulsion when you would ride from the ride deck you can ride with soul blast one instead so it's similar to the gr Grace one the grade one is when this is wrote upon draw a card choose a card from your hand discard it just like the grand Grace one and our starter is exactly like every other starter but it's got some gear chronical aesthetic which is cool but just like every starter when root upon if you want second draw so that is it for the ride deck that they give us going on to the main deck comes with four copies of zort so zort has the skill of act C plus one put this to soul look at the top two cards of your deck choose one from among them call it to rear and you put the rest in your soul so helps you fill your board helps you fill your soul just because F Neil wants to get to that 13 so definitely a really good support card for that then it also comes with four copies of Scythe Dragon which is act so Blast 2 choose one of your opponent's rear guards and retire it so you can activate that retire effect for fail and the second ability is when this attack hits you can Soul charge too so that means it can swing at rear guards for pokes and you can still get that Soul charge which is pretty big so getting a full play set of that is pretty helpful we got a bunch of grade threes uh in this set so I'm just going to move these over here we got four copies of time Jared Dragon which is when this is placed on rear put a card from your hand to soul and draw a card so that's helping you fill up your soul So speaking of more grade 3s it does come with four copies of hodus which is at the end of the battle this attack to Vanguard if you have a Vanguard faval put this into your soul choose one of your opponent's rear guards and retire it to trigger that retire ability and when it's in the Soul at the beginning your right phase if you have a venger or faern bind this card discard a card from your hand and activate Persona rides so this is basically what's going to make it so that you can get that 10K to your front row and your 20K to your Vanguard so you don't need to really reide you you just need extra copies of Rus so that was it for the grade 3es now we're going to move on to the grade twos comes with four copies of squalled freaks I love that name in The Soul if you did not ride this turn this card gets grade plus two even better for the fal deck when your grade three or greater Vanguard attacks if you did not ride this turn you can bind this card and all your front row get another 5K so that's just to kind of help push for game as well so moving that off to the side and it comes with two copies of a sha and a shurta skill lets you move it to the soul after you guard with it so it gets an extra five shield and it can help F your soul so since you need 13 grades being a grade two is going to help out with that as well so but that's it for the grade twos we're now going to go into the grade ones comes with two copies of gungar around which is honestly kind of sick I love that we're actually seeing really good reprints in these uh deck sets so gungaram is when it's placed you Soul charge one and then you can act Soul blast three to draw a card you're probably not going to use gungaram for the draw but you know still being able to Soul charge uh on place is really nice comes with two copies of fiend of the neor Ling when it's placed on rear you look at the top two cards of your deck choose a card from among them put it into your soul and you put the rest on the bottom of your deck so pretty simple uh and then lastly for the grade ones we do get four copies of that really good PG the one where if you have one or less in hand you do not have to discard so again I'm really glad that we're reprinting these type of pgs in these like beginner friendly starter decks and now we're going to move on into triggers we got our gamma which is our go-to dark States trigger this makes the most sense just because FAL is going to restand so if you get an overt trigger not only possibly give 100 million to your Vanguard but that extra 10K plus a crit is going to make fil really really devastating for the rest of the game there's just a lot of really good additions to the fact that this being the OT in the deck crits are the same we got our eight vanillas comes with four draws and four heels so we don't get the fancy uh you know Shield ones but you know you're probably going to replace them out later um interesting choice for the draws maybe fronts are better but I'm not sure the draws probably are the better choice just so you can see cards in your hand for the fne plays so but uh still a pretty good lineup just got to change out those draws for those 10K Shield draws and now getting into the extra cards comes with one copy of eligos or eligos this is a really really good card and I don't think I think this is the first time this card is being printed uh when this unit attacks a Vanguard if you have a Vanguard faal in its name put one other rear guard into soul and you choose one of your opponent's rears and retire it then if the sum of the grades of dark States card in your soul is 13 or greater you caner charge so this is going to help Propel you into your faal turns because you need the counter blast two so being able to get that countercharge off that is helpful I'm just kind of mad that they only give you one copy of this because this is such a really important card for the deck but going on into the rest of the cards that are given it does come with one copy of crimson expeller when this unit attacks a Vanguard you Soul charge one and then Soul can Blast One put this in the drop Soul charge one choose one of your vanguards and it gets 10K so that's really good because you're rest standing your faal K of one falate performer which is nice because that's really good for dreaded and other dark States decks so you know having this in there is nice again really wish we got extra playsets or extra copies of this card cuz it would just be really good for like circulation speaking of cards that should really be heavy in circulation we need more brainwash swirlers but it comes with one brainwash swirler which is nice and then we got the one gratus Gale similar reasons it's to help activate Persona ride without needing to ride a grade three so you know you got that going for you um but that is it for the faal Box we're going to go ahead and get into the orist box and last but not least got the orist standup deck set so we're going to go ahead and uh cut into this get this opened up and like before we're just going to slide this part out and get a a good look at our storage box which looks insanely sick like this is just such a cool box I know I've said that about all of them but these are all just really really nice so we've got our orus deck box Our orus Deck and our awesome orus sleeves this is really really cool right put the sleeves away going to open up the box same quality as the other deck boxes it has the little velcro it's really really sturdy plastic so it's going to hold your deck really well you can hold up to a double sleeved card deck which is really nice and got our sleeves in there so that you can sleeve your deck and then double sleeve it later and now we're going to go ahead and open up our orist deck sliding this off do a quick fan we got our full play set of orice we got our ride line and some pretty good cards in there so getting started we do got our four copies of Orphus which is the orist from the festival booster which is Orphus Regus or Regis when this is placed on the Vanguard Circle choose up to one world card from your hand or drop and you just put it in the order zone for free so that does not count as your playing in order for the turn so something to keep in mind when this unit attacks if your world is a this whole Dark Knight counter Blast One discard a card from hand and for every two World cards in your order Zone call up to one Shadow Army token to rear and this unit gets 5K until the end of the battle the fact that the more and more uh order cards that you build up to the more tokens you generate so this is just a really good card to kind of get yourself set up and of course we have orist mask with dbt2 coming out very soon so this is going to be your go-to ride and then you're going to ride Orphus mask on top of this the rest of the ride line is our Cardinal typical ride line the same one from set one uh the grade two when a world is put into or world is put into your order Zone choose one of your units and it gets five during your turn if your world is Abyssal Dark Knight this gets 5K then we got our grade one which is when this is placed on Van search your deck for up to one world card reveal it add it to your hand shuffle your deck so you can also then discard it for your grade two ride and then you can activate the regies by activating it from drop then we got our Cardinal starter so we got our full Cardinal aesthetic going on here it's pretty much the same ride line and nothing new except for the fact that we have orist regist instead of the OG orist now going into the main deck we got four copies of nooria when this unit attacks this gets 2K until the end of battle for each World in your order Zone when this unit is retired from rear if your world is Abyssal Dark Knight you can call Shadow Army token so what's nice about this is it says when this is retired meaning that if you call a token on top of it you can call another token which is really cool so this is a really really great card to have a full play set of then on to grade twos we have Cardinal Draco K jamid when your world is Abyssal or if your world is Dark Knight or Abyssal Dark Knight this gets boost and can intercept from the back row guard Circle if your world is a Abell Dark Knight this gets 10K Shield so we got a little special Interceptor for the deck but uh pretty sure you're going to be replacing this for something better in the long run two copies of cardinal noid grunder when it's placed on rear from hand if your world is Dark Knight or Abyssal Dark Knight look at the top seven cards of your deck if you do choose one of the world cards from among them if you do choose two World cards from among them and put them into your your drop zone and Shuffle the deck so it can help you with your Reggie orfus plays by activating worlds from drop and just filtering out your deck and Trigger thinning which is always good lastly four copies of Polaris polar Polaris Dragon God that was difficult for me for some reason when this is placed on rear if you have a Vanguard with Orphus Soul Blast One choose a world card with a different card name from the cards in your order Zone from your drop zone and put it into the order zone so it's just you know kind of helping you fill up your order which is cool when this card is put a drop zone from your hand during your battle phase if your world is Dark Knight or Abyssal Dark Knight you may draw a card so for those who are wondering at this point what Dark Knight or Abyssal Dark Knight is it's basically based on the number of set orders in your order zone so if you have one of these dark knight set orders you're in Dark Knight and if you have two or more you're an Abyssal Dark Knight so it's a very very easy cost to get to the the fact that um Orphus Regis gets you to Abyssal Dark Knight instantly is just honestly really good with for the deck so that's it for the grade twos now we're going on do the grade ones comes with two copies of cardinal principal Kola which is when placed on rear F your world is dark knight soul charge one if Abyssal Dark Knight Soul charge two if your world is Abyssal Dark Knight you can Soul Blast One this unit and call a shadow Army token so being able to fill your soul and make some tokens not bad I can see this potentially staying but I don't really know exactly what the uh orus mask list is going to look like but I can definitely see this getting dropped but for now I can for newer players this is still a really good uh piece card just because you are going to want some soul for the deck then last for grade ones in the main deck we got those four copies of violate Dragon so so when this is put in the guard Circle choose one your units can't be hit if you have one or less in hand you do not have to discard if you have two or more you do again really glad that we're getting these in these uh trial deck or start decks for new players then onto our triggers overt triggers ELO breath which is kind of on brand just because we're getting all the skill good overt triggers so this is the one that doubles the power and crit of all the units in your front row which is really really good then we got our full play set of triggers so we got our aggressive Dragon we got our Cardinal Draco so we got our Cardinal uh themed cards more Cardinal themed cards we got our draw triggers which are vanilla and our Cardinal heel trigger which are also venilla so like I said earlier you're going to be switching out those draws for the one with Shield or you might run front triggers instead if you don't need the draw then we got our order cards so it does come with three copies of overcoming and Eternity which is a set order so you play this with soul Blast 2 when it's in the order Zone if you only have World cards you activate the following effects which is if you have one card it's Dark Knight two cards it's Abyssal Dark Knight and the auto skill is when your Shadow Army token is placed that unit gets 5K so you just make all your Shadow tokens 5K stronger which is honestly really really good three copies of howling moonlit Knight so similar cost except you just play with soul Blast One same effect um it's with the Dark Knight and the Abyssal Dark Knight but when this is put into the order Zone you can draw a card which is nice so you can Soul blast one to kind of you know switch it out so you put this down draw a card lastly for our world orders play this with kter blast one when this is put into the order Zone you call a shadow Army token to your rear and it's got the same effects as the other ones which is if you have one world order you're in a Dark Knight two World orders you're in Abyssal Dark Knight so honestly the fact that this comes with nine World orders it's pretty consistent I would say I really don't know how often the ratios are going to change for this deck but this is this is a really really good start in my opinion so then we're going to get into the tokens so you've been hearing a lot about these shadow Army tokens this is what they look like they're just 15K beaters but of course with the grade three world order these are 20K beaters or boosters because they are grade ones with Boost so the whole point of the deck is to just flood your board with these tokens call them during the battle phase get those multi attacks off um it's just a really fun aggressive deck for standard so I feel like a lot of people are going to have a lot of fun with the orist uh deck set so if you're new to Vanguard or you just want to get into into bran gate I honestly think this is a really good product to get you started and lastly much like the other two deck sets it comes with a little like promo pack or like extra cards that are one ofs this one being one copy of robust which is you count plus one search your deck for up to one set order and if your order Zone has a card with the same card name as that card you can put it into your hand shelf your deck so it's kind of get more grade three set orders when this unit attacks choose two set orders with the same name from your order Zone if you chose two cards this gets 10K so it's just a you know fun little 23k beater you got one copy of cardinal Draco death to Jade if your world is Dark Knight gets 2K if it's Abyssal dark Nate he gets 5K at the end of the battle this attacked you retire three Shadow Army tokens to stand this unit so get a nice little restand maybe you uh got your Aldo breath all your front rows got that extra crit you swing with this hundro mil and then you retire three tokens swing another hundo Mill so I don't know if this card is like really that important to the deck at the one seems right but I can see for like really aggressive plays having multiple copies of this might come in handy one copy of combin rusher um that's a really really good reprint uh just because um of the price and also the fact that a lot of people are running this in their ride deck just so they can Soul blast it out early and call it back what it does is when this attacks a grade three or greater for order Zone has two or more cards it gets 10K that's just free and in the drop zone when it's in the drop zone and you place a set order into the order Zone you can of blast one and you call this to rear from the drop zone so just being able to recycle itself is really good one Boba mine because Boba mine is just good it's at the end of the ball boosted if you have a set order move to Soul counter charge counter T is always good but um I think orist only really cost counter blast one so I don't know if there's a really big counter blast issue with the deck but you know what it never hurts um Boba mine might still be helpful and last but not least it's not grale it's elementaria sanctitude that's right orus players get elementaria sanctitude in their deck sets so I think if you're brand new to Vanguard and you had to pick between the three this card alone should sell you on buying this thing so I'd say pick up the Orphus just because getting a free elementaria is just huge this is such an important card for standard even for premium this is such a good card and I think it has more value than gratus grale so that's my two cents all right guys thank you for watching and uh thanks for sticking around and watching me open up all three of these things these are really really good products in my opinion I understand that they come off a little pricey I get that but I still think that these are really good for for new players so if you're new to the new to the game new to Vanguard and you want to decide where to blow your money on shiny cardboard I think this is a good start I still think the Orphus one is the best one just because has new support coming up with set 12 the faal one is cool just because it's kind of like a set exclusive you can only get fa Neil from this thing the Graham Grace one it's a good way to get into ker Sanctuary but there aren't any supporting cards that are cure for Bastion there really aren't any supporting cards that are really here for youth BKE if anything it's really like you get some manura pieces I guess if you want to say but um I would say it's probably better if you wanted to pick up like a Bastion trial deck if you want to play Bastion it's five bucks and you can get it on 50 cards for like three bucks so I'd say go with that but if you really really really want to build gram Grace um I'd say it's it's worth it to pick up the product and then kind of add some pieces is from there all right so that was my final two cents on the unboxing of these three boxes remember that we are doing a giveaway for each of these one of these so there'll be three winners three and each one will get a random box the goal is to get to 200 likes for this video If this video gets to 200 likes we will go ahead and release the information for that giveaway in the description below so be sure to like the video share it with your friends tell them to like the video tell them you might have a chance on winning a free orist deck set if they like the video thank you for supporting the channel thank you to 50 cards for sponsoring this video and providing us with the boxes for the giveaway so please be sure to check out 50 cards and use code Nexus to get that discount of 5% I'm going to get going thank you guys for watching always appreciate you guys sticking around and if you guys want maybe we can get some games with these decks and see how they perform just on their own let us know if that's something you'd be interested in seeing and with that being said I'll see you all on the next one [Music] bye
Nexus Corps
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2023-10-13
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