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2024-04-23 22:07:33
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2024-04-24 00:19:45
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UCwBK7Cdk0wq8rCjxcvaoHzg
ରାଜ୍ୟରେ ବଢୁଛି ମୋଦିଙ୍କ ଲୋକପ୍ରିୟତା, ତଳକୁ ଖସୁଛନ୍ତି ନବୀନ || Survey || 2024 Election
ଓଡ଼ିଶାରେ ବିଜେଡିକୁ ଧୋଇ ଦେବକି ମୋଦି ସୁନାମୀ ? । NEWS X, TV-9 ପରେ ABP C VOTER ଓପିନଅନ ପୋଲ୍ ବି ସମାନ ଆକଳନ କରିଛି । 13ରୁ 14 ଲୋକସଭା ଆସନ ଦଖଲ କରିପାରେ ବିଜେପି । ମାତ୍ର 7ରେ ସୀମିତ ରହିବ ଶଙ୍ଖ । #ArgusNews #Survey #2024Election #PMNarendraModi #CMNaveenPattnaik #BJD #BJP #Political #ElectionWithArgusNews #National Argus News is Odisha's fastest-growing news channel having its presence on satellite TV and various web platforms. Watch the latest news updates LIVE on matters related to education & employment, health & wellness, politics, sports, business, entertainment, and more. Argus News is setting new standards for journalism through its differentiated programming, philosophy, and tagline 'Satyara Sandhana'. To stay updated on-the-go, Visit Our Official Website: https://www.argusnews.in/ (Odia) Visit Our Official Website: https://argusenglish.in/ (English) iOS App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsiOSApp Android App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsAndroidApp Live TV: https://argusnews.in/live-tv/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/argusnews.in Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/c/TheArgusNewsOdia Twitter: https://twitter.com/ArgusNews_in Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/argusnewsin Argus News Is Available on: TataPlay channel No - 1780 Airtel TV channel No - 609 Dish TV channel No - 1369 d2h channel No - 1757 SITI Networks HYD - 12 Hathway - 732 GTPL KCBPL - 713 SITI Networks Kolkata - 460 & other Leading Cable Networks You Can WhatsApp Us Your News On- 8480612900
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2024-04-17T15:00:25
2024-04-23T23:20:45
254
PCz8PwHPDo8
24 gata bhihtare asila, 30 jatiya gana madhyamara janamata sarvheri poot Newjects TV9 pare VPC bhotar bhi kola samana kola na Unisare BJP jitiba teroru 14 tila ka sabha asana Matra 7 tire sinita rahiba BJP Rajjare bohuchi modin ka lukka priyota talaku khosuchanti nabin Ghatathara sankhopadma dalara bhotre tila matra 10 lakka marjin Ethra sabho opinion poll re BJP dithu dheragwa BJP Rajjaru sasa ka dalaku thuide bho ki modi sunami Unisare modil harajur da Newjects TV9 pare VPC bhotar sarvheri bhi Unisare BJP bohuchi bhoda bhihtare kola samana Rajjare modi garanti kumili pare bhoda samarthana Sarvheri poot ko chhi Unisare BJP kumili pare teroru 14 tila ka sabha asana Matra 7 tire sinita rahiba BJP Kongres 7 kujai pare gooti esi Mangalbara tire asitiba TV9 bhotar bohuchi opinion poll bhi kori chikur bhanuman Unisare BJP Report onusare BJP 14 tii BJD khatak ho jiba matra choti asana Gooti re bhihthvui parhe Kongres Shepri Mangalbara asitiba Newjects opinion poll re bhi BJP 14 tii BJD 7 tii asana re jitiba nahi karajdha Chihpur bhanuman BJP bohuthe Unisare sasana kase jipare Elata me dekhelo loko sabha apai Bidhan sabha re bohul kama hujhe Bidhan sabha re bhi Aur jyuprakar re bhatman
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UC9FnJbELQQPAQ1mzMvrdXIg
Canada's Wonderland Epic Prank
I prank Crega into a couple of funnel cakes to the face and more! Follow us on Tik Tok for hilarious videos- https://www.tiktok.com/@amusementinsiders?language=en&sec_uid=MS4wLjABAAAA0PBL3N2mtSdy71exT-YsnKfLxzSpcCYak91IhqWbBtbvcGyfqF3mAiSxMGkpw2FO&u_code=d9i7l7ec1ij51b&utm_campaign=client_share&app=musically&utm_medium=ios&user_id=6767183308121687046&tt_from=copy&utm_source=copy&source=h5_m Support us on Patreon below- https://www.patreon.com/amusementinsiders Amusement Insiders Merch- https://amusement-insiders.com/ Go follow our Instagram for near daily posts! ➤ https://www.instagram.com/amusementinsiders/ Or our Twitter, where we sometimes post something! ➤ https://twitter.com/AmuseInsiders
[ "Amusement Insiders", "Canada's Wonderland Ziz", "New Coaster Canada's Wonderland", "Cedar Point", "New Coaster Cedar Point", "Cedar Fair", "New Coaster", "Canada's Wonderland", "Canada's Wonderland Vlog", "canada's wonderland rides", "canada's wonderland leviathan", "New Ride Canada's Wonderland", "Canada's Wonderland Splash Works", "Canada's Wonderland Behemoth", "Canada's Wonderland Fight", "Epic Pranks", "Pranks on Friends", "Epic Pranks Dvid Dobrick", "canadian pranks 2021", "Canada's Wonderland 2021" ]
2021-07-15T13:00:32
2024-02-07T17:36:18
1,778
pCybEBzdaY0
All righty, okay, so today's video whenever this post is gonna be a little different We're doing a ride challenge or krega thinks we're doing a ride challenge But in reality what I've done is I've rigged the ride challenge the ride punishments so that it's only him getting punishments And they're pretty brutal not gonna lie So I'm pretty excited about that And yeah, so I basically what I what what I did is it's supposed to have my name and his name in there So you reach in you select a name and whatever name you plug It's a ride punishment. Then you reach in and you select a ride punishment. I filled it with just his name and Oh I'm trying to like we were debating in our discord server last night How long it would take him to figure out that it's rigged I'm gonna guess three people in discord have a little less faith in him and are guessing four or five So comment down below What at what point do you think he's gonna clue in like at three ride punishments for ride punishments five ride punishments? When do you think krega is gonna clue in because I? Don't I don't know. Maybe he won't clue in at all. Maybe he'll clue in right away I have no idea. He's pretty like bitter like that like I mean It's pretty obvious at like point two or three I think that when you just keep selecting your name that it's rigged in your favor, so or against you sorry So I definitely think he's gonna clue in it. My guess is three three is my final guess But yeah, hopefully you guys enjoyed today's video because kreg is about to get ice cream to the face Timberwolf bridge Maybe even wear something really weird at the park. So yeah, stay tuned Okay, so we have a new ride challenge. No, it's not a challenge It's actually just punishments because who the hell wants to sit here and watch us just doing fun things Anyone wants to watch us ride behemoth? So this year. I still haven't heard what this is yet by the way it's Reach into the bag and you pick first the blue paper our names are in there. Oh, Jesus Literally equal I made sure I don't yet krega and you have Brenda. No, I promise. I wouldn't do anything like that I don't think so. I've always All of 2019 it was equal So we reach in you go first then I'll go of course I do well you could pull my name Yeah, so you reach in if it's all random and you pull out the name the name is who I was gonna take the punishment No way. Okay. That's actually pretty cool. I like and then once you pick the punishment the person's name who was picked Reaches in and grabs the actual punishment. So they'll be punished. There is Funnel cake to the face What which we'll do in a way that doesn't create a mess by the way So I'll have to explain that because we're not leaving a mess for because we just shove it to your face We're gonna create a mess over the park. This is Your face into the funnel cake and then we'll eat it. So we're not wasting money eat it off my face. No, you're gonna eat it Okay, this actually sounds like a lot of fun now. I'm interested We start we start this Timberwolf bridge. We start you want to be punished. No, I want to see you get punished Oh There's some in here that I realized that are actually closed like I did the splash works bucket. So we'll just have to redraw Is mountain big close in there? I still want to see you jump off it. No, I don't think so Look at that. He said it was fair What a liar live straight to my face. Yeah, so you know what you can you can pick first So, okay, so what am I doing? I got to pick the blue. Yeah, so this one look Yeah, okay, because I think they're not folded perfectly. Oh, they're sticking Yeah, just try and get them not stuck together a Sticky, okay a single sticky. It's gonna be me. That's my name. Are you serious? Yeah I was like when I made it yesterday I realized I my names at the top a lot because I did them and I just grabbed them and plumped them in there No, I got I'm gonna walk around with this on my cheek for the rest of the day. You're lucky Oh, that's one. I forgot the princess uniform I bought these like happy birthday girl and princess for the day sashes as a punishment But I didn't bring it. Oh, thank God So wait now I got to grab the green or you got to grab the you grab the green the loser grabs the green also me Yeah, your loser Okay, oh God I'm hoping it's not okay to the face because I'm not in the mood to go like it's a splash works bucket that I can't even do Oh, so you got to redraw Yeah Okay, Brendan, let's see what you got me into Funnel cake to the face. Oh my god Do you want a funnel cake to the face? I'd rather not. Oh, yeah, I don't either Okay, there's only two of those in there too, so that's I'm glad The real loser though is me having to buy the funnel cake. We got it. I don't know a huge group of people I know cuz them We're knows is what we'll get Can you imagine if you just threw it in my face in the main area of the park? So what we're gonna do is you're literally just gonna like place your face into it. Why you're not gonna throw I want to throw your head. No, because then it gets we can't make a mess of this part. Thanks, Brendan You know wait till you get this one wait till you only one more. I'm gonna laugh if you get both Oh, I'm glad you're happy about it Maybe you'll get that and then Timberwolf bridge, so then it can be really yeah great, right? Yeah, that's really good. Yeah Maybe we can get one of them to partake after and pick a punishment for us They're gonna screw us even harder Let's go let's go get funnel cake So here we are Hi gorgeous. I hope you heard me mutter that under my breath This is the best day of my life Well, you're the one that's got to do it cuz I'm not pushing my face in the thing of ice cream This is what you get what you get Everything so we got his tissue. We're shoving his face into it. So it doesn't create a mess No, because you guys are eating it off my face. We can't make a mess Any mess we make we have to clean up Yeah, vertically if you're able to Okay, can Jonathan because I felt could Jonathan shove your face into it Yeah, I mean I guess Okay, what's the what's the amount of time that Jonathan has to hold your face in that three seconds What's a fair enough amount I just like move it around a bit but not a lot like keep the mess over the plate Yeah Upset how come every time we do something stupid. It's always me it doesn't matter Oh, yeah, any sort of stupidity. I'm in the middle of remember me and my sweater under the bucket last in summer 2019 Everyone was like, how does he wear a sweater? That was the only one thing you ever have to do I always got to stand in Timberwolf, and of course, I'm the stupid test dummy for this I'm so excited. Okay, and so it's he look how look how ready Three seconds like don't smush it a lot just smush his face like okay, okay, do we do it can't act well, it's not my fault Okay Okay, ready ready wait, let me zoom out a little bit. Okay, I close my eyes This is fun, which is this is It's so cold. It's so cold. Okay. It's so cold Oh, there's it's so cold. Why is it so perfect? We made it. Okay. Just so everyone sees we made zero mess It's so cold. You know after it's so cold. I am so oh my god. Go It's getting on you. Oh my hair. I guess you need a Timberwolf bridge punishment This is so bad. This is it's in my hair. My hair is cold. It's sticky. Yeah, you smell like ice cream now. Oh My hand what's that bath and body work sent you wearing Craig? The finest face the la funnel cream Funnel cake whoo the brightness is up. Let me fix that You know what Brendan screw you screw you Get rid of all the ice cream. Yeah, you're actually good. Are you sure it's on your nose? It's on your nose I'm all sticky. This is not a good situation It's still on your eye underneath it But what do I even do now take a bite out of it? Oh, yeah Mm-hmm. No swearing. I Don't want to part that my face went in it. It's your face. I guess it's are you letting us know Mmm Is it actually good food review? I'm not gonna lie. It's pretty good, but it does taste like it's a bit sweaty salty Oh, yeah, no, I wouldn't recommend it. I got maybe a shower next time. I got three forks So I mean everybody could try some but it doesn't look like I know I'm good. I'm good Anybody wants sweaty Craig of face cream. We're gonna use this now. No food waste. What's this cold? What is it called? Okay? I guess it's my turn to reach into the bag. Yeah, give me the camera Kind of hope I do get it now I'm gonna push his face if I know luck it's probably gonna be Craig a one more time and then I'll be the third one That's my guess No, no, no, no, I mean like the name No, I should be able to screenshot Come on What does it say? Oh Oh, yeah, it's you again. Yeah Yeah, I have to pick or you have to pick you pick up how to show it My face is still so cold My face is so cold. How did it feel shoving his face into a funnel keg? Well, I kind of regret not doing it myself Touch my lips just go just touch my forehead. It's so sticky. Yeah, you have like a cold feeter. I Don't really know how to describe it. Like I've never done that. No, you're sticky Really? Am I? Hope I get your bag all sticky Where is the knapsack? Oh My god Okay, I got I see you didn't put Craig up back in there. Did you? Made it so We're goofy outfit. Okay, pick another You're lucky. I didn't bring it. I don't have the goofy outfit. Yeah, I forgot the princess outfit next time next time I'll grab another green No Do you want to do it this time, Brendan? Sure Where's the strawberries gonna get all in my hair again? It's not this time. Let's get your face. We don't even have napkins. Oh my god. Oh, yeah, that's sticky I know I don't even have napkins. We'll just reuse the same ones Are you ready? Am I ready? Am I ready? How ready can I possibly be for something? I'm trying to not get your hair this time Okay, so I got a close-up once it goes in. Yeah, okay, you know how? Oh Like this. Yeah, okay. Yeah Okay, thanks Brendan. It's getting on you Appreciate that buddy. No problem. I'm glad two years of friendship has led up to this. That felt really good This is definitely worth my time. I can't believe you know what when Brendan said do you want to join the music insiders to your skull? I'm so happy. I said yes Screw you. Your sunscreen on your face looks phenomenal. Oh, does it? I'll have a bit of funnel cake not the ice cream I'd prefer that That's not much better. That's not much better at all. I just made the ice cream more watery now. You're even crying Should I not be? You definitely need the timber wall fridge. Should I not be crying right now? Should I be smiling? Is this something look? I'm sticky. I'm moist. I'm wet and I'm cold And now my lips are burning so burning. I don't know why Yeah, they are actually that's weird Okay, pick a damn thing. No, I just picked your name you pick now This is gonna be if it's my name I'm leaving just letting you know you kind of need the timber wall I'm hoping you get timber wolf and then it's my punishment Yeah I want him to get water because he is sticky like his hair was bad Did you put any Brendon's in here at all? I should be on the top What the hell I can't this is like Now the only bad thing is I think there's only eight so he's on three So then it's just gonna be me. It's gonna be me. Me. Me. Me. Good. Good. Good. Good. The only thing is the funnel cake set of the equation Yes, okay, you got timber welfare. I was getting nervous. I'm like thank God. I was starting to feel bad um What do I do about my face like I'm so sticky I really don't like this No, I couldn't be any less happy Now I gotta get so friend and this has been nothing but BS. You know what you're doing timber wolf today Not timber wolf. You're doing a mountain bake lifts today When do you think he's gonna clue in that it's a rig I think after the next time he's gonna like look at this guy So he's already asking. I think it's gonna be around then. Yeah, cuz you said there's yeah I'm sure he's gonna look inside the bag next to the beat. I know There's literally not a single mining. He's already thinking that it's rigged Like he he's saying that for the camera, but he like Like he like he's subconsciously trust you but I know he does trust me a lot. I felt bad the minute he um When I felt his hair, I'm feeling bad now and I'm like do I tell him that it's rigged, you know We're already in here for the long game. Let's go all the way. Okay, so I said On the third time he would clue in It's the third. When do you think he's gonna clean? I'm gonna say the fourth of the fourth of it, okay Wait, but that was already three great. That was three. So I already lost I think what's gonna happen is he's gonna get it on the fourth He's gonna be like whoa big shock the fifth. He's gonna know it's right. Yeah, yeah, if we bring it to the fifth That's what I know. It's the long game He loses it's over. It's only timbral fridges from now on. I think No, it would have been great. It's gonna be a compilation of like rich rich I'm enjoying this so much, but I also feel like the world's biggest monster He's gonna think yeah, I know is he is he betraying my trust again the first challenge of the year is rigged against him I feel like that was a bad idea Yeah We filmed a couple of vlogs. I realized Sometimes when I hit record, it doesn't actually record. I'm not hitting it properly. So we lost Yeah, we lost the vlogs here. He comes Oh My hair, you know when we overcook fries, yeah, that's what my hair feels like You're gonna die Those punishments are easy. I'm telling you you're gonna get it You're gonna get it whether it be another video or that stupid boat tomorrow You are gonna get payback. The next punishment is gonna be funnel cake in your shoe for the day Oh You guys want funnel cake Wait, what what nothing Anyways timber wall bridge it is oh Wait a minute, right that does sound bad. Yeah, it's not bad. Flash me with a stupid You got to splash me with a funnel cake. So I don't know why you're not coming And you didn't do anything you gotta come here you're walking backwards. I know Like I got a camera too, Brendan. Yeah, I got a camera too. It's still yours No, it's hope the marketing for that is true It's waterproof. I hope I don't drop it. It's my thing. Oh my god, look it's what I Don't want to do one monster belonging stuff with me Okay, who's coming Brendan are you coming? Nope? Yeah with a camera Oh my god, I feel like such a mom It's children give me your ball Even if I try and run away with it. I won't get very far. Don't worry All right, you guys ready? This can only go bad All right, you guys ready? I hope we're all in the frame. Oh, no I mean compared to the amazing stream that happened on the fifth Under the camera is perfectly dry I think from what the judges are saying apparently our judges over here is we have to do it again because we're not wet enough Yeah, when I got I saw it from here. It was like a light misting. Yeah, I think you guys have to stand right at the edge I guess yeah, should we go again? Yeah, do it again Did it get you Got me just Just a little bit. I mean look at the state. Look at the state of us Don't just say I think that's a 10 out of 10. Yeah, you guys look pretty wet. Oh really? Thanks, man I am adequately distraught Again, like next time you don't look that wet He cheated No, I just if you have glasses you just stare at it coming towards you But I close my eyes at that time though, so I'm I wonder what the 360 footage actually Like a little bit to the side because I have contact so I think like oh Yeah, we did it again. I won't close my eyes. I'll stare it down. I wonder what the I'm actually kind of excited to see what the footage turned out. Yeah, it's past here. Well That's what three out of three for me now three three three away. You're gonna get four Okay, let me turn this off my heart's racing right now because I'm like I'm due for one You must be like, oh no, what if I get that I hope he's next Hey Brendan, hi That's crazy Because I thought I was at the top This is soft. Yeah, I turned it off. Okay, like what the what the hell just what the hell at all Pick your punishment I'm not going on that one It's gonna be too cool I'll get the 360 camera ready again Come on Fun on cake twice and I already did this twice. I'm dying for some water right now You know what I could have gotten I could be the more on holding the camera I Still regret not bringing the princess costume because him wearing it here leave it up here Yeah, or even swambo that would be so cute Our side still do you want me to film the way on the way coming towards you this time so not not facing us Yeah, okay, I best out on you the greatest gift I could do here in case I move You're such a mom He must hate his life so much I feel slightly better about lying to him now though because He was sticky before and I felt bad about that but now At least the ice cream is washed off so I feel less bad about it My friend I hate this Oh My god, that was how did you still not get wet? Oh my god. Oh, there's like There's bottles in my shoes. This was sucked that one hit me, and I was sitting so far back So the camera go away. That sucks so much That sucks so much. I I cannot slap you guys. I cannot express how angry I am right now Just letting you know the camera is not facing you by the way screw you all my friend You might as well not leave the area. I think it's your turn. Let's go right here my turn to pick or your turn No, your turn. I think that's my turn. Oh great. Yeah Wait, there shouldn't even be any more cargo ones in there. There might be five. I don't know how many punishments you've had But you said it was equal Yeah, but I think there's ten when I counted earlier. There's ten so you have one more Which I'm gonna get I have a feeling it's gonna be you This one right here, please Okay, I can't get through I don't care that I swore Okay, can I see the rest of them go for it? This isn't even fair. This one says krega too I'll come to the first prank B. You got pranked so hard Oh my god, it took you so long. We had bets in discord like when we moved down yesterday, if you remember That's what we were going to discuss Because uh, I don't trust everyone in there to not like spoil it krega They're all Don't toss any on the ground on the ground Everybody get ready to catch these no throw it out. Don't throw it in the property in the throat at you Don't It'll blow away Is there a cup of water or something? I need no screw you You just you know what? You know what? I'm sick. I had to get funnel cake to the face toy. No, you're riding mountain bake clips. Let's go Let's go. Give me this. Give me this camera. I'm putting this away. Let's go I can't even I'm not in improper attack. I don't care. They have a dress code. I don't care. No, they don't I know they don't they do not they do take your shirt off. Let's go You'll violate it. Let's go. We're gonna make clips now No, we're not allowed filming in there We are allowed filming in there. I gotta I gotta get your reaction still you're angry Oh, no, I'm pleased. I have never been more pleased in my life. Oh, yeah Thank you very much. I did a good job then look at that Bringing smiles to people's faces. Did they know both of them? Yes, they knew When you went to the washroom, we talked about it too Screw you guys Screw We were all wrong though. How many times it took six times four five Was that five or six I think that was Four no you couldn't have five I think After you picked your five. This is five. Yeah after I picked the fifth one I said you would put it at three Everyone said four in discord They said four or five I think the best part is he said he said there were only four of each and I think that was fifth, right? Was that five? Yeah, I know I screwed up the fifth one and he still didn't notice That's not fair. This is where we play on roller coasters not test my intelligence What's that like? Oh, look at that another timbre. Oh, he may as well Another timber wolf bridge. Let's see what else I Really wanted to get you dressed up as a princess. I really regret not bringing the outfit timber wolf bridge Oh, wow, I see an F. I wonder what this one says. Oh, look at that timber wolf bridge. So you literally put two funnel cakes Yeah There's got to be something I can Screw you That is not fair at all That is not fair at all. It's not like I plan videos. It's not like I can do the same to you I know I filmed it this morning the prank You filmed what this one on the on the car rides. Oh, really? Did you actually check you up? I said this is what we're doing for a prank guys. How many I was like comment down below what you think he's gonna What when he's gonna clue in I hate you I hate you Screw you. I didn't even awesome
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UCKyTokYo0nK2OA-az-sDijA
Yassmin: Architecture Student in Egypt
She practices her conversational skills with VOA's Avi Arditti and Carolyn Presutti.
[ "Architecture", "conversational practice", "learning English", "Egypt", "VOA", "VOA Learning English", "Learn American English", "Voice of America", "Speak English" ]
2013-04-27T10:36:47
2024-02-05T06:28:07
89
pcy8Cdl_HN0
Yasmin, welcome to talk to us. I'm Avi. And I'm Carolyn. It's nice to see you. I'm from Egypt. I'm 18 years old. In my university, I study architecture. I can't think of a better country to study architecture in than Egypt. Oh my goodness, so much ancient architecture. We study modern architecture and ancient architecture. We study also physics and math and some English. But this subject isn't so important as the design. The most important subject is the design. Do you have a favorite building in Egypt? Of course, my favorite building is the permanent. This building, I don't know how the building is until now. Right. What type of architecture do you want to concentrate on? I like modern architecture. I can say I like small buildings or big buildings. Every building has a job, but it can be small building and it's different. And it looks good and can be also a big building. So I can't say what type of building I like most.
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UCLI5I1QwKqQn0Cf4nzdGKeQ
Lecture 55: Overview of Storage Methods and Economics
Week 10: Lecture 55: Overview of Storage Methods and Economics
[ "Cost of storage" ]
2022-09-22T09:32:13
2024-02-05T06:11:23
1,486
pcNYQLdZSPE
idea about the different methods which can be used for hydrogen storage and the different technologies involved, let us have a quick overview of the different methods and economics involved in the different processes. Now, when it comes to the economics or the cost competitiveness, the scaling up or economies of scale, this is a significant or a key driver in the cost reduction. Now, this is significant player such that it can result into an early cost reduction compared to the major technological breakthroughs that can impact bringing in. We need to understand that not only the hydrogen production, but the storage and transport also plays a significant role in the cost competitiveness of hydrogen. For example, if hydrogen is being produced at a point where it is used itself, so it is like on-site hydrogen production, in that case the costs involved in the storage and transport are negligibly small. However, if it has to be transported over larger distances and large scale hydrogen is being carried over longer distances, then that may involve significant cost and at times it has been found that this cost could be even 3 times the cost of hydrogen production. Now, when we are considering the increased demand of hydrogen, the increased usage of hydrogen in the global energy mix, so for smooth operation of large scale hydrogen value chain, the storage becomes essential. Now, we have seen the various methods of hydrogen storage. We have seen that there is a method geological storage wherein we can store tens of thousands of tons of hydrogen and that is already in operation. Now, which method of storage we will be using that depends upon several parameters like how much amount of hydrogen we want to store. What is the capacity of the storage system we are looking at? For how long we want to store that and all this will be decided by the end-use application. What is the cost that can be afforded for that storage method? At what rate we want the discharge from storage unit to the rate at which hydrogen is discharged from the storage based on the end-use application and this is in case of geological storage its availability at different regions for the different options. So, now currently if we see in the today's scenario most of the hydrogen is being stored in its compressed form or in its liquefied form. So, these usually these are in the tanks for stationary and mobile applications. Now, currently if we see majority of the hydrogen which is being produced that is utilized on site. So, 85% of the total hydrogen being produced that is utilized on site only a small amount that is 15% of it is being transported and that transportation is done by means of either trucks or pipelines. Now, depending upon how long we want to store what is the scale at which we want to store there can be different options for storage and then currently as we see that most of it is being stored in compressed or liquid state and these are in the tanks. So, that the future predictions will depend upon several points like which will be the better method for storage. So, these are the parameters as we have seen which will decide on which method will be which prove promising under different conditions. For example, if we see if we want a very short term storage and this is at the point of export. So, at an export port where it will be shipped further in that case what we require is a short term storage. However, if we want to store it for hours and a typical example could be a hydrogen refueling station for vehicles refueling in that case we may require hours of storage. We may require days to weeks of storage if you want to bridge the mismatch between the supply and demand so that the users they could use it uninterrupted or it could be a long term storage large scale and long term storage and that could be used to bridge the seasonal changes that could occur and when it is combined with the electricity or heat demand and that could provide the system resilience. So, depending upon capacity duration of storage there could be different choices that could be made. For example, if we want large scale long term storage then the option that could be used could be geological storage. However, if short term and small scale storage is desired then it could be in the tanks, the different storage tanks, compressed hydrogen tanks or liquid state storage tanks. Now, when it comes to geological storage the natural gas storage in the geological structures has been well proven and it has been widely used. It provides this particular method of storage that provides economies of scale, it has high efficiency, low cost, it has low land cost, lower footprint requirement above ground and then we have also seen that there are different ways or geological structures in which we can store hydrogen like it can be in salt caverns and there are salt caverns based storage which we have been using since 1970s like in UK. In USA these called salt caverns have been used for storing hydrogen from since 1980s and this has proven to be in spite of the low density of hydrogen as against the natural gas still this particular method of storage is the lowest cost option. So, if hydrogen is stored in salt caverns the cost predicted is comes out to be 0.6 dollars per kg of hydrogen being stored with efficiency of 98%. At the same time in salt caverns the contamination the risk of contamination is very low. At the same time it can we can get higher delivery rate because of the high pressure at which it is stored like in the salt caverns even in like their USA there are the largest salt caverns which can even store for 30 days the hydrogen which is being produced from an SMR plant and that output is of say 10 to 20,000 tons of hydrogen being produced from this plant. Now, there are other plants in these salt caverns storages in UK which can store like 1000 tons of hydrogen and then there are certain other plants which are coming up which can store 3500 tons in Germany. Other than salt caverns among the geological structures we have seen the other choice could be depleted oil and gas reservoirs. Although their size is higher compared to the salt caverns but then there are challenges like the hydrogen which is stored in these depleted oil and gas reservoirs may get contaminated and thus if the hydrogen which is released or taken out from these storage wells from storage reservoirs is to be used for fuel cell then a separation and purification will be desired. The another technology for geological storage would be water aquifers and this is the one which is the least matured technology and then there are differences in the capacity capability for utilization for hydrogen storage. Along with oil and gas reservoirs and these aquifers there are challenges like there could be natural barriers which could trap hydrogen and then there could be a loss of hydrogen. There could be reactions that can occur with the microorganisms in the under the ground with the fluid with the rocks and all these can lead to loss of hydrogen and the feasibility of this particular method of storage that is water aquifer is still to be proven although they can provide seasonal storage both the depleted oil and gas reservoirs as well as aquifers can provide seasonal storage large scale storage long term storage at places where salt caverns are not available. But these particular methods are not suitable for their storage of hydrogen when it is required to store on small scale and for short term. So when it comes to short term small scale storage it can be stored in tanks either as compressed hydrogen or in the liquefied state. Now let us consider the second method of storage that we have seen that was compressed hydrogen storage. Now this particular method of hydrogen storage in compressed hydrogen tank has high efficiency and we can get a high discharge rate. So depending upon the requirement of fuel and feedstock we can achieve the required efficiency and discharge rate at the same time these can be readily available wherever it is required. Now the compressed hydrogen tanks they are manufactured in the same manner as the compressed natural gas tanks like we use type 4 tanks where these are made up of inner liner and with a completely wrapped fibre resin composite as such these are similar to CNG tanks. The differences are in terms of size, the pressures at which they operate, they store and the production volume. Now unlike the compressed natural gas tanks the hydrogen storage cost it is primarily dominated by the balance of plant. So the major contributor in the hydrogen storage in compressed hydrogen tanks is dominated by the balance of plant and the required composites for fabrication for the manufacturing of the tank. If we consider the small volume of production considering like 10,000 units of production if when we talk about small volumes that mean 10,000 units of production per year or when we consider the production as in high volumes like 500,000 units of production per year or when it is considered balance of plant accounts for 50% of cost when it is low volumes of production considering like 10,000 units of production or when it is say higher volumes say 5 lakh units of production per year then 25% of the cost goes for balance of plant. Now if we compare the compressed natural gas tanks which hold natural gas at a pressure of 250 bars as against the hydrogen which stores at 350 bar or 700 bar a significant more amount of carbon fibres is required. Say for example if we see natural gas tanks at a pressure of 250 bar to 75 litres it will require 50 kg of composite compared to a hydrogen storage type 4 tank. Let us say it stores 350 bar pressure it may require a volume of 245 litres and will require a composite weight of 62 kg. So depending upon the requirement of carbon fibre composite the price also varies. So type 4 compressed hydrogen tank it is found that the typical cost is around 15 dollars per kilowatt hour and that can store the tanks can store 5.6 kg of usable hydrogen for vehicular application. Now the major cost that comes in the compressed hydrogen tank is the cost of we can see carbon fibre 62% of it is carbon fibre. This is when the volume of production is higher that is 5 lakh units balance of plant 25% resin cost is 4% wet welding is 6% liner manufacturing and material cost is 1% and the other costs of the material and processing cost is 2%. However the major cost reduction chances are when we could use the resin cost lower the fibre cost could be reduced or the balance of plant cost could be reduced and there will be a possibility of reduction a major possibility of reduction of cost if we could look at alternates wherein we can get lower cost carbon fibre and balance of plant cost could be reduced. Now the other option for storage is in the liquid form. Now cost of liquefaction depending upon the capacity like it is if it is 6000 kg per day or 800 if it is 2 lakh kg per day the cost could be in the range of 50 million dollars to 800 billion dollars and there has been several studies which has been carried out that there has been different cost models including all the production liquefaction delivery and dispensing cost been included and that has estimated that if it is a production size of if it is liquefaction liquefier of size 27000 kg per day the cost estimate is roughly around 160 million dollars. Considering all these production liquefaction delivery and dispensing charges the cost at which it finally is obtained at pump is roughly 14.25 dollars per kg of hydrogen. Usually these liquefiers we know that this is a highly energy intensive process the energy required in industrial liquefiers is about 10 to 20 kilowatt hour per kg. And there are variety of capacity liquefiers which are available like for example in US there are small liquefiers which have capacity of 6000 kg per day liquefaction and a larger liquefier having a capacity of 70000 kg per day of liquefaction. There has been several studies which has been carried out under DOE programs projects like DOE hydrogen and fuel cells program and there they have used several models to find out the cost associated with the liquefiers of different capacity like ranging from 6000 to 20000 kg per day of liquefaction capacity. And they have found that the capital cost is equal to n times 10 lakh times 5.6 times c to the power 0.8 times i where n is represents the number of liquefier such that each liquefier is having a capacity of 2 lakh kg per day of liquefaction. Here c is a liquefier design capacity where 5.6 times c to the power 0.8 is obtained by best fitting with the data which is available with them and this is in units of empty per day i is the overall chemical engineering plant cost index. And if we see the cost breakup for hydrogen liquefaction like considering a plant of capacity 27000 kgs per day then we can see the major cost is dispensing 51% of the cost goes in dispensing. Production cost if we see a certain percentage is for the reformer 9% then it comes a major contributor is another major contributor is in the liquefaction 30% of the cost goes in hydrogen liquefaction. Then the terminal total cost is 7% and finally delivery cost is 3%. Another method that we have learned so far was solid state hydrogen storage method and this can be either in adsorption based materials or absorption based materials. Now if we consider the adsorption based storage say for example with metal organic frambers these systems are made up of because we have learned that adsorption materials they store hydrogen at liquid nitrogen temperatures. So considering a tank let us say a 5.6 kg of usable capacity usually these are having double wall tanks wherein inner tank is made up of aluminium and in between the two tanks is a liquid nitrogen that flows. So considering a tank of say size 165 litres with hexagonal heat transfer arrangement that has been reported in the strategic analysis report with the studies from hydrogen storage engineering centre of excellence work they have incorporated a hexagonal heat transfer arrangement system inside the tank and stored 32 kgs of metal organic framework. Now without the metal organic framework the tank weight was 96 kgs and then there were several other balance of plant peripherals that were incorporated like these were for filling the tank, for discharge of the hydrogen, release of hydrogen from the tank, temperature and pressure monitors and regulators then there were filters, there were several connections required for connecting it for usage. There were heating arrangements so as to get hydrogen at the desired temperature and then this metal organic frameworks were considered found to be fully charged at a pressure of 100 bars and 77 Kelvin. The cost of such tanks that was obtained was found to be with the work done at SRL that hexcom type of structures and it was found that the cost per system at a lower production volume again considering 10000 systems being produced it is roughly $6300 per system cost and considering higher volume cost production 5 lakh units being produced this is 3052 dollars per system. However, there was another study which was meta study and that was found a slightly different numbers but at that same time the amount of metal organic framework used the size of the vessel, the weight of the vessel was different and they found that this was $777 per system and this was roughly around $2945 per system. Now among the total cost it is found that the other components other than the tank that incorporates about 53% of the total cost when it is low volume production and it that corresponds to about 39% of the total cost when the production is at a higher volume of these systems. Now when absorption based systems like the metal hydride based storage systems are being considered it is found that these are at par with the compressed hydrogen tank. So there has been studies carried out wherein integrating electrolyzer with a metal hydride based hydrogen storage system and fuel cell system it is found that these are currently at par they are already cost competitive with the compressed hydrogen 700 bar compressed hydrogen tanks and this is considering that there is no large scale manufacturing of such tanks no manufacturing of such tanks is going on without considering any economies of scale at present they are cost competitive with the type 4 tanks. If there is economies of scale being considered the cost will further come down. It has been found that in such combined systems where we consider electrolyzer integrated with metal or metal hydride based storage systems and fuel cell the major cost component in such systems are the electrolyzer and fuel cell. The storage system cost metal hydride based storage system cost is minimal. We can even find out the metal hydride cost if we know the elements being used and their atomic and their ratios the amounts being used like the cost of metal hydride can be given by the cost of individual elements like A if it is a metal hydride of type A x B y then C A x upon x plus y molar mass of A plus C B the second component C B y upon x plus y M B molar mass of B component divided by x upon x plus y M A plus y upon x plus y M B. So this is a metal hydride which is of composition A x and B y. Now if we consider that a metal hydride which is having a gravimetric capacity of say 2 weight percent is used then the cost per kg of hydrogen being stored in such a metal hydride based system is comparable to 700 bar compressed hydrogen tank. With the advantage of this particular method of storage being since we are storing hydrogen at a lower pressure much lower pressure close to ambient then this method of storage is comparatively much more safer and volumetric density is far better than compared to the other methods of storage using the absorption based metal hydride based storage system. Now to summarize this particular part we have seen that the cost associated with the different methods of storage we have seen that different methods are at different maturity level like the geological state storage salt cavern based storage have been operational however the aquifer based storage these are still much more studies are required at the same time solid state hydrogen storage these are still at laboratory scale and the economies of scale has not yet arrived in the method of storage. We know that economies of scale definitely has a very bright potential to bring down the cost as compared to and that can bring down the cost much faster earlier then that could come from the technological breakthroughs. We have seen large scale hydrogen storage required and long term storage and the geological storage would be the best option when it comes to small scale short term storage then either the compressed or liquid state storage would be the better choice. Thank you.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcNYQLdZSPE", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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2009 FORD F350 CREW LONG DRW LARIAT DIESEL FOND DU LAC WISCONSIN SOLD! 100X www.SUMMITAUTO.com
CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE! https://www.youtube.com/summitauto?sub_confirmation=1 https://www.summitauto.com/used/Ford/2009-Ford-F350+DRW+Super+Duty-Fond-Du-Lac-761cb66a0a0e0a6b109d7b7583edcec4.htm STOCK: 100X PRICE: $30,499 MILES: 75,940 MAKE: FORD MODEL: F350 VIN: 1FTWW3R39EA86652 PHONE: 920-921-0850 WEBSITE: www.SUMMITAUTO.com & TRUCKSON41.com LOCATION: BEAVER DAM WISCONSIN, TRUCKS ON 151 CLEAN TITLE HISTORY! 6.4 Liter V8 Powerstroke Diesel Engine, Full Four Door Crew Cab, Long Box 8 Foot Longbox, Dual Rear Wheel Dually DRW, Lariat Ultimate Package, Automatic Transmission, Turn Dial 4x4 Four Wheel Drive 4WD, Factory GPS Navigation System, Power Sunroof Moonroof Sun Roof Moon Roof, Dual Power Heated Seats, Black Ebony Leather Seats, Captains Chairs, Memory Driver's Seat, Full Towing Package with Receiver Trailer Hitch, Wiring and Transmission Cooler Tow Package, Camper Package with Anti-Sway Bars, Tow Command Factory Electric Brake Controller, Powerscope Tow Power Mirrors that Power Telescope and Power Fold in with Built-in Directional Signals, 3.73 Gears with Limited Slip Differential, BF Goodrich All Terrain T/A LT245/75 R17 Tires, Factory Polished Aluminum Rims Premium Wheels, Four Wheel Disc Brakes, Factory Chromed Stepbars, Spray-in Bedliner, Bedrail Covers, Clearance Lights, Fog Lights, Reverse Sensors, Securicode Driver Side Doorcode Keyless Entry, Vent Shades, Locking Tailgate, Tailgate Step Assist Manstep, Chrome Trimmed Grill, Chrome Trimmed Mirrors, Chromed Rocker Panels, AM / FM Radio Tuner, Sirius/XM Satellite Radio Capabilities Sirius / XM, CD Player, Microsoft SYNC System with Bluetooth, Hands-Free Audio System Blue Tooth, Auxiliary MP3 Jack Portable Audio Connection, USB Jack Portable Audio Connection, Keyless Entry System, Power Sliding Rear Window, Adjustable Height Seatbelts, Driver and Passenger Front Air Bags, L.A.T.C.H. Child Safety System, Multi-Function Steering Wheel Controls, Homelink System with Three Programmable Buttons for Garage Doors, Lighting Systems & Security Systems, Compass, Outside Temperature Display and Mileage Display, Dual Multi-Zone Climate Control , Power Adjustable Pedals, Factory All Weather Floormats, Woodgrain Dash And Door Trim, Air Conditioning AC, Cruise Control, Power Locks, Power Windows, Tilt Steering Wheel, Automatic Headlights Autolamp, Black, CLEAN AUTOCHECK! Very very clean inside and out! This is one of the sharpest 2009 Ford F350 crewcab longbox duallie diesels we have ever had on our lot! Make your move before this super clean 4wd is gone! Call Now! 1-(920)-921-0850 . Check out our Full inventory at www.SUMMITAUTO.com ! Summit Automotive Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin also Proudly Serving Oshkosh, Madison, Milwaukee, Sheboygan, Appleton, and Waupun is a family owned and operated dealership since 1959. We take great pride in our new and used car and truck center with vehicles to fit everyone's budget. We have ON THE SPOT FINANCING. BAD CREDIT OR GOOD CREDIT, we work with over 20 lenders to get you APPROVED AT THE MOST COMPETITIVE RATES. We provide AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION and NATIONWIDE DELIVERY OPTIONS. We are conveniently located on HWY 41 at EXIT 98, Hwy 151 at Military Rd. Exit . Just Look For The TRUCKS ON 41. Advertised price does not include, tax, title, registration and service fee., STOCK: 100X PRICE: $30,499 MILES: 75,940 MAKE: FORD MODEL: F350 VIN: 1FTWW3R39EA86652 PHONE: 920-921-0850 WEBSITE: www.SUMMITAUTO.com & TRUCKSON41.com LOCATION: BEAVER DAM WISCONSIN, TRUCKS ON 151
[ "trucks on 41", "used trucks wisconsin", "used trucks fond du lac", "used jeep wrangler", "used jeep wrangler fond du lac", "54935", "wisconsin", "dodge", "ram", "1500", "2500", "3500", "f150", "ford", "2009 FORD F350 WALK AROUND", "2009 FORD F350 WALKAROUND", "2009 FORD F350 REVIEW", "2009 FORD F350 CREW LONG DRW POWERSTROKE DIESEL BLACK" ]
2018-10-19T16:00:37
2024-02-05T08:52:25
514
pC5yvbFqMis
This is stock number 9329A, we are here at Summit Automotive in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. You're new and used heavy duty truck headquarters, remember we are the guys with the trucks on 41. Today we are checking out this super clean 2009 Ford F350 crew cab long box dual rear wheel. This truck has a 6.4 liter power stroke diesel. In this HD video you will be able to tell that this truck is extremely clean for the age and miles on it, black is the color and we shoot all of our videos in 1080p, so if you have HD capabilities on your computer, tablet or smartphone device, turn them on right now because it's like you're right here looking at the truck with me. Factory chrome step bars, this one comes with the polished aluminum factory rims and it has BF Goodrich all terrain tires, these are LT245, 75R17s, you can see they have about 60 to 70% of the tread left, framing on the body on this truck is in really nice condition as the rancher shocks on it as well, see just how clean that fender is, no dents or dings on that, the hood is in excellent condition as is the front grille, factory fog lights, headlight lenses are nice and clear, passenger side fenders in excellent shape, passenger side rim is in pretty nice condition as well and as you go down this side of the truck, take notice of how clean the body is, how reflective and mirror like that paint is, we take these HD videos so if you are far away or even if you're close by and just cannot make the trip down but you're still interested in purchasing the vehicle you can still see the truck, hear the truck and have confidence in the vehicle that you're looking at before you even get here, cab is in really nice condition as well and on this side of the truck you know I didn't see any dents or dings, all the lower rockers are in really nice condition, these back rims are pretty clean as well and the back tires have just as much tread as those front tires, see the frame and underbody is in really nice condition, I just want to take a look at those box rails so those are in pretty nice condition as well, has the camper package with the anti-sway bar right there, that's what that bar is and the frame and underbody, looks like it has all the DPF and original factory exhaust, dually tub is in nice condition I didn't see any cracks on that, the rear bumper is in nice condition as well, has the backup sensors, the tailgate is in pretty nice condition, has a locking tailgate backup camera, has the tailgate step assist right there, has a very nice spray and bed liner and the bed itself is in really nice condition, tailgate shuts nice and solidly, only thing I saw one tiny little ding on that rear tailgate there, other than that very very clean on this truck all the way around, down this side just as clean as the passenger side, it's back rim, it's in pretty nice condition, we just want to give the most accurate representation possible so that when you get here there's no surprises and everything is as we have advertised it, inside the truck has the Lariat Ultimate package so you get the black leather seats, both of these seats are heated, leathers in pretty nice condition, power driver seat, factory all-weather floor mats, this one has the auto headlamps right there, has the power windows power locks and power mirrors, has the power scoping mirrors so they power fold in, they also power telescope out and in, memory driver seat, inside this truck you will take notice has 75,963 miles, so pretty low miles on this truck for being an 09, steering wheel is in nice condition as well, you got audio controls on the right, Bluetooth controls on the left, this one comes with the factory navigation system, you can also it has a hard drive, I like this radio because you can put songs in CDs on there and listen to them, has the power pedals, factory brake controller, your heated seats, dual climate control, backup sensors, power sliding rear window, turn dial four-wheel drive and your information center controls are up there, passenger seat is very clean as well, no rips or tears on that, smells very clean in this truck, has a power sunroof as well, part of that Lariat Ultimate package, Lariat Ultimate gives you the nav and the sunroof as a combo, has the homelink system for your garage door security systems and lighting systems and that's your controls for that sunroof. So take a look at the back of camera here, shows up right in the steering wheel, or steering wheel shows up right in the radio and we'll take a quick look at the back seats, take a quick look under the hood as well after the back seats, back seats are just as clean as the front seats, no rips or tears back here, has the power sliding rear window as well, factory all-weather floor mat, carpeting is nice and clean throughout and underneath here you get a little bit more storage, somebody has taken the load floor out of this truck so it does not have the load floor and we'll take a quick look under the hood, I really appreciate you checking out the video today, hopefully from this HD video, you'll have been able to tell just how clean this truck is all the way around, so you can make a smart buying decision or decide to make a trip down. Under the hood we have the 6.4 liter power stroke diesel, engine base very clean runs very smooth, this truck has been fully safe and inspected by our service shop, has a fresh oil and filter change, all the fluids have been checked and topped off and this truck is 100% ready to go, to see more pictures of this F350 or one of our other 450 new and used cars, trucks, SUVs, minivans, Wranglers, you name it we got it, go to our website www.summitauto.com, full pictures and descriptions of every single vehicle on our lot, videos of every single used vehicle that we have all at summitauto.com, if you want to check out just our used inventory you can go to truckson41.com, that's truckson41.com, the number 41, takes you right to our website with the used vehicles and you can check out all our used inventory there and if you want to make this truck yours, give us a call right now 920-921-0850, ask for one of our sales associates standing by to take your call, once again that number is 920-921-0850, thanks again for checking out the video, if you'd like to check out more videos you can go to youtube.com slash summit auto remember to like, subscribe and share on this video and all the videos that you see there, in fact in a second you will see a link to subscribe to our YouTube channel on your left, just click that to subscribe, more HD truck videos like this one on your right and if you have not been to our website on the bottom a link to this vehicle on our website click those check us out and we really look forward to helping you with this super clean 2009 Ford F-350, crew cab, long box, dual rear wheel, lariat ultimate, thanks again
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pC5yvbFqMis", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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Deck Review - Moriarty Playing Cards - ☠️ 13 Haunted Decks of Playing Cards 😨
Deck Review - 13 Decks of Halloween - Moriarty Playing Cards original deck review: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghp3B4XsWyI learn more here: http://www.kingswildproject.com/ #MagicOrthodoxy #13decksOfHalloween #playingcards
[ "Deck review", "Halloween themed decks", "13", "haunted", "spooky", "playing cards", "best playing cards", "deck collection", "best on youtube", "best on the web", "best magic reviewer", "magic orthodoxy", "best deck reviews", "best playing cards for magic", "best playing cards for flourishing", "how do you do card magic", "how do you do card tricks", "world's best card trick", "how do you do a cybil cut", "how do you do a giant fan", "sherlock holmes", "elementary", "dr watson", "how does moriarty die" ]
2015-10-25T12:26:10
2024-04-23T14:29:47
101
pcsR9Lsf3uY
Hey everybody, welcome back to Magic White! The Doxy! My name is David, and this is the 13 Decks of Halloween! That's right, we're going to do 13 days, 13 deck reviews of the spookiest decks in my collection. Actually there's plenty of decks in my collection that would qualify as a spooky or Halloween-themed deck, but these are just 13 that I grabbed, kind of at random, kind of not, that we're going to show to you for the next 13 days, so get ready. Here we go. Moriarty deck from Kings Wild Project and Jackson Robinson. Now who is Moriarty? Moriarty is the evil nemesis villain in the Sherlock Holmes series, and this deck was part of the Sherlock Holmes Kickstarter project that Kings Wild Project did, and the reason why we're including it in this Halloween edition is just the tuck box, it's just this flat black, really cool dark colors. One of the jokers is Smear with Blood, and all the courts pay tribute to the different Sherlock Holmes characters, but you definitely have some pretty wicked evil people in there as well. This deck, of course, was printed for the Knights of Plain Card Company, and is completely custom from pips to indices to courts to everything. The back design and the inside of the tuck case almost looks like wallpaper that you'd find in an old haunted Victorian house. All right, so that is it for this quick deck review of the Moriarty deck. If you'd like to learn more or see more, you can visit the link below in the description to our original deck review. That is it for the Moriarty review. Tune in tomorrow and we will look at the Calaveras deck from Dead on Paper and Chris Avignenko. Thanks, bye.
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Maths XII CBSE C 2007 1 22 OP1
[ "Maths", "XII", "CBSE", "C", "2007", "1", "22", "OP1" ]
2012-06-11T10:07:58
2024-02-05T07:57:44
318
pCVsxYAvOcY
Hello, and welcome to the session. I am Deepika here. Let's discuss a question which sees find me new Variant sigma square for the following probability distribution if x is equal to 0, px is equal to 1 over 8 4x is equal to 1, px is equal to 3 over 8, 4x is equal to 2 3x is equal to 3 over 8 and for x is equal to 3, px is equal to 1 over 8 Now we know that the mean mu is equal to the expectation of x which is equal to sigma xi pi i varying from 1 to n Again variance of x is equal to e x square minus e x Whole square So this is a key idea behind our question We will take the help of this key idea to solve the above question So let's start the solution Now according to our key idea the mean mu is equal to e x Which is given by sigma xi pi i varying from 1 to n So this is equal to 0 into 1 by 8 plus 1 into 3 over 8 plus 2 into 3 over 8 plus 3 into 1 over 8 And this is further equal to 0 Plus 3 over 8 Plus 6 over 8 Plus 3 over 8 And this is again equal to 3 plus 6 plus 3 over 8 which is further equal to 12 over 8 And this is equal to 3 over 2 So the mean of the above probability distribution is 3 over 2 Now for the variance Of x we will first find out e x square which is equal to 0 into 1 over 8 plus 1 square into 3 over 8 Plus 2 square into 3 over 8 plus 3 square into 1 over 8 And this is further equal to 0 plus 1 into 3 over 8 plus 4 into 3 over 8 plus 9 into 1 over 8 And this is again equal to 0 plus 3 over 8 plus 12 over 8 plus 9 over 8 And this is again equal to 3 plus 12 Plus 9 over 8 And this is further equal to 24 over 8 Which is again equal to 3 Now according to our key idea we have Variance of x is equal to e x square minus e x Whole square So this is equal to Now we have e x square is equal to 3 and E x is equal to 3 over 2 So variance of x is equal to 3 minus 3 over 2 Square and this is equal to 3 minus 9 over 4 Which is further equal to 12 minus 9 over 4 And this is equal to 3 over 4 So the answer for the above question is mean of x That is expectation of x Is equal to 3 over 2 and variance of x Is equal to 3 over 4 So this is the answer for the above question This completes our session I hope the solution is clear to you. Bye and have a nice day
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCVsxYAvOcY", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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First Love // Part 3 // Pastor Lee Cummings
See more at www.radiant.church
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2019-02-25T21:19:22
2024-04-23T00:51:35
183
PclaMTyVlf0
Well good morning everybody can we just take a moment and welcome those who are watching online and our portage campus come on everybody put your hands together and welcome them. So first of all we want you to know that we actually turned the heat on last night ran it all night long at 70 degrees and that's just what you get in Michigan when you have an arctic squirrel of negative 2,000 degrees overnight but so we want you to know we weren't we weren't skimping on the heat and it's warming up that's why we're a spirit-filled church because the more you get moving in worship the heat rises amen so get your charismatic calisthenics on. And a couple other quick things we want to just highlight is this Wednesday night for our seat gathering a new friend of mine Michael Miller you saw him advertised from Upper Room Dallas is going to be here and listen you're not going to want to miss it what God is doing in Dallas at this church is it's groundbreaking it's really powerful he's an incredible incredible communicator passionate about the Lord we sing one of the songs around here where we talk about this is how I fight my battles that happened out of a spontaneous worship moment at his church in Dallas and I really really have great expectation for Michael being here so Wednesday night do everything you can to be here Wednesday night our gatherings on Wednesday nights Caleb loves that word gatherings they have been incredible they've been packed out so make sure that you're here early and speaking of packed out not so much this weekend because of the incredible cold but the first couple of weeks of January have been record setting here at Radiant Church we have had larger attendance in our services and we've ever had before it's incredible God is moving in powerful ways so so incredible I mean year to date I think this time last year we're 600 adults up from where we were this time last year all of our services that's including portage as well portage is over the 80% rule at at the 11 o'clock service we're over the 80% rule and our 11 o'clock service and the 9 a.m. service which a lot of people think well you can't grow a 9 a.m. service we've been at the 70% rule which what they say is when you get 80 and 70% full in the sanctuary you stop growing because they're just not room for parking and for new people who come in it's just it's just hard to get in and hard to find a seat for three or four people together here's why
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Driscoll Solidifying BSU Men's Hockey Goalie Situation
[ "Lakeland PBS", "LPTV", "PBS", "Bemidji", "Minnesota", "MN", "Public", "Television", "News" ]
2019-02-15T05:55:27
2024-02-05T16:24:06
67
PC_5Rx-AYT0
Coming into the season, the biggest question for the BSU men's hockey team is who would replace Mike Bitzer and Nett. After employing a goalie by committee approach for the first half of the season, the Beavers seem to have found their guy in Zach Driscoll. After splitting time with Hank Johnson in the first half of the season, Driscoll has started every game in 2019, leading the team to a 6-3-1 record, with Driscoll posting a 2.07 goals against Average over that time period. We just think he's playing very consistent and, you know, he's in a pretty good rhythm right now. Just having some troubles there in the first half of the year, seeing the puck a little bit. Did some stuff over break. Saw one of my trainers from back home that I've been working with for a few years. He helped me out a lot, so been doing some stuff with that over Christmas break and so do it before every game in practice here now. If you enjoyed this segment of Lakeland News, please consider making a tax-deductible contribution to Lakeland PBS.
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UC2RbTnQ9sr6r1FgbFKf-fOA
Cass Lake-Bena Boys Basketball Gets Win Against Goodridge/G-G
[ "Lakeland PBS", "LPTV", "PBS", "Bemidji", "Minnesota", "MN", "Public", "Television", "News" ]
2019-03-08T06:18:01
2024-02-05T16:24:04
48
PCzccSvkSXI
Section 8A boys match up tonight. Castley Bean, a host in Goodridge. Panthers up five early Durell Jacobs working on the low block. That goes for the bucket. Two possessions later, Antonio Brown from long distance, one of seven three-pointers for the Panthers tonight. Later, Lucian Tins to Jaden Kiso on the backdoor cut. That cuts it to eight points. But the Panthers came into their groove. Jared Brown snatches the shot attempt from midair. Up to Jacobs on the fast break, he led all scores with 21 points. And the Panthers win 72 to 50.
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Youth Outreach: Finding a Roof for Homeless Youth
Youth Outreach "YO" House, a drop-in center for homeless youth and children in Waikiki, is joining forces with HomeAid on Christmas Eve to give homeless youth a roof over their heads for Christmas. YO works to raise awareness and money to build a center where youth can sleep safely at night. It's major fundraiser, a sock hop at Stan Sheriff Center, is scheduled for April 8. ThinkTech Hawaii streams live on the Internet from 11:00 am to 5:00 pm every weekday afternoon, Hawaii Time, then streaming earlier shows through the night. Check us out any time for great content and great community. Our vision is to be a leader in shaping a more vital and thriving Hawaii as the foundation for future generations. Our mission is to be the leading digital media platform raising pubic awareness and promoting civic engagement in Hawaii.
[ "Think Tech Hawaii", "Tech", "Energy", "Globalization", "Diversification", "Economy", "Hawaii", "popular", "Martin Rabbett", "youth", "outreach", "house", "homeless", "children", "waikiki", "homeaid", "fundraiser", "roof", "money", "awareness", "stan sheriff center" ]
2016-12-21T02:30:04
2024-02-05T08:10:49
1,931
PCNqc7ui9Cw
We're live. We're back. I'm Jay Feidel. This is Community Matters, our regular show that deals with events and organizations that serve the community and the common good. Today we're going to cover youth outreach, finding a roof for homeless youth, critical. How do they do that? Our special guests for this discussion are Martin Rabet, president of the Youth Outreach Board, and Jane Alexander of Friends of Youth Outreach. YO is a drop-in center for homeless youth and children in Waikiki. It is joining forces with Home Aid on Christmas Eve this weekend to give homeless youth a roof over their heads for Christmas. YO works to raise public awareness and also to raise money to build a center where youth can sleep safely at night. It's a major fundraiser, a sock, a major fundraiser is a sock hop at Stand Share of Center and that's scheduled for this coming April 8th. But we'll hear more about that in a minute from our guests, Martin Rabet and Jane Alexander. Welcome to the show, Martin and Jane. Nice to have you here. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. So what's tell me, somebody tell me, what is a drop-in center? The center in Waikiki is a, it's open four days a week because that's as much funding as it receives from Waikiki Health and Holly Kepa, the two organizations that run this show. And it's only open for the kids from three to six where they can come in and get a hot meal, hot shower, they can get their GED, they can get medical attention. But it's also a safe place for them to be because most of these kids have run away from home for various reasons, either they're sexually abused or their parents run drugs, they're kicked out because they're gay or transgender. But this little drop-in center in Waikiki is a safe place for them to be. And they get donated clothes so they can come in and get new clothes when they want. They can also do their laundry, which is important. And they have lockers, a place to stash their stuff. With their own lock, their own control of the space. Well, the lock is under the control of the yo supervisors, but they have a place to put their things in and feel safe. So what age group are we talking about? Well, there are babies of 14, 15-year-old mothers all the way up to 21. Wow. Does the baby of a 14-year-old or 15-year-old mother come with the mother? Oh, yeah. And the aunties and all those who are kids as well, and the siblings of these mothers, they all take care of each other. It's a clan. And this yo house is a safe place for them to be together. I love the term yo house. It's got all kinds of secondary meaning, yeah. They gave the organization the name. The kids did. Oh, did they really do that? Yeah. It was called youth outreach. Good for you for being sensitive to that. Yeah. It was called youth outreach, and they named it yo. Perfect. Perfect. So I guess, you know, I'm wondering why Waikiki. Waikiki is a neighborhood all of itself. Now we don't want them on the street for a number of reasons in Waikiki, partly because Waikiki is the engine of our economy. And it's a, it's a tawdry to have the tourists look on homeless people all day. That doesn't work. But why Waikiki? Are these kids living in Waikiki? Would they otherwise be on Coleo Avenue? They are living in Waikiki, but they, they feel comfortable there. They can fit in in Waikiki. They don't look homeless because of the donated clothing and backpacks, but they feel safe there. And unfortunately at night, sometimes they have to just walk at night because they can't sleep on the beach until daytime. And one of the kids wrote a story of a class there weekly that helped them to teach their stories. And one wrote about one night he was awakened by police officers three times because he kept moving him. So he just walked at night and then he slept during the day on the beach where he could. But that meant he couldn't go to school. Did he have a family? No. So can, can I, I don't know how this works. Can a kid who doesn't have a family walk into a school and get signed up? There are Carla Hauser who runs the Yo-House from the Waikiki Help portion. Helps them get their IDs, documents so that they can enter a school. And also if there are parents anywhere or guardians anywhere, she gets their permission. But it's often difficult to get that because they're often on drugs. And even, even without permission, she can get them into school. Maybe she has been able to, yes. Okay, it doesn't sound easy actually. No, it's not. Because what happens is we have Child Protective Services to come in to get the kids under 18. And they're supposed to take them back to the parents who might be abusing them so the kids will just run away again. And sometimes the police just bring them directly to Yo knowing that they'll be safe there. Where's the, where's the border between this kind of activity, you know, sleeping during the day and walking the streets at night between that and prostitution on Cuyahua Avenue. Is that, are they linked? Is there some kind of connection there? We'd like to think that there isn't a connection, but unfortunately there often is because the kids then find a place where they can sleep and they also get some money. Yeah, yeah. Young kids too, I know. Yes, yes. Yeah. So these, this is Christmas now. You're, of course, your fundraiser is in April 8th, but you're doing this program on Christmas Eve that we're talking about. And I wonder if you could describe to me the program. How does it work? How do you arrange it and attract the homeless kids to be there? How do you support it? What do you expect from it? Well, last year, Nani Madeira, Sioux Runes, homemade Hawaii here, was the she-spear-headed the whole thing. And we did it at the Aloha Tower in the student lounge of the White Pacific University there. And we told the kids they'd have a place to sleep with the roof over their heads. That's all we said. Come down and there'll be food and you can sleep safely. And all these donations came in food and gifts and sunglasses and certificates. And Ihilani gave all these quilts for the kids to sleep with, which is a huge boon for them. I mean, they love those quilts because they could take them out and use them wherever they find it. Yeah, yeah. And it was the most exciting thing for these kids. And then, you know, the next week when we rode again, they all rode about how happy they were to have this experience. So this year, it's going to be larger at another location. And we're, I just, to see these kids happy was such a gift last year. What's the agenda? I mean, how does the program roll out? How does it work? Well, they start with pizza and food like that. And then they have a table full of gifts that they get to select for other people. And that was apparently the most popular activity last year. They're giving a gift to receive. They are giving gifts. The first time is your life. They can go kick. That's very nice. A table full of gifts that they can give to other people and they get to pick something out and wrap it themselves. They presented to the other person too. Yes. Yes. What one of their colleagues as homeless kids or families or families to sometimes younger, younger siblings and and perhaps even a parent that they feel really sorry for, which happens. So OK, so then they have a program with the gifts. What happens then? The tick, tick, tick. It's like 10 or 11 o'clock at night. I guess. Okay. Yeah. They have game boy. They just and they find things to do. I mean, they're so excited to have this place to come together and Father Christmas comes, Santa Claus comes. And it's just it's a delight. What makes it a delight for me? You know, you you talk about a safe place to sleep. So there are there's, you know, dark shadows around in the sense that there are threats if you if you're a kid and you sleep on the pavement. What would they worry about? And how do you ameliorate that? Well, what happens often for these kids and they tell me their stories is that they will, you know, find a place to sleep and then they'll wake up and all the stuff is gone. So that's not the police either. No, that's other homeless people, other homeless people, adults. So some of them, as we said earlier, give their bodies up to adult homeless so that they can sleep safely while the adults watch them. Oh, no. Yeah. Yeah, it's it's just it's just they're so vulnerable in every way. I mean, not only in having these bad acts visited on them, but in in carrying the scars of a very unpleasant experience for the rest of their lives. No. Yes. And that's one of the reasons that I when I found out about this, because I mean, I grew up here and there were no homeless, little unhomeless kids. And I found out about this place. I thought, well, I want to participate. And I thought, well, I could teach them writing to tell their stories, which is what they come in and do. And at first, you know, they're very leery of adults. It took months for them to see that I was going to be there for them, not for me. And then they came a little by little and they would write and I'd say, you know, can they write? Yeah, I mean, they've had enough school to actually write. Yes. And I say, I don't care about spelling. I don't care about grammar. I care about your telling your story. Why don't you read us a piece? Okay, this I'll just read it a little bit about this one young man who once lived in an apartment, and now he's been on the streets for two years. And it sucks to be in the rain. It sucks not to be able to escape people's constant looks. It sucks to have to sleep with one eye open constantly surveying your surroundings, because you know what is out there. It sucks not to be able to take a shower or use the restroom in private. It sucks not to have a space to do things I love to do like dance, rap, sing, draw. It sucks not to have a quiet place to retreat to to when the world gets hectic. It sucks not to have a roof, a space, a home. Beautiful. So informational. I mean, it teaches you so much about his life. I guess it's a he his life. We're gonna take some picture pictures now. And let's see if you guys can give us a running discussion of what's on the screen. Okay. Okay. What's that? That's our event and that we had last April aboard the USS Missouri. It was a 1940s theme. And that's Carla Houser, who is telling everyone about Yo House. Great. That's Cassandra Peterson, also known as Elvira. And she and Richard Chamberlain were the co hosts for the event. And she flew over on her own dime to be a part of this to help the kids. Okay, this one. That's Ben and it looks like he kind of and then yeah, he had just one of the silent the live auction. Richard's Rolex watch that brand new watch that he donated and Cassandra is presenting. Okay, that's more of the event. More of the event. Ah, that's Fitzgerald, Susie and Dennis Fitzgerald, they're big supporters of Friends of Youth Outreach. And in the in the background, you have by Lou and and that's great that you have such support from the community. And obvious that they're down there. Those are our board members there. Those are your board members, including the the captain. That's me. We just figured that we would dress up. It was a 40s themed event. You play a good captain. I'm impressed, Martin. That's the Missouri. That's some Missouri. That's some guests enjoying it. People really had a good time on that. So some more brass. Yeah, there's Richard Chamberlain on the left with Cassandra myself. He plays an admiral, eh? Yes. Okay, great pictures. I love the Navy thing. Do that again. Well, our sock hop is going to be 50s. So come with your t-shirt, hold up with the cigarette pack. So you follow the theme, whatever the theme is. We want to make this fun for people to come. You know, there's so many events in this town almost every weekend. There's something going on. But we want to make it fun because we believe so much in what we're doing. We really want to get a roof over the heads of these kids. They're good kids. They just need a chance. Well, here's the question, though. You're reaching a certain number of kids. I guess we should find out how many. About 500 a year go through the year. 500 a year. But we know there are more than that. I know, for example, downtown, there are a lot of kids that wander the streets at night here downtown, not the same crowd, different crowd. And they get involved kinds of trouble. And they're exposed and vulnerable in so many ways. And so you'll work actually, Martin and Jane is just beginning. There's a lot more out there. And they for the dark forces, they are the low hanging fruit is what it is. Yes. And the good thing about Holly Kepa is that they have the nighttime youth outreach program, they go out and find kids, bring them food, tell them about the your house, and they come in and they can get all these services. And it's, you know, they're it's unbelievable to see some of these new kids come in and go, How long has this been here? Why didn't I know about it? So it's really an amazing program. We just we need more funds so that we can have a shelter based on there's a shelter in Portland, Oregon, that Carl Hauser wants to create here, where you have different stages of need by these kids, you know, intermediate, immediate, and then longer term, so that we can help them get their GEDs, and then they can get jobs, and then they can support themselves. We're just not trying to find a place for them to sleep at night. We want these people, these youth to become, you know, working members of our society. And they want to I mean, they're one wonderful writer wants to be a nurse. And she had no idea that she had the chance to do that, because she's homeless. Why not? You can, you can go to school. That's the risk they kind of write themselves off. Yes, you have to bring them back. So we're going to come back right after this break. And we're going to talk about bringing them back, we can talk about what happens if you don't bring them back. And we're going to talk about fundraising. Don't forget, Jane, don't forget the fundraising. Okay, we'll be right back. Hi, Aloha, my name is Chris Lethem, and I have a host of show called The Economy and You. The show plays every Wednesday at noon. And on my show, I bring on guests who are interested or working in the technology space. And so I'd like you to come and watch the show and learn with me about all the sort of exciting things that we're doing in Hawaii to build and grow our economy ecosystem. So I'd like to say Aloha and I look forward to seeing you on the show. Thank you. Okay, we have a great discussion going on community matters here on ThinkTech. We're calling it Youth Outreach, Finding a Room for Homeless Youth in Hawaii. Featuring our two guests, Martin Rebet, president of Youth Outreach, the Youth Outreach Board, and Jane Anderson, I misspoke before, of the Friends of the Youth Outreach. Okay, everybody agree with that so far? Yes. Alright, so let's talk about, you know, these kids and their delicate psyches, you know, you need to do something for them with the, they will ultimately have terrible lives and be a burden, and on themselves and on us, and not productive members of society. So we're trying to make them productive, which we're trying in every way. You're not the only agency that's, you know, hitting hard at the homeless. We're trying in every way to minimize homelessness, ameliorate when we find it, and make make them productive. So I just like to know, you know, what happens on Christmas, because on Christmas, it's kind of special, the lights, the colors, the sound of music, dancing, food, all that happiness. Sometimes it's real, not always. But there it is. And so the person who perceives that it's always real. And if you happen to be homeless on the street, it accentuates more than ordinarily, you know, at any other time of the year. Do you see that in working with these kids? December is a really tough month for these kids. It's a really tough month because they see all this joy around them, like you said, and they're not a part of it. Yeah. And that's why having this party for them is absolutely wonderful. It doesn't take a party the last two weeks. It just takes a little party. Make them feel that, you know, this is not such a big disparity. Right. They can enjoy themselves like other people do. Well, they also, they want to be seen. There's one wonderful writer in my class who constantly writes about how lonely he is out there, because people look at him and don't just dismiss him. And he's brilliant. And he's a good soul. And he wants to be seen in this party. All these people coming together is saying, you're worthy. We all want to feel worthy. But these kids especially need that because they didn't have an upbringing like many of us did. Yeah, that's a great loss. And they don't have an identity, a persona, they don't have a place where they belong. So you're offering them a place where they belong. And you're offering a chance to be part of the community. This is all about to make them, you know, working members of the community, productive members of the community, they got to be part of the community. And I think that's, you know, baseline what you're offering them. So what's so wonderful about your house? Sorry for jumping in. But these kids love you so much that when I have them write goals, they say they all want to come back and work for you. They want to get back because there's a statement, isn't it? Yes, yes. There's one girl here who wants to create an organization like you, but not just for old or young people, for everyone. They can come in and that's very creative. You ever give her credit for that? She's amazing. Everybody needs you, Martin. We all need you. I went there because I wanted to give backs in some way. I leave there so augmented that I feel so blessed to be a part of this. Now, what happens on the on the foot side of this? I mean, you must have thought about this. If you don't reach them, they don't come in. They don't take advantage or they don't know about. For some reason, they're not involved in your program and their streetwaves disconnected with their family disconnected with other homeless people really just kids. I wonder out of something out of that's one of the Charles Dickens books, Oliver, Oliver Twist. What happens to them? Just give me a sort of ghost of Christmas future kind of description. What happens to these kids if they don't have your help? You know, the how the homeless population is increasing here. Yes, they're going to be part of that. Yes, and they already are a part of it. Yes, but they're the one part that is not being addressed right now. The under under age 24 group is not being addressed yet. That's that surprises me because we have 100 literally hundreds of nonprofits out there trying to deal with homelessness. But no, nobody's addressing my 18 to 24 year olds. No one. So this is a crucial stage of their development. And yes, it is a lot of these kids are in such pain that they do drugs to numb the pain. That's a one way street. Yeah. So we need to get to them desperately, desperately. Let's talk about money now, Jane. This is your turn. You're the friends. Okay. So he's the friends too. Okay, you're both friends. But talk to me about how you raise money for this kind of organization. We've seen some photographs of some of the people who have supported you. But how does that work? Because it's you know, it's a different, it's a different approach on different charitable organizations, different approach on different missions, different approach, you know, depending how you handle it, how do you handle it? Well, first of all, we've only had our 501 C three since last summer. But we got it in two months time. Really? That's a record, isn't it? Yes, must have done something right. Well, we had a very good attorney who did all this work for us pro bono, Steve Egasol. Very nice. Yes. Shout out to Steve. Yes, Steve Egasol. He's on our board. He's on our board and he did. He did this all for us and got it in two months time. And before that, we were sponsored by Lima Kukua, but we've only been in existence for a little over a year. And we are doing everything we can. We're trying. I mean, we had our big fundraiser about the USS Missouri, and we're having a sock hop at the stand here. I'm too young to know what that might be. No, we're trying to have different sort of venues. We're not having grand balls where people have to go out and spend a lot of money for a gown or a tuxedo or whatever. You don't really need that. It's inefficient, isn't it? Well, those are wonderful events and people enjoy them. But they need something different. And because we have such a different population that we're trying to take care of. And we want to get people really engaged. So who's your target, you know, group of possible funders? Anyone? Anyone? Everyone? Anyone and everyone? You'd say that? Yes. Well, who have you been successful? I don't know name names, but what what groups have been successful, you know, in raising money? I would probably say the same people who give. In general, in general. Yeah, there's just there are people who normally give to and people who have very big hearts. A lot of times you just have to tell the story of the people and as soon as they hear the story about these kids, and the fact that they're caught in this terrible situation, they open their hearts and and they open their checkbooks and something and they're they're ready to now these people who are wealthy people, not necessarily all across the board. They're all across the board all across the board. Do they have personal experience with homelessness and and kids that have left home? I think some of them do, but I actually have someone who cleans for me and she came to me one day and at the end of having worked very hard for four hours and I was ready to give her her money. She said no and she said I had to live on the beach myself when I was 18 years old and she said I want to get the money back to the kids. That's something, isn't it? Isn't that something? Yeah, that's great. Yes. You must have said something that touched her. Well, she saw if she saw me collecting everything for the silent auction. She saw me working like I had a full-time job and she she caught the caught the whole thing and yes, she brings me things all the time for the silent auction. So okay, well, we have this fundraiser coming. Let's talk about that for a minute. What is it? And I guess we know that it's April 8th. We have a flyer. We're going to show the flyers to save the date flyer. Talk about it you guys. What what what do we do to ramp up to April 8th here? Well, it's we're selling tables and we were looking for corporate sponsors which since we're brand new people are just finding out about us but you know if we get the message out there that we're here to create a facility for these kids to sleep safely and to help them progress and become members of society that's what the fundraiser is all about. We're going to have a band. We're going to give you socks and we're going to dance the night away and help these kids. Right. Where is it? At the Stan Sheriff's Center. I knew that. Yes, absolutely. Okay, that's big. You can have a lot of people. We can have a lot of people there. Yes, yes. Easy parking. Do you expect that that you know I guess based on experience are people do they give small amounts, medium amounts, large amounts? Do you have or all three? All three. All three. I know someone who just gave us a check and she has absolutely no money whatsoever but she wants to participate in this. Well, you're you're really reaching them. It's interesting that you're filling a gap um and and that changes the paradigm around homelessness. You know it's like did we realize maybe we didn't that there was this age group that was being underserved or not served at all and now we find that it's there and you can and should and must and will serve it. I think you're absolutely right. We I didn't know about this and I told my friends and now I've got the financial planner and Kailua once a month delivering food to the O house. I've got a classmate from school here once a month delivers food because they need more meals delivered every week to these kids and so more and more people saying well I can bring a meal well I can do this once a week I can do this every two weeks or it's amazing how it's beginning to take some momentum. How would you track the outcomes? What I mean is I mean it's early for you to answer the question how are these kids how do your graduates do in life? I know we'd like to have happened but how you know do you have a sense of how you're going to track that and what you would expect when you do say five years later how these kids are going to be faring any thoughts on this? Right now we see them 12 hours a week we want to see them 24 seven and that's a function of money. That's a function of money we need the money to get the house that's open 24 hours a day seven days a week so that you can really make profound changes and it's pretty hard with only 12 hours a week they do a great job. Will you follow them up from year to year? Will you include them again and again? Will you track their lives? We want to do that but prior to this Carla Hauser says that sometimes the kids just leave because at 21 they age out of this facility we're trying to get that extended to 24 but right now it's 21 and they age out and they disappear but every now and then she'll get a letter saying how grateful they were for her guidance and for Yohaus so they do come back and I think there's one person there now was a Yohaus attendee and now she works there so yes to answer your question we try and track those that we can and some just disappear. Yeah because if they had a good time good enough to want to work for Yohaus that's a happy time in their lives and if you can reinforce that going forward or remind them about it going forward you probably have a secondary benefit you know in their lives as they get older so I'm going to offer you guys both of you the opportunity to talk to the public the public is behind that red light camera right over there and to give them a minute each if you don't mind and you know what what exactly oh I'm sorry Vivian is the camera it's Vivian over there she's to the right we're going to do this correctly so would you tell the public what you would like them to know about Yohaus what would you like them to do to assist in the in the cause? Jane? I'd love to have assistance with donations of meals I'd love to have assistance in helping our board because we need we need help because we've got to we we need help to get a roof over these kids heads and we want to get the roof over their heads as soon as we possibly can they need shelter 24 hours a day seven days a week not just on Christmas Eve because this Christmas Eve means so much to these kids to have a night where they can safely sleep and we want to give them safe sleeping every single day Martin? Friends of Youth Outreach was created to to bring a roof over these kids' arms and lives and to make them feel safe in the world and help them get a leg up where they wouldn't have one otherwise they want to succeed they have dreams of succeeding and we need your support to in any kind of way whether it's a donation of clothing or meals or financial donations and they we have a fund at Hawaii Community Foundation set up to create an endowment that will pay for the new facility that we hope to create very soon so anything you can do to help these kids because we want to stop the tide of homelessness in Hawaii and if we start with the children there'll be fewer adult homelessness in the future thank you Martin Martin Rebet and also Jane Alexander Anderson Anderson thank you both are the friends of Youth Outreach talking today about Youth Outreach finding a roof for homeless youth here in Hawaii thank you so much and thank you for your good work and thank you for identifying and dealing with this problem thank you for thank you so much for having us here
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UCzDRvlD9tndGp8i1JtBCSEA
The UN on Drugs: Trends in 2013 (Sub: EN, BG)
The Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) is the leading decision making body of the United Nations on drug policy issues. The Hungarian Civil Liberties Union (HCLU) attended its 2013 annual meeting in Vienna. We interviewed key decision makers and professionals to map the new trends in international drug control. You can learn about the innovative new approach of New Zealand to new psychoactive drugs ("legal highs"), the views of the head of the UN agency on drugs to the legalization of marijuana in the US and the new marijuana regulation scheme of the government of Uruguay. Please watch and share our film! #drugpolicy #harmreduction #drugs #humanrights #decriminalisation #drogok #drogpolitika #ártalomcsökkentés This video is produced by the Rights Reporter Foundation, a non-profit organisation, which is not supported by any governments or political parties. If you like our shows, please support our work on our website, https://drugreporter.net/support/. Make a donation today and become our supporting member. Thank you! A Drogriportert üzemeltető Jogriporter Alapítvány közhasznú tevékenységet folytat, az állam vagy politikai pártok támogatása nélkül. Ha szeretnéd, hogy a jövőben is legyen egy józan hang a drogpolitika terén, kérjük támogasd munkánkat és legyél pártolüó tagunk itt: https://drogriporter.hu/tamogass/
[ "CND", "HCLU", "drogok", "Drogriporter", "psychoactive substance", "human rights", "Guatemala", "Drug Policy", "cannabis", "drug", "marijuana", "amphetamine", "Drugreporter", "Commission on Narcotic Drugs", "legalization", "Drug War", "legal highs", "Uruguay", "heroin", "Evo Morales", "TASZ", "Bolivia", "Cannabis (drug)", "Drugs", "United Nations", "harm reduction", "cocaine" ]
2013-03-27T08:46:19
2024-04-22T18:34:07
649
pcNL-Xjrinc
This is the global peak body for discussing drug policy. This is the body that must recognise that the scope of issues covered must be much broader than just cracking down on drugs and seizing and arresting people. In 2012, we made notable progress in improving equitable access to HIV services for people who inject drugs. And yet, HIV transmission through injection drug use continues to be one of the main unresolved challenges of international community. Why spread stigma, discrimination, lack of access to evidence-informed HIV services are imamzaki challenges. I am fully committed to reaching the 2011 UN General Assembly special session target and we know what needs to be done. And let me be clear, human rights and public health considerations must be at the core of international response to drug use and to HIV. UNIDC is also working hard to meet the threat of new psychoactive substances and we are presenting a new technical study on these issues at this session. Head of UNIDC mentioned the New Zealand example. Can you explain what it is saying and what are real views on his opinion? He described the New Zealand approach as smart, as clever, as innovative and I think he's right. How do you feel about the reactions here at the CNU? The reaction here has been remarkably positive from governments, from Mr Fedotov and his remarks yesterday to a meeting I had this morning with the international NGOs. There's a lot of support for what we're doing. A number of countries at the moment have long lists of products that they ban or long categories of products that they ban. And the difficulty is that the manufacturers are sufficiently smart to be able to go away and reconstitute their products in such a way that they get around these bans. We will have in place law which turns the whole thing on its head. It says that for any product to be sold or available in New Zealand, it first will have to be proven to be safe in the same way that a new medicine coming onto the market will have to be proven to be safe. Under the new law, there will be an independent expert advisory committee established and an expert regulatory regime put in place which will determine the criteria against which that assessment will be made. Once that law is passed and assuming a product does come through as proven to be safe, there will be regulations about where it could be sold, the age of the people to whom it can be sold, how it can be promoted, etc. So even if a product is proven to be safe, there will still be a number of restrictions regarding the way in which it is promoted to the public. Countries should look at new ways of dealing with these things, and then that starts raising very interesting questions for the global drug control system. You know, if the status quo of prohibition ain't working, what is the role of new regulations? According to the U.S. Convention of 1961, the coca leaf is known as a test. I would like to express our firm position. If it is not now, sooner or later, under the knowledge and the reflection of the world, the coca leaf will be removed from the list of 3% of the United Nations. The fight against the doubt is the same time as a failure of our international standards. That is to say, the Convention of the United Nations. Today, there is more and more drugs in the markets. Today, there are more and more weapons that feed on social violence. Today, there is more and more weapons that feed on social violence. That is why we need to see what can we do to ensure better implementation of this Convention. That is my reading of what President Morales has said. Conventions are there, they are valid, but we need to do more to ensure their full implementation. How would you comment on Mr Morales' speech today? Do you see it as a sign that times are changing at the C&E and in 2016 there will be some kind of reform of the international control system? It is very interesting to see how Bolivia's experience has moved the debate forward internationally. It seems like the international community is really quite tolerant of what Bolivia was doing. Partly, I think, because Bolivia went through established legal channels. I mean, denunciation and reassession are allowed within the treaties. They weren't violating any treaties. They really played it by the book. I think there was broad sympathy for Bolivia, but what the implications of that are for wider drug law reform, I'm not so sure. I mean, in a way, the issues around Colorado and Washington, or Uruguay for example, and the cannabis reforms, which would be really much more clearly a violation of the letter and spirit of the conventions, because they're not playing by the book at all. They would be moving outside of what is allowed. My other question concerns the two states of the United States that legalized the recreational use of marijuana. What are your reviews on this and what are the international consequences of these decisions there? For the international obligations, including under international law, including the conventions on drug control, that is the federal government of the United States, rather than the states within the United States that bear primary responsibility. And I'm aware of some steps and decisions taken by federal authorities in Washington, D.C. It seems like what was possible five years ago and what is possible now has greatly changed. Just from the cannabis meeting that was this afternoon where the assistant executive director came out and talked about what's possible within the convention, it seems like they've woken up to the wind that's been blowing for the last five or six years in terms of drug policy reform and are actually starting to realize that this is where it's going and either jump on the bandwagon or be left behind. Can you talk about the plans of your government to regulate marijuana? Yeah. Well, we sent a bill of law to the parliament the first time and now it's in the middle of a major discussion in the country. So we think that we need to move for the prohibitionism to the strictly regulated market and we need to create a strictly regulated market under the state so we create the condition to have a license from the state that the marijuana is produced by the state and then is selling in a specific place with the controller of the state for the people but only for the purpose to keep out the market from the narcotraffic dealers and we create better conditions for our health policies. Can you explain us this cooperation project between the Guatemalan government and the Beckley Foundation? Yes. They invited me to go and meet President Molina and we talked about how I would reform drug policy for Guatemala because they don't have a big drug use problem. We suggested legalizing the currently illicit poppy growth. Guatemala, like the rest of the underdeveloped world, 80% of the world has no painkillers, amazingly, because of the international convention. By Guatemala producing its own legal poppy, it can then produce legal painkillers, first for Guatemala and then for the region and also it would produce income for the farmers and hopefully income for the country. For us it's no question that the last 40 years we follow some policies that cannot good results for us, particularly in our country in Latin America. The international community, they must have the opportunity to discuss if we need to have a global revision of the last conventions. I know that this is very, for some people it's very freaky and say, wait, it's very dangerous, but real dangerous is continue with these policies because we still have the problem of drugs, still have the problem of narcotraffic, still have more violence, more problems. So it's very important for a politician to understand when you fail, you must change. How do you see the prospects of 2016, the General Assembly? We've got three years to prepare now for the young guys in New York. No one really knows what it's going to look like. We don't know if it's going to be another declaration from civil society's point of view. We're a lot more organized than we were in 1998. 2016, you know, regardless of what happens then becomes a target date for us to work towards and to do a lot of education, do a lot of advocacy, do our own diplomacy around how, you know, with missions, with the UN bodies, how to approach drugs differently. Thank you.
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I need your help...
• •DeeJayBe • Darynn Bednarczyk • • Model Horses•Customizing•Tutorials • PATREON • https://www.patreon.com/DeeJayBeStudios • AMAZON STORE • https://www.amazon.com/shop/deejaybestudios *As an Amazon affiliate, I make a small commission on these links* • BUSINESS INQUIRIES • deejaybestudios@gmail.com • COLOURING BOOKS • https://www.deejaybe.com/colouring-book.html • MONTHLY STICKER CLUB • https://deejaybestudios.square.site/monthly-sticker-club-2024 • TOOLS • 3M Respirator Mask with Particle Filters: https://amzn.to/2SPROm0 Vapour/Paint Filters Disposable: https://amzn.to/3T2MBWA Winsor & Newton Series 7 Kolinsky Sable Brush : https://amzn.to/2LZM0CY Size #0 - Good for traditional hairing and markings Size #00 - Good for Fine Traditional hairing, intricate markings, eye detailing Size #000 - Good for Stablemate Hairing, eyes, small micro detail. JoSonja Acrylic – Titanium White: https://amzn.to/3DDYv3k JoSonja Acrylic – Unbleached White: https://amzn.to/3DHUKKu JoSonja Colours: https://amzn.to/3sVefKo Folk Art Paints: https://amzn.to/3h4hFaZ Winsor & Newton Professional Acrylic Paint: https://amzn.to/2JT1rfo Golden High Flow Acrylic Colours: https://amzn.to/2MBfdVG Golden Amazon Store: https://amzn.to/3DzVUHQ Vallejo Model Air Paints - Weathering Set: https://amzn.to/2CXOdx4 Airbrush Thinner: https://amzn.to/3fzcK1w DecoArt Triple Thick Gloss Glaze: https://amzn.to/2yvUJLl Folk Art Blending Gel: https://amzn.to/3FHpZru Gesso: https://amzn.to/2J6q4nI Iwata Eclipse HP-CS Airbrush: https://amzn.to/2tje5gv Iwata Eclipse HP – CS Airbrush with Hose: https://amzn.to/2JLLmMs Iwata Micron CM – C Plus: https://amzn.to/3UbXg2E Iwata Amazon Store: https://amzn.to/3T3rNy7 Beginner Airbrush compressor: https://amzn.to/3Ut88J7 Matser Brand Airbrush compressor: https://amzn.to/3NAfwQL Airbrush Hood: https://amzn.to/2CFPZ5a Airbrush Cleaning Pot: https://amzn.to/2th4IhF Airbrush Cleaning Pot & Tools: https://amzn.to/2t3ptxz Iwata Airbrush Cleaner: https://amzn.to/2t5el3K Iwata Nozzle Wrench: https://amzn.to/2WDmRUP Iwata Tool Kit: https://amzn.to/3fFuJTM Super Lube: https://amzn.to/2UZUwH2 Iwata Eclipse 0.35mm Needle: https://amzn.to/2S1d4sS Iwata Eclipse Nozzle: https://amzn.to/2SjZzDN Drop Sheet: https://amzn.to/2HY895w Blue Tape: https://amzn.to/3WHKivd Mini Hacksaw https://amzn.to/2UaSfvi Vice: https://amzn.to/2uqmIXK Pan Pastel 7-Packs of Natural Colours: https://amzn.to/2JUCrV1 Black: https://amzn.to/2JSZfVc Pan Pastel Colours: https://amzn.to/3sZKuIg MakeUp Brushes: https://amzn.to/2MDnjNx Kneaded Eraser: Single: https://amzn.to/2M1PCUV 4-Pack: https://amzn.to/2JQ2a52 Faber Castel Eraser Pencil: https://amzn.to/2yjp9A0 Testors Dull Coat: https://amzn.to/2lh49Ra Rustoleum Primer: https://amzn.to/3UqxiYE Tamiya Primer: https://amzn.to/3Un33lj Duplicolour Primer: https://amzn.to/3FJr2Y4 Apoxie Sculpt: 1 lb: https://amzn.to/2tk6SwZ 4 lbs: https://amzn.to/2JLXcpT Monster Clay: https://amzn.to/3zFeTj6 Polymer Clay: https://amzn.to/3fBv0Y3 Rubber/Wax Sculpting Tools: https://amzn.to/2JYZtKB https://amzn.to/2LZQNUM https://amzn.to/2JWDqnH https://amzn.to/2JMzLNf Oil Paint Eraser: https://amzn.to/2tjyqT9 Embossing Tool: https://amzn.to/2M43a1Z https://amzn.to/2lghcSY Dremel: https://amzn.to/2t8JXW1 Cutting Wheels: https://amzn.to/3sYoKN6 Cutting Mandrel: https://amzn.to/2D5gP75 1/2” Drum Sander: https://amzn.to/3zHBn30 ¼” Drum Sander: https://amzn.to/3FGjDIP 60 Grit Sander Drums (coarse): https://amzn.to/2FSvfI8 120 Grit Sander Drums (medium): https://amzn.to/3h3n5mx 240 Grit Sander Drums (fine): https://amzn.to/2IlQ2ab Keyless Chuck: https://amzn.to/3WHMOSb Flex Shaft: https://amzn.to/3E1O0sg Heat Gun: https://amzn.to/3Ny4yuO Needle Files: https://amzn.to/2u4lVMs Super Glue Liquid: https://amzn.to/2zm9Nvl Baking Soda: https://amzn.to/3zIxr1X Assorted Sandpaper: https://amzn.to/2MVyh0j Wire: https://amzn.to/3Uqlshq Armature Wire: https://amzn.to/3DB1fi7 Easy Off Oven Cleaner: https://amzn.to/2LZNWfN Safety Glasses: https://amzn.to/2CXEu9Q Nitrile Work Gloves: https://amzn.to/2C8QhRb Yellow Gloves: https://amzn.to/2VAeoRy Latex Gloves https://amzn.to/2SHNLsb Nail Tees Fine Point Q-Tips: https://amzn.to/35xlY4o Cerne Relief for Veins: https://amzn.to/2oJIYfT Neewer Ring Light: https://amzn.to/2UDClcx Canon 90D: https://amzn.to/3NwocaI 50mm Lens: https://amzn.to/3DAIY4q iPad Pro: https://amzn.to/3FE9dto Apple Pecil: https://amzn.to/3U6pZFY • SOCIAL MEDIAS • • WEB • https://www.deejaybe.com •INSTAGRAM• https://www.instagram.com/deejaybestudios/ • ART • https://www.instagram.com/deejaybe https://www.facebook.com/xdeejaybe • DESIGN • https://instagram.com/deejaybedeisgns https://facebook.com/deejaybedesigns • Thank for Watching! •
[ "model", "horse", "breyer", "custom", "customizing", "breyerhorse", "breyerhorses", "modelhorses", "breyerfest", "resculpt", "repaint", "airbrush", "tutorials", "how", "to", "howtopaintamodelhorse", "modelhorsepainting", "modelhorsepaintingtutorials", "art", "artwork", "diy", "drawing", "draw", "procreate", "how to", "model horse customizing", "equine", "riding", "horse care", "girl", "cute", "fix", "repair", "review", "unbox", "toys", "collecting", "collection", "small business", "design", "graphic", "editing", "edit", "colour", "colouring", "painting", "paint", "sculpt", "sculpting", "clay", "3D", "modelling", "animation", "mustang", "draft", "pony" ]
2024-03-06T15:00:51
2024-04-23T04:17:54
324
pCj_EztZtLk
I need your help and I don't normally ask for stuff like this. I promise you this will help you out more than it will help me. Hey everybody, it's DJB. Welcome to my channel if you're new here. My name is Darren and I am here to announce that I have launched a Patreon. I am someone that has been very resistant to launch a Patreon. A little bit awkward to be asking for you know funds on a monthly basis. That being said, I started my YouTube when I started the studio and originally I was making lots of tutorials and if you've noticed on my channel the last few years have been lots of unboxings, also showcase videos and like not a lot of educational content and that's the content I would like to bring to the table. I'd love to have more fun. I'd love to make more tutorials rather than just like having a channel on the side. I've been trying to the best of my abilities but obviously being full-time and being an adult with all these like life responsibilities. The financial component is important. It's a factor. I have to be able to sustain the studio and sustain what I'm doing. So I have made a Patreon and the idea behind the Patreon is that you will get behind the scenes access but it's also to help support this YouTube channel and bring you more free tutorials. I don't want you guys having to pay for stuff. I have created two full-length courses that are behind a paywall. I don't love that layout. I feel like it limits the ability to learn so I would love to post more free content here on YouTube. I have a couple of really large projects that have been in the back of my mind for a little while now. They're both kind of in production already and I work on them when I can but I really can't focus on them. I've launched the Patreon and to my surprise I take a ton of footage. I take a ton of pictures and I don't always have time to necessarily make like a huge YouTube video but I can show you what I'm working on what I'm doing and I can give you tips and tricks and advice along the way through the Patreon. Patreon is actually really an incredible platform. I didn't realize how good it was until I signed up. There's a wonderful desktop application for it. There's also an amazing app for your phone so it's really easy for me as a creator to give you content through my phone and my computer but it's also easy for you as a consumer to view and interact with the content. Patreon is also linked with Discord and Discord if you don't know is a chat service so it's similar to like a Facebook Messenger so I'm able to have my own chat over there and it's the group of patrons, people that follow me, people that want to support my channel, to be able to talk to me one-on-one firsthand and I'm honestly enjoying it more than social media because it doesn't have that component of scrolling through endless posts if I don't you're looking for it's just all content it's strictly community-based. I think it could turn into something really awesome. I have three tiers available for that. I have a $5 buckskin tier and that gives you behind-the-scenes access and you just want to support. You want to see what I'm working on, you want to sneak preview before everybody else. You do get access to the Discord studio chat but you don't get access to any tutorials. The $10 Pinto tier is all of that that I just said plus tutorial components so there's a specific tutorial chat and I post lots and lots of tutorial content on there. If you want to take it even a step further I have an Apple Lucid tier and that is $15 that allows access to everything I'm posting, all of the Discord chats, plus an exclusive advice Discord chat and you can post what you're working on, if you need help, any questions you have and it's a direct line to reach me. Those are the tiers as they stand. I have ideas, other ideas of how I can add to that, make it work better but I'm trying it out and seeing what happens. It's already had an amazing response and I'm so thankful for everyone who's already on there. It's already feeling like I have a bit more wiggle room to work on those big projects for you guys and if you can't financially support in some way pledge or join the Patreon you can support this channel by liking this video and subscribing because that ultimately grows and that helps out immensely so thank you for everyone who already is subscribed. It's crazy. I love my little YouTube community and I want to build a bigger, greater community. I think there can be a lot of negativity out there on social media and specific and just in the world in general. Having public forum is great but it's not always the best because there's a lot of conflicting opinions out there so I really want to build this community. I want to build these chat rooms that allows us to all work together and collaborate and like share advice and knowledge and there's so much advice and knowledge out there and I think just sharing it more is the most fulfilling thing I get out of doing what I do so the Patreon just like is the cherry on top for that and I'm very excited about it so thank you so much for everyone who's already involved and if you are also interested in getting involved the link will be in the description below so thank you so much for watching and happy customizing.
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UCM0sSUOn8mNRi90vA_IJ8lw
"We make sure every pit is filled"
An interview with Jonathan Tettay, 'chief of staff' at Goldbank Resources, a small-scale mine in the Eastern Region of Ghana. Goldbank is working with the NGO Solidaridad to obtain Fairtrade certification. If they succeed, their gold will have access to fairer international markets. To get certified, they need to have in place measures for reclaiming and rehabilitating the land after use. These measures are also needed to secure a mining concession from the government, and are negotiated with the chiefs and local community. "Reclamation is very important in our agenda. We make sure that every pit is filled," says Jonathan. Tettay was interviewed as part of a project by the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) so show that while small-scale mining in Ghana is mostly known for its faults, there is also plenty to be proud of. More details: https://www.iied.org/golden-practices-defy-gloom
[ "mining", "artisanal and small-scale mining", "Ghana", "Goldbank" ]
2017-09-15T09:30:05
2024-04-18T17:46:49
203
pCLRNAnnLu8
There is rules and regulations guarding mining activities in Ghana. With Gold Bank, we take those regulations and rules into action so that we don't destroy the environment because of our mining activities. From day one, that was our concern. We were trained the way to do the mining practice. When the MIRRA Commission and the EPA comes for inspections and all these things, they go and tell the neighborhood groups that they go to Gold Bank and see how they are working. You should learn. That is the main good practice to do mining. So that is why Estrago has given us a very big location in their concentration. We have about 2,000 acres, but the small groups, some of them 100 acres, 50, and maybe 25 acres. What I like about the small mines is it makes job creation to the small communities because the small scale mining doesn't need too much of expertise. We pick 70% of our workers from the community. We have them and we train them to know how to do mining. Safety is our priority. We make you understand that anything you do, you think about it, you think about your safety. So the small scale is very good. I would say it is very good because it can be done anywhere, in a small community. And before the mines stays there for two years, three years, they will help the community to get some social amenities, like they can build the schools, give them boreholes to get good water to drink, they can give them a clinic. I love to see activities going on in the mine, like machinery, the movement, vehicular movement, and how people go about the work because it is my initiative. I have trained them, I have taught them how to do it. You just pick them, lay men, non-scale guys, we pick them from the village. Within the first two weeks to three weeks, by four weeks, you will be able to know the do's and do's in the mine. So as the supervisor or the foreman of the project, I go around every hour, one and a half hours, go around to all the sessions and see how they are faring. That makes me very healthy and interesting because I do a lot of walking.
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UCFBVnWh7KbS0fsPuTh2ZVJg
Young Dolph untimely demise has stunned the Music Industry Our People Have to Wake Up Time 4 Change
This is something that has Changed Memphis for ever R.I.P Dolph #YoungDolph #Dolph #Rip Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/e_ceo_/?hl=en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bosstalkpodcast101/?hl=en Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/boss-talk-podcast-101/id1555978974 Spotify Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0yD2UzYyp3Pg9JwBjgK92j
null
2021-11-18T11:57:58
2024-02-07T17:06:32
1,087
pC7DsOIWXmc
It's a unique hustle nigga, big shit, big shit, big shit, big shit, name another podcast like this. Check it, check it, check it. It's a unique hustle. It's your boy, E.C.E.O. Man, I'm here with the lovely official, Mr. Maker, and my boy, it's Brown. Hey. Man, hey man, guys, we had to do a quick one today, man. Man, we come to you, man, and we just finding out that young Dolph was killed today. We still have a little bit of a crowd right beyond the barricade there, the closest to the building where this happened, and they're still trying to see what's going on. You can see now tow trucks are being brought in. I don't have to, like I said, listen to music to really be touched by what happened. He was a success story when he made it out, but it wasn't only making it out, folks. For those who, you know, again, you may be unaware of his history, his background. What young Dolph would do is he would purchase homes, and he always said he wanted to give his son a home for his birthday, essentially. So by the time he graduated high school, he wanted his son to have almost two dozen homes. So he is essentially pumping money right back into this community. And it's crazy, man, because, man, he wasn't, but how old was he? 36? 36 years old, man. You know, this is something that, you know, we have to, man, you got to stop and just try to figure this thing out, you know what I mean? So many different things going on in the world today where people, you know, we think everything that's going on, that we just, you can't even, you can't write this stuff out, man. You don't know what's going to happen from one day to the next, man. Tomorrow's in promise. We say it all the time. Yeah, but rap music is something different, man. I hate to say it like that, man. Rap music, it channels a different energy, man. And if you're not speaking correctly and if you're dealing with these different groups of people and they're getting caught up in different situations, man, and everybody want to be the man. And next thing you know, something like this happened and now somebody mama crying, you somebody mama crying, somebody daddy crying. And that's that it messed me up when I heard this man, you know, and I like said, just it's just happening. It's crazy. I mean, one day you're here and then you go on that song. It's so real what you GK always say, man, running Spencer's song. And man, it's so true that one day you hear and then you go, how are they saying that it happened? Well, is it TMZ? TMZ, because you know, that's like, yeah, yeah, well, it's allegedly what's going on with it. So Young Dolph was just shot and killed in his hometown, according to the local reports. Fox 13 Memphis says the rapper was gunned down Wednesday in Memphis, Tennessee, outside of a local cookie store. And there's already a massive police presence with people recording the aftermath of video from the crime scene shows his car parked outside the shop while police investigated. Wow. Yeah, I've seen different videos coming out like crazy, man, different different people are stepping up and saying they hate it happen. Brown, man. So, Brown, you being an artist, man, man, what do you think when you first hear somebody else die like this, man? It's messed up, man. Like you're losing good artists, as you know what I'm saying, behind negative, negativity, negativity. It's like, that's the only way you people get traction when it comes to the music. Like it got to be negative. I got to get into what this do just for you to come see what's going on or like, you know what I'm saying? It's not that people don't, but it just, it's like promotion. It's like promotion. Yeah. How much promotion is it when you did, when you doff and you did? How much promotion is it then? But you know, they say all your records and everything skyrockets after you die, man, you know, and it's going to be a lot of people that come out now, man, I used to love him and man, I, and you didn't love him when he was here. They said some of the same people that that that's going to be doing this and they, they about to start this, what they going to love him so much now that he gone. That's how it be. You get more love when you go on and you. Well, let me tell you what it said about how it happened. So the source says Doff went into the store and a vehicle pulled up, firing through a front window and striking the wrapper. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, did he, did he shoot back? Cause I'm pretty sure he was prepared. They didn't say, but. You don't, if he, if they caught him off guard, no matter even if you had a pistol, depends on how many shots he already got, how are you going to shoot back? But when you think about Doff and all the stuff he done been through getting shot in LA. 2017. And then again, then his car gets shot up before that. North Carolina. And then you see this stuff fairly happening in real time to your life, man. And then I noticed he kind of declined back. He stopped, you know, even rapping about the violence after that, after he got shot. And then you look around now and something like this happened, you know, and it just, when does it stop, man? And this is so many years after that altercation. Yeah. Yeah. But the streets is real, man. Like the people out there, jealousy, envy, strife, hate. People see you riding in a Lambo and they in a Toyota. But what my question was all this time and you've always been in altercations, why not have bodyguards with you? Why not be wearing like 50 cent always having a bulletproof vest? Like why not take precautions? You know, all these people are after you. Man, you know, I'm just tired of it, bro. They said that he was there seven days or six days before they promote that story. He was there. So it was a place he was frequently going to. So whoever did that, probably like that already knew, you know, he'd be over here or whatever the situation was. You know what I'm saying? Wow. And this is the hometown. Yeah. Because I've seen a poser like, yeah, he was there six days prior to that, promote that place. I guess they sell food there or something. So back at his hometown. Back at his hometown. You see what I'm saying? A lot of time that's where it be, because that's where people know your your repetition. Like, yeah, you circulate a lot. You know, the great boost, you made the statement that, you know, in your own town is usually, you know, where it goes down to be honest with you. And I'm paraphrasing, but man, when you look at everything that's been transpired in the year that we're in today, you know, coming off the top, you know, you had all the different people that's getting killed at a very young age, man, and all of them are related to rappers, man. Rappers is the new that's that's that's the new thing that that that people are body in, man. No, you know, this this this is crazy. You know, when you look at all the people that have been shot, everybody getting shot. When you look at all of, I mean, from dying to getting shot, yellow beads are getting shot. Trap boy, Freddie getting shot. Mothry dying on the highway. Is it a part of the right? Then what's the other guy down there that that that that died? What would not? Duckie P. Duckie P. Getting getting killed. The other guy that was in the one from Chicago, the one that was going with the girl Asian doll. What's his name? The boy with the brain. King Vaughan. If the list goes on and these people just keep getting and it goes all the way from from Mothry to Nipsey Hustle getting killed in front of the store. These people got to stop this, man. It's got to stop. It got to stop, bro. Because when you look at it, it's it's it's got to be some related to the music, the gun, the talking about it. It's got to be some related to the music. Bunch of. OK, you know, I'm always playing devil advocate. But play whatever. But no, but listen to this. Listen to this, right? You say it has to be for the music and so forth. I'm not saying no. It probably is. But then all of the other people who are dying from gang and all of these other things, because they're not in the limelight like these rappers are, we're not hearing about it and feeling it the way how we're feeling it for them. That's true. But when you look at the the opportunity that they afford it, when you look at what they're, you know what I mean, the man, that other boy, the one got killed in California, the one was from New York, but he was in Arabian be pop smoke. Pop smoke. When you look at all these different people with the afforded opportunities that they have and you're going to hear some songs from doff start to come out now and you're going to hear some music. And now everybody, this is something. This is a spirit of devination where people are called up and they don't even realize it, that they're enjoying the moment after somebody died and it becomes a habit forming thing. I agree to where everybody used to it. It's a normal thing to celebrate right after somebody died with a hit song. And that's bad, bro. Each one of them, man, our people are dying. They either in jail or they're getting killed on these streets. And it's sad, bro. It's sad. I don't know how we changed that narrative. How do we change that? I think people got to change that within themselves. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Yeah. I think a lot of times it really maybe somebody gets successful and then you get these haters or maybe you already had some beef before and they want to get you at your position, whether it's in jail or death or however it is, but they want you at your position. Yeah. Yeah. And I'm just naming, you know, it was T.I. had that artist down in Alabama that died, you know, back in the gap. The other boy, the great, the other guy, the great as well. Shut it low. No, this was a big dude. He had a song with T.I. I can't remember the name. No, it was in Alabama. It was, it was, it was a big, bigger guy. Tim Nim had took him under their wing, man. And he was, he was on to come up too. And they killed him. What I'm saying is when you start to get these afforded opportunities to hate the envy and the strife, it just sanitize at your door. It knocks and it comes right in, man. And it's sitting on your porch. Now you're looking at somebody in a casket and your mama dying and your dad is crying. And it's sad, bro. We just had a water two live on it. That's why it hit home. Because when people die like that, and you know that they had great potential, it just kind of, it's just, it's just the most annoying thing, bro. It was like, man, like Mo3, he had a lot of talent. Man, Mo3 was, I mean, that outside song, you still, like I said, you get a hit right after that. And everybody's cool with it, man. Young Dolph was, was, was an independent. He had just, when you start going back and forth with a soldier boy, they just started doing, and I'm, I'm hoping that was on wax, but we don't know what's going on because the internet, it pretty much, it takes and it illuminates something that you don't know what's going on. It watered down. It hides it in this instance. It amplifies it in this instance. And you just caught in the middle in the grave thinking what you want to think. And these people got to come up with a way to, to get our people in better situations than what they in, man. But isn't that also a media period? Because doesn't the news do the same thing where they show you what they want to show you? They don't show you everything? Yeah, but the news is different in a sense that when you look at these, see the news try to hide different things just the same way, but they, they propped it up a different way. And certain things from back in the days, they didn't show on TV. Now you get a video with young Dolph or whoever allegedly on hanging out the window or something of a store. And they showing this on national TV. Or you see somebody that get killed on Facebook and blood spurting out of them and they bleeding out. And this is stuff that's happening in real time. And you seeing this and you don't know what to think. You don't even know if it's a fake interview. I mean a fake post where somebody just took some footage and said this was that. This is a crazy world that we live in. And we got to come up with some way better to scope it, man. And I asked God to give us the, you know, the ability to start seeing through those, those, those, those dim dark tunnels that we keep having to look at because people are dying. And that's the crazy part. So, you know, man, you know, I just don't know. I don't know what to say. You see, we way how the world is, you know, we want knowledge. We want all of this, but you can't pick and choose the type of knowledge, the type of this, the type of that. When you get it, you get everything on social media. You can't say, well, I can't, I just wanted this or I just wanted that. You're gonna get it all. Yeah, man, like I said, man, he had his issues with whoever, you know, and, and, and shout out to your guy and all those guys, man, you know, Memphis, hey, Memphis got a lot of talent and it pushed Shiesty locked up. You know, when you start looking at what's going on with these people, man, is it really worth it to kill somebody? Is it really worth it for somebody to lose their life behind a simple beef that maybe could have been, something could have been discussed to where somebody could still keep their life? You see what I'm saying? Is it really, really worth it? But people who do things like that, they're doing it because of whether just in a moment or out of respect for their clique or whatever. I don't know. Or I think it's, I don't think nobody, they're not putting the trigger. They paying these young dudes and telling these dudes to do stuff. It's people behind the scenes pulling moves, I believe, in a sense, it ain't just the frontliners. Most of the time, people are getting the key putting they back. Most of the time, niggas getting influenced by the internet just by what they see and they start trying to figure out a way to be a part of something so you can be great and be famous, you know what I mean? Or retaliate. They killed Nipsey Hussle, I think Holder, whoever. You know, just anything, just people just dying, bro. And people just coming out and now they famous in a negative way. What hope do we have for the youth if we keep on doing the things that we doing to try to help change the narrative of the next generation? You see what I'm saying? This is crazy, man. But I just wanna say condolences to the family. He left behind a daughter and a son. And condolences, I'm gonna keep them all in my prayers. Yeah, yeah, we gotta keep them in our prayers, bro. Bro, what I mean, what, like, how does this make you look at the way, cause you a rat or audience. I'm glad I got you on the platform. What does, I mean, what do we do, man? Cause we know that you're projecting and I go right back into the fact that you're projecting one thing, but you're putting an art out there, an art form. How do we better describe what's happening in the process? Like, what do you mean? For as, when you rap, you just rapping about certain things and it's on wax. It may not be even a realistic thing, but then people that are influenced, they take it as, this is how you live it to be famous cause they wanna be famous or they wanna be popular. How do you? And you're not saying it's fake because you have to put on that persona to make it seem like it's real because you don't want anybody, cause I've heard rappers say, I don't want people to look at me like I'm fake, so I gotta do this, you know, I gotta get that persona. Man, like me personally, man, I just rap. But you rap because you've lived a real life, you've been through a lot, you know what I mean? So it's easy for, you know, most of these cats ain't never even been locked up. I spoke on that before. And I said that, you know, these niggas ain't never been faced no time and they ain't done none of this stuff. I don't say it's the most fakeest stuff around here. Yeah, but I've seen some real too because of places I've been and the things I've been, but then that's the difference when you really done seen some things and lived a little bit, you see this stuff, man, and now you see the DQ's playing with it. Now Dolph, he was what, he didn't make it 40 to be 40 years old, 36 years old, that's tough, man. I wanna say, man, I'm gonna keep his family my prayers, but man, I'm telling you, man, we gotta do something, man. Shout out to Keyglock, man, and all them guys. I know they going through it right now. And I wanna say that some people will say, why pray for them? Because you don't even know them. But at the same time, when we were going through COVID, why pray for the whole nation? No. You know what I mean? You can't go about what people say. I'm just, you know, addressing that because at the same time, your mother and you have kids, you know what it would feel like. You know what I mean? Definitely, man. Yeah, yeah, man, and we will, you know, we'll speak on it as a story, you know, unfolds even more, man. We'll try to keep the people that watch this platform updated on the things that we see come out about this, man. But guys, we got it, as I said before, we gotta do better. We gotta do better as a culture. We gotta do better as a people, man. It ain't so good, and it ain't so bad for us to do better. Mm-hmm. Man, hey, man, holler at your boy, man. Some people don't want to see us do better. No, man, it's a unique hustle, man. Holler at your boy, man. Boss talk one-on-one, man. We out, man. Then we out.
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Recap: Longmont City Council Study Session - February 18, 2020
Recap: Longmont City Council Study Session - February 18, 2020
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2020-02-20T04:52:50
2024-04-22T18:30:23
2,740
PC7UCd5-ufM
Let's go ahead with five a revisions to electrical regulations a good evening mayor Bagley and members of city council I'm David Hornbacher the executive director of Longmont power communications and with me tonight is Kerry spots and Kerry is our leader supervisor, and she's going to provide a Short presentation and a brief overview of the proposed Changes to the regulations governing electric service these regulations these proposed changes will be for city council at the next regular council session and Thank You mayor Bagley city council members as Dave stated. I'm Kerry spots with the Longmont power and communications meter shop supervisor and Here to present the revisions to the city's regulations governing electric services here Some of the items we'd like to discuss our metering clearance connections to service facilities and definitions on the electric metering and clearance We are Now offering a lever bypass Tight meter housing in this tight meter housing. Oh, I thought I was going to have an arrow so the top Lugs inside that meter housing are the connections from the city facilities and You can see on the slide the lever with the red handle That is the actual lever bypass and This is a win-win for safety of electric personnel and it also gives the convenience of No power outage for the customer during any type of meter maintenance So we would be able to engage the the bypass lever Take the meter out of the socket and do any maintenance checking, you know for any issues that may be happening there Plug the meter back in re-engage the lever bypass and button it up all while the customer Isn't inconvenienced with a power outage New phenolic badging makes it easier to read the address where We're standing This really helps it make it easier for nighttime outages A lot of times our personnel are called out to respond to an outage We want to make sure that we're at the right location and looking at the right installation The older brass badging was very difficult to read and as you know apartment buildings are maintenance they get painted A lot of times the the painting personnel Wouldn't acknowledge the brass badge and they would paint over it which made it twice as difficult to try and read Where are we? Where are we? So the phenolic badging is a really great thing helps us really identify where we're at Locating the equipment on the exterior of the building helps us To to ensure access to the equipment that we're called out to also helps us with future Excuse me troubleshooting for for outages and Streamlining and basically making making it to industry standard many utilities are Requiring this so that they have the access and it's very easy to maintain and troubleshoot the equipment for the customer new metering options for 400 amp services Now have an installation like this a lot of customers Now have electric vehicles the standard years ago used to just be a 200 amp service This type of convenience takes up less real estate on a customer's home or even on a business And the equipment's very accessible in this instance as well Master metering considerations for multi dwelling units We like having the contact with our individual customers being able to reach out to them Talk with them in the public on some instances though Such as a memory care facility or an assisted living facility It makes it harder for those individuals to maybe remember to pay their utility bill So master metering is an option for for those that get approval from our executive director of electric services Electric metering and clearances clarifying the physical clearance requirements from the electrical equipment Sometimes landscaping who gets in the way and this time of year it makes it kind of difficult when it's under snow or frozen under ice To be able to actually access the door for the utility pedestal Whether it's plants venting or other obstructions Who was teasing that sweet little German he scared me to death I Was called out for a tripped breaker and a cut seal the customer had tried to Flip their own breaker, which is located in that electric pedestal there to the left and I noticed that the fence is blocking the face of the pedestal So I couldn't get the door off and then when I tried to enter the yard and knock on the door to let This customer know what I was there for the dog came from around the back Good boy. So, you know, we're just showing that you know landscaping can still be beautiful and still giving access to the electric equipment Because our customers depend on us for that reliability of their electric service Connections to service facilities This is an electric transformer. So this is owned by LPC and you can see they're kind of on the left where the paddles are with the four holes in the In the paddles, there's limited connections that can be made in this type of cabinet So for apartment buildings, they would need to a lot of times Maybe purchase four or five of these transformers for just one of their buildings. So one of the options is To allow them to install own and maintain a secondary cabinet like this The picture is a little dark, but you can see there's lots of room for a lot of the wires and conductors then coming from the transformer into the secondary cabinet and Then definitions we've updated you'll notice your red-lined copies that you all received It takes a village to make these types of changes update things and really bring things into utility standards So some of the definitions that we changed were from general manager to executive director of electric services We used a lot of terminology like a CT Because we were familiar with the term But maybe the regular public wasn't so a CT is a current transformer or a pt is a potential transformer In a lot of the code we talked about the developer or the owner or the customer and really Streamlining that because a lot of these facilities, you know from electric from apartments go from a developer during the Construction stage then they go into the owner of the apartment complex Then they go into the customer tenant who lives there, but they're all our customer So really just streamlining all of that Thank you for your time and consideration Mayor Pro Tem Rodriguez Well, thank you, Mayor Bagley So I guess to a certain extent just to reiterate outside of some upgrades to say the construction issues as far as The bypass as well as for folks that are desiring upgrades to their their their boxes This will have no material Significant this will have no material change to rates for our electric payers currently It would be a one-time kind of deal if they did decide to get an upgrade to their box for say electric vehicle charging you are correct that this would not have an effect on rates and several of the things that we showed tonight actually are a Direct cost savings to the customer installing those new services, and they would realize that cost savings directly To the first day on your report on inclusionary housing Canadian Mayor and Council Kathy Fetler housing and community investment manager Division manager for the city and I will try and be succinct, but there's a lot of information here, so I'll go as quickly. I won't yell at you. I get it. Okay. All right. Thank you. I appreciate that So first I'll start with the inclusionary housing program snapshot over the past year There's about 20 projects under Development that were our fall under the ordinance So if you remember the ordinance became effective at the very end of last year And so the projects that just started did not have their final plaid approvals prior to or their preliminary Preliminary plat approvals prior to The effective date of the ordinance fall under the ordinance so as you look at construction around the community There's many developments that are not under the ordinance and right now there's 20 in the development review process Nine of those have already committed that they're providing their affordable housing units on site five are making Fee and Lou they've already decided that and eight are undecided and the nine the five and the eight add up to more than 20 Because some of the developments are doing both fee and Lou and units or doing multiple types of units So of the Ten total developments that are providing homes on site five of them are rental projects and five of them are for sale Projects of the rental projects. There's a total of seven hundred and eighty nine units within the rental Developments 230 will have there will be 230 affordable homes and the majority of those affordable Rental homes will be provided within the market rate rental development of the for sale Projects there's a total of 1400 total for sale units within those projects 52 affordable homes will be provided on site and the majority of those affordable homes will be provided in partnership with nonprofits For the fee and Lou projects that are saying that they would like to make the fee and Lou There's five total developments on that as well three rentals and two For sale developments at this point in time with 48,000 is the estimated amount We will not know finals on these until we actually Start seeing building permits and certificates of occupancy issued And then about 1.4 million is estimated under the two for sale developments Those are anticipated to come in over a period of time We're anticipating about maybe just under 400,000 coming in in 2020 again Those are paid at their fee and are at their certificate of occupancy. So they usually come in at the end Of a project and then about I just kind of evenly split the the rest of it Between 2021 and 2022 looking at the developments and where they're at in the process and when they're likely to come in There has been some interest in middle-tier building And I have to stress that again these developments are still in the review process and have not yet Committed to or signed an agreement committing to providing the middle-tier homes to know what tier They want to follow under or if they're even going to do it But the two projects that are in process and have said that they're looking at doing that one is at 1901 South over and they Indicated to Planning and Zoning Commission when they went before them that they'd provide about 209 units in the hundred and 1% to 110% middle or tier and 27 in the 111 to 120% tier and then if you remember Mountain Brook satisfied some of their affordable units with the Veterans community project and the habitat projects and they that covered some of their units, but not all of them So there's still about 49 unsatisfied units that we're working through What that's going to look like so at some point those 49 units will either be provided under one of the tiers Or they'll make the fee in lieu So we'll know as we learn more we'll we'll let you know about that So looking at the current market market housing snapshot This indicates the changes in median sales prices over time and what you'll notice in 2019 is that prices are starting to level off at least in the median area and it actually is Reflected in the average sales prices as well so there was a 1.3% increase in detached homes from 2018 to 2019 and a point 7.4% decrease in attached homes Some of this leveling may be due to more homes being available to purchase there was a 5% increase in the number of units available From 2018 to 2019 in the detached home product and an 11% increase in the attached product New homes first thing versus existing home sales so again looking at past years as well as The most recent current year New homes are becoming a greater part of home sales increasing from a low of 4% in 2010 to a high of almost 29% in 2018 and then it dropped a little bit in 2019 with new homes making up 22% of all home sales The income needed to purchase or rent in Longmont is shown on this chart And you can see in 20 about 2012 is when a family at Making 80% of the area median income and at our city median income can no longer afford to purchase a detached home And then 2015 was when both the 80% area median income in our city median Income wage earners could no longer afford The median cost of an attached home And then the rent is the purple line the income needed to afford Rents and the dashed purple line is the 50% HUD median income for a two-person household so that shows that it's been as well quite a while since Household two-person households one in two-person households could afford our median rents So this is new information. We just got it. So it was not included in in your packet This is from the draft consolidated plan which is being put together right now and they're still pulling a lot of information together But this shows that our greatest rental housing need is for households and families at That make at or less than 40% of the area median income Inclusionary housing rental projects are providing on it says renal sorry instead of rental Projects are providing primarily 60% area median income units where if you look at the That area gap, which is about the 50,000 to 75 no it's probably the 35 to $50,000 range. There isn't really a need Or there isn't a gap showing So we have a gap of 2,300 units right now We're looking at providing 230 units through inclusionary housing with again the bulk of them at 60% area median income So there's a little bit of a disconnect there and quite frankly for market rate development to be able to reach 40% and below without Some greater subsidies than what we're currently providing just under the Our affordable housing incentives is difficult So trying to get some of those units through the affordable housing fund application process or CDBG funds Etc. Is where we really need to focus efforts to get those reach the those units So 2019 sales this shows new and existing home sales There were a total of 1440 total home sales in 2019 I want to say that we do need to still do a lot of scrubbing of this underlying data this came from the Boulder County assessors website and My staff and I tried to do some of this and didn't get too far into it because it does take a lot of back and forth with looking at addresses and going to the website and looking at a lot of different information but What we found was that some in the area that's below 80% AMI and we assume also in that 81 to 100% are related to investment buys and flips Some of the lower sales prices turned out to be a deed or a trust transfer So actually just paying a little bit in order to do that transfer of the deed from one person to another and not actual sales so We scrubbed quite a bit out of it But not totally of the seven new sales that are below 80% that are showing there on the chart For those are the blue Vista homes that are affordable So starting to see some of that under the inclusionary housing program and three are town homes that are in non inclusionary housing developments And then 2019 sales by type of home This shows that the majority are still single family Single family homes in this case includes town homes, but not condos So it's a little bit different than how we normally talk about detached and attached The assessor's office just does it differently, which is another area why where if we have more time to scrub the data We could pull those that information out So this just shows that all homes are at the very top the lightest blue Single family homes are the the next line down and then the the bottom line or the darkest color are our condo units So for single family homes 2019 sales This just shows the difference by the area meeting income prices sales prices So about 93 homes were available in single family or town homes At 80% of the area meeting income and you can see the different Calculations there. So it's just trying to give you a breakdown of those sales prices affordable at the differing AMI levels and Then this just shows new home sales versus all Exists all home sales for single family In town homes new homes new build the new builds are yes are the blue Yeah, the interesting thing here is that Single family new homes are trending to higher priced units unlike the existing market Which still shows the majority of homes in the 81 to 100% AMI tier Which is that 300,000 to 430,000 dollar price range and also since single family in the single family Category includes town homes that may be that may be why that's skewing high in that particular AMI category Just just a quick question the I know the definition of AMI, but are we this 81 to 100 on the previous that one the 81 to 100 a hundred and 120 and greater than 120 is that Is that based on their income or is that based on the house price? It's the house price that equates to that AMI range and so we're not comparing that to the actual home buyer We're just saying that home has that price It should generally be affordable to people in that income range. Okay, okay Can we just just on that and what is it 30 or 30 percent of? Their income at that AMI for housing costs. We use the 33 percent that we use for sale So it's all 33 across the board. Okay Okay, then this just shows the breakdown of sales by condos for the condos for 2019 sales 13 homes were available at 80 percent and below and then the bulk of them at 81 to 100 percent. No, sorry. This one's the 101 to 120 percent AMI and Then again showing New home sales versus all home sales for condos and it's interesting that there aren't there were no Condo sales that were affordable at or below the 80 percent figure Okay, so looking at our affordable housing goal. How are we doing in our progress towards that? We need to create about 200 new affordable homes annually while maintaining and preserving all existing Affordable homes to meet the goal and right now we're about 3,000 units short Which kind of ties right in with that 2,300 rental unit gap as well Although we know we do need for sale housing as well as rental housing Currently we're at 6.06 percent towards our goal or of our total housing stock is affordable Little while ago. We were at 6.2 percent, but we didn't have a very large gain in 2019 19 of units created that got their certificates of occupancy versus the number of new total new home That were added to the city On our pipeline of affordable inclusionary homes that are coming up This shows What we're anticipating so 2018 we had a 313 units that were produced six units in 2019 with a little bit of issue with getting certificates of occupancy and then projecting forward using estimated permits from planning and development and then our Estimated affordable housing units coming in through inclusionary housing So since none of these estimates get us to our 200 per year We also need to be looking at acquisition of market rate housing and converting it to affordable with subsidies or other New construction alternatives So metrics this doesn't look too good should have broken this slide up a little bit So what we're going to be looking at and tracking is changes in building permits and how those changes in our permits Compared to state and or our surrounding communities changes in median home sale prices and rent prices and Their impacts of that on the inclusionary housing goal. Does it need to change stay the same? Impacts on our AMI targets. Do we need to raise or lower those or? adjust those at all and then Providing information on what the market is providing How the units are being provided? So are we seeing a shift towards all on-site? I'll be in lieu that kind of thing to report back on that And whether or not when we start getting fee in lieu is that sufficient to replace units? Or what are we getting for the funding that? is coming in We'll also be tracking obviously our 12% goal attainment And then who is being served with the the program once we get things up and running around demographics and AMI levels, etc So as noted in the council communication some of the trends that we're noticing In a number of projects both for sale and rental are choosing about the same proportion of making the fee in lieu to providing units We'll keep tracking that obviously and see if that the eight units that are eight projects that haven't decided yet how that works The rental affordable housing units are primarily being provided within the the development In the greatest area of rental units needed below 50% and really below 40% area median income are well below what is actually being provided with 68% of the Inclusionary housing rental units at 60% of the area median income So for future Upcoming council sessions some of the things we're looking around code cleanup and code Changes are looking at if somebody's doing renovations to existing housing And are creating new dwelling opportunities within that Renovation does the inclusionary housing apply to that? other residential Dwellings if they are changing the type of dwelling unit that they're providing Does that? Have inclusionary housing provided change all of these these things that are here in within this these four bullets Insert bullets Are things that have come up because they need a site plan modification or something that triggers Otherwise would trigger inclusionary housing, but some of them just don't seem to make a lot of sense Property line adjustments is another one And then changes to type of units So if a development was planning on doing single family detached and wants to switch to town homes And they're going to provide more units does that trigger something? And then again, we've talked a little bit about Whether or not we should amend the code to allow direct donation of land to nonprofits as opposed to going through the city or Alternatively coming back with a voluntary alternative agreement to allow them to do that directly Let's go ahead and ask the city staff to present the safe lot research presentation This is really a team effort, and I have my team nearby Chief sadder Joseph Joanie and myself are what make up the the The research piece of this of the task force, and I'll go this is this is a progress report. It is not a final report We are still researching and looking into different models This is happening here in Longmont and other places and this this the background is this really started and came out of our console conversations on homelessness We've had three we had three in 2019 where we presented some data around what we know around who is Experiencing homelessness and in our September console conversations and Joseph brought up the idea of a safe lot and Council then mandated our task Staff to create a task force to do some research into the safe lot model or safe parking I will also it's also known as safe parking if you ever just want to Google it Is there there is more and more stuff being written about it? So this is the the whole task force Joanie Marsh Jeff sadder Joseph Sadovich myself Amy Scriver Mike Butler Jared and telling him Karen Roney and and Harold Dominguez is on the task force We quickly met and decided that we were going to try and divide and conquer some of the questions that council had around What is the most viable model who's experiencing it? And there's a question of a return investment So what do we know about what type of systems capacity housing system kind of we have that? Investing in this model what what kind of return on investment we get versus investing in more housing or Bridge housing so we broke up those three into those three teams of the task force and We very quickly decided to decide we need a purpose and our purpose as a task force really to understand What are the current gaps in the county-wide systems to move people out of homelessness and into stable housing and to explore? What are some temporary options that we have to address those gaps while? HSBC works on bringing new housing resources as you know Council approved some new housing resources in the 2020 budget Which we're very grateful for and we are working on getting those online however in the meantime there are still gaps and how can we address those gaps and Really the safe lot option is one of many options that we can look at that may serve as bridge housing To try and get people to that final goal of being housed So again, these are the three teams that we created the research team the data team and the capacity team the system capacity team This the research team be a lot of work on best practice research and there is quite a Spectrum when it comes to safe parking models throughout the country primarily there in the West Northwest in California But they're even though there is a quite the spectrum of different models of how they work some are bigger some are smaller Some serve RV some surf cars There are some general best practices that are found in all of them for them for the most part one is Most if not all have case management that leads to a stable housing situation So the idea is how do we get people housed? All of them provide overnight parking and some provide more very few provide more than that Most programs at this point don't allow RVs and we'll go into that question in a second It's primarily a cost issue and they all provide some kind of access to restroom facilities and They most of them provide some kind of security and that can be done in a spectrum of ways as well I've seen everything from you know private security guards firms to volunteer security and that of course affects cost But those are kind of the the What you see in the models throughout the the country those are the things that they tend to have This essential elements piece I added because I read this very interesting study Done by the University of Seattle's law school and they were looking at I'm gonna catch up I need to go. Okay, so I've got it might I've got a family member that just went to the hospital that I need to go So mayor pro tem's in charge. So I apologize. I'll call you after to get Yeah, okay. Yes, and I hope your family member is doing well so this study looked at what are the essential elements of Successful programs throughout the country and they really came down to three key things and being very intentional about them I'm going to quickly cover the first two, but then I'm going to focus a lot on the third one One is funding sources, you know, the the study looked at three case studies and each of those case studies The they were funded in different ways. Some were funded by primarily private donors Some were funded by government and funding and connections to funding can also lead to Different limitations on how the program works. So for example, when you get government funding There's a lot of government strings attached to it. Whereas when you get private donor funding, it may not be as Stable as government funding, but it may open up different avenues of how you deliver the services Then the second one is key relationships Each of those successful models had developed key relationship with both Municipal staff and in particular with the police department. The most successful ones had very strong relationships with local police departments The final one reputational capital I Thought was very important that one focuses on Wherever a model is held Needs to have that reputational capital with the the neighborhoods where they are located there needs to be strong community engagement and Strong community voice in how that model is delivered Those three things together Really are is the fundamental basics of making successful models. We know that that's what that study showed so And Joseph is here so you can talk more about his book hopes part of our research team was also to get Information from hope on their safe lot pilot now as a reminder, this pilot is being done by hope Without any formal city resources or vetting by the HSBC system at this point and I want to correct because Joseph Graciously corrected me on my report and it was also in the paper In the report it talks about Joseph or the safe lot pilot using navigation as kind of his basis for intake Because this is not funded by the city or the county Joseph's let us know that hope will be using its own Intake process and again, this is a working process We're still trying to figure out what that's going to mean for how do we help people access some of the resources? That is within the HPC system. Okay, but I just wanted to point out that correction But the safe lot provides temporary parking waiting for housing you'll provide case management and it will add background checks something That doesn't happen right now People living in vehicles not RVs primary like I said cost is an issue And who are not accessing the shelter and it seek and hope is seeking to implement two lots one for adult individuals And then families a separate lot for families with children and with a total of five to seven vehicles per lot I think the idea is to be manageable at first to learn from it and then decide how to move forward So here's some of the costs that we that that we researched and Joanie was joining Marsh was extremely helpful in Finding these costs. This is what it would cost if we were to provide our own RV safe lot So we would need connections and a dump station that we'd have to create and that would be From 38,000 to 76,000. We would need of course development We would need street improvements to make sure that it's a feasible Place to park those RVs and those are the ranges and these are estimates These are ranges that Joanie Research and then if we were to provide a restroom facility, this is the estimated cost So it's quite an investment to make Of course vehicles and these are these are the estimates provided by Joseph are much lower Primarily it's focused on security and What they would provide There is a one-time If we go if hope decides to go with a shower restroom trailer There is a one-time fee of 30,000 But we're not exactly sure what it would the maintenance would be on that option or to save some costs hope could choose to do portable restrooms and According to Joseph, it's around four thousand dollars a year to rent and maintain those restrooms So that is the research team's work what we're doing the safe lot data team that team Is working on trying to find more and more what is the need and so with the help of Amy Scriber and our GIS folks We created a survey That is primarily being used by public safety right now and this is just a snapshot So this data has not been completely analyzed yet, but I did want to show council Here's the progress that we're making on collecting better data So this is a survey that public safety has on their phones that is helping us capture Data around those who are experiencing homelessness that are living in cars and RV as you can see the number of folks in Cars is much less than what people that are living in RVs and you can see the number between Operating RVs and non-operating RVs and car We're operating and not operating That those are the numbers that are that are are coming and we hope to have a much better picture By the end of March that that right now is our goal to to finish data collection So that we can come back and present some information to counsel But I just wanted to give you a snap talk to snapshot so you can see what we're doing And but it does more than just capture that also looks at You know, what is their family makeup and these are all voluntary questions and contacts They don't have to answer. We have the unknown You can see that the majority tend to be single I mean though there are some couples and there is there was one at least at this point There was one family with children And you can also see You know the vehicle if when once you click vehicle it breaks down from vehicle to art to that other picture of RV Non-operating and operating and and car operating and not operating but the majority of the of the contacts 72 so far Have been in vehicles either cars or RVs So we are collecting this data to try and Frame a better picture of who's experiencing it and what we're seeing out there And I think this is being very helpful to us to to give us a better understanding of Of the people that are experiencing homelessness living in RVs and cars So what is our next steps? Well, as I mentioned, we continue to gather data via survey until the end of March We are working on assistance capacity analysis So the housing exits team that's part of HSBC is doing a pet portfolio Of available housing and that was in the report You can see part of the work that they've done so far and hopefully we'll have more and then As such we'll move along with to the 2020 legislative bills recommended for city council Position with Sandy Cedar assistant city manager Sandy Cedar. Thank you Thank you mayor pro temp Sandy Cedar assistant city manager, and I have four bills for your consideration today Two of them regarding mobile home parts. So Part of the conversation. So the first one is house bill 20-10 17 Concerning treatment of individuals with substance use disorders who come into contact with the criminal justice system So this bill is well-meaning it provides safe spaces for people to be able to bring Drugs and be able to get help but it mandates it in a way that is contrary to the way that we are doing it with Our angel and network today this also creates an unfunded mandate And so even though we appreciate what they're trying to do with this bill and staff is working with the Bill sponsors they the wording has not yet changed and so at this point the staff recommends that city council opposes house bill 20-10 17 House bill 20-11 96 concerning updates to the laws governing mobile home parks So this bill defines new terms for the purpose of the mobile home park And the dispute resolution basically it strengthens the rights of residents in mobile home parks and because this is important this Issue of housing and their rights are important to the city council staff recommends the city council supports 1196 House bill 20-20 12-01 is another mobile home park bill and basically provides the Homeowners in a mobile park the opportunity to purchase the park under specified circumstances It lays out when notice needs to be given to those residents and how that might be conducted Again, this strengthens the rights of the mobile home park owners And so city staff Recommends that city council supports 12-01. I should note that both 12-01 and 11-96 are up in committee tomorrow So if the if the council does decide that they would like to support these bills I have some contact information with Boulder County if you're interested in going down and being part of the Conversation and the bill and you know signing peace so Both committee the last one house bill 20-12 94 concerning replacing the term illegal alien with undocumented immigrant As it relates to public contracts for services This does exactly what you have already done and removes the requirement for a legal alien Certification but instead replaces it with undocumented Immigrants of course we would rather have a full repeal, but this is way better than nothing So we would suggest that you support house bill 20-12 94 This is a study session So I might remind the council that if you'd like to take positions on these bills Your first motion needs to be to suspend the rules of procedure to do so and then to take your positions Councilmember Martin Councilmember Martin. Oh, I move to suspend the rules And then I move that the count. Okay. Well, we'll take we'll take that vote for I was just looking to see if anybody had any objections We'll take the vote any The vote on the motion all in favor say aye All opposed The motion carries unanimously six to zero And then I move that we the council accept Miss Cedars recommendations as written Second for all four. Yeah, thank you any debate Seeing no debate all in favor say aye aye all opposed the motion carries six to zero with mayor Bagley absent I move adjournment All in favor all opposed we adjourned
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Lux Radio Theatre - Branded
01/28/52, episode 775 This episode provided by the Old Time Radio Researchers Group At Yahoo -Video Upload powered by https://www.TunesToTube.com
[ "Old Time Radio", "1952" ]
2017-03-01T00:27:24
2024-04-23T14:17:18
3,325
Pc2-IAc6DcI
Lux presents Hollywood Lever Brothers Company the makers of Lux toilet soap bring you the Lux radio theater Starring Fertland Caster Charles Pickford and Nancy Gates in Brandon Ladies and gentlemen your producer Mr. William Keely Greetings from Hollywood ladies and gentlemen When we think of the days of the early West Branded is a term we usually associate with round-up time and the great cattle drives But in our play tonight Branded serves to mark one man as another Giving him a forged birthmark Which will allow him to step from a life of crime to one of wealth and position As our stars of this absorbing drama from the Paramount Studios Burt Haster in one of the rugged roles for which he's famous Also that excellent character actor Charles Bickford and graciously stepping in for Mona Freeman Nancy Gates And of course the word branded can also carry the public's stamp of approval Surely there can be no higher compliment than to be branded a Lux girl Because if you're a Lux girl you can be sure you have the very best in complexion care You're dependable daily Lux toilets old facials The curtain rises on branded starring Burt Lancaster as Choyer Charles Bickford as Mr. Lavery and Nancy Gates as Ruth Lavery Arizona 50 years ago the lonely desolate Canyon country a Refuge for anyone anxious to keep ahead of the law a man for instance like Choyer I'd figured to stay in the canyon for a week or so then turn east again New Mexico maybe to Kansas Arizona was getting too hot for me too many sheriffs in too many towns were looking for me Was kind of a shock to see a couple of men heading straight for my camp But we're friends sure yeah, why don't you put that gun away? We even left our guns blow with the horses. They don't approve just don't turn around Now what you come here for mr. We've been riding your trail all the way from Montana. Why we got a business proposition a Million-dollar deal get out even more maybe all I ask is a minute just one minute Distinguished foolproof you can take it easy to rest your life while we'll own the biggest ranch in the Southwest How about you tell it? Turn around slow My camps behind the rocks Start walking His name was letting well you call the old man tattoo they talked for hours It was a kind of a deal that you dream of All I had to do is let the old man tattoo a mark on my shoulder a Birthmark I'm a real artist with a tattoo needle When I'm sober and this year is gonna be my masterpiece. Yeah. Well, this whole job is a masterpiece You know, there's only been one problem Joey they're getting you to tie on with us Well, I the first time I lied eyes on you was in Dodge City and I knew right away. You was the man for the job I'll come you had the eyes the right age and the nerve I seen you when you made your plan to saloon that night. Take a look left. Oh Finished. Oh perfect like it was born on his skin. That is high art, mister Yeah, you can put your shirt on You live we didn't say anything yet about the split re-waith all even don't know Down the middle nothing well half for me Shut up. You mean as much for you as me and him together. That's right. Hmm. Well, I reckon that figure Do not to me it don't you must never be greedy tattoo. Don't pay. Oh, come on We're right into town for supplies. Just sing out when you come back I'd sure hate to shoot a partner You'll hear me. I only got one life joy. Yeah, I ain't no cat Nothing will came back the next afternoon He was alone Him I yeah, I bought him out. Oh, no trouble at all. Huh? No trouble at all When do you figure to buy me out? Oh setups no good without you to here right down the line Let's get moving. I've waited a long time for this 25 years a million dollars and Half of its mine It was a long push all the way through Texas down to the Rio Grande But the day finally came when we could stop traveling Just like I told you Troy one of the biggest ranches in the whole Southwest Well, what's the matter? You ain't spoke ten words in the last three days the sign on that fence read it Bar whole am ranch Richard Lavery owner keep out This means you that's right partner. It means you You only over in town today here for me. No reason why we can't ride in together. Oh I just walk up to the door. Take off my shirt. Say here. I am look at my birthmark Now let's get the straight left from here on. I'm doing the figuring. Yeah, yeah, maybe maybe it's better that way But just don't forget the details. I told you like Like that rockin horse story Let me hear from you real soon when there's something to tell you you'll hear from me. Yeah, sure Good luck partner. I had it all worked out in my mind just how to play it Way in the distance. I saw a bunch of cow hands men in offense. They look kind of surprised when I wrote up Who's the foreman here? Maybe he just don't read I'm a foreman. What do you want? I want a job. Yeah, what can you do? Smart poke, huh? Get off this ranch. I didn't come here for trouble. So don't start any I want a job Morning, mr. Lavery I'm by a long shot, mr. Ruth. We had a little misunderstanding if your Lavery I am Well, I'm looking for a job right some does all our hiring You will not take him on and show him who's foreman around here that new colt ready ransom ready to lever B He's real wicked boss lead strong riding in court handling. Well, I'm his man. I'll take him on tomorrow All right, Ruth. Let him get back to work You What's your name? They call me Choya. You want that job or not? I said I did tonight. All right. You're hired Now get on them French boys So far so good that night I saw the girl walk out on the porch of the ranch house I knew I hadn't any right over there That's why I purposely walked. What are you doing here? Well, I I wanted to thank you man for getting me the job today. I had nothing to do with it Mr. Ransom does the hiring. I know Thanks anyway You kind of like yourself, don't you? Well, it's the only affection I can depend on You can't expect folks to like someone who behaves like a one-man stampede What's your name? Choya Isn't that Spanish for cactus? Why do they call you that ever try to pick one now? What's your real name? I wouldn't know I Let your father in there. Why well, I guess this meeting's over. Oh dad doesn't mind. He's just talking to mother Tell me is Is that all the family? That's all now now Well, I I had a brother, but I never saw him Kidnap by it. We never found a trace of him dad still offers the reward, but it doesn't mean anything really Dad and I realize he must be dead But not mother Her whole world centers on the hope that Richards alive that you are there coming dad Well, they'll be going up pretty soon. You'd better You're a waste from the bunkhouse mister. I didn't know there was a dividing line and keep it in mind Sure, mr. Labry. I'm a cowhand The labors don't mix with dirty cowhands. Oh dad didn't mean it that way at all It's as plain as those signs out there keep out. This means you Dad you you were wrong. You think so all right. I'll square it with him tomorrow But he's sure honoree it seems to me you could both do with some breaking Yes, everything was moving along just the way I wanted the next day. I had another trick to pull I'd heard leave retail ransom. He wanted to ride that wild I figured I'd beat him Get off that cool choice. I broke close before now Get off it. Well, man labry's age is level to get hurt Around here rides the mean ones. That's the boss. See that's his order Well, why don't you say so wouldn't matter much of my hand with it? I guess not Get off that coat. Yeah, sure, mr. Labry I'll get off this ranch. Oh wait a minute I'll go when I'm ready get my weeks pay ransom and throw them out of here It'll be a pleasure. Not until I pay you off. They read you just fight crazy. Aren't you come on boys? Let's get him Why don't you call the russium in Lavery? Hold it hold his arms Ratsom sure they're at the shoulder where it's torn boss. They go Where are you from? Why talk several I said where are you from? Places who is he'll get let him go boys. Mr. Lavery. I said let him go Maybe now you'll tell me I got no folks Nobody owns me that's birthmark on your shoulder. It's not your brand is it right some look again Say what's the matter you all crazy? It's the same birthmark boss. I never forgot it another sooner I clear out of here listen to me You don't understand. I've got to know something about you Why because you might be my son and you might be local my son was taken from this ranch when he was five years old We've never stopped looking. We had only one thing to go on a mark of birthmark like yours I don't know what this adds up to mr But I never been in Texas before in my life that cleaned up then come up to the house I want my wife to see you and if I don't you can come of your own free will or ransom and the boys will bring you I'll be there in a few minutes. Thank you My wife's inside there with Ruth. I want you to try to understand what she's been through I've told her this is probably a mistake, but she's excited naturally And you won't mind her asking you questions. Will you know, but well, I stick your stick your way wrong. All right. I'm wrong He's here Mary Would you mind showing that birthmark to my wife later Richard later? Just Just let me look at him I've been trying to tell your husband, man. He's He's made a big mistake. Do you Do you remember me at all? Oh, no, of course you couldn't it's been so very long Is there anything familiar about us to you Ruth? How could there be? Richard was so little Just a baby What about this house the ranch Richard was barely five. He couldn't remember. I can remember for that Heard your baby stories from mother and me so often you think it's your own memory But there wasn't anyone to tell stories to Richard, but surely he must remember something Well, the the only thing I can remember Well kid dreams, but they never made any sense. What were they? Please? Please nothing about here or or texas just crazy things like Well like uh Like a rocking horse. What about a rocking horse? Nothing. It doesn't make any sense A rocking horse with three legs one in front was always missing that was your toy your favorite toy I still have it Sit down son Please We want to talk to you It was that simple I let him drag out a couple of more details things laughing while I told you just enough to make it sound real good There's quite a performance the old lady never stopped crying even levee's eyes were full of tears and root But she she just stopped there staring at me The next day I went riding with her who wanted to show me the ranch There's the south section. That's our best grazing land. It runs as far as the mountains sure look like good stock Now if we go down this trail we can well All I I really want to tell you is I'm very happy Are you? As soon as we spoke that night I I felt something about you Oh, it's hard to explain but But afterwards I I kept thinking about you Of course, I couldn't have known then but I just felt close to you But you're still not sure of me. I am now You see another shock in mother's life. She's not they might have been more than she could take I should have known mother's instinct about her own son couldn't have been wrong It could be she's been wanting this to happen so bad. She She just bought me on site. Yes, that could be Oh, but there's no ifs about you You're rich at lavery my brother. I haven't cried till now. I'm I'm sorry I just can't help look if if we're going to get back before supper. We better ride The next time I get sentimental you you just tell me to shut up Dick, what was it like all those years what you did where you went you wouldn't like it And sounds exciting Like maybe you had to use those guns. I've used them Well, you can put them away now You'll never have to wear them around here And don't worry about what's past We're going to love you so much. You'll forget there ever was anything else but us and the ranch shut up I'm sorry, but Well, you asked me to say that if you ever got sentimental Come on. Let's give these horses a little exercise. Yeah, come on. Let's ride Went like that for three weeks Lavery is wife and root Standing on their heads trying to please me Trying to make me like Even when I was alone, I felt they were watching me smiling at me But being alone wasn't easy Lavery started rounding up this cattle Well, dick will be driving a hundred and eighty thousand dollars with a prime beef to El Paso Well, aren't you impressed? Yes, sir. I guess I am a man's viewpoint sure changes I used to want success right enough, but nothing like the way I do now It's a great feeling to know your own flesh and blood sun is around to take over what you sweat to build Lavery, let's get over to the chuck wagon. Look there's There's something I want to tell you When I came here Who's that? I'm not sure Oh, yeah, he's uh He's an old friend of mine A man named Leffingwood. Well, he's a friend of yours. He's welcome here You'll sure have something to tell him, won't you son? Yes, sir I love a lot to tell How long you've been working here. I uh, I just stopped by looking for a job Well, don't I even get a handshake you kind of took dick unexpected. Nice, sir dick Dick who Richard lavery jr. My son him chorea. Well, go on dick tell him He's right. Are you You mean all those years you said you had no folks you had this place to come to dick. I'll tell you all about it Go on son and take your friend up the house I'll join you later Yes, sir. Thank you So this is your room, huh? I told you'd be living like a king in a palace And I told you to wait in town. Sure wait. I got calluses from waiting And as soon as you're in the saddle, we'll dump this ranch on the open market We'll be up to our ears and cash. Why don't you stop dreaming you saw lavery He'll outlive the both of us. You getting soft in the head. He ain't going to outlive a 45 slug Is it get this straight? Nobody's gunning him. No Well, I ain't young enough just to set around and wait for him to have a natural You won't have to wait. We're getting out. No, no, you can't do it This thing is mine. You ain't got the right to go and get religion now If I ain't got this deal, I ain't got nothing. We'll get ours. Now listen I'm heading the cattle drive to opasso There's 180,000 money you ever see it's the cattle money or none at all Yeah, I guess that's that Can you sign me on for the drive? Yeah, I've starved and gone to prison. Yeah, and I've killed and all the while I was counting on the money I was going to make out of this. I figured I'd go back to New Orleans in style I guess I'm just too old to argue. Just don't change your mind Come on. I'll show you around the ranch We started the cattle drive a week later lavery stayed on the ranch After all his own son would be in shock Yeah, lavery stayed But Ruth insisted on coming along I kept away from her as much as I could remember tonight dick We're making good time today. Not good enough ransom. We got to do better tomorrow No sense in running their weight off for their soul right out where you belong ransom. I'll handle this drive Yeah, I guess you will Anything wrong? No, no, I just thought I'd ride with you for a while dick There is something wrong It's you You've been jumpy and irritable ever since we started You've been avoiding me. I know I'm sorry Well, I'm just anxious about the drive Just like dad ready to buck and rear at the flick of a whip I guess you heard me blowing off at ransom just now, huh? He means well dick and there's nothing he wouldn't do for us I know I'll make it up to him later I can't wait till we get to pass up. There's so many people I want you to meet Oh, don't look so bored. Where do you see some of the girls? I'm gonna I never asked you Maybe you have a girl somewhere Oh, maybe I oh Oh, you you can be so aggravating at times. There isn't any girl. That's wonderful then We'll I introduce you to Judy Medgar. She's the prettiest girl in passing. Let's worry about my girl after we get there I'm sorry Oh, I I almost forgot your friend mr. Leppingwell. What about him? Nothing. He just said if I saw you and you weren't too busy, you wanted to talk to you Where is he? Up ahead riding point That's too important to you only uh, I just been doing some thinking At 90,000. I'm gonna get about it. Well someday it may all be gone and we can come back Hmm the family will always forgive a little thieving and then only we're never coming back I figured all depends on the finances That uh that girl joya Pretty hmm too bad. She's your sister. Why don't you find yourself a rat hole? I was only joking But uh, maybe you called me right. Maybe rat fits me proper So don't push me too far partner. Don't back me up against no wall You're the one who's pushing hard. You ain't the kind it'll draw first for shoot a man in the back Me then what I told you once this was my deal. I put my life in it So it's gonna pan out Just like I hoped it would In a few moments, we'll be back with act two of branded now. Mr. William Keely our producer act two of branded Starring Bert Lancaster as joya Charles Dickford as mr. Lavery and Nancy Gates as Ruth Lavery I timed the drive so we'd reach El Paso early in the morning By nightfall. I wanted to be as far away as a horse could take you As we were leaving the cattle yard. I told ransom. I wanted to see him Why isn't my sister ransom the office talking to the cattle people pick her up see that she gets to the hotel I thought you were going with her. I'll meet her there. They sent the tally over to the bank I'll go there first to make sure about the money Might as well keep walking in What are you doing riding hurt on me? I don't need anybody to hold my hand. I don't reckon you do All I aim to do is pick up my horse I got left him well and went over to the bank. I left him outside I told the cashier. I wanted to see the president young lavery sit down son. Thank you I just wondered if you had our money ready. Yeah, got it right here ransom brought the tally over about an hour ago Yo, come in dawson come in Here's somebody been waiting a long time to meet you This charlie dawson texas rangers looks like I finally caught up with your lavery. What? Yeah, I've been looking for you for more than 20 years You sure caused this plenty of trouble when you were stuck Why chased one lead all the way to new allons New allons, huh? Yeah, nothing come of it though Well, it's sure good to see you Anything you want you just come on over to the jail. Thanks Now about your money. It comes to 182 thousand dollars. Don't bother to count Just give me a receipt And deposit it to my father's account. Oh, I thought you wanted the cash. I changed my mind I want my money. I said we'd come back to the hotel and talk it over. All right We're here now. Give me my share and you can talk all you want I didn't take the money you're lying. Am I here's the bank receipt Deposit it to the account of richard lavery senior. You'll be sorry for this charlie right down your dying day So the rangers chased you clear down to new allons, huh? What are you talking about? We made a deal you're going to see it through lavery son. What did you do with him? Go ahead. Go ahead pull a gun on me. My time will come sure your time will come You'd kill me just like a kill tattoo Only that won't get you a dime will it Ah, it looks like there ain't nothing to talk over then isn't there There are six bullets in this gun I'm taking five of them out Now I'll spin the cylinder. I'm giving you odds laughing. Well five to one Now what did you do with the lavery kid? You won't pull that trigger. You just need to murder in kind The boy where is he? Hey, he died on me before I could collect a reward I swear it on my mother's grave. He died across the border. You're lying No, charlie. Wait. He he was took from me. You never tried to get him back You just let it ride never tried to collect the reward. What are you giving me? There are three more chambers two of them are empty. He he he was took by Mateo rubies the old bandit Yeah, yeah rubies you picked that name because you know that rubies is dead No, no, no, he ain't he's in mexico. He's holed up in the mountains the other side airmosa He found gold. Yes honest charlie honest, but it's worth a man's life to go near there What about the lavery boy? Well, he's been told that he's that he's tolio rubies his son The old man's so crazy about him. He killed anybody that tells him any different So you're finally telling the truth 25 years Best hand a man ever held and it blows away like a book Let now get a thousand miles from texas if I ever hear that you're around the laverys. I'll kill you Did you take care of the money I took care of everything. Thank goodness Now hurry up and get dressed. We're going over to call in the med berries. Wait I'm not going with you. Rick. Here's the receipt from the bank. I'm leaving But first I have to tell you something I know something that's been bothering you all through the drive But there's nothing you can tell me that could matter. I'm not a child dick If I can help you. Well, what's the sister for? I wish I had some place to crawl in and hide Ruth I'm not your brother I'm a foreflushing thief No No, that isn't so that birthmark. It was tattooed on my shoulder that story about the rocking horse That was just one of those things I learned from the man who kidnapped your brother. No, no I was going to hit it big take it easy for the rest of my life But nobody told me that I'd meet somebody like you Wait, but don't go Please I got out of town I had three in my mexico Somewhere in the mountains near hermosa was a man that I'd have to find Mateo rubris And all the while I thought of Ruth And how she'd feel when she faced her folks again Now tell me what really happened in el paso dad. I I told you Dick had some business to take care of you'll be coming back later. He said he'd write. I don't believe that I've got to know Ruth What happened to your brother? He's not my brother He came here to rob us That birthmark was tattooed on his shoulder. You're talking crazy. It's true. He told me so himself Oh dad, what do we do? I should have used a gun on him that first day he came here Killing him's hardly enough now, but it's all I can do and how would that help mother? It's mother. We have to think about I'll find him. I'll find him and drag him back He's going through with his foreflushing all the way He'll be richard lavery jr. As long as your mother's alive I'm some get a couple of horses. We're leaving for el paso There was no way of my knowing then that that labored started on my trail Besides by now I'd reached the mountains back of her mosa And as I'd hoped rubies men found me and brought me to them americano, huh Do you lose your way in the mountains? Maybe I came here looking for you rubies. Well, there was a big mistake They used to come looking for me all the time Not so many went back senor I'm in trouble with the law back in texas. They ran out of hiding places. I thought maybe you material braces no innkeeper Get out. I didn't know that you were friends with the law Friends with the law Before the government forced me to retire. I used to Rio Grande like a ferry boat. That's why I thought you'd hide me out Or kill you I took a chance What did they call you Choya choya El choya It's a name. I have not heard Small thing with a gun, huh? Big enough the rangers want to do a little hanging me. They wish to hang a thousand times Yeah, you're young ones in the old days when I wrote with what is I All right, you work later the mind on you. Hey, come here This one is called choya My son. Oh, welcome senor. He has come to me because they have a piece of rope for him in texas Uh, Miguel, he's waiting to see you. I see. I know you stay here, tonio with his desperado this bad one from texas You uh You ever been in texas tonio? Oh many times. I've used the real grande like a ferry boat. Yes. I know. I've heard that already tonio I may not have much time I came here only to find you me Why I'm going to show you a brand maybe you know it Come here. Take a look Dead mark on your shoulder But that's on my shoulder too. Yes, but yours is real. This is tattoos Sit down Important Miguel is business of yours the americano ify someone is following me. Huh someone you know Lefting well lefting well Bring him in There long ago. I told you never to come to these mountains again. Yeah, I'm not crazy. Mateo. I got good reason for coming It's about tonio. Miguel leave us alone. I turned down a hundred thousand dollars to do this for you What about tonio? 50 thousands all i'm asking from you. Mateo old friends I'll tell tonio and take him back. Take him back Back where family in texas. He's their son Well, don't you have nothing to say? Stay here. I will be back Everything I told you was true. He's not your father Your real mother and father are waiting for you in texas. Not my father But how could he have done it? Yes, take him away quick He said that You're not my father. You can't deny it rubriz. You I will have flayed a little at the time and let the dogs eat Your hide are you are you my father? Tell him rubriz. You know, he's not your son tonio tonio I do not know what he has told you But there has been no one in the world more to me since the day you were abandoned in my village They knew all these years you have lied to me No, I do not lie Tonio what is blood When you were little and you cried in the night I put my hands on you And the love of god flowed into your body You would go to sleep Holding this hand When I tried to pull away you still held it even in your sleep Made me very happy That is how I made you my son The son of matthew rubriz But you you should have told me had I said oh mother of god make him understand Tonio listen to me It was a miracle from heaven that I gained you as a son You have lived in my heart ever since You You are my tonio Stay here. I have words now with alchoia. No, no, no. I ask you to let him go my mother To all these things are as they were he will talk tonio. There will be trouble and since who any of we Run away from trouble have a seat, oh Since Come we are both hungry. First we eat and then I will think on it some more Ruber's men had taken me to a barn. They tied me to a post late that night the door opened It's tonio I'm going to let you go. What about rubriz? He changed his mind about killing me. I don't think so Look senio. I love my father, but I'm disobeying his orders your father's in texas labor. Do not use that name to me. I'm rubriz All right, search yourself outside is a horse right past to the past We have two centuries there here Take my gun. Thanks. I hope you will not have to use You're not coming with me. No My father is matthew rubriz your father's richard. Lavery You've got a mother and a sister. You can't change it It's a crazy thing to be born twice in one lifetime senor Get on your horse Where are I not ahead of getter? I'm taking you back tonio senor. You're a man without honor and I'm a fool But you will have to shoot me before it They brought the butt of the gun down on his head. I have no choice I tied tonio to another horse and started for the past There were a few shots from the senators, but they lost us in the darkness It wasn't till I stopped to rest the horses that I saw that Tonio I've been You will never leave these hills senor By now my father will know what has happened. You're here Yeah, that's it What's the nearest place we can stop there is nowhere that you can stop That remenades mountains will be searching for you Tell me senor Is the money that you hope to collect for me enough to pay for your life We're moving I'm sorry that you got hurt tonio But don't try to stall me. Ah, you will do nothing to me There I'm not worth a peso to you. You want to be hogtied? I will come But it's a long way to the real grandest senor She'll never make it The daylight you were still in the mountains Then far off through the mists I saw spirals of smoke in every direction A signal senor Soon they cover every trail How's your arm? It pains me greatly But I am not the one who's going to die Yes, you're just about got me convinced All right, I'll try to make it out of here alone here. Take the gun when you hear them fire a couple of shots They'll find you senor I do not understand you at all It is not money that you want, is it? No What made you come into our mountains? Because I had all the angles figured all except one your sister Ruth you do not answer my questions. Well, maybe I came here because I was tired. Maybe my luck's running out. I don't know Maybe I came here because for just once in my life I wondered what it'd be like to do something decent And now you will try to go back and see them. Oh, no if I get out of this I'm going to skip the whole state of texas But listen You get yourself across the border sometime you'll meet those people meet them and Well, then you'll know why I came here. You will have to go back to the laborer's choice Not a chance. I cannot go by myself Now come on. Help me up on the horse again. You know, you'll make even trouble. I will make it I wish to see for myself this this wonderful family So we started out once more and behind us closing in with every mile For rubries in this min and lefting well Stop here. Why why for what we said here now making time for the real I asked men in these conions. They wouldn't know which trail they took Antonio knows these trails too. You know where to hide where to throw us off. Antonio will show him nothing You still don't believe it, huh? You just can't believe that. Tony would help him What more proof do you want all these years? They cannot be destroyed by a few words from a stranger stranger, huh? They're partners by now Shut up. You think I do not know But it's not easy to recognize the trader among your own No That is not the way I punish traders Tony was no differ from the others I used to think it was nothing. I wanted more than money stacks and stacks of money But now most of all, I want to watch chorea die I want to do the killer, but you're even a big once they get across the real kind of cross I will follow until I find them There's a rebranded starring Bert Lancaster as chorea Charles bickford as mr. Lavery and Nancy Gates as Ruth Lavery We pushed ahead all that day and night without the rest of food By now, Antonio was too weak to stay in the saddle. It begged me to tie him on to keep going In the morning we reached the Rio Grande Somehow we we got across I got Tony off his hearts But this was it We could go no further Far off I I thought I saw two men I tried to call to them, but The ground gave way and swallowed me up Friends by sundown mr. Lavery We figured out yet what we're gonna say to mrs. Lavery I don't know what to say to her right son My guess is chorea crossed the real three or four days ago Deep in mexico, but now how can I tell her that? How can I tell her the truth? And yet if I don't every time anybody rides up to the ranch she'd be waiting for her son to come through the door I don't know what to say or what to do Maybe you could tell her we saw him in Paso. They stand there on ranch business Or maybe he didn't cross the river We could push on toward arizona. Wait a minute There's a stray horse down there coming up from the river. Yeah Carry in a mexican saddle. He's fresh out of the rio Come on ranson. Let's ride down and have a look Lavery and ranson got us back to the ranch tonio was still unconscious I guess I should have told lavery all about him But I was too beat up to do much talking Yes Don't worry lavery. I played it just the way you told me I told her I'd I'd explain everything in a morning What about my friend? I've been with the doctor. He just left He says he'll be all right He gave him something to keep him quiet I could use a little rest myself If you can wait a morning too, I'll We'll take you to one of our rooms. You'd better get up there yourself If uh If ruth should just leave ruth out of this Yeah, sure I'll tell you the whole story tomorrow lavery. You've got nothing to tell me But as long as my wife's alive after I've said my piece you can do whatever you want with me Right now if it's all the same with you, I'll get some sleep But it wasn't easy to go to sleep I had too much to think about But just as I seemed to be dropping off I heard someone at a window There was no mistake in him in the moonlight Mateo rubries get up. Troyer The two of you came out of may go together and now it is right that you die together. He didn't come out with me I brought him out rubries at the end of a gun no longer is my heart bigger than my head Tonyo get up Take it easy rubries One of your men shot him the night we got away Then he will not be awake to see death But you are awake If you kill him rubries, you'll be sorry to rest of your life You're the top of his world once maybe but no more. That's the truth Troyer it's ruth Please let me talk to you. Please let me come in not now Is anything? Yes, he uh, he's awake send her away Ruth you uh, you better go downstairs now If that's what you want That's what I want What is the taste in your mouth, Troyer? Like salt And your neck is stiff I can still nod to a friend you I can't kill happily I can look straight into your eyes and pull the trigger and I will sleep at night even better than if Rubries meant every word I kicked over a chair as he came for me I knocked the gun out of his hand But for an old man this rubries was plenty tough. That's right rubries Get up now sit down sit down now. You're gonna listen to me This is the reason tonia went with me this the end of a gun And that's the reason you're gonna sit there and listen to me You will gain nothing. I did not come alone 10 of my men's are on the bunkhouse 20 more of my men are around this house What's going on in there? Open the door, Troyer. Hold it. Lavery. Just stay where you are. You hear me open this door Or I'll everything will be all right if you do as I say Don't let anyone leave the house. Do you understand as for you rubries A 45 slug would untwist that mind of yours. I'd let you have it in a second But Tony would never forgive me that Not the way he feels about you your gun will not help me believe your lies No No, I suppose I'm gonna have to kill you kill you like a local horse And then your men can come in here and finish off the rest Kill the best part of your life took you from nothing made him my son And he loves you for it. He kept stalked plus. He favorite. Let me take all his rips The only reason he changed his mind was to help me square myself with his family All these years. I have been his family. He has been mine. There was nothing else and now you're gonna blow him out like a light You never stopped to figure that his father and mother That they have a right to some of what you've had for all these years that you talked about They've had nothing since lepping well stole him out of this room to meet Tonya was abandoned I did not know he was stolen. Well, you know it now 25 good years and you're gonna wipe them out with your own hand. No, he has destroyed those years All the happy days Tonya has forgotten He despises me betrays me leaves me if you don't believe he has nothing but love for you If you don't believe that when he's well, he'd be riding right over to see you If you don't know better than that then Oh, what's the use here Hey, go on take your gun. You are your man. What's the difference go ahead and shoot him while he's still asleep You give me back my gun You would have me leave him here to Forget Mexico to forget me forget you I tell you that when he's well He'll be making the real grand like a ferry boat Running between you and these people here these labor is If only it could be so it is so momentum You get get them in together right back to the trail. Wait for me there Tonyo, Tonyo It's me your father He can't hate but don't worry. It's the medicine the doctor gave him He'll get well Tonyo Life is not by the blood But by the heart Yes, Tonya, you can come in now lavery you and your wife and You We heard joya we heard it but lady real father Tonyo, he's too sick to ride along with me senor And in sickness it is better that he'd be with you and his mother his sister I Maybe someday I can come back and see him and he to see me anytime Thank you senor This joya he's more like me than myself He gives me the gun he invites me to do murder but First he removes the bullets And where does he go joya joya Senor Senora before I leave With my men is one named laughing well Your ranges with a big reputation You tell your ranges I give them a present They can pick up laughing well on your side of the river He's not fit for me to kill joya What do you think you're doing? It's a long walk into town We can ride double Come on get up. I could use a horse but Not with you on it. I'm going with you joya It might be fun to be out where things happen. You're not leaving the ranch. I am if you are now listen Don't argue with me joya. I'm pretty tough Yeah Awful tough Why'd you slap the horse for so he'd go back to the corral But still a long walk to town It's much shorter back to the house Maybe you're right Suppose we find out Our stars will return in just a minute Walking walking waiting waiting dancing dancing dating dating Everywhere a lady goes it's hard on stockings hard on holes Sitting sitting striding striding running running driving driving everywhere a lady goes It's hard on heels hard on toes One two one two stretch strain stretch strain Everywhere a lady goes it's hard on stockings hard on holes Scientific strain tests show that stockings wash the gentle lux way last twice as long That's why 90 of the manufacturers of nylons recommend lux care So start the lux flakes habit this very night. Remember lux flakes gives you double the stocking wear It's like getting an extra pair with every pair you buy Extra pair lux care double wear lux care lux lux Lux and now here's mr. Keeley with our stars and we invite them forward for a special curtain call Bert Lancaster, Charles Bickford and Nancy Giggs spirit red is that we couldn't see some of your acrobatic tricks during the show Well, as a matter of fact bill, I just happened to have a few parallel bars with no thanks Charles and I don't want you showing us up. That's right. My greatest exercise comes from lifting a script But maybe Nancy'd like to see a few acrobatic You know, I think Nancy performed quite a trick when she stepped into tonight's play at the last moment Well, I'm very sorry that mona freeman was suddenly taken ill, but I did enjoy doing the show You don't suppose making a picture with those crazy comedians Dotton and jerry had to do with more ill that old flu bug Is she and martin and louis latest picture for paramount sailor beware? No sailor beware is already playing all over the country now. This will be their next one And I understand that on the set. It's uh, everyone beware They tell me the boys never stop clowny when they're making a picture You're so right berth then on weekends they make home movie I wish they'd cast me in one of their productions. Well, if they ever need a lux girl, I'll recommend you Well, that would be perfect casting bill because lux toilet soap is my favorite complexion care before we go bill We'd like to hear about next week's play next week. We'll have a modern romance It's the 20th century fox screen success take care of my little girl And as the stars of his current drama of college and sorority life and playing their original role We'll have gene crane and dale robertson That was a hit picture bill. Good night. Good night. It was a great show. Good night One of hollywood's most glamorous stars arlene doll A beautiful redhead with a radiant creamy smooth complexion gives you one of her most precious beauty secrets She says it's wonderful the way my lock soap facials give skin quick new loveliness Why don't you take the advice of glamorous screen stars like arlene doll? Lux soap's creamy active lather does so much for the skin These easy beauty facials are a simple complexion care that works Just smooth lux soap's rich active lather well into your skin Active lather does the trick it cleanses gently but thoroughly Then rinse with warm water and splash with cold right away skin feels softer smoother looks lovely So get fragrant white lux toilet soap tomorrow and see what hollywood's own beauty soap can do for you You'll find life's lovely when your luck's lovely. That's why nine out of 10 screen stars are lux girls Brother it does toilet soap join me in inviting you to be with us again next Monday evening When the lux radio theater presents gene crane and dale robertson In take care of my little girl. This is william kealy saying good night to you from hollywood
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pc2-IAc6DcI", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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You Can Be Redeemed
1 // You can be redeemed. Do you always believe it? 2 // Hiw have you experienced (or participated) in our age of online mobocracy? // YOU CAN BE REDEEMED // Spoken & Written by Adam Gonnerman Music by Podington Bear Footage from VideoBlocks Edited by Jim Kast-Keat View the complete transcript: http://thirtysecondsorless.net/2chronicles-2 See the complete #30SecondBible series: http://thirtysecondsorless.net/30SecondBible Follow Thirty Seconds or Less on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ThirtySOL Follow Thirty Seconds or Less on Facebook: http://facebook.com/ThirtySOL Subscribe to Thirty Seconds or Less on iTunes: http://thirtysecondsorless.net/itunes Find Thirty Seconds or Less everywhere: http://thirtysecondsorless.net/everywhere
[ "#30SOL", "#Podcast", "#Ideas" ]
2016-02-17T13:00:03
2024-04-23T17:05:25
39
pcoA0V3ZOZo
The good news, the second chronicles, is that you can be redeemed. The clearest example is Manasseh, who worshipped other gods, establishing altars for them in the temple and throughout Israel, and even sacrificing two sons to Moloch. He was taken into captivity, and in deep despair, repented. Despite his former wickedness, he returned to the throne and lived a new life. This message is unwelcoming our age of online mobocracy, in which any moral failing marks as contemptible and beyond hope.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcoA0V3ZOZo", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCKULTAeygQyCD_lLmex0eJA
Remember the R's: Rotate (Drew Anderson)
Rancher, Drew Anderson doesn’t have uniformly sized pastures, but he is rotating as much as possible to allow for rest and then full recovery for his pastures. At 0:30 in this video, Drew says “It take the livestock to make a full recovery”. The grasslands were meant to be grazed and Anderson is a big believer in the 5th principle of soil health, namely the benefit of livestock on the land. He and his neighbors have seen land flourish under Rotation, Rest and Recovery. At the time of this video’s release (March 2021), it looks like this growing season will be a dry one. Now is the best time to begin to think about drought planning to begin the process of building resilience on your operation – visit https://bit.ly/GrowingResilience for more information on drought planning. Remember the R’s for Rangeland Resilience: Rotate, Rest, Recovery USDA is an Equal Opportunity Provider, Employer and Lender.
[ "science", "natural resources", "soil", "water", "air", "plants", "animals", "conservation", "soil health", "South Dakota", "USDA NRCS", "USDA NRCS South Dakota" ]
2021-02-26T16:36:43
2024-04-23T17:11:39
59
pcsRpwOEygs
Our pasture sizes range from ten acres to four or five hundred acres. We also run on some national grassland which has less flexibility in management so we try to rotate as much as possible. Anything that we have control of management over, we're rotating two days is probably the fastest and three or four weeks is probably the longest. Rest will help the land recover but it takes the livestock to make it to make a full recovery.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcsRpwOEygs", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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'VRS in BSNL Not to Revive But to Sell-off'
Around 78,000 BSNL employees retired on January 31, a majority of which have opted for the Voluntary Retirement Scheme (VRS). They have already submitted their papers last Friday. The reduction of the workforce would be a big challenge to BSNL. "The Narendra Modi-led BJP government is selling all the national assets including BSNL to corporates. The VRS offered to the employees in BSNL is a step towards it," says P. Abhimanyu, general secretary of the BSNL Employees Union.
[ "BSNL crisis", "Modi", "Jio", "Abhimanyu", "chronic capitalism", "political nexus", "ambani", "VRS", "bjp", "general secretary" ]
2020-02-02T05:30:02
2024-04-22T18:36:10
825
pcG8j2hstPg
Hello and welcome to NewsClick. Today we have with us Mr. Abhimanyu, the General Secretary of the BSNL Employees Union. We'll discuss with him about the recent revival package announced by the government of India. Welcome sir. So the government of India has announced a revival package for the BSNL. Do you think it will definitely revive the BSNL from the current crisis? See, basically the revival package offered by the government of India consists of two important aspects. One is allotment of 4G spectrum. In fact, at least for the past four or five years, the entire unions and associations of BSNL have been demanding that BSNL should be allotted 4G spectrum. Another aspect is that implementation of VRS. Around 80,000 employees are leaving the company under VRS. These are the two important aspects of the revival package. So far as the VRS is concerned, we are of the strong opinion that it is totally unwarranted. In fact, we have even demanded to the government of India, whatever amount you intend to spend for implementing the VRS, that amount can be given to BSNL as a financial assistance for its revival. That was not paid heed to. Why I am saying that VRS is totally unwarranted? The government as well as the BSNL management are trying to paint a picture as if BSNL has gone into loss only because of the huge workforce. That is not the truth. BSNL was having one lakh more employees during 2004-5. And I want to say that the same BSNL with one lakh more employees earned a net profit of 10,000 crores in the financial year 2004-5. Now, after one lakh employees have gone home, the company is running into loss. So the reason is employees' strength is not the main issue. But the issue is the policies being adopted by the government. So far as the Indian telecom sector is concerned, it is very important to note that it is not only BSNL. Airtel has gone into loss. Vodafone idea has gone into loss. In fact, Vodafone idea is the biggest corporate that is running into loss now because the loss incurred by Vodafone idea in one single quarter is the highest in Indian history. So what we want to say, the government even without implementing VRS, the government could have taken certain steps, would have financially revived BSNL. Basically, the unions and associations, they are functioning under the umbrella organization, AUAB, all unions and associations of BSNL. The demand of the AUAB is that BSNL should be allotted with 4G spectrum. And BSNL should be given some soft loan. Government of India has given soft loan to 96 countries. BSNL is the government of India's own child. And we demanded that government of India should give a soft loan so that BSNL can have the necessary investment to modernize its technology and to come out of loss. Unfortunately, it was not accepted by the government. But now 4G spectrum has been allotted. But what about other requirements? For example, BTSS means the equipments mounted on towers. Around 50,000 BTSS are 4G enabled means by making a small upgradation of the technology, all these 50,000 BTSS could be converted into 4G BTSS. But this technical upgradation of those BTSS has to be done only by the original ventures. Original ventures are one company's Chinese ZTE, the other one is Nokia. But both these companies, Nokia or ZTE, they are reluctant to upgrade these 3G BTSS into 4G BTSS, because BSNL has to pay huge amount to these companies, outstanding amount, dues. I think it is around 1200 crores outstanding loan, I mean amount has to be paid to ZTE. Similarly, a very big amount has to be paid to Nokia. So, these companies, vendors have taken a position that unless you clear the outstanding dues, we will not upgrade your BTSS. So, you know the revival package was announced on 23rd October. BSNL management does not know when it is going to launch its pan India 4G service, because the procurement of 4G equipments is one part. But the existing BTSS have got to be upgraded. So, basically even after the implementation of revival package, BSNL is not having the working capital to either to launch its 4G service and also, for example, the contract workers, they are not paid their wages for the past 10 months. It is a very unfortunate situation. Even presently, BSNL employees are not getting their salary every month. And similarly, BSNL management is not having sufficient funds even to pay electricity bills. That tragedy continues even today. So, basically, the BSNL management should have got some financial assistance from the government to come out of the crisis. Allotment of 4G spectrum alone, it is not going to take BSNL out of the crisis. So, that is the situation now. CMT BSNL has told us that 4G services are likely to be launched in July. It is too long a period and the people are expecting BSNL to start its 4G services without further delay. And in fact, sufficient publicity is also coming in various media that BSNL is going to start its 4G service from March 1st, etc. It is not correct. So, BSNL should immediately launch its and the government, BSNL employees union has written a letter to the honorable minister, Mr. Ravi Shankar Prasad. After allotment of 4G spectrum, if sufficient working capital is not provided, how the company can launch its 4G service, but it is not being taken note of. But what I suspect, what we strongly, as a trade union, what we strongly suspect, the whole intention of the government in introducing the revival package is not exactly to revive BSNL, but to close it down as early as possible. Because through VRS, they have already in BSNL alone, they have retrenched. I will like to use the word retrenched. It is not voluntary retirement. Minister himself told, if BSNL employees do not voluntarily go on VRS, their retirement age will be reduced from 60 to 58. Minister himself told us, told us, told me. So, a threat was sent out. BSNL employees were forced to go on VRS in a large number, 80,000 employees. So, now, just like Air India, in 2018, the government of India announced the privatization of Air India, but there was no one to purchase, because there is a loan of Air India is having a debt burden of 50,000 crore rupees. So, together with that 50,000 crore liability, no entity wants to take over Air India. Again, revised offer has been made wherein almost the entire financial liability of Air India is going to be borne by government of India and other offers are being made. So, what I want to say, Air India has been made attractive for privatization. Similarly, implementation of VRS in BSNL is only intended to make BSNL attractive for future privatization. Mr. Ravi Shankar Prasad is making very beautiful announcements. BSNL, MTNL are our strategic assets. They will remain, government will strengthen, absolutely nothing. When government is out to dismantle the entire public sector of the country in BSNL, we are not prepared to accept the words of the minister that BSNL will remain. No, absolutely not. Now, the whole strategy of the government, they through VRS, they have already retrenched more than 50% of the workforce, which itself is an attraction for privatization. And through implementation, I mean launching of 4G service. And now you know, all the private operators have also raised their tariff, both call charges as well as data charges. Geo has raised, it's a tariff to the extent of 40%. And Vodafone idea and Airtel have raised their tariff to 40% to the extent of 45%. So, BSNL is also likely to fall in line. If not immediately, if not in one go, at least gradually BSNL is also likely to increase its tariff. So, through all this process implemented, I mean launching of 4G and raising of tariff. So, our whole apprehension is to, is that government will take BSNL out of the laws. Government will enable BSNL to start earning profit. Thereafter, immediately, government will go in for privatization of BSNL, undoubtedly. So, the whole task being faced by the trade unions in BSNL is that, yes, we want BSNL to exist as a viable, vibrant, profit making public sector company. In 2015, December, a devastating flood came in Chennai. All the private operators shut down their services because for fear of damage to their equipment, shut down their equipment, I mean equipment services. It was only BSNL. BSNL was not having even, there was no electricity supply. BSNL had no money, but they mobilized funds to procure diesel and BSNL's installations were running day and night and that is how support was given to the relief and rescue operations done by the government. This is BSNL. So, BSNL alone can serve the people. So, we want BSNL to remain as a vibrant public sector company and at the same time, we do not lose sight of the fact that the intention of the government is to dismantle the entire public sector of the country because that is the demand of the corporates, no public sector. Why BPCL is being sold? It is not a loss making company. It is a huge profit making company giving high returns to the government every year. It is being privatized. So, we do not lose sight of the fact that government will privatize BSNL also. So, our whole strategy is to see that on one side, yes, being the workforce, the workforce will do its best to see that BSNL is revived at the earliest. BSNL provides quality service to the public at affordable rate and at the same time, to the extent possible, we will try to see that BSNL remains as a public sector company. For that purpose, the left out employees and officers of BSNL alone cannot accomplish that task of defending BSNL as a public sector company. We have to join hands shoulder to shoulder. We have to join with the rest of the working class of India. So, just like the general strike which has taken place on 8th January, we will join hands with the rest of the working class of India and we will continue to carry on powerful struggles against the privatization policies of the Narendra Modi government and this is our idea.
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UCjFmkmzvMl5pwHgFVV7F5gw
TU 10/27 - 2020-21 PANINI CONTENDERS DRAFT PICKS BASKETBALL 1-BOX BREAK #21 RANDOM PACK*
* JOIN our group breaks on https://JaspysCaseBreaks.com/ * WATCH seven nights a week from 2p PT to 10p PT (5p ET-1a ET) on this channel! * VISIT our 3,000 sq. ft. shop seven days a week at 1402 Pacific Coast Highway, Hermosa Beach, CA from 11a to 8p! * FOLLOW us on Twitter and Instagram @JaspysBreaks https://twitter.com/JaspysBreaks https://instagram.com/JaspysBreaks * THANK YOU for watching and subscribing! * CONTACT us at JaspysCaseBreaks@gmail.com for any customer service related issues, media inquiries, advertising, questions, etc. If you haven't heard back from us in a few days or so, pop into the chat on the live stream and let us know!
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2020-10-28T08:59:14
2024-04-24T00:07:59
648
Pc_ir-wpbow
Hi everyone, Sean with jaspyscasebrakes.com here doing 2020-2021 Penumi Contender's draft picks basketball one box break random pack number 21 typically six spots sold randomize the names of the customers and the packs one through six and open up the packs based on which customer gets which pack but Matt bought all the spots. So he gets his own personal box. No randomizer is necessary Here are our boxes. You can see they're all marked RP for random packs And There you go, Matt So we're gonna roll dice to see which box we're gonna do We've got four boxes. So one two three or four if we end up With a five or a six. We'll reroll. So here we go Good luck. It's over here You can see just over the keyboard Say one So one with the box on top number one turn this back over here So there's number one These three will be for Random pack breaks 22 23 and 24 22 is in the store right now. Good luck, Matt. I've got my prospect list already opened up here Let's find you a top 10 prospect at least NBA drafts is next month just a couple weeks away Trey young campus ticket Jason Tatum campus ticket and Elijah Hughes, I believe is pretty decent 61 out of 75 Let's see where Elijah falls on the list Elijah Hughes 57th overall prospect 6 6 to 15 22 years old previously ranked 63rd. So he has moved up in the list feel Maladon Most boxes I've seen have at least one on-card auto That's typically like the better prospect or the lower numbered one These are short printed It's a fake auto, but they are very short printed Jaden McDaniels campus ID very cool Carl Anthony Towns campus ticket DeAndre Aten campus ticket and Mustafa Herron prospect ticket. He's not on the sports illustrated top 80 That doesn't mean he won't go Precious Ashua Devin Vossel 10th overall prospect on their list I Pack three Al Horford campus ticket Al Horford conference ticket to 99 and Ty Sean Alexander prospect ticket He is 61st overall rated prospect six foot four hundred ninety-five pounds twenty-two years old Previously not ranked so moving up the rankings Pack four something sleeping in here Matt Something's waiting Steph Curry campus ticket Lonzo ball and There you go James. Oh god James Weisman finals ticket four out of five Told you something was sleeping in here. There you go, dude Fortune favors the bold Number three overall prospects number one in my heart That's gonna get a picture after this Lamella ball playing the numbers game Isaac Acoro also top ten very nice very nice There we go Matt There we go I've got Nick and I have a hundred dollar bet on James Weisman's draft Feeling pretty confident. I'm thinking he's going to the Warriors and then they're gonna ring off like multiple titles in a row Devonte Graham campus ticket Lori Markin in campus ticket and Mason Jones conference ticket out of 99 so we're going from James Weisman at third To Mason Jones at 51st overall rated prospect Six foot five 200 pounds 22 years old previously ranked 69th. So moving up on the draft board. Oh be topping Also top ten Killiam Hayes top ten and pack six. Maybe it's another James Weisman probably Chris Paul Zion Kyrie Irving Campus ticket Clay Thompson campus ticket and Najee Marshall prospect ticket auto Najee Marshall 56th overall rated prospect Six foot seven 220 pounds 22 years old Previously ranked 59th So moving up a little bit Devon Vossel top ten pick RJ Hampton just outside of the top ten. I don't know why he moved down, but Anthony Edwards number one overall There you go That's your box Matt Congrats man. That was 2020 2021 Panini contenders draft picks basketball one box break random pack number 21 Where Matt bought the box himself very nice box Jasper's case breaks calm more in store random pack number 22 is in store now Jasper's case breaks calm. I'm Sean. Thanks for hanging out and I'll see you next time
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pc_ir-wpbow", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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2024 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT S 2 DOOR SARGE GREEN NEW GRILL 4K WALKAROUND 24J145
This 2024 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT S 2 DOOR HARD TOP IN SARGE GREEN FOR SALE IN FOND DU LAC OSHKOSH WISCONSIN 54935 is the vehicle we did walk around review of today. ORIGINAL WINDOW STICKER https://www.chrysler.com/hostd/windowsticker/getWindowStickerPdf.do?vin=1C4PJXANXRW165580 CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE! https://www.youtube.com/summitauto?sub_confirmation=1 Thank you for checking out this video of this 2024 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT S 2 DOOR HARD TOP IN SARGE GREEN FOR SALE IN FOND DU LAC OSHKOSH WISCONSIN 54935 If I helped you out in any way you can support my knowledge sharing cause with Super Thanks Button Above! ^|^|^|^|^|^|^|^ Remember to like, subscribe and share. https://www.summitauto.com/inventory/new-2024-jeep-wrangler-sport-s-4wd-2d-sport-utility-1c4pjxanxrw165580/ 920-921-0850 STOCK: 24J145 MSRP: $47,585 MILES: 12 MAKE: JEEP MODEL: WRANGLER VIN: 1C4PJXANXRW165580 PHONE: 920-921-0850 WEBSITE: www.SUMMITAUTO.com & TRUCKSON41.com LOCATION: FOND DU LAC OSHKOSH WISCONSIN, 54937 TRUCKS ON 41 * 2.0 Liter DOHC I4 Turbocharged Engine, 270 Horsepower* Two Door with 3-Piece Modular Hard Top* Sport S Package* 8 Speed Automatic Transmission* Automatic Transmission Center Console Shifter* 4x4 Floor Shifter Four Wheel Drive 4WD* Command-trac Part Time 4wd System 4x4* Selec-Speed Crawl Control* Reverse Backup Camera Rearview Camera* Start / Stop Technology Start/Stop* Driver Seat Height Adjuster* Dual Heated Seats* Black Ebony Cloth Seats* Bucket Seats* 2nd Row Bench Seating* Heated Power Mirrors* Electronic Stability Control Traction Control ESC* Nexen Roadian ATX 245/75 R17 Tires* Painted and Polished Aluminum Rims Premium Wheels* Four Wheel Disc Brakes* Gorilla Glass Windshield* LED Fog Lights* LED Headlights* LED Running Lights* 12.3" Uconnect 5 Touchscreen Radio* AM / FM Radio Tuner* Sirius/XM Satellite Radio Capabilities Sirius / XM* Offroad Pages With Temperature Guages, Pitch And Roll Display, and Drivetrain Display* SOS / Assist System* U Connect Hands Free Bluetooth Hands-Free Phone System Blue Tooth* Android Auto Compatible* Apple Car Play Compatible* Auxiliary MP3 Jack Portable Audio Connection* USB C Jack* USB Jack Portable Audio Connection* Enter-N-Go System Keyless Entry System* Keyless Entry with Factory Remote Start* Rear Window Defroster* Swing Open Rear Door with Manual Raise Glass* Adjustable Height Seatbelts* Driver and Passenger Front Air Bags* L.A.T.C.H. Child Safety System* Side Curtain Air Bags SRS Safety Restraint System* Heated Steering Wheel Multi-Function Steering Wheel Controls* Homelink System with Three Programmable Buttons for Garage Doors, Lighting Systems & Security Systems* Compass, Outside Temperature Display and Mileage Display* Factory Floormats* Air Conditioning AC* Cruise Control* Power Locks* Power Windows* Automatic Headlights Autolamp* Tilt/Telescope Steering Wheel* 3 Year / 36,000 Mile Remaining Factory Bumper to Bumper Warranty, Whichever comes first* 5 Year / 60,000 Mile Remaining Powertrain Factory Warranty, Whichever comes first* Sarge Green* Call Now! 1-(920)-921-0850 . Check out our Full inventory at www.SUMMITAUTO.com ! Summit Automotive Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin also Proudly Serving Oshkosh, Madison, Milwaukee, Sheboygan, Appleton, and Waupun is a family owned and operated dealership since 1959. We take great pride in our new and used car and truck center with vehicles to fit everyone's budget. We have ON THE SPOT FINANCING. BAD CREDIT OR GOOD CREDIT, we work with over 20 lenders to get you APPROVED AT THE MOST COMPETITIVE RATES. We provide AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION and NATIONWIDE DELIVERY OPTIONS. We are conveniently located on HWY 41 at EXIT 98, Hwy 151 at Military Rd. Exit . Just Look For The TRUCKS ON 41. Advertised price does not include, tax, title, registration and service fee.
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2023-12-19T06:09:40
2024-02-05T08:51:11
720
pC8yvO_SisQ
Hey, everybody, this is Brett, and today I'm super excited to go over this brand-new 2024 Jeep Wrangler 2-door Sport S package. This one has the 2-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine. It's paired up with the 8-speed automatic transmission. It is the Sport S package. It has the LED headlamp and lighting group. It also has the convenience group, which I'll show you in just a minute. And what it also has is the satin black grille. Yes, this is a Sport S package, and you do get the upgraded grille with this one when you go with the $325 option satin black grille. So that looks really good. These LED light group lights are a $1495 option. Let's take a quick look under the hood. Under the hood, you get the 2-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine. It puts out 270 horsepower, 295 foot-pounds of torque. Everything that you need to be concerned with is labeled in yellow, the oil dipstick, the power steering fluid, the windshield washer fluid, and the coolant there, as well as where you put the oil in. There is your battery. Here's the emission sticker. Like I was saying, this one has the satin black hood. It also has the LED lighting group, $1495 option. I'm going to turn those on at the end of the video. I'm also going to turn off all the lights inside the picture studio so that you can see just how bright that is. They got new wheels out for $2024 on the Sport S, get the painted and polished aluminum wheels. These are 17-inch wheels, and it has Nexon, Rode, and ATX tires. These are 245, 75-hour 17s, and I like these tires. They got a really cool sidewall pattern to them, kind of like rocks on there. That's pretty neat. A couple little Easter eggs, you get these seven slots up here as well as that grille. You get the Jeep climbing up the side. New for 2024, you get the windshield with the antenna in it, and then the trail-rated badges on both sides now, so it can take those doors off with the T-50 Torx bit. We did a video on taking your doors off. Now I'm going to show you the window sticker at the end of the video, so I'm going to finish my walk around here, and then it's also going to be linked in the description below. This is stock number 24J145 on our website. There's a link to this vehicle on our website in the description below, so definitely click that to see all the pricing and availability on this particular Sport S. Sarge Green is the color. PGG is the paint code. If you want to know where your paint codes are, it's right here on the VIN sticker. PGG is the paint code for Sarge Green. Inside the Sport S package gives you what Jeep calls black interior. I'm going to say it's dark charcoal. What do you think? Let me know in the comments below. This is the seat height adjuster, the lumbar, comes with factory floor mats. This is new for 2024. Gives you the Jeep and the Gladiator on there. Also auto headlamps, tilt telescopic steering wheel, power mirrors, power locks. Those mirrors are heated as well. You get this cloth dash trim. Let me know what you guys think about that. You get the gold kind of metal piece right there. I like that. I like the steering wheel as well. You get the gold stitching on that steering wheel. They've made this leather really. It's soft, but it feels more durable than the old steering wheels. Cruise controls, adaptive cruise controls, Bluetooth information center controls, audio controls in the back of the steering wheel. This one also comes stock with Gorilla Glass now, which is pretty cool. You get the 7-inch LCD display. I'm not going to go through the whole radio in the display. You get the new UConnect 5 12.3-inch touchscreen radio on this one. Everything is touchscreen. Everything is five times faster than the old radios, the 8.4 4C radio. Everything's very responsive, very quick. You can see you got Android Auto on there here, all your apps, media, comfort, all that good stuff. You can go to home. It comes with AMFM Sirius XM radio capabilities. This dash had to be redesigned when they came out with the bigger radio. You'll notice your air vents down here are very narrow. They used to be big round ones to either side of the radio, whether it was the 7-inch or the 8.4 touchscreen or the 5-inch. You get the updated top here, and it used to be one big piece, and now it's two separate ones. Down here, everything from here down though is pretty much the same as the 2023s. You get your heated seats, part of that convenience group, heated steering wheel controls, dual climate controls. You get the 4x4 shifter on the 4-speed automatic transmission. This one still has the flipper key with the remote start. Love that key fob. And then you can take a look at that cloth dash on the passenger side there. And the hard top, they're still very easy to get off. They've updated the map lights. So the map lights are right there, and they're also right there. They used to all be in a big cluster. And the new thing for 2024 as far as safety goes is you have side curtain airbags, even in the two-door Wrangler that is a new safety standard feature on the Wrangler. So I'm going to turn on all the lights, and we'll take a look around with all the lights off in the picture studio. And then we will finish off with taking a look at the original window sticker. I always like doing this just to show you how bright these lights are and how much of a value that these lights bring to the table for $1,495. Let me pause it right here. OK, so you can see just how bright those lights are. The one thing to note with the LED headlamp and fog lamp group is that it does not give you the LED running lights in the fenders. That's only on the Sahara Rubicon and Rubicon X and 392, of course, standard. But you can see just how nice and bright those lights are, how wide of a field that they illuminate. You also do not get LED tail lamps with the headlamp and fog lamp group. You still get the LED license plate lights right there. All right, let's take a look at the original window sticker. Here's the original window sticker. Feel free to pause this. I'm not going to go through everything, but most of it. You can see the 2024 Wrangler two-door Sport S4x4, the two-liter turbo eight-speed automatic transmission. Sarge greens color, they call it black interior cloth. I'm going to say charcoal. You get all your stuff right here is your standard equipment, and that's what I'm going to kind of glaze over. Sarge greens is your first optional equipment, which is 595, the customer preferred package of 22S, which is your Sport S package, is a $3,500 option. So that gives you the power heated mirrors. The premium wrapped steering wheel. The windshield with Corning Gorilla Glass, anti-lock four-wheel disc brakes. Deep tint, sunscreen windows, remote keyless entry, forward speed, forward collision warning, plus adaptive cruise control and advanced brake assist. Sun visors with illuminated vanity mirrors as well. The LED headlamp and fog lamp group is $14.95. You get the front LED fog lamps and LED premium reflector headlamps. Best value on the whole vehicle. Convenience group is $19.95. You get the 7-inch driver information digital cluster, the heated seats, the heated steering wheel, the front door passive entry and lock, or the enter and go system. Remote start system, air conditioning with automatic temperature control and the dual climate controls. Emergency assist calling. The eight-speed automatic transmission is a $2,500 value, and the black three-piece hardtop is $16.95. If you want to see how to get your hardtop off, we did a video on that that's in the description below. Satin black grille by Mopar is $325, and that gives you that updated grille. $245.75 all-terrain tires are $495, and the 17-inch by 7.5 aluminum wheels are $1,095. Total MSRP is $47,585 if you want to get your summit price, like I said, in the description below or in the upper right-hand part of the screen as a link to our website with all the rebates and incentives and pricing on this particular Jeep if it's still available. Three-to-36 bumper-to-bumper, five-year 60 powertrain. There is your fuel economy, and it's only rated for a rollover of three stars on these safety ratings. Anyways, that's pretty much everything on this one. I will show you the back real quick. Not a ton of room back here. Those seats fold down and up for obviously extra storage. You can also take these seats out. We did a demo on that as well. There's storage underneath here, spots for your door hinge, roof, and windshield bolts. You can take the hardtop off. Like I said, we did a video on that, and all these will be linked in the description below. Seven slots on the back of the door here, and then you get the JL badge with wheelbase, two-door, four-door, and overall length and water-forting. All right, that is everything on this particular Jeep. Thank you so much for checking out the video. Remember to like, subscribe, and share on the YouTube channel, and we are super excited to help you with this brand new 2024 Jeep Wrangler 2-Door Sport S in Sarge Green. And to see more pictures of this Jeep or one of other 550 new and used car-struck SCVs, minivans, Wranglers, you name it, we gotta go to the website right there, summitauto.com, full pictures and descriptions of every single vehicle, all at summitauto.com. And if you wanna check out more HD videos, you can go to youtube.com slash summitauto. Click the bell notifications, get updates on the videos I do each and every day, as well as having access to one of the largest catalogs of vehicle and Wrangler walk-arounds on YouTube. 9,000 videos and counting in almost and over 500 Wrangler videos. In fact, in a second, you will see a link to subscribe to my YouTube channel in the upper left, a link to all the Wrangler videos I've ever done in the upper right, a link to how to take your doors off your two-door Wrangler in the lower left and a link to how to take your hard top off your two-door Wrangler in the lower right. Click those, check us out. We're super excited to be offering the brand new 2024 Jeep Wrangler Sport S in Sarge Green Clearcoat. Thanks again for checking out the video. Remember to like, subscribe, and share on the YouTube channel. I really appreciate it. Thanks again.
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UCUp6Pd9fx8_UX7S38Ih_JqA
Report: Genomics and Society Working Group - Lisa Parker
February 6, 2017 - National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research More: https://www.genome.gov/27567611
null
2017-02-15T04:03:22
2024-02-05T06:21:02
1,637
PcwgYpDdqzA
Thank you very much and it is indeed the right report. I was sitting back there panicking because the file was misnamed but this this is it. This is 2017. So indeed, let's get the screen, sorry. Yes, so these are indeed the members of our working group and we have since I last reported three new members including Jeff Botkin, Sandra Lee and Melanie Myers and Rudy had just introduced those of our working group who are also on council. The website for our working group obviously describes our charges and I'll organize today's report in relation to these responsibilities. The first is to provide input about the LC research program and its research priorities and in this regard we reviewed three aspects of the LC research portfolio. Embedded LC research, the duration of our one projects and the relationship of LC and health services research. I will also report on a couple of steps that we took as a group to encourage high quality applications to the research program. In my last report I talked about the fact that the group had articulated criteria or features of projects indicating when embedded research is warranted or is most appropriate. We used these criteria to review embedded LC research that's research where an LC issues, ethical, legal and social issues are incorporated into the design and conduct of a larger project or initiative. This review included looking at, I'll go back, yeah, included examining CSER to which the LC research program contributes approximately $500,000 per year and NSITE, a program to which it makes actually no financial contribution. We also reviewed the Emerge Network and the LC component of its work across its three phases. We determined that the majority of embedded research has been successful and has afforded positive return on the investment of the LC program funds and the time and the effort of the LC community researchers and program staff. We recommend that embedded research projects continue to be monitored for the effective functioning within the larger research project as well as their impact and productivity beyond the host project. To this end we suggest that future discussion of the working group might usefully explore development of metrics to evaluate the impact and productivity of embedded research because metrics that are employed in other contexts may not fully capture the value of this embedded research. This value may include its contribution to developing infrastructure for future LC research or its influence in both the LC community and the genomic research and clinical practice communities. Metrics employing observational and narrative approaches that note changes over time in practices and that note the experience of project investigators may capture impact alongside numerical measures like the number of publications. The working group also stressed that the need for the quality of proposed embedded research projects to be consistently incorporated into the overall priority score during peer review. We were asked to review the duration of R01 projects and discuss the appropriate period for such R01s. The NHGRI default is to fund R01s for three years with limited exception for longer awards. The rationale for this three year default is the fast paced nature of the field and the constantly changing technology. The question posed to us was whether this is an appropriate default for LC R01s. We discussed the circumstances that might justify a longer award period such as longitudinal or multi-site studies and the startup curve of new investigators. After reviewing the portfolio, the working group recommends that the project period should correspond to the proposed research question and methods and that applicants should be encouraged to discuss the appropriate peer project length with program staff prior to submission. And we noted that this may be especially important for new investigators in order to avoid there being a sense of or a reality of an in-crowd that's in the know and realizes that there could be exceptions to the apparent three-year rule. With the encouragement of council, we continued to explore the question of the appropriate relationship between LC research and health services research. While health services research is traditionally a large-scale effort requiring multi-year commitments and is thus expensive, there are topics we believe in health services research that have significant LC impact components and implications. Our discussion elucidated that health services research could provide data that call for normative analysis or that are needed to refine or strengthen the empirical components of LC study. We noted that conceptual research may inform or clarify components of health services research and that health services research embedded research projects may encourage the collection of longitudinal data with LC input into research questions and study design, thereby catalyzing subsequent LC research to address important normative issues that require longitudinal data to be collected for us to engage in that analysis. We recommend that the Division of Genomics and Society should promote health services research and LC research in other institutes and centers with other divisions and within the LC research program when this is appropriate and possible. We also recommend that the working group and LC research staff might usefully continue to discuss ways to encourage LC research on findings from health services research and projects that conceptualize health services issues and analyze their normative foundations and implications. To help encourage high quality applications from investigators, including those who are not familiar with grant writing and the process of NIH grant review, the working group encouraged LC program staff to post to the program's website sample applications and summary statements. This has been done as you can see and you can go there and visit and read and we are very grateful to the generous investigators who shared their applications and the summary statements they received. We hope that this effort may expand the pool of applicants as well as encourage those who already consider themselves to be members of the LC community. Then further, to expand that community, members of the working group proposed and participated in panels at the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities, the main bioethics LC oriented professional society meeting, and we discussed activities of the LC research program. We also are currently revising an article explaining the content, methods, and value of empirical, normative, and conceptual LC research with the intent of better informing our colleagues, specifically genomic scientists, about what we do, and why. The group also plans to publish announcements or explainers about the LC research program at professional and multidisciplinary meetings and in professional society newsletters. Now, finally, I will report on our activities in response to the charge that the working group should identify emerging issues or gaps in knowledge related to the ever-changing landscape of genomics and genomic medicine, as well as to find points of potential synergy between NHGRI and other institutes and organizations. The Precision Medicine Initiative presents opportunities for synergistic activities of NHGRI and leads us to identify gaps in knowledge and new issues warranting LC research. We were pleased to be informed of developments in the early days of the PMI by Joni Ruder, Director of the Division of Programs and Strategic Implementation of the PMI, and in turn, the working group offered its interdisciplinary expertise to assist in the initiative's design and launch. As many of you know, we drafted a memo in 2015 that was subsequently endorsed by Council urging that the PMI attend to issues of ethical, legal, and social import. In December of 2016, Genetics and Medicine published a commentary by the working group, which is an extension of that memo demonstrating the need for LC research in relation to the activities of the PMIs, all of us research program, and outlining an agenda for potential PMI-related LC research. The working group stressed that additional resources and additional research are needed because the PMI presents issues that are in addition to those already represented not only in the LC research portfolio, but also represented by the foci of the Centers for Excellence in LC research. On behalf of the working group, I attended the Sears annual meeting this past fall, and the range of issues being addressed within those Centers, which is illustrated only partially on this slide, demonstrates that the field is thriving and responding to emerging technologies and scientific questions, and is anticipating new issues and opportunities. Among those Centers coming to the end of their funding as Sears, discussion included ways of sustaining the infrastructure that they have built, and then those retiring or transitioning Sears and new Sears also discussed attention to training new LC investigators, increasing diversity among those investigators, and tracking the success of their increasingly diverse career paths. We note that many LC investigators or trainees, I should say, like other trainees within NIH, are not necessarily going into the typical tenure track positions, but are infiltrating and spreading LC attention in a variety of career paths. So to conclude, oh, and I will also point out that this image, which I took from Columbia's newsletter, which I happened to run across because they did a nice little feature blurb about the PMI commentary the working group had done. Anyway, I think it's a lovely bridge there of the DNA between the transitioning and retiring centers and down to the new ones. So we have the retirees in italics above and those new folks coming in. To conclude, I'd like to express the enthusiasm of the GSWG for the work of the division and of the LC research program and recognize the vibrant activity of the whole field, the interdisciplinary field of LC investigators, and especially the vast substantive and geographic impact of the LC research program. To this end, I wanted to point, as Eric did earlier today, to the fourth LC Congress that will be held in Connecticut in June. As he said, 190 proposals were submitted from 68 institutions and these included 28 international submissions representing 10 countries outside the US. So finally, I would like to thank the staff of the division and the LC research program and I will attempt to address your questions if I may. Thank you, Lisa. Questions? These are other things. Yes. Yeah, thanks, Lisa. Very interesting. I want to go back to one of your earlier slides where you talked about the need to develop metrics or to think more about metrics for the LC field. And at the same time, you made comments to the extent that the working group had assessed the embedded program to be successful. So I want to just hear what your, how the group looked at metrics in that particular context to make that determination. Right. So I think we, our assessment of success was based in large measure on metrics that are traditionally used of productivity in terms of publications, impact. But I, and I'll speak personally, having served on the advisory group to emerge the scientific advisory panel and then representing some of what I witnessed across three phases there to the working group and also talked about, and hence my reference to a narrative approach, the kinds of statements that investigators, and by that I mean, you know, scientists, not necessarily the LC investigators, the kinds of statements that they would make about the impact that the LC projects had on their work and how they had to change practices or were brought up short by a finding of some of the LC research and, and again, had to change practices or think about things in a, in a different way. And I think that it, in looking back, were, you know, at reviewing existing or completed embedded research, it was a combination of publications, citations, you know, public impact and, and references of this embedded research, but we also began to get a hint of, we thought that was really important, too. We're investigators in a meeting or, you know, not exactly in private, but not out in the published literature. We're saying, hey, this changed what we did. And in some ways we think that, that that is, I won't say more important, but at least as important as some of the articles, you know, that came out of, you know, best practices that emerged, emerged from Emerge or from Cesar or, or others. Yeah. I'd just like to add to that as somebody who worked on a Cesar project for the last five years at UNC, because I think equally important. Well, first of all, I really think that metrics, that this is really a tremendous opportunity to think about metrics in a, in a little bit more systematic way. I certainly agree with you about some of them, but, but I think the other really important part of this is the bidirectionality of the learning and influence and so on, because I think these opportunities with Emerge and Cesar and Insight provide something for LC researchers that they may or may not have experienced in the past. It's a, it's a great opportunity to be part of a team to, you know, go deeply into understanding what happens, you know, between collecting specimens and, you know, getting a final judgment about pathogenicity. So for me personally, and I think for a lot of people I've interacted with that, that those opportunities would not have happened, except in the instance where an investigator would, would be, you know, generous about inviting somebody into the project. So this was mandated, these, these embedded efforts. And, and so if we move forward with these kinds of things, I think there's really not such difficult ways to develop assessment of lessons learned on all sides. And two comments in response. One is that about the requirement that these, in some cases there was this requirement for an embedded project and we speak to the importance of having good solid peer review of those projects that are proposed, or if they're not specific standalone projects, the challenge and yet the importance of being able to evaluate the quality of what's proposed if it's woven through a scientific project or a clinical implementation project. There I think some of the metrics for reviewing a good project are very much the same as in the LC study section with the same, you know, positives of that and challenges of that. But I think there, I think the metrics maybe are a little bit more clear. I think looking back to try to measure impact is harder and, or at least is more unusual. We don't have stated metrics for that except for, you know, counting numbers of publications and citations. And it was very interesting. One of the panels at the American Society of Bioethics and Humanities, there were some, as I mentioned, there were how-to panels about the LC research program and talk to program staff and a little bit of cheerleading and a lot of education about that to people who weren't necessarily in the know. There was also a, I thought, terrific panel that was really intellectually substantive wrestling with the question that I think the field broadly of LC, bioethics, health law, so on, has wrestled with for a long time of, you know, do the ethicists become handmaidens to a project? Is there a risk of co-optation? How can there be a good collaboration that's really, as you say, bi-directional and mutually informative on this spectrum from doing the bidding of and reviewing consent forms to being the ethics police, neither of which do LC investigators want to be doing. What is the appropriate balance and especially the appropriate distance and the appropriate embeddedness? And it was truly one of the, well it was a very good discussion, I think, at that meeting. And I think catalyzing that discussion in itself is a very valuable thing for embedded research to have done. Shanita. Along those lines, I wondered if you could talk about, talk more about the manuscript that's under development, about normative research and how that fits within the portfolio. Right. So this manuscript in development, which you may have seen some, at least notes on or draft of, but not everyone did, it is born of attempting to articulate within the working group, but for an audience outside the working group, of what we mean by normative and what mean we mean by conceptual research. Pamela Sankar, our former chair and I sat down and we're working on a draft of this to pass back to our colleagues and realized that Pamela has always thought of normative and conceptual as being very, very similar and I, in my draft, was teasing the two apart. And suggesting that there's more of a meaning-making aspect of the conceptual and more of a prescriptive or analysis of values, descriptive analysis of values or prescriptive based on values recommendation, claim, that was the normative side. And so one aspect of this manuscript is to talk about those two different types of research. We also wrestle with the challenge that normative and conceptual research can be characterized as I just did in terms of what I'd call its content, but also its methodology and that it's different from laboratory science, epidemiology or empirical bioethics of doing a survey or doing a qualitative study of preferences or values or perspectives or uptake of a genetic test that it may involve legal analysis, normative analysis, and I'll go and that it may involve staking a claim in the beginning. Some scientists might say it's a matter of assuming what you want to prove, which is heresy, but the research then is does my claim stand up to real critical scrutiny and argument, sometimes argument on a panel, sometimes sitting and thinking very hard as a philosopher or as an ethicist or doing historical analysis to see whether that claim can be supported and trying to explain those sorts of issues for the benefit of people who, I'm a philosopher who asked me how do you do research if you don't collect any data? How do you get to be a professor? To explain to folks who think of research solely in terms of data collection and analysis solely, but that's the methodology, that is the goal of the paper and it will also and one reason it's been delayed is we've realized we also need to talk about that norm of empirical research and then go on and talk about what we consider to be distinctive. Thank you. One of the questions I had and maybe I may enlist Jay to comment on this, I mean it relates to the paper you and Pamela wrote in Genetics and Medicine about precision medicine initiative, Jay was on the original working group. I thought maybe you said it but I missed it, that you've given that paper I guess to one of the one of the major program directors there. Has that gotten traction in terms of any real programmatic development as part of the program? I don't know how much was actually written about if anything and think it was one of the disappointments is that the working group really never dealt very much with LC-like research within PMI, is that a fair, is that a fair statement Jay, pretty much, so I'm just curious is there any traction, any real traction as opposed to just being aware of your paper? Right, because it's the second time they've been given this because I gave the original letter from Doris Bye Council to the then leadership. Yes, so one point of clarification, it would not be accurate to say that it's a paper that Pamela and I wrote. Oh great, but you're an author. It's an artifact of where you where you publish that you get to list two names. So it is a product of the working group discussion and the real question though about is there traction? I think there is and there's been some discussion of it, however I don't think there's been discussion that I've heard from the people we'd really like to hear discussing it, working group and so on. I would also suggest that if I remember correctly December 6th or December 16th was not the best time between and events of the fall and events of December of holidays and so on to have kind of that kind of discussion taken up. I think there were a lot of distractions but I we are hopeful and we are going to be discussing. We have a working group call coming up this Friday and we'll be talking about what we can do to try to have the the agenda that we sketched. I mean it's not a point-by-point this is what should be done but trying to characterize a research agenda. We're going to talk about how to try to increase its traction or its impact. Thank you very much. Thank you. So we had kind of a late lunch break on the other hand the cafeteria is going to close upstairs but let's be respectful of Dr. Bianchi's time because she's here to speak to you. Can I ask people how fast they can get up the elevator back five minutes? Take the other elevator. I can lead a charge up the stairs. Can we be back in five minutes please? Alright. I'm going to break.
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UCtKSLA4sBvp4gU-NIGFEQgg
Plus, moins et égal - More, Less, and Equal (French)
Tu peux aider un enfant à apprendre sur plus, moins , et égal avec cette activité de mathématiques. Tu peux mettre deux petits groupes d’objets devant l’enfant et demander, « est-ce que le second groupe est plus,moins, ou égal au premier groupe ? » Enseigner pour la vie est un mouvement de personnes qui partagent leurs connaissances pour améliorer l’éducation de nos enfants et créer l’espérance dans le monde. French translation and narration by Janane Zayat. You can help a child learn about more, less, and equal with this math activity. You can place two small groups of objects in front of the child, and ask, "Is the second group more, less, or equal to the first group?" Teach for Life is a global movement of people sharing knowledge to better educate our children and create hope for the world. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TeachforLifeICT/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/teachforlife_ Instagram: https://instagram.com/_teach4life_ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/teachforlifeICT/
[ "pre k", "teaching", "education", "teach for life" ]
2020-05-13T15:03:44
2024-02-15T16:18:05
87
Pc3ZD2DjRgw
Pour aider un enfant à apprendre plus, moins et égale, tu peux jouer un jeu avec des petits objets. Tu peux mettre un petit groupe d'objets devant l'enfant et ils peuvent les compter. Ensuite, tu peux mettre un autre groupe de petits objets et demander à l'enfant, « Est-ce que ce groupe est plus, moins ou égale au premier ? » L'enfant peut compter les objets et donner sa réponse. Pour aider l'enfant à apprendre, tu peux faire le second groupe plus, des fois moins et des fois égale au premier groupe. Comprendre plus, moins ou égale aide à préparer l'enfant à apprendre à ajouter et à soustraire.
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UCcoMAyqHdAfLPD-1hAQ2r6A
WHY I USE STRAPS TO DEADLIFT
FOLLOW MY GAMING CHANNEL- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWgppO0DXoxz4XE0TrhtzCw?view_as=subscriber -[GET MY PROGRAMS] http://kizentraining.com/ -[Check My Fav Reebok Gear] http://bit.ly/2tS11xj -Business inquiries: silentmike95@gmail.com -FOllOW ME! SNAP: silentmik3 INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/silentmikke/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/silentmikke FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/Silent-Mike-1074791212573124/ -Edited by: Connor O'Neal INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/connoroneal/?hl=en
[ "using lifting straps", "lifting straps for deadlift", "deadlifting straps", "why to use straps", "deadlifting strap", "silent mike deadlift", "untamed strength" ]
2017-09-07T16:00:10
2024-02-14T18:47:57
765
pCUyiJJP1qw
He's in the music video with him? So good. Chapa! Chapa! Come sponsor your boy. What edge of a cage are you kids? Are you kids listening to Little Yachty? Are you kids thumping that Kanye West? This is artistry. If you saw him perform, it takes his artistry to a thousand. Level nine thousand, as these kids say. Thank you both very much. People always ask why you use straps so frequently. Yeah. Like I'm a fucking cheater just because I'm using straps and I'm pulling sumo. Fucking haters. So, a lot of related questions that will tie around. A lot of people ask me like oh this hurts or oh this happens when I lift. What do I do? Hip hurts when I squat. Shoulder hurts when I bench. Whatever. And with all this stuff you have to start to look at what may be causing it. So when I first tweaked my back, I don't know, two years ago I started to analyze what could be possibly happening. So I was doing very high volume deadlifts. Conventional and sumo. A very hip dominant low back dominant squat. And I was using the same grip over and over on a deadlift. And what can happen, you'll see sometimes, is kind of a helicopter factor. Sometimes people misweights doing this in the deadlift. But if not, it's naturally easier to lock in this overhand lat than it is the underhand lat. And so whether I'm thinking about it or not, I think I was repeatedly pulling over 500 pounds very slightly like this. And of course what happened, my lower right back started to hurt. So in my off season, I started to use straps to keep it symmetrical. When it goes into prep mode, I'll probably start to alternate sets, get ambidextrous, bidextrous. It's a spectrum of grips. And I've never had a grip issue. So if you've had a grip issue, you've got to just the straps. But I used straps for, I don't know, three months. And then I had a three month break because my back hurt. And then I just did an eight week prep, no straps. And I pulled the 705 and grip was the least of my worries. So for me, I'm really not worried about it. If and when I decide to prep for a meet, I'll go barehanded for eight to 16 weeks. And I'll have zero issues with my grip. Another common question, how do I train my grip if you do have grip issues? All accessory work, I suggest doing barehanded. All work we ever do, squat, bench, dead, overhead, anything. People say white knuckles. But you're just squeezing the bar as hard as you can, trying to juice that bar as hard as you freaking can. And then the other thing, if you have mega issues, which we've done with a couple of the guys I coach, Dan, and even Smokey a little bit. At the top of your deadlift, every single rep, if not just the last rep, if you're doing higher reps, hold the set, hold the deadlift lockout strong, tight core, flex knees, flex glutes for five seconds. Every single deadlift dead. Grip is very specific. All lifting and strength is specific, but grip is very specific. So you want to get strong in that deadlift position with whatever grip you plan to pull your heavy deadlift with. Don't eat a meal yet. It's carbless, keyed up. Fasted. The starvation bench press workout. Feeling gravy, bro. I mentioned it's Michael Jackson's birthday? No. Do you even care? Greatest performer to ever live. Inspired much of my dancing. Trope of you guys are following me on Instagram. I've been trying to portray a little more of my hipstone life for you guys. Dang, I had a breath. The bench press might be on a breath. Headin' to New York. This will be the last little vloggerouski I had entertained for a little while. Headin' to New York for a week. Gonna do some laundry pack up, headin' tomorrow. Then I come back for it. Come back for a day or two. Then off to LA. Findin' the groove. A1. If you were tan, you'd be able to see that. Fashion goes in rotations. In the 1400s, pale skin was in. You think it's gonna swing back around? Trans-setting, bro. 2020, it's gonna swing back around. True blood, me, the 1400s. Go ahead and film the moist man. Rules for the strict overhead. Competition rules. Question. So you have to, like any of the movements, when you walk it out, the bar has to be motionless. So you can't step back and press as you're walking backwards. The bar can hover, it can float. It doesn't have to touch your collar bones, but it can. It has to be below your chin. Sorry, Doc, I got a real shoulder issue. It has to be below your chin. And then your knees have to be locked out. So you can never ever bend your knees at all. Your hips, you can have horizontal displacement of hips. So when you see me press like hips like this, so you're allowed to do that all you want. There can be no upward and then downward motion of the bar. So if you're here and you, like, and then bounce down like that, it doesn't count. But you can have that like stretch reflex bounce that I use where you're here and then it kind of goes down and up. You're allowed to do that. The rules for lean back, they're kind of, I don't know how strictly they're enforced. I've done one before because it's really hard to see. But the plane of the front of your shoulder cannot go past the plane of your butt. So when you're leaning back like that. So you can't be way back like this. So there's side judges for that. And then as you walk down, head over. Parallel is technically hitting lower knee, but it's all up to this human's cough. Yeah, yeah. Do some inclines. And then back biceps. Call her a day, find some food. Now I'm going to go stream Madden on our new gaming channel. I'm looking for approval from Connor. Yeah. If you guys want to check that out, we'll throw it in the description. I've played games my whole life. Back to the Nintendo NES system. A lot of time on N64. Spent a good amount of time on Xbox. When Halo came out, I was really, really into Halo up until about Halo 3. Took a little break from it. Then played a little bit of Call of Duty, Black Ops 1 and 2. Another little break. And then two years ago, I got Xbox One. Got really into Black Ops 3. Played a little bit of Infinite Warfare. But recently got a PlayStation. And we will be jamming on Call of Duty World War 2 when it drops. I have one live stream up on the channel right now. Hopefully a couple more by the time this drops. Although it's not available yet, that I played the Beta. I may play some Madden. I'm a 2K guy a little bit. But Call of Duty is my main jammer. Check it out below. Comment what you think I should name the channel. And also comment favorite games you guys like to play or would like to see me play. Here you go. As we talked about, working my way back into the volume. Frequency is fairly low. Bench in twice a week. Overhead once or twice. Squats I just started doing twice a week again. Squats once a week. Going to New York. Hopefully going to get at least three training days there. I'm going for about six days. What are we talking about? What are you talking about? Feeling pretty good. Back's feeling good. Quad's feeling decent. Excited to put it into power. Looking back into shape. Diets locked in. Feeling leaner. Still about 212, 210. But about my leanest. I've been at that weight. That's why I use straps. That's why you guys can train your fucking grip. Appreciate you guys. I'm going to go get some food. Sleep pack. And I'll see you in the Big Apple. The city that never sleeps. The city that Patrick Ewing built. And you know who Patrick Ewing is. Goddamnit.
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UC2RbTnQ9sr6r1FgbFKf-fOA
Boys And Girls Hit The Rink For Day 2 Of U18 Curling Nationals
[ "Lakeland Public Television", "LPTV", "PBS", "Bemidji", "Minnesota", "MN" ]
2018-02-24T05:30:03
2024-02-05T16:24:45
69
Pc1CZ0_hHE8
Day two of the U18 Curling National Championships boys action. Jonathan Gosvig taking on team Kepke Gosvig with the hammer here. Lands it right in the house for a point. They would go fall for they would go fall in this one team fence and looking to start three and no taking on team Gardner Riley fence in the hammer and he delivers inside the 8 for one. They would win 6-3. They make it four no with the night cap win 11-1 team. Gosvig though falls in a close one at five to two girls also an easy start with team Yovaro to skip. Leah throwing the hammer here and look at this. The triple takeout two points. They go on to win 6-3 next up team Hoover. They're playing team corn over team Holler sorry and look at this throw. Emily the takeout she lands five rocks in the house for the end. They though would lose in a close one 10-8. The two actually met earlier in the morning. Team Holler with the advantage 8 to nothing. If you enjoyed this segment of Lakeland news, please give us a tax deductible contribution to Lakeland PBS.
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UCkY5L8JYwx7BT0cOXYZX_dw
Discussing #SecureNorth Protests | THE BREAKFAST
Ibrahim Hussain Abdulkarim, M.D Easygis Limited and Mustapha Bulama, Editorial Cartoonist Daily Trust Newspaper joined us to discuss. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Watch More: https://bit.ly/2KLQxbI Watch PlusTV Africa Lifestyle: https://cutt.ly/tbdOHzQ Watch via our Website: https://plustvafrica.com/live-tv Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PlusTVAfrika/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/plustvafrica/ Tweet us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PlusTVAfrica Comment on Whatsapp: http://ow.ly/d4kQ50pT4Bt #PlusTVAfrica #TheBreakfast
[ "News", "Politics", "Nigeria", "Africa", "Plus TV Africa", "Plus TV", "Plus", "Plus TV Nigeria", "Plus Television", "Plus TV News", "Justin Akadonye", "Osarogie Ogbonmwan", "Top News", "news", "trending", "destiny momoh", "mercy ebokpo", "adebanke odunuyi", "channels news", "arise tv", "legit news", "tvc news", "BBC", "CNN", "BBC news", "CNN news", "latest news", "breaking news", "buhari", "osinbajo", "Destiny Momoh", "channels", "tvc", "al jazeera", "news central", "arise news" ]
2021-12-16T12:39:01
2024-02-05T06:26:18
2,125
pcKSVqlekeQ
Today I am standing as a mother, a wife, a friend. Today I lost someone, very dear to me, raped by eight men, killed, beat yourself to a kiss, for crying out loud. Have we done to you, this government? I say to good luck, Jonathan Abelli. Thank you for being a good man. It is now, we are realizing, that you are such a very nice honest man. Thank you, good luck, Jonathan Abelli. Tomorrow if you come up, we will vote you. BAPAA, YOU ARE THE ONE. I say to good luck, Jonathan Abelli. Thank you for being a good man. It is now, we are realizing, that you are such a very nice honest man. Thank you, good luck, Jonathan Abelli. Tomorrow if you come up, we will vote you. నికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికికిక some of the protestors who came in large number, no fewer than five protestors and two journalists were arrested. The protesters under the ages of the north-south alliance and take-it-back movement converged on the medical and health union secretariat in Abuja. The labor leaders to join in the campaign in demanding an end to the killing by bandits. We have joining us this morning two gentlemen, one from Kaduna, Mustafa Bulama, a journalist and editorial cartoonist or the Daily Trust newspaper. Thank you Mustafa for joining us. Alright, we also have Ibrahim Hussein Abdul Karim, he's the MD, AZGIS Limited. He is joining us via Zoom from Abuja. Let me start with you Mustafa. The secure north is bleeding protest that started sometime on Wednesday and lots of people were reportedly arrested and journalists too were also arrested in the process. Can you give us a background on what really happened at that particular protest? Mustafa, can you hear us? Alright, let's bring Ibrahim Hussein Abdul Karim, he's the MD, AZGIS Limited from Zoom. Ibrahim, can you hear us? Alright, let's talk about this killing. It's been going on for quite some time now. Indeed, if you check the pages of newspapers this morning, what you see is a banditry insurgency. And we even hear that farmers are even paying to harvest jack crops in some parts of the north. What's the situation and what exactly are your thoughts concerning all of that? The situation is really pathetic. There is nobody that will think of by the start of the year or by the start of the moment in the first century. And I would think this low at the moment that we see that the best thing that we can have is democracy, people for government for the people. And there's a moment that we see government supposed to be more close to people than before. This kind of system to now perhaps like this in front of everybody with all the structures that we have. I think it's a failure that comes from the weak institutions that we have. At least we at least have started eroding and then everybody feels it's comfortable, everybody sees it's okay. If you have your money, you just pick your children and take them abroad. You are safe, you are abroad. If you have everything, you just allow the whole system to keep on decay. So I think what really happened is that some of the institutions like the religious institutions are left out of the system, the traditional caste system are not performing anything. They don't even have a role in their constitution or what this has to do. So I think this is what really creates that vehicle. And then the level of education that was dropping and the elementary issue is coming up everywhere. And then where it starts with the IVPs and people are seeing the bombs coming up and then people are losing their families. Nobody thought of to put up a solution, something to now fight over and do a projection. If we have this number of people outside not doing anything, definitely something is going to come up in the next five years, the next thing. Or because actually we have leadership and the system that people are not solving problems. If you can look at Nigeria, for example, it's just like a Lagos. A Lagos having a build-up since 1970 is 1970, 1980 is up to today. We have the same problem with Lagos. If you look at the ASU that will not strike today or tomorrow. If you read out what they are saying and what they want, why they want to strike. And you pick up a newspaper of 1980s and then the 90s and read what why ASU are going to strike. It's the same thing that they are complaining. The same enable all structure. So actually I think we so much relaxed and then we turn our political system not to look for people that have competence. We are just looking for people that belongs to our tribe and people that belongs to our religion and other things like that. So to lack of that nationalistic ideologies and then vision and mission for a nation to move forward really kill everything. So when people reach a level that they don't have anything as hope for them to what they will do, then they will solve health. And then the issue of the bandit religious are escalated because the people that are in charge of what they are supposed to do are not taking care of. The masses, for example, there is different between ruling and leadership. Leadership is used to lead people to exactly why you want them to go, why they want to go to. But in the government that we have after the previous government, at least the input of any energy, any relationship between them and the people so that they can secure the whole system. And then up here in the north, I think we have a lot of decay not only in terms of a security issue only but our moral values drop seriously down and we allow everything to go. And then we start to realize that now we have already shot ourselves with the foot. If you see the people are marrobing and killing people in the name of this bandit, they are northerners. They are people from maybe the same tribe or same religion with the people that are killing and also forward really are killing the poor in the north. So the killing is something that is very horrific. And nobody will understand it unless when you are staying here on the north. There is no any family in the north that is not affected with this banditry and this crime. Because these criminals, some of them are collecting rams on maybe they are doing it for some gain. Some are just going into villages and just kill people. If you even ask them why they even killing people and burning their families and just like that, there is no even any answer to that. So this is the highest level of terrorism. This is the anything that you can think of that how can a human being go to this loop. So I always tell people that when we started the hashtag still north, we realized that we just have to come together. We have a movement that will come together. So we actually calling people to come together and let's do it ourselves. We don't have to rely on the government to do everything for us we suppose to partner. We are government. We are the one that will give the legitimate people any government to work. And we can even withdraw our legitimacy if we feel the government is knocking because the ultimate goal for any government is for them to protect lives and property. So I think that we have to go beyond the hashtag. The hashtag and protest is just for us to register our grievances. But we have to organize our people. We have to find a way where we can make our system work, make the north work because it's not pulling the whole nation down. Not really because they don't know what to do but because they don't have leadership. They don't have leadership from their houses. They don't have leadership from their immediate community and they don't have leadership in their schools. And then drugs have already entered everywhere and then we are facing the price now and we are suffering from what we have created and the most that we have created ourselves. All right, let's see if we can bring Mustafa Bulma. Mustafa, can you hear us? Hello Mustafa. Okay, so I probably just, you know, change the question then to you back now. Now there are some quotas that are saying following the protest that's happened. I mean, that's the hashtag as much as you're saying that we need to move beyond the hashtag. But of course you would also want to agree with me that protest is a tool that has been used by different climes and people in different countries to demand from the government good governance and what have you. The lease will be endless. Now, some people are saying that the north is secure, that everything is perfect. I mean, the president has provided so much security and all of that that this could just be, you know, elements, some persons who are trying to run down the administration of president Mohammed Buhari. I'd like to find out from you. Yeah, you leave in that particular axis and I'm sure that you are in tune with what's going on. What is the situation with or not? Is it secure? Is it safe? What is going on? True picture of it. Far, far, far away from that nobody was said to not secure. There is nobody in the north being a governor, being a businessman, being just a local person driving your car, being one of the lowest of the lowest of the society. Nobody, even the traditional council leaders are being kidnapped. Nobody will tell you that they are not secure. There is nobody. Even the people that are in government, none of them can comment on television and tell you that they are not secure. They knew that they were in trouble and that it's not secure. But let me just address a little bit. It's the system that they have created and all the insecurity we have seen. No matter how government wants to solve the problem, they need the buy-in of the people. And they cannot buy, get that buy-in from people unless the government shows it on the side of the government, show empathy, talk to people, bring them closer, tell them what you are doing. Because the people are the ones that are supposed to give you the intel that you need for you to take care of the problem that we see and the flow. So government alone cannot work, government has to work with the people. Those people must get that confidence from government because if you now tell government that this person that I know in my area is a bandit, for example, or he belongs to a social place, then the guy who holds maybe will come, arrest the person. In two days, three days, you have to see that person out of the, out of the government decision. So immediately he comes, first the first person that he is going to attack is what? He is going to attack that person that reported him. So people are not willing to give because there is not any custody protection for anybody that is giving information to like being an informal government. So out of that one, then these people are not being, when we started in Kathina, for example, in the early days, during the of this project, secretary issues and things like that, that started to come up, there is nobody that is being punished. There is no system that is put in place to stop that and it's continued from Kathina to Jaws to Theraba to a lot of places having the small sectorist problem and then people start to excite, people start to align themselves with their tribe and then nobody is seen it as a danger. If people are fighting of tribe for a very long time, you will be actually that one day they will start to fight on their religious lines and once they started, the whole system will break down on them. Actives always tell people what I'm talking about. Justice and peace, just like twins brothers or twin sisters, they live and work and act together. Any place you see justice, you always see peace. And then without justice and peace, you cannot get prosperity. What we miss in this nation is that we don't have that clear vision of people that will understand that there is a problem. If you accept the problem, if you go on television and say there is no problem in the north and the north is secured, that means you are seriously undermining exactly what is happening. If you fail, you can fail as a leader. All right, thank you, Brahim. We will still get back to you on turning all of those issues that you have raised. But let's bring Mustafa Bullam right now. Mustafa, you are in Kaduna State. Can you bring us up to speed concerning the issues in Niger State? We here report from Bandit's collecting levies. Then there's been several attacks along the Kaduna-Abuja expressway. What exactly is going on right now? Are the protests also holding in Kaduna? All right, thank you for having me. The problem I think we are having here is the fact that the D.S.S. people coming out to intimidate people. Police are coming with these people. What we call the D.S.S. addition statement telling people to be careful what they say to do this. These are not the issues that itself, you know, aid. People in Nigeria have the right to come out and express that when they are being hurt or something like that the constitution of the Federal Ministry has given us the right to test, right? So now I hear people are coming out to protest in Kaduna and the D.S.S. are running them up. That's what people are afraid. So should we be afraid of the crimes, the terror that is happening to us or should we be afraid of the people that are supposed to protect us? People are afraid to come out to Kaduna in the D.S.S. Yes, because these are the kind of issues that are happening. Just yesterday or the day before yesterday Kaduna to Zaire Road. So people were adopted, what you call, a member of the House of Assembly here in Kaduna were killed, you know, and we held the case of Abudia to, what you call, Kaduna to Abudia Road every time they have abduction and all of that. You go to Kaduna, it's trouble, go to this rural community, they are in so called everywhere. And then somebody comes from somewhere and tells you that NOB is secure. I don't think there is anything like that. Everybody tells you that even if you are outside the country, just continue and see what is happening. Straight away and you can understand what I am telling you. Alright, to Mustafa. Well, just like my colleague has actually said, we are hoping to get an update of what really transpired in that protest that happened. Do you have an idea what happened? We hear that, you know, protesters were arrested and there were different men handling by, you know, DSS and police officers. Well, I don't know, I wasn't at the protest, but what I wrote for sure is that people are getting tired. I think that the government stands up and actually is something really tangible. This may get out of control. And we hope it doesn't because when people are suffering from poverty and then there is also insecurity, you know, and allow these people to come out to express themselves. I get out of hand because especially when you try to resist or you try to tell them not to talk, in outside the world you say that somebody will beat you up and stop you from crying. You tell you not to cry, you know. So I think people need to be pacified and then also stand up and do what is right because we can't continue like this, you know. We started talking about the QNR last year in October. We came out to people protest and then some good looks were sent from and struck the protest, either the protest. Fortunately for us, we were able to get a win of that. So we decided not to continue with the protest. But this is how it has been happening. A coalition of Northern groups in what we call a meeting to discuss the security in Northern Nigeria at Arirau House. So where Arirau House is, it's a prestigious place of honour and all of that. People, responsible people were invited but you know what happened? They sent hoodlums to attack us there. This was not even a protest. It was a meeting. So who sent hoodlums to attack you at your meeting? You know, people were actually attacking Arirau House. We had to find some people who were jumping out of India and they destroyed the hoodlums. So at the end of it, I said sometimes there are people who are happy with the situation. Why would they send somebody attack us during a meeting? Traditional women were invited from a village. People were invited for that meeting. And some useless somebody gathered some hoodlums to attack us there at Arirau House. All right, Mostafa. Let's bring Ibrahim once again into this conversation. Ibrahim, from what you have said when you gave a bit of an analysis, you talked about organizing your people to make the North great. You also talked about the issue of leadership. So in all of these, lots of statements have come out concerning that the federal government said that insurgency terrorism won't disappear overnight and they also said that government is working hard to tackle the issue of insecurity. Is it a thing of government are not really having control of this issue of security despite what they are saying or just that they don't really have the will power to do what is required? I think they are a little bit confused because they supposed to realize that there is a people that will help them to end the insecurity. And if you are grandstanding and if you are denying and if you are telling Nigerians what they don't want to hear or telling the people that you are supposed to kill you are not going in the same direction with them then you have a problem. What you suppose is you accept the fault that yes, we are trying our best but this is our limitation and we want you people to assess us in one, two, three and four things because if you put everything in secrecy then the people are not understanding what you are doing and what you are bringing then they get agitated then they get that direct sentiment will start to now setting and they start to hit the government and if people hit the government then you are adding to the problem and you are not making any solution so what I am saying is that if they said they are doing what they are supposed to be doing as I am calling them to look inward look at the people where these people can vent their anger as Mr Paa is saying if you restrict people even not to vent their anger you are adding to the problem because that is the feedback you are getting if they are up on the street protesting protesting is that telling you that you have missed what you said you are doing we are not seeing what you are doing is for the government to look at it dialogue with them give them their own tax for example if to say today I am somebody in the part of that leadership that they are saying what I will do is that all these groups that are now planning to go on because I was in a meeting yesterday and they are proposing to go in a bigger motion of the skill not hatch that which they are planning to do a bigger one what they are saying in the meeting is a public something I don't think it's something that is a secret for them it's open they are calling their men because this pigment and the people in the government are using these roads that people are being kidnapped every day why not shut down the railway station and then shut down the airports so that anybody that is going anywhere he wants to go to let him use that same road because if they are using the same road that the other engineers are using then they must skill that place that people are going so if the North really want to we want the North to be skilled we have to talk to them in the language they understand I think protest is one of the language this government really understand even though they use the talks and then they use everything to bring but we think that even these talks that they are bringing we are more closer to the talks than even the government so we can talk to them because we are all in this together if we give them drugs and everything that's the way we can talk to them we can get out our old men we can get out our old women we can get out our destitute we can sit down in the wrong way we can sit down in the wrong way so that everybody that is going for quality let him use that even if you are going for anything you are going for a wedding you are going to take a go to the road from here to Sokoto so that you can feel what other engineers are feeling and those people that are being kidnapped start feeling the same thing they are feeling these boys are going to grow bigger they are going to grow because this North is not skilled and they are tired so the government has to do something new which we are not seeing anything coming out from the government that is new they just condemn any killing they just send delegation they even present themselves that he is supposed to be in charge of the nation it's not taking some engineers people don't vote in his assets they don't vote in his ministers they voted in General Muhammad Bawair as a president I think for empathy he is supposed to directly talk to engineers at least every day he can do it he is a president he can talk to them in the morning he can talk to them in the evening us and we together we are trying to convince and talk to almost all the other groups so that at least the protest and what we are planning to do is not going to go out of hand and somebody has to take responsibility we don't want it to be like NSAS that it come and destroy a lot of people we want it to be something that is well coordinated something with leadership and the people is supposed to relate and if you want something on the street the idea is that we are going to give the government the comfort that the skill not protest is not going to be something that is going to cause too much trouble to the country but it's something that at least we have to voice out we have to voice out what is happening and talk to the whole world to understand the problems here in the north and then we see how we will work together to see how we can secure the north let's bring in Mustafa Bulama he has mentioned the president in the course of this conversation and you still also have some quarters saying that the reason why insecurity is persisting in Nigeria and mostly in the north is because of the body language of Mr President now if you want to agree with me the federal government however you want to put it we have identified those who are sponsoring terrorist group in Nigeria we have identified sponsors they have also agreed to the fact that the Niger state government saying yes we have also agreed to the fact that bandits are collecting taxes from the people so do you agree with the school of thought saying that the body language of Mr President is responsible for the current security challenges that were faced with in Nigeria yeah I think there is a bit of truth that because you see if you have to be killed you have community ravaged people destroyed all you see let's say for example is certainly being in Koto between the month of Uba and the Zerba over 100 people have been killed in Tokoto in October over 40 people were killed in November over 43 were killed then recently with the passenger that were attacked were talking about some are saying to answer I think three some are saying who 42 understand people who have been killed in Sokoto now in October if presidents did not come out address the people of Sokoto he did not go to Sokoto he did not go to Sokoto in November not go to Sokoto in December but we are seeing the president going for a good lunch in Lagos he is going for a launching of another who is trying after all these things he still didn't go to Sokoto and in the midst of this while we are talking about this what we call it in Niger 15 worshipers were going down in the mosque they were praying they were there and killed these people in the same location they did that in November so twice I see people in northern night especially in rural communities they listen to radio a lot they listen to big house and they listen to house society and all of that why would he take the presidents or his advisors or whatever take the BBC and do the president talk to people in the language they wouldn't understand outside language they wouldn't understand Mustafa I am sorry I have the coming at this point I want to understand how the presidents visiting this community would solve the problem of insecurity in Nigeria you are saying the president needs to go there speak to the people how does that translate because the issue of saying we have identified those who are sponsoring bandits let's not forget that lawmakers actually called we need to prescribe this group of peasants a terrorist and that has not happened and if we have identified those who are sponsoring what are we doing about that so is it about the president visiting these places or it's about the president being that he controls the security architecture I mean it's within the federal it's within the exclusive list so is it about the visiting or taking proactive actions let's see arrests let's see peasants prosecuted if we have people who are sponsoring if we know that bandits are already paying taxes and they are paying and we are agreeing to it so it means we know where they are we know who these people are how come we have not had peasants arrested and prosecuted what is going on so I don't understand when you say that the president needs to visit does visiting really translate into and putting an end to all of this insecurity consent alright let me give the right answer now see there are two things the issue of if this particular inconvenient we are having is not something you go on you know you switch it off like you turn off the light or something I thought if something the government has to fight and if something that it's going to take a long time but why the government is doing that also needs to be assured it's people that this is what it's doing it needs to show empathy to the victims it needs concern to the people now holding back the issue of the people and the sponsors that are being identified and all of that yes that's also another issue how can you comment and tell us you have unidentified these people or you know the people that are sponsoring and yet you don't tell them about it so it still comes down to the issue of the burden that we are talking about okay if you know these people you have identified them why are we not seen arrested right I remember they were talking about this they said okay they cannot attack because the condition is that only you need to attack but now the court has ruled that these people are terrible so get to work what we are concerned about nobody is terrible any other or any political whatever they want the issue is and this needs to stop right this and the people that are they are not arresting what are they telling us if they are identifying groups and we are not seen arrested not seen question what are you telling the people and this is why people keep feeling that the government not seen enough alright thank you most of all let's have the final word from Ibrahim Hussein Abdul Karim as we round off on this discussion most of all has said he is on point of view but you know in all of this now what do we expect to see in the coming days from the secure north north is bleeding and hashtag are we seeing more protest and are you going beyond protest or what exactly you know is in the offing we are going to see more and more protest because protest is just asking questions I think we are going to force it online I want to protest underground we are going to organize seminars we are going to organize some meetings we are going to do a lot of things that will help to see when we get to the end of this problem because we cannot normalize there is no other place in the world that somebody or the government will normalize insecurity or normalize we have to talk about it our traditional council system has to talk about it our religious leaders has to talk about it then anybody that feels that has something to offer must talk about it we have to start to talk it because we have to organize our people we don't want it to be something that is out of hand something that we cannot control we have another hashtag we are going to use what else at least we organize that activity in a way I think we have some small meetings in the smaller groups and then we are going to move that meetings to a bigger larger forum we have to talk about it and we have to make sure that we secure we secure the country and also to make sure that we have a very good 2022 because in the election a year to election we are going to have more violence than what we have seen alright very big thank you to you Ibrahim Huzain Abdel Karim MDE ZGIS limited Abuja and of course also to Mustafa Abola my editorial cartoonist daily trust the gentleman both joined us to discuss the issue of security in the north indeed the north the entire Nigeria needs to be secured in the moment when we come back from this quick break we will be talking about the gender opportunities bill in the moment to join us again
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Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 540615 219 The Paterson Transport Matter [AFRTS]
YTJD V2 -Video Upload powered by https://www.TunesToTube.com
[ "Old Time Radio", "1954" ]
2017-02-21T10:57:40
2024-04-23T14:17:49
1,750
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Well, your listening enjoyment, John Lund as Johnny Donner. I'm back to Johnny. How fast can you get to Kansas City, Missouri? Why? Maybe you can stop a homicide. Well, that sounds worthwhile. What's the deal? We underwrite complete insurance coverage for the Patterson Transport Corporation. They handle a possible delivery service for most of the department stores in town. Well, that should be profitable, but hardly deadly. There have been six robberies and beatings involving their drivers in the past week, Johnny. Apparently, one guy is responsible, and he's gotten increasingly brutal with each holdup. How far has he gone? The last holdup was yesterday afternoon. He went berserk. The driver's in the hospital with five broken ribs and a fractured skull. If this guy isn't caught, it's only a question of time before he kills somebody. I'll take the first plane out. You know, many great men have attained the highest office in our land, the presidency of the United States. Can you guess the name of this man? In 1884, with a limited education and practically no experience in national affairs, he was elected president at the age of 48. During his administration, an income tax was passed, but declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. And Coxsey's Army made its first march on the Capitol as a protest against unemployment. It was also during his administration that the Presidential Succession Bill was passed, which indicated the line of succession to the presidency from the president down through the cabinet. If you don't have his name by now, here are two more clues. He was the first president to be married in the White House, and the only president to serve two non-successive terms. Who was he? Grover Cleveland, 22nd and 24th President of the United States. His life is part of your American heritage. Expense accounts submitted by Special Investigator Johnny Dollar to a Home Office, Eastern Indemnity and Insurance Company, Hartford, Connecticut. The following is an accounting of expenditures during my investigation of the Patterson Transport Matter. Expense account item 173.20. Airfare and instrumentals between Hartford, Connecticut and Kansas City, Missouri. I was met at the airport by Walt Hendricks, Vice President and General Manager of Patterson Transport. It's a rough $1.06 hold-ups in the week. Over $3,700 was COD money stolen, three drivers beaten so badly they can't work, one of them in the hospital in critical condition. Real rough one. I understand one man has been pulling the job, Mr. Hendricks. Seems to stack up that way. So far we haven't been able to do a blast thing to stop him. How's he operating? Most like this. He buys something at a department store, has the package sent out COD to a vacant apartment or house. When the driver gets out there, he lowers the booze. What about the police? Well, since yesterday morning, they've had a plane closed and riding the delivery trucks with the drivers. Well, that should have brought results. We thought it would too, until last night. The driver that's laid up in the hospital? Yeah. He got it in his own garage, coming home from a movie with his wife. Hendricks dropped me off at the Mulebach Hotel. He said the Patterson Transport Company would supply a car for my personal use. And it was there, ready and waiting after I finished checking in. I drove over to police headquarters at 1125 Locust Street, where Lieutenant Herman of the robbery division filled me in. Well, there's a few things about this that make sense, Teller. Not money, but a few. Like what, Lieutenant? Well, he operates for one as a definite pattern. Every holdup's either at the far end of the driver's route or the last stop or two before he checks in for the day. Sounds like he's pretty familiar with the delivery operation. And that's what we figure. Maybe from the Patterson Transport Inn, maybe from the department store. Then another thing. He's almost sure to be a psycho. The way he's manhandled those drivers? There wasn't any reason for beating him. Drivers all have orders not to resist. Gets increasingly brutal with every holdup. No sense to it, unless he's a psycho. Any description on him? Yeah, partial. Always wears a blue band and a handkerchief over his face. But here's what we've got on him for what it's worth. See, about six feet, 190 to 200 pounds gray slouch hat, baggy gray suit, has a noticeable limp in the right leg. Well, that's pretty general, but that limp might help tie him down. I've got the personnel managers of Patterson and the department stores going over their records on the basis of that description. So far, they haven't bumped with anything. Well, here's another angle. Take a look at this map. Yeah, sure. Now, the first robbery took place out here, 43 under Block and Seneca. The next? Here. An observation park. And Cyprus. The next, a 32nd terror. Men, 54th and Jackson. Well, that makes a rough circle around the city. What's he been doing, moving from route to route in a definite pattern? That's it. Hitting one driver after another in turn. Well, then you should know who's liable to be next on the list. We do. Driver by the name of Milton Spears. He's got the Southwest Territory down here. If the man we were after follows this pattern, we'll get him. But if he breaks it like he did last night... That's about all I can tell you now, Donner. We are hoping this guy will try again with our men riding the trucks. It's our best bet for getting him. And even if he doesn't, maybe we can... Oh, hi, Grayson. Tell us. We just got a report over in traffic division. One of the Patterson Company's trucks was in an accident. I understand, haven't you? What kind of accident? Well, apparently the truck got out of control, smashed into a parked car along the curb. Driver was killed. I wonder about our man. He didn't have anybody assigned to it. Truck had been in for repair. And the driver was just road testing it. Doesn't sound like it ties in with a holdup. I thought you'd better know. A van's Grayson. Let me see the complete report when you get it in. Yeah, sure, Lieutenant. Hey, Sergeant. Yeah? Did you get the name of the driver who was killed? Yeah, we got it. His name was Spears. Milton Spears. When we got to the scene of the accident, an ambulance and squad car were already there. One of the squad car men filled us in on what they'd learned. He was heading east on Anderson here, Lieutenant. Then for some reason, he suddenly clamped the wheel to the right and plowed into that buick there at the curb. He must have been going in a pretty good clip. He burned a lot of rubber off on the street when he swung in here. Yeah. What did the ambulance men have to say? He was dead when they got here. Didn't look as though the crash killed him. No, the impact wasn't heavy enough for that. I think you might have had a heart attack. Uh-huh. Any witnesses? No, I witnessed it, Lieutenant. There's a lady over there who wants to talk to you. Okay, ask her to come over and have them take the body down to the morgue for an immediate autopsy. I want the results done as soon as possible. Okay, Lieutenant. How does it hit you, darling? Well, a couple of things don't quite add up. Take them down to the morgue. Like what? Well, why he was road testing a truck on a quiet residential street. Why he was going fast enough to make heavy skid marks. And why it had to happen to a driver by the name of Milton Spears. Yeah. Well, maybe the autopsy will give us something to go on. Yeah, maybe. Here's the lady I was talking about, Lieutenant. Mrs. Robertson. How do you do, Mrs. Robertson? I understand you have something to tell us. I should say I do have something to tell you, Lieutenant. It's about time you police officers did something to protect the interests of our citizens. We've got rights, you know, and it's your duty to see that they're protected. I'm not sure I understand. No, I didn't think you would. Things have come to a pretty pass when a taxpayer can't leave a car parked out on the street without some drunken truck driver smashing into pieces. It's your duty to see that such reckless and competent drivers are kept off our streets and highways. You're the owner of the buick that was hit, Mrs. Robertson? Well, isn't that just what I've been telling you, young man? And believe me, somebody is going to pay for the damage done to my car and for the shock and damage caused to my nerves. Did you see the accident take place, Mrs. Robertson? No, I didn't see it. But not that I had to. I was upstairs in my apartment over there, playing with with some friends. Then what makes you think the driver was drunk or irresponsible? Oh, of course he was. What other explanation could there be? Smashing into a person's car like that in broad daylight on a quiet street. That's not the slightest doubt in my mind. Both of them were drunk. Then there was somebody else in the truck besides the driver? Of course there was. How do you know, Mrs. Robertson? Oh, because I saw him, that's why. I looked out of my window and saw him. A big husky man he was. He got out of the truck right after the crash and went limping off down the street. Additional questioning of the excitable Mrs. Robertson brought no further information. We got the same results from the other residents of Anderson Avenue. The men from the lab arrived and started working on the truck and Buick for possible physical evidence. And we went back to police headquarters. No neat view to stick around, darling. Unless you want to, you won't be getting the autopsy report on spears for another hour or two. Oh, I thought I might look over the driver's statements on the robbery, Lieutenant. Maybe something will hit me. Oh, sure. I'll have Grayson dig them out for you. Yes, sir. Grayson, will you get out the driver's statements in the Patterson Transport files? Mr. Dollar would like to look them over. I've got them right here, Lieutenant. Adding another report to the list. Oh, what's that? Got a call from General Hospital, the driver who was beaten up last night just died. The driver's statements and the official investigation reports. Lieutenant Herman and his men had covered every angle I could think of and a couple I hadn't. When I got through, the autopsy on Milton's spears hadn't been completed yet. So I drove out to the Patterson Transport Company in the Northeast industrial district. I found Walt Hendricks in the offices of the company, which were located to one side of their busy garage. Oh, that's a terrible thing about Milton's spears. Dollar, a terrible thing. The man had been with us for 15 years. Perfect safety record, and gets himself killed in an accident that way. If it was an accident, will you think it's connected with the hold-ups? We'll know more about it when we get the autopsy report. Well, I suppose it's put by... According to the pattern, spears was the next driver due to get hit. Sure, and if it had happened while his spears was out on the road, I'd say okay. But he wasn't. Just what was he doing, Mr. Hendricks? Well, his truck broke down. We sent a clutch linkage. We sent a substitute out. When the garage got through, Milton took the truck out to road test it. Anybody go with him? No. Milton was a good mechanic. No reason to send anybody along. And we don't allow our men to pick up any riders or hitchhikers. No, there couldn't have been anybody in the truck, though. Well, maybe he picked up somebody new. Well, a possibility, I suppose. I don't know. This thing's got me so busy, I can't think straight at all. And I guess there's one consolation, though. Yeah, what's that? If you count spears, every driver in the organization has been hit by now. Unless he starts over again, this guy has any place to go. I'll give you eight to five. He'll think of something. Getting late in the afternoon, so I figured I'd pay one more visit to headquarters before going back to the hotel and knocking off for the day. As I walked into Lieutenant Herman's office, he was just finishing a phone call. Okay, Doc. Thanks for the past report. I'll buy you a dinner someday if you're lucky enough to catch up with me. All right, darling. That was Doc Winters, autopsy surgeon. There was a 22-caliber bullet in Milton Spears' brain. Wow. Nothing very accidental about that, is there? Not likely. Fired at close range behind the right ear. Point of penetration was covered by hair. Bullet lies in the bone. That's why the ambulance attendants didn't catch it. No wonder he crashed the truck. We'll have ballistics examine the bullet. Don't know that they've come up with anything, though. Well, it's been a long day. What do you say we go out and have a bite to eat? I'll buy that, will come in. There's a good steakhouse right down. Well, Lieutenant Herman, I remember. We'll be right there. Now, let's roll, darling. What's up? Remember that Mrs. Robertson? The woman who owned this smashed up Jewish? Yeah, I just saw the man we were after. He's out in front of her place right now. If I cut in to say something, fellas, it won't take too long since a word to the wise is sufficient. And in the English language, there is one word which is important to just about everyone in the world. That word is security. Security has several different meanings, however. Usually we think of it in connection with the protecting of our military installations and defense industries. But it means more than that. There is a security which applies to every man, woman, and child in America. The security which comes from being in good health, having a good education, and being well taken care of in case things get a little too tough to handle by oneself. This kind of security is the problem of the President's newest cabinet member, the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. This department ties together the work of several governmental agencies. There is the United States Public Health Service, which strives to make certain that the general health of the people in our country is in the best of condition. Then there is the Food and Drug Administration, which guarantees that the food we eat is pure and safe to eat. The Social Security Board, which takes care of old people, children, and the blind who need assistance, also comes under the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, as does the United States Office of Education. This office does research on the educational possibilities, changes, and opportunities, and passes on its information to the various state boards of education. As you can see, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare is one of the most important agencies in our government, assuring us as it does of a normal and healthy way of life. Now, with our star, John Lund, we bring you the second act of yours truly, Johnny Dollar. Helen Herman and I got out to the Atterson Avenue Address. Mrs. Robertson was waiting for us in the vestibule of the apartment building. It's the man, I tell you, the very same man who got out of the truck that smashed my car, and I want you to arrest him at once. Do you hear? I saw him get out of the truck and limp down the street, and I saw him again just before I called you. What was he doing, Mrs. Robertson? Looking over my car, that's what, a nerve of him. A criminal returning to the scene of his crime. There's no doubt about the identification. I told you there wasn't, didn't I? A big, heavy-set man dressed in a gray suit, walking with a limp. He's the man, all right. Where is he now? I told you he was drunk when he smashed into my car. He went into that bar at the corner. I'll give you the same sort of description. You want to take him over there? Let's keep your hands on the bar. Hey, what's going on here? Take him down, darling. Yeah, sure. What do you think you're doing, Mac? I ain't got no rod on me. How about it? He's clean, Lieutenant. Sure, I'm clean. I told you I was, didn't I? What do you guys want with me? What's your name, Mr. What's it to you? Your name. Wesley Gerald Wesley. Where do you live? I ain't decided yet. Just got into town. What are you doing in this neighborhood? Look, you guys ain't got nothing on me. A guy's got a right to come in and have a drink without coppers hopping all over him. Why are they interested in a car, Wesley? What car? The smashed up Buick down the street. Who's interested in a smashed Buick? You were. You were looking at it. Why? So I looked at it. Any law against that? A man was killed when that car was hit, Wesley. So what's that got to do with me? We've got a witness who says you were involved in the accident. Your witness is nuts. All I was doing was walking down the street. I seen the car. It took a gander at it. Well, you talk it over downtown, Wesley. There ain't nothing to talk. I didn't have nothing to do with that car. Somebody getting bumped off. You heard the lieutenant. We'll talk about it downtown. Wesley, make it easier on yourself. There's nothing to come clean about. I told you coppers that you ain't got nothing on me. We've got a witness who says different. I told you he's lying. I never been in that neighborhood before. What did you do with the gun? What gun? The one you used to knock off Milton Spears. I never heard a gun. And I never heard of the Spears. Now, why don't you guys lay off and let me out of here? It's a pretty good racket you had, Wesley. How'd you happen to think of it? What racket? The parcel delivery gimmick. You nutchess. I didn't have nothing to do with them paddishing trucks. We didn't mention the name of the outfit, Wesley. You didn't mention it. Then how'd you know what we were talking about? I can read the papers, can I? They've been full of them parcel delivery stickups. You know more about it than that. Come on, let's have it, Wesley. I tell you, nuts. I just got in a town yesterday. From where? California. Where in California? Folsom. We can check on that, Wesley. So check. You'll find out as like I said. You ain't got a thing on me, coppers. Not a lousy thing. Lieutenant Herman sent in a teletype request for verification from Folsom, along with telephoto copies of Wesley's prints for comparison. We got the answer back in an hour. Well, there it is, darling. Wesley wasn't sprung from Folsom until yesterday morning. Served his full time. We made one more check. We had Mrs. Robertson try to pick out the man she'd seen from a lineup including Wesley and six police officers. She made a positive identification of Sergeant Grayson. Expense account item two, $17.85, dinner and drinks for Lieutenant Herman and myself. Afterwards, the lieutenant called it quits for the night and I headed for the Patterson Garage. I wanted to talk with Walt Hendricks again. Lucky to catch me in, darling. I don't usually work this late, but it's different tonight. What's different about it, Mr. Hendricks? I've got some drivers to get. A couple of substitutes for those who are laid up. Two permanent ones. Yeah, yeah. Well, I won't take up too much of your time. I just want to get a few things straight. Sure. It's pretty obvious that whoever we're after knows the operation of this business. That means he knew he wasn't going to get much of a take on those morning stick-ups. The drivers hadn't time to collect many CODs. No, but he got over $3,700 in the afternoon job. Nothing wrong with that. I don't say there is. But it's possible that money is only the frosting on the cake. Thinking that somebody might have a grudge against the author? No, there's enough evidence to support it. The systematic way he's gone after the drivers, the beatings he's dished out for no apparent reason. Yeah. Yeah, I've been thinking the same thing. Come up with any ideas? No, not a one. The company's always had a good labor record. Never any boss with competitors. I even checked with Mrs. Thompson about it. Who's Mrs. Thompson? Oh, she worked here for almost 20 years as my assistant and secretary. Had an auto accident about six months ago, left her crippled. Oh, that's tough. Yeah. But she knows the business as well as I do. Maybe she'd come up with something. Have any luck? Nothing. They even talked to her husband about it. Did he work for the outfit, too? No, no, but he got to know it pretty well through her. And he figured it the same way we do. But he couldn't come up with anything either. He did try to warn Milk Spears, though. How was that? Well, he had the guy's pattern figured out, too. A new milk might be next. So we warned him to be careful. Mrs. Thompson's husband was here at the garage before Milk Spears left? That's right. He drove up just a few minutes before Milk took off to protest the truck. I went back to the hotel and put in a call to Tom Benson in Hartford. In the company's interest, he was willing to bust up his bridge game and go down to the office. He called me back in about 45 minutes with the information I wanted. The accident took place last Christmas Eve, Johnny. Thompson's were leaving a party at the Patterson offices. Apparently the husband had little too much to drink. He drove out of the garage too fast, skittered as he hit the street and wound up on the wrong side. One of the delivery trucks was just coming in and met head-on. Uh-huh. What's the medical report say? Well, the driver of the truck was killed outright. Mrs. Thompson suffered two broken vertebrae left her permanently crippled. We paid all medical expenses. She got a life income of $100 a month. What about the husband? He was in the hospital up until a couple of weeks ago. Had a depressed skull fracture, a bad compound fracture of the right tibia. Outside of that, he should be as good as new. Help, Johnny, Johnny. I wouldn't be surprised. The Thompson home was a modest sprain bungalow on Prospect Avenue, less than a half mile from the Patterson garage. I was met at the door by a practical nurse who checked with Mrs. Thompson and then led me into the bedroom to see her. It was awfully kind of you to call on me this way, Mr. Darley. And I want you to know that Charlie and I are very appreciative of everything your company has done for us. You're only getting what you're entitled to, Mrs. Thompson. Well, perhaps. But when you've been used to making your own way of life, earning your own living, then suddenly find yourself in a position like I am in. Well, it's awfully nice to know that there are people like you around. Well, thanks, Mrs. Thompson. Is your husband at home? I'm dreadfully sorry. But he left just a few minutes ago. And you did want to talk to him about those robberies, didn't you? What makes you think that? Oh, Mr. Hendricks told me you were in town. And Charlie's been so interested in those hold-ups. He just feels terrible about those poor drivers, you know? No, I didn't. Oh, yes. Just terrible. He's been so worried about them ever since the trouble began. But he even wanted to ride along with some of them on their routes to help protect them. Is that so? Yes, he's felt that way. You know, protective about them ever since that accident happened to us. Some man might have felt the driver was to blame that night. Might have felt resentful toward them because of what happened to me. But not Charlie. He's a wonderfully forgiving man, Mr. Dollar. Where is your husband now? Yes. He even had a presentment about what was going to happen to them after the hold-up started. He told me he was afraid that robber would go from one driver to the next, beating them, perhaps even killing them. He even made a list of the ones he was afraid would be hurt. Where is he now, Mrs. Thompson? That's why he went out tonight, Mr. Dollar. He's determined he won't let anything like that happen again. That's why he went out to protect him. To protect who? Well, the next one on his list, of course. My former employer, Mr. Hendricks. He was in the living room. I put in two fast calls. The first to police headquarters. The second was to the Patterson garage to warn Hendricks. The garage was only a few short blocks away, and I made it before the squad car did. There was a light in Hendricks' office, but it was empty. The second garage next. Is that you, Thompson? What's the shooting about? It's Dollar, Hendricks. Dollar? Yeah. Throw some lights on, will you? Yeah, sure. What's going on here, Dollar? What are you doing? Hey, Thompson. Yeah. Where were you? In the back row. But, Charlie, what happened? Well, somebody had to stop him from protecting you. Three, twenty-two dollars and ten cents. Hotel bill and miscellaneous. Expense account item four, seventy-one dollars and thirty cents. Airfare back to Hartford. Expense account total, one hundred eighty-four dollars and forty-five cents. Remarks? When ballistics verified that Thompson's twenty-two cold had killed Milton Spears, my official job was over. My unofficial one informing Mrs. Thompson wasn't nearly as easy. I guess I got a little confused. It's the only way I can account for the fact that she believes her husband died a hero getting the bandit single-handed. Here's truly Johnny Dollar.
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Pr. Godswill Mensah
Christian Home & Marriage Evangelistic Campaign Theme: Hope For Families (Build, Establish & Flourish) Speaker: Pr. Godswill Mensah Key Text: Proverbs 24: 3-4
null
2024-02-22T12:33:11
2024-04-22T18:29:15
20
pCKiMmpebUI
you listen to my word is possible that the more matured individuals get the more mature decision they make or some of them can become and then they make they settle for anything including a lizard in a brown suit
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UC4al3A_gysYEIzAM1L2qZbg
Opening Ceremony of LUCELEC 3MW Solar Farm
Official Opening Ceremony of St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited (LUCELEC)3 megawatt (MW) solar farm in La Tourney, Vieux Fort.
[ "Government of Saint Lucia", "Government Information Service (GIS) Saint Lucia", "GIS St. Lucia", "St. Lucia Government", "Official site Government of Saint Lucia", "St. Lucia Government news" ]
2018-08-09T21:18:02
2024-02-05T16:08:05
5,697
PCvzadqGRJ0
Good afternoon everyone. Please stand for the entrance of Governor General, his Excellency Sir Emanuel Neville Snack and Lady Snack. Please remain standing for the National Anthem of St. Lucia, to be performed by noted St. Lucia jazz guitarist Ronald Boo Hingson and award-winning composer Arranger Panis Allison Markey who is also the customer care engineer at Lucillac. Thank you Boo. Thank you Allison. You may have your seats. Your Excellency Sir Emanuel Neville Snack, Governor General of St. Lucia and Lady Snack. Honorable Alan Shasney, Prime Minister and Minister for Finance, Economic Growth, Job Creation, External Affairs and Public Service of St. Lucia. Members of the Cabinet of St. Lucia. President Bill Clinton, 42nd President of the United States of America. Mr. Jose Maria Figueres, Former President of Costa Rica. Honorable Philip J. Pierre, Leader of the Opposition. Honorable Dr. Kenny Anthony, Parliamentary Representative for Viewport North, Permanent Secretaries, Deputy Permanent Secretaries. Mr. John Joseph, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited and other Board members. Mr. Trevor Luisi, Managing Director of the St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited. Other members of the Management Team of the St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited. Representatives of the Clinton Foundation, Rocky Mountain Institute. Ms. Chisa Nikami, Deputy Representative, Resident Representative, UNDP Office for Barbados and the OECS. Mr. Javier Vela, Kunkia of Group Tech, specially invited guest. Staff members of the St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited. Members of the media, good afternoon and welcome to the official opening ceremony of Lucilek's three-megawatt solar farm. My name is Bernardia Rages, Corporate Communications Assistant at Lucilek and I will be your master of ceremonies this afternoon. We're really pleased that all of you are able to join us today for what is a special occasion for Lucilek. A high point of many years of relentless march to introduce utility, scale renewable energy into our generation portfolio. Thank you for your presence. The solar farm is located in the Latuni community, which sits in the constituency of Viewfort South and I would now like to invite Honorable Dr. Kenny Antony, the Parliamentary Representative for Viewfort South to make a few remarks. Dr. Kenny Antony. The Excellencies are Emmanuel Neville, St. Governor General of St. Lucia, President Bill Clinton, 42nd President of the United States of America and delegation. Mr. Shastney, Prime Minister and Mr. Shastney. Members of the Cabinet of St. Lucia, Mr. Jose Maria Figueres, former President of Costa Rica, Honorable Philip J. Pierre, Leader of the Opposition, Permanent Secretaries, Deputy Permanent Secretaries, General Manager of Lucilek, staff and members of Lucilek, ladies and gentlemen. In January 2003, I had a special honor of being the host Prime Minister to President Bill Clinton on his memorable and historic visit to St. Lucia. Today I am again honored to welcome President Clinton and his delegation and this time to my constituency, Viewfort South, where this facility, as you heard, is located. Today's official opening of this new 3.2 megawatts solar farm marks an important milestone in the development of the energy sector in our country. With the assimilation of this solar energy into our national grid, we are effectively adding a little over 5% of renewable energy to our national energy profile. Put another way, we are reducing our dependence on fossil fuels by 5%. In celebrating this achievement, we must not forget the vision and the hard work that got us here. This journey started with a promise by my former administration when it assumed office in December 2011 to increase the penetration of renewable energy in our national grid by 20% by the year 2020. However, in making that pledge, we understood that we were going into uncharted territory and we needed to build a correlation of development partners to help us along the way. The former Minister of Sustainable Development and Energy, Dr. Jimmy Fletcher, with the blessings of the Cabinet of Ministers enlisted the support of the Clinton Climate Initiative. During a sustainable energy for all meeting in Barbados in 2012, Dr. Fletcher met with Jan Hartke and Ira Magasina, and I hope I have the words right, of the Clinton Foundation and a very successful partnership was born. One year later, our government extended this partnership when we brought Sir Richard Branson's Carbon War Room on board after another meeting this time in London between Jimmy Fletcher and Peter Boyd and Maya Dulub. Soon, our energy coalition started to grow with the World Bank added in 2013 and the New Zealand government SIDSDoc and the Caribbean Development Bank in 2014. Also in 2014, at a Renewable Energy Summit hosted by Richard Branson on Necker Island, I announced that St. Lucia would be increasing our renewable energy penetration ambition to 35% by the year 2020. But as it is so well known, Prime Ministers may propose, but the electorate may choose to dispose. Today, we are seeing the coming to fruition of one of the elements of the ambitious energy program that we set in 2011, and for this, I am very pleased. I am glad, President Clinton, that you are here with us today so I can thank you in person. Apart from the Clinton Climate Initiative, I also thank the Carbon War Room, Rocky Mountain Institute and Lucillec for their commitment and perseverance with this project. I also want to thank those who worked hard to get this journey started and lay the foundation that has brought us to this point. The former Minister Jimmy Fletcher and the staff of the Ministry of Sustainable Development and Energy were the trailblazers who translated the vision of our government to a modern diversified competitive and renewables-based energy sector into a structured, sensible, resource program. I am reliably informed that Lucillec is looking to expand on this initial investment with the installation of battery storage. This suggests that the approach that my government employed of treating Lucillec as a partner rather than an adversary in our energy transformation program appears to have paid off. Others have approached it differently and the results have not been as successful. However, as exciting and pleasing as today's achievement is, it would be remiss of me if I did not also use this occasion to reflect on some missed opportunities and to hope that we will soon see the restart and completion of other critical elements of the National Energy Transformation Program. It would be good to see the tabling in Parliament of the new suite of energy legislation that my former government initiated, which will create the environment for a truly modern and diversified energy sector. The decision to stop the CDB-funded island-wide LED streetlight retrofit should also be revisited and this project restarted. These funds were made available to the government at highly concessional terms and the annual savings to government and relatively short payback period more than justified the investment. Unfortunately, the wind farm development was stopped over a simple issue where we should now have a 12 megawatt wind farm generating renewable energy into our national grid. With dividends for local shareholders and benefits for consumers, we have shrubs and snakes on undeveloped land. I point out these things because transforming our energy sector is very important for us economically, socially and environmentally. At the economic level, it will allow us to reduce the high cost of electricity. When we drive these costs downward, we make every economic sector more competitive. At the social level, it brings benefits to all sectors of our society, particularly the poor and vulnerable among us. At the environmental level, our transition away from the use of fossil fuels will allow us to play a leadership role in the global fight to minimize the emissions of greenhouse gases that are causing our planet to warm at such an alarming and dangerous rate. These benefits will take time to percolate, and for that reason, it is vital that Lucellec dramatically increases its efforts to explain to the public the value of these investments to our society, economy and ecology. Mr Chairman, this solar farm is in the constituency of VFOR South, which I have had the honor and privilege to represent in parliament for the last 21 years. So on behalf of the residents of VFOR South, I will conclude by saying that despite our misgivings about the location of this solar farm, we accept that it is a transformational facility. I look forward to seeing it serve as a catalyst for other sensible, sustainable development initiatives in the South and for the broader transformation of the energy sector that must take place nationally. I thank you one and all. Thank you, Honorable Dr. Kenny Antony, the Parliamentary Representative for VFOR South. Today's opening is the fulfillment of an ambition long held by Lucellec. Our managing director has been with the company for nearly 30 years and hasn't been involved in many of Lucellec's major milestones in various capacities during that time. We now invite Mr. Trevor Luisi, Lucellec's managing director to deliver his remarks. Your Excellency, Sir Emmanuel Nevel-Snack, Governor-General of St. Lucia and Lady Snack, Honorable Alan Shasne, Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Economic Growth, Job Creation, External Affairs and Public Service of St. Lucia and Mrs. Shasne. Members of the Cabinet of St. Lucia, President Bill Clinton, the 42nd President of the United States of America, Mr. Jose Maria Figueres, former President of Costa Rica, Honorable Philip J. Pierre, Leader of the Opposition, Honorable Kenny D. Anthony, Parliamentary Representative for VFOR North, Deputy Permanent Secretaries, Mr. John Joseph, Chairman of the Board of St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited and other Board Members. Other Members of the Management Team of St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited, Representatives of the Clinton Foundation Rocky Mountain Institute. And on that note, I would like to utilize the protocol already established. Another page, another chapter. The first pages of Lucellec's history book were written in 1964. As we look back over the pages of that book, we see several milestones, several major achievements in the development of electricity here in St. Lucia. We see also that Lucellec's history has been integrally intertwined with St. Lucia's economic and social development. Today is no different. As we officially open the first utility scale renewable energy system in St. Lucia, we are adding another page, another chapter in the history of Lucellec, in the history of power generation and in the history of St. Lucia. I won't detail the history of Lucellec's foray into solar energy today, except to note that we officially started in 2009 with a pilot project to integrate rooftop solar photovoltaic systems or solar PV into the grid. Presently, and not including this solar farm, there are approximately 771 kilowatts of installed solar PV from 92 systems connected to the grid island wide. Some of the inputters for the integration of renewable energy came with the approval of the national energy policy by the government of St. Lucia in 2010 with targets for renewable energy penetration. In 2013, Lucellec completed the feasibility study on a three megawatt utility scale solar PV system and work on the request for proposals was started in 2015 with the support of the Rocky Mountain Institute, the Carbon War Room and DNVGL. The RFP was issued in 2016 and attracted over 40 bidders from all over the world for the mandatory site visit that formed part of the process. Grupo Tech, an international company with a strong presence in the Caribbean and a portfolio of over 500 megawatts of solar PV plants worldwide was contracted to undertake this project. Construction of the solar farm began in November 2017 and the entire three megawatts of this solar farm came online on April 11th of this year. It has been connected to and feeding into the Lucellec grid since then. This solar farm is funded owned and operated by Lucellec. It costs approximately 20 million East Caribbean dollars and occupies about 15 acres of this piece of land purchased from in West St. Lucia. It will form part of a power complex that we are proposing to develop. It's nearly 15,000 panels arranged in three main banks or arrays. It will generate approximately 7 million kilowatt hours or units of electricity per year. That's about 1.3 percent of the electricity generated annually from Lucellec's diesel-based cul-de-sac power plant, which incidentally sits on the same area of land, 15 acres. So that should give you an idea of how land intensive utility scale solar powers. The solar farm will reduce the volume of fuel purchased by Lucellec by about 300,000 gallons annually. A very small amount really, but when you consider we use approximately 20,000, 20 million gallons of fuel per year. But we think it is a start, small in volume, but the basis for big aspirations. For the country, the solar farm aligns neatly with the national energy transition strategy that seeks to promote a blueprint for new energy future in St. Lucia. An energy future that is focused on developing renewable energy resources and how best to integrate the optimum mix of renewable energies into the national energy grid at least costs without compromising the stability and reliability that we are accustomed to. It brings us one step closer to the goal of 35 percent of energy from renewable energy sources by 2020 and reduces our dependence on important fossil fuel. Lucellec anticipates making further contributions to renewable energy development in St. Lucia. We are currently working on a study to determine the optimum location for interconnecting a large storage battery on the grid, which we hope to commission sometime next year. Despite the several setbacks to date, we will continue working towards the development of the 12 megawatt wind farm and we will also continue providing as much support as we can to the government of St. Lucia with the ongoing geothermal exploration and development. In concluding, there are many anonymous contributors to history. No one makes history alone and Lucellec has not been alone in writing this new page or this new chapter in the annals of the development of electricity infrastructure on the island. I take this opportunity therefore to thank the teams from the Rocky Mountain Institute, Carbon War Room, Clinton Climate Initiative and DNVGL and their respective donor agencies for their support in the development of the national energy transition strategy, Lucellec's own integrated resource plan, the development of the RFP for this solar farm, and the oversight of the bidding process and contract negotiations. Our thanks also go out to the former and current ministers of energy and sustainable development, the support staff at these ministries and the government of St. Lucia for their respective and various levels of support to get us to this moment in history. I also want to express my appreciation to GrupoTech for the excellent work they did in completing this project. Although slightly delayed, it was still within budget and to our specifications and to all the Lucellec staff who have been involved in one way or another in overseeing the project through its various stages to ensure its successful conclusion. Thank you for your efforts. Indeed without you and all the staff and all the Lucellec staff past and present, our history book would hardly have any pages worth reading. As we get ready to cut the ribbon to mark the official opening of this three megawatt solar farm, in more ways than one, we are changing St. Lucia's energy landscape and the new energy future for St. Lucia is being written. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Luisi. We now welcome back Ronald Buhingsen and Allison Marquis for a brief musical interlude, this time for something not so formal. Ladies and gentlemen, ladies and gentlemen, Ronald Buhingsen and Allison Marquis, two of the wealth of really talented musician St. Lucia is blessed with. Did I tell you that Allison works with Lucellec? I did, but I just thought I'd slip it back in again. We would like to invite Honorable Stevenson King, the Minister of Infrastructure, POTS, Energy and Labor, who has portfolio responsibility for Lucellec to address us now. Your Excellency, St. Manuel Neville Snack, Governor-General of St. Lucia and Lady Snack, Honorable Arlen Shastney, Prime Minister and Minister for Finance, Economic Growth, Job Creation, External Affairs and the Public Service of St. Lucia, members of the St. Lucia Cabinet, President Bill Clinton, 42nd President of the United States of America, Jose Maria Figueres, former President of Costa Rica, Honorable Philip J. Pierre, leader of the opposition, Dr. Kenny D. Antony, Parliamentary Representative of VA for North and former Prime Minister, Permanent Secretaries, Deputy Permanent Secretaries, Mr. John Joseph, Chairman of the Board of Directors of St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited and other Board members, Mr. Trevor Luisi, Managing Director of the St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited, other members of the Management Team of the St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited, representatives of the Clinton Foundation Rocky Mountain Institute, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon. Energy is at the heart of everyday human life and is pivotal to our very existence. It underpins social, physical and economic development, which are in turn affected by the availability and access to reliable and cost-effective energy by all strata of society. We rely on energy services for electricity generation, transportation, water supply, food production and telecommunications, to name a few. It is therefore clear that energy services are critical to the well-being and advancement of our people. Like many other countries, St. Lucia depends almost exclusively on imported fossil fuels to meet local energy demands. Consequently, local energy supplies and prices are highly dependent on the vagaries of the global marketplace, with resulting negative social and economic impacts during all price spikes. Further, from as far back as the Earth Summit in Rio in 1992, a global clarion call was made, urging for development of renewable energy resources since the link between the combustion of fossil fuels and increased greenhouse gas emissions and anthropogenic induced climate change had been suggested while noting the limited supply and unsustainable nature of fossil fuel use as a source of energy. St. Lucia's commitment to the Paris Agreement and NDCs signalled our nation's intention to reach ambitious climate and energy goals cognizant of our special vulnerabilities as a Caribbean small island development nation. The events of Hurricane Thomas, the Christmas Eve trough, hurricanes Maria and Irma are all grim reminders of the urgency of climate action by all, especially the bigger and more developed nations. It is with these considerations in mind that successive governments have resolved to transform the island's energy sector to achieve greater energy efficiency, decrease dependency on fossil fuels, decrease greenhouse gas emissions and greater indigenous renewable energy penetration to promote social and economic development with minimal harm to the natural environment. From the elaboration of the natural sustainable energy plan as far back as 2001 to the endorsement by cabinet of the national energy policy in 2010 and ramped up renewable energy targets in 2014 and most recently the approval of the national energy transition strategy or NETS by the cabinet of ministers in 2018. The government of St. Lucia has continuously affirmed its commitment to the use of clean energy and clean technologies. The NETS endorsed by our cabinet in April of this year was developed through consultative and participatory process led by the government of St. Lucia and Lusleck through technical assistance from the Clinton climate initiative and Rocky Mountain Institute Carbon War Room with support from DNV GL and funding from the global environment facility. It constitutes a roadmap for achieving greater renewable energy penetration within our energy mix while pursuing energy efficiency with three central principles as follows. Service reliability intended to achieving lower than historical outage duration and frequency. Two, cost containment to reduce customer costs, reduce impact of fuel volatility and ensure financial viability of the utility. And three, energy independence to achieve renewable energy targets, reduce reliance on fossil fuels and achieve increased energy diversity. The NETS results indicate that St. Lucia should develop energy efficiency in solar, wind and energy storage projects as well as geothermal if the resource provides to be proves to be commercially viable. Today marks a milestone as indicated by the general manager in the transformation of our energy sector to a more sustainable pathway with the official opening of this three megawatt solar farm, the first utility scale solar farm on our beloved island. It expresses also the determination of not only the government and Lusleck to achieving the recommendations of the NETS, the commitments to the Paris Agreement and the international development agenda 2015-2030 and the sustainable development goals, but more importantly the desire and resolve of our people to meeting and overcoming the challenges that are before us through collective effort. As we continue to implement the NETS and increase renewable energy penetration within the energy mix, we will experience greater energy security which is defined as the uninterrupted availability of energy sources at an affordable price. This is critical to ensuring that economic and social gains are sustained and not easily eroded by oil price volatility on the global market. I would therefore wish to congratulate Lusleck on this bold and audacious achievement and investment. Fuel savings of up to 300,000 gallons are anticipated and it is estimated that this solar farm has a generation capacity of up to 1.3 percent of the electricity generated presently by Lusleck at its cul-de-sac plant. Special mention and thanks must be extended to the Clinton Climate Initiative and Rocky Mountain Institute Carbon War Room for their active role in the procurement process for the solar farm and their professional management of better expectations. The team assisted with project challenges especially those associated with geotechnical uncertainties, the preparation of a glint and glare study, and assisting with obtaining requisite permits and approvals. These efforts have manifested in what we are witnessing here today and even more importantly will contribute to lower electricity prices in the long run for all Saint Lucians. The Ministry of Infrastructure, Ports, Energy, and Labor in partnership with the National Utilities Regulatory Commission, Lusleck, and the sector at large will continue to facilitate the implementation of the NETS recommendations and at a broader level to champion the cause to foster lower energy costs without compromising system reliability and yet promote efficiency within the electricity services sector. The ripple effects we are convinced are central to ending poverty, inequity, and achieving environmental sustainability which are contiguous to the tenets of the International Development Agenda 2015-2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals. In closing, it would be remiss of me if I were to end without extending my sincere personal thanks and appreciation and that of the government and people of Saint Lucia to a dear friend of Saint Lucia as expressed by the former Prime Minister, President William Jefferson Bill Clinton, who has graced us with his presence here today. A clear demonstration of his unwavering commitment to clean energy and addressing the issues of climate change in a dynamic and meaningful way. To you, President Clinton, I thank you and to all who are gathered here on this very historic occasion. Please accept my appreciation. I thank you all. Thank you, Minister King. In the preliminary stages of the development of this solar farm, Lusleck has had the benefit of technical assistance from the Clinton Climate Initiative and the Rocky Mountain Institute. We are pleased, therefore, to have a member of the Board of Trustees for Rocky Mountain Institute and former President of Costa Rica, Mr. Jose Maria Figures, to make some remarks. Mr. Figures will also introduce our special guest, former U.S. President William Jefferson Clinton. Buenas tardes, amigas y amigos. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Governor General Sir Neville Snack and Lady Snack, Prime Minister Alan Chastney and Madam Chastney. Buen amigo Presidente Clinton, bienvenido al Caribe nuevamente. Mr. Trevor Luzi, Managing Director of Lusneck, distinguished guests, amigas y amigos. On behalf of Carbon War Room and Rocky Mountain Institute, it brings me truly great joy, truly great joy to participate in this event, in this great inauguration with all of you here today. In Spanish, we say that el que no sabe de dónde viene no sabe para dónde va. He who does not know where he is coming from does not know where he is going. And so therefore, this afternoon, I would like to compliment what the former Prime Minister Kenny Anthony has mentioned as part of the history coming together for this momentous occasion. And then secondly, share with all of you what this project means to me in terms of the opportunities that it opens towards the future. Our Minister of Environment and Energy, Minister King, just mentioned the Rio Summit of 1992. Well, the history goes back to Rio Plus 20, which as you recall, was celebrated in Rio de Janeiro in 2012. At that opportunity, Prime Minister Mike Eamon of Aruba, and Sir Richard Branson, founder of the Carbon War Room, came together to launch what they called a Ten Island Challenge. The challenge was to work with islands in the Caribbean to bring them off from fossil fuels that were rendering very expensive energy and on to renewables because the Caribbean has sun, que dice gracias a Dios, and wind for renewable energies. St. Lucia was one of the first islands to step up to the challenge and say, here we are. We want to move forward. We want to begin a transition towards sustainable energy in our country. And so it was that with Minister Fletcher ever since 2013 and 2014, we began conversations to be able to be here today. Justin Locke from RMI was here and began conversations with two people in Lucenac that I would like to highlight and distinguish. They were Victor Emmanuel and Trevor Louisi that has accompanied this process from day one. Muchas gracias, Trevor. Very well done. Shortly after that, Carbon War Room and the Rocky Mountain Institute merged. We wanted to be able to do more things. And then we entered into a partnership with the Clinton Foundation and the Clinton Climate Initiative, which are very nicely represented this afternoon by Kevin Thurm, the CEO of the foundation, and by Jesse Gerstin and Stephen Muschigan who have been leading up this effort in the Clinton Climate Initiative. Stephen, by the way, has been down to St. Lucia 16 times. I think Stephen, who is stand up, Stephen, stand up, stand up, stand up. I think he should be given honorary citizenship of St. Lucia. If they do that, I'll be next in line after you. Then with the financial help of the Dutch Postcode Lottery, which is a very strong friend of the Clinton Foundation and also of Rocky Mountain Institute, and with the support from the Global Environmental Facility GIF, as well as UNDP that helped us put the financial packages together, this project was underway. Absolute transparency, amigas y amigos. In international tender, Lucenek deserves a medal for the way in which it was conducted. Trevor mentioned 40 companies that came to visit the sites and hear what was to be done. Then that now was narrowed down to 11 bidders that came in with their office in the tenders. Three finalists were shortlisted and finally a winner, Grupo Tech, who I will refer to in just a minute. So as we can see, many have contributed to our being able to be here this afternoon and enjoy this momentous occasion. But I would like to signal out what I call three champions above and beyond all. First, it is to the people of St. Lucia. You know, back in 2014, Mark Grundy from Carbon War Room, who is here with us, visited St. Joseph's Girl School because they hold an annual event on sustainability and renewable energy. And there was a group of girls at St. Joseph's that had presented as a project, a small hydro to be able to take advantage of the water behind their high school. When Mark came back with that story, we said, this is a place to go. This is a place to help build as an example of what can be done in the Caribbean and elsewhere. Secondly, I would like to single out above and beyond all the role of Lucilik. Let's face it, it is not easy for a utility that has been accustomed all its life to fossil fuel generation to change the business model and begin to see the other side of this beautiful story. And Lucilik has done it, has done it artfully and is an example for the rest of the utilities in the Caribbean. And thirdly, to the government of St. Lucia. For its leadership, its determination. To you, Prime Minister Chesney, thank you so much, sir. But also what a wonderful lesson from St. Lucia for the rest of the world that lives in democracy to have two prime ministers, a prime minister, the former prime minister from two different political sides of life, side by side, speaking on the same podium, participating in the same activity supported by their both governments that brings development to St. Lucia. That is a type of democracy the world needs. So we at RMI and Rocky Mountain Institute stand ready to be by your side on the exciting steps ahead. Don Trevor, a las órdenes. Let's see where we can go from here. Second and lastly, to me, this represents a shining example of four things. First, it is a shining and no pun intended with this sun on the panels when I say shining. But it is a shining example of for the entire Caribbean. This is the largest solar project in the East Caribbean. It produces energy for 3,500 homes. And in that, it is not only an example for the Caribbean, but for regions above and beyond. It highlights the opportunities of the region to be able to transfer from energy costs that go between 33 and 67 cents per kilowatt hour to energy costs that are much lower based on renewables. Secondly, this is also the beginning of a journey, the beginning of a journey to cut carbon emissions, which is good for the planet. And to begin eventually to cut energy costs in St. Lucia when we have more renewables up and running, which is good for the people. So it's good for the people and it's good for the planet. Thirdly, it provides leadership for the world of how a small island nation, St. Lucia, still in many aspects developing as my country, can in fact move forward, show the road for other countries, small, medium, and large to follow in these footsteps and be able to combat climate change, which is the most impressive of all challenges humanity has ever faced, but is also the greatest economic opportunity as we are seeing here today. And fourthly and last, it is living proof of the efficacy of a public-private partnership. This project has involved the government of St. Lucia and Lucitec. It has involved business bidders and contractors, Grupo Tech, Javier Bela, muchas gracias por estar acá. It has involved civil society, RMI, the Clinton Global, the Clinton Climate Initiative of the Clinton Foundation, Dutch Postcode Lottery, and it has involved international organizations such as GEF and UNDP. Again, heartfelt recognition and deepest gratitude to all that have contributed to this momentous occasion. Y ahora, amigas y amigos. Now it is my distinctive pleasure to introduce a friend, the 42nd President of the United States, President William Jefferson Clinton. To us here, much more important than that, and with full respect for your tenure, sir, we would like to welcome and introduce a true friend of the Caribbean and a global statement, a global statesman that has always had in his heart the well-being of peoples around the world and the well-being of the planet. Señor Presidente. Thank you very much, President Figueros. Thank you for that introduction, for your wonderful work, and for saving me a lot of words. I should just say I agree with him and sit down. For many years now, he's been trying to get me to do exactly that. Governor General and Lady Snagg, Prime Minister, and Mrs. Chastney, thank you for the meeting we had and the work you're doing and the work I hope we will do in the future. Former Prime Minister and current Minister for Infrastructure, Sports, Energy, and Labor, King, thank you for your wonderful remarks and your work. Former Prime Minister and Representative Dr. Anthony, it's good to see you again. Thank you for welcoming me 15 years ago to this wonderful place. Dr. Fletcher, thank you, and Trevor Loisey, and John Joseph, and the others from Blue Select, thank you. Mark Grundy and the RMI Carbon War Room crowd, thank you for the chance to work with you. I feel like a guy who was speaking at the first banquet I spoke at. It was a Rotary Club banquet in 1977. I was a young official. I'd worked hard on my speech. The dinner began at six. I was introduced at nine. There had been eight previous speakers and 500 people in the audience had all been introduced except three. They went home angry and my introducer was so nervous. He was trying to give me a good introduction and he said, you know, we could stop now and have had a good evening. He meant to say the best is yet to come but most people thought, please do stop right now. I want to say what I think all of this means. This clearly makes St. Lucia a clean energy leader in the Caribbean. I applaud the government and previous governments and all the ministers here in Blue Select and I agree with everything that Jose Maria said. I think this should be seen as the beginning of a comprehensive, determined, unrelenting effort to make St. Lucia and all the island nations of the Caribbean stronger, safer and more sustainable. All this clean energy will only work if it can be protected. The sea levels are rising. The storms are growing in intensity. One of the reasons we have the support we have today for doing what needs to be done in clean energy is that we know what causes the sea levels to rise. One of the reasons it's going to be hard to continue the energy for doing the right thing if larger, wealthier countries and multinationals walk away is that every nation knows that alone we cannot do this. This is supposed to be an era of militant nationalism, our crowd against the world. I don't suppose it would be possible for any person to be prouder of or more benefited by being an American than me. You are, I hope, looking at the last American president who, as a child, lived in a place without indoor plumbing. It sounds so great as a campaign issue. It is overrated as a lifestyle, particularly if you come from where I do. In the winter, you freeze to death. In the summer, you have to watch out for the snakes. I grew up in a place where we had to learn the difference between a poisonous and a non-poisoned snake by age five to have a really good chance of growing up. I'm proud of that. I'm proud of my country. But I'm not proud when we pretend that we don't have obligations to others or we pretend that our destiny should be entirely in our own hands or we pretend that it's us against the world. We live in an interdependent world. Nobody caused climate change alone. Nobody is raising the sea levels alone, and no one will fix it alone. The same is true of global poverty and of all the rising conflicts. The truth is that the future lies in what I would call inclusive nationalism. Be proud of who you are and where you're from and what your roots are, and still know that diverse groups make better decisions than totally homogenous ones. If this project, the prospect, the result of two governments, as Jose Maria said, of different parties, and the utility and the government, and input from civil society groups and all the people that backed us, including the Norwegian Development Agency, what if they were also nationalists? They said it's cold up here. What do we care what happened in St. Lucia? Or the Dutch Postcode Lottery? They will only help the Dutch islands and the Caribbean. The Dutch Postcode Lottery just built the first completely carbon neutral, that is zero emissions building in the Netherlands for their headquarters. It is entirely funded by Dutch citizens most of you will never meet who buy little lottery tickets, and 100% of their profits go both to needs in the Netherlands and to people throughout the world. Why are they interested in financing me to help you? Because they know that we have a common future. And so what I ask you to do is to think about what this really means. You've done something good, remarkable, worthy in its own right. You know that you can do more. The Caribbean still has about the highest electric rates in the world. You have to work things out that are fair to a utility that is clearly willing to help you and has been built on a certain set of assumptions and the world has changed. It's now wind energies economical, solar energies economical. For all I know here geothermal energy may be economical, but you've had to figure out how to get from here to there. You will have to do that together. And at the same time as I have heard the Prime Minister say again today, you have to do it in a way that makes the island more resilient. Otherwise, all your gains can be lost in the blink of an eye. Maybe we'll get lucky this year. You deserve the luck after what the storms last year did to the Caribbean. Didn't do it to you, but what happened to Puerto Rico and St. Thomas to Domenico, Dominica, and to other places compromised your future too. We have to do this together. So I hope that today will be a day which we'll all be able to look back on with pride. Five years, 10 years, 15 years from now, because it was the beginning of something remarkable and enduring. I saw the Dominican Republic where I spent a lot of time the last 18 years starting an AIDS program and then helping with various economic initiatives. I saw them. I know it's a bigger country, but you can get the picture. They put up 90 megawatts of windmills and cut their power bills by 25%. And they did it working with the utility. In Panama, I've seen them put up 400 megawatts of wind power. And in the six months when the hydro power doesn't work, provide 40% of the power to Panama City in a way that cut the bills, not increase it. I have seen last year in your country, Mr. President in Costa Rica, for the first time for more than six months, the entire country operated its full economy with no carbon emissions, zero. And the per capita income of Costa Rica, for a lot of reasons, is roughly twice that of the other countries in Central America. I'd say that not to brag on Costa Rica, but to say we have to raise the others to that level. And energy and sustainability is a part of it. And you can't do one without the other. So thank you for allowing us to work. I want to thank all the team from the Clinton Foundation here today. You know now that I'm old, this is a great gig I'm on. They do all the work and I get to give a speech. Doesn't seem fair. But I have lived with this issue now for more than 40 years. In the late 1970s, when I was a young Attorney General, I tried to get my state to invest in energy efficiency instead of wasting more money on a power plant we didn't need. They thought I was crazy. Now they think I had foresight. We can't wait 40 years for everybody to wake up to that reality now. Think how we would feel if none of our children and grandchildren were able to live in much of the Caribbean because it was underwater. Think how we would feel if it started earlier because we couldn't insure places anymore. So no one would build a resort, or for me a tragedy, a golf course, because there was no insurability. And yet here at hand, we have the means to do this. In New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, I had the honor to help find financing to rebuild some of the poorest parts of the United States. And I watched people, working people, move into homes that were affordable and simply through efficiency used so much less electricity that their rates were lower than they had been in more than a decade. It freed up money for the region to grow again. You can do that. You need the money you could get from having cheaper electricity to invest in your children's education, to invest in your infrastructure. And the utility needs that strategy because then they'll do just fine because there'll be more customers and more demand at lower costs. We have to do this together. So I leave you with that thought. I learned more last year from watching a movie called Black Panther. Do you see that movie? About the shape of the modern world then I did listening to all the politicians talk. A lot of people like Black Panther because it was the first American movie with an all-black cast that white people paid like crazy to go see. A lot of people liked it because there were so many women in strong roles. A lot of people liked it because it was a sci-fi thriller. A lot of people liked it, including me, because it proved that Africa was not full of countries described by certain adjectives that I hated because this African country had been blessed with a great resource and like a 22nd century Botswana had used the most of it to create a whole different world. I liked it because it was an African morality tale. It was an updated version of what Nelson Mandela lived and died for, the belief in inclusive tribalism. In that movie turned out the good guys were still the good guys at the end of the movie but no longer perfect. And it turned out the bad guy was still on the wrong side of the issue but not completely bad and in the end they decided to make the best of it and try to find some way to go forward together. That's what we all have to do. Caribbean can lead the world into building an inclusive 21st century prosperity. This region could be completely carbon-free. You still need utilities. What you've got to figure out is how to get off the fuel that's killing you and bankrupting you and generate it from the sun to wind, geothermal, biomass, and where possible hydro. And while you do that, you have to become more resilient. You can't reverse climate change with just clean energy. You can become insurable and you can grow and you can lose less in the storms. You can't turn back by having more reliance on clean energy and more reliance on resilience. That's what I want you to do. You took this step before most other people did. Lead the way to the future and we'll all follow waving our various flags together. Thank you and God bless you. Thank you President Clinton. Our final speaker this afternoon is our Prime Minister and Minister for Finance, Economic Growth, Job Creation, External Affairs, and the Public Service, Honorable Alan Shastney. Honorable Prime Minister, welcome to the podium, sir. Good afternoon. I'm not sure if everybody was clapping because I was the Prime Minister or because I was the last speaker. I'd like to probably think it was the former. Your Excellency, Sir Neville Snacken, Lady Snack, members of my cabinet, President Bill Clinton, the 42nd President of the United States of America, Mr. Jose Maria Figueres, former President of Costa Rica, Benvenito a Sanducía. The Dr. Kenny Antony, Parliamentary Representative of View Fort North, sorry, South, and also former Prime Minister. Permanent Secretaries, Deputy Permanent Secretaries, Mr. John Joseph Chairman of the Board of the Directors of the St. Lucia Electricity Company Services, other board members, Mr. Trevor Louisi, Managing Director of the St. Lucia Electricity Services, other members in management of the team of the St. Lucia Electricity Services, members of the Clinton Foundation, especially invited guests, staff members of St. Lucia Electricity Services Limited, and members of the media. So great to have all of you here today. Let me first start off by saying that when the itinerary of the former President Bill Clinton arrived, it included a golf game. And I was so disappointed to hear that we cancelled the golf game and we kept it to just this meeting. I hopefully you didn't hear about my prowessness at golf and decided to change your mind, but let me once again extend a formal welcome to President Clinton and the Clinton Foundation team to our beautiful island. President first visited our island shortly after he left office with a local ballroom named in his remembrance and that special occasion. It's safe to say that solutions will not soon forget that visit in 2003. Our people still remember with fondness how the President made an unscheduled trip and visit to our castries market to mingle with the vendors and shoppers alike. Apart from the media attention the President attracted, the Clinton Foundation made a commitment at that time to infighting HIV AIDS and St. Lucia and the OECS as a whole. This was a time when our countries were experiencing problems of capacity and we lacked the human and financial resources to deal with HIV AIDS epidemic. The Clinton Foundation assisted by negotiating on behalf of the OECS for a reduction in the price of pharmaceuticals to treat HIV and providing technical assistance. They were critical to us being able to access funding and to provide free and low cost medicine to persons living with HIV AIDS. Were it not for the Clinton Foundation lobbying on our behalf we may have not been able to reduce the number of persons contracting the disease and for that we are deeply grateful to you, sir. Help to Dominica. Recently the President Clinton visited Dominica to view the reconstruction efforts after Hurricane Maria and the foundation announced its willingness to assist Dominica in rebuilding its efforts. I too have been to Dominica and I'm very disheartened at what has taken place in Dominica and I again once again applaud and publicly acknowledge the efforts of the government of Dominica in very difficult and trying times. But the Dominica lesson and the lessons of last summer, like what President Clinton spoke about, has left a resonating message to all of us. And that message is that we live in a very sensitive ecosystem, one in which Senlusha cannot do it by itself. Even if Senlusha were to have the most successful economic model we would only be limited by our own resources. The true benefit to us is when our region can forge ahead and everybody be able to benefit. It was amazing to me that when we went around and people talked about whether Senlusha had been impacted and while immediately one would say no but in fact we were. Many solutions who were living in Dominica or living in the BVI and working in the BVI, many of them who were living in St. Croix in the Virgin Islands in Puerto Rico and had been sending back remittances for years, ones which we were depending on. Our farmers who had markets in the Northern Islands, our cruise industry, because without Puerto Rico, none of the cruise ships that came from North America would be able to come to St. Lucia on a seven-day trip. The tourism industry in general, even though many of us perceive Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands as being our competitors, the fact is the rest of the world think of us as one product, one destination. And so when people who heard of the level of devastation in the news, many of them felt that all of us had been impacted. So the fact is is that the world continues to see us as one, yet we continue to act as if we are just one. And I want to take up President Clinton on what he started, is that in order for us to be able to move forward and to solve this major crisis that we have, and clearly being here today is an effort on our part to be able to reduce emissions, to be more responsible citizens, and at the same time to economically make ourselves less dependent on fossil fuels. But climate change or the environment, climate global warming is having a devastating effect on us. And we're not going to resolve that problem by ourselves. This region has to unite. This region must come together with one singular voice in order to determine how we're going to move forward. The fact is that the odds are stacked up against us. The OECD continues to classify us as middle-income countries, and as a result of it, we don't have access to development funds. The protocols that most of the development agencies use reminds us every day that every project has a beginning, a middle, and an end. And because of the time they take to be able to disperse funds, it requires the corporation of both governments. And so I want to acknowledge and again thank the former government for the work that they did in starting this initiative and continuing some of the ideas and philosophies that were already begun. But it cannot be achieved by one party or one ideology by itself. And if that applies in solution, it also applies on a regional basis. The debt, we're not going to solve the problem of the debt crisis by ourselves. It is going to require us come together collectively. How we vote on a collective basis at the UN and other international agencies says everything about our determination to succeed. So as the lead prime minister for sustainable development, we have been working very closely with CARICOM and in particular the OECS about creating a common platform. Let us try to get that OECD can change how they classify us. Let us work on getting the protocols changed. But more importantly that this is global warming is something that we don't control. It's not within our destiny to be able to control. So even though we were to come 100% carbon neutral in our country, it's not going to change our destiny about global warming. So what it means is we have to adapt. And in adapting, we have to be able to take on investments that are critical to making that happen, but we have to do it within the constraints of what we are financially. And again, solution cannot resolve this problem by itself. It is going to take the collective effort of all of us to be able to make this thing work. And so we've been arguing with the World Bank and the IMF that loans that are going to be going towards resilience building and in terms of raising the level of our bridges, broadening the breadth of our rivers, slope stabilization, putting utilities under the ground, building dedicated centers for disaster relief. None of those things are going to contribute to the economic growth of our country. None of them. But if we have to borrow the funds through the traditional resources, it's going to reduce our ability to put money into healthcare, reduce our ability to put money into education and into our basic infrastructures because the country has been running a deficit. And the solution is better than most. In some other countries, the debt to GDP are in excess of 100%. The amount of money they're paying towards interest payments are in excess of what they pay in wages. So there is no space to be able to borrow the money to be able to fix this problem. And President Clinton spoke about it, and I hope that we appreciate what he was saying, that without insurance there is no viability. So if in fact insurance companies deem this region to be uninsurable, there are dramatic consequences to that, meaning that solutions, people from CARICOM and international people will not invest money in our region. This is again something in which St. Lucia cannot fight by itself. But President Clinton also spoke about the level of nationalism that's taking a place across the world. We know we've been down that road that that doesn't work. So how are we going to solve that problem? The fact is that we must take a leadership role and determining for ourselves what we need to do. We need to literally put this thing on a silver platter to make it almost impossible for the donor agencies not want to participate. Instead of thinking that they don't want to help, we must recognize that they are preoccupied with other things. And we must make ourselves that priority. Otherwise, we're not going to succeed in moving forward. I recap those events that to say that Mr. President, that you continue to be a friend of the small islands in the Caribbean. And today here we are once again grateful for the technical assistance your foundation has provided to St. Lucia Electricity Services for this solar farm we are officially opening. Susanna Locke said, and I quote, the sun that power the plant in the sky baves earth in ample energy to fulfill all the world's power needs many times over. It doesn't give off carbon dioxide emissions. It won't run out and it's free. I know we're still working on the free part. However, we must recognize that today's opening is a major step in the right direction of our country. I congratulate the board and the management of Lussek, the contractors, Grupo Tech, Rocky Mountain Institute and Global Energy and Engineering Advisory firm DNVGL for this project which we will all anticipate will help to change our energy landscape. As I mentioned in the budget, my budget earlier this year, among the key areas of focus for this administration are building capacity in renewable energy and adapting to climate change. Many people may not understand the order of priority, but that 60% of our foreign exchange goes towards purchasing petroleum products. 60%. So think of having all those that money rather than being in reserve at the central bank actually being in circulation in our economy, what the impact would be. Our price reliability. With renewable energy, we don't have to concern ourselves anymore about what the price of oil is. In fact, we can take that app off. It's something I have to look at every single morning as to what's happening to the price of oil because it has such a large implication in terms of our future in our economy. Cost efficiency. We know and we're seeing that the technology is getting better and better. So every single year, the technology that we're using for renewable energies is improving in efficiency and therefore then reducing our cost. But clearly, one of the things that we're contemplating and which is going to require the support of the opposition of civil society of everybody is going to be electrical vehicles. If in fact, we're going to become 100% dependent on renewable energy, how does it make any sense to continue to import fossil fuels to provide energy to our vehicles? Are solutions ready for this change? But the fact is if we want to make a dent in the world and recognizing how the world is going, the change must start here at home in order to give ourselves that level of independence. I'm very pleased that we are also on the plans for utilizing our geothermal resources. And following a pre-feasibility study for the geothermal project, the draft environmental and social impact assessment ESIA report for the drilling sites, we're working on the legislative and regulatory framework for introducing and integrating renewable energy into the domestic power system. This is something that started back in the 80s. I remember when I was an economist in the Ministry of Planning in 1984 to 1987, Mr. Lubin was the head of the program. So adapting to climate change, challenges for the small island states and limited natural resources, building resilience and implementing sustainable goals are all the challenges that we have to face, but recognize that our own future requires that we take this seriously, not only here in Celusia, but at the OECS and at the CARICOM level. In closing, I know that this renewable energy project will be a great success and it represents a new promise and a new model that I hope to see replicated in the future. Remain very optimistic about the future of the development of the electrical sector. As a government, we are committed to projects such as these which are key to facing climate challenges. We would like to thank all the different parties and partners in this project who worked tirelessly, not only to complete the project you deserve, but you all deserve a round of applause. Let me remind us that every project has a beginning, every project has a middle, every project has an end, and therefore it requires all of us to cooperate on a continual basis for the benefit of all solutions. So I thank you. Thank you, Honourable Prime Minister. It is now time to cut the ribbon and officially open the Lusilec 3 megawatt solar farm. We invite the members of the media to please take up your positions at the ribbon cutting area. The ribbon cutting will be done by Governor General, his Excellency Sir Emmanuel Neville-Snack. He will be accompanied by Prime Minister Honourable Alan Shastney, President William Jefferson Clinton, Minister for Infrastructure, Ports Energy and Labor Honourable Stevenson King, Lusilec Chairman Mr. John Joseph, Lusilec Managing Director Mr. Trevor Luisi, RMI Board of Trustees member Mr. Jose Maria Figures and the Deputy Resident Representative in the UNDP office for Barbados and the OECS Mr. Chisa Mikami. Will the ribbon cutting party take the positions? Invited guests will remain seated. After the ribbon cutting, the party will take a brief tour of the solar farm, following which President Clinton will make his exit to fly out to another engagement in the US Virgin Islands. Immediately following, other groups interested in touring the solar farm will be accommodated as we enjoy some refreshments and more great music from Ronald Buhingsen and Alison Markey. Please note that the solar farm is an industrial site and you should exercise every caution as you walk and please do not stray away from the touring party. So on behalf of the Lusilec Board of Directors, our Managing Director Mr. Trevor Luisi, the entire management team and the staff of Lusilec, we thank you for your attendance and attention and bid you a good afternoon.
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Teacher articulates how success will be measured - Example 1
Teacher articulates how success will be measured. Students can articulate how their success will be measured.
null
2016-01-13T19:09:10
2024-02-05T06:17:26
121
PC8zP3cVvWM
Today we will analyze the painting using VTS, what is VTS? Martina. Visual thinking strategy. Excellent. Our close readings and the vocabulary of art. This is called our academic vocabulary. Today's vocabulary is value, its texture, and its movement. Why are we doing this? So that we can understand and analyze the painting as to how the elements of art are used. Think for a minute. I know I am successful. Devin, would you go to the window? Thank you. Alright, students, please raise your hand. Think for a minute. When you walk out of here today, how will you feel successful as it pertains to your written analysis, your bell ringer? Okay, think for a minute. Okay, responses please. Shana. I know I will be successful when I understand how our elements are used in the painting. So Shana will feel successful when she understands, when I understand how the elements, is that right Shana? How the elements are used.
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Part 1: Dinner at a Chateau | Geneva in Luxury
PART 1 - Geneva, Switzerland We traveled to Geneva with my entire immediate family as a first stop prior to heading to the Alps and Megève. Although our time in Geneva was short, it was hard to not enjoy ourselves!Celebrating my mother's circle around the sun. Exploring the bourgeoisie city of Geneva. Spending time in the most quaint hotel and a quick cheeky GRWM. Accommodations: https://www.beau-rivage.ch/en/ Restaurant https://www.chateauvieux.ch/en/restaurant
[ "fashion", "life", "video", "vlog", "diary", "style", "lifestyle", "geneva", "switzerland", "passport", "france", "french", "Megève", "alps", "bourgeoisie", "luxury", "quaint", "hotel", "views", "city", "nature", "overseas", "international", "black travel", "african american", "black", "blog", "travel", "travelling", "expensive" ]
2020-12-27T19:45:01
2024-04-18T18:30:59
208
Pci7XMNPllc
Part one of this trip starts in Geneva, Switzerland We stayed at the Bu Ravage, a quaint bourgeois hotel that overlooked the lot of Geneva And I'm enjoying the fabulous hotel and the spectacular city We also got to celebrate my mother's birthday at an outstanding restaurant called Domaine du Chateauvue Up next is part two Wine tasting and skiing in the Alps
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Its Christmas Final poster GIVEAWAY and its a BIG one!!!!!
HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM ME TO YOU ALL Give away rules and how to enter yourself 1- Be Subscribed to the Channel 2- Tap the like button on the video 3-Comment on the video about the channel, the video or simply I want that poster I will use a random comment generator that will pick a random comment and that subscriber will win that poster you are more than welcome to try for every poster thew the month of December!!!! Show your Support with some Team Evlrabbit and EvlRabbit07 stuff available here more stuff coming soon!!!! https://www.etsy.com/shop/EvlRabbit07Designs?ref=l2-shopheader-name Get all you NRG Innovation Products at DriveNRG.com Contact me at teamevlrabbit@gmail.com If you want to see something more on the channel or something else I am always up for new games to try just subscribe to my channel and comment on the videos what you want to see or message me on Xbox live - EvlRabbit07. Follow me on Twitch https://www.twitch.tv/evlrabbit_07 follow me on Instagram @evlrabbit07 follow me on Twiter @evlrabbit07 follow me on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/TeamEvlRabbit/ #drifting #drift #racing #evlrabbit07 #teamevlrabbit #gamer #customwheelssetup #logitechg920 Special thanks to WeRabbitz for the use of there tracks if you want hear more of there music check them out at https://soundcloud.com/werabbitz or on facebook at https://www.facebook.com/werabbitz/ Girlfriends Shop for Custom coasters and other cool stuff check out her shop at the link below https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheMintyOwlCreations?ref=search_shop_redirect
[ "evlrabbit07", "christmas", "holiday", "free", "shoutout", "shoutouts", "25 days of christmas", "giveaway", "giveaways", "free giveaway", "holiday giveaway", "james deane", "piotr wiecek", "formula d", "formula drift", "formula drift giveaway", "diy", "forza horizon 3", "snow drifting", "blizzard mountain", "christmas giveaway", "free presents", "nrg innovations gaming", "horizon 3 tandems", "snow drift fail", "drifting in the snow" ]
2017-12-25T15:02:18
2024-02-05T07:08:58
357
pCgGlJdDZ7I
What's up everybody, welcome back to the channel and a Merry Christmas to you and your families, especially you know on this Christmas day episode. So Merry Christmas to you from my family and myself, to you guys. Hope you guys are having a good Christmas season. We're here on Blizzard Mountain in this focus RS with our Merry Christmas livery on it. Can't take credit for it, but it's definitely a pretty sweet livery. So today is Christmas, so this video is going to be pretty short, but want to get on here and have a little fun here on Blizzard Mountain in this holiday, you know livery car. So as always you guys know this is going to be how it ends for my 25-day Christmas giveaway here on the channel. Definitely got some pretty special posters to give away today for this video. So you guys know the rules if you don't and you're just coming to the channel. Well welcome to the channel for the giveaways here on Christmas. So if you don't know what to do, make sure you comment on this video down below. Anything you'd like to register yourself for the random drawing for the winner of the poster is make sure you like the video and comment as well as subscribe to the channel. Oh yeah, USA Stance person in here. So today's giveaway is actually going to be two poster cards. I saved these two for the Christmas giveaway because well once I tell you what they are you guys will know. So the first poster card that has been given away finds you this is giving away as a set so the winner will get both of these. So the first poster card is that of the rookie of the 2017 season, the rookie of the year Peter Vincic in that amazing S-15, his autographed poster card. And going along with that is the 2017 Formula Drift Pro Champion James Dean in his Thousand Tires Warhouse Drift Team S-15 autographed poster card. So the winner of today's episode for the Christmas giveaway will get both the Peter Vincic and the James Dean autographed poster cards which is pretty awesome that you know he won rookie of the year as well as James Dean won the championship as they are teammate. So it's pretty sweet. So I am saving that's why I saved both of those two people away here on Christmas. So if you guys want a chance to win those two posters make sure you comment down on this video down below as well as like and subscribe to my channel to support it. And once again I want to wish everybody a Merry Christmas or happy holidays depending on your background. You're not celebrating Christmas and you've celebrated the love of holiday. I wish you the best on all your holiday seasons to your family. You're celebrating Christmas today. Merry Christmas to you. Whoa he's died there. So like I said guys it is the holiday season is Christmas. I am going to meet this video pretty short because uh it's Christmas and I know not everybody wants to sit here and watch a long video because they got stuff to do with their families as well as I do. So we're just ripping around here in Blizzard Mountain. Crews in the streets and the snow in this focused RS running into a glon. But I wanted to make sure I got to see you guys that give me the opportunity for that. So coming up for the new year soon because the new year is coming to the 18th is coming look for a full wheel setup update on my rig. I will be modifying the setup changing it up some changes of adapters changes and you know things on the wheels and things on the setup. I am still sticking with energy innovations that is not a question of a matter. So stay tuned to the channel for more updates on and more how to's on the G920 setup that I run as well as more content coming out new games new recording styles and such. So I hope you guys enjoyed the 2017 year. I'll probably be doing a year review a year end big video montage of the best moments of 2017 for the new year before we get into 2018. But like I said guys I want to wish you guys a Merry Christmas happy holidays happy you know Hanukkah Kwanzaa Christmas Hanukkah whatever you guys celebrate you know that's your celebration. So you know I'm here celebrating it with you guys and you appreciate all the support from everybody throughout the holiday season in the giveaways. So you know you guys call me at least with quick Twitter and Instagram all the problems here from the box below as well as make sure to comment on this video to get that posters if you'd like. So I think that's going to do it here for this episode here on the 4th of Horizon 3. I'm blizzing them out in this Merry Christmas RS as we decide. So I'm Evil Rabbit and I'm out.
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Panthers Still Looking To Acquire Baker Mayfield?
Baker Mayfield could have played his last snap with the Cleveland Browns and the next team for him is still to be determined. One team that could be looking to acquire Baker Mayfield might be the Carolina Panthers. Pat McAfee reacted to the latest rumors around Baker Mayfield on 'The Pat McAfee Show'. Subscribe to the Pat McAfee Show: https://bit.ly/3eEQOyL Follow Pat McAfee on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PatMcAfeeShow #FanDuel #BakerMayfield #Panthers FanDuel on Twitter: https://twitter.com/FanDuel FanDuel on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/fanduel FanDuel on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fanduel/ FanDuel on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@fanduel FanDuel on YouTube: https://bitly.com/sub2FanDuel
[ "Baker Mayfield", "baker mayfield trade", "baker mayfield rumors", "baker mayfield trade rumors", "baker mayfield next team", "nfl", "cleveland browns", "baker mayfield browns", "fanduel baker mayfield", "fanduel", "fanduel nfl", "trade rumors", "nfl trade rumors", "nfl rumors", "Panthers Baker Mayfield", "Baker Mayfield Panthers", "Panthers Baker", "Pat McAfee Show Baker Mayfield", "Baker Mayfield Pat McAfee Show" ]
2022-06-15T00:14:52
2024-02-05T06:22:44
56
pCPgDWJdUbM
Carolina Panthers and Cleveland Browns are in the middle of trade talks right now. This just kind of got dropped out of nowhere. We obviously thought that the Browns and the Panthers would make a deal because Baker Mayfield going to the Panthers makes sense. This has been alluded to literally since the Deshaun Watson situation happened in Cleveland. Now, so the Panthers and Baker Mayfield have been linked for a long time publicly, but it sounded like when Baker spoke about it, he said nah, and then whenever the world started chatting about it after the Deshaun Watson trade, it was like a lot of things have to happen here for the Carolina Panthers to want to get into the Baker Mayfield. Now it is being reported with very firm conviction from Jonathan Jones. Hey, when JJ's on the beat and what JJ says, JJ knows. That's right. Trade talks between the teams continue surrounding quarterback Baker Mayfield per sources. Okay, so he said that it's been happening. The main issue remains Mayfield's salary and how much or how little teams pay.
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US non farm payrolls replayed - 5th May 2023
Michael covers the US non-farm payrolls report for April, as the numbers break, looking at all the key levels on the major indices, currencies and commodities. Get the latest daily analysis on key markets such as US 30, UK 100, Germany 30, Japan 225, USD/JPY, EUR/USD, GBP/USD, Brent and West Texas Crude Oil and Gold via our CMC TV playlist. CMC Markets is a global leader in online trading, offering spread betting and contracts for difference (CFDs). Learn how to spread bet and trade CFDs with our trading strategy videos. CMC Markets offers trading on thousands of financial markets including forex, indices, commodities, shares and treasuries. Website: http://www.cmcmarkets.com/en-gb/ This video is for general information only and is not intended to provide trading or investment advice or personal recommendations. Any information relating to past performance of an investment does not necessarily guarantee future performance. CMC shall not be responsible for any loss that you incur, either directly or indirectly, arising from any investment based on any information in this video. Please remember spread betting and trading CFDs carries significant risks and may not be suitable for all investors.
[ "indices", "markets", "stocks", "stock market", "charts", "how to", "charting", "currencies", "FX", "GBP", "JPY", "Crude", "Japan", "Dow", "FTSE", "UK100", "CMC Markets", "USD", "Exchange", "Funds", "economy" ]
2023-05-05T14:30:14
2024-04-18T18:19:41
1,904
PCc9TTUgEMA
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to this month's non-farm payrolls webinar with me, Michael Hueson, on Friday, the 5th of May, 2023, covering the April US jobs report. And given the events of this week, I think you'd be forgiven for thinking that perhaps today's jobs report has probably lost some of its importance. Certainly, that's my feeling about it. Obviously, we've seen concerns about the US banking sector remain front and center all of this week. Obviously, the Rescue First Republic at the beginning of the week. And that's been followed by the concerns about the health of Pac West Bank or Western Alliance, who've seen heavy falls this week. And obviously we also had to Jerome Powell, Jerome Powell's press conference on Wednesday in the aftermath of another 25 basis point rate hike from the Federal Reserve. I think the big question at the moment of vexing markets is whether we've hit peak rates when it comes to the Fed funds rate. And certainly the market's made up its mind. The market seems to think that we probably have. And even though Powell changed the guidance on Wednesday, or the FOMC changed the guidance on Wednesday, about the prospect for future rate hikes, that doesn't necessarily mean they're completely off the table. However, and is a big however, given what we've seen thus far this week, I think the fact that the Fed has signaled that it may well pause for a while to try and establish the pass through effects of recent rate hikes on the US economy is probably eminently sensible. I think the bigger question is our markets right in starting to price in rate cuts by the beginning of q3. And the answer to that question is depends. I would say no, I'm not a big fan of the idea that we are going to get rate cuts this year. But that's not to say that things won't change or the banking crisis won't get worse. Certainly if you look at US two year yields, they're at the bottom end of their recent range and pretty much back at the level they were a month ago. When I was sitting here talking to you in the in the lead up to the March jobs report and which saw a massive beat on the headline number. So what we've what we've seen so far this week is that while jobless claims have risen from below 200,000 to be trending at around about 240,000 per week. If you actually look at continuing claims they've actually been trending down from highs of around about 1,860,000 to 1.8 million. So you're getting a little bit of a mixed view also the ADP jobs report earlier this week came in well above expectations at 296,000. The ISM services index showed that prices paid nudge tire, while the employment component of the services report was roughly flat around about 50.8. So there are many reasons why today's jobs report could well. Miss to the upside, ie we're expecting 185,000. That seems rather conservative, given the fact that there are still 9.6 million vacancies in the US economy. You know and people are sort of fretting about the fact that they've dropped below 10 million in the last couple of months I mean 9.6 million is a lot of people. And if the unemployment rate is to go up by the amount the Fed expects it to with respect to its end of year forecast of four and a half percent. It's got to go up by another not 0.9% from where it is now, but also those vacancy rates have got to come down quite sharpish. And that would require a significant reversal of fortune for the US economy now the banking crisis may well provide that. Certainly it has tightened credit conditions and it certainly will have made banks more cautious. But if you actually look at the macro data for the US economy, it's still pretty decent. And even though first quarter GDP was a little bit disappointing in the numbers that were released a couple of weeks ago. That was largely as a consequence of running down inventory. The actual personal consumption was fairly solid. So at the moment, we're range trading on the two year. You've seen some big falls, but it does appear to be an area of support around about three and a half 3.6%. And it's pretty toppy anywhere above four. We're also seeing a similar sort of trend player in the German bomb market. There is this perception perhaps that European rates have topped. Certainly President Lagarde gave the impression that she didn't want people to think that. But looking at the way German two year yields have traded over the last two weeks, they've they're on course decline for the second week in a row, just like US two year yields. So there is this expectation or there's this the bond market thinks we've hit peak rates. And really now it's just a question of what does the data tell us in the context of when are we going to get rate cuts? Now, in the case of the US, if the data continues to hold up, while we may not get rate hikes or further rate hikes, we're not going to get rate cuts, not while inflation is still fairly high. And we've got US CPI next week. And that could well give an indication that inflation has continued to fall on the headline number. But the core number is really where the Fed's focus of attention is right now. And that continues to remain sticky. As a reminder, that ticked up to 5.6% on the core CPI in the March numbers. So on Tuesday, that'll be a particular that'll be a particular. So it's not Tuesday Wednesday, that'll be a particular focus for on the on the 10th. There'll be a particular focus of investor attention US CPI. But in the here and now. Let's look at the headline numbers for non farm payrolls. Now, Reuters have kindly decided to leave off the estimates, but they you can you can find it in the calendar. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to tell you what the estimates are for today's payrolls numbers. So on the headline number, the headline number is expected to come in 185,000 and down from 236,000 in March. The unemployment rate is expected to tick up to 3.6% from 3.5%. Now 3.5% is around about 50 year low. Earlier this week, you unemployment drops to a record low. So that gives you an indication of where we are in terms of the labor market. It's it's pretty tight. And even though there's plenty of vacancies, people are having trouble filling them. So I would suggest that wage growth, which, albeit did fall to 4.2% in March, it's likely to stay above 4% in April. And April also tends to be a fairly decent hiring time for an awful lot of what I would call recreational jobs because around about April May time, all the parks, the national parks in America start to reopen. So you get an awful lot of hiring in and around that period of time as the parks reopen and people's attention starts to turn to driving season, which obviously comes up, which is also on the horizon. One thing we have seen this week is a big decline in oil prices. They're on the rebound today. But again, they're at the bottom, they're at the bottom of the range of the over the course of the past few months, they haven't actually taken out the lows that we saw back in March. And if they fall too much, then you can certainly see OPEC plus jumping in again and cutting production. So I think there's limited downside there. And also on US prices, the US still needs to refill the strategic petroleum reserve. So that should limit the downside in WTI as well. But here and now Euro dollar continues to find life difficult anywhere above 110 and a half. We can see from this line here, we've had three attempts to try to get through 111. And there's fairly decent support at 109.40. And I think that will continue to be the way of it over the course of this payrolls report. It's going to be a real struggle, I think, for the Euro to really push above 110, 111 irrespective of what policymakers at the ECB governing council might say when you get German factory orders declining by 10% in one month, then the ECB needs to be very, very careful about how hard it applies the monetary policy break. Cable continues to trend higher. I'm still of the opinion that we can head to 127, 128. Secondly, if you look at UK guilt to your guilt yields, they've held up an awful lot better than US and German to your yields. And that's why the pound has done really well this week because yield differentials are again moving in the pound's favor. We've got the Bank of England next week. I expect I fully expect them to raise rates again by another 25 basis points. I don't really have a choice when you consider that actually the UK economy has done an awful lot better than thought was thought to have been the case at the end of last year. GDP is coming out next week, first quarter, and that's likely to see another expansion, albeit a very mild expansion of 0.1% for the first quarter. The monthly GDP number for March is also expected to come out with a similar amount. We may see 0.2, given the fact that monthly GDP for January was at 0.4%. So we'll have to see whether or not that plays out. What we do have to remember though is in March markets were hit quite hard on the back of the initial blow up of Silicon Valley Bank, which happened on the 9th of March and prompted the big sell-off that we've struggled to really recover from over the course of the last couple of months. But Cable is now starting to run into a little bit of resistance from this trend line from the highs back in June 2021, which currently comes in around about 127 on my chart. So you could see a little bit of dollar strength today because the dollar's had a poor week, it's down on the week, pretty much across the board. It's done particularly poorly against the yen and against the Australian dollar. So another rate hike from the RBA on Tuesday, a surprise rate hike. So the dollar is due to, I think, give up some ground. And if you really do think the Fed is on pause, then the likelihood of further rate hikes diminishes further, particularly if these numbers come in in line with expectations. I think if you are going to see a bit of dollar strength towards the end of this week, the number will either have to come in line or be very, very good to prompt a little bit of dollar buying. We could well see that every single non-farm payrolls number that we've seen so far over the course of the past few months has come in higher than the forecast. So will this be the exception? Or will it not be the exception? Who knows. But for me, I think 185 does seem a little on the low side when you price in seasonal factors. And I think if you're going to be talking about potential pause, then you want to be seeing labor market numbers of around about 10, 15, 20, and then start to see some negative numbers heading into the summer. And I'm not really sure we're quite there yet. So anyway, dolly end. So I'll tell you the opinion that by year end we'll probably see Dolly end in the mid 120s. And we've tried on a couple of occasions to break through the 200 day moving average at around about 137. We did have a false break and I was bald trap here we've come back down again. And we now look to be testing support in and around these what this 132 and a half area. Again, I think it's much more likely that the Bank of the Bank of Japan will tweak its yield curve control settings, pushing the yen higher, pushing the dollar lower. As I say, I think the Fed's on pause. I think we'll probably be on pause for at least the next three months, unless something quite drastic happens or inflation spikes higher at the moment. I don't see much evidence of that, given the fact that US PPI is already down at 3.4% on an annualized basis and could well fall further. And if that's the case from US PPI, I usually tend to think that PPI acts as a leading indicator to CPI. It's also worth keeping an eye on the participation rate when the numbers break. That's been edging higher over the course of the last six months. It's gone from 62.2 to 62.6 over the course of the past six months, which suggests more and more people are returning to the workforce. That could in turn push the unemployment rate up. Again, I'm not bothered about that. If people are returning to the workforce, it means those vacancy numbers could soon come down even faster. That for me is a positive when it comes to the outlook for the US economy. It needn't be a negative. Why should it be? So for me, I think things that point to a strong report, the beat on ADP job openings are still very plentiful, 9.6 million. That's not too shabby spring hiring season. And the big data on the services side is still holding up very well. And manufacturing data has actually started to pick up certainly in the US on the weaker side of the ledger. The increase in weekly jobless claims over the course of the past few weeks, but then continuing claims have been coming down. So, you know, you pay your money, you take your choice. Is that positive? Is that negative? Tighter credit conditions could act as a break on the US economy. It could stop companies hiring people because they're less certain about the future going forward and weaker employment surveys. But overall, I think the outlook for the US economy, it is slowing, but the labour market still remains fairly resilient. And consequently, I would expect that the best that we can hope for, it's unlikely we'll see further rate hikes. And I think that for me is probably the key takeaway that I've taken from events this week. So even if we get a decent report, we may see a spike in yields, but I don't think that will mean that we'll see a rate hike in June. Because we have to bear in mind this is one number. We get two more CPI reports before the next meeting, and we also get another non-farm payrolls report as well. So the market may react on a short-term basis, but what it won't do is certainly determine the overall direction as it goes forward. And for me, it's now more about when we get the next rate cut or the first rate cut. And again, the market is pricing in potentially July or August. I think that's wishful thinking on the market's part. I think we could stay at current levels for quite some time and certainly pricing in one or 200 basis points of rate cuts by year end. Unless there is a significant deterioration in economic conditions. I think that is highly unlikely. In any case, we're just counting down to the overall numbers. But for me, I think there's nothing to suggest that we're going to break out of the range that we're currently in. If we look at the S&P 500, we can see from this chart here that we've got fairly decent support in and around these areas down here. But it's 4,200 area, big, big resistance. I think we're going to continue to range trade over the course of the next few days and weeks. And this is essentially how I would look to trade these markets. Just pick your levels and range trade the levels. If we look at the NASDAQ 100, we can see from this that there's potential for us to certainly edge higher today. Obviously, Apple's numbers are fairly decent and we're getting the numbers breaking right now. Non-farm is 253, so that's a fairly decent result. I thought we'd get a better number on that, so that is fairly decent. Let's see if we get a revision to that. On that, the unemployment rate falls to 3.4%. Wow. I mean, that's a pretty decent report. So again, really positive for the dollar. Let's get that down there. Average earnings are up as well, 4.4%. So double bubble here, solid on the average earnings and 4.3 revised upwards on the headline number. Now that's interesting. The revision lower on the March number. So let me just work on that. I'm assuming that revision is right. At the moment, it's not confirmed on Bloomberg. So take that, what I've just said with a pinch of salt, because Reuters have a tendency to be fairly unreliable when it comes to their push-throughs on the calendar. But what I'm seeing on my Reuters is that there is a downward revision. I would be very, very surprised by that. But let's just see what comes out over the course of the revisions as we get them. Let's have a look at a participation rate, 62.6%. So again, it's a really positive report from what I can see based on those numbers that are broken now. Obviously, the dollar is higher. You're a dollar down below 110, cable below, back below 126. And we are getting the revisions and 165 on the March numbers revised down from 236. So that's interesting. Private payrolls were revised lower from 239 to 123. Change of manufacturing, average hourly earnings. So wages up. Again, it's a decent report. There's certainly nothing there to suggest that the U.S. economy, hiring may be slowing. But we're not certainly, we're not, we're certainly not seeing a marked slowdown. So we may get a, we'll probably get a dip back to 109.40 in euro dollar. But overall, I think that jobs report matters slightly less than what we're seeing when it comes to the U.S. banking sector. Let's take a quick look at the two-year yield. That was already higher, leading into the numbers. It's probably even higher now. Yep, 10 basis points up on the day. There's your two-year. So it's really all you need to know. So we're pretty much back in the range, bottom of the range on the two-year and about 3.65. Top of the range anywhere near and above 4%. So we're pretty much back where we've been for the past three or four months. It's very much a range trade on the markets at the moment. We've remained in a range on euro dollar. We've remained in the range pretty much on NASDAQ, S&P and the Dow. And overall, I think the markets are more concerned about what's going to happen with PAC West Bank or Western Alliance and U.S. banks when markets reopen in just under an hour. So if anyone has any questions that they want to ask me about particular markets that they want me to cast my eye over, I'm more than happy to do that. But for the here and now, for me, I think this jobs report just really supports the idea that the U.S. economy is fairly resilient, rates are likely to remain on hold, not cut, on hold now, on a pause for quite some time to come. And the markets are going to continue to range trade from here on in. As I say, there is a questions box somewhere which you can ask me questions and hopefully I can answer to them to your satisfaction. So let's go Aussie dollar. Actually, funny you should say that James, I was looking at that earlier today. Right, we next week, we got China trade. Now looking at this, for me, the big level is 68. Why? Because obviously we've got these series of peaks through here. It's also a little bit of a pivot level in and around here. But for me, I think this potential for the Aussie to go a little bit higher, certainly not today. Certainly, I think in the context of rate expectations, we've seen a significant shift between Australian rates and US rates over the course of the past few days. Obviously the surprise rate hike from the RBA on Tuesday has played a part in that. But I think if we get some decent Chinese trade numbers later next week, and it shows that far from the economy slowing down in April, it starts to accelerate. We could see a rebound in commodities, copper, what have you. That should be good for the Aussie dollar. And consequently, we should see a retest of this series of peaks through April around about 68. So for me, I'm fairly constructive when it comes to the Aussie dollar. But obviously we have to bear in mind that we're in a range and this range can be defined by this piece of price action right here. But we have seen a fairly decent move higher through these lows there. So hopefully that gives you some indication or some idea of my thought processes around Aussie dollar. Any other questions, ladies and gents? I'm going to quickly look at gold, because gold started to retest its record highs recently, but obviously the spike up in yields now is acting as a drag. We can see this 2070 area is a big, big resistance. Those of you who followed me on a regular basis will know very much that I'm a levels trader. I wait for my opportunity and pick my levels, trade in and out, as and when I see an area that I particularly like. And it's usually just basic support and resistance levels. It's nothing too complicated, essentially, because I don't have time to be complicated. But certainly what we've seen here with respect to gold would appear to suggest that we could well see a bit of a bit of a correction back down to around about $2,000 an ounce on that basis. So it's a fairly decent, fairly decent chart there. As I say Brent crude in West Texas could well see a little bit of a move higher. Given the fact that we've bounced off the March lows on Brent, we can see that there around about $70 a barrel. That's a fairly decent support area and likely to remain so. Obviously if we do break below there, then I sort of revise my assessment of the market. Anything else? Ladies and gents. Look at the look at the Canada. Let's look at the Canada because we also saw the Canadian jobs report as well. So let's look at that. On the basis of the Canadian numbers. Let's just quickly find out what's going on there. It's 41,000 jobs added in April up from 34 points 34,700 in March. So a decent Canada jobs report. And that's pretty much born out by the move in dollar card there. Big, big, big Canada gains there. The participation rate in Canada remains at 65.6%. So again, pretty much okay. And just been pointed out to me that the two month payroll net revision is negative to the tune of 149,000. So, as again, you've got positives and negatives in that payrolls report. So the unemployment rates decent, but the two month net revision, not so much, but we did get a seasonal boost in April because of the 253,000 that we got in April. So pretty decent overall, well, average. Any other questions being asked if there's a free alternative to Bloomberg in terms of finding these revisions quickly. If there was, I think I'd use it with respect to the gold price, not really know because we need to basically go above it and hold above it for me. I think when you're talking about a record high or a record low, you need follow through on it. And if you don't get follow through on a move above a record higher record low, it becomes it becomes very suspicious. And that for me, I think is one of the things about gold. I think, you know, there is potential for us to record new record highs, but certainly not on the basis of those those particular numbers that we saw over the course. That we've seen that we've seen today. CPI next week might do it, particularly if we get a week CPI number. We're expecting 5% CPI for April, which will be unchanged from March, but more importantly than that core CPI is being forecast to drop from 5.6% to 5.4. So that's that's potentially could be interesting. If we get a week CPI reading, we could start to see those yields come back down again. So it's certainly worth keeping on US CPI next week. Obviously we've got the Bank of England next week as well. As I say, I will get we will get new projections for inflation and GDP from Mr Andrew Bailey and his cohorts. Let's hope they're a bit less. Let's hope that they do a better job of them than they've done in the previous lot, but certainly given the fact that they were projected predicting a two year recession in November. I generally don't tend to take too much notice of anything the Bank of England puts out because usually it ends up as chip paper a week later. But overall, I'm still expecting to see some form of dissent on any decision to raise rates from the usual suspects of 10 Rero and Dingra, but 10 Rero is less relevant now because she's being replaced in June, July by Megan Green, another economist from the US, who I happen to know, and tends to and she tends to lead slightly more hawkish so I think the Bank of England will start to have less of a dovish voice coming out of it in the wake of Green's appointment so it'll be interesting to see how that dynamic plays out in 10 Rero departs. Anything anything else, ladies and gents, before I wind this up. No. Okay. All right, well, thank you for your time today. I'm going to say it's a middling report unemployment really good wages really solid gains there. So it's more positive than negative even if you take it even if you take into account the fact that there's been a negative two month provision of around about 150,000. And here and now I'd just like to wish you all a good long weekend. Yeah, good long weekend. Hope you enjoy the coronation. Hope the weather's decent for you. I probably won't be paying too much attention to the coronation. It doesn't really interest me that much. But it gives us an extra day off. So that's always a good thing. And see you all the same time, same place next month for another non farm payrolls webinar. Thanks very much for listening and have a great weekend.
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EFFector 35.5 | Decoding the U.N. Cybercrime Treaty
EFF's EFFector newsletter for April 17, 2023. To read EFFector, which includes links to all of the stories mentioned, visit https://eff.org/effector/35/5. Become an EFF member today! Grab some gear and donate at https://eff.org/EFFect
[ "EFF", "Electronic Frontier Foundation", "nonprofit", "tech", "law", "activism", "technology", "privacy", "security", "freespeech", "free expression", "U.N. Cybercrime Treaty", "EFFector", "smart locks", "surveillance", "podcast", "how to fix the internet" ]
2023-04-18T16:50:17
2024-04-23T02:27:11
438
pcSM_byk1Lc
Welcome to Affector from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. This is the audio edition of EFF's emailed newsletter geared towards keeping you on the bleeding edge of your digital rights. This is Affector Volume 35, Issue 5, titled, Decoding the UN Cybercrime Treaty. This issue was published on Monday, April 17th, 2023, and I'm your host, Member Outreach Assistant Christian Romero. Let's start with our top feature. Decoding the UN Cybercrime Treaty Negotiations for a proposed UN Cybercrime Treaty commenced in 2017, but began to take shape in 2022, and there's a lot at stake. The draft treaty has the potential to rewrite criminal laws around the world, possibly adding over 30 criminal offenses and new expansive police powers for both domestic and international criminal investigations. These widened parameters have grave implications for billions of people, particularly the potential for stifling free speech, increasing government surveillance, and expanding state investigative techniques. Now let's move over to some updates. First up, stop the Restrict Act and pass real privacy legislation. Under the guise of curbing data collection by foreign governments, the Restrict Act, Senate Bill 686, would set the stage for a restriction on the use of TikTok, but not do nearly enough to truly protect our private information. There are legitimate data privacy concerns about social media platforms, but the Restrict Act is a distraction. Congress instead should pass comprehensive data privacy legislation. Next, AI art generators in the online image market. Now that computer generated imaging is accessible to anyone with a weird idea and an internet connection, the creation of AI art is raising questions and lawsuits. The problem going forward is keeping the good things, open source technology that researchers can audit, cutting down on tedious parts of making things, without letting the concerns give powers to the same companies that disempower artists every day. Next, enough is enough. Tell Congress to ban federal use of face recognition. Police and government use of face recognition technology cannot be effectively regulated. Face surveillance in the hands of the government is a fundamentally harmful technology, even under strict regulations and if the technology was 100% accurate. Protect your elected federal officials and tell them to support the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act. Next up, smart locks endanger tenants' privacy and should be regulated. The growing deployment of smart locks in apartments has created a new stream of sensitive location data for law enforcement, landlords, and private companies. Tenants should not be forced to submit tracking just to enter their home. At minimum, we need privacy laws that require consent to collect this data, a warrant for police access, and strong data minimization. And for our final update, podcast episode, Losing Until We Win, Realistic Revolution in Science Fiction. Science Fiction author and science journalist Annalie Newitz speaks with EFF Cindy Cohn and Jason Kelly about depicting true progress as a long haul endeavor, understanding that failure is a part of the process and creating good law as a form of world building and improving our future. Now let's go over some EFF events. First up, EFF at Beeside San Francisco. We're happy to be back at Beeside San Francisco from April 22nd to April 23rd. If you're attending the event, be sure to stop by our booth and say hi. You can even pick up a special gift when you take advantage of our membership specials or donate. Next up, EFF 7th Annual Tech Trivia Night. Join us in San Francisco on Thursday, April 27th for EFF 7th Annual Tech Trivia Night. Explore the obscure monotony of digital security, online rights, and internet culture. Enjoy delicious tacos, churros, and drink as your team battles through rounds of questions and cutthroat live judging to see who will take home the coveted trophies and EFF swag. And for our last event, EFF at Black Hat USA. EFF is once again excited to be back in Las Vegas for Black Hat USA. If you're interested in submitting a talk to Black Hat, you can contact info at EFF.org about any legal concerns regarding your talk or any sensitive info security research you are conducting. And finally, let's run through some mini-links. First up from Just Security, Digital Privacy Legislation is Civil Rights Legislation. As Congress ponders legislation to reform big tech, it must view comprehensive digital privacy legislation as desperately needed civil rights legislation because data abuses often disproportionately harm communities already bearing the brunt of other inequalities. EFF's page callings and Adam Schwartz make the case. Next up from Reason, the government is turning border surveillance on everyday Americans. When viewing the towers on the map, you can really get a sense of how these tools of surveillance are installed in residential communities along the U.S.-Mexico border, be it in urban or rural, and not in just remote expanses of the Southwest. EFF's Dave Moss discusses our new border surveillance technology map. Next up from Mashable, Why Age Verification Bills for Porn Sites Won't Work? Louisiana's age verification law is essentially creating an immediate requirement for people to share their private information alongside their pornography preference with companies that don't necessarily have a system in place to protect that data. EFF's Jason Kelly breaks it down. Next up from BBC News, Clearview AI used nearly one million times by U.S. police. It tells the BBC. Clearview is a private company that is making face prints of people based on their photos online without their consent. It's been a huge problem for civil liberties and civil rights, and it absolutely needs to be banned. EFF's Matthew Gariglia argues against this perpetual police lineup. Our final mini-link comes from Voice of America, TikTok controversy. Governments can ban TikTok, but they will not be denying Chinese government access to user data unless you are restricting the data flows to data brokers who sell it to foreign governments. EFF's David Green outlines the civil liberties issues at stake. And that's it. Thanks for listening. If you like what you're hearing, be sure to sign up for the email version of Effector, which includes links to in-depth coverage of these stories and more. See past issues and subscribe at EFF.org slash Effector. Before we end this issue of the newsletter, I just want to let you know that EFF is a member-supported nonprofit organization, and you can help us protect digital privacy, security, and free expression for everyone. Donate to EFF today and even grab a bit of gear by heading over to EFF.org slash Effect. That's EFF.org slash EFF ECT. You can become a member for as little as $25 or even sign up as a monthly or annual donor. Thanks for your support, and I hope you'll join us for the next issue of Effector.
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FACEBOOK STOCK EXPLODES ON EARNINGS 🔥 | Stock Market Update 4/24/19
🔴 SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiIarDNLrAA1xWsbHWW2ehQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔴 🔵 FREE DISCORD CHAT: https://discord.gg/aavHHGT 🔵 🤑 Sign Up & Get a FREE STOCK: https://share.robinhood.com/anastas82 🤑 📘 FREE Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/261011534628242/ 📸 Stas Serfes Instagram (@StasSerfes): https://www.instagram.com/stasserfes/?hl=en 📸 Strive Smart Instagram (@StriveSmart): https://www.instagram.com/strivesmart/?hl=en 🐥 Twitter (@StasSerfes): https://twitter.com/StasSerfes 📕 My Favorite Investing/Trading/Personal Finance Books ⤵️ 📗 Investing Books - https://amzn.to/2Dr2nq4 -https://amzn.to/2KSQVtL -https://amzn.to/2Dmw9MI -https://amzn.to/2UO1AKA 📘 Trading Books -https://amzn.to/2DpFkw5 -https://amzn.to/2KSTtrD 📕 Personal Finance Books -https://amzn.to/2URaNC9 -https://amzn.to/2VY0bh0 Business Inquiries: StriveSmarter@gmail.com Disclaimer: These videos that I create on YouTube shouldn’t be taken as financial advice. I am not a licensed financial professional. Nothing I mention in these videos is meant to be a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, etf, index, or future. Please consult with your financial professional for your financial advice. I am not liable for any loss that you may experience from watching these videos. Do your own research when it comes to investing and trading to take 100% responsibility for your financial decisions and future.
[ "facebook stock", "facebook stock analysis", "is facebook stock a buy", "facebook stock 2019", "top stocks week 4 april 2019", "top stocks im trading april 2019", "top stocks april 2019", "stocks to buy in april", "stocks to buy in april 2019", "trading stocks for beginners", "swing trading for beginners", "april 2019 stocks", "stock market", "investing", "stock market for beginners", "how to make money trading stocks", "swing trading strategies", "day trading for beginners", "trading stocks with $100" ]
2019-04-24T23:06:30
2024-02-07T17:32:20
1,589
pCCDrAaxmOc
What is going on everybody, it's Stas here. Welcome back to yet again, another video. So in today's video, we're going to be doing an overall market update, very briefly looking at the S&P 500, the Dow Jones, and the NASDAQ. We're going to be doing a quick trading update as well as hopping into Facebook's earnings. What did they end up reporting? And their numbers were pretty, pretty solid for this quarter, as well as taking a look at some other companies, some other stocks and ETFs that I'm personally watching here over the next couple of days, heading into the May month of 2019. So before we do get into the topics of today's video, for everybody out there that finds value in these videos, you enjoy the content that I'm putting out here on YouTube, feel free to go down below and hit that like button, guys. It really does support me and supports the channel in general, and I do appreciate every single one of you guys out there watching, subscribing, hitting the like button. It really does mean a lot to me. So without further ado, let's just hop into it, guys. What ended up happening today in the overall market, starting off here with the S&P 500, it wasn't really a crazy day, right? We ended up closing the day down about $6.43, which was kind of expected due to the massive green day that we had yesterday. You know, a little pullback here honestly didn't surprise me, right? We ended up closing down about 0.22%. Nothing crazy here on the SPX, just a very minimal pullback. Over here to the Dow Jones industrial average, same thing, right? Guys, down the exact percentage, down 0.22%, the exact same as the S&P 500, down nearly 60 points here, 59.34 to be exact. And the NASDAQ is up right now $1.50, but this is the future. If we hop over here to the one day, one minute, we'll be able to see exactly where it ended up closing, which is roughly about 32 points below from where we are right now. Roughly, actually no, not 32, about 19. So it ended up closing the day, you can say roughly down about 17 points on the NASDAQ. So overall today, guys, in the overall markets, it was a bit of a pullback day, which again, doesn't really surprise me due to the massive green day that we did have yesterday. So going over here back to the S&P 500, we can see that it was just a little pullback day again. Like I said, just brief consolidation in this range between 29.36 and about 29.26. Really the $10 buffer here on the SPX is where we've been trading. And if we just hop over here and get one of these resistance and support tools, we can see exactly what I'm talking about. That's pretty much where we're trading right now in the S&P 500. And if we're just going over here on the 184 hour chart very quickly, we all know at this point, the next resistance that we are going to face right now is the 29.40 level, which is the all-time high in the S&P 500 from a couple of months ago in the October month in 2018. And that's honestly the level that I'm watching here over these next couple of days with the big name companies reporting earnings to see, are we going to able to push above that level? But with this pullback that we are seeing now, guys, are we going to maybe retest this 29.15 level, which was a support, but since we broke out of it, or rather it was a resistance, but since we broke out of it, it's now a new support. This is a level that we could potentially be testing if we happen to pull back again tomorrow. But if we have a green day tomorrow with a lot of these big name companies that are doing pretty well here after market hours, if they do influence the market positively tomorrow, this could end up sending us two all-time highs. And that's really all I have to say here on the SPX, guys, nothing crazy. I don't want to spend too much time on that. But if we're just hopping over here to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, same exact thing, right? We're just trading simply in that horizontal range, that horizontal channel that I've been talking about here over the past couple of videos. And that range is from $26,400 and $26,800. That $400 buffer range is where we're trading right now. And if we want to test those all-time highs from back in October, guys, at $26,951, we're going to have to break that resistance in the next coming days, weeks, however long it takes. And once we do, if we break that resistance, guys, that's going to be the one-stop shop to those all-time highs, which at this point, if we just take a look on a percentage basis, are around 1.1 to 1.2 percentage points roughly away from where we are right now. And let's say we do end up pulling back, the level you're going to have to take a look at on the Dow is going to be around $26,400. If it maintains that level, slowly starts to curl back up, that's just going to be the continuation of the uptrend at that point in the Dow. But again, as of now, we're just simply trading in between really right in the middle of this channel, nothing too crazy here on the 24th of April in 2019. So hopping over here to the NASDAQ guys, again, like we've been talking about over the past couple of days, the NASDAQ has been pushing day in and day out to all-time highs. So if we hop here to the one day, one minute, did we hit an all-time high after market hours? Yes, we hit an all-time high yet again after market hours here in the NASDAQ. And I believe we actually hit an all-time high in the NASDAQ after market hours yesterday, I think. I think that's true. I don't know 100% if that's correct, but I'm pretty sure it was after market hours. Actually, I can just check it right now. Maybe I'm wrong on that one. Maybe I'm wrong. If we go to the five-day, five-minute, we'll be able to see that a bit closer. Yeah, it does seem like we did hit all-time highs after market hours yesterday. So that's two days in a row after market hours, all-time highs on the NASDAQ. And guys, again, on a technical basis here, in terms of the NASDAQ, we're just day in, day out hitting all-time highs. We're pushing higher highs on the NASDAQ. We're just simply riding the 50 simple moving average, like we have been over the past couple of months. Now let's say we pull back on the NASDAQ, the level I'm going to be looking at in terms of a support level is going to be roughly 77, 25, 77, 30, right around 130 points below from where we are. Now, are we going to pull back 130 points? Am I saying that? Absolutely not, guys. I am not saying that, especially without tech stocks are looking right now. Apple's reporting soon. This is a tech-heavy index. This can push the way these companies are looking. We'll get into that in a couple of minutes. This could very well push the NASDAQ into the $8,000 level over the next couple of weeks. That is something that is very, very possible, so I'm not going to be here calling a pullback on the NASDAQ. Maybe we pull back 50 points, but I personally think we're going to continue to push up and test 8,000 points over the next couple of weeks. Don't hold me to that. Don't hold me to that, but that is just what I'm thinking right now, guys, based on the movements of some of these stocks, these larger cap stocks. So in terms of the NASDAQ, that is what I'm looking at, guys. Overall, the market today, nothing crazy, nothing crazy. Just a simple pullback. We're looking to push up from this pullback for an all-time high in the NASDAQ, or rather the Dow, and an all-time high in the S&P 500. So in terms of my trading, guys, today, I'm not going to lie to you. I honestly didn't do much because I was waiting for today, today's earnings reports in Facebook, Tesla, right? We talked about Visa, PayPal, Amazon. These were some earnings reports that I was waiting and I wanted to see before potentially trading these stocks tomorrow, right? Which in terms of tomorrow, that is Thursday the 25th of April in 2019. So you guys saw in yesterday's video that I was actually in Procter and Gamble, which is a swing trade that I'm currently in with about 75 shares. And that's the only one that I'm currently in right now, right? Procter and Gamble did pretty well today, up 0.5%, up 53 cents, a nice little recovery day, bounce day off the 180 S&M. Everything is looking pretty solid here for a recovery on Procter and Gamble. We're seeing a bullish cross. The 50 S&M is crossing above the 180 S&M. That's looking pretty solid, right? The 50 S&M was acting as a resistance over that day. Yesterday when they reported earnings, the fact that we broke out of that, we broke out of both of the moving average resistances. This is a very good sign that Procter and Gamble wants to continue this push up. Not only that, guys, we also have been forming higher highs, higher lows here, and we closed on a nice little upswing here towards the end of the market. This is telling me, this is giving me an indication, the pattern is telling me here that we are reversing to the upside. So there's honestly not much to talk about here on Procter and Gamble. They simply fell, in my personal opinion, due to a weak Gillette performance in one of the segments in their baby unit, their baby business did poor as well, but they are looking to ramp up some new products in Gillette. Hopefully this does end up stimulating some growth in that segment, which in my opinion, will do great for the stock long term. But since they beat on EPS, guys, they beat on revenue. The overall earnings were pretty solid on Procter and Gamble. We dipped, we confirmed the bounce on the 180SMA. These were all incentives in my eyes to hop into it as a swing trade. It's a blue chip company. I'm looking at this more as a safe swing trade. No stock in the stock market is 100% risk-free, 100% safe, but Procter and Gamble guys being a blue chip, this is one that I feel pretty comfortable swing trading on this rebound. Who knows, I can be 100% wrong. No one really knows. And if I am wrong here, I do plan on cutting losses if we break this 180 simple moving average here on the 180 for our chart. So in terms of a trading update, that's really it, guys. I'm really waiting for tomorrow to do some more swing trading. There's one in particular that we're going to be talking about soon in this video that I'm looking to swing trade. So stay tuned for that. Now I'm going to pull out my Facebook. Oh my goodness, guys. I just got a notification from Robinhood. Facebook is at $200 per share right now. This is absolutely unbelievable. Let's just talk about what is going on right now with Facebook stock. The earnings call is happening at the time that I'm recording this video. So I'm assuming Mark Zuckerberg, one of the leaders, one of the executives said something that's very positive. It's causing the stock to push up even higher. And I'm going to just listen to that after I record this video, probably a rerun, which doesn't bother me, guys. I don't have to listen to it real time. That doesn't really bother me. But if we go to Facebook, we'll see, oh my goodness, guys. $202 per share. This is a real time reaction right now. This is unbelievable. I actually had a feeling that Facebook was going to pop heavily today. And I was right, guys. So let's just hop into what they ended up reporting in terms of earnings. So EPS, guys, was 85 cents versus the 161 expected by Wall Street. So you may be asking yourself, they missed heavily on earnings per share. And they did, guys, because Facebook actually set aside $3 billion, which was taken out of their EPS in anticipation of the biggest fine ever from US regulators over their privacy concerns. So the fine right now is expected to be $3 billion, but it can range up to $5 billion. This fine was due to the investigation of Facebook after the Cambridge Analytica scandal due to violating 2011 consent decree on user privacy. So this is actually the biggest fine in, I think, history, if I recall. Yes, that is the biggest fine in history, guys. And for those of you guys that don't know, Cambridge Analytica was a scandal where millions of people's data, right? Their data was taken without their consent. So if Facebook, which is why, in my personal opinion, Facebook stock is flying, let's say Facebook didn't have to pay this $3 billion fine. If that wasn't in their earnings per share, take a look at what their EPS would have been, guys. It would have been a dollar and 89 cents, which absolutely blows away analysts' expectations of a dollar and 61, which is why the stock, in my opinion, is reacting as positively as it is now. Quite frankly, investors out there, they don't really give a crap about this one time fine because Facebook, let's be honest, they're making billions of billions of dollars of profit. They see what the EPS would have been, which is a metric that, honestly, I'm looking at as an investor. A lot of people out there as investors are looking at. We don't really care about the fine, right? We know this is a one-time thing. Hopefully it doesn't happen again. And the EPS is just looking super, super strong, which is what people are focusing on right now. Absolutely unbelievable, guys. Let's just go to the one day, one minute before we talk about revenue here. Let's take a look from 182, guys. It's up 10%. My long-term holding on Facebook, it's going to be up a crap ton of money tomorrow if these levels do end up staying at 200, which I don't know if they will. We might see a pullback, but at this point, guys, up 10% after hours, absolutely unbelievable. So revenue came in at $15.08 billion versus $14.97 billion expected by analysts. That's an 8% year over year growth. Some other metrics that we like to look at, $2.38 billion in terms of monthly active users versus $2.375 billion expected, $1.56 billion daily active users. And Mark Zuckerberg actually came out saying that he is focused on building out a privacy-focused vision for the future of social networking, which is something huge in my personal opinion. Again, with the Cambridge Analytical, these data scandals, you know, the privacy thing on Facebook is huge. And I'm sure it's really obvious that Mark is working on this. This is obviously the future of Facebook to be more secure. This is something that I love hearing as an investor. And he's working collaboratively, that's a very tongue-twisting word right there, to address important issues around the internet. So overall, guys, Facebook's earnings report blew it out of the water in my personal opinion, right? And if we're just hopping here to live news to see if we can see anything new that came out, so we can see, yeah, the $5 billion fine there, that could be the peak of it, $3 billion for sure. You see, okay, the revenue, okay, okay, 8% growth year over year, we see that. So that's pretty much it, guys, in terms of Facebook stock and their, you know, brief earnings numbers. We see the stocks at $200, oh my goodness, guys. The fact that I was loading up on shares all throughout October to December, it's making me really happy right now because that position in the morning is roughly going to be up like 40, 30%, which is absolutely unbelievable. Let me know down below in the comment section what you guys think about Facebook. Are we going to maintain these levels? I would love to know what you guys have to think. So if we're just staying on Facebook now for what stocks I'm looking to trade, let's just go to some long-term resistance levels on Facebook that it seems like we are breaking out of right now. So the resistance that we are seeing is at about 185 to 190. We obviously broke out of that level of resistance. So let me get this drawing tool very quickly to see some new levels right now that we may be facing. So this 192 level from back in July of 2018, a support level from back then, we obviously broke out of that level as well. The next spot that it's looking like we're testing right now is $203 per share. So as of now after market hours, guys, and probably into tomorrow, this is where we're going to be trading between $193 per share to $200. So this is the new channel I'm looking for Facebook. Are we going to end up getting rejected by $203? Maybe start to sell off to $193, which is that support level. Are we going to maintain this horizontal level? This is something I'm going to be watching tomorrow for a potential swing trade, especially on this amazing, in my personal opinion, amazing earnings report. So let's hop to Tesla, guys, because they actually reported earnings as well. I didn't have time to digest their earnings because I started filming this video, but I did see that they reported a negative EPS if I do remember correctly. Let me just hop over here and we can see if we just zoom in here on the live news tab. Let's see, let's see, let's see. Okay, guys, let's see, let's see, let's see. Where is that? Okay, here we go. So EPS, negative $2.90 misses the negative 66 cents earnings estimate that was expected. So that's pretty bad in terms of EPS on Tesla. Total sales, $4.5 billion versus $5.4 billion expected. So in terms of the two major metrics, EPS, revenue, Tesla ended up missing on both of those and the stock right now, while it initially reacted to a pretty big dump from the close, $258 close, we dumped down a $250 flat, but it seems like we've rebounded, we hit $266. Now we're hovering right where we ended up closing, today, right, about 20, 30, or really an hour and 40 minutes. Wow, guys, time does fly when I'm analyzing these reports. But an hour and 40 minutes ago, we closed roughly right where we are right now on Tesla stock. So to be honest, guys, I don't know, I really can't predict, honestly, no one can predict what Tesla stock is going to do, but maybe it goes lower tomorrow due to this bad earnings report at the bell, that's when we're gonna know the direction of Tesla, right? If we see some aggressive sell-off in the morning, maybe heading back to the 250 level, that's going to be a sign that the bears are taking over, we're going to be testing that 247, 250 level of support, again, if we break that, that's going to be such a bearish sign on Tesla. At that point, I'm going to be pretty scared. I might add some shares on my long-term portfolio as a more speculative position, but in terms of swing trading, guys, I'm not going to be touching Tesla. I've said this numerous times on my videos here on the channel, I am not touching Tesla unless, and to rather, we break out of these moving average resistances, guys, in terms of my strategy, guys, and in terms of what I'm seeing on a technical basis here, there's no reason, and there's no sound logical reason with data-driven facts to trade Tesla unless it breaks these levels. It just doesn't make sense to me, right? Why would I hop into Tesla here hoping it breaks out until it actually does break out, until we actually get that breakout pattern, right? So just to be honest, that's what I'm waiting for, right? If we break out of these levels, maybe in a couple of days, maybe in a couple of weeks after this earnings report is digested, if we see the price starting to pop up, that could be a potential trade, but as of now, I see better options including Procter and Gamble, Facebook, because both of those had pretty solid earnings reports. So another one I wanna talk about here is ticker symbol V, ticker symbol V visa, guys, and this is one that just reported earnings as well. I didn't really digest their earnings as in-depth as I did with Facebook, but I think they did report some pretty decent earnings. If we're just going down here so we can see, yes, they did report pretty decent earnings. EPS was $1.31 versus the $1.24 estimate. So they beat on EPS and they also beat on sales with 5.49 billion versus 5.46 billion. So this is honestly in the same situation as Procter and Gamble, right? A larger cap company reported some solid earnings, they pulled back on the earnings report, maintaining the moving average support levels on the longer-term charts, which this one is and same thing with Procter and Gamble. It's maintaining this 50 SMA here. So tomorrow morning, if we do see, it's maintaining this 160 level, 161. This could be, in my personal opinion, a good swing trade for the rest of this week heading into the May month. I want to see, though, I wanna get the 100% confirmation that we are maintaining this level. And let's say we get in, it's not crazy upside to be completely honest with you guys, it's about 2% up to the previous resistances, but the key here is if we continue the uptrend, maybe we get to 164, 165, that's when we start to get some pretty solid gains of three, four, five percent if it continues this move upwards. So as of now, guys, swing trading wise, Visa, Procter and Gamble, they are both at the top of my list, no doubt about it. So that's pretty much it in terms of swing trading. AMD is also one that's looking like it's breaking out a bit here. We're finally starting to see a hold above that $28 level of support. If you guys recall, I was talking about AMD how it was trading vigorously between 27 and 28. It did not like that 28 level, it dipped below that about three, four times. We can see here it dipped, here it dipped, here it briefly dipped, but we popped back up, which is why I am liking the level that AMD is at right now. But I am approaching you with caution because we have an earnings report and about six days from now on the 30th of April. So I'm most likely going to be waiting until after they report earnings before hopping into AMD. But it's definitely one that's looking like it's breaking out into the 28, 50, potentially the $29 level here over the next couple of days. So that's in terms of stocks, all that I'm watching heading into tomorrow. Let's just take a look at Amazon very quickly because they also reported earnings today. If we go to the live news, we can see what they ended up reporting. If I can see it here, guys, let's see. Are they not uploaded here on the live news? That would be very shocking if it wasn't uploaded here. Okay, I guess Amazon is not here on the earnings report. Okay, or did they not report earnings today? Am I making a huge mistake? Oh, their earnings are tomorrow, guys. Apologize for that. That's a pretty big mistake on my part. I think PayPal was the one that reported earnings. Let's see how that stock is reacting as of right now. Okay, we got a pretty nice dump there to 103, gap fill up to 109. If we can see their earnings report very quickly, PayPal sees, okay, their EPS was, okay, if we just zoom down a bit, we can see. Okay, they've reported EPS roughly 0.68 to 0.70 versus 0.69 estimated. So that's roughly in line with the analysts. And sales of 4.3 to 4.34 versus 4.37 estimated. So they missed a bit on sales, not too good of a sign there. The stock reacted to that, I'm assuming, down to about 103, but we gap filled up. So this is one that could be a potential play tomorrow, ticker symbol, PYPL, guys. So that is what I'm watching, guys. I'm very excited, honestly, about Facebook. That's the key takeaway of today's video. I'm going to hop off this video. I'm going to see if I can catch the tail end here of the conference call and might be over at this point. I'm not too sure if it is. I'm probably going to find it online. I'm going to rewind it and watch it from the beginning to see what ended up being a catalyst for Facebook to pop it up into the $200 level. Because when I was watching it before recording this video, it was at about 193 or something like that. And we can see right now it is falling down a bit, 198. So I would love to know what you guys think about Facebook. Please drop a comment down below. Talk to me about it, guys. Talk to me about it. So I'm going to end the video off right here, guys. If you enjoyed the video, feel free to hit that like button. Drop a comment. Subscribe to the channel if you're new. Hit that notification bell so you're notified every time that I do make a video. I'll catch you all in the next video. I appreciate every single one of you guys watching. It means a lot to me. Peace out. Good luck. Tomorrow, I'll talk to you guys soon.
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June 12: Sanwo Olu Tasked Nigerians To Have Faith In Renewed Hope Mantra.
In the spirit of democracy, Nigerians have been called upon to remain steadfast, united as one great people with common destiny and most importantly continue to have faith in the Renewed Hope mantra of the All Progressives Congress, APC. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Watch More: https://bit.ly/2KLQxbI Watch PlusTV Africa Lifestyle: https://cutt.ly/tbdOHzQ Watch via our Website: https://plustvafrica.com/live-tv Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PlusTVAfrika/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/plustvafrica/ Tweet us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PlusTVAfrica Comment on Whatsapp: http://ow.ly/d4kQ50pT4Bt #PlusTVAfrica #News #NewsOnPlusTvAfrica
[ "News", "Politics", "Nigeria", "Africa", "Plus TV Africa", "Plus TV", "Plus", "Plus TV Nigeria", "Plus Television", "Plus TV News", "Top News", "news", "trending", "trending news", "today's news", "current news", "entertainment", "sports", "business" ]
2023-06-13T09:56:24
2024-02-05T06:24:32
248
PcXHqU5SrLA
We return you to the story where we told you that the Lagos State Governor has advised that all remains steadfast, united, and as one great people, and to also hope in the renewed mantra of hope of the all-progressive Congress. Our correspondent, Lovie Kukui Edokun, was at the Democracy Day event in Lagos, and now reports. It is the 30th anniversary of June 12. The day commemorates what is adjudged to be one of Nigeria's three years and fair democratic election, believed to have been won by the late Chief M. K. O. Abyola. People across all tribes and tongues, ages, creed, or color gathered at various centers in Lagos State to mark the historic day. Lagos State Governor Baba Jidesawunlu, represented by his deputy, Dr. Obafemi Hamzad, paid glowing tributes to the late M. K. O. He described June 12 as a watershed and a turning point in the political history of Nigeria. We are getting there, and for every Nigerian to understand, there are no process designed by human being will be 100 percent perfect. So, of course, we cannot ask for democracy and behave in a non-democratic way. So, there has been an election. There are processes to adjudicate, and so as long as that process is ongoing, we should all unite to build our country, because that is the essence. He also commanded President Bola Chinubu as a major player in the journey to enthroning and enduring democracy in Nigeria. The new hope is a mimic of a sort of the hope agenda there, because the reality is we need to build this country, and that's what is doing, what will be done about it, the culture, what will be done about our economy. It has said for the first time the GDP of our country will rise by six percent, so we have to do what we need to do. Until the emergence of President Bola Chinubu, I believe that it has been significantly negative. What the military, the politicians in military uniform did to us in 1999 was that rather than allow Nigerians to pick a leader of their choice, they went ahead and fostered on us one of the former military commander-in-chief. We are ready to express ourselves, to define democracy, to define the image of the country in the committee of nations, and it's also significant in the sense that for the first time after due 12, for the past 30 years, a major actor in that scheme is now the President of Nigeria. We hope that he will learn from the trauma, the pains of Nigerians. Abyeola Edewo also spoke on what Chinubu's presidency means for the entrenchment of democracy in Nigeria. See, Ashwajibola Med Chinubu is a very loyal person. Ashwaju and MKO, when I saw Fermi, Fermi Kbajabiamila, Mr. Speaker, with Ashwaju during the campaign trail, it reminded me so much of my dad and Ashwaju. Highlights of the event was a traditional lane of reads, with prayers said at the grave side of the late Chief MKO, Abyeola. Hello, hope you enjoyed the news. Please do subscribe to our YouTube channel and don't forget to hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates.
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Words & Numbers: What You Should Know About Poverty in America
Support Out of Frame on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/OutofFrameShow Watch our newest video, "The 1970s are back. Yaaaayyyy.": https://youtu.be/pYnpnB0dj5s Check out our podcast, Out of Frame: Behind the Scenes: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiS5rEmhnLwo1IG9bgr19Og Poverty is a big deal – it affects about 41 million people in the United States every year – yet the federal government spends a huge amount of money to end poverty. So much of the government’s welfare spending gets eaten up by bureaucracy, conflicting programs, and politicians presuming they know how people should spend their own money. Obviously, this isn’t working. This week on Words and Numbers, Antony Davies and James R. Harrigan delve into how people can really become less poor and what that means for society and the government. Learn more: https://fee.org/articles/what-you-should-know-about-poverty-in-america/
[ "Poverty", "Statistics", "Economics", "Ending Poverty", "War on Poverty", "Great Society", "Progressive", "Global Well-being" ]
2017-06-14T13:19:35
2024-02-05T07:20:15
858
PC6wK-iKfMs
Hi, I'm James. And I'm Anthony. And this is Words and Numbers. So this weekend, we're going to talk a little bit about poverty. And I've been thinking about poverty a bit lately. You know, Lyndon Johnson, once upon a time when he was president, declared war on poverty. Reagan came along 20 odd years later and said, we fought a war on poverty. Poverty won. Right. And it gets you to think in a little bit about every time the United States fights a war against a common noun, right? So we've got a war against poverty, a war against drugs, a war against terror. They don't seem to work all that well. But today, we're going to stick with the war on poverty and think through a lot of the issues that surround that effort to eradicate poverty from our midst. Yeah. And this is interesting. The latest numbers, which I believe are from 2015, are that roughly 13 and a half percent of the U.S. population lives in what the Census Bureau defines as poverty. Yeah, but that's not quite it, is it? There's more to it than that. Well, there's a lot more to it. It's necessary to understand what the definition is to understand where we're going. So of course, the definition varies by person, right? So if we were one person, the poverty rate's like $12,000. If you're a married couple with two kids, it's like $24,000 thereabouts. But here's the interesting part. When we talk about poverty statistics, we count money that people earn at their job. We count social security retirement benefits. We count investment income. But what we don't count are things that the government gives to people expressly for the purpose of alleviating poverty. So things like food stamps, the earned income tax credit, housing subsidies, these sorts of things aren't counted. So you kind of have a before and an after view of poverty, what poverty looks like before the government does what it does and then what it looks like after. And we only really think about the before times as these things go, which seems to be deeply counterproductive, right? Because if you're poor and the government gives you a bunch of money or an in-kind donation of some kind, you might not be poor anymore. That's right. You might not be. And these things are hard to measure. But estimates are that if you count the money that the government gives people to help alleviate the poor, you're talking about something like a 2.5 percentage point reduction. So instead of 13.5 percent poverty rate, you're really talking about 11 percent after the government hands out whatever the government hands out. Right. Now I'm guessing there's more to it than that still. Well, it goes even further because here's the interesting part. The poverty definition, and this goes back to Lyndon Johnson, right? The poverty definition looks only at income. It doesn't look at wealth. So for example, if you've got a quarter of a million dollars stuffed underneath your mattress but you don't have a job, you'll be counted as poor. Is there some kind of rational number that we can work with? What percentage of the American population is actually and legitimately living in poverty? Yeah. So again, we're back to trying to estimate these things. And estimates, there are estimates that say if you take away the people who are wealthy in terms of wealth, albeit not in terms of income, that that knocks another 3 percentage points off the poverty rate, which brings us down to about 8. So roughly speaking, you're talking about somewhere in the neighborhood of 8 percent, perhaps on the low end to 10 percent on the high end. That's poverty in the United States. And how many human beings does that equal? Well, roughly you're talking about 41 million. All right. It's a lot of people, regardless of how we do the math and how we slice the categories. It's still in the end going to be quite a large number of human beings. And clearly, we want to say something like, okay, maybe we're overestimating the number of people who actually live in poverty. Nonetheless, we are still looking at in excess of 40 million Americans. Right. And then the obvious question comes, okay. If we've got 40 or so million Americans living in poverty and we're engaging in, I think, profligate spending to aid and assist that group of human beings. So let's stop there for a minute and figure out how much we're actually spending on poverty relief in the United States year over year. Yeah. And there the question gets even more interesting, right? Because if you thought it was hard to figure out how many people live in poverty, try and figure out how much we're spending to alleviate poverty, and you've got an even bigger problem. The numbers range from a low of around $250 billion a year to a high of $1 trillion a year. And the difference in the numbers hinges on what sorts of things you want to include or exclude, right? There is no line item on the federal budget that says welfare spending. It's a whole bunch of programs that some of which arguably maybe really don't apply exclusively to the poor and maybe we shouldn't count them, right? But at the end, you're talking about some number in the range of $250 billion a year to $1 trillion. That's what the government spends trying to alleviate poverty. Well, predictably, we're going to get back to this possibility of a line item on the budget for poverty relief in a minute or two. But are you telling me, I mean, let's really think this one through, are you telling me that we actually can't, and we're a couple of bright guys, we should be able to figure things out, right? We can't actually figure out the amount of money we spend year over year on poverty relief. And as a matter of fact, it's so difficult that the answer could be literally anything between $250 billion and a trillion dollars. Yeah, yeah. I mean, step back and think about it. The margin of error in the number exceeds the economic output of a lot of the countries on the planet. Right? This is a gargantuan uncertainty. Yeah, by a very, very healthy margin as these things go, right? Yeah, but here's the interesting thing. Even if you take the low end number, so let's take the most conservative and say, all right, suppose the government spends $250 billion a year trying to alleviate poverty. With 41 million people living in poverty, and forget about the problems with the definitions of poverty, right? This is the government's definition, 41 million people. If I take that $250 billion and divide it by 41 million, I could cut each poor person in the United States a check every year for $6,000, which doesn't sound like much until you step back and think about that family, two parents, two kids. That's four people in a poor household, which by the government definition is $24,000 income. If they received $6,000 per person, they would double their income to $48,000, which is now coming up on the median household income. So now stop me when I become too cheerfully optimistic here. I know it's not the kind of thing we usually say out loud that I've become cheerfully optimistic, but I may be wrong. But haven't we just eradicated poverty in the United States for exactly the low end estimate of what we're already paying anyway? Yeah, that's the odd thing. Even at the low end estimate, if you got rid of all of the alphabet soup of agencies that we have that deal with poverty and just cut every poor person a check and be done with it, you could spend the same amount of money and quite literally eliminate poverty overnight. Of course, we would run into the related problem of unemployed bureaucrats, which would probably cause a bit of a problem here. Well, they can now go do something productive, like actually produce some goods, right? Well, I mean, if they're bureaucrats by profession, they're probably unfamiliar with the notion of productivity. But here's something else that's going on in the background. The way we try to do poverty, and this has evolved over time because as we see problems, we create new agencies to try and help with these problems. And what's happened is it's very, it's analogous to a person who's sick and the doctor prescribes a medicine and some other doctor prescribes another medicine and a third doctor prescribes another medicine. Before you know it, you've got these medicines interacting with themselves in ways that nobody anticipated. And that's what we have with our current alphabet soup of handling welfare. So you put all these programs together, and what happens is they start to interact in ways we never anticipated and never intended. I'll give you an example. There's an economics professor, Clifford Thies, who's done an analysis of this, and he asked the question, let's take a family, two parents, two kids living in poverty. And let's ask what happens as they start to earn more money? Thies looks not only at how much additional taxes they will owe, but as they earn more money, he also looks at the plethora of government welfare benefits that they cease to get. And what he finds is horrifying. For the family who earns about $24,000, as they start to earn more money, they actually become worse off. Not only are they being taxed more, but they start to lose benefits so that when all the dust settles, they're actually better off staying poor than trying to get richer unless they can immediately jump to $40,000. So we've created inadvertently this poverty gap. If you can't go from $24,000 immediately to $40,000, you're better off staying at $24,000. But of course, if we did exactly what you said earlier and just start cutting checks and dismantle the welfare industry really as it really exists, we could get beyond that problem. Oh, yeah. That problem completely goes away. And the other problem that goes away, which is probably endemic to any welfare system, is the massive problem of inefficiency, right? Because in order to get money from taxpayers to other taxpayers, you have to set up this massive bulwark of government in the middle. And that's where all the inefficiencies are introduced. So wouldn't it be better just to have money in and money out? I'm not saying that this is the thing that we would advise in the end. It might or it might not be. But as we sit now, this is a far better approach down the same road. Yeah. And in a real way, it's more respectful of the people who are receiving the benefits because under the current system, we have government bureaucrats dictating how much people should spend on food, how much they should spend on housing, how much they should spend on health care. And the government will dole out these benefits in the magnitude that the government bureaucrat thinks is best. But if you give the person a check, you say, look, I don't understand your circumstances, but here's enough money that can buy the things you need to buy. You go figure out for yourself what it is you need. It's much more respectful of the person. No. And it's typically where we, you and I end up falling on matters such as this, right, regardless of the approach we take to get there. The common answer seems always to be, live your life as you see best, and we'll just stay out of it to whatever extent we possibly can. You know, like I said, I'm not sure this is the right answer, but it's clearly a better answer. I think it's a better answer. But one of the things we have to be careful of is that this can be used because it starts to sound a lot like this thing people talk about the universal basic income. Yeah, universal basic income. And here's the danger where UBI is concerned. It's great if it replaces the current welfare system. That's a better solution than what we have now. But a worse solution than what we have now is if it sits on top of the current welfare system, because then you preserve all of the inefficiencies you talk about, plus we have an additional expense on top of everything else. Right. What we typically end up with every time we tinker with the system is an overlay on top of an inefficient system that's theoretically designed to fix the inefficiencies within the system. But of course, it just adds more. Right. Exactly. Including thought ant. Got anything wise and wonderful to say to us as we leave this week? Well, I think one thing that we should keep in mind and absolutely we should be concerned about the poor, no question, but also to put things in perspective that life in the United States, even for the poor, is remarkably good. So we talk about for a single person, the poverty line is $12,000 annual income. If you look at the world as a whole and adjust for differences in cost of living, that's almost the median household income. So what we consider poor in this country, the rest of the world actually considers middle class. Yeah. And that's really not a bad place to start if that's where we're going to start. So that's all we've got time for today. Thanks for watching this episode. We'll be back next Wednesday at about noon with another one. In the meantime, feel free to click on that subscribe button down there and check out everything on fee.org and at fee online on social media for all kinds of great content. We'll see you next week. See you next week. Have a good one. See you next week, James.
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DCDC22 | Community building through public engagement
DCDC stands for Discovering Collections, Discovering Communities. It is a cross-sectoral conference, hosted by The National Archives, RLUK and Jisc, that brings together the GLAMA sectors (galleries, libraries, archives, museums and academia) to shine a light on our shared experiences, innovations, interests and concerns. DCDC22 explored how digital innovation is transforming the cultural heritage and academic sectors and their relationship with their audiences. https://dcdcconference.com/ Out of London into communities: How the Living Knowledge Network brings cultural experiences to public libraries across the UK - Rhian Isaac, Leeds Libraries, and Maxime Pons Webster, British Library Research Volunteers, Archives and Academics: a three-way collaboration to improve access through digital resources - Rebecca Jackson, Staffordshire Archives and Heritage, and Alannah Tomkins, Keele University The European Digital Treasures: Engaging with wider audiences - Charles Farrugia, The National Archives of Malta / University of Malta
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2022-07-18T22:27:02
2024-04-23T01:02:51
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And our first talk today is we're going to hear about the Living Knowledge Network. The Living Knowledge Network was created by the British Library and is an exciting partnership of national and public libraries which is centred on exchanging knowledge and developing memorable experiences for public library audiences. So we're going to hear from Catherine Blameer, Blameer and Maxime Ponds Webster from the British Library who will explore how the network enables libraries to share ideas, learn new skills and discover connections between their collections. And Rianne Isaac from these library will also speak and will discuss how the support of the network has increased engagement with their special collections and created cultural opportunities for local communities. So I will hand over to Catherine, Maxime and Rianne if you could share your screen and turn your cameras on. Thank you. Hello everybody. It's brilliant to be here today to introduce you to the network. My name is Catherine Blameer. I'm a white woman. I've got extremely long brown hair. I'm looking very warm. And I'm in my 30s. Hopefully that gives you an idea of my appearance. So yeah, I'm here to introduce the network. So the Living Knowledge Network really kind of came out of the idea, the ambition of the library to make our intellectual heritage available to everyone for research, inspiration, enjoyment, wherever you live. So we are our ethos is to build on the incredible local knowledge of libraries around the country, but use our national convening power to develop a really mutually supportive and self sustaining network of libraries across the UK. And we really are coming together to reinforce the idea of libraries as a vitally important public asset for our communities. So what are we? Well, we are founded by the British Library, but also in collaboration with the National Library of Scotland and the National Library of Wales, who are founding partners. And we also have a presence in Northern Ireland with libraries and I, and we have 31 public library partners stretched all across the UK. We also have a wider ecosystem, which is really very exciting sort of reach into communities via nearly 1000 branch and community libraries. So again, the ethos is to create this really supportive community that enables the creation of fantastic experiences for the public and really coming together to see what we can do more. How we can have a greater impact and combining that national and local residents. We see our position as a national library is convening thought bringing together libraries to look at really big topics and try and add value to those discussions by just simply creating the spaces where those discussions can occur. And a place where library professionals themselves can come together to share skills with each other. For example, through the network, a librarian in Edinburgh would be able to share their challenges and shared experiences with perhaps a librarian Jersey or down in Exeter. So we've got some really sort of wide ranging partners. And again, it's all about that reciprocal partnership, drawing on the strength of a national to regional connection. So what do we do. So coming together to share knowledge and ideas is really central to this. One of the ways we've been doing that recently, particularly through the lockdown was creating these sort of digital online learning experiences. Here's just a few examples of some of the topics that we covered. There's a great one with libraries connected around death positive libraries. We sort of try to get a lot of feedback from librarians to develop the program. And we've covered a range of topics. It was fantastic in the lockdown as we were able to connect with Denmark to find out, you know, from from our house where where they were at with their opening. We could learn from them as we then moved into opening up libraries across the UK. We've built partnerships, sharing collections. This was a Shakespeare exhibition that happened a few years ago with Birmingham library. We also partner with other organizations. So through the fantastic network, other organizations see opportunities to share some of their cultural work as well. This was a fantastic collaboration with an organization called poet in the city. It was called collections inverse. And I was exploring how we can reinterpret exhibitions through the power of poetry. And then those commissioned poets from the communities then performed those poems in the libraries themselves. And we had an incredibly vibrant highlight event at the end of that collaboration at the bottom here. There was a live stream from hay festival, and it was just great to be able to bring that fantastic festival to libraries across the UK. But what's really important to understand, I think, is that a lot of our digital outreach work and digital collaboration work does kind of come from a physical element. And this is the exhibition that we have every year. We create centrally at the British Library create a set of four panels for each library in the network. And then those panels launch simultaneously across the network. So it's a massive nationwide exhibition all occurring at the same time. And all of these panels are based on the theme of a particular blockbuster exhibition at the British Library. This one was our first one, which was the history of magic covering several different topics. But what's really exciting about this project is what the libraries themselves bring to it through their own understanding of their communities, highlighting their local collections, partnering with other organizations in their communities to make this exhibition have a really fantastic local resonance. Through libraries, you know, unheard narratives can be can be brought to the fore, perhaps in ways that haven't been heard before. And Rianne will talk a lot more about this later in the presentation, but this was just a great example of our recent exhibition breaking the news where you can see this incredibly sophisticated exhibition that has been developed by Rianne at Leeds Libraries. Really fantastic local objects coming out of their collections which Rianne will go into in a lot more detail. So just to give you an idea of the general scale, the first exhibition reached more than 70 775,000 people. We developed many libraries themselves developed these partnerships within their own authorities. We had all these people watching live streamings around 3000 people in that instance. The international development was continuing and over the course of three exhibitions we've nearly reached 2 million people through libraries, which is a fantastic testament to the collaborations of the libraries involved is really through their local knowledge through their kind of expanding of the themes of the exhibition that bring that make this this reach so so significant. And what's really fantastic is what they bring to it themselves in terms of their own exhibitions at their own events. Sorry. And here's just a few examples from Twitter of some libraries that have created their own events programs. I'm going to pass over to Maxime now to continue talking about the live streaming. Hello, I'm Maxime. My full name is Maxime Ponce Webster. My pronouns are she her and my title is live screening producer at the Living Knowledge Network. I'm a woman with kind of purple coloured hair which is tied in a bun and I'm wearing a yellow and white patterned shirt. I'm also wearing a kind of Britney Spears style headset and I wear glasses. So I just wanted to start by talking about the kind of ethos of why libraries. So a study that's very familiar to librarians but not necessarily familiar to other sectors is that in December 2021 a study found that librarians are among the most trusted professionals in Britain. 23% of Britons say they trust librarians to tell the truth. That's in contrast with museum curators at 86% charity execs at 49% and journalists at 28% which is quite interesting given that our most recent exhibition is about the news. Through our cultural programming we aim to convene conversation and discussion creating a space for people to engage in topics that they may not otherwise encounter. Through the network of libraries and particularly our work directly with library staff, we can ensure that those spaces are trusted and safe for individuals to ask questions, be curious and actively listen to others. We convene the conversations and discussion through a vibrant programme of events with world recognised speakers and regional voices, our live screening programme. Our UK wide remit goes hand in hand with our objective of convening conversation. It's important to us that we connect people of differing backgrounds and experiences. Digital is an invaluable asset when forging these connections between disparate audiences. As such, all of our events are live screening events. We hold an event in a single location or have speakers join us remotely and harness live streaming capabilities to have people join the events from public libraries across the UK. If you go to the next slide, Catherine. Brilliant. Thank you. You can see how we connect prestigious speakers such as Joanna Lumley and Moira Stewart, physical events and live screening to create a unique experience for all involved. Our speakers are always extremely enthusiastic about the opportunity to connect with libraries and their users and often leave our events with a renewed passion for the importance of libraries to communities. Next slide please. People interact with their libraries in a variety of ways, whether they enter a building every day, use ebook services while on the move or find themselves dependent upon delivery and remote services. In wanting to create cultural offers that most effectively serve the needs of library users and complement the activity of libraries, we take a two pronged approach to live screenings. We support libraries to host screenings within library buildings and locations with individuals physically gathering in a space together. But additionally, we stream our events online through the lens of the local public library. It's important to us, even with the recognized brand and prestige of the British library that the online experience of our program is led by and channeled through the connection people have with their public library. Streaming online is important for reducing certain access barriers to cultural experiences, as I think we all became very aware during COVID. But it's also important for people to engage with digital digital programs that frequently engage with digital programs they enjoy doing things online, and they can realize the wealth and breadth of public libraries offers through our website. Next slide please. Here you can see how we iterated our design from our online from the library to your home offer to become more user focus considering the journey of library users across the UK from their library to an online experience. We recognize the incredible wealth of content created by libraries in a desire to send to the libraries, the communities and local narratives. We developed our online offer to platform content from our network libraries side by side with centrally produced events program which may come from partners such as the British Library, Hay Festival or the Royal Society for Literature. This way we're reducing the geographical barrier of engaging with libraries, allowing people in Exeter to enjoy stories surfaced in Edinburgh, building audiences from Surrey events hosted in Sheffield library and sharing online exhibitions in Bristol with people living in Birmingham. Next slide please. Unlocking our resources as the National Library of the UK, we amplify local narratives, bringing local community stories to the attention of people across the UK. In a time of division and isolation, there's a real power in recognizing resonances in personal stories across disparate geographical locations. As part of our exhibition breaking the news, we traveled to Jersey, Cambridge and Wakefield to record short films of library staff, telling remarkable stories that they pulled from their collections. We find enormous value in not only amplifying local narratives, but also platforming the skills knowledge and passion of library staff. Next slide please. But when it comes to content creation, nothing is quite like a live experience. In our aim to pull cultural authority out of London and into communities, we produce live screening events in and with libraries across the UK, showcasing an incredible diversity of spaces, voices and perspectives. Here you can see events we've held with our library partners in Leeds, Sheffield and Exeter. Our work isn't about broadcast, but about co-production and collaboration. As a team at the British Library, we are continually so impressed and happily challenged by the innovation of our public library partners. With this in mind, Rianne will talk to you about the impact the Living Knowledge Network and partnerships with the British Library has had in Leeds. Hello, I'm Rianne Isaac and I'm Senior Librarian for Special Collections at Leeds Libraries. I'm a woman in my mid 30s with brown hair and I wear a black and white shirt dress. That's enough for me. So Leeds has had a really close relationship with the British Library for a number of years due to the location of the British Library site in Boston Spa, which is located just outside of the city, which houses 75% of the National Library's collections. And this relationship has continued to develop since the Living Knowledge Network was established and Leeds became one of the pilot public libraries in 2016. Next slide please. And during this time, we've delivered exhibitions such as the History of Magic and Making Your Mark, which were inspired by the British Library's major London exhibitions, but also tailored to our own local audiences and displaying items from our Special Collections. It was really exciting to discover that we also held books that were on display at the British Library, like History of the Four-Footed Beasts, and were able to include these in our exhibitions. And often we could source interesting local equivalents, a highlight of securing the loan of Agatha Cook Christie's petrified handbag from Brother Shipton's Cave. These exhibitions provided communities outside of London the opportunity to engage with high quality content produced by the British Library, combined with stories from our own collections and the chance to view items of historic and cultural interest firsthand. Next slide please. We develop event programs around these exhibitions and have hugely benefited from the livestream offer of British Library events into our libraries. Our audiences are encouraged to submit their questions on Twitter, interacting with both the London event and other audiences simultaneously watching from other library locations. LKN are committed to making these events feel really inclusive. Even the simple acts of the speaker welcoming each individual library helps create a really good sense of a shared experience. It is a real treat when someone like Margaret Outwood says hello to everyone who leads or one of our questions is selected. We also display collection items alongside the screenings to create an added value blended physical and digital experience. For example, before watching Nigella Lawson's voice and cook who writing read 18th century cookbooks available for people to browse. Next slide please. And we become confident in curating the panel exhibitions work with partners such as museums and archives to secure loans and programming talks and workshops. However, just as we were preparing to open the exhibition Unfinished Business Fight for Women's Rights, the pandemic hit and we had to quickly decide how to deliver the project online and the ability to produce virtual events became more important than ever. We hosted the exhibition on our blog Secret Library Leads and created a 360 degree tour on PolyGoogle. This platform unfortunately no longer exists, but it did make us think about how to display online content in different ways. The move to an online format gave us the opportunity to be more collaborative with our programming. In partnership with the British Library, we delivered a weekend of events, which included a panel discussion with Tracy Chevalier, a spoken word showcase, and a wiki edit song that added more women from Leeds onto Wikipedia. Next slide please. The support of the British Library and LKM during Unfinished Business gives the skills and confidence to organize further high quality virtual events, especially as part of the BBC novels that shaped our world project release use gaming and mixed reality performances to engage audiences with reading and special collections. We ran a game jam, which attracted a number of creative submissions. These are a couple of my favourites. These are available to view online and we can use them for future activities. Next slide please. VR artist Rosie Summers was commissioned to create a world inspired by an early edition of Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe in a live performance using tilt brush software. This was enjoyed by both gamers as well as book enthusiasts who watched a much loved fantasy world come to life in front of their eyes. This also resulted in a bespoke piece of digital art, which was a valuable asset for the library. Next slide please. And when in-person events returned, the next natural step was to deliver a live stream from Leeds to the rest of the Living Knowledge Network. This was part of the Break in the News programme and took place in our stunning Telltale Cafe, which is the original reading room. The events celebrated the role of regional news with local journalists from different backgrounds as panellists. This powerful and topical debate was even more impactful coming from a regional library where the subject matter particularly resonated. As Maxime says, it's not simply a broadcast, but a collaboration where each partner brought different skills and resources to ensure that different voices were amplified and everyone was able to contribute. As our first major hybrid event after two years of virtual programming, this was an exciting step in welcoming visitors back into our buildings. It wasn't completely without any challenges, not least a fun affair arriving outside right before the event, but adapting to the unexpected is something we've all had to become experts in. Next slide please. Membership of the Living Knowledge Network has provided us not only with unique opportunities to deliver cultural events for our communities, but also enabled us to share expertise and ideas with colleagues. From conservation to exhibition curation and interpretation. The British Library recognized the value of public libraries and LKN gives us some of the tools and supports needed to explore that potential. Going forward, I would like these to further collaborate with LKN regional libraries, organizing regular loans and material for exhibitions, and highlight the connections between our special collections and tell the stories of our communities. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much to Rian, Catherine and Maxime there for kicking us off in such good style. We will now hear about a collaboration between research volunteers, Staffordshire Archives and Heritage and Keel University, which has led to the development of digital research resources and research tools as part of two recent projects. A case for the ordinary, the patient experience of mental health care in Staffordshire, 1880 to 1960, and small bills and petty finance co-creating the history of the old poor laws, 1750 to 1834. These projects were funded by Welcome and the Arts and Humanities Research Council respectively with the dual aims of increasing research access to collections and delivering high quality public engagement. So we will hear from Rebecca Jackson from Staffordshire Archives and Heritage and Alana Tompkins, Professor of History at Keel University, who will explore the relationship between the research volunteers, the archive and the academics and the impact of this three way collaboration on research engagement and access to collections. So over to you and thank you. Hello everybody. I'm Rebecca. I work for Staffordshire Archives and Heritage. I've got light brown shoulder length hair. I'm wearing glasses and a blue top. And I'm in my 50s, although I prefer not to think about that. I hope that's helpful. So on to our presentation today. The five services need to make their collections widely accessible and academics aim to engage the public with their research and volunteer researchers stimulate new ideas for research and engagement. Collaboration between these three groups presents opportunities to improve access to collections and research. The projects we're discussing today produce digital research tools and resources. They range from databases and blogs to a data capture app called capturing the past, which is aimed at the general researcher. We're looking less at the resources themselves today. You can do that online or ask us about afterwards. And instead we're focusing on the actual partnership that made these resources possible and better. The case for the ordinary project began with an idea to create a digital resource to improve research access to the Staffordshire Asylum's archive collection. With support from Keel and Birmingham universities, the archive service received a grant from welcome to produce a data set of historic patient information. And we had an additional budget for public engagement. Building on that grant and with the support of the archive service. Alana then obtained, that's Alana my co presenter today, obtained economic and social Research Council funding for a PhD student to work with the archives. The two grant funded projects would be mutually beneficial linking up in terms of research and digital resources. And even more importantly, they would have a greater impact in terms of public engagement because we widened the collaboration to include a group of volunteer researchers. In practice, the collaboration presented many opportunities. From an academic perspective PhD student Lucy was embedded with the archive project team working on the Staffordshire Asylum's project as we came to call it for two years and was able to help us shape the data set to meet best meet academic needs. She bought an end users perspective to the resources. In addition, Lucy also had opportunities for public engagement facilitated by the archive service, writing an exhibition text posting on the Staffordshire Asylum's blog and giving talks to public audiences, which is not always an opportunity that starting off academics would have. She also benefited from working with the research volunteers at the archives, their questions and the informal discussions that they had sparked ideas and challenged her I think she'd say to think outside her own research remit. So you can see that that collaboration, just from an academic perspective had some opportunities. From the volunteer perspective. The collaboration had other opportunities complimentary, but different. The group met with Lucy weekly. They located patient cases and discussed how these hidden voices in the asylum records might be presented from modern general origins with similar experiences and concerns around mental health. And that was particularly popular and tapped into during the pandemic as concerns around mental health came to the fore. At the same time, remote volunteers then research the patient backgrounds and case studies were published on the blog alongside thematic articles by Lucy based on her academic research. One example is the case of little Selena pictured here, which drew out themes of social deprivation, endemic disease and family relationships in the context of mental health. The volunteer group particularly welcomed the opportunity to develop knowledge through informal discussions with an expert and found the focus of Lucy's academic research really stimulating. It wasn't something that they'd had as volunteer groups before. They were also motivated by the inclusion of their research in the blog and in the exhibition. They all came to the exhibition and delved into the blog on a regular basis. The opportunities presented by the collaboration between those two groups and with us were legion so because we don't have so much time. I'm just going to mention a few of those. Firstly, we benefited greatly from our partners advice and backing for the grant applications in the first place. We couldn't have got the money for this project without that. Then at the other end of the project, the archive service achieved a much better end product through the collaboration. We had a well researched but accessible project blog that deals with difficult subjects. We have a well used online index and also a data set which is really tailored to the research needs of our target audience and an exhibition based on academic research. The data has engaged local audiences really well and is surprisingly popular with families despite the challenging subject and it's been on view throughout Staffordshire libraries for the last year or so. Apart from these resources, our volunteers are enthused and they feel a sense of satisfaction about their research work. And as a consequence of the collaboration, we now have a tested model of working which we continue to build on and perhaps as importantly, we're developing a reputation as a trusted partner for collaborative projects. And lastly, our profile within the county and within our own organization Staffordshire County Council is raised by the success of the three way partnership. I don't think we've ever had so many councillors interested in what we're doing as with this joint collaborative partnership. So following that summary of the opportunities presented by just one of our collaborative projects, it's over to Alana who's going to share with you some wider reflections and also some of the problems. Thanks Alana. Thanks Rebecca, I'm just hoping it has moved on so that's perfect. Thank you very much Rebecca and brief description of me. I'm a bespectacled brunette woman in her fifties who was introduced by her colleague once as being older than she looks you can take from that what you wish. This second half of the talk I'm going to speak about the collaboration between the structure archives and keel University from the perspective of academic priorities, volunteer goals or at least what it seems to seem to me to be volunteer goals, and also reflections about archival ambitions in a way to augment and solidify the sorts of impressions, which we hope already have been conveyed by the first half of the talk. I've got a bullet point here for something called the ref or the research excellence framework this is for anybody who's lessedly unfamiliar with this. This is a every six to eight years every research active department in an English, sorry British higher education is subjected to an assessment of its research quality. And as of 2014 a significant chunk of that the mark that we get the score that we get as a result of that external assessment is allocated as a result of impact in other words our ability to speak to people beyond other academics. This means that we are obliged to speak quite in quite a tailored way to the different sorts of categories of impact that academics might hope to have might hope to exert. Some disciplines, perhaps may hope to make a difference to policy, for example, the arts and humanities disciplines don't really necessarily have that kind of leverage, or not in lesson, except in most extreme circumstances so we tend to see ourselves tapping into impacts which we can claim around quality of life and service delivery. And those are two things which I think we were able to demonstrate very decisively in the, we've just had a ref reported on the 12th of May. Our sensitivity is never, never lapses in relation to the ref. We had about five minutes off after we submitted back in 2021 and now we're back on for that again. So, from the point of view of academic priorities, we are compelled to have the ref in the forefront of our vision. Collaboration with the archives is something which really enables us to tap into some of the core objectives in terms of what's been defined as viable impact people in the arts and humanities. And of course we have a number of ambitions in parallel with archives and heritage and museum services. So, in other words, it's not that academics aim to achieve improvements to quality of life to local populations or indeed national global populations and other people don't. This means that we are able to draw on our collaboration with archive services to make a more powerful and persuasive case for things like funding. And so the second major example I want to give you today is the case of the small bills and petty finance project, which secured three quarters of a million pounds worth of funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council. So it was a very big deal both for both for Kiel and the funder, I think. And you can find out more about this from our website which I've pictured on the slide and from a number of different sources that I mentioned as we go through. But the thing that I really want to underpin in this slide is the fact that we couldn't possibly have obtained that money without the collaboration with the archives. Because it was the Staffordshire engagement officer who first of all facilitated the pilot project, which enabled us to demonstrate proof of concept, and which then, and who then supported us as the project ran initially it was going to be for three years but then because of COVID it ended up being four. So this is a project which actually became even longer as a result of perhaps even more impactful as a result of COVID. My assumption when I started was that volunteers might be, I had some unformed ideas about what I thought that volunteers might want to get out of a collaboration with academics and with archives. And the Small Bills and Petty Finance project pretty much required volunteer input because it set out a programme of work that it was too was too vast to contemplate without assistance other words without people to help support weekly meet and offer us their time and their expertise. And so it seemed to me that it might be the case. I hoped it was the case that volunteers motivations and aspirations might be met by the ability to bring their own perhaps family research surname research household research to a different programme and speak to a wider project in other words have an input into something which was had significance beyond drawing their own drawing the family tree defining the history of their house or what have you. The it seems to me also quite important that we we meet in locations where volunteers and the community are willing to gather. In other words, universities can be quite off putting places. And ideally libraries and other community locations like county record offices and indeed online, we can buy utilising these sorts of spaces and of course since COVID we're all much more adept at using online spaces but by using these means of meeting people which are not necessarily requiring people to sort of to tackle getting onto campus or to managing university buildings seem to me to be quite important. And it also struck me from the outset and indeed it was proved by events that we would need to adapt our project to fit the cohort of volunteers we recruited and this, for example, was demonstrated when our first pilot project began with one group of volunteers that have been long established to the structure record office and who didn't really weren't all that keen on the small bills offer. And so they were they were exceptionally dedicated given that they weren't they weren't all that persuaded by my initial pitch for their work on these these materials which are essentially the materials of the old pool or but they saw through their their shares it were the work that then declined further engagement, which required us to go back and rethink both in terms of the fit with the volunteers and the offer that we were making in terms of the types of work we were proposing that people could undertake. But on balance, as a result, I'd say we, I think we conclude that the volunteer element of the collaboration was key to bridging the gap between the academic project and the public audience by stimulating new directions in research and presentation. One recent comment on the blog, for example, the blog, one of the blogs hosted by the staff of archives commented directly quote wonderful this research has been made accessible, which in in brief is what we set out to achieve. There are briefly also those some some thoughts about archival ambitions. I think we probably can't claim to speak to all five of the tenets of well being in sense that unless you actually get up out of your chair and then go to the archive or go to the library that that I suppose is a form of being active but most of the time in archives we're sitting down. More indeed in other locations we're sitting down to do this work so, but we do speak to the other four of the five tenets of well being because volunteering enables us and the successful fostering of volunteering collaborations enables us to claim that we are encouraging people to take notice to connect to keep learning and to give because the giving of their expertise. is key to the success of the research project and we can say a bit more about that in questions if you like. And I think that that collaboration of expertise where you have an academic and archivist and a group of volunteers in the room is quite a potent venue for fostering new understandings of life in the past in our case. It also is a way to exert more funding and so it was the initial collaboration with the archives which enabled me to obtain funding. It's also a way for archives to obtain funding so as a result of the wider small bills project. We worked with the Staffordshire the East Sussex and the Cumbria archive service and the results of that has been for the Cumbria archive service that we've obtained another. Studentship a doctoral studentship akin to the one which is being undertaken by Lucy in relation to the case for the ordinary project. I think one key takeaway point for all this would be that we we we think we should if we haven't already we should in the future evaluate evaluate and evaluate because it's only by seeking independent. Feedback in other words by getting a third party to ask our volunteers and indeed our other participants what they think that we can develop real points for understanding what's worked well and what could work better in the future. So in our in our ongoing collaborations we will be seeking ways to make sure that we are we're collecting that vital evidence of volunteer experience throughout our future projects. Thank you. Thank you very much and we're now going to hear our final presentation and which is about the project the European Digital Treasures Management of Centennial Archives in the 21st century. So this project aims to bring together joint European archival heritage, especially in that kind of digital format and to increase visibility outreach and use of those of those versions and formats. The project involves a consortium of seven institutions from seven countries that unites a multi stakeholder team of state archives, the Technological Institute, a cultural incubator, a research institution and a wider international network of cultural heritage institutions. So Charles from the National Archives of Malta will discuss how this project is helping European archives to reach out to a new cohort of users and that's across the generations from the young to the old. And also around gamification communities as well. So I'll hand over to Charles. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much, Jenny. I'm Charles, 53 years old, short black hair wearing a blue shirt and eyeglasses straight through the objectives of the project. This project, the formal name is the European Digital Treasures. In terms of objectives, the project aims to identify and implement new business models for archives. It also tries to diversify when it comes to the users of archives through the identification of new audiences and the development of strategies and activities. The third main objective is to increase visibility of the European archival heritage, history and culture. In terms of the partnership within this project, we are seven partners from seven countries. There are a number of national archives participating. So there's the National Archives of Norway, the National Archives of Hungary, Spain, Portugal and Malta. We have a university, the Monster Technological University of Ireland and also the International Center for Archival Research, ECROS based in Austria. In terms of the budget, this project has a budget from the European Commission of 1.5 million, which is then up by 50% co-funding from the partners. Coming up to the budget of 3 million euros, spread over three years. It kickstarted in 2018. However, due to COVID, it was actually extended up by a year up to the end of the current year. In terms of the work packages of the project, the first work package tries to identify new business models for the working of EU National Archives, not only National Archives, but EU Archives in the 21st century. The second work package is focused on the creation and dissemination of three transmedia exhibitions. The third work package is identifying new target audiences and then the fourth work package, which cuts across the whole project, is the admin of the project. This is the communication administration reporting. Let's focus a bit about each of the work packages. So under the new business models, basically there were a number of studies. One of the studies was definition of international benchmarks for the working of archives. An interesting component of the project was the artist in residence. So basically this was a call within the different countries where the project was taking place. Asking for artists to join the archives participating, spend some time with them, understand the work processes of archives, and also come up with merchandising that can be then promoted through the partners of the project. We mentioned gamification, so basically there were also specific projects and seminars whereby experts in the area of gamification were asked to take documents from archives and interpret them in a particular game. There were workshops about new technologies, new business models, and also about generation of income from new activities. On the screen there is a snapshot of some of the extensive merchandising that came out from the project. What's interesting about this merchandising is that it's not simply merchandising as a profit making activity, it's merchandising that was developed in collaboration with the different archives, starting from documents from the various themes within the project, and then building the product and integrating the whole product within the various activities of the project. The second work package, the second work package consisted in something tangible and the creation of the three interactive transmedia exhibitions that were held in each of the six countries participating in the project. There were long discussions about the themes, what themes to be chosen. Finally, the selection of documentation from the different archives started with about 1000 documents, which was cut down to 140 documents that were finally used for the exhibitions. The themes that were chosen were the construction of Europe from Charlemagne to the EU treaties. The second exhibition focused on exiles, migratory flows and solidarity, and the third and final exhibition European discoveries from the new world to new technologies. This is a visual idea of how these exhibitions looked. This is actually one of the exhibitions. They are similar exhibitions held in the different countries, making a lot of use of augmented reality, virtual reality, not the traditional focus on the document itself, but the focus on how that traditional document can be interpreted in modern ways for new audiences. The third work packages targeted new audiences and basically this was split up into two focus areas, the younger generation, and for the younger generation there was the development of an online archival literacy course, the creation of a virtual European archives, and also the development of edutainment applications linked to the exhibitions. When it comes to the 60 plus age groups, the silver generation, there was first of all a survey conducted among these users of archives about their needs and expectations, and there was also an interesting crowdsourcing activity involving members from this cohort. The survey was carried out in 2020. It reached 889 participants, frequenting the different archives in these six different countries, and a lot of interesting insights came out of the study. Now with all the studies, as we mentioned the earlier studies also, these studies will be available once the project is finalized for all the other archives, not only in these countries to use as a point of reference. In terms of the crowdsourcing activity for the silver generation, this was an interesting collaboration between the University of Polytechnica of Valencia and Spain. This university came up with a creation of a software aimed at the recognition of handwritten texts from manuscripts, and the interesting involvement of volunteers, of these volunteers who are 60 years and older, was in them helping us to check what the software is actually doing to verify the data and to help in this process. As you can see over there, there are some basic statistics that's the number of volunteers we had from Malta from the silver generation cohort. It was quite encouraging from a small country to have 19 volunteers, some of them Maltese who even live abroad in the UK, in France and in Australia, and basically there are some statistics there of the number of documents they managed to check on this transcription tool. The archival literacy course is a course that is online, it's available online for anyone to use, targeted at youths in the age bracket 15 to 18 or even younger. Basically, it's not a course that aims to, in any way, train archivists. It's a very basic course that tries to bridge the gap that we know exists between archives and the mysteries surrounding archives and the people out there. This is actually a slide of a seminar, we held one of the authors of the modules, Marika Kamelleri, who is delivering a presentation presenting this archival literacy course. The European Youth Archive was an initiative targeting youths in these different countries. We would have expected more take up of this initiative, however, we did realize there were challenges, especially with examination phases in different timeframes within different countries. Youths were asked to select three documents from the 140 documents used in exhibitions and they were asked to interpret the document in whatever form, digital form they want. Some of them did play PowerPoint presentations, other created a short film footage and a group of Spanish youths also came up with a song. They actually wrote a song inspired by a medieval document and also wrote the music and recorded that particular song. The end result of this youth collaboration was a summer camp that was held last week in Budapest. Over there there's a photo of the steering committee actually meeting and evaluating the youth proposals and then the group of youths who visited Budapest last week from the different countries and they had a week packed with activities ranging from visits in the different archives to, for example, the building of time capsules linked also to the same project. At the end of the project there are a number of expected outcomes, most of these have already been accomplished because basically we will start now during this summer, the reporting phase of the project to wrap the whole project up by this December. There were a number of initiatives that are listed over there, basically a number of operators from different archives involved and a number also of persons who probably never imagined they will reach to an archive. So over here we have a slide of one of the meetings that we held for the Silver Generation cohort and basically it's a step by step presentation to them about this transcription project that was highly, highly successful. In terms of the outcomes I would like also to highlight that when it comes to the exhibitions, the exhibitions will also leave a permanent mark on the sector because when it comes to the edutainment applications, the number of different games that were generated from the archives. These are all products as is the merchandising that will be licensed to the different archives and will be actually utilized throughout in the years to come, even after the project is over at the end of this year. I would like to thank you and to encourage you to enjoy this project because a lot of it is online through the website of the project that's digitaltreasures.e. Thank you very much. Thank you Charles and if I could invite every all the speakers to maybe switch their cameras on and we can move to the Q&A. Because we already have lots of lovely questions coming in through the Q&A box. I thought I'd start with one for everybody because that would be good so everybody gets a chance to kind of get back into speaking. So the question is from Melinda and it's all about kind of we've seen from the kind of various presentations at these partnerships that you're talking about are bringing mutual benefit. But Melinda's question is kind of how easy is it to sort of get started with that. And you know how easy was it for all these different partners to kind of well to identify the partners to start with to work out who to work with and then to kind of understand each other's goals and to kind of form that partnership. And she asked particularly if you have any tips for kind of creating a good starting point. So how do you kind of identify the partners and kind of build that partnership? I don't know if anybody has any reflections on that. Please speak up. Maybe I could start things off. Yeah, it's a really, really good question. Particularly around the area of how you identify what about the partnership is going to be mutually beneficial. And I think with the Living Knowledge Network we found that it's about understanding where you add value to each other. What can the other partner do that you can't do? What do they bring to the partnership? And with libraries the fantastic thing is that national local connection. We have a national platform. We have a national brand. We have a known brand. We can support with assets. We can bring high quality cultural offers. The libraries then have the connections locally. They have the understanding of how to use those assets. They know how to augment it and create something really resonant for their own communities. They reach into areas and they find, you know, we have a lot of evaluations that we do and we continually assess those relationships. And I think that's also really important to understand and to emphasize that you need to constantly check in with with each other as to how well those partnerships are creating impact. And one thing we found through libraries is that we're actually seek, we sort of through the content is actually reaching people who might not normally engage with culture of that kind. Through branch and community libraries particularly. So with that knowledge we can then try to, you know, expand those partnerships further into those areas to make more impact. So it's just about continuously reviewing it, starting from a place of sort of mutual impact and then continually reviewing that so that it becomes a closer and closer partnership and always continuing that sphere of conversation, always making sure that there's an open space for discussion. So that all the partners feel that their voice has heard and always valued, I would say that's probably the most important thing. Thank you, Kathy. That's wonderful. Does anybody have anything they'd like to add to that? I can just contribute that, sorry, Salana, historians and historians always in archives and archives always talking to historians, but I think what's more difficult to know is where you have things of mutual interest. In other words, archives have diverse holdings and sometimes have something that speak very sort of openly to the interests of an academic in a nearby university, but the academic doesn't necessarily know it and vice versa. So it's not necessarily the case that academics go to archives and say, do you want to, have you got anything like this because I'm interested in this sort of material. So I think it's about dialogue, sort of having venues to open out that dialogue. I was very fortunate in Staffordshire in sense that we've always had a long, a long standing connection between the university and the archives for the purposes of teaching local history to adult students. But it's, I think it's about taking the plunge and making the first approach. Does anybody have any tips for that first approach? How do you go up to somebody who've never met before and make that approach? What's your pitch? I think you stood up by asking them what they're doing and then seeing how it fits in with what you want to do. And I really liked what Catherine said about recognizing what other people can do that you desperately want to do, but you know you can't within your particular situation. And I think that really works with us and the volunteers and Alana in that, well and Keel, in that we can't infuse the volunteers as much about the collections that they're working on as an expert can. And we can't get grant funding without that academic support. So you look at what you can't do and see who can you work with to achieve what you want to achieve. Yes, as Alana said, having conversations. Thank you, Rebecca. And Charles, you were working with some unusual groups like gamers and artists. How did you sort of reach out to them? Yes, in our case, because it's an international project involving partners from different countries. Basically, the starting point was the personal connections we already had. Actually, maybe one could ask why these countries, why Spain and more than Hungary, for example, the main reason is that there were personal connections that were built over the years. Our sector, the archive sector, especially probably more than libraries is a relatively small sector, even internationally. So some of us studied on the same courses, even in the UK. So there are those connections which one should use and one should build upon because obviously to develop that relation between two national archives to go into a venture like this. It's not something you would build in a couple of weeks. It's something that was built over a number of years. Then obviously when the project took shape and when we started working, basically there were a lot of rules that we had to abide with. In some cases, it was simply issuing a call that was set up for all the countries and maybe that was one of the shortcomings of the project that sometimes what worked really fine in Budapest did not really work that well in Spain or in Malta. But again, it was an interesting experience and especially we're getting feedback this week from the youth camp in Budapest when you have these youths coming from different places. Most of them had no idea what archives there are or never visited an archives before. So they came to us through their schools. So we did disseminate the call through schools. They reached us through schools, through history courses, through social studies or similar topics. And they become their new, nowadays they are our new community of collaborators. And at the end of the day, there was not much to lose in our case. Basically, we were trying to reach out. There were some disappointments. Some of the numbers in some countries were not really what we would have expected. But again, the overall experience was quite positive. Thank you. And I have a specific question next. This one is for Alana and Rebecca. And Chris is curious to know whether you also collaborated with the North Norfolk Archives, the Change Minds Project, which has also worked on local asylum records. And if so, if there has been any evaluative work of what worked well there and what worked well in Staffordshire. Yeah, thanks, Jenny. And thanks, Chris, for your question. It's a good question. The North Norfolk Archives Change Minds Project was starting up pretty much at the same time as our project. And when we were thinking about our project, the sort of planning for both projects happened quite closely. But we didn't go any further with joining up with that Change Minds project because it didn't work with our funders and our specific remit for how we used our funding. And I know we didn't work with them, but it's a really good point and I'm glad you've reminded me of it because I really think we should do some evaluation with them. I think that would be really interesting and I will follow that up. Thank you. And there's a question there mentioning evaluation around evaluation because yourself and Rebecca and Alana and also you, Charles, you're kind about that evaluation stage. There's a question about the kind of importance of kind of constantly monitoring the kind of relationship. So I don't know if people had anything to say about kind of their plans for evaluation or how evaluation tells you what has changed. Do you have any examples of ways of evaluating that kind of produce the sort of evidence that is going to kind of demonstrate the impact that you want? There's something briefly here, which is that I was very green in this respect. And so when I first put in an application for funding, I didn't consider that evaluation might have costs attached. But then I came up against the very obvious problem, which is that if you can't go to people and say to them, what do you think of me? So what you need is a strategy and a third party and some funding to repay that third party for them to make investigations as to how people are candidly reacting to what you're doing and your proposals without them feeling like you're sort of watching over them. So we used an evaluation company called Urban Lamp. There are lots of evaluation companies out there, but they were very good at conducting face-to-face interviews and indeed on the onset of COVID telephone interviews with our volunteers to find out what they thought us. So Catherine, go on. I just think this is such an important area. It's something that we should all be always doing more of. And I think one of the things we maybe need to do better is to be connecting that data and that evaluation, you know, the evidence you have of that impact that you've made with our audience development plans for the future so that there's a continuous kind of connection between that evaluation, what you're going to be doing next. Because we often think, oh, we've wrapped that project up, we've evaluated it. But yeah, one thing we're really trying to look at is how can we use that information to improve what we're doing to feed into the next project. When you're working with partnerships, the really challenging thing is getting them all involved in it, because like Helena says, you need a system that takes staff resource, staff time. And I think one of the really important things to do is make sure that that evaluative material is of benefit to your partners as well as you. So you're all kind of reaping rewards from that evaluation and showing that sort of change impact on audiences really well. And I just jump in to say that I think that's why those initial conversations when you're forming partnerships are really important to understand what's going to be valuable to them. So when you're thinking through your project and how you're going to evaluate and the impact you want to make, you're measuring based on those goals that you have. And for us, it's quite tricky because we work with so many different libraries, some of them are run by councils, some of them are run by kind of independent charities that are funded in a completely different way. So trying to balance that alongside our own evaluation that we have to have as the British library is quite complex. But I'd really, it's an area that I think is still being developed in the cultural sector. So anyone with an interest in it, I'd recommend to attend webinars by the centre of cultural value who are doing lots of work on trying to kind of critically look at how we evaluate cultural experiences and take some of the pressure off the audience. Who end up doing a lot of legwork and telling us what they think, and it's not very enjoyable. And we need to kind of make that part of the enjoyment of cultural content and cultural experiences. Thank you. We have another question. This is about this kind of, you've made a point about this kind of national and then regional and this kind of different scales we've also got international here so we've got international we've got national we've got local. So, how is this kind of affected this kind of global to sort of reach is the international national and the connections that you're trying to make at sort of which scale. How has that kind of affected the project design and delivery do you think do you think it's easier if you're just operating at a local scale, or is it harder when you're starting to connect across local regional or regional, you know, national. I think what's really exciting for us has been part of the living knowledge network even though it's a big national project. We really have the freedom to make it hyper local and use our own networks, and even just over the last four or five years. We might have started with one or two museums that we're working with. But now we go to them each time we've got, you know, an exhibition. And it's just given us a focus we know this project's going to come every years exhibition. And it's quite a bit branded British library, but because I know the quality is there, but then we can use our own networks to do something completely different. And I think that's what's really nice is that each library, even if they have the same source material same assets can do something completely different, but I think it does have a very local impact even as a national project. I hope Catherine and Maxine agree. Yeah, that's really great to hear. And I think it's about creating when you're working on this scale I think about creating assets and cultural experiences that can be taken in a multitude of directions, based on the location that they're in so they have to be scalable but they have to be flexible. And I think quite often that is just about simplifying the offer so that the power in the sense is in the hands of those local, you know, curators and local libraries to kind of make it what they want it to be to make it really resonate in the way that makes sense to them. So it's not about us kind of imparting lots of cultural assets on to forcing a sort of certain direction of travel but really leaving that open and really clear so that that can just be taken in a multitude of directions depending on what makes sense to the local area. And I have a question for Charles this is around and this is obviously project work the European digital treasures is a kind of a project that's coming to an end. But what kind of bits of it are you going to be able to kind of embed do you think permanently in archival working practices because I'm thinking that this this idea of merchandising and income generation and particularly the stuff around business models how do you think that's going to embed or you know how are you going to kind of carry that forward to kind of normal archival business as usual I guess. I think there were there were certain initiatives that will remain as studies that depend on whoever wants to consult them and to take them to another step. Basically, when it comes to the merchandising, there is already agreement that each National Archives or each archives involved in the project would have the licensing agreement to use those those products. So basically, in terms of what the project created there is a lot there was already a lot of thinking in the project that there will be permanent benefits from from the outcomes of the project. However, what I would like to highlight most because compared to some of the other projects we've heard about this was quite rigid because when you have European funding. You're quite in a straight jacket what you can do and especially the public procurement within the different countries meant a lot of commitment and time and not necessarily getting the product you want. However, there is the added advantage of the new networks that we've been let's say this network of older persons who are now volunteers with the archives, apart from the project they worked upon which was literally imposed by the project. We still kept them now as volunteers working, most of them at least in other areas of the archive so I would say the main advantage apart from the merchandising the studies and all that. That's probably the advantage on an institutional level, but then the new networks and the new cohorts of collaborators is definitely a big advantage, especially for an institution as small as ours where where you get 19 new volunteers at one go that's quite quite an achievement for a small archive. So that's one of the benefits again we're talking about the benefits of partnership working and actually to some extent the values in those partnerships and the values in the collaboration and the connections that you're making. And I just wondered, Alana or Rebecca, I was, you're sort of doing citizen research to some extent, you know, a lot of talk about citizen science but this is like citizen history. So does that sort of translate well because in terms of kind of aligning goals aligning benefits. You know, can you kind of translate the work of the kind of citizen researchers the volunteer researchers into that academic sphere, you know, do people see as real real academic research or that sort of thing. Well I have a very good piece of information on that which is that when we, one of the things we offer to do with the project was to have a book of the project. And we wanted two things for that firstly that it was open access so that when it was published it would be available to everyone, including volunteers, but also the volunteers will be represented as writers in that book. So we didn't compel anyone but we, we opened up the opportunity for anyone who wanted to in the amongst across our three participating county groups. If anybody wanted to write a small piece, perhaps I was thinking of a biographical piece essentially about one of the people they've researched as a result of the somebody who's embedded in the experience of the old war. We had two volunteers from each county so there are six pieces by volunteers in the book, which comes out in the next month, I think. So, yes, it we've, we've, we've explicitly made it our goal to say that this this research is appearing on the same platform so academic articles but also volunteering biographies. And I think that's the next logical step in the sense that quite a lot of projects have blogs where you have a mixture of academic student and volunteer input. And I think the obvious next step is publication.
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Waldteufel | Robert Kraft | Action & Adventure Fiction, General Fiction | Speaking Book | German
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2019-12-20T10:21:24
2024-04-23T22:47:41
3,895
Pcksa4N5G1A
Kapitel 1 von der Waldtäufe Dies ist eine LibriVox-Aufnahme. Alle LibriVox-Aufnahmen sind lizenzvoll und im öffentlichen Besitz. Weitere Informationen und Hinweise zur Beteiligung an diesem Projekt gibt es bei LibriVox.org. Der Waldtäufe von Robert Kraft. Kapitel 1. Ein Kindsraub. Wir befanden uns in Nordaustralien und wohnten der Eröffnung jener Eisenbahnlinie bei, welche jetzt die Hafenstadt Rupertown mit dem im inneren liegenden Cainfield verbindet. Mit nem Busch wurde feierlich die letzte Spelle gelegt, aus Sedanholz bestehend, und die Nägel waren Goldene. Natürlich war dies nur pro Forma. Schwelle und Nägel wurden dann wieder mitgenommen und durchgewöhnliche ersetzt, sonst wären sie nicht lange dort liegen geblieben. Auch die Aufräumungsarbeiten waren beendet, das Zeltlager wurde abgebrochen, in Eisenbahnzüge verladen und mit dem Personal nach der Küste zurückbefördert. Die Ingenieure blieben bis zuletzt, sie wollten sich noch einige Tage durch Jagd ergötzen, was bisher nicht möglich gewesen war, weil das Direktorium sehr mit Beendigung der Arbeit getrieben hatte. Da kam ein Ingenieur, Mr. Russell, welcher auf dem vorgeschobenen Posten beschäftigt gewesen war, mit einem Arbeiterzug und brachte eine aufregende Nachricht mit. Dem Squatter Harrison ist sein jüngstes Kind von einem Gorilla geraubt worden, und der Affe ist mit seiner Beute in den Busch geflohen. So weit wir jetzt erfuhren, waren die Tatsachen folgende. Dick Harrison war ein Pionier der australischen Wildnis. Seine Farm lag am weitesten im Inneren am Victoria-Fluss, sechs englische Meilen südlich von Cainfield, welches damals aber nur eine kleine Ansiedlung mit Faktorei war und erst durch die neue Eisenbahn eine blühende Stadt zu werden versprach, was sie denn jetzt auch ist. Eine eigentliche Farm besaß Harrison nicht, er baute nicht mehr an, als was er für sich, seine Familie und Leute bedurfte. Er trieb vornehmlich Schaf- und Rinderzucht, und so kam es, daß fast die direkte Umgebung der Ansiedlung in noch völliger Wildnis da lag. Die Schafe und Rinder weideten zu jeder Jahreszeit im Freien, sich ganz selbst überlassen, nur von einigen berittenen Hierten beobachtet, welche verehrte Tiere zurückbrachten, und wurden einmal im Jahr in die Pferche getrieben, wo man den neugeborenen Tieren das Brandzeichen eindrückte, die Schafe schor und die fetten Rinder absonderte, um sie nach der Küste zu überführen, wo sie verkauft wurden. Die Käufer kamen stets selbst auf die Farm, es fragte sich nur, wieviel Tiere man wohl behalten an die Küste brachte, danach wurde bezahlt. Eine solche Zeit war eben jetzt, die Schafe wurden geschoren, die zurückgebliebenen Rinder befanden sich in der Pferche, die meisten der Hierten waren auf Transport. Harrisons Familie bestand aus seiner Frau, einer Tochter von 18 Jahren, einen Sohn von 16 und einem späten Nachkömmling, einen Knaben von zwei Jahren. Wir alle kannten Harrison aus Caimfield, wo er sich zur Zeit mit seiner Familie wegen des Rinderverkaufs aufgehalten hatte, und wir alle hatten dem Biederen Squater, seine freundliche Frau und seine frischen Kinder lieb gewonnen. Und bei dem jungen Russell war es wohl auch noch mehr der Fall, betrifft der schönen Susan, wenigstens hatte er sich nicht nehmen lassen, gestern Morgen bei Sonnenaufgang sein Pferd zu satteln und nach der Ferne zu reiten, um von den wackeren Leuten nochmals Abschied zu nehmen. Die Familie und Russell wollten sich an den Frühstückstisch setzen. Der kleine Henry spielte noch draußen unter der Aufsicht eines alten Schwarzen, eines Hausdieners, dem man immer das Kind sorglos anvertraute. Es war ja auch absolut keine Gefahr vorhanden. Reißende Tiere gibt es in Australien nicht mit Ausnahme der Dingos, wilden Hunden, welche aber nie einen Menschen anfallen. Giftschlangen hatte man nie gesehen, ebenso wenig waren Giftbären bekannt und außerdem hütete der alten Neger das Kind mit zärtlicher Liebe wie seinen Augapfel. In der Umgebung trieben sich zwar viele eingeborene herum, nur von der Jagd lebend, aber das waren eben die besten Schützen des Hauses. Den Harrison zahlte ihnen einen bestimmten Tribut an Tabak und Mehl und nun wachten die wilden Eiversüchtig darauf, dass kein fremder Stamm in die Nähe der Ansiedlung kam, sonst wäre ein Kampf bis aufs Messer entstanden. Eben sagte die Mutter zu Ralph, dem älteren Sohn, er solle die beiden doch holen. Als der alte Neger hereingestürzt kam, aschfarben, an allen Gliedern zitternd, keines Wortes mächtig. Woß Henry, schrien die Eltern gleichzeitig, von einer bösen Ahnung erfasst. Der Waldteufel, der Waldteufel, mehr vermochte der eingeborene erst nicht hervorzubringen. Der Waldteufel hat ihn geholt, holte er dann und riss sich das Haar aus dem Kopf. Endlich brachte man heraus, wo er sich zuletzt aufgehalten hatte und dort hatte Henry eben der Waldteufel geholt. Vater, Sohn und Russell, griffen nach den Büchsen und schwangen sich auf die Pferde, ohne die man nie den Busch betritt. Einige Hunde folgten von selbst. Der Platz, wo sich der eingeborene mit dem Kind zuletzt aufgehalten hatte, war bald gefunden. Er war nicht gar so weit von der Ansiedlung entfernt, freil ich schon im weglosen Busch. Mit Schrecken konstatierte Harrison, ein erfahrener Buschjäger, außer der Pferde des alten eingeborenen, die eines nackten, ungewöhnlich großen Menschenfußes. So mußte Henry also von einem eingeborenen Geraubborden sein. Warum aber war der Diener da geflohen? Und das Wunderbarste war, daß die Hunde sich weigerten, die Pferde aufzunehmen, während sie sonst stets den eingeborenen folgten. Und der Fuß war so furchtbar groß. Harrison setzte der Pferde nach, und die drei waren noch nicht weit geritten, als sie etwas erblickten, was man gern in das Reich der Träume versetzt hätte. Am Saum eines Tewaldes, vielleicht fünfzig Meter entfernt, sahen sie eine menschliche Gestalt hocken, die den kleinen Henry in den Armen hielt und ihn hin und her wiegte. Als das Geschöpf die Reiter erblickte, sprang es auf, rannte noch einige Schritte am Wald entlang und dann hinein, immer den schreienden Henry im Arme. Das Geschöpf besass menschliche Formen, lasse ich Russell selbst erzählen, war aber viel größer als ein Mensch, über sechs Fuß mindestens, und dann ging es auch noch mitgeknickt in Knien, aufrecht, ungeheuer stark gebaut, ganz nackt der Körper mit braunen Haaren bedeckt. Ich habe es ganz deutlich gesehen, fünfzig Meter ist nicht so weit, nur das Gesicht entging mir, ich könnte darauf schwören, dass es ein Gorilla gewesen ist. Die anderen Herren, alles englische Ingenieure, waren derselben Meinung. Ein Gorilla in Australien? Die Westküste Afrikas ist die Heimat der Gorillas. Der Engländer wird von klein auf zu seinem künftigen Beruf erzogen, alles andere wird von nachlässigt, seine Bildung ist daher schrecklich einseitig. Dieser junge Russell war ein tüchtiger Ingenieur, er hätte jede Schwierigkeit erst theoretisch mit Zahlen und dann praktisch überwunden, aber in der Naturkunde war ein aus der deutschen Volksschule entlassener Bewanderter als er. So stand es auch mit den anderen Herren. Mancher englische Astronom ist am Himmel zu Hause und kann kein Weizenkorn von einem Roggenkorn unterscheiden. Ich war wohl der Einzige, der hier ein unbefangenes Urteil hatte. Miss Mary nicht ausgenommen. Ein Gorilla war es auf keinen Fall, er hätte in diesem Klima keine Woche existieren können und zu dem Stimmte verschiedenes nicht. Doch hören wir erst weiter. Schießen durfte man nicht, weil das Kind getroffen werden konnte. Zu Karriere setzte man dem unheimlichen Räubern nach. Der jedoch bald verschwand. An einem Baum hörte die Spur auf. Er war aufgebäumt. Immer mit dem Kinder. Auch das Kindergeschrei hörte man nicht mehr. Offenbar hielt er ihm den Mund zu. Oder es war tot. Der Affe hatte also seinen Weg von Ast zu Ast und von Baum zu Baum genommen. Man sah ihn nicht. Harrison vermochte eine solche Spur nicht zu verfolgen. Eingeborene hätten das wohl Fertige gebracht, aber auf die war nichts zu rechnen. Die Australniger glauben nicht an einen Gott, jedoch an böse und gute Geister, welche ihnen Krankheiten oder gute Jagden schicken. Und erstere führen den Namen Walteufel. So etwa übersetzt, welche besonders bei Nacht ihr Unwesen treiben und Macht über die Menschen haben. Man stellt sie sich als menschenähnliche Geschöpfe vor. Bahat, sehr groß, ebenso, wie es Russell jetzt beschrieb. Gerade in letzter Zeit hatten die Eingeborenen wieder viel davon gefabelt, wie sie einen Walteufel gesehen hätten. Die Weißen hatten darüber gelacht. Und nun war wirklich einer da. Ja, was war das aber? Ein Affe? In Australien? Ganz unbekannt. Ein wirklicher Walteufel? Unsinn. Meiner Ansicht nach war es eben ein Eingeborener gewesen, der den Kindsraub wahrscheinlich begannen hatte, um dann Geschenke zu erpressen. Den mit haarenbedeckten Körper hatten sich Russell und die anderen eingebildet. Sie hatten mit den Augen der Eingeborenen gesehen. Oder es mochte ja auch solche behaarte Menschen geben. Von früh bis abends suchten die drei, ohne wieder eine Spurt zu entdecken. Dann mußte Ralph nach der Farm reiten, um mit Nahrungsmitteln vor sehende Hierten herbeizuholen. Harrison verwahlte im Busch, wo er den Affen zuletzt gesehen. Russell begleitete Ralph. Denn seine Pflicht zwang ihn, sich beim Chefingenieur zu melden, konnte hier auch nichts helfen. Das war gestern Geschen, jetzt war es Mittag. Es war ein Gorilla, schloss Russell seine Erzählung. Alle Herren waren sofort entschlossen, sich nach der Farm zu begeben. Dazu war ein scharfer Ritt, von wenigstens fünf Stunden nötig, denn ein Zug stand uns nicht mehr zur Verfügung. »Aber wir können auch nichts tun, sagte Russell. Wir sehen nur den Jammer der Eltern. Gleichgültig, wir mußten hin und erfahren, wie die Sache verläuft, entschied der Chefingenieur. Mr. Russell, haben Sie schon ein Gorilla gesehen? fragte ich, während die Pferde gesattelt wurden. Gewiss im zoologischen Garten. Der Gorilla lebt in Afrika, in Australien gibt es gar keine Affen. Nach einigem Bedenken gaben das alle Herren zu. Lief er aufrecht? aufrecht wie ein Mensch. Der Gorilla kann nicht aufrecht laufen. Nein, höchstens an einem Stock, und wenn er es einmal wenige Schritte ohne Stock tut, so balanciert er dabei mit den Armen. Zudem wird ein Gorilla nie größer als sechs Fuß, alles andere ist Farbe. Es war ein Riese. Ich schätze ihn auf sieben Fuß. Dann war es kein Gorilla. »Wir werden erfahren, was es gewesen ist. Wir ruhen nicht eher, als bis wir das Geschöpf haben. Tod oder lebendig. Vorwärts, meine Herren, rief der Chefingenieur und schwang sich in den Sattel. Im gestreckten Galopp ging es nach Westen. An meiner Seite hielt sich Mary. Ende von Kapitel 1. Kapitel 2 von Der Waldteufel. Dies ist eine LibriVox-Aufnahme. Alle LibriVox-Aufnahmen sind lizenzfreund im öffentlichen Besitz. Weitere Informationen und Hinweise zur Beteiligung an diesem Projekt gibt es bei LibriVox.org. Der Waldteufel von Robert Kraft. Kapitel 2 auf der Fährte. Unterwegs änderte sich meine Ansicht über den Fall ganz bedeutend. Der Katage Hanno wurde ums Jahr 770 v. Chr. geburt ausgeschickt, an der Westküste Afrikas Kolonien zu gründen. Er gibt in seinem Werk PeriPlus die Beschreibung eines menschenähnlichen Tieres, welches unverkennbar der Gorilla war. Er wurde in das Reich der Fabeln zurückgewiesen. Die Westküste Afrikas wurde ums Jahr 1440 von Europäern bevölkert und diese hörten wohl, wie die Neger von fürchterlichen Ungehörn erzählten, welche in den undurchdringlichen Wäldern hausten und welche sie Waldmenschen nannten. Das ist die Übersetzung des Wortes Gorilla. Glaubten ihn natürlich nicht. Im Jahr 1847 wurde der erste Gorilla von den Missionar Savage am Flussigabun gesehen und beschrieben. So haben wir also vier Jahrhunderte im Lande des Tieres gelebt, ohne zu wissen, dass es überhaupt existiert, seine Annahme als eine Fabel bezeichnet. Oder 2500 Jahre hat es bedurft, ehe bewiesen wurde, dass Hanno kein Lügner war. Über das Innere Australiens wissen wir so gut wie gar nichts. Einige Reisende haben es durchquert, aber immer denselben Weg einhaltend. Sie haben Flüsschen angetroffen, große Grasflächen, Wälder und Himmelhohe Gebirge. Wie sieht das andere aus? Niemand weiß es. Pflanzen und Tiere, alles noch unbekannt. Warum nun sollte in Gegenden Australiens, die noch kein Fuß betreten, nicht ein riesiger, menschenähnlicher Affehausen? Auch der Gorilla beschränkt sich auf ein nur kleines Gebiet. Der Sommer war äußerst trocken. In die Nähe der Ansiedlungen, also in den Flussbezirk, kamen scheue Tiere, die sich sonst nur im Inneren aufhalten. Zum Beispiel das Riesenkänguru. Sogar das Felsenkänguru hatte sein Gebirge verlassen, um neben den Menschen zur Tränke zu gehen. Warum sollte der Wassermangel nicht auch solch ein noch unbekannten Affen in bewohnte Gegenden getrieben haben? Dann wäre an dem Glauben der Australnäger an den Waldträufel etwas wahres. Und an dem Volksglauben oder Aberglauben ist überhaupt immer etwas wahres und wenn es auch noch so krass wäre. Nun, ich hatte Zeit, mehr als die Ingenieure. Ich wollte der Sache auf den Grund gehen. Spät am Abend erreichten wir die Farm und fanden Mutter und Tochter in Tränen aufgelöst. Trösten konnten wir sie nicht. Sie zogen sich schnell zurück. Harrison, Ralph und die Hirten waren noch nicht wieder da. Das englische Dienstmädchen trug uns Abendbrot auf und salzte es mit ihren Tränen. Ich merkte, wie es die Ingenieure jetzt bereuten, hierhergekommen zu sein, wo sie nichts anderes tun konnten, als fremdes Leid anzusehen und ich merkte auch, mit welcher Ungeduld Mary die Ankunft des Hauswertes erwartete. Die Nacht war schon angebrochen, als auf dem Hofe Hofschläge erschollen. Türen gingen auf und zu. Wir sahen ein weißes Gewand über den Hof huschen, hörten einen gelnden Schrei, den Mrs. Harrison ausgestoßen hatte, und wir wussten genug. Harrison trat ins Zimmer, sagte kein Wort, grüßte nicht, als sehe er die Gäste gar nicht, stellte die Büchse in eine Ecke, setzte sich, stemmte die Elebogen auf die Knie und den Kopf in die Hände. Ich hätte den rüstigen Mann kaum wieder erkannt, so gealtert kam er mir plötzlich vor. Der Chefingenieur nahm zuerst das Wort, sprach ihm Mut ein, man müsse das Kind doch noch finden. Ja, wenn der kleine Henry tot wäre, mummelte der unglückliche Vater, und zwei große Tränen rollten langsam über die verwitterten Wangen. Wenn ich ihn ertrunken aus dem Bache gezogen hätte, dann, dann, aber er lebt vielleicht, in der Gewalt eines Affen oder sonst eines Scheu-Sals. Es ist entsetzlich. Mit stockender Stimme erzählte er nichts weiter, als dass man die Spur eben nicht habe wiederfinden können, an dem Baume hörte sie auf und damit war es alle. Für was hielten sie denn das Wesen? Für einen Affen, einen Waldhäufel, einen beharten Eingeborenen. Gleichgültig, ich suche so lange, bis ich das Scheu-Sal vor der Mündung meiner Büchse habe. Warum mag er das Kind denn geraubt haben? Ach, schweigen sie doch, miss. Ich bitte sie, mir zu antworten, beharte Mary Hartnackig. Können denn die Eingeborenen, deren scharfe Sinne doch so gerühmt werden, die Spur in den Zweigen nicht verfolgen? Die könnten es wohl. Warum verwenden sie sie nicht dazu? Sie fürchten sich vor dem Waldhäufel. Alle schätze der Erde, nein, ein ganzer Sack voll Tabak könnte sie nicht dazu bewegen, dem Waldhäufel nachzusetzen. Aber ich kann es. Nicht nur der Squater, auch alle Ingenieure oben verwundert den Kopf. Sie hatten bisher, miss Stan Hope, eben für eine Reporterin gehalten, wie es jetzt solche Unzählige gibt. Man wusste, dass sie gut ritt, nichts aber von ihrem Vorleben. Wo ich zu Hause bin, gibt es andere Wälder als hier, und ich habe gelernt, jede Spur zu verfolgen, ob auf der Erde, ob in den Zweigen, ich erkenne aus der Fährte im Grase, wieviel Enden der hier stregt. Indianer waren meine Lehrmeister. Hey, wenn sie das könnten, rief der Squater, nur dieses Scheusal will ich haben, und die Füße will ich ihnen küssen. Hoffentlich finden wir auch ihr Kind. Tod oder Lebendig, es gilt. Lebendig! Oder das Ungeheuer hatte sie gehe, er verendete den Satz nicht, knirschte nur mit den Zähnen. Wir verbrachten eine unruhige Nacht. Wohl bei jedem spugte der menschenähnliche Affe, von dem die Wissenschaft noch gar nichts wusste, im Kopf. Am Morgen verlangten wir Pferde. Reiten die Herren mit? fragte Harrison unwirsch. Auf alle Fälle wir bleiben nicht zurück. Können sie denn im Busch reiten, wenn es eine Hetzjagd gilt? Warum denn nicht? Harrison sagte nichts mehr, gab ihnen aber andere Pferde, welche im Busch groß geworden waren. Hier winkten Mutter und Tochter zu und springten davon. Es waren acht Herren. Der alte Harrison, Ralph, ich, fünf Hierten, lauter verbegene Gestalten, die im Sattel zu Hause waren, und Miss Stanhope. Auch Hunde wurden mitgenommen. Mary verlangte, dahin geführt zu werden, wo das Kind geraubt wurden war. Hier saß der alte Neger mit dem Kind, erklärte der Squatter. Er hörte einen grunzenden Laut, und als er aufblickte, sah er den Affen, wie sie sagen, auf sich zukommen. Das war zu viel für ihn. Er ergriff die Flucht und ließ das Kind im Stich. Als er sich noch einmal umblickte, sah er den Waldtäufel mit dem Kind dem Wald zu eilen. Mary war vom Pferde gestiegen, und obgleich der Boden schon arg zertreten war, er kannte sie sofort einen sehr großen, nackten Fuß. An einer lemigen Stelle betrachtete sie den Abdruck aufmerksam und maß ihn mit der gespannten Hand. Das heißt, für mich war überhaupt nicht sichtbar. Es ist ein großer menschlicher Fuß, so groß, wie ich ihn noch nie gesehen habe. Er hat noch nie einen Schuh getragen, denn die Zehen stehen auseinander, die große Zehe weit ab. Nicht der Fuß eines Affen? Darüber habe ich keinen Urteil. Der Formnach ist es ganz der eines Menschen, eines Riesen, der immer barfuß gelaufen ist. Ohne sich umzusehen oder zu zögern ging sie, die Augen kaum am Boden, geradeaus, am Wald entlang und führte uns an einen Baum. Hier ist er hinaufgeklettert. Wahrhaftig miss, das ist der Baum, rief Harrison. Sie verstehen es besser als ich. Ich hätte die Spur heute nach dem Tau nicht mehr verfolgen können. Er ist nur mit einer Hand geklettert. Natürlich, weil er das Kind in einem Arm hatte. Ich wüsste es auch, wenn mir das nicht bekannt wäre. Ich sehe es, und hier ist ein Haar. Es war ein rotbraunes Haar, welches Mary von der Rinde löste und uns zeigte, stark und etwas gekräuselt. Auch Affen haben rotbraune Haare. Not kennt kein Gebot, vor Mary fort, besonders in der Wildnis nicht. Sie entfernte, die mit Federn an den Halbschaftstiefelchen befestigten Sporen, gab sie mir, löste den Gürtel, an dem immer der Revolver im Futterall hing, ließ sich von einem Hirten das lange Scheidemesser geben. Es auf den Gürtel schiebend hatte ihm nur ihren kurzen Reitrock abgestreift und ehe wir noch richtig sehen konnten, dass sie lederne Reitbeinkleider trug, hatte sie sich schon blitzschnell an dem Baume empor geschwungen und war unseren Augen in den dichten Zweigen verschwunden. Ein leichtes Knacken verriet, dass sie an dem mächtigen Baume immer höher kletterte. Hier ist er auf den nächsten Baum gesprungen, ertönte ihre helles Stimme, wie aus dem Himmel herab. Nun folgen sie mir, ich spreche immer, damit sie meine Richtung einhalten können. Auch der Squater war gestern oben gewesen, hatte aber aus geknitten Zweigen den Weg, den der Räuber genommen nicht erkennen können. Mary bewegte sich so schnell vorwärts, dass wir unsere Pferde immer im Schritt halten konnten, also schneller als ein zu Fußgehender Mensch. Sie sprach immer, diese und jene Bemerkung uns zurufend, so dass wir wussten, welche Richtung sie einhielt, denn sehen konnten wir sie niemals. Trug das Kind ein schwarz und weißkarites Kleid, rief sie hinab, Harrison bejahete. Hier hängt ein Fetzen. Wo? Geben sie mir ihn, es ist ein Andenken an mein armes Kind. Ich stecke ihn vorläufig ein, das Tuch würde nicht im Boden erreichen. Hier ist ein halb langes hellblondes Haar, von meinem Henry. So fand Mary noch mehreres, was darauf hindeutete, dass das Ungeheuer das Kind immer mit sich genommen hatte. Und wo hätte es auch sein sollen, wenn nicht bei ihm, dann hätten Mary oder wir es finden müssen. Wir ritten stundenlang zwischen den Bäumen hin. Mary schien keine Müdigkeit zu kennen, die Schnelligkeit ihrer Bewegung verminderte sich nicht. Einmal, als der Wald etwas lichter wurde, sahen wir sie in einer Höhe von 20 Metern wie eine Seiltänzerin. Über die waagerechten Äste balancieren, oft bogen sie sich, dass wir glaubten, sie müssten abgleiten. Aber denselben Weg hatte er schon der schwere Affe zurückgelegt und dann sprang sie wieder von Ast zu Ast wie ein Eichhörnchen oder eben wie ein Affe, wenn der Vergleich bei ihr nicht zu unpassend gewesen wäre. Die dichtes Dickicht nahm sie wieder auf. Halt, bauen sich Affen Nester. Jawohl, einige und ganz besonders der Gorilla rief ich hinauf, wenn er schlafen will. Hier ist so ein Nest gebaut worden. Ich kletterte ihn auf, Harrison und Ralph folgten mir, starke Zweige waren abgebrochen, ineinander verschlungen und so eine Art von Korb hergestellt worden, welcher sicher auf einem gabelförmigen Ast ruhte. Gerade solche Nester baulen sich die Gorillas für die Nacht. In dem Korbe lagen Eierschalen, Vogelfedern und Überreste von Honig auf Baumrinden. Der Affe hatte also Unterwegs Nahrungsmittel gesammelt, was Mary auch beobachtet hatte. Da unter den Bäumen auch Eugenien und Chrysobalanen waren, von denen besonders die Letzteren eine große, sehr wasserreiche Frucht tragen, so konnte der Affe wohl auf diese Weise seinen Durst löschen. Die Vögel hatte er gerupft und dann roh gegessen, bis auf Kopf und Füße. Ich muß mich unbedingt schneller bewegt haben als er, sagte Mary. Hier hat er wahrscheinlich übernachtet. Harrison ließ sich die Haare und den Fetzen Zeug geben, gerückte es an seine Lippen und wir stiegen wieder an die Erde. Ein so guter Turner ich auch war. Diesen Weg über den Erdboden hätte ich nicht zurücklegen können, wenigstens nicht mit solch einer Schnelligkeit. Noch zwei Stunden ging es so weiter, bis dieser dichte Wald von einem solchen aus weit voneinander abstehenden Gummibäumen abgelöst wurde. Hier ist die Spur, Dave Harrison. In dem selben Augenblick glitt Mary auch schon an einem Stamm herab. Vorsicht, dass wir die Spur nicht verwischen. Der Affe hat hier bequeme Rast gehalten und sich nach Menschnaht lang ausgestreckt. Ihr Kind lebt, hier sind die Füßchen hin und hergetippelt. Der Vater stieß einem Jubelruf aus, als er ihre Wahrnehmung bestätigt fand und in die Küste er die Stellen, da der Fuß seines Kindes verweilt hatte. Jetzt konnte die Spur am Boden schnell verfolgt werden, soweit die Pferde ausgreifen konnten, ging es vorwärts an der Spitze immer Mary. Aber ach, wo blieben die Herren Ingenieure? In Australien gibt es keine Wälder, lieber uns mit Unterholz. Sie gleichen viel mehr künstlich angelegten Parken. Der Boden hat keine Wurzeln und ist nur mit einem Rasenteppich bedeckt. Dennoch ist das Reiten sehr schwierig darin für ein europäisches Pferd ganz unmöglich, weil es sich wie eine Schlange zwischen den Bäumen hindurchwinden muss und überall drohen die waagerechten, oft sehr niedrig stehenden Äste der Gummibäume den Reiter abzustreifen. Das im Busch aufgewachsene Pferd weiß Bescheid. Es streckt den Kopf, duckt sich sogar, gleitet darunter hindurch, aber auch der Reiter muss das verstehen. Er muss sich förmlich glatt auf den Leib des Pferdes legen, links und rechts ausweichen. Er sieht einen freien Weg, kein niedriger Ast sperrt ihn, er richtet sich auf. Da biegt das Pferd, das sich selbst überlassen bleiben muss, aus, um sich durchzuwinden und wirft sich der Reiter nicht schnell zurück, so dass er mit dem Rücken auf dem Pferd zu liegen kommt, so streift ihn ein Ast ab. Ihr höchste Reitkunst ist dazu nötig, auf den Stand im Steidügel darf man sich nicht verlassen, vor allen Dingen aber braucht man die kalblütige Geistesgegenwart. Ich sah den Chefingenieur, dem ich überholt hatte, wie er wie eine riesige Frucht an einem Aste hing, wollte ihn aus seiner Situation befreien, da galoppierten aber schon vier andere ledige Pferde neben mir, blieben stehen und trotteten zurück, denn das Buschwert ist so dressiert, dass es zurückkehrt, wenn seinem Reiter einmal Lörr passiert. Kein Einziger, der Herreningenieure, blieb im Sattel. Harrison hatte es gewusst, er beorderte zwei der Hierten bei den Herren zu bleiben. Wir anderen sprengten weiter. Mary ritt wie eine Kunstreiterin. Ihr konnten die gefährlichen Äste nichts anhaben, und ich wußte gleichfalls die in der luftschwebenden Klippe zu umgehen. So ging es einige Stunden weiter, bis der Wald einer weiten Grasfläche Platz machte. In der Ferne sahen wir ein kleines Gebirge sich erheben, jedoch war es keine Beerkette. Es lag wie ein Felsenaufbau mitten in der Ebene. Da läuft er, rief Mary, und gab ihrem Rosse die Sporen, dass es wie ein Wirbelwinter hinflog. Wir sahen eine menschliche Gestalt den Felsen zu eilen. Es war zu weit, um etwas Genaueres zu unterscheiden. Nur das war deutlich zu erkennen, dass er etwas Helles im Arm trug, das gerobte Kind. Das Geschöpf rannte aufrecht wie ein Mensch in großen Sprüngen, dem Kopf verflatterten lange Haare nach, die ihm bis auf den Rücken gehen mussten. Kein Eingeborener trägt solch lange Haare. Er erreichte die Felsen noch bedeutend vor uns und verschwand darin. Das etwa zwei englische Malen im Quadrat halten die Gebirge, erhob sich je aus der Ebene, bestand aus einem Weißgeldengestein. Auch der Boden, keine Spur von einer Vegetation, zeigte sich. Dagegen erblickte man überall, wohin das Auge fiel, zahllose Scharen von Aameisen. Der Aameisenfelsen wurde er daher genannt. Diese Gebilde sind eine Spezialität Australiens. Es gibt dort nämlich eine Art von Ton, welcher so weich ist, dass man ihn mit dem Messer schneiden kann, doch nur, wenn man ihn frisch aus der Erde befördert. An der Luft wird er hart wie Bimmstein, je länger er an der Luft liegt, desto tiefer dringt die Härte ein. Wäre man mit der Spitzhacke tief in das harte Gestein eingedrungen, so hätte man vielleicht noch weichen Ton angetroffen. Er ist porös, Aameisen bauen sich Gänge hinein und benutzen ihn als Wohnung. Doch verdanken diese kleinen Gebirge ihre Existenz nicht etwa den Aameisen wie etwa die korallen Röffe kleinen Tierchen. Aameisen haben sie nicht aufgebaut, das weiß man bestimmt, doch sonst ist ihre Entstehung unbekannt. Auf dem harten Boden konnte auch Mary die Spur nicht weiter verfolgen. Die Hunde wollten sie durchaus nicht aufnehmen, woraus eben Harrison schloss, dass es kein eingeborener sein könne, sondern ein den Hunden unbekanntes Tier. Sie liefen mit der Nase am Boden hin und her und widmeten den großen Fußabdrücken nicht mehr Aufmerksamkeit als den unseren. Unbedingt mussten wir eine Rast machen, um etwas Essen zu uns zu nehmen und von dem in Lederschläuchen mitgenommenen Wasser zu trinken, hatten wir doch schon seit sieben Stunden nichts genossen. In zehn Minuten hatten wir dies getan und uns zugleich beraten, was nun zu tun sei. An das Gebirge gerenzte ein Wald, dorthin begaben wir uns zunächst. Nur einige Bäume standen dicht an dem Felsen und Mary sagte aus, dass der Walteufel weder am Boden noch in den Zweigen seinen Weg fortgesetzt hätte. Hier wurde ein Hirte postiert, die anderen umritten teils das Gebirge, teils wurden die Welt zerklüfteten und labyrinth ähnlichen Felsen abgesucht, wo sich der Räuber sicher versteckt hatte. Oder hatte er es in der Ebene verlassen, so mussten wir sicher die frische Spur finden, auch ich hätte es gekonnt. Ich gehörte mit zu denen, welche das Gebirge umritten. Den gespannten Revolver in der Hand, das Auge am Boden, ließ ich mein Pferd raschen, trab, gehen und lauschte dabei auf jedes Geräusch. Nur der Hufschlag meines Tieres und das Creechen des Sattels, erklang. Nach einer halben Stunde traf ich mit Ralph zusammen, der den anderen Weg geritten war. Auch er hatte keine Spur gefunden und weder war ein Schuss gefallen, noch hatte ein Pfiff ertönt, zum Zeichen, dass man etwas von der Anwesenheit des Waldhäufels im Inneren des Gebirges entdeckt hätte. Wir trennten uns wieder und ritten weiter. So kam ich nach einer Stunde an meinen Ausgangspunkt an, wo der Hirte zurückgelassen worden war, und da lag er am Boden, blutüberströmt mit zerschmettertem Kopf, der ihm mittels eines großen Felsstückes eingeschlagen worden war. Nur das erkannte ich noch, daß sein Hals fürchterliche Wunden zeigte, von langen Nägeln herrührend. Dann stieß ich ein gelnen Pfiff aus, welcher Mary zu mir rief. Er hat ihn von hinten überfallen und erwürgt, rief sie. ihn dann erst den Kopf zerschmettert, hier lag einstweilen das Kind. Er hatte es wieder aufgenommen. Da läuft die Spur. Fort! Ich feuerte zwei Schüsse in die Luft ab und jagte ihr durch den Wald nach. An einem Bache, jedenfalls der erste Lauf des Viktoriaflusses, hörte die Spur auf, kam auch am anderen Ufer nicht wieder zum Vorschein, daß Ungeheuer war also mit der Klugheit eines Menschen im Bache gewartet, um seine Spur zu verwischen. Ich ritt an dem anderen Ufer, eine halbe Stunde vor Strich. Wir kamen in eine große Ebene, die von einem dunklen Streifen am Horizont begrenzt wurde, abermals einem Walde. Unsere Begleiter kamen uns nicht nach. Da ist er! rief Mary und sprengte in die Ebene. Wieder sahen wir ihn laufen, dem Wald zu, immer noch das Kind auf dem Arme. Jetzt mussten wir ihn einholen. Mary löste ein Lasso, den sie stets bei sich trock und den sie wie der geschickteste Cowboy zu handhaben wusste. Vom Gürtel richtete sich in den Steigbügeln auf und wirbelte ihn um den Kopf. »Ibendick fangen, schrie sie. Sie war ihm nah genug gekommen. Russell hatte richtig geschildert. Es war ein menschenähnliches Geschöpf von riesigen Verhältnissen, über und überbehaart, mit langen Kopffahren, alles rotbraun. Mary wollte den unfilbaren Lasso schleudern. Da stürzte ihr Pferd. Es war in ein Loch getreten und in großem Bogen und sich überschlagend wurde die Reiterin abgeworfen. Ende von Kapitel 2, gelesen von der Queber, Rheinberg. Kapitel 3 von der Waldtäufel. Dies ist eine LibriVox-Aufnahme. Alle LibriVox-Aufnahmen sind lizenzfrei im öffentlichen Besitz. Weitere Informationen und Hinweise zur Beteiligung an diesem Projekt gibt es bei LibriVox.org Der Waldtäufel. Von Robert Kraft. Kapitel 3. Tier oder Mensch Törtlicher Schrocken und den Waldtäufel vergessen, sprang ich aus dem Sattel und beugte mich über die regungslos darliegende. Aber schon schlug sie die Augen auf. Fort, fort, drängte sie, sich aufrichtend. Sie können ihn noch einholen, ehe er den Wald erreicht, aber keine Waffen gebrauchen, lebendig. Da ich sah, dass Mary unverletzt war, wenigstens scheinbar, saß ich mit einem Satz wieder im Sattel und sprengte weiter. Steh oder ich schieße, schrie ich, als hätte ich einen Menschen vor mir. Das Ungehör wendete in der Tat den Kopf, blieb stehen, ließ das Kind fallen und drang auf mich, der ich schnell abgesessen war, ein. Ich hatte die Büchse in der Hand und der Anblick dieses beharten, riesenhaften Ungehörs mit den gefletschten Zähnen wirkte so auf mich ein, dass ich einen Augenblick die Besinnung verlor, sogar mit Furcht erfüllt wurde. Im Nu war er bei mir, die herrkulischen Arme ausgestreckt und schützend hielt ich den Lauf der Mündung vor. Ich wußte, was jetzt geschah, hatte er die Mündung zwischen den Zähnen. Ich hätte nur Abdrücken brauchen, so wäre der Affe, oder was es sonst war, ein Leiche gewesen, aber ich drückte nicht ab. Zudem hatte er sofort den Stahlauf zwischen den Zähnen zusammengequetscht, was die Gurlers ebenfalls immer zu machen versuchen, als wüssten sie, dass aus der Mündung die totbringende Kugel fliegt. Ries mir das Gewärm mit unwiderstehlicher Kraft aus den Händen und hatte mich um den Hals gepackt. Ich fühlte, wie Messerschafe krallen mir ins Fleischstrangen, sah dicht vor meinen Augen die fürchterlichen Zähne, die rot unter laufenden Augen, fühlte den heißen Atem, hörte ein schreckliches Grunzen und besaß noch so viel Kraft, auch seinen Hals zu packen und die Zähne von mir abzuhalten, die sich jedenfalls in meine Kehle schlagen wollten. Es war ein entsetzlicher Ringkampf und mir versagte unter dem eisernen Griff der Atem. Alle meine Ring- und Boxer-Künste nutzten mir bei diesem Ungetüm nichts. Ich unterlag, fühlte, wie mit den Kräften meine Besinnung schwand. Da lockerte sich sein Griff, die Arme wurden unter einem schauderhaften Gebrüll, wie von einer fremden Gewalt, an seinen Körper gezogen und so war es in der Tat. Mary hatte ihm von hinten das Lasse übergeworfen und zog die Schlinge zusammen. Ich war frei und half ihr, den langen Lederriemen noch mehrmals, um seine Arme zu winden. Er gebärdete sich wie, wie eben ein wildes Tier, in dem ich ihm ein Bein stellte, warf ich ihn mit einem Ruck zu Boden, wobei er mir mit dem zollangen Nagel seiner Zähne das Beinkleid von oben bis unten aufschlitzte. Dann banden wir ihm noch die Füße und so lag er am Boden, sich krümmend und windend, empor-schnellend, mit den Maulen schnappend und dabei ein furchtbares Gebrüll ausstoßend. Wir waren so in den Anblick des sonderbaren Geschöpfes versunken, daß wir das Kind ganz vergessen, auch den Harrison nicht gesehen hatten, der mit den übrigen unter dessen angekommen war. Der alte Squater wollte sich mit gezücktem Jagdmesser auf den haarigen Teufel werfen, um Rache zu nehmen. Sa er doch sein Kind nicht, welches vom hohen Grase verborgen wurde. Ich hielt ihn zurück. Ihr Kind ist da. Wo, wo ist es? Wir alten hin und wandern es am Boden sitzend, unverletzt, nur die Kleide arg mitgenommen, es weinte nicht einmal, jubelte laut auf, als es den Vater sah und lief ihm entgegen. Harrison presste es weinend an seine Brust und untersuchte dann mit zitternden Händen den Körper des Kleinen. Er zeigte ihn nicht einmal einen blauen Flecken. Leider war Henrys Sprache noch nicht so weit entwickelt, daß er uns hätte erzählen können. Mann, sagte er nur, auf den Waldträufel deutend, der noch immer in seinen Fesseln schäumte. Dottermann, Henry viel, viel Honig und Eiei. Honig und Eier hatte er ihm gegeben. Er war in seinen Augen ein guter Mann, hatte ihm nichts zu Leide getan, und das veranlasste den Vater, das Scheusal mit anderen als mit zornigen Augen anzusehen. Ja, es war ein richtiges Scheusal, aber es war kein Tier, sondern ein Mensch, wenn er auch auf der tiefsten Stufe stand, in Zügen und Augen Ausdruck dem tierischen Charakter verratend. Das Gesicht von einem Barte umwuchert, der bis an den Leib ging, war doch ein menschliches, die Nase, die Zähne, Kiefer und alles, auch die Gliedmaßen. Über und überbehaart war er nicht, so zum Beispiel auf den Knien und an den Händen, am Hals oder am Rücken nicht, oder doch ganz sperrlich, dagegen waren Brust, Beine, Arme und Leib in einen dichten Pelz von rotbraunen, gekräuselten Haaren gehüllt. Ich schätzt ihn auf eine Länge von sechs und einen halben Fuß. Wir hatten es mit einer Speziesmensch zu tun, die bisher noch nicht bekannt war, und die sonst nur im Inneren von Australien lebte. Sie kannten keine Kleidung, besaßen kein Schamgefühl, keine Waffen und schienen auch keine ausgebildeten Sprache mächtig zu sein, mit der sie sich unterhalten könnten, höchstens durch Bellen oder Heulen nach Art der Tiere. Ihr Körper wurde vor dem Unbilden der Witterung durch einen mangelhaften Pelz geschützt, wie zum Beispiel auch der Gorilla, an Händen und im Gesicht keine Haare hat. Wo die Haut sichtbar wurde, da war sie dunkelbraun, pergamentähnlich und spröde. Dass sich diese Menschen nur von rohen Früchten und rohem Fleisch näherten, war selbstverständlich, hatten wir doch schon Überreste von Vögeln gefunden. gern hätte ich die Rippen gezählt, aber ich wagte es nicht, denn wenn die Hand zwischen diese Zähne kam, war sie ab. Es ist äußerst interessant zu wissen, daß das Glett des Gorillas, dem des Menschen am ähnlichsten ist, ob schon es 13 Rippenpaare hat, während der Orang-Utan, wie der Mensch nur zwölf besitzt, ihm sonst aber weniger ähnelt als ersterer Affe. So hatten die Australniger also ganz recht, wenn sie von Walteufeln sprachen. Das war ein Tier und doch kein Tier, ein Mensch und doch kein Mensch. Mancher gebildete, hätte das wilde, riesenstarke Geschöpf für eine Ausgeburt der Hölle, für ein Kind des Teufels gehalten, von einer Hexe mit ihm erzeugt. Ich machte den Leuten klar, was ich von dem Wesen hielt, Mary war sofort damit einverstanden, ihn mitzunehmen und ihn nach New York überzuführen. In die Ehre eine neue Menschenart entdeckt zu haben, teilten wir uns. Dann war es Sache, der Forschungsreisenden, andere solche Tiermenschen im Inneren Australiens aufzusuchen. Um uns vor seinem Gewiss zu sichern, umschlangen wir den Kopf mit Riemen, so daß der Unterkiefer nach oben gepresst wurde, eine ganz gefährliche Arbeit. Ein Hirte mußte sein Pferd hergeben, wir hoben ihn auf den Rücken, schnallten ihn fest und tratten den Rückweg an. Da es schon spät war, mußten wir ihm freien übernachten. Als der Walteufel, wie ich ihn nennen will, das Feuer auflackern sah, fürchtete er sich, was man noch nie bemerkt. Brot und getrocknetes Fleisch verschmähte er, rührte überhaupt nichts an, auch nicht, als wir ihm einen lebendigen Papagei vorhielten. Dagegen trank er Wasser aus einer Flasche, die ihm vor den Mund, nachdem wir die Bande gelockert hatten, gehalten wurde. Als ich aber ein Hirte den Spaß machte, statt der Wasserflasche ihm eine solche mit Whisky an den Mund zu führen, spiel er den scharfen Trank unter Zeichen des Ekels aus und begann zu toben. Am anderen Mittag erreichten wir die Farm, wo wir noch die staunenden Ingenieure vorfanden. Ich verzichte darauf, die Freude zu schildern, als Mutter und Schwester das gerettete Kind in ihre Arme schlossen, wie sie uns dankten. Harrison besaß ein Verlies, in dem er früher wilde Dingos gehalten hatte, um mit ihnen Züchtungsversuche zu machen, und in dieses kam der Walteufel. Durch die Gittertür konnte ihm alles hineingegeben werden, außerdem vermochte man ihn, noch durch ein an der Decke angebrachtes Loch heimlich zu beobachten. Harrison wollte nichts weiter mit dem Unhold zu tun haben. So hatte nur Mary und ich Anrecht auf ihn. Der Chefingenieur unterredete sich mit den übrigen Herren und bot mir dann immer höhere Summen, wenn ich das Geschöpf ihm überließe, um es nach London zu überführen. Allein wir ließen uns nicht darauf ein. Mary bestand darauf, dass er in Amerika ausgestellt werden solle. Die Ingenieure mussten abreisen, wir blieben, um den Walteufel noch einige Zeit so zu beobachten. Er benahm sich gerade wie ein wilder, scheuer Affe, lief im Käfig hin und her, kauerte sich in einer Ecke, suchte sich umgeziefer ab, mit dem er reichtlich gesegnet war, schlief in der Nacht ausgestreckt auf dem Heulager und beobachtete alles, was auf dem Hofe vorging mit gespannter Neugier, was man seinen Zügen deutlich ansah. Lachen konnte er nicht, hatte freilich auch keinen Grund dazu, so glaubten wir wenigstens erst anfangs, lachen kann nur der Mensch. Wir hörten nichts anderes aus seinem Munde, als grunzen eine Art von Bellen und jammendes Geheul. Brot und gekochtes oder gebratenes Fleisch rührte er nie an. Ebenso wenig ein Gemüse, alles andere aß oder vielmehr verschlang er mit behaglichen grunzen, bei rohem, blutigem Fleisch zeigte er die Gier des Raubtieres. Sumpt ihm eine Fliege um die Nase, so fing er sie und steckte sie in den Mund, Frösche und Eidechsen verzerrte er gern, den Ratten und Mäusen, die es in dem Volldies genug gab, stellte er nach, riss sie auseinander, fraß das Fleisch, nagte das Fell ab und warf es hinaus. Eier zog er aus, Zucker und Honig waren ihm leckerbissen. Nährte sich ihm ein Mensch, so zog er sich in die Ecke zurück und knurte, kamen dagegen Kinder, ein Hirte war verheiratet. Herein, so sprang er schnell an die Getertüre und da nahmen seine wilden Züge einen förmlich freundlichen Ausdruck an, er verzog den Mund wie zu einem Lächeln, steckte den Arm heraus und gab gutmütige Töne von sich, als er wolle er sie ganz zu sich heranlocken. Einen Hund, dem man zu ihm ließ, erwirkte in der Nacht und fraß ihn an. Sein Minenspiel war ein bewegliches, oftmals, wenn er auf dem Hofe etwas sah, etwa wie ein Arbeiter seine Pfeife anzündete, war darin staunen zu lesen. Wir gaben ihm allerhand Sachen hinein, Kleidungsstücke, Stiefel, Spiegel, ein Messer, eine Pfeife Tabak, Streichhölzer, Flaschen, einen Kamm und anderes. Solange jemand davor stand, tat er, als bemerke er gar nichts, er knurte, glaubte er sich aber unbeobachtet, so benahm er sich ganz anders. Dann zog er die Kleider, die Stiefel an, freilich ganz verkehrt, sah in den Spiegel, kämpfte sich und da hörten wir ihn auch richtig lachen, allerdings das blöde Lachen eines Wahnsinnigen. Jetzt nahm ich bestimmt an, dass er ein Mensch war. Er gewöhnte sich schnell an Brandwein und war dann gierig dahinterher. Dass er Brandweintrank war für uns eine große Wichtigkeit, so besassen wir ein Mittel, ihn zu betäuben, wonach wir den Käfig und ihn untersuchen konnten, natürlich immer mit der größten Vorsicht. Ende von Kapitel 3, gelesen von Jagweba, Rheinberg. Kapitel 4 von Der Waldteufel. In dies ist eine LibriVox-Aufnahme. Alle LibriVox-Aufnahmen sind Lizenzfrau und im öffentlichen Besitz. Weitere Informationen und Hinweise zur Beteiligung an diesem Projekt gibt es bei LibriVox.org. Der Waldteufel. Von Robert Kraft. Kapitel 4. Tom Jersey. Wir berieten uns, wie wir ihn nach der nächsten Hafenstadt bringen und seine Überführung nach New York bewerkstelligen konnten. Es mußte mit Gewalt geschehen, wie man ein Raubtier transportiert. Das Beste war, wir besorgten erst einen starken Käfig. Es kamen nun die Hirten vom Rindertransport zurück und staunten das Wundert hier ebenfalls an. Gerade so lang und so stark wie der Tom, meinte ein alter Hirte, als sich der Waldteufel einmal hoch aufrichtete. Und wenn der Tom, der man stockte, stutzte, erschrak und schlug sich dann mit der Faust vor die Stirn. Heiliger Gott, wenn das Tom wäre, schrie er, wie er vorunfolgendes. Vor fast zwanzig Jahren mußtete ein Gelehrter in Adelaide Leute an zu einer Forschungsreise ins Innere Australiens. Zu solchen Expeditionen nimmt man mit voll liebe Seeleute, wenn sie auch schlechte Fußgänger sind. Aber sie ertragen wechselndes Klimagut, sind an Strapazen gewöhnt, gehorsam und vor allen Dingen praktisch. Sie wissen mit allem Handwerkszeug umzugehen, Zelte herzustellen und da man auf solchen Expeditionen gewöhnlich auseinander legbare Boote mit getärtem Segeltuchüberzug mitnimmt, so sind sie hierbei am besten zu verwenden. Tom Jersey, ein wahrer Riese von Gestalt und Kraft, war Matrose und hatte seine Familie in Adelaide, wo die Expedition ausgerüstet wurde. Zu jener Zeit hielt er sich gerade dort auf und ließ sich auch anwerben. Die Expedition drang weit vor. Eines Tages ging Tom mit anderen auf die Jagd und kam nicht wieder zurück. Alles Suchen war vergeblich. Er mußte sich verehrt haben, was in der wasserlosen Gegend gleich bedeutend mit dem Tod war. Man gab ihn auf. Der Gelärter zahlte bei seiner Rückkehr der unglücklichen Familie eine kleine Summe aus. Als ich das hörte, fiel es mir plötzlich wie Schuppen von den Augen. Wie kam es nur, dass ich noch nicht daran gedacht hatte. Dieser Walteufel war ein Mensch, ein richtiger Mensch, der nur verwildert und so zum Tiere herabgesunken war. Dass solche Menschen existierten, ist nichts Neues. In allen fünf Welteilen hat man sie gefunden, in Russland zum Beispiel in den gewaltigen Wäldern. Dreierlei kann die Ursache sein, wie ein Mensch verwildert und auf die Stufe des Tieres herab singt, also noch unter die des rohesten Volkes. Das geht meist umso schneller, je geistig höher entwickelt der Mensch ist. Danach wäre auch Robinson Crusoe, den wir alle so gern gelesen haben, unmöglich gewesen und wir haben doch so viele Beispiele, dass schiffbrüchige Jahre lang ein Menschenalter auf einer Insel gelebt haben, ohne ihren Verstand zu verlieren. Vielmehr haben sie ihn recht tüchtig angestrengt und ihn ausgenützt. Das ist auch etwas ganz anderes. Nicht die Einsamkeit und die Furcht macht den Verehrten immer wahnsinnig und dadurch zum Tiere, sondern das beständige Suchen und Nichtfinden. Robinson wusste, dass er auf seiner Insel einsam und verlassen war, fügte sich in sein Schicksal und suchte es zu verbessern. Auch die außerordentliche Behaarung war nichts so auffallendes, es ist eine Tatsache, dass geistig tiefer stehende Menschen immer mehr Haarwuchs haben als höherstehende. Die vielverspottete Glatze ist immer das Zeichen einer höheren Intelligenz, nicht umsonst sind so viele gelehrte Kalköpfige. Der alte Hirte sagte, Tom hatte ein so gutmütiges Gesicht und dieser sieht eben wie ein wahrer Teufel aus. Hatte Tom braunes Haar? Hellbraun und das ist ja fast rot. Der Einfluss der Sonne. Hatte Tom starken Bartwuchs? Ja, den hatte er, auch an der Brust war er behaart. Hatte er nicht irgendein Zeichen an sich? Warten Sie, ja, am Arm einen tätowierten Anker auf der Brust ein Schiff. Ich gab dem Waldteufel so viel Brandwein zu trinken, bis er berauscht umfiel und betrat den Zwinger. So war nichts zu sehen, auf der Haut unter den Haaren lag eine Schicht Schmutz. Ich holte Rasiermesser und Seife und barbierte die betreffenden Stellen. Gott mach mich blind, es ist Tom Jersey, schrie der Hirte entsetzt. Anker und Schiff waren da. Wir trieben nun Eisenstangen auf und schmiedeten selbst einen Käfig zusammen, denn nichts zu wünschen übrig ließ. In Adelaide lebte noch seine Frau und ein erwachsenes Kind. Es war ein Weg von 50 deutschen Meilen. In sechs Tagen hatten wir ihn zurückgelegt. Der auf dem Wagen stehende Käfig wurde verhängt. Ohne Aufsinn zu erregen, langten wir in dem Ihren Haus von Adelaide an. Ich gab den Ärzten Erklärung ab, Tom wurde hierauf in einer Zelle untergebracht. Bei seiner Abreise vor 20 Jahren hatte er einen kleinen Sohn zurückgelassen, an dem er mit außerordentlicher Zärtlichkeit gehangen hatte. Henry musste ihm eine Erinnerung geweckt haben, offenbar hatte er das Kind nur geraubt, um ihm seine Liebe angedeihen zu lassen. Tom's Sohn wurde benachrichtigt und gerufen. Zuerst kam sein Weib eine weißharige Frau. Tom hatte von Kundigen Wertern die Zwangsjacke anbekommen und war zur Vorsicht auch noch auf dem Stuhle festgeschnallt worden. Die alte Frau trat ängstlich in die Zelle und erkannte ihn trotz der furchtbaren Veränderung sofort wieder. Wir hatten ihn schon bei seinem Namen angeredet, allein ohne jede Wirkung. Tom, kennst du mich nicht mehr, Tom? Ich bin doch Anna, deine Frau. Bewegungslos saß der Unglückliche da, aber seine Augen quollen hervor. Man sah es ihm an, wie furchtbar die Gedanken hinter der Stirn arbeiteten. Zum ersten Mal brachte er menschliche Worte über seine Lippen. Anna, Anna, Anna, mummelte er in einem Fort. Lasst den Sohn kommen, sagte der Arzt. Ein junger Mann trat ein, er kannte ihn nicht, konnte es ja auch gar nicht. Kennst du denn den nicht, sagte die Frau, das ist doch der George. Er begann der Unglückliche mit Macht in seinen Banden zu reißen, er tobte und plötzlich brach er in Tränen aus und weinen kann nur der Mensch. Allein dabei blieb es auch, die Vernunft bekam er nicht wieder. Als ich ihn einige Tage später besuchte, das heißt ihn nur von außen durch die Klappe beobachtete, waren Frau und Sohn bei ihm. Er ging frei in der Zellum her, trug Kleidung, barrt, die Kopffahre und Nägel waren gestutzt. Zubereitete Nahrungsmittel verschmete er noch immer, höchstens aus der Handsanne Angehörigen nahm er sie, aber nur mit Wiederwillen und suchte sie womöglich heimlich zu beseitigen. Sobald er allein war, riss er die Kleidungsstücke wieder vom Leib, ließ sich auch nur von seiner Frau anziehen. Ich mußte weiter reisen. Was ich nun erzähle, erfuhr ich erst nach vielen Jahren. Der Unglückliche war und blieb wahnsinnig, wurde aber still und harmlos, sodass er in das Haus seines verheirateten Sohnes eines Tischlermeisters kommen konnte, wo auch die Mutter wohnte. Die Erinnerung war ihm völlig geschwunden. Er lernte von Neuem, wie ein Kind sprechen, gewöhnte sich an zubereitete Kost. Verschmerte Rosfleisch betrug sich überhaupt sonst ganz wie ein vernünftiger Mensch. Das Schrecklichste war ihm, allein zu sein. Die Einsamkeit fürchtete er über alles. Am wohlsten war ihm, wenn es recht laut um ihm herum zu ging und wenn recht viele Menschen sprachen. Am liebsten beschäftigte er sich mit den Kindern seines Sohnes. Überhaupt war er ein großer Kinderfreund, doch auch mit einem solchen wollte er nicht allein sein. Wie schon erwähnt, konnte er sich auf gar nichts mehr besinnen. Nicht auf sein Vorleben, nicht auf die Expedition, nicht auf die zwanzig Jahre seiner Einsamkeit. Es war, als ob er von Neuem geboren worden wäre, war auch kein sprechendes, unvernünftiges Tier, etwa ein Papagei, sondern wie ein Kind in den Anfangsstadien, etwa von drei Jahren. Seine Frau starb bald, er weinte nicht, klagte nicht, fragte nur immer, wo Anna sei und man musste ihn mit ihrer baldigen Wiederkunft tulschen. Aber er wollte seitdem nicht mehr essen. Verfiel rasch und kaum eine Woche später schloss auch er die Augen für immer. Ende von Kapitel 4 Gelesen von Jagweber Rheinberg Ende von der Waldtäufe von Robert Kraft
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pcksa4N5G1A", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCCNBUsRwWl-J4di-GIZG16A
Exploring Advanced Image Compression and Feature Extraction at Bionichaos.com
Hi everyone! In this video, a quick overview of some of BioniChaos tools like the image compression using wavelet transforms. I explore different levels of compression and how they affect the Peak Signal to Noise Ratio (PSNR), which is crucial for reconstructing images back to their original state. Additionally, I demonstrate feature extraction techniques using FAST, Harris, and Shi-Toimasi algorithms, showcasing their effectiveness on medical imaging data, like scans indicating ischemic strokes. I also cover some quirky image generations from DallE-3, a glance at EEG data conversion into music, and a look at biomedical datasets available for public use. Don’t miss out on understanding these complex but fascinating tools. Check out the site and provide your feedback! The tools I develop are available on https://bionichaos.com You can support my work on https://patreon.com/bionichaos #ImageCompression #WaveletTransform #FeatureExtraction #MedicalImaging #Bionichaos #DataScience #EEGData #BiomedicalData 00:00 - Introduction to Bionichaos.com 00:07 - Demonstrating Image Compression Capabilities 00:23 - Adjusting Compression Levels and Understanding PSNR 00:52 - Feature Extraction Techniques: FAST, Harris, Shi-Toimasi 01:59 - Example of Medical Image Analysis for Ischemic Stroke 02:19 - Fun with DallE-3 Generated Images 02:44 - EEG Data and Its Musical Transformation 03:25 - Enhancements in EEG Data Interpretation Tools 03:49 - Tutorial and Usability Enhancements 04:10 - Future Updates and Project Overview by GPT-4 04:23 - Invitation to Contribute Data for Site Features
null
2024-04-18T12:25:36
2024-04-20T04:51:57
335
PcEOE_ONxB4
haven't tried by chaos.com yet, please go check out the site. Don't forget to provide your feedback. This tool is actually showing you image compression. It can be used for any image. Of course, in this case, it's showcasing medical data. It can use different... it's a wavelet transform. So you can use different wavelets inside how many bits you have in the image. The level of compression. So essentially, the higher the compression, the more levels, the more compressed it will be. And the PSNR, meant to the peak signal to noise ratio, meant to essentially tell you how easy it will be. You'll be able to reconstruct the compressed image back to the original one. Yes, you can increase the number of levels and increase the number of beads. Yes, we can play around with that. What else we got? The feature extraction. Yes, so it's using the detection type. You have three types at the moment. The fast, high-res sheet, the massy, there's a description of each one at the bottom. And you can see how well it's working. So in this case, the fast algorithm is finding too many points. The high-res is kind of okay if that's what you're looking for. Probably be aiming at the brain, but then you need to define your region of interest to be the brain. For example, this algorithm is not doing that. You can just see the difference it makes on different images. So this is an example of a ischemic stroke. So again, the fast, still processing is probably doing too many data points. It's not actually producing anything at all. The high-res found all these beads there, some over here. I don't know why. Yeah, the sheet must be indicating more points. So yeah, so you have to obviously tune these things up to the other side that you have. There's a bunch of blocks as well. You have some silly images being generated by a dally three. Some of them are not too bad. Some pretty horrendous. Surprising you'll get some relevant ads. I don't know about that. It's not sponsored by it. It's just Google ads. I think I covered this one before. We have a standard, not standard. This is from an implant EEG 16 channels. You can scroll through the data and see what the frequency spectrum looks like. And we have a similar tool that actually convert the EEG into music. So I don't know if it sounds like music to you, right? This one. Give me an ad to learn how to play piano in only 21 days. Again, not sponsored by that company, whatever it is, school, music school. You might also need some more development, but essentially the auto volume will make the volume very quiet when there is no seizure. I cut the end of this data sample. And we know there is a seizure in the middle, so it will become louder. The auto duration will adjust itself to the window size. By the way, yeah, we need to record. So I do record the instruction video of how I'm using this tool and pop it on the website at the bottom. So yeah, because no one reads text. Well, at least I don't assume others don't read anything as well. So it will be good to have a video showing how to use it. But we might be doing more work on it, so it will change anyhow. Yeah, there's a description of what the project is all about by GPT-4. Yeah, the podmaster found the about section on the site. And yeah, it does mention that there is not currently an option to upload data. If you do want me to look at any data or for any of your data to be featured on the site, please go upload it onto Github or any other public repository. We're also looking at the another thing we were thinking adding a couple of a couple of extra topics to the mix. So currently we're doing the bot that plays the cardio game. It was have was generally looking will be trying to open review of a public biomedical data set. Like currently this data on the page is actually using data from IEG.org. I think anyone can after a simple registration can go and get this data. So as I said, we'll be looking at the different biomedical datasets, like the IEG, but the other ones as well. If you haven't tried by chaos.com yet, please go check out the site. Don't forget to provide your feedback.
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UC640y4UvDAlya_WOj5U4pfA
Mod-04 Lec-21 Neuropsychology and cognitive neuroscience research
Selected Topics in Psychology by prof.Braj Bhushan,prof.Ajit Dalal,prof.Alok Bajpai,prof.Girishwar Misra,prof.JBP Sinha,prof.Manas K Mandal,prof.Rakesh K. Gupta,prof.Ramadhar Singh & prof.Vivek Benegal,Department of Humanities and Social Sciences,IIT Kanpur.For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in
[ "Neuropsychology and cognitive neuroscience research" ]
2014-09-05T07:29:38
2024-04-23T23:49:27
3,273
pcnsKZ8paao
Welcome to the talk on understanding human behavior using neuropsychology as a paradigm and neuroscience as an approach. The idea behind taking up this talk is to understand human behavior using a neuroscientific approach. We all believe that understanding human behavior is very easy, but in fact the science of human behavior is very strong based on certain scientific assumptions. One such assumption lies on the parameters based on neuroscientific approach. I will talk about this neuroscientific approach to the understanding of human behavior primarily with the notion related to cognition. And thereafter critically discussing that why neuroscientific approaches are good to understand human behavior for an objective assessment regarding what really happens at the highest center of the brain when a behavior is executed. Remember there are various other approaches as well. The idea of taking up this notion is not to nullify the other approaches. The idea here is to delineate the relevance, the criticalities of neuroscientific approaches in the understanding of human behavior. I would like to talk in terms of a broad perspective of all sciences that try to understand human behavior. It is not psychological science which is only devoted to the understanding of human behavior. There are various other sciences also contribute to the understanding of human behavior. If you try to have a look it at how many sciences are contributing to the understanding of human behavior, you will find that two major groups are responsible for it. One group of sciences relate to hard sciences which are genetic, biological, chemical and artificial. These hard sciences give us very objective notion about how a behavior is formed, executed in the human system. Genetic system tells us what are the inherited properties of our behavior. Biological system tells us how such behavior are expressed through a biological system. Political sciences tell us how such chemical reactions, geochemical reactions take place when a particular behavior is executed. And artificial neural network or mathematical sciences tell us how can we understand the simplest or the rudimentary part of a behavior through the understanding of mathematical sciences. On the other hand some of the social scientific approaches also try to understand human behavior they include social science as such, cultural sciences, anthropological sciences, developmental sciences, ecological sciences and psychological sciences. These social scientific approaches try to understand behavior how it is embedded into a context or a social context. The cultural subsystem, the anthropological route, the developmental channels, the ecological perspective, the social perspective and the psychological context all contribute to human behavior. My approach here would be to understand using understand human behavior using some kind of psychological system with inputs drawn from primarily biological system. And to do that we are not going to talk about all kinds of human behavior we would primarily concentrate on cognitive behavior. Because other than cognitive we have got effective behavior we have got behavior that are executed through our motor systems we will not talk about those systems. Here our effort would be to understand cognition or cognitive behavior using a neuroscientific approach. Well, before we enter into cognitive neuroscience it is important that we understand cognition what do we mean by cognition. Cognition is basically a science that deals with how a information is registered, how an information is processed and how an information is retrieved. In a rather bookish term it is a science that investigates the representation of and the processing of information by animal and human being. In fact, cognitive science has its root in animal sciences and in comparative psychology as well. So the representation and the processing of information is the primary area where cognitive science works. We believe that any information that is registered depends on how we represented internally. The same object may have several forms of representation in our brain. An apple is represented in various forms in a person's brain. One may perceive an apple with a red color, one may perceive an apple with a yellow color, one may perceive a bigger apple, one may perceive an apple with some context when he first got an apple from somebody and one may actually try to represent it through certain reinforcement paradigms. So how it is processed and internally represented is one of the major issue of cognition. When whenever they are represented they do not stay as it is. Any input that comes to our brain undergoes some form of transformation. That is the representation changes after some time and that change takes place based on our kind of experience that we have. So any mental representation that we have actually undergoes transformation. That transformation takes place at a biological as well as biochemical levels. Therefore the transformation in cognitive process we say that it has got a neural basis. Based on the neural basis the transformation actually takes place. And finally the whole transformation with a neural backdrop is done at the highest center of the brain. Therefore cognition has a relevance greatly with the brain sciences which we actually term as cognitive neuroscience. Therefore under cognitive neuroscience as a subject matter we talk about the structure and signal of nervous system for explaining any cognitive function. That is any kind of information processing that takes place at the neural level and how they are represented, how they are transformed and how ultimately they are retrieved through a cognitive system is the subject matter where cognitive science deals with it primarily. So the questions coming up under cognitive science is basically a science with information processing capability where any information that is transformed in a formation is just not a random input. So any input that reaches brain and transformed in some kind of formation becomes information. All kinds of information are not registered automatically and transformed and processed. So the patterning of the input in some formation is basically a cognitive science where we try to understand how these inputs are acquired and interpreted because we do not take up or acquire all kinds of information in the brain and then interpret it. How they are stored and modified? How we use those information to manipulate and to predict? How we use information to execute a behavior and how such behavior are executed or utilized to communicate to another person? These are the basic questions in cognitive processes. So under cognitive process, we try to understand the whole area of questions right from how it is acquired to interpreted, stored, modified, manipulated, executed and how they are utilized for communication purposes. I will give you now what are the constituents of a cognition because in order to answer for these questions, we must know how a particular behavior is executed through different array or different steps in cognition. As I said that any input, the registration of it, the processing it of and the retrieval put together is called cognition. But that is elements view about what cognition is. When we try to translate cognition into certain steps, the fourth step comes here is in the form of sensation. That is until and unless we accept some kind of energy through our sense organ, the cognition cannot start. Any energy that is not accepted within our system cannot actually either be represented, transformed or utilized for making some kind of behavior through communication system. Now, after we accept a particular energy which is termed as sensation, we try to interpret energy. However, we accept many energies, but we do not try to interpret all kinds of energies. Now, interpretation of energy is a very important concept which we call perception. Now, until and unless we perceive those energy, they becomes redundant and do not come to our system following a meaningful way. Now, when we interpret a energy, we find that all energies are also not interpreted. Like all energies are not accepted either through gastric channel or visual channel or auditory channel or tactile channel. All energies are not accepted likewise all energies are not interpreted because our perception is primarily guided by certain attentional factors. We cannot actually attend to everything, we have limited capacities. So, we filter those mechanisms through our cognitive system which we call as attention and these perceptions the interpretation of energy gets guided by attention. After we attend to it, we try to store the material through memory because until and unless we store it, we have to learn that material every day. Therefore, attended material when it is stored, it becomes memory. There can be any kind of memory, it can go into our long term memory which we never forget, rarely forget, it can go into a short term memory which remains within our system for short period or it can be of any kind. After we store it, we actually try to utilize it through a process because the storing process is important through learning because if we do not store that energy, we may have to learn the same thing every day. Now, if I learn how to thread a needle, I remember it and if I fail to remember it, I will have to learn it every day. Therefore, memory and learning are very important linkages. After we learn it, we understand that the learning process itself helps us in solving various kinds of problems because learning as a component help us problem solving problem in our day to day life because if we fail to solve problem, learning becomes meaningless. Now, this problem solving and learning as an approach is possible through our intelligence which is our basic capability based on which we take decisions into our day to day life. And these intelligence in turn are also affected by some kind of our emotional inputs which modifies our cognitive system. So, apart from affect, all other steps right from sensation to intelligence actually are different constituents of cognition. And when we study cognitive science, we actually study them as a process, as a whole or we study its unitary concept at various level of sensation, perception, attention, memory, learning, problem solving and intelligence. Now, we should try to understand what are the two major models to understand cognition. Now, cognition as a science has its origin in behavioral science, but both mathematical science as well as neuroscience has their own models to understand it. The mathematical science actually is based on connectivistic model. This model is a computational approach which examines how simple processing units are connected together towards a network of complex understanding. So, the mathematical processes to understanding cognition, the whole process try to understand the unitary concepts in cognition and how they are linked in a certain process which mathematically if we can calibrate would be able to tell that how such networks develop. While the mathematical approach is to understand the minimum unit of our understanding right from understanding or acceptance of energy to the higher level of processing of decision making. The cognitive neuroscience process deals with the structure and signal of the nervous system for explaining such kind of behavior. What kind of signals we generate in the brain when we accept such energy, how we interpret it, how we represent it and how we transform it at the highest center of the brain which is dealt with by cognitive neuroscience model. So, these are the two major models which try to understand cognition. One has got a basis in mathematical science, other has a basis in the biological science to understand the outcome of a process called cognition which has got its root in behavioral science. So, you understand that how cognitive science is a science has a derivative from behavioral science, from mathematical science as well as from biological sciences. I would like to now tell you that how brain and behavior is related and what are the different neuroscientific method because my attempt here it be to understand using cognitive neuroscience model rather than connectivistic model. Now, when we try to understand cognition from brain and behavior perspective we have three models in hand these three models try to understand human behavior through different process and perspectives. One is a localization model, one is called a regionalization model and one is called a lateralization model. Now, I would try to explain each of these models in order to understand human behavior. The localization model has its origin in the deficiency model which started with DAX in 1896 wherein we tried to understand human behavior through a clinical approach and the approach suggest that if there is a lesion, a tumor, a damage in the brain what kind of impairment we are going to get in future. By making a link between the impairment observed and the damage to a given site they are correlated in the localization model and by having that localization model we try to predict which part of the brain is meant for what kind of behavior. The regionalization model is different slightly different from the localization model while localization model says that how one part of the brain is related to one kind of function. The regionalization concept tells that different regions of the brain may be responsible for one kind of behavior or several behaviors may also be located in one part of the brain. So in regionalization model we try to understand what are the different regions that get activated when a mental function is there. So localization model is primarily utilized in brain damage cases and thereby making an inference between a cognitive behavior and a particular impairment. Regionalization model primarily deals with the intact brain subjects where we try to understand that when a particular mental function is executed what are the different regions that get activated. Now these activations are studied through different mechanisms which I will be telling you shortly and thereafter a model comes which is called lateralization model. The lateralization model is neither a purely localized model at a given site nor a regionalization model which considers the whole brain into account. Lateralization model actually says that which part of the brain is meant for what kind of behavior like left brain has got different kind of behaviors which are executed cognitive behavior right kind right side of the brain is meant for different kind of cognitive behavior and how they are executed. So lateralization is a concept which deals with left brain as well as right brain and it uses both clinical model as well as experimental model while regionalization utilizes primarily an experimental model and while localization utilizes primarily a clinical model. So when we try to understand all three models the clinical approach is primarily as I said executed by localization model. Regionalization and lateralization models are somewhat different regionalization models primarily deal with experimental model the studies are primarily done with intact brain subjects while lateralization is dealing with both clinical cases as well as experimental point of view as well. So when we talk about the experimental paradigm in the understanding of the neuro scientific issues related to brain and behavior there are four kinds of techniques that we have been utilizing. One technique is of course neuro imaging a non-invasive imaging process through functional MRI where we try to understand the oxygenation process in the brain. Whenever there is a mental function the neural signal a neural signal is fired and oxygen is consumed the moment oxygen is consumed and a depletion the nearby capillary is open and they rush to compensate for the oxygen impairment while they are rushed the oxygenated and deoxygenated components within that given area gets identified through a computer scan and process and through a complex statistical analysis we understand that which part of the brain is oxygenated and which part of the brain is deoxygenated. So with this method which is called functional magnetic resonance imaging we understand which regions of the brain get activated when a mental function is occurring. The other approach is a electrophysiological approach which is a age long approaches where we try to understand the electrical activities associated with the brain whenever there is a cognitive function is executed. The behavioral method primarily deals with the lateralization program where we try to understand what kind of mental function or cognitive function is located in which side of the brain the left side as well as the right side and the artificial is basically a mathematical model where we try to understand how a cognitive function is executed I mean how a cognitive function is networked through an array of activities which can be calibrated and calculated through a mathematical process of software. In any case these are all experimental methods this can be done on intact brain subjects the clinical method as I said is primarily a deficiency model not a efficiency model it tells if there is a tumor as you see in this scan what kind of impairment takes place following a particular damage in the particular site. With these methodologies I would now like to tell you this localization, regionalization and lateralization each of these methods had their own advantages and disadvantages. Now advantages are known to us because lateralization helps us very clearly without using sophisticated tools and procedures that how the two sides of the brain functions. One gives us a clear correlation between what kind of damage and what kind of impairment one can very easily calculate that. In regionalization also we understand what are the different regions that are getting activated when a mental function is executed, but each of these methods has its own lacuna. Here I would like to critically discuss how these methodologies suffer from different kind of difficulties because that will give us a comparative understanding of how the two or how the three approaches differ and how they are complementary to each other. For example in localization the challenge is that there are various kind of challenges one such challenge is that the very assumption that the correlation there is a correlation between a specific impairment and a focal brain is not sufficient to infer the normal brain functions. In fact from an impairment we are trying to talk about the efficiency or the performance of a given particular area. So the correlation between a specific impairment and a focal brain is not sufficient may not be sufficient to infer the normal functions. It may be taken over by other sides of the brain which we do not know. In clinical and the localization method we simply say that after this damage there is a set of impairment. So that particular side must be related in a intact brain for such kind of behavior which may not be true it may not be sufficient. Likewise a lesion when it is studied within a brain in a localization model is unlikely to be restricted in a well delineated modular unit and may create disturbance in other parts. I may be having a tumor in the frontal lobe, but the pressure may be created somewhere back in my temporal lobe or may be frontal temporal lobe, may be in the occipital lobe. So functionally the changes may occur where the pressure is created rather than where it is physically limited to. Therefore it is very important to understand that when we refer about a lesion in terms of a site and size they may not be restricted to a well delineated modular unit and they may actually create disturbance in various other parts which are physically not possible for us to see. And it is also possible that there may be more than one areas for a given psychological function in the brain. The very hypothesis that there is a one to one relationship between one part of the brain with one kind of psychological function may not be true. It is possible that various psychological functions are located in one part of the brain and it is also possible that various parts of the brain are actually required to execute one kind of mental function. As of now we do not have a very clear notion that whether brain is distributed both by some form of equipotentiality or some form of localization or not. So that is a very difficult area where cognitive neuroscience find it difficult to understand mental function through localization paradigm. Finally, it is also there that a intact hemisphere in a damaged brain which we find in a localization model if there is a damage in the right brain the left brain may be intact. But there is no reason to believe that a intact hemisphere in a damaged brain can operate as it does in a intact brain. I meant to say that if the left hemisphere is intact in a damaged brain we should not presume that the left hemisphere will function normally because in a damaged brain the whole system may be damaged. So localization as a system localization as an approach to the understanding of cognitive aspects of a human function or a human behavior has its own disadvantages. But it has got its own advantages as well which I have talked to. I will now talk about the regionalization as a critical notion. Regionalization is also having its own disadvantages has its own challenges. It is possible that different regions of the brain participate together in a specific function. So the point that there is one region for one function or there may be different functions located in one particular region applies to regionalization hypothesis as well. Likewise determining what a brain is doing when it is activated is also not known. Activation means what is not interpreted we only know there is an activation. Now whether it is due to some form of excitation or some form of inhibition we are not very sure. It is not very clear that if I get activation whether my efficiency is referred by some form of activation or not. If a person is doing very well in mathematics will he get more activation or if a person is finding it difficult to do a mathematics will he get more activation. Activation per se refers to what is it excitation or inhibition is also not very clear. We get activation we know there is a processing going on. But the activation per se does not refer whether it is part of the excitation process or inhibition process. Likewise regions may be critical for a particular operation but the operation itself arises from combined action of many regions. The region that we finally home in for a given function that we try to understand or link it with a particular behavior. But the point is that before the activation takes place the entire operation may arise from different other sections of the brain which may not have been activated at that point of time. So regions may be critical for a particular operation but the operation the processing itself arises may arise from a combined action of many regions. And finally a region can participate in a function but may not be critical for its expression. Now this is very important you get an activation in a given region but that region may not be critical for the expression a different region may be a critical for that it is only finally executed by a particular region for which you are getting the activation therefore it is very important to understand that cognitive function per se and the regional activation they may not be directly related in a one to one matter manner. Likewise we have certain challenges for lateralization paradigms also. In lateralization paradigm unlike regionalization or localization these are mostly computer generated methodologies where we have two major or three major techniques which are called split visual field technique where we try to understand how the two sides of the brain process visual information. We have got a dichotic listening technique where we try to understand which side of the brain process what kind of a caustic information. And we have a dicaptic method where we try to understand which side of the body kinetically process what kind of information. These techniques are behavioral techniques basically they are done for intact brain subjects technique but they have got their own difficulties as well because some such techniques are not centrally executed that is they do not involve any central nervous system or processing per se. There are certain peripheral mechanisms also wherein we try to understand which side of the brain is activated for what kind of function. For example, if we are right handed we presume that the left brain is dominant for that particular person. If somebody is purely left handed or left footer we try to presume that probably the person is more right sided. Such kind of peripheral measures are also utilized but more often to draw a conclusion about the brain involvement in lateralization pattern through the study of cerebral hemisphericity. We generally utilize split visual field technique which I am showing it here as a technique wherein the two sides of the visual field left visual field and the right visual field they are stimulated with some kind of visual stimuli. And we try to understand that which side of the stimuli is actually processed by which side of the brain normally the stimuli are presented in less than 200 milliseconds. So that there is no saccadic eye movement before that and the information is not exchanged from one side of the brain to another side of the brain. With this paradigm we try to understand with a presentation of visual stimuli at the two visual field left visual field and right visual field in less than 200 millisecond. We try to understand which side of the brain is processing what kind of information. The other technique is called dichotic listening technique in which the two sides of the the two ears are simultaneously stimulated at the same temporal point. Thereby trying to understand whether there is a interference or a facilitation or whether there is a greater advantage of processing of one side of the brain over the another side on the processing of a caustic stimuli. This methodology was devised by Doreen Kimura a scientist long back is a excellent technique through which we can understand the cerebral hemispiricity. When the two sides of the brain or the two ears are simultaneously stimulated at the same temporal point the ipsilateral pathways are inhibited the contralateral pathways are facilitated. Therefore if we get two different noises or two different lexical stimuli at two different ears the ear the side which is dominant for processing a particular lexical stimuli gives gets a priority in terms of processing. Like A and B if the two ears are stimulated with two different alphabets the one that is presented at the right ear gets an access over the one that is presented in the left ear because generally the left hemisphere is more dominant in the processing of lexical stimuli. In the lateralization paradigm though these paradigms are relatively easier to execute there are certain disadvantages in it as well. For example these are indirect measures of brain function they are not direct measures like regionalization there is a direct measure of brain function or in localization we directly understand that a particular part of the brain is damaged. Here in lateralization paradigm we do not get any such input it is a indirect measure. It is also a challenge the understanding that the brain function is a clear linear process that is left will get the access to right side and right will get access to left side there is no such linear relationship. Brain functions are often non-linear so therefore a clear cut linear relationship a correlation cannot actually tell about which side of the brain is performing what kind of information. The non-laterality account of some of the observed performance asymmetries is not generally taken care of. The some observed performance at asymmetries are not clearly understood through lateral paradigms everything cannot be understood through a laterality paradigm. There are activities in the brain which are not lateralized clearly. So to understand such behaviors other than the motor behavior for example the higher order complex mental processes are not fully lateralized. In fact the rudimentary behaviors the more rudimentary the behavior is greater there is a chance that there are lateralization. But higher centers of the brain or the higher complex mental processes cognitive processes are not lateralized to that extent. And it allows inferences only about inter hemispheric effects it does not talk about anything else than other than understanding a relationship between a particular cognitive process and a particular side of the brain. There are computer modeling also as I said in the experimental modeling the artificial neural network also comes into picture AI comes also into picture other than the brain sciences. But they also face different kind of challenges. The cognitive scientist use computers to actually simulate cognitive processes it is possible that in computer we can simulate such process. But in simulation the way computer represents and process information is totally specified though the outcome is not known in advance everything is specified. So that specificity that linearity that sequentiality does not explain fully the parallel processing capacity of the human brain. In fact cognitive processing is not only sequential they are parallel as well that parallel understanding is not fully possible for us to represent through some form of softwares which AI as a methodology artificial intelligence as a methodology tries to develop. So the critical issues what it is coming up that in cognitive neuroscience we utilize biological system biological signals to interpret our cognitive behavior while mathematical science try to understand how the network is created. In behavioral science we try to understand behavior at a macro level rather than at a micro level as I said the hard sciences the biological sciences the genetic sciences the biochemical sciences the artificial sciences they all try to understand human behavior or cognitive behavior at a very micro level. But behavioral science has their own approaches at a very macro level the problem is that the understanding at a micro level as well as a macro level to what the understanding of human behavior are generally treated as mutually exclusive they are never taken into consideration in some kind of relationship the micro level understanding is done separately the macro level understandings are also done separately. As a result what happens the behavioral scientists view biological sciences as useless reductionism that at a molecular level if we try to understand the human behavior ultimately we get to understand what changes are happening at the molecular level does not have any correlation what behavior is executed at a holistic manner. And even if that behavior is executed under what circumstances what are the context what are the social ecological developmental and other issues which bring in changes into human behavior and not at all understood in the reductionistic approach. While biologists view that social sciences is nothing they cannot tell anything about cause effect relationship of a human behavior. So, they are simply a history of human experience they simply talk about human experience of that the behavior is executed they talk only about the experience that the human being has actually gone through. So, there is a difficulty here in the understanding of cognitive science as a whole where the macro sciences as their own approaches the micro sciences as their own approaches cognitive neuroscience is a science where we try to bridge the gap by examining the bio behavioral subsystem within the environment under cognitive neuroscience we not only look at a molecular level or at a signal level of the brain what kind of changes are occurring. But how these changes are also getting correlated with a given context with a given backdrop or with a behavioral subsystem within the environment is also looked after. So, cognitive neuroscience does not exclusively depend on a biological model or a reductionistic model it actually takes into account both the models into account. So, the challenges of cognitive neuroscience is therefore, in order to understand since we have now integrated our approaches and tried to understand human behavior through cognitive system through a overall process it is now time to understand that how cognitive neuroscience should progress. Now, it is important to understand the technology integration across all levels of analysis that is I will get input from localization model I will get input from regionalization as well as lateralization model. And using experimental model we get input from neuroimaging sciences we get input from electrophysiological sciences we get input from behavioral sciences we get input from artificial and neural sciences the question is that how do we integrate those how do we integrate this technological input in a overall analysis to understand holistically cognitive science cognitive behavior as a whole. Then the question comes even if we understand the applicability of all such techniques and understanding on the overall course of development is a very important phenomenon as I said to understand any behavior five cornerstones are utilized one is a theoretical biological developmental cultural and statistical. So, the question comes the developmental train that is after theoretical biological we must understand that how cognitive development takes place and at every stage of the development how this technique and technological integration can be done is a big challenge for cognitive neuroscience. Then comes the issue of cognitive neuroscience the major trouble they are facing with the extent of individual difference now human to know no two human beings are seen neither two human beings are altogether different the extent of human difference has never been calibrated one of the major problem with cognitive sciences is that if we treat every individual as a different individual developing a notion about cognition in an as a whole is a very difficult ask for a different process and not only that within the same individual the cognitive system or the cognitive process changes over a stage over a period. So, a child who is of six years of age when he develops reaches at 20 years of age his cognitive system will undergo a great change when he reaches 60 years of age his cognitive system will also undergo change. So, it is not only between the two individuals the extent of individual difference that will create difficulty for us to understand cognitive neuroscience it is also within the same individual the cognitive system subsystem that changes over a period of development is also a difficult thing to understand also it is important to understand for us what does the resting brain is I mean understanding of the resting brain. Because as you see all models either localization regionalization or lateralization as a model they can be utilized whenever the brain has some function or the brain is doing something or the brain has got some aberration or some problem. In a intact resting brain we have no study method to understand it what the brain is doing at a resting state. So, the understanding of the resting state of a brain is never attempted in any time therefore it would be a challenge for cognitive neuroscience also to understand resting brain the acting brain or the damaged brain or the impaired brain or the active brain there are models to understand it, but there is no such model to understand the resting brain finally reaching beyond the academic discipline and then actually understanding on ground how cognition takes place is not happening in cognitive neuroscience it still remain within the theoretical backdrop it still remain within the domain of science and technology it has not come out of the academic discipline. The deliverability of the discipline in different forms of sciences or different walks of life is still to be done that is a big challenge for cognitive neuroscience it remain a subject within a discipline with it certain textbook within certain research group. The deliverability of this cognitive neuroscience in order to understand for example how the aging takes place nowadays lot of studies are being done with the understanding of cognitive neuroscience what the mind does for example how the mind edits a particular environment how the mind edits when we have a developmental thinking process. But as of now is we are still within the academic discipline the deliverability out of this discipline to every walk of life to the understanding of a human disease system is still a far reaching issue that we must be able to address. Therefore within the domain of behavioral science now I would like to tell which does not require other forms of hardware technologies the testing as a paradigm we need to understand how neuropsychological testing can be utilized to understand cognitive neuroscience. One of the major challenges to do some kind of testing based on simulation that can we simulate a situation to a perfect normal condition or a perfect reality condition into a laboratory environment and then study it for example in virtual reality. Can we create such kind of virtual reality in the laboratory set up in order to understand how actually cognition takes place in real situation because until and unless we understand them under a controlled condition we would never be able to understand the cause effect relationship. Likewise test construction for some kind of non specific behavior within the domain of cognitive neuroscience is also a challenge. The behavior which is non specific for example understanding the resting brain is a non specific behavior which is not executed under certain condition. How do we understand it through our normal psychometric process like neuropsychological testing for extreme environment when the brain is acting or performing under a extreme condition for example in space for example in very high altitude for example in a condition where the pressure is very high for example in a condition when the temperature goes beyond 50-52 degree temperature. What kind of cognitive impairment takes place under certain extreme condition and how do we assess them through neuropsychological testing in order to understand cognition at extreme environment is a challenge. Likewise it is also important to understand how technology invariant testing procedure can be done that different kind of different ways other than the laboratory based ways how can we test a person under different condition is also a challenge. And we should also try to understand that cognition is a generic process but it has also got its cultural input and cultural specificities. Can we devise certain test technique which are cross cultural neuropsychologically based paradigm issues that is cross cultural neuropsychology is a subject matter where the general the generic the experimentally tested cognitive issues are seen in certain culturally sensitive or contextual areas. So can we develop some kind of neuropsychological testing which is culturally sensitive to that is a challenge. So cross cultural neuropsychology can give us some input for tomorrow's neuropsychological testing paradigms. For understanding cognitive science in a bigger way for people who would like to do research in the area of cognitive science a varieties of areas are today in front of us. We can study what are the different styles of cognition which is cognitive style whether the person is field dependent or a field independent for example who can identify a camouflaged object better. We know that field dependent cognitive style people fail to do it while a field independent person can do it very effectively. So cognitive science as a behavioral domain and cognitive style as a paradigm generated out of behavioral science can be utilized to do cognitive science research. Cognitive decision making how a decision is taken. Metacognition the cognition of cognition is another area of research which can go beyond a particular existing paradigm and behaviorally we can try to understand cognitive science through metacognitive paradigms. Cognitive profiling that is right from sensation perception to attention to memory to learning to intelligence to problem solving to concept formation. How I can profile a person at all levels it is possible that some people are good in memory but others are good in learning others are good in concept formation but not in other areas of the cognitive processes. So, how can I create a profile of cognition for a given person. Cognitive regulation is another area how can I regulate under difficult conditions our cognitive system. Cognitive engineering based on machine designings are done that how a machine is designed based on our cognitive capability, cognitive multiscaling that is how many cognitive skills we can perform at one time keeping our secondary resource intact. Because in cognitive multiscaling we do not exhaust all our resources while we execute brain resources while we execute a task. If too many tasks are being done and the resources are depleted there would be interferences. But to what extent what is the threshold what are the benchmarking for doing some form of cognitive multiscaling is a different area of research. Cognitive failure why simple cognitive failure takes place under different conditions. When simple cognitive failure becomes too costly we can understand that process. Cognitive aberrations under certain diseased conditions is also a possibility there are several cognitively oriented disorders in mental functions which we study under cognitive clinical paradigm. Cognitive rehabilitations how we can rehabilitate a person restructure a person's cognition how we can retrain them through some kind of guided imagery. It has been found that cognitive disturbances can be overcome with some kind of guided imagery and cultural cognition how it different cultures the cognitions take place. Because every culture has its own way of looking at things we all believe that we have a free will the way we want to think we can think. Actually culture gives us a shape to the particular thinking process that thinking process which is part of the cognitive system is guided largely by a stream of thought which is generated out of cultural orientation. So, cultural cognition is another area. So, the challenges behind before us that can we do cognitive processing for indirect display is a latest area of research. How do we lose situational awareness under a cognitive extreme cognitive condition? What kind of image processing that we can do in an unusual environment can we create a virtual environment of extreme situation and then can we image the brain. Otherwise, we have to image the brain in a resting state with or some kind of state within the magnet, but the question is it possible to do some kind of non-invasive imaging under certain virtual reality condition. Cognitive restructuring under environmental extreme environmental condition, cognitive engineering for high tech system. There are as I all know that in a high tech system the cognition has to have a reshaping. How we reshape our cognitive system? How we metacognize ourselves in high tech system is an interesting area of research. And simple cognitive failure in suboptimal condition are certain challenges which we if we can execute the greatest difficulty of cognitive neuroscience as a theoretical subdiscipline can be overcome. Because the implementability of such research, the deliverability of such research will be full proof when we understand such kind of cause of a relationship and then see it under a given condition. Thank you so much for giving attention to it.
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Site-42 SCP TikTok Compilation #15
If you like what you hear, don't forget to Like, Share, and Subscribe, click the bell, and visit the links below! Contact TheeSherm/Site-42 at SCPSite42@Gmail.com Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheeSherm Support the show, become a Patron! https://www.patreon.com/site42 Support the show, but more casually on Ko-Fi or Streamelements! https://www.ko-fi.com/theesherm https://streamelements.com/theesherm42/tip Want some Site-42 swag? Check out the store here! https://teespring.com/stores/site-42 Join the Site-42 Discord Server here: https://discord.gg/NWwFMwFuGp Check out TheeSherm's Author Page & Site-42 Hub on the wiki! http://www.scp-wiki.net/theesherm-site-42 Content relating to the SCP Foundation, including the SCP Foundation logo, is licensed under Creative Commons Sharealike 3.0 and all concepts originate from http://www.scp-wiki.net. This page's art and graphic design is the work of John Maddocks, and is released under the same license. Attributions Editing and effects for this video are the work of Synthetic Alien: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCusmVWZDtC88zI_NK2XNUA Music by Kevin Macleod Website - http://incompetech.com/ Images by Pixabay https://pixabay.com/
[ "audio scp", "audiobook", "best scp", "best scps", "containment breach", "creepy", "creepypasta", "horror", "horror narration", "narration", "paranormal", "podcast", "scary", "scp", "scp audio", "scp audiobook", "scp containment breach", "scp declassified", "scp explained", "scp foundation", "scp foundation explained", "scp podcast", "scp reading", "scp secret lab", "scp secret laboratory", "scp wiki", "sherm", "site 42", "site42", "site-42", "theesherm", "voice acting", "voice actor", "voice over", "voiceover", "what is scp", "what is the scp foundation" ]
2021-11-05T13:00:24
2024-02-05T07:14:49
679
pcpzU9O1twg
Dear Mrs. Jacobs, my name is Agent Jonathan Bradley, and regrettably, I'm contacting you because your son Mickey has passed away. He was not, as he told you, a security guard at a lumber factory. I know I'm supposed to tow the company line, but your son was a goddamn hero and you deserve to know the truth. He raced into an army of the most hellish creatures I could imagine with not a care but to save the people they were attacking. I wish we all could be as good at- What the f- Oh no, you don't! You pencil-pushing! Ahem. Mrs. Jacobs, in close you will find the remainder of Mickey Jacobs' severance pay. Please note that despite his recent drug issues and sudden disappearance, we will be happy to provide rehabilitation services if he turns up. Signed, Jonathan Bradley, chief of security, Southern Crosscut Pines. What the h- Listen to me very very carefully. Very quickly... No! You'll have kilograms of- No, not today, right? We'll have to wait for us in about ten minutes. La la la la, get out of my office now, you're not my problem! See you in a while. Everything you're doing is making me wanna slap that little shit out of you right now, but I'm more mature, more than I've been normally so I shake your hand. And then I'll bite it off! The lights above the Arby's are getting bolder. This new signal infects nationwide commercials with a cognitohazard that makes the viewers crave the meat. Someone grab the doctor's sandwich so we can have some of that. Item number SCP-2165. Object Class. None. Special Containment Procedures. SCP-2165 is to be left to its own devices. It is not to be acknowledged in any way outside of this reference. This reference is to be kept in an extra-temporal, extra-spatial location. All is as it has been. All is as it always was. Description. SCP-2165 is irredeemable. It is unknown if SCP-2165 is an entity, object, or concept. This information has been deemed irrelevant. What SCP-2165 did has been erased from the timeline by universal consensus. Addendum. There will be no forgiveness. Good afternoon, PSY-42 staff. Why is it so dark in here? What is- What the- Volkov! Was this you? I was only asleep for 20 minutes. Geez. You know, it's not actually that bad. Alright. Oh no. What's eating Dr. Sherman? No, no, no, no. When that DVD logo bounces from corner to corner 1,138 times, the world ends. I see. And where are we now? 1,025. Shit. It eventually comes back. Don't worry. I'll take real good care of ya. Go on. 13 of our town's most popular teenagers just disappeared. 13. Mayor Bennett's hair turns white and he looks 30 years younger. That's not good. Weird. Does any time I try to address this with him, if I'm near the mayor, it's like the memory of these teens just slips from my mind like- Memory altering. Benachini noodle through a suburban mom's tight, puckered lips. And the waiter is being very attentive. He's bringing plenty of breadsticks. It's almost as if- Are you hungry or something? We're Yelp reviews at this Olive Garden. So Martin, yeah, you do deserve 15% today. You did it, buddy. I'm Mayor Bennett. Make something up. I'm just making a video. It's about the Olive Garden. Ingredients, buttered noodles, the Olive Garden. Good enough. Did you know that there are only three days left? You know, trying to avert an XK, is it any easier with you counting down? Well, what do we got? All right, creepy face that checks the box. What the- What? Looks like we have some Ben Drown shit going on. What just happened? What just happened? Lately, I've been spending a lot of my time eating too much Arby's. I just finished the disinformation campaign from Saharu's Arby's video. And now you blurt this out in public? Researcher Green, consider this a formal reprimand. Why does this shirt make me feel so powerful? First, you stole my wardrobe. Then, you lost my favorite shirt. And now some civilian has the power. I expect you to clean this up. Focus up, staff. This test is risky, but it is essential. If the Little Chef entity cannot control its anger, we can't allow it to socialize with the other anomalies. Release the milk demon. Let's get some negative stimuli in there. That's not a promising start. That's a lot of anger. Attempt to deescalate the situation. We'll call this a minor success. Now that the Pepsi Man test is complete, you can head back to your cell with your Pepsi and... Excuse me? There's another one? Wait a minute. Well, that's a little extreme. Hey, Researcher Smalls. Can you see the knife I'm holding in my hand? Why no Junior Researcher Harris. I don't see any knife in your hand at all. Okay, but we're both scientists at an organization that hides magic objects, monsters, and even sometimes gods. So if I told you that I was holding an invisible knife that no one but me could see, you would probably believe that, right? I have seen some crazy things in my career here, so yes. Even though I do not visibly see what you're talking about, I will believe you and we should set up a testing plan of some kind. None of you pursue for driving me to this easily avoidable tragedy! All right, Foundation staff, you voted with comments and we are going to let the little chef entity cook what it wants to. So let's find out what it decides. Barging in with your normal gravitas, I say. We're not cooking. Hashtag relatable, I didn't feel like cooking last night either. You know, for those of you who work off-site, Foundation campuses are a lot like Silicon Valley and that we have on-site restaurants. So you might suggest that this is a breach of secrecy ordering takeout, but it's just from Nick Monalds, which is our, you know, off-brand. But it's the same thing. We have all the secret recipes. You know how we got them. In fact, the on-campus crapplebees is like the most popular after-hours drink spot. I mean, you need to numb the pain somehow. Uh... Ah, you must be looking for surrealistics. Third purple down the neuron that holds your favorite childhood memory. Oh, we got another BI. That's a before-invasion class scenario. Don't worry, we get these all the time as long as we catch them early. One and a half months ago! So we've gotten to that point in quarantine where my wife comes home and says, Darling, the key word is potentially... The key word is cursed! It is cursed. You don't want to know what's in there. Is it? Yes, that is actually correct. They recognize it and they still sold it to her at the grocery store. Well, that's just capitalism. Recognize it? One part of my brain says... Obviously, that's the right answer. One part of my brain says... Don't, no, no, no, don't! All right, steady, steady. Or just breathe in what could be anomalous anthrax for all we know. Places that I think are a cover-up for something because it just does not make sense for them to still be in business. Arby's. Okay, Arby's. Who the fuck is eating at Arby's? No hate, no tea, no shade, I'm sure they're fine, but I've never heard someone be like, Yo, I'm so hungry, let's go to fucking Arby's. And I've never been. Who has been to Arby's? Okay, like if you've been to Arby's, if you work at Arby's, I mean say something, this is your moment to shine, because I genuinely don't... I think it's a cover-up. There's gotta be some shit going on because of no one. What is Arby's even known for? No one going to them? Is that what their reputation is? Because I see them all up on that Twitter shit. I see them all up on the socials. But who's eating there? Who's funding their commercials? Who's funding...what? See viewers, this is exactly what not to do while performing car maintenance. Not only does pulling the hair of the horrible witch who lives in your tailpipe out cause your muffler to be less effective due to it not being packed full of creepy witch hair, but you're also giving her scalp quite a rash. How rude and ungrateful. Thank you in advance, and cheers.
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UCu3Ri8DI1RQLdVtU12uIp1Q
Deepak Goel | KubeCon CloudNativeCon EU 2023
Deepak Goel, CTO at D2iQ sits down with John Furrier, and Rob Strechay for KubeCon CloudNativeCon EU 2023 in Amsterdam the Netherlands.
[ "SiliconANGLE Media Inc", "SiliconANGLE", "SiliconANGLE Inc", "theCUBE", "Wikibon", "John Furrier", "Dave Vellante" ]
2023-04-21T10:10:22
2024-02-05T08:42:13
970
PcaY114pfss
Welcome to Amsterdam. And KubeCon, CloudNativeCon 2023. Join John Furrier, Savannah Peterson, Rob Streche, and UPSCOT. As the Kube covers the largest conference on Kubernetes, CloudNative, and open source technologies together with developers, engineers, and IT leaders from around the globe. Live coverage of KubeCon, CloudNativeCon 2023 is made possible by the support of Red Hat, the CNCF, and its ecosystem partners. Hello, everyone. Welcome back to the Kube's coverage here at KubeCon in Amsterdam. It's Europe. It's CloudNativeCon. I'm John Furrier, host of the Kube at Rob Streche. Analyst in the Kube. Got a deep echo here. CTO of D2iQ, formerly MesoStreet for the folks in the industry going back in the beginning of DevOps and containers and all this great stuff happening now. Deepak, thank you for coming on the Kube. Thank you for having me. So we've been unpacking a lot of the trends here. The Kube's been to every single Kubernetes KubeCon since its existence, I think that our 13th episode here. It just gets better and better on the mainstream adoption. Still so much work to do, simplicity, a lot of challenges there. Although they score themselves great on portability, Rob and I think that Rob's more on the, they need more work on portability. But overall, Kubernetes, being more enterprise grade, the progress is there. WebAssembly is looking good. A lot of devs coming together. Infrastructure Express Code is a done deal. We're starting to see it go mainstream. Containers, virtualization moving into containers, big migrate, a lot of headroom from a business standpoint. A lot of more projects coming down the pike. You guys are the center of it. Where do you see it going on here? What's the top story at KubeCon this year from a Kubernetes standpoint? So Kubernetes, over this years, I would say the day zero aspect of Kubernetes has simplified quite a bit. It has become a no opt for anybody to bring up a Kubernetes cluster. But Kubernetes alone is not enough to run in production. I would say it's an enabler to create a platform. So that's why it's an API based and it has been very successful. What we're starting to see is people moving higher in the stack and abstracting some of the complexities of Kubernetes to simplify it. As bigger organization, Global 2000s are adopting Kubernetes, they need that simplicity to spin up a cluster which is production ready, which is secured by nature, which has observability, which has monitoring, logging. All traditional aspects of a cluster that they have always seen in another platform. Now you would see there's integration points happening in Kubernetes as well. Yeah, and I think you had some announcements that, to me, signal that Kubernetes really has a lot of momentum. It's the fact that you're going into air-gapped environments, the fact that you're going into managed service providers. I think to me that would lead me to believe that there's newer people coming in looking at these microservices built applications. Exactly. In fact, one of the CNCF surveys from two years back have showcased that all the innovations that are happening in any industries, you take blockchain, you take digital reality, genomics, robotics. In fact, the chat GPT, which I'm pretty sure is known, named in every house, is being run on Kubernetes. So Kubernetes has become the de facto platform for that is fueling innovation in every area today. So one of the rise of Kubernetes impact has been the enterprise application award that we heard earlier. That's not a really word. As it gets more mainstream, Rob was talking about the platform engineering piece becoming much more defined from a practice standpoint, where team formation, roles. You guys talk a lot about this. This is the hot trend here, KubeCon. What does platform engineering mean today? And how do you see that rolling forward? Is it a modernized version of IP with a reconfigured or what's your view of platform engineering? Platform engineering is a team that is responsible or it's a concept about creating reusable standard tools that are scalable, that are consistent, that brings in the consistency in managing the platform. There has been a trend, especially which was started when the cloud services came a thing where developers started doing their own things. And that led to correlation of different toolings, a different way of doing the same things. And it was a costly thing when they do that. What platform engineering has started doing is consolidating all those where it was standard tooling, where developers can still achieve the agility that they hope to achieve with a cloud native platform, but in a much more consistent and cost effective manner. What's the biggest impact to IT from an infrastructure's code standpoint as DevSecOps becomes day two like, more day two like as we were saying, what's the big impact? What's different about platform engineering than classic IT? The platform engineering, classic IT was responsible. They didn't have the insights into what the developer requirements are. What they used to provide is the infrastructure on the request basis. Platform engineering is, I would say much, if I had to use a word, is an aware IT ops, which is they now understand the platform through, like for example, Kubernetes. And they configure in such a way that takes away the burden from developers and standardize them into a platform so that developers can focus on their developing the application, making their life easier. Like for example, deploying the cluster, making sure the cluster is elastic, secure, easy to use. Whereas the developer can focus on their business applications. And I think what's really key to that, and I think it is that centralization. I'd like to say my former employer, Amazon, with their two pizza teams kind of started a whole movement where you're going to have, okay, eight people and a manager, eight people and a manager using different systems, different methods, different SREs, different DevOps on different infrastructure and different tooling. It would seem that the CIO is really helping lead some consolidation around it. Is that what you're seeing? Yes, exactly. So what led to, one of the, DevOps has been very good in achieving the agility and time to market. But what it missed is it led to the problems like cluster sprawl, cloud sprawl, where developers are spinning because their main focus is how to get their code running in production easily. But for the organization as a whole, it created some of the challenges, which is what is simplified by having platform engine or IT team, which has the experience and expertise to use like something we call instance platform engineering, which is using the right platform, right tooling and providing an environment for developers where they can still feel self-managed and self-serve, but under the guardrails of the platform that the platform engineering has provided. Deepak, Rob and I were talking about day one. Remember we talked about developer productivity? Oh yeah. So this gets at the heart of developer productivity because obviously platform engineering has to enable not just a service organization like the classic IT. Developers are setting the agenda. Right. So developer productivity is number one. So assume platform engineering is in place. What are some of the developer productivity challenges and opportunities today? Obviously S-bombs, supply chain is a big problem. Now you've got Genovi, putting code in the mix. We call it code pollution coming in. Stack overflow just ban chat GPT. They don't want any of that in there. It's a nightmare. So like you have all this hardened kind of mindset going on. But yet developers want more data. So how do you see the whole developer equation from a productivity standpoint to a consumption? Because we're not B to D anymore. It's B, D, B to D. Right. This is developer. I mean, there is a consumer. Right. So I give an analogy with the car analogy. It's like if we ask a driver to configure the engine first before driving the car, they'll say they can't drive the car because their whole time will go in configuring the engine itself. In developers without this platform engineering is something like that. They have to first configure their system before they can use their system, which kills their productivity. What enables their productivity is a platform that is secure. Right. That is scalable. That is user standardized tooling that is consistent and easy to use and easy to deploy. Right. So the developers can come in and deploy their application without worrying about whether it's a secure way of deploying the application. Is somebody attacking their applications? Right. All those concerns are being taken care by using a platform that provides this out of the box. How would you rate the productivity of today's developer on a scale of 1 to 10? Obviously, don't compare to old way, but like in DevOps. As DevOps becomes more mainstream, more tooling is out there. What's the... Before even I give the rank, I would say it gives a perception that the DevOps is becoming agile, but what's happening is it is creating shadow IT within those teams. Give an example. Because operations are complex by nature because of the things that you have to take care, security that we have talked about. What happens is in a typical team, the senior developers takes this responsibility of providing the operation. What ends up happening is the reverse effect of what the organization was expecting their senior engineers to be doing, which is like focusing on developing the business application instead of working on the operation. What happens is they start helping the junior engineers and it creates a model which is reversed to what the organization was expecting. And that leads to the cost inefficiency and effectiveness. And we call it as like a shadow DevOps. Yes. You agree? I would agree. But this is why platform engineering has gotten... It's becoming more mainstream is that it's bringing it back together so you're not to your... I think to your earlier comment, it's IT that is developer friendly versus an adversarial where that was very adversarial back. Even if you look at how databases were dealt with in VMware. Right. And I kind of look at everything that's old is new again and we kind of learned. It seems like, and very interested in your opinion on this, it seems like we're getting through that at a faster pace where it's coming together. Like the teams are coming together. One of the differences I would highlight in comparison with the traditional centralized IT was there was a ticketing system that used to be in place. Like the team would... If they need an infrastructure, they used to create a ticket for that team. That team will act on it. So that used to delay a lot of productivity or agility that the organization were looking for. That's why DevOps became so attractive because now you don't have to do any of the requests. You can just go and create your own thing. What Platform Engine allows it to do is they still maintain the agility and the self-serving and self-managing nature of DevOps, but they provide an environment that is being custom made for that environment. Instead of like centralized IT figuring out all the time based on request. Platform Engine is... That's why I was using the term aware centralized IT. Aware of what would be the need of developers and providing that environment. They still got to do it. Yeah. The job changes. It's faster. Agile is the key word. But the shadow IT example for devs is very interesting because they want to go faster. There's going to be consequences to this. It's got compliance, it's security. What are some of the things you've seen that's been bad that companies can avoid? Because I'm sure it's happening in other companies that no one knows about. But how do you identify it? And then what are some of the consequences or benefits of it? Benefits of Platform Engine. Well shadow IT you could argue was actually good because that helped the DevOps movement. So is there a positive or negative impact to shadow DevOps? It ultimately leads to a negative impact. That's why I was reading one article where CIO is saying after three or four years of their investment they are now looking for return on that investment which they are not seeing. Because what happens is initially it gives an impression that everything is moving fast but over time it builds up the maintenance and the operational burden of managing that platform. And that's where the organization realized that they missed on standardizing tooling. Like for example they may start with one cloud provider. Different teams would use different cloud providers. They maintain different toolings, different teams to different skillset and they lose the efficiency or the benefit of having some kind of a standardization. So the shadow IT and then it because it's not one time you launch a code and you forget about it. There's a continuous upgrade that happens. There's a continuous maintenance. And the teams are not benefited by having this cross team knowledge sharing because they do it by themselves. Yeah and I think that it's been interesting hearing. That's been a theme that we've been hearing. Especially the multiple cloud teams and things of that nature. Do you think projects like Backstage and others are going to really help bring that back so it becomes more of that, becomes the interface. And are you guys working on Backstage or with the Backstage group? I've heard a lot. We are not directly working on that but I have heard positive thing. What we have done is with our platform is something very similar. Which is like providing that instant out-of-the-box production ready environment which is multi-tenant. So that management platform is being maintained by platform engineering group but then it has the ability because it's multi-tenant it has the ability to function like a DevOps under the guardrail of what the platform has provided. For example just to give a simple example if an organization wants to provide a set of applications that their developers should be using without having their developers to select those applications then the central platform engineering team can expose those through the platform so that their developers can come in and spend those applications. So like a marketplace that you're providing. Right, exactly. And one of the interesting things is when Savannah would give me crap for not mentioning it we actually showed off your sweatshirt yesterday in our swag segment. It was a really good piece of swag so high marks on the swag for the show. Did we get our sweatshirts? I haven't gone by yet. I'll have to swim by it somewhere. We'll buy a few sweatshirts. It's a great swag. Thank you. Well thanks for coming on. It's going to be an ongoing conversation. We should dig into it when we get back to the US. Platform engineering is moving fast. It's kind of recasting into, I won't say recasting into, I think it's redefining IT certainly has. The Shadow Dev is interesting because it could be an opportunity or it could be problematic. We'll see. I mean I've always felt Shadow IT was, swipe the credit card, get on Amazon. That funded the movement. It definitely did. It's definitely where it started. Deepak, thank you for coming on. Thank you for having me. CTO of D2IQ here on theCUBE, breaking it down. Platform engineering, the new DevOps, the trends continue. Faster, more reliable and actually more portable Kubernetes. We'll be right back. The leader in tech coverage theCUBE, we'll be right back.
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Simulation | NWS #634 John Kagia - Cannabis Analytics
John Kagia is Chief Knowledge Officer at New Frontier Data, the first analysts to focus exclusively on legal cannabis, providing unbiased vetted information & educating stakeholders to make informed decisions. https://newfrontierdata.com Partner ► https://newwestsummit.com Welcome ✌🏽 We Uncover The Nature of Reality 1 Interview Smart People 2️ Synthesize First Principles 3️ Elevate Planetary Consciousness ⭐ http://simulationseries.com 🧬 Find Us Everywhere YouTube ► http://bit.ly/SimYoTu 👀 SOCIAL Instagram ► http://bit.ly/SimulationIG Twitter ► http://bit.ly/SimulationTwitter Facebook ► http://bit.ly/SimulationFB LinkedIn ► http://bit.ly/SimulationLinkedIn Telegram ► http://bit.ly/SimulationTG 🎧 AUDIO iTunes ► http://bit.ly/SimulationiTunes Spotify ► http://bit.ly/SpotifySim SoundCloud ► http://bit.ly/SimulationSC Insight Timer ► http://bit.ly/SimInsight 💰SUPPORT PayPal ► http://bit.ly/SimPayPal Patreon ► http://bit.ly/SimulationPatreon Crypto ► http://bit.ly/CryptoSimu 🇨🇳 CHINA BiliBili ► http://bit.ly/SimBiliBili 👕 MERCH Yoobe ► https://yoobe.me/simulation 🎤 PUBLIC SPEAKING All Videos ► https://allensaakyan.com TEDx Talk ► http://bit.ly/AllenTEDx Questioning Growth ► http://bit.ly/QuestioningGrowth 1,000 Robotics Students ► http://bit.ly/AllenFIRST Instagram ► http://bit.ly/AllenIG Twitter ► http://bit.ly/AllenT ❓ QUESTIONS 📹 HIRING List ► http://simulationseries.com/the-list Email ► simulationseries@gmail.com
[ "simulation", "science", "technology", "allen saakyan", "simulation series", "nws", "new west summit", "John Kagia", "Cannabis Analytics", "cannabis", "hemp", "industrial hemp", "cbd", "thc", "cannabis market", "market for cannabis", "analytics for cannabis", "New Frontier Data", "cannabis analysts", "cannabis analysis", "cannabis market analysis", "legal cannabis", "cannabis market knowledge", "cannabis investors", "cannabis industry analysis", "industrial hemp market", "hemp market", "cannabis market analysts", "cannabis legalization" ]
2020-02-28T17:36:33
2024-02-05T08:25:26
2,585
pcctdanWJ_w
Rather than focusing on any singular part of the industry, not only rather than focusing, say, on retail or consumers or on investment trends, we cast the net completely wide to capture any data we could from any source, feed it into our system and start using that to identify where both the connective tissue was within these data sets, as well as what the broader story we were seeing emerging was. We've just done what we believe to be the most comprehensive assessment of global demand for cannabis in the world today. There are over 260 million, at least semi-regular cannabis consumers around the world, who are collectively spending over $350 billion each year on cannabis. That does not include all of the medical applications and the emergent kind of therapeutic uses, nor does it include any of the industrial applications that are emerging with activation of the industrial hemp. Wow. I believe that the legalization of cannabis is going to be arguably the most consequential social change of our generation. We're now looking at over 60 countries just in a five-year window. So the pace is accelerating dramatically, and the reason why it's moving so quickly is because the science is affirming it. Cannabis is largely or increasingly being as seen as as acceptable, if not better than alcohol. That's part of the reason why companies like Constellation Brands, one of the world's largest alcohol companies, just spent $4 billion investing in a Canadian licensed operator. They see the writing on the wall. We use the public-facing reports that we release as a way to signal to the market some of the major issues that we're thinking about. So the data that we make available through Equia, which is our data platform, maybe the simple way to think about it is like Bloomberg for the cannabis industry, houses not just the reports that we produce, but the data underlying the reports. If you want to go in and explore the data yourself, you can certainly do that. Through that, we developed nine cannabis consumer archetypes, profiles of cannabis consumers that are not just defined based on what they consume and how they consume, but based on all of these other lifestyle attributes as well. We would all do well to find more joy in ourselves and spark joy in each other. And I think that seems to be one of the motifs or driving commitments that's pushing a lot of people in this space. It's all about your perspective. Who are we and what is the nature of this reality? What's up, everyone? Welcome to Simulation. I'm your host, Alan Sakyan. We're on site at the beautiful New West Summit, the Cannabis Tech Conference. We are now going to be speaking with John Cagia. Hi, John. How's it going? Thank you so much for coming on the show. The pleasure's mine. Thank you for having me. I'm so pumped for this conversation. Those of you who don't know John's background, he's Chief Knowledge Officer at New Frontier Data, and he's one of the first analysts to focus exclusively on legal cannabis. All right, John, who are you? How did you even get interested in this field? So I'll tell you, I never in a million years thought I would be working in cannabis. I'm a professionally trained market analyst. I've got my master's degrees in business and in marketing research, and I built my career working, journey for small market research agencies that were working for very large, generally very conservative organizations, the Microsofts, IBMs, Northrop Drummers of the world. And we would work with these companies to help them kind of address and deal with, respond to major strategic operational challenges, how to build new products that are going to be serving the global marketplace. In late 2011, as we were watching the run-up to Colorado's ballot-ish initiatives, we're getting the signatures ready and trying to get the vote for legalization on the ballot, I began paying attention to it because I never thought cannabis was going to be legal in my lifetime. And just out of personal interest and information junkie, I started digging into some of the early numbers that we were seeing in Colorado around support, and it became apparent to me that there was a very good chance that this was going to pass. And that nobody was paying attention to it. And there was certainly nobody providing the kind of market research that we had been providing to, you know, these world-class organizations, the kind of market research that you find in every other sector of the economy, in what seems to be a sector of the economy that was about to emerge. So I proposed to my employers at the time that maybe this is something that we should look at. And, you know, we worked in Washington, D.C. We had many government clients that were like, yeah, not yet. So our compromise was that it becomes a personal pet project. I would report out every three to six months what we were finding, and we'd make a go-no-go decision on whether or not to enter this space. Well, fast forward four years, and every time I presented, they'd be like, oh, this is amazing. By that point, Colorado's measure had passed. Washington, D.C. had legalized. But with every presentation, they're like, this is amazing, but we're not quite ready yet. And I'm watching this market emerging. I'm watching the momentum building. My mind is being blown that this thing that I never thought had any possibility of happening is now happening. So fast forward to the summer of 2014. I'd actually just come back from an extraordinary trip to Brazil for the World Cup. And I got back to Washington in time to watch the World Cup final, and I'm trying to decide where I'm going to go and watch this game. And for some reason, I felt compelled to go to this restaurant that is not a place you would ordinarily go to watch a World Cup match. There's a lot of great soccer bars that you could have gone, but for some reason it felt like the right place to go in and watch this game. And so I'm sitting at the bar, having a cup of coffee, watching the match on the screen above the bar. And I get introduced to the woman who is sitting next to me. And as you do in Washington, I ask what she does, and she tells me she's about to start a data analytics company in the cannabis industry. That's how I met our father, Giada Guaida Carcer. And it's been nearly six years since we met. And we hit it off immediately. We spent a handful of hours that day geeking out at the bar and she's like, where have you come from? Everybody else in Washington at the time, you were talking about cannabis, people would run for the hills screaming. But there was just a clear connection there that was almost immediate. That was immediate. And as the conversation continued, as I began to understand what it was she was doing, it became clear that this was just too compelling an opportunity to pass on. A total green field market that was growing explosively, that had no meaningful data worth speaking about, and that was so well aligned with my professional interests. So I officially joined New Frontier in January 2015 and had never looked back. What an interesting trajectory. Were you also born in Kenya? I was born and raised in Kenya. I moved to the U.S. How old were you? I was 12 and a half when we moved to the U.S. So I did middle school and high school here. And then I went to the U.K. for my undergrad and graduate degrees. I moved back to Washington and it's largely called at home since. And doing data for all these other massive companies and analytics and now you saw the trend. And it's so interesting how the universe put you and New Frontier data at this World Cup final like you were going somewhere that wasn't unconventional and ended up happening. It's very interesting. So okay, now how do you guys pick? In 2014 these things are starting up, you're trying to find signal in data. It's just something even in your previous work that you were doing as an analyst. How do you find signal in data? Structuring data is something that we care a lot about. That's what we're doing. We're identifying great minds. We're sitting down with them, structuring data, sharing it with other people in a sense. But how do you pick? How do we pick who to pick? How do you pick the data? Which is most interesting to you guys. So this is where there's a science and an art to the kind of work that we do. One of the things that I learned quite early in my career and had extraordinary mentors to guide us through our early training was that it's very easy to teach the mechanics of research. It's very easy, relatively, to teach people how to crunch the numbers. And particularly now in this highly technological environment there's no shortage of solutions that can do the vast majority of the work for you in terms of just processing data. What is much more difficult to do is to explain, to understand and identify the so-what, to understand and identify the implications and tell a compelling story around it. And that's the art of research. That's the art of what we do. Why should people care? Why should people care? And how can they use this to do what they do better? In a case like cannabis, having come from an environment where our issue was actually generally we had too much data. We had too much information. Coming to cannabis, it was not just the most data-derth environment I'd ever been in. It was the most data-averse environment I've ever been in. One of the first conversations I had with a master grower, he told me that he's been growing cannabis for about 30 years in Northern California, but at the end of every cultivation cycle he'll burn all of his notes, all of his records, because he was so scared about federal intervention, about getting caught up by law enforcement that he didn't want any records of his historical practices. So coming from an environment where we're literally talking about billions of data points into one where people are writing things down in notebooks and then burning them at the end of the season was just a complete flip of the kind of environment we're in. So as a company we realized that this was not going to be a conventional environment in terms of the types of data stories that you see in other ecosystems, but that also where we saw an opportunity. And rather than focusing on any singular part of the industry, rather than focusing, say, on retail or consumers or on investment trends, we cast the nets completely wide to capture any data we could from any source. Feed it into our system and start using that to identify where both the connective tissue was within these datasets, as well as what the broader story we were seeing emerging was. And what were those connecting tissues and what is the broader story that emerged? So one is that for every market we have seen legalized, we have seen explosive consumer demand. I've been in the space for five years now and when I first started I thought I knew how much cannabis Americans consumed. I had no idea. Americans have a prodigious appetite for cannabis. And one of the interesting things about this market... How much are we talking? So the number is just on a global context. We've just done what we believe to be the most comprehensive assessment of global demand for cannabis in the world today. There are over 260 million, at least semi-regular cannabis consumers around the world who are collectively spending over $350 billion each year on cannabis. So if the current legal market is just around over $20 billion, we have barely scratched the tip of the iceberg of the addressable market that the full legalization will represent assuming it became legal globally. A trillion dollar market or more, yeah. It certainly has that potential. Because if we're talking about a $350 billion market of just regular consumption, which is largely flower and generally low quality flower in most parts of the world, that does not include all of the medical applications and the emergent kind of therapeutic uses. Nor does it include any of the industrial applications that are emerging with activation of the industrial hemp. So the long-term opportunity that this could grow into has meant that as my study of the industry has continued, I believe that the legalization of cannabis is going to be, arguably, the most consequential social change of our generation. So it could be that the industrial hemp and also the health and wellness applications of cannabis could themselves be significantly larger than the recreational use market? On the legal side, absolutely, at least initially. So first, taking the medicinal side. It has been extraordinary to see how quickly the global community has began to have this debate conversation around medical cannabis. When we first started looking at this industry, there were probably four countries around the world where there was meaningful progress or active legal programs. We're now looking at over 60 countries just in a five-year window. So the pace is accelerating dramatically and the reason why it's moving so quickly is because the science is affirming it. When the World Health Organization comes out with a statement, with a very affirmative statement about the wellness and therapeutic benefits of CBD, when the US National Academies of Sciences, through the most comprehensive assessment of all of the scientific literature around cannabis, comes out and says, yes, it does work for paying for nausea related to cancers. It does improve patient wellness outcomes. The medical community, which has so long been informed by the propaganda of the war on drugs and prohibition, is now being challenged to rethink the role that cannabis can play in improving health and wellness outcomes in our population. And so that's happening on a global basis. And even amongst skeptics, when they see the effects that it is having on their friends and their loved ones, like so many other issues, once it hits home, once it becomes a kitchen table issue, attitudes change very, very quickly. Once a family member has some sort of a health issue, and then it suddenly changes perspectives. On the industrial side, we think the transition is going to be a little bit different. So because cannabis and marijuana and hemp got prohibited at about the same time, despite the longstanding recognition that hemp was a phenomenally versatile plant, it largely got removed from our industrial economy. So for all of the innovations that have happened across the industrial economy and across virtually every other sector of the economy over the past decade, hemp has remained a largely unexplored, unstudied plant. And so the applications that we're seeing people starting to focus on now, whether it's bioplastics and companies like BMW, integrating hemp-based plastics into the interiors of their latest models, biofuels, the hemp producers equivalent of light-sweet crude for an ethanol biodiesel, textiles, the fact that Levi's have just announced their first hemp cotton blend genes. And even though it is a 70-30 cotton hemp, we anticipate within a few years it's a matter of time before we start seeing 100% hemp products that are virtually indistinguishable from cotton, everything from paper to animal feed, the spectrum of applications that construction materials, supercapacitors. With hemp? With hemp. So there's a team out of Canada about two years ago that did this study that found when you carbonize hemp, it produces a supercapacitor that can rival graphene, and graphene right now is one of the best applications that we've identified. It produces supercapacitor that can rival hemp with none of the toxicity, sorry, a supercapacitor that can rival graphene with none of the toxicity that is related to the manufacturing of graphene. This is early science still, but consider the possibility that the Teslas of the future could be running on batteries that are based on hemp-based carbon. These are applications that we're just beginning to explore. And as you see increased investment, as more countries begin to reintroduce hemp into their economies, the pace of that innovation is going to accelerate dramatically. And the substitution of hemp for many existing applications I think will grow across the economy. Man, you really showcase this as the emerging market, just straight up the emerging market. Other people argue that blockchain crypto decentralization is like the emerging market where you're like, nah, nah, nah. And they kind of go hand in hand in so many ways. And this is not to knock either blockchain or crypto, which are going to be massively disruptive in their respective ways. But I think there's a number of things that make hemp unique in where it sits in the economy, or where cannabis sits in the economy. One is just how disruptive it will be in so many different aspects of our society. So let's just take some social issues as easy considerations. Prohibition enforcement has been largely very inequitable. In the U.S., across the country on average, four times more likely to be arrested for cannabis offenses if you were black than if you were white. In Washington, D.C., you were eight times more likely to be arrested if you were black than white. In fact, we just had an event with the mayor of D.C. last week. And we ran some numbers that found black males make up 22% of Washington's population, but make up over 80% of the arrests from our offenses. There's been very significant inequity in the way prohibition has been enforced. So with legalization, the ability to remediate what has been a century of inequity alone is going to be a dramatic social impact. Because of prohibition, cannabis consumers have been driven underground. It has not, you know, 10% of Americans or just about 10% of Americans consume cannabis regularly. So it has not, prohibition has not stopped their use. It has just meant that it has become a very segregated, you know, isolated activity. The fact that we're now talking about cannabis social use spaces appearing in, on Main Street, a company called Lowell's just opened the Los Angeles' first cannabis café. It's going to be radically disruptive to our kind of notions of where a cannabis sits in our society. The medical applications, in the midst of a catastrophic opioid epidemic. When states like Illinois say that now when your doctor, when your physician issues you an opioid prescription, you automatically become eligible to participate in the medical cannabis program because they're so worried about propagating this opioid epidemic. You know, these are just kind of low-hanging fruit in terms of some of the ways cannabis is reshaping some long-standing aspects of our society. Like physicians literally being educated on their MCAT about cannabis in the endocannabinoid system. Yeah, that view. And the fact that they're not being, and they haven't been historically, the doctors who were at the vanguard of medical cannabis had to go and study this themselves because it wasn't being taught in medical school. And so all of those applications, all of those implications from policing and social governance to destigmatization and the normalization of cannabis in our society are going to be really consequential in the way we think about where a cannabis sits in our society. Pulling on that thread a bit more. Something like social use cafes where cannabis is served but alcohol is not allowed. It's just like straight up also, just ban that other one. Nope, can't bring your beer and no wine in here. There was an extraordinary paper in the British Medical Journal that answered a little while ago that showed it was the largest global study on the impact of alcohol on global public health. And in the conclusion of that report, the statement that read, Now, even the lead author would go on to say he is going to have a glass of wine with his dinner. But there's a real recognition that alcohol has had a hugely deleterious effect on public health around the world. And now you have a cohort of young adults who are coming into maturity at a time when cannabis is largely or increasingly being as seen as as acceptable, if not better than alcohol. The disruptive impact that this could have on alcohol and alcohol's place in our society is potentially going to be very, very significant and that's part of the reason why companies like Constellation Brands, one of the world's largest alcohol companies, just spent four billion dollars investing in a Canadian licensed operator. They see the writing on the wall. And so when you take all of that and then add on things like the industrial applications of hemp, in my view, the implications of cannabis as an industry I think extend well beyond what something like blockchain or crypto could do. Damn, such a good synthesis on the industry. I'm loving it. It's obvious that New Frontier has to do a lot of deep dives into all of the different profound impacts that the ascension of cannabis and hemp will have on our world and by doing so, you guys also become, you know, doing these industry analyses gives you guys unique foresight and so then companies want to talk to you and they want to know, well, where should we invest? What countries are moving forward? What are they moving forward with? Which specific aspects are they going forward with? How are Gen Z going to be stepping into their, you know, as 10-year-olds seeing cannabis be legal and also then as 20-year-olds when they have the option to consume, well, what are they going to be choosing? How are we going to be leveraging it for other spiritual ascension potentials and right now it doesn't really seem like alcohol is being used for that whatsoever. So there's so much fascinating nuance there. Do you guys end up taking the, teach us about this process. Do you guys end up taking and making industry reports and then taking those reports and then distributing them through people that subscribe to New Frontier data? Right, so we have a number of approaches by which we do our work. Because of the broad spectrum of issues across the industry that we're tracking and the data that we are ingesting from companies in the industry, from governments of the county, state, national level, international organizations because some of the partnerships we've built, we have this constant and extraordinary stream of data that's flowing across our data engines. So we use the public-facing reports that we release as a way to signal to the market some of the major issues that we're thinking about. Given how much is happening in cannabis, we feel that one of the privileges our role has given us is the ability to see what's happening next, what's coming next. And for the stakeholders who are either already in the space and kind of heads down in the work or trying to come into the space and trying to figure out where they should fit, our reports give them a chance to understand where some of the major issues that they should be paying attention to lie within this space. But there's a second aspect to our work which is the custom research that we do. So there's a lot of companies who will see something that we've talked about in a report and then engage us to do some specific analysis for them and some specific research on a critical issue that they're facing. We work with a lot of investors who are trying to understand, you know, I see this opportunity. Is this, say, category going to be as lucrative as this company that we're about to invest in claims it's going to be? What is the long-term trajectory of this market? I'll give you an example. We just completed a project with a group of Australian investors who have phenomenal experience in the agricultural sector but have never been in cannabis before. They were looking at a investment, a fairly substantial investment in a company that makes cannabis nutrients. And the question was, how big is this market going to be and what sort of potential capture opportunity could this company take of that market? We did all of that analysis and that ultimately involved the investment thesis and ultimately the investment decision. We've worked with companies who are looking at some of these emerging state markets. State like Florida is about to have an adult use ballot initiative proposed for 2020. For the investors who are looking at a large market that has a very strong likelihood of passing, early tests suggest that a ballot will introduce the day that there's a good likelihood it could pass. Investors are looking at that market and it's going to be a lucrative one and they're wondering how large is opportunity specifically going to be and what are some of the key dynamics we should be looking out for as we try to navigate that investment. Similarly on a global scale, we're seeing this explosion in interest in CBD and companies are now wondering how does the global CBD supply chain work and how do we get involved? If we have the ability to set up operations anywhere in the world, which countries should we be looking at and what sort of assets should we be investing in to ensure that we're not planning for next year, we're planning five years from now, for a market five years from now. There's a lot of public facing reports going out but then there's also all these incoming inquiries. They're really, they're querying your knowledge, chief knowledge officer, they're querying your knowledge so that they can gain the insights and so then you work with companies, organizations individually as well based on what they want to know. That's right. So the data that we make available through Equia which is our data platform and maybe the simple way to think about it is like Bloomberg for the cannabis industry. It houses not just the reports that we produce but the data underlying the reports. If you want to go in and kind of explore the data yourself you can certainly do that. And so there's the ability to kind of go through the self-service model of just taking the content that's relevant to you and kind of diving into our content stream and capitalizing on that. And then for the stakeholders who are now grappling with a very specific issue to engage us to do a much more customized and nuanced analysis for them. You mentioned this earlier that you guys have so much data that is coming in. I mean we could talk about that but you actually said that that's not as challenging now as actually talking about the stories of the why that data matters after it does get structured. And so tell us about how you guys can take up like a Pixar or like a Disney role regarding storytelling about the profundity of the data and why it should matter to the world. That's a great question and a really important one based on where we are right now as a cannabis industry. And I'll use the example of the cannabis consumer which is where we think one of the greatest opportunities for cannabis is beginning to emerge. So pre legalization the cannabis consumer was a monolith. You either cannabis consumer or you weren't. Post legalization we bifurcated the cannabis consumers into either a medical consumer or a recreational consumer. But as we're looking at the space to me that just didn't feel right. From all of the consumers we were speaking to that duality, that simple duality just was not reflective of the nuanced ways in which consumers were interfacing and integrating cannabis into their lives and lifestyles. So in late 2018 we deployed what at the time was the largest cannabis consumer survey that had ever been done. Nationally which was based in the US nationally national scope including fully recreational medical and unregulated markets. And the question was we're trying to understand who is the cannabis consumer. Based on this very very large survey I mean it took our respondents nearly 30 minutes to complete so we spent a lot of time not just asking about their cannabis usage habits their cannabis experiences but other things about their lives and lifestyles. And what was the sample size of this survey? 4500 Wow, across the US. Across the US. So by statistical purposes more than enough data for us to do some really really elegant segmentation. 30 minutes is a big survey too. Exactly, exactly. So we took actually the questions as an interviewer I already know that you guys focusing on the questions was again one of the most important parts of all of this because then it leads you to what the answers are what the data is that you get. So I assume you guys spent a ridiculous amount of time on the questions. It was a month long, like many months long effort to build that survey right because we knew that if we got it right the applications for that data downstream would be potentially profound. Yeah, let's hear it. So once we got the data back it became clear that this idea of the medical recreational binary was just completely incorrect. And there was it was much more of a fluid continuum between kind of pure recreational consumers blending into the wellness consumer and then to the pure pharmaceutical user consumer who is treating cannabis like any other pharmaceutical drug. Interesting. Recreational blending with wellness blending with replacement in a pharmaceutical. And just totally spectrum style between like that style. Okay, very cool. But there was a layer deeper than that which is we took nearly 200 data points out of that survey and used it to create consumer clusters. We basically said take these 200 data points and let the algorithm identify the groups that have greater affinity with them. And through that we developed nine cannabis consumer archetypes. Profiles of cannabis consumers that are not just defined based on what they consume and how they consume but based on all of these other lifestyle attributes as well that inform the usage habits and inform their attitudes. Cannabis consumer archetypes. Precisely. Wow. And the archetypes fell across it was nine archetypes. Three that fell across the highest using groups three that fell across the moderate using groups three that fell across the lowest using groups. But as we explain these archetypes and I'll perhaps give you a couple of examples, we have the traditional lifestyles. People who use cannabis very, very regularly but are much more likely to be flower only smokers. So these are people who have integrated cannabis into virtually everything. They use it to get up and go they use it to wind down at the end of the day. You know, they are they are kind of let's call them joint-a-day consumers kind of daily habitual consumers but they are almost flower only, flower exclusive consumers. They're much less likely to consume any types of products. Contrast that against the modern lifestyles who have a very similar usage profile but have completely embraced the new value added products. So these are consumers They're like tic-tac, the one two milligram tic-tac. Absolutely. So they're, you know, not just using rapes and edibles and tinctures whereas they still consume flower but much more load balanced on these other types of products and because they're using these other types of products they're also much more likely to use these products in much more diversified ways. It's like the artisanal user of the they're like which good brand of this do you purchase of the cannabis? And it's the idea that maybe in the morning I'll use a CBD vape for one thing and then before I go to the gym in the afternoon I'll use a kind of activating sativa after I'm done working out I'll apply a CBD lotion on my sore muscles and then before I go to bed I'll have an indica to help me sleep and help me stay asleep longer and so it's extraordinary what the advent of these new product forms has done for the way cannabis is being used not just because they allow for a lot more discretion you can't smoke a joint in a restaurant or a bar without being quickly escorted out or even at a dinner party without people freaking out but you know to pop a little tic-tac at the party that's right you could take a little edible or you could pull out a vape and which some vapes are so odorless now you could be consuming and you wouldn't be able to tell tell well these archetypes are so interesting and then there's the ones like we interviewed Kristen Price and Sarah Baker as well who are literally going through some of the most rare diseases as literally teenagers and then for them to be able to take hundreds of milligrams of full spectrum hemp CBD to heal themselves and to start what the company is like so there's like that too for that was one of our archetypes the medical purists consumers who truly are using cannabis as a pharmaceutical product and there was nothing social recreational about their use very very regimented meticulous about this is just a medicinal product and so trying to pitch them a product for going out to hang out with their friends I have a quick question on the way out the last one actually the last question is the emerging market is exploding how do we make sure that the fruits of this emerging market unlike past instances of emerging markets how do these fruits become more well democratized and distributed across minority populations across vulnerable populations women people color all type of stuff just democratize the financial benefits more widely how can we ensure something this is a great and critical question because the window to do that is actually closing and it's closing quickly first there has to be a kind of conversation about some things I mentioned earlier the inequity that cannabis prohibition has had on the state of the market today on who's participating in the market and who feels that they can participate in the market today there's a lot of people who after being or recognizing that any association with cannabis could get them into deep deep trouble and that they would be targeted for it getting those people to search their mindsets to now say that they're going to enter the industry takes work takes real conversation for them to understand that this is a real legitimate opportunity and they're not going to face the challenges that the previously faced the second thing that businesses in the space can do and should do is think deeply about how their practices are either supporting these broader goals these broader goals around equity and opportunity in the space or undermining them so for example one of the biggest challenges that minorities of people of lower means have had participating in cannabis is access to capital the fact that cannabis is not banked at the federal level banks are not participating in this industry because of its illegality at the federal level has meant that much of this industry has been largely privately funded and so the people who have been able to participate most robustly are the people who have access to high net worth capital has meant that there's been a great number of extraordinary entrepreneurs with brilliant ideas who because of lack of access to capital have not been able to bring those ideas to fruition and so there needs to be a robust conversation about how some of these regulatory practices and the social environment that we're in are propagating and promulgating these issues issues like the advent of federal banking there's a build just past that was going to that's intended to address this issue of banking for cannabis businesses should help more stakeholders find access to capital in the space but I think investors also need to challenge the conventional assumptions about who can be an opportunity, a successful entrepreneur in this space because given that cannabis consumers represent the full cross section of society it is one of the true egalitarian aspects products in our economy it's important for both investors, business operators to understand that because it's a product that transcends our society it should be an industry that reflects the spectrum of society and we love asking at least this question at the end of the show what do you think is the most beautiful thing in the world? A joyful spirit and ironically it's something the profundity of which I hadn't understood until I came into the cannabis industry and saw people who were more passionate, committed driven, invested in their work than any other sector ever worked in I think it is a reason why despite the phenomenal challenges this industry and you talk about a sector that has headwinds coming from all directions that it has been able to grow at the pace it has that it has been able to achieve what it has because people love what they do and at a time when there's so much doom and gloom there's so much anxiety in the public I think we would all do well to find more joy in ourselves and spark joy in each other and I think that seems to be one of the driving commitments that's pushing a lot of people in this space John this has been such a fascinating episode thank you so much for coming on and teaching us it's been my pleasure, thank you for having me thank you, keep up the great work with new friends here, it's so cool your macro perspective on the emergent market is so fascinating thank you, thank you thanks everyone for tuning in we will see you soon it's a wrap great job, great job that was so fun
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UClbN077lfAToY6Cr5P4JmLg
Never care about calories low carb keto carnvore
Count carbs instead of calories. Your life will be much improved. --------------- Help Support this channel ✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸ ✦ $180 per year for cell service at Mint Mobile! - https://mint-mobile.pxf.io/qRj ✦ RECOMMENDED GEAR: Sony a5100 - https://amzn.to/2Nn3hqA ✦ Use TubeBuddy - https://www.tubebuddy.com/NJroute22 ✦ Our Amazon Affiliate link - https://amzn.to/2r2lqRn Music for this video ✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸ Music from https://filmmusic.io "Rising Tide (faster)" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) NJroute22.com HomePage ✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸ ✦ NJroute22 - https://njroute22.com/ Connect with NJroute22.com ✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸✸ If you use other social media – please add us or subscribe. Below is a handy list. ✦ Facebook – https://facebook.com/njroute22 ✦ Twitter – https://twitter.com/njroute22 ✦ Pinterest – https://pinterest.com/njroute22 ✦ Instagram – https://instagram.com/njroute22 ✦ YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClbN077lfAToY6Cr5P4JmLg ✦ RSS Channel – https://njroute22.com/feed/
[ "NJ", "Route 22", "Blog", "Vlog", "Lifestyle", "New Jersey", "Product Reviews", "Central NJ", "Life", "Supermarkets", "Carbs", "Calories", "Low Carb", "NJ low carb", "diet", "weight loss", "simple" ]
2019-09-08T09:45:01
2024-04-23T14:35:31
319
Pc94nLAYoEg
With all the information out on the web today, why is it that people still count calories? Hey there, NJRoot22.com here with another low carb keto carnivore Chad. It's a quick little just point that I feel like making about calories. I wonder why after all this time that people, you know, just like they're worried about, you know, low fat foods and this, that, and baked instead of fried, why people still even worry about calories. Calories are the biggest number on the nutrition facts label. Everybody's always counting calories and like that counting calories thing was like 30 years ago. I really think people should be counting carbs. The carbohydrates and the net carbohydrates should be the biggest number on the back of any food product or label. And, you know, when you're low carb keto carnivore, you sometimes, you know, they don't have those nutrition facts on raw meat. So that would be a moot point kind of, but it's just ridiculous. When you're low carb keto or carnivore, you don't need to count calories because they count themselves. If you're eating a high fat steak, you will stop eating when your body is naturally satiated. And eating all that fat, which contributes a lot to the calories and the protein too. You don't really have to worry about it because, I mean, you can really eat more than they say, oh, you're 2,000 calories a day. I can eat 2,000 calories of fat a day practically and or 4,000 or even more and never gain a pound. As long as your blood sugar doesn't get spiked and you're in the state of ketosis, it doesn't really matter, you know, calories alone. It's the kind of calories. And we know this already, but for anybody that's stumbling onto this video that's just starting and needs to get it hammered into their head, calories don't matter. It's the type of calories and how your blood sugar reacts to the calories that you consume. You know, carbohydrates are the worst. The baseline is if you eat more than 50 grams of carbs in a meal, that you're going to go into a heightened state of blood sugar and you're going to gain weight. You're also going to get that sugar crash, which is going to make you hungry. And the odds of you eating go tremendously up. Same thing with protein. This is why they call it a high fat, moderate protein, low carb diet when people go into the keto carnivore zone because too much protein. Your ideal number of protein value for how we understand is to eat just as much as you burn off and use as fuel. Any excess protein that isn't used as fuel at the end of the day does get converted into glucose and it turns into sugar basically and gets stored in your body fat and you get bigger. Fat alone and a low amount of protein and a minimal or zero amount of carbs and your blood sugar doesn't go up and you're in a state of ketosis. It's searching for fat for fuel. And if you're running on just an empty fuel tank, it'll use your stored body fat as fuel. If you're not in ketosis, you cannot use stored body fat as fuel. And it's just not a good thing. So don't count the calories. It's a waste of time unless you look at how the calories are comprised. And it's so simple. I just don't know why more people aren't figuring that out yet. And I guess the food industry believes their own BS as well. Calories, calories, calories, low calories, 100 calories. I hate that. I don't give a crap how many calories it is. I eat until I am satiated. Oh, PS, I sometimes do make mistakes. We had a video recently about the mistakes I make. And I'm telling you it sucks just putting one bite of bread or carb-y item into your mouth. And that's separate from the sweet sensation that we've been talking about as well. But just putting anything that's outside of this low carb keto, it really does hurt. You get body aches. I ate one bite of a breaded chicken tender that we had here for our kids. And I felt like crap for almost a day. I didn't sleep. I woke up in knee pains. I don't know. That's why I'm never putting wheat in my body again. That is a whole separate story. It's like the worst of all worlds, wheat. It's inflammatory. It's a carb. It raises your blood sugar. It's genetically modified. And I should go some Far Hills bakery that makes ancient grains and hasn't been infected by the big agricultural companies. But that's it. Don't worry about the calories. Forget them. Just worry about the kind of calories you eat. Have a good week ahead.
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UC2S7CGceq5tsuhcVyACdA3g
I Took an Ice Bath
So I've been working out lately, and my coach told me I needed to do an ice bath... Merch ☁ http://www.crankgameplays.com Join the Channel ► https://www.youtube.com/c/crankgame/join Edited by ► http://www.twitter.com/BuffDaddyHD Outro Art Designed by: https://twitter.com/MakorieTV Outro Song Created by: https://soundcloud.com/divinewub/the-cranky-crew-a-tribute-to-old-friends #CrankGameplays CrankGameplays https://www.youtube.com/c/crankgame
[ "crankgameplays", "crank gameplays", "ice bath", "cold exposure", "cold shower", "cold water immersion therapy", "ice baths", "ice bath challenge", "crankgameplays vlogs", "ethan vlogs", "ethan", "ethan nestor", "crankgameplays irl" ]
2023-01-08T23:10:35
2024-02-07T17:15:50
1,295
PcFiu-mAdzY
Hello gamers. I've decided today that I'm going to vlog. Will this be a vlog that actually comes out? I don't know. I just got done at the gym. It was very hard workout. It was leg day. My legs are noodley. My trainer was like, I need you to take an ice bath today. And so I thought it would be a fun thing to film. So I need to go to CVS or whatever. Go and get some ice. I need to get some epsom salt as well. I thought that I'd film that and just kind of film the rest of my day. I want to do a day in the life video. I did one a few years ago back in like 2018 or 2019 where it was like my ideal day in the life because I just I'm trying to get my schedule to be better and recently I've been waking up at like 6 30 ish, so I'm gonna do that soon But I thought that it would be fun to vlog me doing the ice bath. I might start doing some more vlogs and stuff like that I don't it's just like kind of fun and I feel like most people like Seeing the day in the life kind of stuff like I just said I'm gonna do an actual day in the life thing I got new sunglasses And I like them one of the reasons why I want to start sort of documenting More of my life one. I've been training a lot more and I've just been trying to get in a good shape And so it's been cool to just like see my progress I think I'm really excited because as many of you know I used to be a gymnast and it was really intense I was training Like five or six days a week It was a lot more intense though because usually now if I'm training I'm training for like An hour and when I was a gymnast I was working out for three to four hours every day One of the things that got me being like, ah, I kind of want to document me training is Cody Co's channel Cody trains but watching those videos has been cool to see him train and so I thought Maybe I would do something similar. We're at CVS now and then we're gonna do the ice bath When I get home This is gonna make me shit my pants I don't want to poop in a tub Okay, I got the I got the ice the ice has been secured but also the battery and my key died and I I had to take the little key and use it like a normal key What so it's time to go home. You guys who get to see Spence here. He'll be very excited to see you in the vlog You'll also get to see Jerry but the plan for the rest of this video If you want a plan, I guess we're gonna do the ice bath right away I guess that makes sense and then I'll just take a normal shower I also I got my hair done yesterday and like it looks good But I made the mistake and I didn't know that this was a mistake because nobody tells me even the hairdresser Was like, yeah, I feel like we should give a warning to people and I was like, yeah I feel like you should after this awful experience that I Had now I went to go and get my hair bleached and cut again But I washed my hair before going because I had just worked out and so it was sweaty and gross But apparently if you wash your hair before getting your Head bleached you wash all of the oils off of your scalp and that kind of protects against the bleach So I literally have scabs on my head now and it hurt so bad. Anyway That was my day yesterday. We're gonna go take an ice bath It may or may not feel it's not gonna feel good. It's gonna be terrible, especially so here's the thing I'm not doubting my trainer's knowledge But what I am saying is that I thought if you combine ice and salt It gets super cold and like burns you so should I put epsom salt in with the ice I'm gonna do some of my own research I want to make sure that I don't have a burning sensation part two because I did that yesterday so Anyway, I'll see you when I get home Okay, so I have done the research first of all Spencer says hi The internet says that it's fine and that it actually helps The ice bath because that helps relax your muscles. Also, this is Jerry Jerry say say hi say hi to everyone. Uh, yeah, so it's um It's time and I'm not looking forward to it. Here we go. We have the ice gamers and it's time to transport the ice from the ice Bag into the tub. I have a bath mat. That's a pair of tits. Okay, so I have The ice I guess I'll just fill up the tub I was about to put warm water in because that's what I would normally do In a tub scenario when I'm taking a bath Um, that's where I poop Just giving you a little insight. So the next thing I guess which is the epsom salt that has laxatives in it It's all two cupfuls of this per gallon of water. I don't know how many gallons Oh my god, this water without ice is cold. I'm getting nervous gamers. I'm getting nervous, but it's time for the actual ice part Of the ice bath. Wouldn't it be good if you could see please don't Fall into the water Okay, oh, yeah, oh, yeah, okay So I have four bags of ice which now in hindsight. I feel like Isn't nearly enough. There are only five pound bags. That's all CVS had And I'm just one man. How can I do more to sweeten the deal? I'm also putting in All of the ice from my fridge. There we go Yeah, it's really fucking cold and now we add in The epsom salt. I'll use this much. Is this too much? It's probably fine It's probably enough. It is time. Oh my god. That is so fucking cold bringing over this So I can quickly get out and go into the shower Okay, here we go. Here we go. Set a timer for 10 minutes That's the maximum amount of time I'm gonna this is my first ice bath like since doing it for like A video for the goof. So we'll see how long I can actually last in this. Here we go. Sensor out my feet Oh my god, that is so fucking cold. Fuck. This is gonna suck. This is gonna suck. This is gonna suck Look at the air coming up from my bosses. Just kidding. That's my penis. It's that big Oh my god This is not Fun. I like can't talk because it's so cold Breathe boy Breathe I might be done. It's so cold Is it still going? Yep. Hi. Okay. I gotta go get in the shower I've done it. Yeah, that was not fun Um, I have to again, this is my first ice bath. So I gotta like Train myself into working up because it was so shockingly cold. Bunch of people are probably gonna be like You're a pussy. You didn't ask wrong enough in the tub. Me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me. Okay Shut up. I don't care But I think I was probably in there for like Maybe two minutes. Now I'm putting my foot back in. Oh my god. That is so fucking cold. So now I guess I'm just going to get dressed and do videos It's Christmas Eve Eve. So I do have plans tonight. Jocelyn who a lot of you guys probably know Some of you probably don't know she's my assistant. She's great But I'm not going home for the holidays And so she texted my mom and was like, what do you usually make on Christmas because Ethan's not coming home. And so on Christmas Eve Eve I want to cook him a meal of what you would make which is really really sweet really really nice So she's coming over later to make um a fish chowder that my grandfather always makes But now I need to go and record I'm gonna get dressed. I'll keep you updated. Hello. It's later now Um, I didn't go and record after uh after doing the ice bath I made a thumbnail for tomorrow's video and did some other stuff. But now I'm making a fire my good pal Justin who owns Jerry the dog that you met earlier He gave this to me as a random gift. It's it's just a fire pit It's a little solo stove as it's called and it's just been really nice Like a nice way for me to chill out at the end of the day is just I sit out here on my little balcony And I make a little fire. I really like my making fires a lot I used to do it a lot as a kid because in the house that I grew up in we had a fireplace So my brother and I would make fires a lot especially during the winter time So it's a nice it's a nice thing to just chill out here And make a little fire. I have a little drink whether it's a little What is this a mango orange sparkling water or maybe a crap and crack an open a beer with the boys, you know But look at that, huh? Look at that. Damn son You shit with that ass That you do So yep, that was the fire, but it's a nice way to just like chill out at the end of the day I don't know where I'm gonna pick up pick up this vlog next Because I don't think the video is gonna end here Maybe I'll give you some stuff tomorrow because tomorrow is saturday. It's christmas eve one and right now I don't work out on the weekends at all. I just do monday through friday But especially tomorrow because it's christmas eve So maybe I'll just wake up and do a little vlog of Of my whole day and we'll see you. We'll see what happens Good morning So I lied to all of you because it is now december 26 I did not vlog on christmas eve like I said I would and I did not vlog on christmas And I didn't say that I would so it's actually fine ready Be free It is the the day after christmas. It's the 26th today. I woke up at 6 30 to the sound of my alarm and I said hey This bitch has got to get some stuff done today. So we're gonna go and get some stuff done today. I don't know if you guys wow Look at this cool lighting It is tough to be alive. I don't know what you guys are like in the morning, but usually Hey, it's too early for that Wait, there's a person at the front door I'm not checking that. I'm not awake yet But today some things that I need to do one I need to record some stuff because I am going to visit Sean and Evelyn In the UK I think we're gonna record choo-choo charles. I think I'm gonna record I need to record my like bye-bye 2022 I have I have a list in my office, but I got these notepads That I'm really excited about that are just blind notepads But at the start of everyone there's a little box for a check mark because I really like a physical list It's nice. Good morning. He wants a little ball time. This ball is fucking gross, bud I'm going to Make coffee for myself now So Have you guys ever heard of top of the morning coffee? God, I don't have the bag But the beans are in the machine and they're about to get grinded up and put into my ass Top of the morning coffee. It goes in your ass You know a lot of people ask me what's the first thing you do when you wake up Well, I always start my mornings the same with a nice fresh cup of top of the morning coffee And even more people ask me why top of the morning? It's because our favorite youtuber drinks it Jacksepticeye, it's because it tastes better than every other brand of coffee I'd imagine if I tried other brands of coffee, but most importantly, it's because it fucking rules, dude It's because without top of the morning coffee I wouldn't have my 3.5 million dollar salary 17 los angeles apartment complex is 12 malibu homes 14 malibu stasis 9 spouses three super yachts six additional fingers on my right hand two fingers falling off my left hand lost a vision Out of my left eye blunt for trauma and the will to carry on But do you want to know the real reason that during top of the morning? It's because I can do what I want I'm an adult blow me Top of the morning coffee I have coffee now um a lot of people You can see my nipples through the shirt Mommy a lot of people don't like this mug How did on live streams before and people are not about it and why aren't they about it? People don't like being able to see what's in it. I guess I have no problem. I actually really like these mugs I kind of like that they're clear. It's kind of cool, but they're also fucking massive So that's really why I like it a lot. So if you don't like my mug Go fuck your shaft. This is the little list thing that I was talking about. Look at this. Isn't this cool? I don't know how cool this is, but it's just a list. It's just a normal little List, but it's got a little checkboxes on it Which I really like I like to physically check things off tip for adp people sometimes doing a physical thing Rather than writing something down in your phone where it just gets lost into the abyss I don't have an issue with losing these and a lot of people have issues with object permanence with adhd Which I mean, I also do but I I don't seem to lose the lists a lot, which is nice I do also just kind of keep them in my pocket But I like having a physical list and it's also really satisfying when you get to check something off But let's see I wrote down some things that I need to do. I need to clean out my fridge before I leave I want to go and get a new comforter cover while I'm at target And then the last thing I need to do is buy film for my little film camera Um, that I'll be bringing to the uk because I'm not gonna film anything while I'm there film because Because it's it shoots on Recordings that I need to do I need to do choo choo charles. I need to do ticktocks my favorite ticktocks of the year Goodbye 2022 Those are the three priorities. I'm gonna put little stars next to these I also have goats and three on here because I haven't played that yet. I am Jesus Christ is a game Just came out There's a common sense test that I want to do and then if I have extra time Yeah, a three scary games. I'm very excited for this new year coming up. Um, I really just I know that I'd say this all the time. We'll see if this actually means anything later But I really want to focus on like being more consistent this year and I'm already feeling more consistent in other ways in my life Like I was saying at the beginning of this vlog. I've been working out almost every day and that's been really really good for Obviously my physical health, but my mental health too because doing the same thing Every day or almost every day is just really good for my brain I think it's really hard for me and it's really stressful for me when I'm not doing something Uh habitually and I think that that's been the hardest thing for videos and stuff these last few years Is that I just haven't gotten into the habit of like posting every day or posting almost every day I really want to try and do that and a lot of people are like either you don't need to post every day for I know that I don't and I am not necessarily going to but I think that I need to start making Uh a schedule for myself where maybe I record at least one thing every day or almost every day Just to keep in the habit because that's better for my brain to keep the habit because if I stop the habit then it just Crumbles do you know what I mean? Anyway, um, I'm gonna go check some stuff off this list so See you in a bit. Okay, uh, I just did a recording of tutu. Charles I have a little less than an hour until I need to be at the gym But I haven't eaten any breakfast and I don't really have any breakfast food currently So I might leave early and go and get Some breakfast food. I did just received a A a gift not a gift for me a gift from me to somebody. It's not an exciting gift But I'm excited about it at the game grumps office I love the game grumps everybody there But I was recording guest grumps with them a little bit ago and all of their mic cables are the same color Which is fine, but it's also sometimes annoying being like which mic is which when all the mic Uh cables look the same and so I got them. I got air in a pink one because it's his favorite color I got the guest mic orange like the game grumps logo And then I got dan a blue one because blue is his favorite color Except I actually ordered another blue one because dan's favorite color is like a light blue But the this the preview image on the website was Much lighter than this like this is like a really dark blue. So I ordered another one that is much lighter I'm excited to give them those because I think I think it'll be kind of fun Okay, it's gym time. I might be a bad little boy and just stop at mcdonald's or something because I don't want to go to the gym on an empty stomach. So I might just like grab it Egg McMuffin depending on if people are there or not I might film but I don't like filming if other people are there Because uh, I don't want to make people feel uncomfortable But we're going to meet up with my trainer andre who has been in a couple videos He was in that video a long time ago where I did the like anime workout That was him and alex who is marx trainer just going in for a normal workout today The last workout before my little vacation. So he's probably gonna kill me So I can't Can't wait for that I've finished the workout right before vacation Andre killed me And guess what? It's the Christmas season and it's almost a new year Until you want to get in shape Or you can train with andre over zoom But I can't zoom in If people want to work out with you, how do they do it? Get in contact with me through instagram andre kim underscore And then have a look at the editing put it right there Wow, it's so great. It feels so good It's always so good to work out But it also hurts a lot Oh, I need to go to the target. I need to go and get things for the trip I need to get a new suitcase. I need to get it on my list But yeah, that workout was rough. But yeah, if you um If you want to be trained by andre, he's doing stuff over zoom, but don't Hit him up and ask him questions about me. Okay. I know that people have done that in the past Because he's told me please don't do that. It's really weird and it's disrespectful Uh and not cool. I have returned It took way longer than I thought but I got a little small suitcase now I need to eat and I need to take a shower And get unstinky and then I I'm gonna record tiktoks of the year and Bye bye 2022 and then I'm just gonna clean. I think a little bit. Um, just do some general Cleaning and decluttering. Oh, fuck. I need to do laundry Uh, yeah, yep. Yeah, I also realized while I was in target Um that uh, I was still wearing this and I was like you can definitely see my nipples through it so Whoops
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Single Use Plastics: Slayer of Environment || UPSC Current Affairs || SIA || Mains & Prelims '23
In this video, we have discussed about the Single Use plastic ban and the ill effects of Single Use Plastics on the environment, a topic important in UPSC CSE Prelims and Mains GS paper 3. #Plastics #BisphenolA #singleuseplastics #plasticban #plasticpollution #environment #environmentforupsc #environmentforcompetitiveexams #science #UPSC #upscmotivation #upscpreparation #upscexam #currentaffairs Link for daily ‘The Hindu’ news analysis - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPiW7xDrJhw&list=PLolj3WrQmJe6eQA2s1SujU_WfN947VEFQ
[ "shankar ias academy", "daily current affairs", "the hindu news analysis", "current affairs", "shankar current affairs", "best current affairs", "upsc preparation", "upsc daily news current affairs", "best news analysis in youtube upsc", "shankar news analysis", "Daily News", "UPSC News", "Todays News", "News Analysis", "UPSC", "Current Affairs Hindu Newspaper Analysis", "October 2022", "UPSC CURRENT AFFAIRS", "UPSC October", "News for UPSC September", "Daily Newspaper Analysis", "October" ]
2022-11-01T08:00:18
2024-02-05T16:15:55
179
pCsxjOKlE2w
Have you all heard about an EDM? All back but no bite. Today's topic is one such topic. Yes, we are going to learn about single use plastics. Do you know what are all the harmful effects of single use plastics? Just stay tuned in this video. Now coming to the term single use plastics. See single use plastics are low utility, high littering potential plastics which are used and disposed by humans in a very short period of time. To be precise, they are used only once before they are disposed of. Some of the examples of a single use plastics are plastic carry bags, plastic flags, plastic sheets used for foot wrapping, spreading on dining table, plastic plates, plastic coated tea cups, plastic water packets, plastic straws etc. Remember to uphold the spirit of Azadika Amrit Mahotsa, a defining step to curb pollution caused by littering and unmanaged plastic waste was taken by the Union government. What it did? It banned the manufacture, import, stocking, distribution, sale and the use of identified single use plastic items all over the country from July 1, 2022. So to implement the ban strictly across India, Central Pollution Control Board had been issuing directions towards state counterparts. Now with this basic information, let us see some of the ill effects of single use plastics on our environment. Firstly, human health. See human health is harmed by single use plastics. When left to degrade, single use plastics leech many harmful chemicals into the environment like Bisfinol A. They release endocrine disrupting chemicals that bio-chimulate in humans and can cause cancer and impact reproductive hormones. Secondly, single use plastics which are also micro plastics get in the mouth, stomachs and digestive systems of fishes, birds and animals. This is making it hard for them to breathe and eat. The non-decomposition of all these plastics becomes part of the food chain of aquatic and subsequently human life also. Now thirdly, as you know, single use plastic is produced from fossil fuels. The process of extracting and creating these plastics emits huge amount of greenhouse gases. Therefore, single use plastics increases the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. So this is all regarding the effects of single use plastics. So through this discussion we came to know about single use plastics and the ill effects of single use plastics. So to know more environment related articles, just subscribe to Shankarai's Academy YouTube channel. Thank you for listening.
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UCu3Ri8DI1RQLdVtU12uIp1Q
Sizzle Reel | AWS re:Invent 2019.
Watch our top highlights from AWS re:Invent 2019.
[ "SiliconANGLE Media Inc", "SiliconANGLE", "SiliconANGLE Inc", "theCUBE", "Wikibon", "John Furrier", "Dave Vellante" ]
2020-02-25T18:36:37
2024-02-05T08:42:48
887
pC_2z3WXrOc
I'll sort of build on some of Ben's comments because I think what he articulated is one of the killer use cases of VMware Cloud on AWS that I think is driving that momentum, which is we think it's one of the best solutions in the marketplace, and customers have told us this, to enable them to migrate and modernize. So let's talk about the migrate piece first. When you have customers that have these tremendous enterprise class applications running on vSphere and their data centers, they're built on top of that platform, they depend upon it for performance, availability, everything else. With VMware Cloud on AWS, we can migrate those applications with zero downtime, no refactoring, no additional costs, in a matter of weeks or months, as opposed to if you had to refactor everything to take years and millions of dollars, right? So that cloud migration use case, I would say is the killer for us and that's exactly what Ben was referring to. No, we're definitely seeing that, and I think that's the thing that really got me excited about a year ago, was watching enterprises make that transition and say, you know what, the center of gravity has gone from architectures inside the on-prem data center, is now moved to in the cloud. I mean, that shift has happened, it happened, people talked about it five years ago, but they didn't mean it. And now when you talk to enterprises, they are actually moving into the cloud, not just talking about it, and they're saying that is the center of gravity. And what's interesting to me was, I think even just the tone of Andy Jassy today and what he was talking about was it's, once you define what your architecture is, you push it everywhere. So cloud 1.0 and 2.0 was really more about taking my architecture that was on-prem and pushing it into the cloud. So let me take a virtual appliance, a virtual router, basically my hardware router, package it up, put it on the cloud. That's not cloud native, it's cloud naive as we talk, right? And so what's the change that's happened is now everybody realizes the center of gravity is in the cloud and you start seeing things like outposts, you see things like wavelength, you see things like, you know, TGW network manager, things getting pushed out, the architecture of the cloud, now actually pushing out and extending out into on-premises. I've been at it for a couple of decades. So in the beginning, there was a lot of evangelism that this is safe, it's consumable by the enterprise, it's not some kind of crazy idea to bring open source, you're not going to lose your intellectual property or things like that. Those days, I mean, I'm sure you could find an exception, but those days are largely over in the sense that open source has gone mainstream, so I would say open source is one. Most large enterprises have an open source strategy. They consider open source as critical to not only how they source software from vendors, but also how they build their own applications. So the world has really, really evolved and now it's really a question of where are you partnering with vendors to build infrastructure that's critical to your business but not your differentiator and where are you leveraging open source internally for you to differentiate your business? And I think, you know, it's a more sophisticated view, it's not the safety question, it's not is it legally, you know, you're bringing legal concerns into the picture, it's really a much different conversation and people in the enterprise are looking, how can we contribute to these projects? So it's really, it's pretty exciting actually. Both are a great place for startups, right? They're not meat exclusive. So I think if you go horizontal, the amount of data being created by your applications, your infrastructure, your sensors, time series data, ridiculously large amount, right? And that's not going away anytime soon. I recently did an investment in Chronosphere as you guys covered over at KubeCon a few weeks ago that's talking about metrics and observability data, time series data. So they're going to handle that horizontal amount of data, petabytes and petabytes, how can we query this quickly, deeply with a lot of insight? That's one play, right? Cheaper, better, faster at scale. The next play, like I said, is vertical. It's how do I own data, or slice the data with more context than no one else can have? We talked about like the virtual cycle of data, right? The system of intelligence, if you will. If I own a set of data, be healthcare, government, or self-driving car data that no one else has, I can build a solution end to end and go deep. And so either pick a lane or pick a geography, you can go either way. It's hard to do both though. It's hard, for startup. For startup. Any big company. Very few companies can do two things well. Startups especially, it's a seed by doing one thing very well. I mean, I'm impressed they got two CEOs, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, the CEO of Cerner coming to the show. It's kind of rare that the CEO of your customer comes to the show. I guess the second thing I'd say is, Amazon is not a rinse and repeat company at these shows, although they are when it comes to shock and awe. So they tick the box on shock and awe. But you're right, John. They're talking a lot about transformation. I would sort of think of it as disruption. Here's what I would say to that. Amazon has a dual disruption agenda. One is it's disrupting the horizontal technology stack. And two, it's disrupting industries. It wants to be the platform of which startups in particular, but also incumbents can disrupt industries. And it's in their DNA because it's in Amazon's DNA. And I guess the last thing I'll say is, Amazon is the retail, Amazon retail is the you can buy anything here store. And now to your point, Justin, Amazon web services is you can get AWS anywhere at the edge in the little mini data centers that they're being at on outposts and of course in the cloud. Absolutely. You know, I'd say primarily we're most kind of pleased with the variety of workloads and use cases that customers are bringing us into. You know, I think when we started out on this journey, we saw a tremendous promise for the technology to really improve the AWS ecosystem and customer experience for people that wanted to consume block storage in the cloud. What we learned as we started working with customers is that because of the way we've architected the product brought a lot of the same capabilities and deliver on our flash arrays today into AWS, it's allowed customers to take us into all the same types of workloads that they put flash arrays into, right? So that's their tier one, you know, mission critical environments, their VMware workloads, their Oracle workloads, their SAP workloads. They're also looking at us from everything from, you know, to do lift and shift, test and dev in the cloud, as well as DR, right? And that again, I think, you know, speaks to a couple of things. It speaks to the durability, the higher level of service that we're able to deliver in AWS, but also the compatibility with which we're able to deliver the same sets of features and, you know, have it operating exactly the same way on-prem in the cloud. Because look, if you're going to DR, the last time, you know, the last point in time you want to discover that there's a caveat, hey, this feature doesn't quite work the way you expect is when you have a DR failover. And so the fact that we set out with this mission in mind to create that exact level of sameness, you know, it's really paying dividends in the types of use cases that customers are bringing us into. No, I think we're delighted. You know, Mike obviously and I have been friends for years. He's had some connections with VMware in his past that certainly helped in setting up his partnerships. We're grateful to Mike and Andy and the team for that. And it's, you know, two and a half to three years now since we announced it. Tremendous amount of customer interest. Listen, you know, we said at the beginning of this when you take sort of the king of the public cloud and the king of the private cloud together and don't force customers to say these have to be separate doors. You can do them both together. Customers like that message and what we've been really doing over the course of the last 12, 18 months is perfecting use cases for this platform. I think to us the key word is migrations, cloud migrations. When people are moving their workloads off an app off VMware vSphere or our cloud foundation we want this to be the best place for it to land. VMware, cloud and AWS for a migration opportunity. And anything short of that refactoring app would be, you know, not something that would be a good use of people's time and money because they should be then modernizing with all the wonderful services that Amazon's built once they've migrated. So we've really perfected our message in the course of the last six, 12 months to two Ms. Migrate and modernize, migrate and modernize. So we could migrate you into this avenue and then modernize with a set of container and other services. So that message working we put on stage at VMworld and there are many of them here, two big Amazon customers, VMware, cloud and Amazon, Freddie Mac and IHS market. And they were telling our tens of thousands of customers at those shows and similarly many of them here that that's the best option to be able to do things. Yeah, so if you know public sector, public sector actually has a lot of windows or Microsoft workloads in it. And so we're seeing a lot of public sector customers looking to modernize their windows workloads. In fact, we made several announcements just yesterday around helping more public sector customers modernize. For example, one is a Windows Server 2003 and 2008 will go out of support. And so we have a great new offering with technology that can help them to not refactor but actually abstract those layers and move quickly to 2016 and 2019 because both of those will go out of support in January. And Dave mentioned cloud first strategies but we're also seeing a lot of movement around data. Data is really powerful. Andy mentioned this as well yesterday but for example in our partner keynote where I just came from, we had on stage Avis. Now Avis, not public sector customer but what they're doing is the gentleman said your car can now talk to you and that data is now being given to local state officials, local city officials. They can use it for emergency response systems so that public and private use of data coming together is also a big trend that we're seeing. It's all about breaking down, I mean, if DevOps was all about breaking down silos between Dev and operations and other parts of the business, DevSecOps or secure DevOps or whatever we want to call it is just bringing more people into the fold and helping security join that party and get at things earlier in the cycle so we can catch it before it, before there's a breach that's in the news. Yeah, so I think there's going to continue to be convergence between Amazon Business and AWS over time and the marketplace. We offer kind of a goods marketplace, they offer a software marketplace and a services marketplace and so I think we're still working on how do we harmonize that experience better and we've got a lot of work to do there. We have a saying at Amazon that it's always day one and that's a great example where we still have a lot of work to do but one of the things that is another one of our partners, Koopa, which is a procure to pay platform and a long time Amazon business partner, we've done some pretty creative things to improve the user experience and make it easier for customers to use both Koopa and Amazon Business and concert together. Koopa announced a couple of months ago that they've built an integration to the AWS marketplace and so that's a pretty exciting opportunity where people who are provisioning services via the AWS marketplace can have that transaction flow seamlessly into their procure to pay solution and let the user who's provisioning that focus on what they want to do which is developing new solutions to serve customers. I mean the spectrum's massive so our biggest challenge is keeping up with everything and continuing to innovate with all the things that are happening but again the benefits of the platform that we have enables us to do that and the enhancements we made this year. Now that our platform is more open we can collect data from multiple entities not just the new relic agents that we were built on so the concept of observability and being able to observe the entire application environment is built on the fact that data's got to come from all these different places then we need to turn that around and curate it into the right experience and the right use case that the customer's looking for. So all I can say is that our company's built on innovation we try and stay on the cutting edge of all that try and stay current with that and meet the customer's needs as everyone here is innovating like crazy at scale. Well I mean there's a lot of a lot of the technology we build comes from things that we're doing ourselves and that we're learning ourselves it's kind of how we started thinking about microservices, serverless too we saw the need, we would have we would build all these functions that when some kind of object came into an object store we would spin up compute all those tasks would take like three or 400 milliseconds then we'd spin it back down and yet we'd have to keep a cluster up in multiple availability zones because we needed that fault tolerance and it was, we just said this is wasteful that's part of how we came up with Lambda and when we were thinking about Lambda people understandably said well if we build Lambda and we build a serverless event driven computing a lot of people who are keeping clusters of instances aren't going to use them anymore it's going to lead to less absolute revenue for us but we have learned this lesson over the last 20 years at Amazon which is if it's something that's good for customers you're much better off cannibalizing yourself and doing the right thing for customers and being part of shaping something and I think if you look at the history of technology you always build things and people say well that's going to cannibalize this and people are going to spend less money what really ends up happening is they spend less money per unit of compute but it allows them to do so much more that they ultimately long term end up being more significant customers look I mean the show as Dave Vellante says Amazon always delivers with the shock and awe brought us in the deepest so many pieces here I took a selfie with many people and the biggest celebrity of the show AWS Outpost the rack it's over in the corner there and people are asking me about all the gear inside I said you should stop asking about that because you will never touch it only AWS will so put a curtain around it it's managed as a service and that's what I think people are still trying to understand we've been talking about cloud for what 15 years now but Amazon's positioning on cloud is still different than everyone else's when I think back to some of the waves there's that buzzword and there's one or two that really architecturally are different and deliver and Amazon laid out their strategy even more and through the geeky pieces and transformation was the theme
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This Makes the Holy Spirit Happy #Shorts
#Shorts Did you know that this makes the Holy Spirit happy? For more content, watch my video, “Holy Spirit Loves to See This, but Few Christians Do It,” by clicking here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hG6z8dqhvwM&list=PLyPy6sEo_wifRjopDQf_YvKFi7go2Ej-U&index=15 ______________________________ 📩 Sign up to receive updates, free content, and more from David via email: http://www.davidhernandezministries.com/email ______________________________ 🟢 Give a single gift to help fund our livestreams, content, events, and more: http://www.davidhernandezministries.com/donate ______________________________ 🤝 Become a monthly ministry supporter. Partner with David for as low as $15 a month: http://www.davidhernandezministries.com/partner ______________________________ 🗓 Upcoming Events - Come experience the presence and power of the Holy Spirit. See David's ministry event schedule: http://www.davidhernandezministries.com/events ______________________________ 📚 David’s books and ministry apparel: https://www.davidhernandezministries.com/shop ______________________________ Receive Livestream text alerts. Text LIVE to 747474 ______________________________ Receive ETV content right to your phone. Text ETV to 747474 ______________________________ #EncounterTV #DavidDigaHernandez #God #HolySpirit #HolyGhost #Unity #WordOfGod #Spiritual #SpiritualGrowth #Christians #Christianity
[ "This Makes the Holy Spirit Happy #Shorts", "Does it Matter if I'm Mad at a Another Christian", "Does the Bible Say I Shouldn't Be Upset with Other Christians", "Do I Really Have to Get Along with Other Christians", "Does God Want Every Christian to Get Along", "Encounter TV", "David Diga Hernandez", "David Diga Hernandez Holy Spirit" ]
2023-08-03T12:00:42
2024-02-05T07:38:25
46
pCBSXME0EXI
Holy Spirit loves when we do this. Here's a challenge. Do all that you can to live in peace with everyone. One way to keep the peace is to give others the benefit of the doubt. This doesn't mean that we're to be gullible, it just means that we refuse to jump to conclusions. How do you give the benefit of the doubt? Well, you allow people to explain themselves. Consider the difference between an offense and a perceived offense. Consider the words of others in full context. Let them tell you what they meant by what they said instead of their critics. Don't assume bad motives. Try not to take so many things so personal. Consider that someone might be in emotional or physical pain or stressed or confused. Look for opportunities to believe the best about people. Give the benefit of the doubt because
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UC3vBPQIJzgAfEpSl9RKmj4g
andre: Freifunk - Free and Open Wireless Community Networks
https://media.ccc.de/v/emf2016-236-freifunk-free-and-open-wireless-community-networks Freifunk is a volunteer operated wireless network offering city-wide intranet with local services and also anonymous internet access for free. 34,000+ nodes are currently available in more than 300 communities, mostly throughout Germany, but also beyond. Anybody can use it and anybody is encouraged to contribute to the network, whether it be by setting up nodes, providing services, or whatever they can think of. People offer Freifunk at home, in public places, conference rooms, on the street... everywhere. Socially, we thrive to mitigate the divide between those who can afford access to the net and those who cannot. We also provide connectivity to refugee camps. andre
[ "EMF", "EMF16", "Electro Magnet Field 2016", "Guildfort", "Hacker", "Security", "Hardware", "Rain" ]
2016-09-14T11:16:36
2024-02-05T07:27:09
1,858
pC2atv_ZPOc
Welcome to foreign language language class. So Freifunk is a German compound word and Frei means free and funk does not need funk. It means radio as in radio signal or radio transmission. So to put in more complicated words what we do is free and open wireless community networks. And before I get to the socially more acceptable stuff I'm gonna tell a little bit about like what's slightly special about the technology that we use. So what we do is mesh networking. Just imagine you have a couple of Wi-Fi routers like regular home devices distributed throughout your city that are symbolized by yellow anchors in this figure. Don't ask why yellow anchors it's a hammock thing. And the radio range is symbolized by a McGinty circle. So you would have maybe one router in one part of the town and two routers in another part of the town. And at the bottom of the screen you got three routers and the two can obviously talk to each other because they're in radio range of each other. But the three at the bottom are not. But still the left one can talk to the right one using the middle node. So and then you would find your end devices like smartphones, laptops, Raspberry Pi's whatever you hook up to it connected to your five from routers. Now every device in each of these clouds can talk to every other device within that same cloud. But what we want to do is build a citywide network. So we want it all to be connected into one and you cannot do that right now. So what we do is or what you could do is you could do a long distance radio links and we do that but it's a lot of work. EZR is for most people to hook up at least some of the routers to the internet. So we added gateway service and data centers and they would accept VPN tunnels and those five from routers could now make a tunnel connected to the gateway. And now we have one citywide network. Now every device within that network within the entire city connected to five phone can talk to it every other device. Due to some legal specialty in that we have in Germany and I don't want to get into the details because it probably doesn't apply to most other countries. We route all internet directed traffic through the gateway servers. So for example, you have your phone at the bottom of the screen and you got a service running at the top of the screen. Now the phone wants to talk to the service, wants to access it and the router which hosts the phone could send the traffic through various ways in this figure apparently. So it could take the direct route A through the VPN tunnel to the gateway onto the service but there's other ways as well. It could decide to do two wireless hops and then pass it on route B to another gateway server and then you see there's even more ways afterwards. So for those of you familiar with routing of course it's not uncommon to have more than one possibility but just imagine it looks slightly complicated here with just six routers. Just imagine you have a city with a thousand routers. This would be very complicated. And then participation in Freifunk is 100% voluntarily. So people turn off and on their routers all the time. So your network topology changes constantly and we use mostly Wi-Fi links and they're unreliable. So you don't want to just use any connection. You want to use the best connection and this is really where the mesh protocols come in. So to do this manually in a routing table which you probably could you would constantly have to update it second by second by second is just not reasonable. And this is what a mesh protocol does for you. So as you can tell mesh protocols are complex. They have to deal with that constantly changing topology. They have to deal with unreliable radio wings. You know there's people walking by antennas. People are bags of water essentially absorbing or reflecting microwaves. There's leaves in the trees. There's humidity like rain, fog or whatever. And so your radio links constantly change. All the quality does. And then you probably want to avoid certain things like routing loops. You don't want your packets to run in circles if there are any. You don't want your data to get lost. So mesh protocol has to handle that. And our goal at least is to make it widely affordable. So it has to perform on cheap home routers. And maybe you want to have special services like roaming. So you make a zip call with your mobile phone and you walk through the street from one Frivengrouter to the next and you don't want your connection to drop. So there's not one mesh protocol. There's many probably more than I listed here. So there's a better approach to mobile networking, Batman Advance, Babel, BMX, optimized link stage routing versions one and two. And you might be asking so which one is the best? And the answer is there is no answer to that. Actually a lot of research and a lot of brain cells went into development of these mesh protocols over the past 20 years. And that's not the one mesh protocol which does it all perfectly. And that's why actually why people meet once a year in some city in Europe and let their mesh protocols compete. So if you want to check out pros and cons of each mesh protocol, you could probably check betelmesh.org and see how they perform. What I can tell you is that at Freifunk we mostly use OSR and Batman Advance currently. But that may very well change in the future. So when I do a talk about Freifunk, I usually start out differently because like the regular people, not so tech savvy, they think the internet is their favorite homepage or, I don't know, the search engine or whatever. They don't have a clear picture in the head of what the internet is and how it works. So it's very hard for them to read their minds around the idea of what Freifunk is. I know I don't need to explain the internet in this audience. However, I'd like to point out some design goals. So obviously the internet is a coupling of multiple networks, hopefully redundant, was supposed to be distributed, no single entity controlling it, was supposed to be open and was supposed to be neutral. So the infrastructure is separate from the data which is transported and everything is treated equally. We all know what the state of the internet is, but I think those design goals are still valid. So what we do at Freifunk is open, free, free of charge, neutral and decentralized networks, plural actually, because it's not one network, it's many. Open to us means it's open for anybody to participate. I can take Hamburg as an example because I'm from there, so when you walk through the city, you would see a network SSID, Hamburg.freifunk.net and it's unsecured, so you can just click on it, you connect it, that's it. We don't want your name, we don't want your phone number, your credit card number, password, any kind of credentials, just use it and have fun, enjoy. More interestingly to you might be it's just as easy to participate on the providing side, so you can provide access by setting up a node or many nodes and you can run services within that network. I'll get into services later. So free is as in freedom, so we use mostly free software. We do it free of charge, so nobody earns any money with it. It's obviously then non-commercial and it's actually very good because we don't have that conflict of interest you might have with your commercial telecom on one side and its customers on the other side. Their interests might not always be the same. At Freifunk, hopefully all the decisions that we make are in the best interest of the users because the people operating the network are the people using the network and vice versa, so it's really a network for the people, by the people, anybody can participate on the administrative side as or just as like they can use it. Famous example of that where you have a conflict of interest with commercial telecoms is net neutrality, so of course it's good for every user. Some telecoms want to charge twice and so they are not net neutral. And as I said, it's decentralized network, so it's decentralized in a way. If you remember that picture of the mesh nodes, they are all operated by different people, so it's not one entity controlling it. It's very many people and there's not one Freifunk mesh network, there's very many. So actually we got currently more than 310 communities, mostly throughout Germany, some in Austria. I hope this can change after this talk. And if you want to check out that map live, you can do so at community.freifunk.net. Don't worry that it's HTTP, it's just a little forward to you to an encrypted side, it's just shorter. And it will list like all the attributes of those communities, like which mesh protocols they use, what their homepage is and so on. Once again, since I'm from Hamburg, I take Hamburg as an example. So you would see all those little dots over the map of Hamburg and all those Freifunk nodes. So currently we have more than 1000 nodes active and they are randomly distributed throughout the city because there is no plan behind. They are set up by random people in random places. So they operated basically anywhere in homes and rooftops, church towers and community centers, hex spaces of course, in cafes and venues anywhere. And two or three years ago, we started also to provide access to refugee camps. And I think that's very important to them, much more important than a lot of people think at first thought, you know, because they have friends and families get it throughout the entire world that they want to stay in touch with. They want to know what's going on in the home country that they came from. And they want to know how this country works that they live in now, which is so foreign to them. So in a lot of ways, or translation tools on the internet are very useful for them. So in a lot of ways, access and free access to the internet is much more important to them than it is to us. Can check out this map live. I'm going to explain a little bit to you what it does. So yeah, all these blue, red and green dots are five notes somewhere. And we'd see maybe like these long green lines, the color is the link quality. So you have bad links here, you got good links here. And these actually are long distance radio links. So this one's almost two kilometers long. It's got a transmission quality of 98%. And then since this mesh protocol does everything automatically, for example, these two, they are not it's not like they're antennas pointed at each other, they're just in range of each other. And they see each other, and they make a connection here, which is not very good in this case, but it works. It's also good, for example, to have as a backup. If the internet drops out, they can use the internet connection of the other one and vice versa. Okay, so you can take a look at the map in parallel at map, I'm open net and play with it. So you don't get support for me talking. I talked about a lot about nodes or access points or routers. What we use, we call them nodes, five nodes are basically mostly off the shelf routers. So you would have your regular omnidirectional antenna router, or sometimes we use section antennas, or these dishes that you see at the top for long distance radio links. And quite a lot of devices are supported. And what you would do is the unpack your router, go to the configuration interface and exchange the firmware, which is already on there by the vendor, with the Freifunk firmware. It's currently based on open WT might be lead in the future. We'll see. But the firmware details, like which mesh protocol they use, what services are pre installed on a router and running, that actually varies by community. So every community can do what they think is best for them. talked about services. Obviously, the most renowned and ask for service is internet access. But that's not so you can actually run services within that network that never have to go through the internet. They can but they don't have to. So what I've seen running on Freifunk networks is blocks encrypted video chat file sharing with FTP or C file that's kind of like Dropbox or whatever it's open source implementation. Get servers, new social instances, kind of like Twitter, also open source, sip telephony, mumble, radio streaming, podcasting, people run new servers or webcams or whatever, you know, and some people really do cool art installations with that always give like one example, because I think it's very funny. So somebody connected Raspberry Pi to his router and made it possible for anybody to upload videos to that Raspberry Pi, and the videos would be projected across the street from his house on the wall. So can think of anything that could go wrong with it. So Freifunk basically is what you make it. You know, if you have any idea, just do it. It's a network for you to play with. And I think that's kind of like really the hacker spirit behind it, you get something some infrastructure, somebody else built and you can build on it, you can participate in you can play with it, whatever. And that what makes it so much fun really. So people ask us a lot. So who are you? Who are these Freifunkers? Why do you do it for free? Are you crazy? And Freifunk is not one person or one set of persons is actually very many different factions that all think this is a good thing. So a lot of clubs support us, for example, especially like, if we want to sign a contract to get on a roof or whatever, then we need a legal person. So clubs like the CCC and others sign contracts for us. There's data senders giving us traffic, rec space, electricity, internet exchanges led us here. So we are AS4909 in Hamburg. And we would love to be here with you if you're within the same internet exchange, let us know. Sometimes municipalities or some cities say, hey, you can use our buildings or give us money or both or whatever. And basically, it's it's the average person of the street. So it's you and me and everybody and anyone can participate and it's all done by volunteers. Once again, nobody makes any money with it. And it's supposed to stay that way. That also means any type of skill is welcome. You know, you don't have to be a techie to participate. You can just, you know, if you want to do graphics or whatever, just do it. We're done security. So I said it's it's an open Wi-Fi, there's no password, which also means it's unencrypted. Apparently, you can also do encrypted open networks like they do here at camp. But we would have to type in some random credentials, at least, which would scare off most people. And we think this is the easiest way to do. Sometimes people say, Oh, how can you do that? It's unencrypted. People could sniff the traffic in the air, which is true. So they could sniff the traffic traffic between the end device and the access point, the range of Wi-Fi is obviously very limited. But the chances are there. On the other end, the chances people sniffing your traffic on the internet, if it's internet direct to traffic is 100%. If you want to be sarcastic about it, it's actually more than 100% because we know there's more than one party sniffing all of everybody's traffic. So the only thing keeping you safe is really enter encryption. That's what we tell people use enter encryption. You'll only save if the data is encrypted between you and the device you're communicating with. And then you don't have to trust us, me, anybody, it should matter which infrastructure you're running on can just use it. Another question that people ask us. So if I connect my free from grotto to my home network to give it internet access so it can set up a VPN tunnel, do I compromise my home network? And the answer is no, they are separated. This is a topic which is very dear to me, a long haul radio links, because I think it's just awesome fun. You get to see nice climb roofs and see beautiful panoramas of the city live in. But as you can tell from the pictures at the bottom, it's a lot more work than just a flesh or other connected to power. And that's it. So sometimes, first of all, you have to get onto the roof, which is more difficult than you would think takes us maybe nine months to negotiate with some building orders. And then maybe there's no electricity on a roof. So you have to set up the electricity, you have to if you're on top of the roof, you have to worry about lightning strike. So you have to really make a proper installation. And if you did all that, you probably want to put more than what one router on there. So you want to put a set of routers pointing in every direction and have more than one link. And you need to do a lot of manual click configuration. So it's a lot of work, but it's definitely worth it. Why do we do that gives you redundancy, the more connected the network is, the more direct links are between the nodes. The more redundancy you have, obviously, if some link drops out or your internet connection drops out, you can still use your radio link and so on. If your mesh protocol is smart. It will also give you a lot distribution. So it will sense some path is congested and take another route. And it gives you independence of the internet and only put like half jokingly here, democracy insurance. Unfortunately, we've seen over the last couple of years, what people do with the internet. So there's no fear traffic, they censor the internet, they turn it off altogether. And this would be a network which is decentral and still works when the internet is turned off. So it's still have a way to communicate. I don't want to let you off on a sad note. So I really want to tell you that it's a lot of fun. And you get to play with hardware that maybe you have at home, but most people don't. You get to go to places that you probably wouldn't go if you look very closely, there's somebody hanging with a drill in his hand off the top of that building installing antennas. And you get to install Wi Fi in the most random places and make people really happy. And my message would be copy what we do, build on it, feed it back to the community, set up your free from community today. Thanks. Time for questions. Right. Cool. Thank you very much, Andre. Yeah, we've got time for a few questions. If only it's got one. I've got one to begin with. So if we want to, if I want to create a thrive on the node in my home, what would I need to do practically speaking? Yeah, starting out is a little bit difficult because you have to set up the entire different infrastructure. So what you would have to do for, for example, you would have to make a decision for which firmware you use. Obviously, you could build your own firmware based on open WT or open or any other open firmware. But that would be very difficult, or you could choose one which is already out there and configure it for your purposes. This is the router side. And then on the backhand side, you would have to send a set up some central infrastructure, at least if you do it the way we do, because some services are unfortunately, still centralized, because we cannot do it any other way. So for example, IPv6, you know, network works without any central components, but for IPv4, we need DHCP running on DHCP servers. So you would have to set up that. Or if you want to use gateways, because in your country, you have to route the traffic through gateways, then you would have to set up those. So starting out is not that easy, but lots of people have done it. So there's more than 300 communities. And I think lots more people could do it. So to start, if you've got a public IP address at home, you can't just flash a router and plug it in. It's a bit more than that. You could. But it would be by itself, you know, it won't be connected to any of it. Yeah, you can add more nodes. And if they're in radio range of each other that it would automatically connect, you could talk within that little network then, and let it grow from there. Cool. And how long has it taken to get from the beginning of Freifunk in Germany to the 300,000 nodes you have now? 34,000, sorry. Okay, not quite as much. So I think Freifunk started out sometime in 2003, I wasn't participating back then. And then it grew rapidly. And then the last change in Germany, and which is almost killed it, until people found other ways to compensate with that. So too difficult to explain. But people have found other arrangements, how they can deal with that. And then it grew back again. So and in the last two or three years, it grew rapidly to the size that we have now. Cool. We got any other questions from anyone here? Oh, yeah, I'll take it around. I'll be upright. Hi. Is it completely legally? Yes. You don't need any licenses to put your... Yeah, we use Wi-Fi, which is publicly accessible. Anybody can use it. Once again, certain frequencies in a five gigahertz band, for example, are limited in use. In Germany, you would go to the Bundesnetzagent 2 and say, hey, I want to use those frequencies, can I? And they might allow you or not. I don't know how it is in England, for example. But actually, most frequencies you can just use, yeah. And do you know if the free net of Fryfunk net in the Netherlands? I don't know of anything. Maybe there's something which is similar. There's, for example, I don't know about the Netherlands, but in Spain, there's Guifi, which is also a community operated network. They also do fiber optic cables and lots of other stuff. Athens has a big network, which is slightly similar to ours. So there are similar communities in other countries, yeah. And there are plans to connect them, the countries and... Not really. We could. It's possible. Because if we are at the same internet exchange point, or through something which we call Intercity VPN, which is also a VPN connecting not routers to gateway servers, but networks to each other. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Thank you very much. Welcome. We had another question back somewhere. So do you have to ask for permission when you want to install something on top of a building? You have to... Depends. When you live there, you can just do it, I guess. If you want to get on the rooftop, you might have to ask your landlord. Depends on who owns the building. If it's a city building, so you might want to go to the city and ask him if you could use it. Okay. Thanks. So you don't currently have any locations outside of Germany? No locations that call themselves Freifunk. As I said, there are other similar networks, but they might be called differently. And I don't know them all. And how do you pose internet access working for those locations if they're trying to get out on that network, if they're in a different country? Okay. You mean if somebody would set up Freifunk in a different country, like as their own network or... Yeah. So somebody creates their own network over in the UK and they're trying to... Somebody connects their network and they're trying to connect to the internet. Right. They would basically have to set up the same infrastructure that we did. It's basically the question that the host asked in the beginning, what I would have to do to start a network like this. So I would have to create firmware for my routers and I would have to do some backbone infrastructure on the other hand. And you would have to set that up. Obviously, you could just take a router from some other city and connect it through a VPN tunnel. But that's not what we want to do. We don't want to just be a VPN offloader. We want to build a city-nigh-wide radio network. Hopefully, that answers the question. Did you mention that Austria was connected? Yes. They call it Funkfire, but it's very similar. All right. So effectively, they have their own AS number, do they? Effectively? Yeah. So if a Freifunk network was to be done in the UK, you'd probably suggest having its own AS number as well. Absolutely. And we are not one AS in Germany either. So there's many ASs for each community if they have that. But you'd have recipes and firmware that people could customize, for example? Exactly. So everything is open source. You can find it on GitHub and we would love for people to use what we built. So with the connectivity from your current Freifunk nodes, where they hop onto the internet is that generally an exchange point for each city that they each node would have a radio link to, as opposed to everyone's home, current internet connection? It's both. So it depends how you router connects to that gateway server could either be through a VPN tunnel or direct radio link. Okay. Do we have any other questions? No. Oh, yeah, we do. In terms of IP addressing, if I would set up a web server, would it just use its existing public address, or do you use like an internal range for their internal services? Did you want to you want to make it accessible as an internal service? Yeah, we'll say Freifunk. So for IPv4, it depends on the community. And so I can only speak for Hamburg, how we do it for IPv4. We have local RFC 1918 addresses. And so you could not connect to the internet with IPv4, but we have public IPv6 space. So your service would be accessible from the Freifunk network and also in the public internet. Super. Okay. I think that's it for a question. So, Andre, thank you very much indeed for telling us all about Freifunk. Thanks for having me.
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Channel Partners 2016: Momentum Telecom Talks Awards, Growth in 2016
Live from the showfloor of CPEvolution 2016, JSA TV sits down with Jamie Minner, Vice President of Sales for Momentum Telecom, a premier provider of Business Voice, Broadband Management and Unified Communications solutions. Momentum Telecom's specialty is its implementation process, differentiating it from other UC providers in the industry. The company also talks about its acquisition of Alteva in January 2016. Watch to learn more or visit http://momentumtelecom.com/.
[ "Telecom interviews", "Telecommunications interviews", "Executive telecom discussion", "Technology video", "Technology videos", "telecom videos", "JSA TV", "Momentum Telecom", "channel partners evolution", "CP Evolution", "channel partner tv", "Alteva acquisition", "Unified Communications", "Vonage" ]
2016-09-16T13:02:37
2024-02-05T08:32:50
128
PcLP8AldVhE
This is JSA TV, the newsroom for tech and telecom professionals. I'm Dean Perine and welcome to JSA TV. We're coming at you live from the show floor at Channel Partners Evolution in our nation's capital of Washington, D.C. And I'm standing here. I wish I was standing. Actually, I'm glad I'm sitting. I'm here with my new friend, Mr. Jamie Minner. And he's the vice president of sales for Momentum Telecom. Jamie, welcome to JSA TV. Thank you, thanks for having me. Of course, of course. So how is the show going for you so far? The show is going well. We just won an award from CNSG. It's the top channel manager, Sharinda Kushner. Congratulations. Thank you. It's going well. Good start. Outstanding, outstanding. So for our viewers that don't already know, why don't you tell us a little bit about Momentum Telecom? Sure. So Momentum is probably the largest host of what company you've never heard of. We've been a wholesale provider for the last, call it 15 years. And for the last four, we've been in the retail business and business space. And now we are playing with the big guys like Vonage. Well, congratulations. So what is the latest and greatest coming out of the newsroom there? So I think from a differentiator standpoint, we are, our specialty is our implementation process. We go on site before we sell the deal. We go on site after we sell the deal and do our own implementations. We don't do the plug and pray, drop ship the phones, and pray that it works. And then the second thing, we just acquired Alteva back in January. And what we wanted out of that was our product set and sales organization. So now we've got the voice enabled link. And I think that's what you'll see come out of us over the next six months. Outstanding. So big growth. Well done. Absolutely. Thank you. You got it. You got it. Jamie, thank you very much for joining us on JSA-TV today. Thanks, Dean. Appreciate it. You got it. You got it. And thank you viewers for watching JSA-TV. We'll see you soon.
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American Minute Man Part 31: Do you need thermal?
You know how youtube works. Like, comment and subscribe. Sign up for email updates: http://eepurl.com/dqpRnX Come Train With Us: http://www.citadeldefensemn.com/ Twitter: @lumacas
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2023-10-03T21:00:32
2024-04-23T14:23:19
884
pc8_LsceuiM
If you can't see like Predator, do you think you're going to make it hell over one Dylan Schumacher Citadel Defense and we're back with another edition of American Minuteman Gear. And today we're going to talk about thermal and do you as an American Minuteman for you know in China invades, whatever, blah, blah, blah, let the reader understand. Do you need thermal? So let's start with a couple things. First of all, thermal is not night vision, okay. It does not and you can see at night with thermal, but it does not amplify existing light. You can use thermal during the day, you can use it at night. I will say in my little trials with trying it during the day on like a hot day and by that I mean like above 80, it doesn't really do so hot because everything is so hot that it really can't tell temperature differentiations very effectively, right? Like your body is 98.6 degrees, right? When the sun is beating down on a rock on an 80 degree day that rock is going to get really hot. And so to be able to tell the difference because that's the way night vision works is temperature differentiations between the temperature of that rock and the temperature of your body. The rock might appear hotter than you. So it's just, it's hard to pick up like people and organic living objects shall we say during the day and a hotter day. Now maybe I haven't tried it to be fair on like a cold day, right? Like a 40 degree day or something. I bet it probably works pretty well then, but during like a hot day, not so much. And I've been just playing with this this this summer. So that's one, two, it does have limitations, right? Like it can't see through glass, for example, right? Which night vision can see through glass? No problem. Thermal can't do that. It can't necessarily see through like, if you were to put like a hold up like a poncho or whatever and be like two or three feet behind that poncho, it probably won't penetrate beyond that, right? Because it's going to pick up the temperature of that poncho. And if your body isn't close enough to either affect that poncho with your heat or for your heat to be visible through it, then, you know, you're good to go. So there are definitely limitations to it. Now, when I first got thermal, you know, it was supposed to be like this, this kind of eye of God thing is really how I had always heard about it. Like, oh, thermal, like, I mean night vision is cool, which night vision is cool, you should know night vision. But, you know, like thermal, like, oh, that's where it's at. Like, that's really true power, like eye of God kind of thing where you can just see everything and it just pops out. It's just it's amazing and whatever. And that's not been my experience, to be honest with you. I have been disappointed, underwhelmed, if you will, with thermal. Now, hey, I'm not a thermal expert. I've only ever had one. This is a Pulsar Xeon 2 XG35. So maybe you just want to tell me, hey, you're dealing your thermal sucks. That's what your problem is. And then maybe it is. And I don't have a drone with thermal. I don't have helicopters with thermal. I don't have that bird's eye view that I can do, right? I'm just talking about American Minuteman here, right? I'm a guy on the ground with my boys and I got thermal. How much capability does that give me or not give me? And at this point, I would say the best thing that thermal has provided me, owning thermal has provided me, is realizing that it's not, it's an advantage. I don't think it's a game changer. Like I would say night vision is a game changer. It changes the game. If you have night vision and someone else doesn't or vice versa, there is a severe and sharp power discrepancy there at night, obviously, right? Severe and sharp power discrepancy. Thermal? I mean, maybe if they have nothing and you have thermal, right? But if they have night vision, you have thermal, I don't know. I mean, it could go either way. It's not this powerful, like I said, eye of God kind of thing that at least I expected it to be. And what it had been built up to me, to be. So that's my first one. I would say I'm generally underwhelmed. Two, and you'll see this in the footage that I'm showing here. Maybe you've already seen this already, right? It like, it does this reset thing where it'll freeze frame for a while. And that's just part of the deal of thermal is my understanding. But when the frame freezes like that, it's not because your video is skipping or I edited poorly. It's because that's how it works. Every so often it has to like reset. I don't know all the technical terms behind that. I'm not a technical person. I've found out a long time ago, I'm a driver, not a mechanic, right? I just do the stuff. I don't like to figure out how it works. So maybe you can explain that better than I can, right? But point being, it has that limitation as well. The other big limitation is again, if you put any kind of foliage between you and the observation, that thermobility disappears. There's a couple clips I have in here of guys going prone in a field. When we're in the prairie here, and when you go prone with that tall grass, which is, you know, two, three feet high, you disappear. Like you're gone. You're gone on thermal. Like there's no recognition with that. So again, I think there are these limitations that exist with thermal. And I don't think it's this I've got thing. So that's the big thing. I do think there is benefit to thermal. And I think thermal benefits in a couple ways. Okay, so let's talk about as an American man, and that's the only perspective we're coming from here. That's the whole point of the series. How does thermal benefit you? Is it worth it? Okay. And I think it has a couple different benefits. Number one is, it's a good team item. And what I mean is, does every guy in your crew need thermal? No. Hard stop? No. You don't. To me, it's like an E tool, right? Not everybody needs an E tool. You need one, maybe two E tools, because everybody can't dig at the same time anyway. Right? Some people got to pull security. Some people got to dig, whatever. You only need one or two. It's not worth the weight to carry all of them. I think the same thing with thermal. You need one guy per unit, however you're organizing your units, right? Fire team, squad, whatever, to have a thermal. I don't think everybody needs one. The mage, which leads me to my second point. The major, major benefit for you as an American Minuteman with thermal is a scanning and detection. And that's really it. If you're patrolling it at night, to stop every 25, 50, 100, whatever, yards and scan with thermal and say, hey, is there anything out here? Can we pick up anything with thermal just to see what's out here? Because there are sometimes like, I think we saw some deer. And you might have already seen this footage already. I might be showing it right now, where we saw some deer out. And they were, I don't know, a couple hundred yards out. I could not have detected them without the thermal night vision. Nope, no way. Not going to pick it up. Thermal, they did pop, right? And they were looked to be some deer bedded down for the night. And you know, again, that was a place where, okay, thermal was helpful there, because I could detect something far out. And I could say the very least I can say, Hey, there's something there. There's something most likely living organic that is a severe temperature differentiation out there that we need to at least be aware of as we come up on it. Or maybe we're going to change our route because of it or whatever. But as a detection tool, I think that's where thermal shines. It's not. And again, I don't have a thermal scope in my gun. There's probably some really cool applications for that. But we're just talking about a monocular thermal in your crew here and the applications of that. And I think as detection device, that's where it works the best. Honestly, after having thermal, I wouldn't want a thermal scope really. I mean, maybe doing some night hunting on coyotes would be a lot of fun, but that's an expensive like range toy. From an American minimum perspective, just go with a red dot and a laser and leave the thermal in the detection category, right? So every team lead is for them to again, stop every so often and just scan and say, What else is out here? I think that's super helpful. Two, I think it works better in a rural environment or three, whatever we're on, it works better rural than it does urban. Can you still use it urban? Yeah, sure. And especially like dilapidated urban because that becomes more like rural, right? Because urban that's functioning, modern urban, let's call it, has a lot of electrical and there's just a lot of heat. There's just a lot of heat signatures. But if you're in some kind of war zone urban, well, there's going to be less power, less heat, less everything else. And so I think it could shine better there. But rural, I think rural thermal does better than urban thermal. That was really tough to say, apparently. In regards to that detection equipment, I was at SNS training solutions and I borrowed my thermal to one of the guys for this night patrol we were going on. We were going on to practice getting ambushed is essentially what you're doing. It's reactive contact drills, what you're doing at night. And we put the thermal guy up front in the lead, the lead fire team, and every so often he would stop and scan. And we got ambushed, but he detected it right before we got ambushed. Now, and these guys were like hidden in trees, you know, down the way. And he wasn't able to detect it early enough to warn us. But the fact that they were hidden in some wood line, he was able to detect it. And then we got shot right away. I think that speaks to, again, the benefits and the negativities of thermal, right? It's cool. He was able to detect it. We wouldn't have been able to see that with night vision. It didn't detect it early enough. Now, maybe there's some training gap, maybe there's some other stuff we could have done, right? Maybe we could have run that patrol better, maybe, maybe, maybe whatever. But I think to me that that perfectly illustrates the positives and negatives of the thermal in that it has a capability that night vision doesn't. Yes, long range detection, I think it does well at. But that's about it. It's not the superpower the way night vision is. If you were to come to me and say, hey, Dylan, I have no gear whatsoever. I'm buying all my Minuteman gear. Give me the list. Give me the ordered priority list. Thermals probably not in the top 10. Maybe it's not in the top 20. It's not super high on my priority list. Like I said already, the best benefit I've had from owning thermal is realizing that it's not the omnipotent superpower tool in the vein of night vision. It's similar, but if I only can pick one, I'm taking night vision every time. Thermal just isn't that overcoming of a power in my opinion. Now, maybe some other people have some different opinions out there and I'm open to being convinced. But I don't think for the American Minuteman and our application, it's all that. I mean, it's cool. It's nice to have, but it's not all that. And I would say, again, it shines in that detection region. If you can have one in your team, great. Beyond that, maybe you should get one so you can learn how to defeat it, right? So you can see yourself in thermal and see your buddies in thermal and you can figure out how to defeat it better. But for the $3,500, $4,000 starting price point, starting price point and going up from there, man, there's a lot else we could do with that $3,500 that I think would benefit you more. And I mean, I'm talking like, let's make sure you have a solid rifle. Let's get night vision first. Let's get you some training, right? If you have like, I have a rifle, I have night vision, I have plates and a chest rig and a rock and I mean, I'll score away and I got $3,500 to blow. Man, if you haven't been through like five or six classes, go do that first. Like there is a lot other stuff. If you haven't had solid medical course and gone to see like Dark Angel Medical or something, go do that. Like there is a lot better ways we can spend that money to benefit you more in your development and your growth than thermal. Thermal is cool. Don't get me wrong. It's cool. It's a nice to have. Me and my crew are going to use it because we have it, right? And we're going to use it as a detection like tool. But if you're like, man, we're lacking thermal out there, I would tell you, look, I don't think it puts you at that big of a disadvantage. And if you ever actually get thermal, you're going to realize it's not all that. It's not the superpower. It's not amazing. It's cool. But again, I don't think it's a high priority. I don't think it's the best spending of your money necessarily. Now, if you've got all the stuff already, you've got the night vision and you've got the training and, you know, you've got some solid equipment pieces like your rifle and your pack and all that stuff set up and good to go. Well, then, hey, maybe it is time to look at thermal. Maybe it is time to add that tool into your kit. Every time you add a tool, you gotta remember that causes additional training causes, I mean, but you require additional training, right? I've had to play around with this thing to learn how to use it. I struggled today just to plug it into my computer to figure out how to upload the footage. It ended up being pretty simple, but it took me like 20 or 30 minutes to figure out and I couldn't find the instructions anywhere, right? So there's just a learning curve with every piece of equipment, that GPS, that thermal, those nods, that all those lasers, those optics that all requires a training deficit that you have to make up and you have to upkeep. And the more pieces of equipment that we stuff on ourselves and on our gear and in our crew, the more overall training upkeep that is. As an American Mint Man, I don't know how much that behooves you. Rather than just keeping your kit simple and your skills high, right? That seems to me a much better tactic or strategy for the American Mint Man when pursuing how we're going to be the most effective fighters. So you take all that into consideration, you think about it. At the end of the day, I would tell you, you do not need thermal. I think it's a really nice to have, but I do not think it's necessary. I hope that's helpful. I hope that gives you some thoughts. Let me know your thoughts about thermal. You might have more experience than I do with it. Do brave deeds and endure.
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Dunbeholden FC draw 2-2 with Tivoli Gardens FC in exciting JPL matchday 9 clash! Match Highlights
SportsMax TV presents the Highlights in Jamaica Premier League matchday 9. For exclusive SportsMax content: https://sportsmax.tv/zone Download the app here: https://linktr.ee/SMaxDigital Call your cable provider to subscribe to SportsMax TV! Follow us: Website: http://bit.ly/2upQU5q Facebook: http://bit.ly/2Fomi9l Instagram: http://instagram.com/sportsmax_tv Twitter http://bit.ly/2CzAADz #SportsMax #JPL #JamaicaPremierLeague
[ "Sports", "jpl", "jamaica premier league", "mount pleasant", "cavalier", "jamaica pl", "jpl 2021", "jamaica premier league 2022", "jpl 2022", "mobay united", "harbour view", "monteog bay fc" ]
2023-12-11T14:57:54
2024-04-24T00:19:37
418
pcmxli4rxq4
In a huddle and they're going through some free match rituals done beholding starting 11 Damien had in goal Ricardo Thomas the captain Chevoi Watkin, Zachia Wilkes, Shaquille Fowle, Alex Gale, Shevon James, Roger Smith, Rohan Brown, Stephen Barnett and the man wearing number 10, Nicholas Nelson for Coach Lenworth Teacher High, Selena High from last National Foreman's of Clarendon College in that Narcostica final dismantling Glenmure in an eight goal thriller. Yeah, dismantling is an adjective you'd love to use today in this 4-4-2 formation, but yeah, Nicholas Nelson in top form and finding a nice partner in Barnett. Let's see if they can get that chemistry going up front. Potipoli, they're all in. This is the starting 11 that Jerome Wade has penciled in for today. Nicholas Clarke in goal or in, Penny Cook, Barrington Price, Richard Brown, Alton Lewis, Alcaline, Nakila Wright, Justin Dunn, Jane Ilary, Kevin Garnett, Kino Simpson, Nakalia Fuller, Afford, Jerome Wade, number 10, Radiko Wellington, watch him on the bench and number 6, Neaton Tidal, Horatio Morgan. Yeah, very expressive going forward and yeah, look out for them. Two for Tivoli, two for Nicholas Nelson, two for Don Beholen, it's ends all square. Sun was hot by the time we were sent on the way and Gale bursting forward the first chance and Nicholas Clarke off his chest, Smith, Nelson off his chest, plays it the dummy by Barnett and then Smith couldn't steer it goalwards and then from freaky cranes, Nicholas Nelson. Oh, how delicious was that? You can have that with your son, the dinner and you won't need a slice of cheesecake because that's sweet enough. That was goal number one, Gale, a cross. Look at this now, twisting Barrington Price this way and that and then Nicholas Nelson finds the back of Clarke's neck, good work by Shaheen Powell and then leaving it to the marksman to do the rest and he finished with a plumb. That looked pretty, Don Beholen bench loved it but then Tivoli struck back because Tivoli Barnett wrestled Tivoli man to the floor, looked to have been Brampton Price and Justin done from 12 yards, no mistake, sending the keeper the wrong way, the league's leading marksman with his eighth of the season. Kina Simpson couldn't direct his shot for goal one, well he directed the goal but without power. Second half, well still first half, Gale driving that forward but Nicholas Clarke in a good position. Then the second half, Alton Lewis flings this towards the goal, didn't clear the header, look at that first touch and second touch by Justin Dunn, you're going to see it again from this angle, look at this first touch, take the ball down, the second touch and the third was decisive, fired it in through some bodies in blue and then the body in yellow or green if you may, well yellow and green Damien Hyatt couldn't keep it out, his second of the afternoon, his ninth of the season, then Fuller from Freaky Grange and Hyatt flying and then Fuller once again will help to create this chance, done on a platter for Horatia Morgan, he nods the breeze, everybody thought that one would have gone in and then from this play Justin Dunn rockets it goalwards, Hyatt got in the way with his big frame and fell heavily, had to get some treatment Damien Hyatt and then this last chance Horatia Morgan again and Thompson the second half substitute, the substitute's combining and Thompson just couldn't get a foot on it, Tivoli rampant late in the second half, pushing for the victory, Thompson again to Morgan, Hyatt with the save with his legs, Tivoli Kudah-wurda-shooda, too long wait, cutting Latin on the bench and Andrew Hayden called the time at about 95 minutes, but on the hold and there were 21 shots, 5 on target for both teams, there were 45 falls, wow, there were 80 yellow cards, 14 corners even split, saves even split, three apiece, Tivoli 53% possession, Chris Taylor as has or man of the match, Justin Dunn pitchside. Justin, another man of the match performance for you as well. You just can't stop scoring nine goals in a season. Assess your performance today for me. Well, I think we start very flat. I just see Dunn ball and scored two on us in the first half and we got a penalty. In the dressing room, we told ourselves that second half coming out and this player better performance for the Tivoli guard from Tivoli. You mentioned a flat start to the first half and I totally agree. In fact, the penalty kick I think was arguably your first touch of the game. Were you nervous before the kick or you're used to it? No, I wasn't nervous because in the link-up I missed a penalty against Ayat and I took the responsibility and told myself I wanted to do it and I scored. Tell me what would have transpired at half-time because obviously you must have got a strong talk in the dressing room. What is it like working under him as a head coach? In the dressing room, he demands a lot from his players and also about the physical aspect of the game. All right, you look at this two-ball result. Do you think that's a fair result? I think in the latter end, we get some opportunities who could win the game easily but unfortunately, it wasn't to be. And you're maybe just an inch away from that hat trick. You scored one hat trick this season against Arnett Gardens. What do you think about that strike from about what? 25 yards out? I think watching it just now, I think I have a lot more space to bring about but I took the opportunity and ate it from there. All right, keep going from strength to strength. Congrats on your performance. Enjoy your goals and get some rest. Thank you. Justin, done.
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Thu. 1/18/24 - 2023 BOWMAN'S BEST UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL DELIGHT 2-BOX #4 *RANDOM FN/FL*
* JOIN our group breaks on https://JaspysCaseBreaks.com/ * WATCH seven nights a week! Some nights will feature a LATE NITE! * VISIT our 3,000 sq. ft. shop at 1402 Pacific Coast Highway, Hermosa Beach, CA! - Open M-Sa from 11a - 6p - Open Sunday by appointment - We're following all Covid-19 safety protocols for your safety and ours! :) * FOLLOW us on Twitter and Instagram @JaspysBreaks https://twitter.com/JaspysBreaks https://instagram.com/JaspysBreaks * THANK YOU for watching and subscribing! * CONTACT us via the "Support" button on JaspysCaseBreaks.com * FAQ here: https://jaspyscasebreaks.com/a/faq
[ "#sportscards", "#casebreaks", "#sickhit", "#mojohit", "#bighit", "#boxbreaks", "#packopenings", "#irlpack", "#baseballcards", "#groupbreaks", "#nflcards", "#footballcards", "#nbacards", "#basketballcards", "#casebreak", "#groupbreak", "#topps", "#panini", "#upperdeck", "#bowman", "#leaf", "#tristar", "#hermosabeach", "#unboxing", "#livestream", "#sports", "#sporstalk", "#collect", "#thehobby" ]
2024-01-19T02:10:01
2024-04-24T00:04:29
509
pchGBzxfbYk
What is up everybody, Jayce here for jayspeakscagebase.com. We just sold out 2023 Bowens Best University Football Delight, two box break, random letter, first name, first letter, number four. And again guys, 15 total spots, so we're getting a random letter from the list below. There's your example there. Got some combo letters, let's rock and roll. Roll it. One out of five, six times. One, two, three, four, five, six. Six times. Steve Lock down on Michael Russo. Six times. One, two, three, four, five, six. R down to A. Six times, six times. So Steve, you have R, Adam with F and G. Steve Lock, you got K, M, Adam with J, Nick with T. Joe Lawson, you got D. Nathan with LN, Nick L with OP. Michael Russo with SV. Darren D. Mack, you got W. Mike Tyler with C. Adam, you got B. E all of the letters and Michael with A. Wow, a lot of orders came in. You guys, no trading I guess. All right, so two more stacks here guys. Top or bottom? One, two for the top, three, four for the bottom guys. Six, one, two, three, four, five, six for the bottom. These two here will be for the last one, number five. All right, here we go guys, good luck. We have a fusion die cut. Mackay Lemon, letter M. That's hard to put in there. Letter M with that one, Steve Lock. And then we have Shador Sanders to 15, nice. Letter S, going to Michael. And we got Dallon Hayton. Actually, let's put these down here. I'll just grab one by one. Letter D, we got Smell Mondon Jr. Letter S, going to Michael. D was Joe. Brandon Innis on the die cut ones. Oh, they do actually. You're right, thank you, man. So Marshawn, oh, it's actually gonna stay for the same ones, actually Marshawn Lloyd. Letter M there, letter M. So regardless, I guess it's still stayed with M. So that's still gonna go to Steve Lock. Sorry about that, guys. All right, Brandon Innis for letter B. Going to Adam Kuperman. Cameron Ward, I think he ended up transferring out to Miami, I wanna say. Weirdo. We got Devin Leary, letter D. Ooh, don't look, nutty-nate. Don't look, nutty-nate. We got a Joe Milton. Just a base, though, but still Joe Milton. Let me have a duel. Sam Hartman and Aldrich, it's time. Stimmy. Out of 25. Notre Dame right there. So letter S with Michael. Letter A with Michael. Wow, don't even have to randomize that. It's gonna go both to you because you have both letters. A and SV combo. That makes my life easier. Another one, I don't have to randomize. Steve, this is why you went hitless in the last break. To get something like this in this break. Marvin Harrison, Jr. patch autograph. There you go, little relic auto. Looks like not numbered, but I think you'll be fine with that. Awesome-o, awesome-o. All right, well, still got another box, guys. They thought we only had one box for a second. Nice Master Bees is Blake Horham, letter B going to Cupperman. Not numbered there. Then Brock Bowers, another one for letter B. It's time to 50. They go cup, back-to-back Bees. Another B, Braylon Trice. And then Dallin Hayden, letter D there, going to Joe, out of 100. Richard Rees, letter R going to Steve Locke, R, matey, R. Jackson Arnold, out of 150, letter J going to Cupp. Riley Leonard, 18 out of 75, another one for R. Then we got a Audreyk, letter A going to Michael, out of 50, for Notre Dame. We have a Will Shepard, that Vanderbilt, yeah. W going to DMACC. And how about another nice patch autograph? This time, Shador Sanders, letter S going to Michael. Nice break for you, Michael. So Marvin Harrison Jr. and Shador Sanders, patch autographs. There we go, very nice. All right, nice two boxes here, guys. Two more left, guys. Still think there could be some nice ones hiding over there, too, as well, guys. So appreciate everybody. Number five is in the store. Those are our last ones from this case, and I'm pretty sure we can post more after that. Jasper'scasebreaks.com, guys, thank you.
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368 MPs provide security support for Valiant Shield in Guam
U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers from the 368th MP Brigade conduct area security during their annual training in support of the INDOPACOM Exercise Valiant Shield at Anderson Airforce Base, Guam June 10. Valiant Shield ensures the Joint Force maintains the advantage against long-term competitors seeking to undermine the rules-based international order and the free and open Indo-Pacific that bolsters Indo-Pacific Security upon which global prosperity rests. Defense Now - June 2022. https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe95fdmDwNk9IGEDfYKiTckm8YN5P4J6l Checkout for more Latest Defense & Technology News Updates. www.defenseflashnews.com 368 MPs provide security support for Valiant Shield in Guam GUAM 06.10.2022 Film Credits: Video by Spc. Mason Runyon 9th Mission Support Command
[ "military exercise", "marine Corps", "Military videos", "infantry regiment", "infantry combat vehicles", "fire fighters", "wildfire", "combat footage", "usmc", "special forces", "Aviation", "NASA", "NATO", "force recon", "marsocs", "United States", "Air National Guard", "Army National Guard", "U.S. Air Fore", "Army", "Marines", "Navy", "Coast Guard", "Space Force", "Military Defense", "Technologies", "Special operation forces", "International armed forces", "War Conflicts", "International Military drills", "Weapons", "Aircraft", "Ships", "Vehicles" ]
2022-06-25T02:49:47
2024-04-22T17:55:46
73
PCpDdTeiug0
I am Private St. Nicholas Keone. I am with the 368MP company. So far, being here, we've been conducting critical side security. We go out in pairs of two. We do perimeter checks. I think what we're doing is very beneficial to being an MP since we're able to actually conduct our actual job on the field. The 368 is out here for valid shield and support of the Office of Secretary of Defense, the experimental exercise for valid shield. And it's very beneficial for us as an MP unit, and especially with the night, for us to exercise our mission essential tasks. That way, when it comes down to it, we're able to deploy out and be mission ready to meet the ninth mission and the in the pay con mission.
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City of Jacksonville Hosts Veterans Day Parade
City of Jacksonville Hosts Veterans Day Parade
[ "all hands update", "navy", "united states navy", "us navy", "military", "sailors", "united states", "america", "usa" ]
2012-11-14T18:15:14
2024-02-05T09:03:10
61
pCIb9dyuGeQ
The city of Jacksonville honored true American heroes including veterans and active duty military during the city's Veterans Day Parade which featured more than 4,000 participants. You can see it in their eyes every time you get to take a little time to talk to somebody, have them swap some stories with you. It gives them a sense of importance that they should have all the time, not just on Veteran's Day. There are heroes, they made things happen before us and so we should support them all the time. I feel like we haven't lost it, we still have it. That's what I feel. That's why I'm here today and I hope I'll be here tomorrow. But this means a lot to the young people and to the Americans as a whole. Their veterans are not forgotten. From Jacksonville, I'm Petty Officer Salt Sebe.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCIb9dyuGeQ", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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Resilient Rivers: Counting Fish from Forests
Forests, rivers, and fisheries are inextricably linked and have a direct impact on the well-being of all. Forests, including headwater, riparian, and floodplain forests, are essential to maintain freshwater ecosystems. Inland aquatic ecosystems, included under SDG 15.1, cover just 1% of Earth's surface yet are habitat for more than 40% of all fish species. They deliver services such fisheries which alleviate poverty and provide food and nutrition security for some of the world's most vulnerable populations. In observance of the UN's Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, this webinar includes perspectives from government and stakeholders on successful multidisciplinary management of natural resources; experiences of private sector forest investment in freshwater restoration to protect fish species; examples of community-based freshwater management; and inter-sectoral basin-scale management. Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=FAOoftheUN Follow FAO on social media! * Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/UNFAO * Instagram - https://instagram.com/fao * LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/fao * TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@fao * Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/fao/ * Weibo - https://www.weibo.com/unfao © FAO: http://www.fao.org #SDGs #Agenda2030 #GlobalGoals
[ "fao", "united nations", "food and agriculture organization of the united nations", "fao.org", "Agenda2030", "#Agenda2030", "GlobalGoals", "#GlobalGoals", "SDGs", "#SDGs", "Freshwater", "rivers", "inland fisheries", "forestry", "multi-disciplinary management", "watershed", "multi-sectoral approach", "basin development", "land use planning" ]
2021-05-25T14:45:33
2024-02-05T08:18:32
7,696
PctxnNHPmt0
I want to welcome you to what we hope is the first joint forestry fisheries webinar on resilient rivers counting fish from forests. I want to begin with two technical points. First, your program is being simultaneously translated in Spanish and in English. So to select your preferred language, use the small globe icon to the bottom right of your Zoom screen. We're asked to let you know that if the audio quality deteriorates, as can happen in a remote environment, interpretation will be impossible for a brief moment. The interpreters will let you know, and they will resume interpretation as soon as the sound quality permits. Due to the large turnout, we are not including a Q&A session, but we're really encouraging all our participants to make comments and ask questions in the chat. Our panelists will do their best to answer the questions after their presentation. We thank Mr. Bruno Paz for his assistance with translation in the chat, and we look forward to a very lively discussion there. Freshwater systems, including forests and fish, are at the heart of every functioning landscape across the world. Rivers, in fact, connect all living things from the mountain ridge tops to the coral reefs, and that makes sustainable management a wicked problem. That's a problem that's difficult, but I don't believe in this case impossible to solve because of competing demands, shifting needs, and incomplete data. And the only solution to a wicked problem is true collaboration. So not just redistributing the workload or coordinating definitions, but accomplishing together far more than the sum of what could have been accomplished individually. It seems you agree. In the survey we circulated with the webinar announcement, 64% of you responded that collaboration across forestry and fisheries was not just useful, but in fact was essential for achieving the SDGs. Only 12% of you frequently observe such collaboration, and in fact, most of you rarely observe it. So today we have it. With that, I introduce my colleague from fisheries, John Jargensen. Gracias, Ashley. Yo te mi parte. También quiero tales, en tales la bienvenida al webinar, re-resolviendos con tanto las veces del bosque. Primero quisiera repetir los siguiendos dos puntos técnicos en español. El programa será traducido simultáneamente en español y en vez de escoger su idioma preferido, por favor presione el icono en forma de un tubo pequeño ubicado en la parte inferior derecha de la pantalla. En un entorno virtual, la calidad del audio puede fallar inesperadamente hasta el punto que se vuelve inequada para fines de interpretación. Si eso sucede, los interpretadores indicarán el problema verbalmente y en lugar a la interpretación cuando la calidad del audio lo permita. De nuevo, al gran número de participantes, nos vamos a tener una sesión de preguntas y respuestas. En cambio, elentamos a todos que hagan sus comentarios y preguntas en el chat. Nuestros panelistas harán todo lo posible para responder a las preguntas en el chat después de cada presentación. Esperemos una discusión animada. Igual, como mi colega, está muy emocionado por el gran número de participantes. 360 personas de 58 países registradas y de diferentes sectores y disciplinas, incluyendo la NGL, academia, sector privado y guiamos. Esto demuestra la relevancia del tema y la necesidad de reflexionar sobre la manera en la que estamos trabajando, sobre todo colaborando en nuestra lucha por una gestión sostenible de los recursos naturales y el logro de los ODSes. A continuación, tengo el gusto de introducir Manuel Balaje, director de la División de Pesca, en Vau, quien va a ofrecerlos sus palabras de apertura. Manuel. Gracias, John and Ashley. Buenos días. Buenas tardes. Es un placer darles la bienvenida a todos. I will proceed in English for my introductory remarks. Good morning and good afternoon and good evening everyone. It is a great pleasure for me to welcome you to this event on Resilient Rivers, Counting Fish from the Forest. I would like to start by thanking the panellists for sharing their insights regarding freshwater ecosystem, their fisheries and forests. We hope that this webinar is just the beginning of a longer multi-disciplinary and multi-sectoral dialogue. In fact, this seminar emerged from a recent funding allocation through FAO's Multidisciplinary Fund to connect some of our work on inland fisheries and on forests. This fund intends to strengthen collaboration across disciplines to increase FAO's effectiveness and to encourage creative measures. Ladies and gentlemen in the audience, I thank you for showing up in such numbers and from around the globe demonstrating the importance of today's topic. What we hope for today is to collectively demonstrate the interconnectedness of forestry and fisheries issues in their common freshwater environments and interconnectedness that will provide unique opportunities for innovative collaborations. Let me talk briefly on inland water ecosystems. Inland waters cover just 1% of the earth's surface, but about 50% of all fish species make use of them. These habitats are extremely varied, including streams, rivers, flat plains, lakes, ponds, deltas and more. Set within broader landscapes, the exert major influences. These aquatic ecosystems are highly dynamic and very productive. For example, at least 12 million tonnes or 13% of the world's fish catchers come from inland fisheries. Almost half of it comes from 50 low income food deficit countries and well over a million tonnes come from landlocked countries. In these nations inland fisheries deliver much needed animal protein, nutrients, minerals and vitamins. Inland fisheries are typically part of a mixed livelihood strategy. As such they provide livelihood opportunities for people relying on access to common property resources, providing food for billions and livelihoods for millions of people. Inland fisheries are often the most vulnerable and food insecure people. Forests and aquatic ecosystems in catchment areas are inextricably linked and dynamically interactive with many inland fisheries relying on freshwater habitats that are maintained and supported by forests. Flat plain forest among the world's most endangered forest types support natural river meanders and particularly diverse and productive fisheries. Headwater forests and forested catchments provide soil stability, decrease destructive overland flows during rainstorms, support groundwater recharge and reduce the risk of landslides into downstream rivers and habitats. Repairing forest provides shade, erosion protection, chemical buffering and nutritious terrestrial inputs to aquatic food webs. Flooded forest often support essential inland fisheries. To give a couple of more direct examples, the flooded forest around Cambodia's Great Lake, which the minister will speak about in a few minutes, give rise to one of the largest inland fisheries in the world. Fisher mobile organisms that move up and down river channels and in and out of flat plains and flooded forest where they feed on insects, fruits and seeds and find refuge. In another example, it has been estimated that 75% of commercial fish species in the Amazon are part of food webs that originate in the flooded forests. This fish could in fact be considered a non-wood forest product. But inland and freshwater systems are very much under threat. The Sustainable Development Goal 15.1 calls specifically to ensure the conservation, restoration and sustainable use of terrestrial and inland freshwater ecosystems and their services. Thus further linking forests and inland fisheries. But while they contribute to many other SDGs, freshwater ecosystems are vulnerable and still insufficiently valued. They are subject to high rates of loss and degradation. Globally, wetlands are vanishing three times faster than forests and freshwater vertebrate populations have declined more than twice as steeply as terrestrial populations and even more steeply compared to marine populations. The past 30 years have seen a 50% decrease in populations of freshwater species. Threats and pressures arise chiefly from outside the fishery sector and include land use changes and degradation, deforestation and sustainable agriculture, pollution and poorly managed water users. Experiences shown that restoring land and hydrologies can deliver significant and immediate gains in local fisheries as well as deliver co-benefits such as biodiversity conservation, productive and resilient agriculture, forest and water resources. Let's hope that this event will highlight win-win solutions regarding collective conservation and sustainable use of freshwater ecosystems and forest and guide us further in our work. And with that, I would like to follow the event by introducing his Excellency Ben Sarkon, Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Cambodia, who is joining us on a video link. With one of the largest inland fisheries in the world, the linkages between forests and fisheries management are perhaps more clearly shown in Cambodia than in any other country. More importantly, the Cambodian government is a leader in having acknowledged this interrelationship and in having demonstrated his commitment to ensuring environmental sustainability for the benefit of its population. Thank you very much for your attention. Technical colleagues, over to you and to the video. Don Dritter, Mette Wilkie, Mr. Dritter, Manuel Barangy, panelist, fishery and forestry expert, lady and gentlemen. Fishery and forestry are the main natural resources for the livelihood of Cambodian people and the national economy in Cambodia. Cambodia inland fishery, one of the largest and most significant in the world, consists of more than 500 of species. The richness of fish since thousands of the year and is to memorize on the wall of the ancient Angkor Wat temple. Until recently, up to 700,000 tons of fish were caught every year. In addition to 60,000 tons of other activities are any more such as shrimp, crab, snail, frog, insects, snakes, and turtle. Cambodia is also rich in terrestrial biodiversity, including the third largest lowland dry evergreen forest in Southeast Asia with 2,300 plant species and 14 endangered animals. In fact, almost half of Cambodia is forested with nearly 8 million hectares of naturally generating forests. Across the nation, forests provide benefits to freshwater systems. Forests high up in the mountains, protect soil and forest store water in the rainy season that become essential dry season flow. Forests that line stream lakes and river provide shade protection from erosion. Cambodia is also home to 500,000 hectares of flooded forests and over 50,000 hectares of mangrove forests. Forests that are even more closely tied to fisheries which is habitat and source of natural food for fish. Forests and fisheries are the foundation of livelihood and our economy, nearly 4 million people or more than 30% of the population live with the 5 km of the forest with forest resources accounting for an average of 10 to 20% of household consumption sources. Cambodian forests also produce that when harvested sustainably and support the economy provide livelihood and rural area and even store carbon and mitigate climate change. Millions of Cambodian find employment in fishery related activity. Fish and rice remain the nation's staple food. Fish and other aquatics animal are crucial for nutrition and food security because they provide Cambodian people with 80% of their animal protein and much of their essential food and mineral, particularly calcium and vitamin A and fish oil. In land fishery are also of the fundamental important to economy as they contribute 60% to the country GDP. Excellency, ladies and gentlemen, I understand the close relationship between fish, forest and livelihood are crucial important and cannot be guaranteed by the fishery or forestry administration alone. It requires collective effort and collaboration from all sector in both management. The forest is essential for productive fishery that can meet the needs of the Cambodian people. Sustainable management of fishery also has benefit for forest and forest dependent people. The government has taken many action to support forest and fishery. In 1997, the Cambodian government established the Tunlisa biosphere reserve that cover 1.5 million hectares and which is devoted to the long-term protection and conservation of natural resources and the ecosystem and specifically to preserve flooded forest with wildlife hydrological system and natural beauty. In several areas around the Great Lakes we are restoring access for the fish to flooded area including the flooded forest with great benefit for the local people. The government is also implementing policy and law that allow villagers more rights and responsibility to protect and manage natural resources. Ensuring stakeholder participation at the community level. We really need to have a holistic and multidisciplinary approach to watershed management, protection and restoration of ecosystem for the benefit of people and nature. As I said in the beginning natural resources are central to the lives of the Cambodians. Our time we have gained a lot of experience about their sustainable management and many of these lessons have been learned together with the partner such as the FAO and we are happy to share this experience with all of you. I wish to conclude my thinking thanking the organizer for inviting me to address you and this important meeting and all of you for attention. Thank you. Thank you very much for these inspiring words and also policies. Thank you for your leadership and for your contributions to our events. It's my pleasure to introduce the next speaker with four decades of experience supporting private sector restoration of forests for fish. Many of you mentioned riparian forestry and restoration as primary activities for achieving the SDGs from Switzerland to Ghana. Now with an example from the Pacific Northwest USA the floor is yours. Thank you, Ashley. I was asked today to provide a presentation on the process that has evolved in the Pacific Northwest over the last 40 years to better coordinate forest management in the region. Both forestry and fisheries prior to 1950 were the primary drivers of the economy in the Pacific Northwest and they both remain major industries in the region. However, historic forest management as I'll show you in a few minutes severely damaged both freshwater habitats and to some extent estuarine habitats in the region but over the last 40 years and unfortunately I've been around for most of this there have been a series of improvements in the practices, forestry practices around freshwater habitats that have had a really beneficial effect on the quality of our environment in the region. The area that I'm talking about today is circled here in red. It's that blue-green strip along the coastline east Alaska all the way down into northern California. This is an area that has both incredibly productive forests as well as some of the most productive fisheries in the world, most valuable fisheries in the world. Taking a look at the forest, this is a chart that represents relative forest production across the globe and in this case the growth of eucalyptus plantations in New Zealand and South America is arbitrarily set at 100. You can see that the only forests in the northern hemisphere that actually approach the kind of productivity you see in southern hemisphere eucalyptus forests are the softwood forests in the US Pacific Northwest so it's an incredibly productive environment for forests. I'm going to give you some indication of the kinds of economic activity associated with forestry and here I will just use as an example some figures from one particular jurisdiction in the Pacific Northwest state of Washington. In Washington as of 2011 when this information was generated there were 1,700 forest businesses in the state employing 42,000 workers for $1 billion annually in wages. Total economic activity associated with forestry in Washington state is about 28 billion US dollars per year and you can multiply that figure by about six times to cover the entire Pacific Northwest region so forestry still remains a very, very big economic driver in the region. Fisheries is also important although because of fish stocks it's not nearly as economically active as it was historically particularly south of the Canadian border but still it is a fairly important source of both income and jobs. 16,500 fisheries jobs in Washington state and it generates about $500 million US dollars per year in economic activity. Of those fish one is a particular significance when we talk about this nexus between forest management and fisheries and that is salmon. There are a number of salmon species in the Pacific Northwest historically they were a critically important component of the fisheries however they are greatly depressed so the amount that are caught each year is quite a bit lower than it was historically but even more important than the economic and fisheries fish is their cultural importance particularly Canadian cultures in the Pacific Northwest but these truly are a revered fish in the region. To give you some idea about their status now south of the Canadian border over the last 20 years 27 populations have been given protection under the US Endangered Species Act because of the high probability of expectation so they really have been severely affected by a variety of factors forestry being one of these. So let's take a look at how historic forest practices impacted aquatic habitats. Prior to about 1970 forestry was conducted in a way that was not particularly protected of aquatic environments. All the trees within a broad area were cut those trees were then yarded up to a landing using typically cable systems and some of the logs that they collected were quite large grow some very large trees here in the Pacific Northwest but the result was this figure shown in the upper right and this is a picture that was taken in the mid 1960s so it's not battle depending on your context what the landscape looked like. All the trees are gone after the trees were harvested the area was burned to facilitate replanting with young trees but there was no protection afforded for the stream flowing down there through the valley in the picture this is a salmon bearing stream obviously these were a set of practices that had really consequential effects on aquatic ecosystems. One practice that was very dramatic and the results of this particular practice are still evident today throughout the Northwest and that is the process that was used until the 1950s to transport logs from the forest down to the sawmill where they were processed and this was called log drive essentially trees were cut they were then cut into logs approximately 15 meters in length and all of these logs were placed in a stream channel or a small river channel then a structure upstream called a splash dam was opened releasing a rush of water then moved downstream to where the logs had been placed in the stream channel where those logs were floated and then log drivers or log rollers riding on top of these floating logs coming down the stream would herd these things downstream until they got to the sawmill this was a practice that had massive impacts on the aquatic ecosystems throughout the Pacific Northwest there was direct mortality of organisms living in the stream at the time one of these drives occurred banks were eroded the perian vegetation was removed and the effects of this practice are still quite evident throughout most of the drainage networks in the Pacific Northwest today so we are still attempting to recover from this particular type of management even though it stopped over 70 years ago so about 1960s 1970s people began to recognize that forestry was playing a role in pressing fish stocks throughout the region and at that time we began the long process sometimes painful process contentious process of developing management prescriptions management measures that would ensure the protection of aquatic habitats and allow the recovery in very important fish populations and the entire process really was based on one fairly simple principle and that was the belief that if we could very specifically identify those portions of the landscape that had the greatest degree of interaction with aquatic ecosystems we could focus our protected measures at these sites and by doing that both enable a high degree of protection for aquatic habitats and at the same time allowing a forest land owner to manage most of this property for the continued production of water so what are these important areas well really in the Pacific Northwest we've focused on four primary issues related to forest management and its effects on aquatic systems the first is the protection of repairing areas including flood points the second are forest roads once log drives were done the logs were taken from the forest to mill by trucks obviously they required roads roads both generate considerable amounts of sediment and they also create in many cases barriers to the upstream passage of fish the Pacific Northwest also is quite steep and we get quite a lot of rainfall as a result landslides are an issue and forest practices both road construction and logging can increase the frequency of landslides the final issue that was addressed during the evolution of these forest management prescriptions was forest chemicals and I'm not going to talk much about the chemical part of this today really the chemical concerns focused on potential impacts on human health so it clearly is a critical concern but it's been less of an issue when talking about aquatic ecosystems during the 1970s people first began to talk about affording some protection for repairing systems in unmanaged forest landscapes and the concern at that time was primarily with water temperature the thought being that removing the trees from the screen edge removed shade, allowed sunlight to hit the water increasing water temperature which is bad for salmon which are cold water fish so in the mid 1970s the first set of riparian prescriptions in the pacific northwest was developed however these were not particularly stringid measures and as a matter of fact they were not really they didn't really result in any consistent buffering of the streams there were a couple loopholes one was that no streams above 700 meters in elevation that was in Washington state required buffers the thought being that streams at higher elevation were naturally cold and didn't need the shade the second loophole was that people didn't landowners did not have to retain trees at sites where they trees might get blown over the pacific northwest during the wintertime gets frequent large storms that come in off of the pacific ocean and you can make the case that trees anywhere could blow down so as a result very few buffers were left during the 1970s it wasn't until the 1980s that we got a set of rules and regulations that required the consistent protection of forested buffers along streams and this occurred as partly as a result of the increased appreciation for the important role that riparian zones play not only in protecting water temperature but also for some other functions including input of large wood industry channels which is an important structural component stream systems create pools, regulates material movement in the stream here's a figure that shows a large number of salmon utilizing a pool formed by a piece of large wood and also litter input input of leaves and needles which is an important energy source that supports the food webs in stream and river systems so as a result of what happened in the 80s buffers were finally required consistently on all aquatic habitats this buffering system was further enhanced in the 1990s into the early 2000s and the changes included the protection of floodplains no forest management whatsoever on floodplains recognizing the important role they play in maintaining productive fisheries and also buffering was extended upstream beyond the areas that were actually occupied by fish the concern here being that these small streams although they didn't directly support fish impacts on those small streams ultimately to be transported downstream to fish bearing reaches and as a result impact the productivity of those systems so now in the Pacific Northwest I think we have relatively good buffering prescriptions that are applied pretty consistently throughout the entire region in Washington our buffers average about 60 meters on either side of the stream with some light management out at the outer edge of those buffers and we completely protect floodplains let's talk a little bit now about about roads second big issue roads have two major problems one is that they can generate sediment and they generate sediment in two ways one is the crushing of the road surface by traffic and then subsequently the washing of that road surface during rainstorms that sediment moves in the roadside ditches directly prior to the 1990s those roadside ditches were drained directly into streams and rivers the other way that roads affect sediment delivery is through improper road location which leads to landslides landslides move massive amounts of sediment downstream and nine times that a landslide winds up in a stream channel the other impact that roads have is that where a stream passes a road in many cases the message block occurs so what we've done over time here in the Pacific Northwest is implement a series of measures that are designed to reduce the production of sediment from road surfaces these include things like requirements to use farmed surfacing materials that breaks down more slowly under traffic but most significantly the one management prescription that's had the greatest effect is the deliberate disconnection of the road drainage network the roadside ditches from natural drainage networks in watersheds ditch water is now drained off onto the forest floor that's sufficient distance from a natural drainage channel so that that water can soak into the soil leaving the sediment behind and this has been really a very effective mechanism for reducing sediment delivery to streams passage blockages were a huge problem on forest roads prior to about 2000 since that time forest landowners have committed in the Northwest to fixing these issues and that requires the installation of a crossing structure that has a natural stream bed in the bottom not a pipe because you have to provide passage both for the adult fish quite athletic and capable of making it through some barriers that in some cases are hard to believe but also for the juvenile fish that are rearing in these systems for most of the time during the year and they cannot get through anything that's particularly difficult so this is an example of one such culvert replacement went from this round pipe with a large fall at the downstream end to this arch pipe which has natural stream in the middle of the day finally landslides landslides were a huge problem in the Pacific Northwest any kind of management activity road construction forest harvest on an unstable field slope feature frequently leads to a landslide starting in the 1990s we began to develop processes in the Pacific Northwest to help us identify any kind of management activity on those unstable sites this process involves in the office exercise looking at available data sources maps, lighter coverage if you have it and then using that process to identify sites on the ground that appear may have stability issues subsequently on the ground visit to the site and then ultimately the development of a map that indicates where trees can be harvested harvested and where trees cannot be harvested this particular example the red lines represents the outline of the area that's logged the green line is the area set aside for repairing buffers and then these orange polygons represent areas where the forest harvest is allowed in those locations so over time in the Pacific Northwest we have developed a pretty comprehensive set of management prescriptions for the protection of aquatic habitats and this has had beneficial effects but the mechanism that we've used over the last 40 years primarily for implementing these new management procedures has been regulatory it's been mandatory regulations but in the last 20 years there have been a number of new tools that have been added to the toolbox that can help us encourage more sustainable forest management one of these is the process of forest certification which is essentially a market based system to encourage sustainable forest management in this kind of a system customers commit to purchasing wood products and wood only from producers who can demonstrate that they are generating that material sustainably in a way that a landowner would do this by getting certified through the existing forest certification systems globally one of the big ones is FSC the forest stewardship council in Canada in the US and North American sustainable forestry initiative one that is very commonly used but the idea here is that these certification systems contain standards if a landowner commits to meeting these standards undergoes an audit it then gets certified you can put that certification seal on its products and as a result it increases its access to the market this has been a very effective tool at generating more sustainable forest management worldwide the other opportunity we have going forward is beginning to develop systems for monetizing ecosystem goods and services beyond simply wood and that includes some things that have already developed there is some opportunity to get for a landowner to get compensation for carbon sequestration in the US the environmental protection agency runs a program called wetland mitigation banking where landowners get compensated for maintaining wetlands in high quality conditions it's also biomass energy and some of the sustainability requirements associated with that and conservation easements in the US have been used broadly to encourage more sustainable forest management so I think that we have done a relatively good job in the Pacific Northwest over the last 40 years of developing a system that protects aquatic ecosystems there are some opportunities to do things a little bit better in the future however I do think that there is a takeaway message from the Pacific Northwest that can be broadly applied to other forest regions in the world and that is if you in fact can identify these areas that are particularly important for maintaining the health of aquatic ecosystems and focus protective measures at those sites I think it is possible to have both healthy productive fisheries and still maintain a viable economically viable forest products industry so thank you very much Thank you very much Thank you very much Thank you very much Thank you very much Thank you for sharing your experience with us that was extremely interesting we're going to go south to Colombia with Mr Mauricio Valderrama director of the Fundación Umedales he has carried out research in fisheries resources and has carried out environmental and fisheries management activities for sustainable use in wetlands in Magdalena the Amazon river and other areas he's going to tell us about how to strengthen the local governance of fisheries and how to carry out activities to achieve integral sustainability in the basin of the Magdalena river in Colombia you have the floor sir good morning good morning good morning I thank FAO for the invitation what I am going to show you in a few minutes is a process that we have carried out in Colombia in order to strengthen fisheries governance as well as some activities that contributes within an integral framework that contributes to the sustainability of the Magdalena river basin this is a process that started more than six years ago initially with two fisherman associations then three now therefore we provide support and accompaniment from the beginning with the national fisheries authority which is known as Aounap in Colombia let us begin to look at the Magdalena river basin it is in the northern part of South America in the center of the country we have the Magdalena river basin it is the sources in the Andes and it ends up in the Caribbean and it goes through the Andean valleys the Magdalena river 1,538 km it has more than 3 million hectares associated with aquatic ecosystems it is also the basin that receives a lot of pressure in the country it is the main basin of the country more than 40 million inhabitants 78% of the population and we produce 80% of the GDP electricity and coffee production as well and thermal electricity as well as agricultural production so original ecosystems have suffered from this pressure and obviously fisheries resources have also been affected in the red circle you see the Magdalena river it is the most important fisheries area of the basin let's look at the fish in the Magdalena river basin we have 233 species 68% of them are endemic with biodiversity that is one of the country's patrimony 91 are the object of fishing 65 are for human consumption trade and 40 are simply ornamental and then 8 species have been introduced that have been brought to the area by accident it wasn't planned amongst all of those species we have the barred sorry boom that has the highest represents the highest threat and it is considered as a morose species in the last 40 years we see in this graph how the fisheries production in the Magdalena basin has had a 64% reduction more than half of the fisheries production has disappeared in the last 40 years we also see that the second species of production it has the greatest commercial value and we have considered the annual production in 16.8 million dollars that is back in 2017 so the basin is very important with a lot of it is subjected to a lot of pressure and we need to carry out management and conservation activities for the governance of all of our fisheries who are our fishermen we have 32,000 fishermen that live around the area 157,000 people are the direct beneficiaries from this source of employment the rural population is rather poor with less than the monthly minimum legal wages they have very little there is very little generational shift they have bad living conditions they have now understood what the role can be in terms of organization and conservation we also have a complex environment within an area that is subject to many pressures the forest cover has been reducing steadily in the last 50 years the population has been increasing catchment areas have been growing the production of gold has been growing and that entails a lot of problems for the environment a lot of contamination we have the loss of connectivity we have a complex environmental situation and right now 90% of our fisheries production in a research we have just completed is explained by environmental variables overfishing is no longer the main cause of the reduction of our fisheries resources so the problem is in the integral management of the area we need to understand the environment the forests the rivers and the catchment areas this is the landscape of Karate Chukuri that is where we began and now we have other associations in Barranco de Mera this is the area of the Magdalena river we started here 57 kilometers of river 300 fishermen and four fisherman's associations have joined the process so we see the culture that is associated with the fishing activities the canoes the ports and this is the reality of our landscape we started the process with all the fishermen with conservation strategies based on local knowledge trying to achieve the management of the territory and we have the classical management of the fisheries resources we ask the questions such as can we go beyond the classical management of fisheries with unofficial norms do these contribute to the conservation of the species how can we make the local system more resilient with the support of other fisheries organizations we started carrying out social analysis workshops with a participative process with our fishermen who are obtaining and producing information on the effort the size of our fish the seasons community management to reach agreements, management agreements we have created a local committee for fisheries management that is where we meet and discuss and twice a year we have consultation processes with planning and the interinstitutional structure both in the local community and regional levels that is what we started doing in 2014 with fisheries agreements we have some norms that are unofficial but that can be observed we reached an agreement to protect the breeding season we have had changes in the flows and flow rates of the river so we need to have the seasonal closure exactly when the breeding is taking place here you see the size of landings of catch the allowable catches we speak in terms of pounds of fish we also have rules for our fishing gear agreements depending on the seasons and so forth we have reservoir areas to define a conservation strategy for sorobims we have four reserved areas to our special management and one is in an area where it is completely forbidden to fish in swamps roughly 1300 hectares have been protected and what was important was that the fishing authority authorised these agreements endorsed them producing an administrative certificate that adopted the recommendations amongst the fishermen as we had done with the seasonal closure to allow breeding and reproduction and the fishermen themselves are carrying out the follow-up and monitoring they themselves collect the information process it and distribute it with our support but they are becoming more independent in producing their own information then we have the monitoring of the reserved areas we carry out educational activities assessment activities and we also define some levels of adherence to the agreement here you can see the months the years each figure the size the gear the level of compliance the important thing is that in time we have improved our compliance rate in the six years we have constantly improved we carry out evaluations and assessments every month and discuss it all in our meetings at the table what we do is present and analyze the results of the processes we propose management measures we try to improve the trust between institutions and the community and we try to bring the state closer to the community we have two meetings a year with all the stakeholders and entities involved the national associations that deal with fisheries and other sectors as well and we try to have the participation of all the local stakeholders in the the table now we have helped them understand that it is necessary to carry out conservation activities to protect the territory we carry out educational activities with children in all of our schools we have developed educational projects in all of the schools and the fishermen themselves are the teachers they themselves show their children the importance of the fisheries we have connectivity restoration activities for our flood lands the lack of connectivity is one of our more serious problems and then we have rehabilitation for forests in our floodable plains the relationship of the forests with the fish, with productivity services that water ecosystems provide we carry out rehabilitation activities we have a small plant production structure as you can see we have freshwater projects so that people may access clean fresh water and we have projects with protection measures of the quality of water and in Bocas de Carare we also have these all of these activities for the purification of water are within an integral holistic protection of the territory and of the resources and of the resources in other ways what are our reflections we began six years ago and we have now a social, environmental and economic transformation process in the implied locations it is sad to say we rarely have access to communication systems the best practices in fishing agreements are complied with in a reasonable manner as we showed and this is a clear contribution to the conservation of the barred sorobim it's a small area but it can act as a pilot to replicate the quality of life in the basin of the river we have already started the process in other regions continuity for more than five years of the Mesa del Bagre of our meetings has managed to create a regional planning and coordination tool the sector has become more resilient and the implementation of the quality of life and the reduction of poverty have strengthened our process we are now working on consolidating the financial independence of associations to ensure the sustainability of the process so that they may feel they own the process themselves and so that they may fund it in the future as well as their own associations so these are the institutions that have supported us that have helped us out and I would like to thank the Fishing Authority that has always supported us they have always been with us from the start and all of these entities have supported us and continue giving us their support so I hope I have been able to illustrate the strengthening of governance and complementary activities process that we are carrying out in the Magdalena River Basin in Colombia and I hope you have found it interesting thank you so much for your kind attention thank you very much Mr. Valdurama it's been my pleasure to learn about your work before this webinar and now to hear about it in more detail is really a great opportunity thank you for this excellent presentation so again referring to our pre-webinar survey of participant opinions you ranked various types of activities in terms of their priority for achieving the STGs particular target 15.1 and the highest ranked activities were development of inter or multidisciplinary management frameworks capacity building and watershed planning including forestry, fisheries, and water management and importantly implementation of cross-sectoral river basin management plans so with over 25 years of experience in intersexual river basin management planning I would like to introduce Mr. Evans Kaseke he's worked for the World Bank for UNESCO and the African Development Bank and he is currently the program manager for the Zambezi River Strategic Plan Mr. Kaseke, the floor is yours and I will begin to share the presentation please let me know when you want me to change slides all right we can get going thank you I think to to maximize on my bandwidth over here I'll just switch off the video for the moment but just to show who I am this is Evans Kaseke from the Zambezi Watercourse Commission and as I've already been introduced I'm responsible for strategic planning development of instruments of cooperation in the Zambezi Watercourse thank you so I'll switch off my video and focus on the presentation what I'm going to be doing today is to share with you framework the large framework that we have developed in the Zambezi for cooperative management of this particular natural resource before I can embark on the presentation I would like to inform the meeting that the Zambezi has been designated a fishery a significant fishery in southern Africa and has been done through activities that we've embarked on with the African Union I think some of you know which is actually fronting the development of fisheries in Africa the southern African development community the fisheries division we are actually at the Zambezi Commission we are actually part of the technical development of the African Union on fisheries the SDAC committee on fisheries so there's quite a lot of work that we have been doing together with these two key organizations the continental as well as the regional on the development of fisheries in southern Africa and my presentation is going to be on multi-sectoral management of large rivers and in this case the Zambezi watercourse let's go on to the second next slide please the outline of my presentation amounts to the key items that I will be focusing on Zambezi watercourse key features Zambezi watercourse the definition this is very important so that everybody is at par with the kind of feature that we are actually talking about the governance structure this is very critical for cooperative management of these large features these transboundary features then I will also move on to the key challenges the ones that actually galvanize that actually galvanized the eight countries in the Zambezi watercourse to get together and produce and come up with the Zambezi watercourse commission then also I will move on to the opportunities for enhanced cooperation amounts to the eight countries I will touch on the vision which is the preferred development future then I will move on to the key instrument of cooperation the main framework within which the Zambezi is now being managed and within which fisheries the issue of fisheries is actually going to be managed then I will end up with the foreseen benefits of cooperation next slide please the Zambezi watercourse key features amongst others are that it is the fourth largest river in Africa after the Nile the Congo and the Niger and just to give you an example when we compare for example the discharge of the Zambezi with respect to the Congo when the Congo when they say you know it's a drought year and there's not much water in the Congo just downstream of Kinshasa we are talking of around 40,000 cubic meters per second that is a very large discharge and then we talk of the Zambezi probably at its mouth we'll be talking around 7,000 cubic meters anything up to 10 15,000 cubic meters per second in a very good season so when you compare it with the Nile, the Niger the Zambezi is somewhere there but not as large then also another key feature of the Zambezi is actually a watercourse which is shared by eight countries that are the republics of Angola Botswana Malawi Mozambique Namibia Tanzania and Zimbabwe and what brings these countries together is an agreement which they actually signed in 2004 which actually called the agreement on the establishment of the Zambezi watercourse commission that's the one which actually the organization that presides over this transboundary system is actually the Zambezi watercourse commission and another key feature the mean annual runoff which is available for development mean annual runoff is around 200 billion cubic meters per second and this water actually this is very important when we are talking about fisheries this is it and when we talk of deforestation it adversely impacts on the availability of this resource for the management for the availability of viable fisheries and then also it's very important to talk about the people within the Zambezi watercourse at the moment we are talking about around 45 million people and the population is projected to be around 50 to 55 million around 2025 so when we talk of the population the people we are actually also focusing on the issue of dependence that population is dependent on the resources that are available within the Zambezi watercourse and you can also imagine the dependence on not only the water but also the issues that will arise and in this case water pollution it adversely impacts on the availability of quality water for fish for breeding as well the environment that they need to thrive in so we are talking of issues that are actually interlinked that are interwoven that can adversely or positively impact on fisheries next slide please next slide yes before I can go on before I can go on it's very important that we get to know what Zambezi is Zambezi is actually defined as a watercourse that definition is actually is enshrined in the United Nations Convention on non-navigation uses of water that's where it originates from then that was cascaded down to the southern African revised protocol on shared water courses water courses are what we have in southern Africa we don't have really river basins because with river basins you are actually focusing on the liquids that you actually find within those drainage basins but with the watercourse the definition is the system of surface and ground waters of the Zambezi constituting by virtue of their physical relationship a unitary hole flowing normally into a common terminus and in this case the Indian ocean the Zambezi watercourse is perceived broadly to also include the topography of the landscape and associated lands of the Zambezi river so we are talking of the Zambezi river in association with all the lands that are actually in its catchment let's go on to the next next yes and after the future we also have to take note of the situation that for the watercourse commission to operate there is a structure that was actually set up and this is actually enshrined in the agreement which was signed in 2004 and the highest decision making body within the Zambezi watercourse commission is the council of ministers and at the moment we are talking of ministers of water they are the key officials that sit in that body so they decide they actually endorse and approve activities that are actually carried out year in year out within the Zambezi watercourse and just below the technical the council of ministers there is the technical committee these are primarily permanent secretaries and directors from the ministries of water but these two organs the council of ministers it has demanded to actually share what is occurring within the Zambezi watercourse with other ministers from other sectors as well as you know informing the heads of states the presidents the prime ministers on activities that are actually going on within the Zambezi watercourse and it is through these two key organizations that you know the issue of ownership is anchored within the Zambezi watercourse then the secretariat where I sit this is actually where we have got demanded to actually operationalize to implement decisions of council and below the secretariat there are specialized working groups for example if now we are going to be embarking on the development of a framework for cooperative management of fisheries in the Zambezi watercourse that entails that you know we have to actually put together a specialist group of experts who are very specialized in fisheries so they are the ones who actually sit in that particular group and advise and drive the process of developing a framework a regional framework for the development and management of fisheries also what I wish to share with the meeting is that the Zambezi watercourse commission its activities are actually anchored in a very strong watercourse multi-sector multi-sectoral stakeholder activity so the multi-sector component plays a major major role in the development of all sectors sectoral activities within the Zambezi watercourse so this is primarily what happens is what comes out of the multi-sectoral stakeholder level which is right at the bottom there which is the foundation that's what actually is pushed right up to the council of ministers so the council of ministers are actually mandated to actually deal with what comes what is recommended from the lower levels and those lower levels include we're talking of the public sector we're talking of the private sector we're talking of the NGOs we're talking of our rural people the ordinary person who is the key beneficiary of the activities of the commission is actually the one who will sit in that particular organ right at the bottom let's go on to the next slide the key challenges that were identified that were identified you know throughout the Zambezi watercourse commission were actually identified through a very intense stakeholder consultative process this actually started around 2004 soon after the signing of the agreement and there was a strategy and integrated water resources management strategy for the Zambezi which was produced in 2008 that is a key document whereby stakeholders multi sectoral stakeholders articulated these particular challenges you know for the Zambezi we know that when it comes to challenges we can have specifics like water pollution we can have environmental degradation climate change all those are challenges but what are the key overarching challenges these are the key challenges that were actually articulated by stakeholders and these actually touch on all the other all the other challenges we can think of climate change, environmental degradation and in this case the first one was articulated as persistent poverty there is the need for equitable and resilient development these are the broad statements that were actually articulated crystallized you know from the multi sectoral stakeholder consultations the next one it was articulated that there is competition there are competing uses for water in this case talking of hydropower agriculture urban industrial and of importance there is need for balanced development then also another key challenge infrastructure deficits this is very key when we talk of development we are talking of infrastructure it's not just water but there is if I could it's actually anchored within a multi sectoral spectrum so here when we talk of infrastructure deficit we are talking of energy we are talking of transport roads we are talking of green energy we are talking of the grey infrastructure one of the key key desires of the stakeholders there is need for infrastructure development also environmental degradation this is another key challenge that was actually that was identified by the stakeholders environmental degradation we are talking of pollution also of pollution deforestation and that there is need for sustainable development as well and here we are talking of environmental resources development and protection then also another key challenge which is always experienced within the watercourse disaster risk was a key challenge that was identified and here for the stakeholders the need for climate resilient development so issues of climate change they come in very strongly so let's go on to the next next slide please the key opportunities for sustainable development in this underwater course were also identified by multi sectoral stakeholders consultations as pent up socio-economic development demand in the region there is demand for socio-economic development in the region be it agriculture in energy, in transport and manufacturing by one would find that like at the southern African community development level industrialization has been prioritized because there is need for that in respect also to uplifting the standards of living of the populations then also demonstrable political will to co-operate this is a key feature that actually is driving the processes in this underwater course a very good example the political will to co-operate we are talking of the signing of the 2004 agreement after years of negotiation and as of 2019 we have witnessed actually the adoption of a new framework of operation and planning for the Zambez Watercourse and this is the strategic plan for the Zambez Watercourse then also we are talking of legal and institutional frameworks that have been agreed on as instruments of cooperation examples the agreement divides the protocol on shared water courses the strategic plan all those they constitute the legal framework and what for these to come into being the political willingness to co-operate is a key feature and also what I want to share with the meeting is these legal and institutional frameworks they come about through a very strong sectoral stakeholder consultative process these products of those processes then we are also talking of strong and extensive analytical foundations in the Zambez we have got lots of studies that are actually going on generation of information and data that is actually going to be that is very useful for informing decision making as we are just talking I can give you a very good example we have just been granted a multi-million dollar grant by the European Union to actually embark on serious studies those studies they will generate information and data they will also be generating experts at the masters and doctorate levels in the various sectoral fields that are of importance for the Zambez water course so this is actually an bonus a plus for the Zambez water course then also through another world bank study called the Monsieur multi-sector investment opportunity analysis study there was an identification that there is actually opportunities for investments in infrastructure with more than 16 billion and some of it we have just recently witnessed the commissioning of a bridge 360 million bridge on the Zambez that is from Botswana to Zambia but all the other countries are also involved that is what we are talking about the potential for cooperative investments in poverty alleviating infrastructure this is important we have got a program called creative climate resilient infrastructure development facility which is actually funded by the UK government to the tune of 1 million pounds that is actually going to be it has been operating investing in infrastructure that is actually targeting a poverty alleviation infrastructure and that infrastructure I would like to also share with you that there is also a component of fisheries in irrigation systems we have got those night storage dams in those night storage dams and there is the opportunity for fisheries for aquaculture and we have got examples that we can actually share with colleagues water transfers there are two major water transfers one for Botswana another one for Zimbabwe hydro power production we are talking of the Batoka gorge for which now the EIA is being concluded then also transplanted irrigation schemes they are all on the cards so these are key opportunities for sustainable development within the water course let's go on to the next slide please what also binds the people within the Zimbabwe water course they actually during the development of the of the strategic plan they agreed on a vision with respect to where they want to be taken to by development the preferred future it reads as maximise the economic benefits of water development in the Zimbabwe water course they have predicted constraints of ensuring the maintenance of moderate environmental flows and flood protection so this is the development future that was preferred and which is now the vision of development for all the people in the Zimbabwe water course let's move on to the next slide please next slide please yes let's go on to the strategic plan for the Zimbabwe water course as a main instrument of cooperation for all the eight countries in the Zimbabwe water course and this is now the new framework of planning and operations for the Zimbabwe water course and it's the one that is actually going to be driving development through which development is going to be driven for the Zimbabwe water course and in the agreement of 2004 the development of the strategic plan was actually made a priority and it was defined as a development plan comprising a general planning tool the general planning tool we've got a decision support system that we actually developed which is in place and which was developed through a multi-sectoral consultative process which was agreed on as the tool that will be used for the Zimbabwe in planning by all the eight countries and there is also an inherent process for the identification categorization and prioritization of projects and programs for the efficient management and sustainable development of the Zimbabwe water course and inherent to this process of identification categorization and prioritization there is what we call, there's another instrument of cooperation which is entitled the ZAMCOM procedures for notification of planned measures and what this does is that if a country wants to develop a project in any of its territory it has to notify other countries so that you know there's no harm which is okay to other countries by way of developing that particular asset and in this case we can also let it to fisheries with fish they like water of a certain quality water of a certain quantity for them to thrive you know to breed so all of those have got to be maintained and this strategic plan contributes to the contributes to the mission of ZAMCOM which is to promote the equitable and reasonable utilization of water resources of the ZANBEZ water cost as well as sustainable development thereof. Next slide please this is just strategic plan the objective what I would just say is it provides a basis for an agreed coordinated and integrated implementation of activities in the context of efficient management and sustainable and what I can also with respect to share with you on the last statement is that having adopted the strategic plan member states are now required to conduct their management and development plans projects and programs relating to the ZANBEZ water cost in accordance with the strategic plan next slide please the core components of the strategic plan are infrastructure investment livelihood support environmental protection and water resources management those are the key pillars of the strategic plan so all the investments are going to be coming through those particular pillars next slide please yes and you may also want to know that you know the preparation of the strategic plan which is now the main planning and operations framework is based on the previous on the studies quite a lot of studies that have gone on you know in the ZANBEZ and then also the second bullet it talks to the strong multi-sector stakeholder consultation process that actually goes on for all the activities in the ZANBEZ water cost next slide please so for the strategic plan to be implemented what happened was the strategic plan was deliberately developed without an implementation plan so a number of activities had to be done before the actual implementation of the strategic plan so a number of activities have been prioritized under each of those pillars the one that I would like to mention that I would like to share with you is one that we are actually implementing right away in cooperation with the WWF and with our assistant from the United States USAID and the United States Department of State and this is actually focusing on dialogues so that you know people you know stakeholders let's say from Angola or Portuguese speaking from Namibia or English speaking Mozambique also Portuguese speaking you know from the whole spectrum from the upstream to the downstream to the mouth of the of the ZANBEZ they should be able to talk to address issues pertaining to transboundary development so there is a program that is actually working on the dialogue how people can actually talk to each other about issues pertaining to the transboundary system which is the ZANBEZ and that's just one that I want to share with you. Next slide please yes for seeing benefits of cooperation the management and development of the ZANBEZ is actually a cooperative activity and these are some of the benefits that were actually articulated by through multi sectoral stakeholder consultations peace dividends increase the food security increase the regional economic benefits increase the energy security joint investment planning jointly addressing external threats increased employment opportunities these are key drivers that make people that make the countries and ultimately the people co-operates and at the bottom you can see there is that bar with the flags of the eight countries and then you've got Danida you've got World Bank and some GIZ what that symbolizes is with the eight countries we need partnership international co-operating partners strategic partner organizations and that is the way we are operating in the ZANBEZ that is essential for multi sectoral management of large rivers and lastly thank you that is a picture of the Victoria Falls very important for tourism thank you thank you very much Mr. Kaseki that was extremely interesting and truly relevant last speaker on my list is Mr. Nelson Alex from the Kichwa peoples and an NGO of Ecuador Mr. Dawa has extensive experience as a researcher and is currently the director of a division of the agriculture of Ecuador represents the stakeholders on the ground he will be addressing the issue of how indigenous peoples draw a link between the environment and human well-being and how this is reflected in their customs and traditions will also be addressing the importance of forests, rivers and fisheries for indigenous peoples as a main topic for his presentation on the floor thank you Ashley, thank you for inviting me to take part in this event I'm part of this broader picture we've painted and I'd like to tell you a little bit about the customs and traditions of indigenous peoples from the I'd like to share with you the experiences of our people it's important to understand how indigenous peoples live which is why I've tried to summarize a few key aspects I'd like to tell you about how we live and why our world view as indigenous peoples includes the importance of forests, rivers fisheries in our daily lives in the province of Pestasa as you can see it's quite a large area a very diverse region of Ecuador with seven different nationalities including Chuar, Chuar Warani Chuar, Chuar Andoan and they're distributed across different areas as you can see in the image up on the screen which is a map of the different nationalities within these many generations have lived their lives and exercised their customs with a view to keeping forests alive in each of their individual territories that's key in order to achieve sustainable development across all nationalities and all peoples as a people and as nationalities we have dwelt in four main aspects one of the elements is called biodiversity you know that biodiversity is included in many aspects or components that are a part of it in our own language in our cosmo vision we have guidelines and it is important that this has prevailed throughout the life of our communities our culture has also been important as each of the communities has developed its own culture for millions of years how they have carried out work in each of their communities and then the element of history is also an important pillar in each of our communities because the history of each of our communities is developed according to how they have transformed and experienced their spirituality with the relationship with forests between forests and mankind and men and women in the communities and another thing is living together shared lives sharing between our brothers peoples communities our experiences our everyday life to have conversations to become familiar to solve problems amongst family members that is why our shared lives together within our nationalities has been so important here you see grandmother Rebeca who has great knowledge of her own culture and she has handed it down by narrating the life of the different nationalities one of the examples of our community can be told through the stories the narrative Tiax are those who have left the higher basin of pastasas to the lower basin towards Maranhon and they have named the rivers because the Tiax have been powerful they take ayahuasca or other medicinal remedies based on their tradition the tradition of their spirituality in terms of naming the rivers so they are like small scientists because they through their vision have seen the development of the rivers where they come from how to name them all of this has been important from pastasas all the way downstream another of the historical issues that are told by our grandparents the amasangas our ancestors they are the kings of the jungle they have the energy they own the forest and they attract the animals of many species in a primary intangible forest where not just anyone can enter not just any human being can carry out his or her activities there and the amasangas are the owners so they have a territory that is reserved only to them and nobody else can enter it because that is where the spiritual conversations with the lord take place and only through them can you carry out work or activities there the huri huris is a similar story millenary story history of the indigenous peoples in the pastasa people and the ingaros also they have been marked spirituality they have maintained for thousands of years in many of the communities transforming it into an experience the spirituality living in the jungle and they keep the jungle alive that is why the relationship with rivers and forests has always been important in the stories that are handed down generation from generation the culture here in pastasa has been varied since we have seven nationalities different peoples and communities have their own customs and traditions and for example we have dances and the dances are different amongst the nationalities painting painting our bodies has different meanings in the different communities as you can see in this image through the blow gun this man is being painted and then they wear ornaments and they know how to preserve the forest in its natural habitat and the different practices of yacac here at grandmother is blowing so that the evil spirits can leave to free this man who was linked to evil spirits and he needs to be liberated from them that is important in each of our nationalities and that is how they have lived and produced many yacacs that have been handed down generation from generation and it has been important to strengthen this in the daily lives of each of these communities and then they also have costumes the ornaments they wear have been important in their daily lives they have different types of clothing that has meaning from the ancestors from the grandparents and ethnobiology has focused on the nationalities as these know many of the species in their own languages that they apply in their daily lives they use them in their daily lives and it has been very important they support many of the communities and the ones that are nearby along the highways where mining activities are carried out have been partially lost because in the area of the highways those who carry out forestry activities have invaded the area and the community needs to survive with its own harmony and they try to maintain their own language but more and more they are starting to speak in Spanish and English and their children and young people are learning English and Spanish and the traditional languages in the high basin of PASTAZA is now being partially lost another important aspect has been sharing our lives and our agricultural activities in the PASTAZA province of the Amazon area as you can see they share they make chicha which is by the women and everyone takes part in the cooking the children the girls the mothers they prepare this and that has been our tradition sharing between families between brothers between communities because that is how certain experiences of ancient knowledge of seed keeping are handed down and communicated each of the communities has ancestral feeds that they have kept for many many centuries and it is important for the territory because the communities they have not devoted themselves to agriculture in a large territorial extension only have a hectare for example of land is what each community cultivated but there is a lot of diversity in the agricultural systems both for the extraction of wood or other crops of plants that are endemic in the area however some communities are beginning to lose this tradition and then there is also a tradition of textiles with mokawa you see that this woman is weaving a mokawa representing many of those textile products represent the animals that are important from the spiritual standpoint and through the preparation of the mokawa they produce also the chicha and that is why it has been important to safeguard this in all the communities you see the child holding a squirrel because we live together with our animals so the child knows and lives together with the fauna that is how our communities live with the animals and that is what has kept our culture alive the ecosystem is alive it is intact human beings have not caused a huge impact on our territory because of this because we live in harmony with nature that is how we share our lives together and also basket weaving the community itself knows how to weave what you see here is a bejuko that is the basket that is made by men in many shapes for different activities as you can see here for agriculture to carry out bananas, pineapples sugar cane and that is important for each of the communities so ancestral knowledge is important because ancestors grandparents handed down the traditions but now we are losing this in part because multinational companies mining and oil companies have taken over the land and that is where when the communities have not supported one another all of their traditions have been lost and here you can see our fishing activities we have also had important relations in the communities within a people each nationality has its own techniques or practices that they develop for fishing to carry out different activities they know many species in their own languages roughly 277 77 species are the ones that we know in our own languages and it would be good to compare the names of the species amongst our communities what are the scientific names of the species that we know we haven't really looked into this we haven't explored the flora and fauna from the geostanpoint but we have so many species and as nationalities we have a small community system where dynamite explosions are prohibited we can eat the products for our own food security but not beyond that and that is why sharing our experiences has been so important in order to carry out conservation of many of the resources that our communities are now losing so that the coming generations will be able to see the species that still exist in our communities that is why when it comes to hunting it is important. Hambi is a poison developed by men and it requires a lot of time to make it using techniques and medicinal plants and Hambi is a poison that can kill an animal you can also hunt with bloke and spears the tip of the spear is poison and that kills the animal and it is cheap because they can develop their own livelihoods and within their own communities how they live their lives in order to have food security and then we have the bodoqueras, the blowguns then spears, hooks, arrows also used for fishing and this has been important for all the different communities and nationality medicinal plants ancestral medicinal plants that our communities have are also extremely important because many of the communities have used them since ancient times and the forests are essential because it is from the forests that animals or aquatic species are caught and used so that these species are used together with plants to make medicinal remedies and in many communities these traditional practices are still applied to making of medicinal plants there are many different species that are known in the nationality's own languages and being a part of this exploration that we're carrying out some of us don't know them while our grandparents do know them and it is important for them to hand them down to convey them to their future generations as a conclusion we have seven different nationalities in the area and we conservation explore with the indigenous cosmo vision that our nationalities have in this province and we have also recommended the governance to be independent through the indigenous cosmo vision our vision of the world to reach sustainable development because each of the territories maintains its vision of the world and manage the resources it is important so that multinational companies to prevent multinational companies from affecting our communities and causing them to lose their customs, their traditions and culture we also have ancestral and western knowledge it is important nowadays to know about other cultures because we are globalized, globalization is moving forward and so it is important to have knowledge of the reality of the world and what is happening with climate change now this is what I can tell you about our experience and I'm here to answer any questions should you wish to make any. Thank you very much Mr. De Hoa this was a very inspiring and important presentation and I'm very grateful that we have your perspective as part of our program today so with thanks to all our speakers I'm proud and happy to introduce the director of FAO's Forestry Division Mehta Wilkie for closing comments the floor is yours. Thank you so much and first and foremost thank you so so much to the speakers for this series of fascinating presentations with perspectives from around the globe we see that in spite of the challenges there's a lot of value in intersectoral collaboration across ecosystems I'd also like to sincerely thank the audience for your comments your questions, your enthusiasm we are all benefitting from the very active discussion in the chat and I hope that all the panelists will have time to answer some of your questions and that this discussion will continue into the future the evidence that we've heard today demonstrate the possibility but also the difficulty of implementing integrated approaches to achieve socially, economically and ecologically balanced development across large and very complex watersheds in order to deliver on the sustainable development goals but it's not only necessary to think across disciplines and come up with innovative solutions it's equally important to ensure broad participation of stakeholders as we've heard and this can help make the true value of ecosystems services visible, can help to better inform management and the tradeoffs and can help sustain ecosystem services to benefit human society broad participation of stakeholders can also help a balanced and sustainable development and an equitable distribution of the benefits many of the most successful strategies prioritized co-management with local communities using their extensive local knowledge that we've just heard of ecosystem functions by diversity and priorities for effective restoration measures FIO is just developing a new strategic framework with four outcomes better production, better nutrition better environment and a better life that framework is well suited to try to address these issues and help countries meet in particularly the sustainable development goal 14 life below water and sustainable development goal 15 life on land and as we've seen today the management of freshwater systems is inherently multi-disciplinary FIO initiatives for multi-disciplinary work has catalyzed this joint forestry and fisheries event and we anticipate additional joint activities supported by what we call the multi-disciplinary fund in Sambia Colombia and Papua New Guinea Manoel Barones at the beginning spoke about the importance of forest for fish so I want to talk a little bit about the importance of fish in land fisheries provide food and livelihoods to riparian communities who are then better able to manage their forest resources sustainably in land fish may also supply the nutrients that feed the forest itself Pacific salmon transport nutrients hundreds of kilometers from the ocean to the forest streams where they spawn and die nutrients from the fish transport to forest soils where they support the growth of trees similarly the Cayman of the Amazon river feeding in productive lagoons and then moving to less productive areas fertilized floodplain forests and across many tropical rivers fruit eating fish promote forest diversity by selectively dispersing seeds of fruit trees within their river networks so in these systems fish are even the potential engines of forest restoration the absolutely fantastic biodiversity represented by inland fisheries contributes to the overall health of forested systems many groups consider fisheries and biodiversity conservation to be competing objectives but experiences show that inland fisheries and biodiversity conservation are supported and all the examples of inland fisheries restoration explored to date have demonstrated significant co-benefits of improved biodiversity local communities exhibiting a high degree of knowledge and awareness of both the aquatic and terrestrial biodiversity and in particular their interdependencies are motivated to sustain the fish the forest and the linkages essential to them both also want to talk to you a little bit about the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration which runs from this year 2021 to 2030 it is co-led by FAO and the United Nations Environment Programme it's a rally in call for the protection and revival of ecosystems all types of ecosystems all around the world for the benefit of people as we've heard today freshwater ecosystems are essential elements of all landscape scale restoration plans and the Decade on Ecosystem Restoration is an opportunity to bring together multiple existing data and knowledge stream within FAO and between FAO and other organizations including data, fisheries, agriculture forestry, water resources and effective work we're hoping will also help utilize FAO's considerable knowledge base knowledge that's spread across our divisions on sustainable inland fisheries on sustainable forest management sustainable land management landscape restoration integrated water resources management so do reach out to us if you want some more information about what we are doing in those areas of work I also want to say that this Decade on the Ecosystem Restoration provides a particularly opportunity to make the goods and services provided by freshwater ecosystem more visible in policy arenas and I would encourage you all to take advantage of that the value of these ecosystems is often not fully recognized and therefore may be given low priority invasive development strategies so they will benefit from increased awareness which can be generated through this Decade and those awareness in particularly of the far reaching impact of land and water use across watersheds and of the need for an integrated approach to management so I hope you will be active participants in this UN Decade we will have a formal launch of the Decade on the 5th of June on World Environment Day and I know there's a lot of activities planned in that as well. With that I'd like to thank all our speakers, all our participants those who are up very early and those who are up very late for your participation and for your enthusiasm and as we are getting closer to the afternoon here in Rome we wish our colleagues who are observing Ramadan a very joyful Eid al-Fitr celebration tomorrow. Thank you all very much for this event bye for now.
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Hallmark Playhouse - Unless Love Is Music (#3)
Hallmark Playhouse - 06/24/48, episode 3 OTRR version 2303 This episode provided by the Old Time Radio Researchers
[ "1948", "Old Time Radio" ]
2023-04-02T00:00:09
2024-04-23T14:13:50
1,760
PcMM5xILv7g
Remember a Hallmark card when you care enough to send the very best. Mark greeting cards bring you an exciting dramatization of an unforgettable story on the Hallmark Playhouse. The play was chosen from the whole world of fiction by one of the world's most popular authors whose knowledge of stories that will entertain you and stir your imagination is universally recognized. Hallmark is proud to present the distinguished novelist Mr. James Hilton. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Our story tonight is called Unless Love is Music by Libby Block, which we are giving for the first time on the air. It has a beguiling musical angle and a title that suggests that love is a lyric experience. Well, what happens if it isn't? Our story gives us one answer and there's no doubt that the author has fulfilled her intention to weave an intriguing story. That's not always easy to do, you know. I know something that helps a lot of folks fulfill their good intentions, Mr. Hilton. Yes, I'm quite sure I know what you have in mind. I'm sure you do, Mr. Hilton, and I'm sure millions of other people do, too. It's Hallmark card, you see. Yes, Hallmark cards help make it easy to fulfill those good intentions of keeping in touch with friends on every occasion that calls for remembrance. For Hallmark cards say just what you want to say, the way you want to say it. Now, Mr. Hilton, let's see how Miss Libby Block fulfilled her good intentions. Well, you leave on Dager on a business trip to New York. You're invited to a dinner party in the upper 50s. You sit next to a girl who's not the prettiest girl you've ever seen. She's pale and small and doesn't wear much makeup. And even you, who don't know sat in from Serge, know that her clothes aren't new or expensive. Still, you look at this girl and, well, it happens. You're in love. And going no place unless this stranger goes along. That's what happened to Sam Burridge. After dinner, he sought out the pale little girl, dispensing immediately with the usual verbal whipped cream and getting right down to solid cake. Pardon me, but which is your code? I beg your pardon. Describe your code to me and I'll get it for you. You and I are leaving. Where are we going? We can't just stand here on the curb giving taxi drivers false hope. Now wait, look, let's settle this right now. Settle what? Nothing's happened. On the contrary, something has at last happened. Now, I'll never bother you with questions. All you have to know is your last name and are you free? On second thought, never mind your last name. Am I free? Are you? I'm free. I want you to marry me. Marry you? Good, like that. Could you smile when you say that you look so miserable? Well, that's because you'd have to move down Dega. The whole town could fit into Central Park. I work in construction and track mud around them. Rough, simple, I whistle around the house and I... I don't think you'd like me. Oh, yes, I do. Just forget everything else. What did you say? The answer is yes. Mrs. Burrage, I skipped the flower in your hair. You like it just the way it is, Lord? Uh-huh. Simple things for you. Thank you, Mrs. Burrage. Oh, and thank you for attempting that most delay of beef for the party. I'll try anything once. I do want to make a good impression on Mr. Burrage's friends at our first party for them. Oh, Sam ain't worried. He's got confidence in you. Have you always called Mr. Burrage, Sam? He likes it. They're very fond of him, aren't you? Who ain't fond of him? Um, who is exactly? Besides you, that is. The woman to watch is Mrs. Celeste Clayton. Old slave? Grass widow. Is she pretty? Midland pretty. Clever or talented? She paints watercolors. Talented? Pray so. You do a lot for Sam, didn't you, Flory? I'd even attempt a filet of beef for him. But what can I do? Oh, just keep looking like you do now. Thank you, Flory. And good luck to you, ma'am. Mirror, mirror on the wall. Am I all right for him? Oh, be careful, Faye. Delight him the way they have him. But be careful. So careful. Come in. Faye, if you're about to... Faye. Well, don't look so shocked. But you're lovely. Well, that's like telling me my face is clean. And it is, too. Oh, Sam. You know what? Why? I'm wearing the satin slippers you bought for me. They fit. Of course, they fit. Well, how did you know the size? Promise to run your closet for a sample shoe. All right, Sam. Why are you so good to me? The whip I ordered from Chicago has me right here. All right, now, downstairs you go. Am I all right for them? You'll slaughter them. I want you to be very proud of me, Sam. The carnage will be awful, I'm telling you. Why, in that dress? Well, that dress ought to pose for portraits. You ought to be on a concert stage in that gown. That creation... Well, Sam, how odd of you to say that. Why? Sam, well, would you be surprised or think if I told you that I... I did study for the concert stage once. You? The piano. Me, too. Chopstick. No, really, Sam. A concert pianist. Well, why didn't you ever tell me? I just studied for it. I never quite made it. You just don't want to embarrass Oscar LaVam. Oh, Sam, you mustn't give anyone the impression that... Sam, look at us holding hands while our guests are waiting downstairs. A concert pianist. What do you know? Sam, please don't make anything of it. Hey, if you've made a mistake. If you've been vain to make him proud. You are a perfectly enchanting dress, but rather chic. I'm glad you like it, sir. And that superb filet of beef. Oh, you do much. You know, I just wish there were a piano here so you could play something for us. What? Sam says you're perfectly marvelous. Oh, no. Oh, come, let's not be modest. After all, I never failed to talk about my painting. Excuse me, Celeste. I'm neglecting my other guests. I'm so glad to see you. You murdered him, Miss Predictive. Did I really? Justifiable homicide, too. Tell you how big you went over. We're invited to Dr. and Mrs. Rome's mid-January tea. Mrs. Rome? Mm-hmm. The one who runs the Andega review every year? Mm-hmm, why? Oh, maybe. Like, though. Good night, then. Good night, Sam. Good night. Why did I do it? Why did I do it? Why did I do it? No, please. I just can't. I guess Faye doesn't feel like it just now. No, not today, Sam. She can't play cold like this, but I can. Let me favor you with my version. Well, that must have been terribly embarrassing. Sam, I'd blame you. An artist needs practice, and you're very naughty not to have bought, say, a piano long before this. Now there's an idea. Sam, take me home. All right, dear, come along. I'll get you things. Bye, Celeste. Bye-bye, children. Mm-hmm. Get out of there, Faye. Let's see you slide out of that. I know I could get into the living room. I had it delivered while you were downtown. You like it? Oh, it's beautiful. Yeah. I'll just sit here and relax while you play a list of ours. Oh, it will need tuning. Have a man tuned it, listen. There you see. Go ahead, play something. I can't. I just can't bear having anyone around when any artist will tell you the same thing. You know best, Faye. Look, uh, suppose I go to the office and work late while you practice and private. Don't wait up too late. For you by James Hilton. For a moment to the early 19th century and a quiet street in Concord, Massachusetts, it is late at night and all the houses are dark. But wait, there's the faint glow of a lamp coming from a window of that old house down the block. Inside the room that is lined with books, a thin scholarly man sits at an old-fashioned desk reading and making notes. Year after year, he has done this, constantly reflecting and writing on the problems of everyday living. This is the man whose essays will someday win for him the title of the wisest American. And tonight he has reached a conclusion concerning one ingredient that every work of true value must have. At this point, the great Ralph Waldo Emerson looks up thoughtfully for a moment, then takes up his pen and slowly writes these seven significant words. Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. If you could watch the folks who make hallmark cards, you'd be impressed by the sincere enthusiasm that goes into their work. They want people to enjoy these greetings and they spare no effort in making them warm and friendly and affectionate. You see, they're not making just cards. They're creating hallmark cards, greeting cards that have a wonderful way of saying just what you want to say, the way you want to say it. That's why hallmark cards are America's favorite greeting cards. So remember to look on the back of the card you intend to send. Look for those three identifying words, a hallmark card when you carry enough to send the very best. Now, the distinguished novelist James Hilton continues with the suspenseful romance by another writer of today, the Libby Block story, Unless Love is Music. With the arrival of that mischievous piano when the barrage home came a curious cooling in Sam Barrage's attitude towards his wife. Perhaps Faye in her distraught mental state merely imagined it. She remained for the new crisis to bring matters more into the open. In April, plans were underway for the on-dega review. Celeste, being husbandless and free, contrived to be chosen as chief talent scout for the show. And who will be the first on her list? Of course. But her natural prey, Faye Barrage. Hello? Faye, darling, this is Celeste. How are you, dear? Very well, Celeste. How are you? Bouncing, darling. And I'm glad you're the queen because we want you to play your review in June. Oh, no, that's impossible. But, darling... I'm sorry, Celeste. I'm much too busy. Miss, with your help and your children, my dear... Goodbye, Celeste. Why don't they leave me alone? Why doesn't she leave me alone? It's on your mind, Celeste. Wish you'd talked to your wife for her sake. Why? What's the matter? We all love Faye, but some of us are beginning to feel a little hurt by her. Why? She continues to refuse playing for us, and people are talking. Talking about what? Well, what would you think about someone who's supposed to be a wonderful piano player and who has never been heard to play a note? Listen, Celeste. Don't bother me with your cat-clubs. If you meant this kindly, I'd thank you kindly. But I'm too busy to listen to ladies' day at the human sacrifices. Goodbye. In favor, sir. I'd like you to play the piano for the Undega review in June. Don't ask me that. I'll never ask you again. Don't ask me at all, Sam. Please don't ask me. Why, Faye, what's wrong? I can't tell you. That's too bad. Everything was good between us up to now. What was good? Up to now. Up to the piano? Up to secrets between us. Secrets between us? Sam. Yes, ma'am? Sam, sit down. Please. Well? Before we were married, you didn't want to know anything about me, not even my name. Remember? I remember. So I didn't tell you anything. And then, when I wanted to seem worthier of you somehow, I told you I could play the piano. You didn't have to do that. But I can play, Sam. Well, then? Or rather, I could play once. I worked very hard to become a concert pianist. I went to Italy to study. I was very poor, but in Sicily, I met a teacher who gave me free lessons. At first, I was very grateful. And then, he was so good to me, I couldn't help what happened. You fell in love with him? I was in love with him. And then I wasn't. I can't explain it to you, but he was fascinating and terrifying when I really knew him. He always said, I have the technique for music, but you have the soul. I can teach, but you will play. We will go far together. We went a long way together, Sam. Is that all? At last, my fear of him grew greater than my fascination. I told him it was over. It was a dreadful scene in the studio, on the cliffs. But at last, he seemed resigned to the break. He asked me to play for him for the last time. I played. In the middle of it, I heard the studio window shatter. They found him on the rocks below, crushed and broken. He knew what it would do to me. Evil and terrible to the last. He destroyed me when he destroyed himself. I could never play after that. You mustn't ask me to, not if you love me, Sam. Call Celeste. I'll tell her I've forbidden you to play. And as gentle as ever, but in the dead of night, he lies awake, rude and smoldering, hating my past, despising me in his secret heart, and tomorrow we must go to that horrible review. And laugh and applaud as though we were the happy gay, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Burridge, as of old. As of old. To take you out of the audience tonight, children, I simply had to. All right, Celeste, what? Is anything wrong? Nothing except that the girl we finally got to play the piano for us tonight hasn't shown up. Let's get out of here, Faye. But all Faye has to do is just sit at the piano and pretend to play. We'll turn the keyboard away from the audience and have Mr. Steinhoff play his piano in the orchestra. Get someone else to do it yourself. Come on. Wait a minute. All you have to do is fake it. I'll do it. Oh, wonderful, darling. I'll tell Mr. Steinhoff right away. I'll do it on just one condition. That I play the music, not Mr. Steinhoff. I, faces over the footlights waiting for me to play, waiting for me to fail. Well, they'll see. The signal, the baton. I'll do it. Feeling better, Sam? Florey and I put her to bed. She's resting upstairs. I confess, I'm bewildered. Are you Celeste? Why, if she can't play, would she go out on that stage tonight as she did? It's my conviction, Celeste, that Faye went out there tonight because she could play once. Well, if she could once, she can today. I don't understand what... I don't expect you to understand, Celeste. Just lay off, that's all. Now, why don't you call a taxi for yourself and go home? I'm going upstairs to my wife. I mean, about tonight and everything. You did think you might be able to play tonight, didn't you? I was heartily sick and tired of the snares and innuendoes of Celeste and some of the others. Yes, I thought I could play. Don't be better. I had nothing to lose tonight by playing, and I did have something to gain. I'd lost you, yes. Lost me? I tried to break down that thing in my mind and soul that kept me from playing. At least I've had my music again. I failed. Lost me? Faye, if you think you alienated me by that story about your music... You know I did. But that's unthinkable. You wouldn't have said you could play unless you could. And when you persistently avoided playing, I knew there had to be a reason, something deeply rooted in your being. When you told me the reason, I was fully prepared for it. Then why did you brood? Why did it alienate you? It didn't. Sam, you've been distant, cold, preoccupied. No, Faye. I was troubled, but not with jealousy. Because if you could play and didn't, something that you treasured as a part of you was lost to you and to me. Sam, is that what you really feel? I've thought it for a long time without knowing what to do about it. It's something you must have or die. Oh, no, Sam. I think so. I think so, too. Oh, no, no. I don't care, Sam. I just want you. I just want you to love me, and I don't care about the other. I don't, Sam, I don't. So be it, Faye. Kiss me. That can be arranged. He doesn't care about what happened long ago. He wants me to play again for my sake. A way he can sing. Sam loves me. And I love Sam. He woke me up. Let me sit beside you. Faye. Let me sit at the piano. Faye, you tried once. Then I'll try again. I don't want you to be hurt. Let me try. Please, let me try. How much will it be? Let me try. I can play. I can play. You did wake me up. In the office. Siegfried broke through the magic fire to wake up Hitler. Didn't he? Mm-hmm. They used to call me fireproof burrage, too. Present an interesting problem. One made especially attractive because of its background of music. As you can imagine, our musical director, Lynn Murray, had quite a field day over it. And Milton Geiger wrote an excellent adaptation. I think you'd also like to know that Faye and Sam Burrage were played by Joan Banks and Bill Johnstone. And our cast included B. Benedett and Eleanor Ortley. Have you heard about the new Hallmark Doll Collectors album? Children are going to have more fun than ever collecting Hallmark Dolls now that there's a lovely new album to put them in. It gives you a new and inexpensive way to make some child very happy. And during this introductory period, the album is only 25 cents when you buy one or more of the Hallmark Dolls. You'd expect the album alone to be worth a dollar, but you can give your little boy or girl or some little friend the Hallmark Doll Collectors album with three beautiful Hallmark Dolls in it to start a collection for only one dollar. It's a wonderful and truly different gift that will make any child's heart leap with joy. Then later, you or friends and relatives can help complete the entire collection of 16 colorful Hallmark Dolls. The dolls are as easy to send as any Hallmark greeting card and cost only 25 cents each. And each new doll added to the collection will mean a new thrill for a child. So stop in tomorrow and see this new album at the store where you buy your Hallmark cards. Remember, the album with three dolls in it to start the collection is only one dollar. Now, once again, James Hilton. Next week we've chosen Penicillinade, the delightful romance by Martha Cheever through which many of you remember. Penicillinade has that most elusive quality, charm, a nostalgic charm that will strike many an echo in the hearts of listeners. I'm telling you this purely and quite frankly as a teaser because I wouldn't like you to miss it. So until next Thursday, this is James Hilton saying good night. To be doubly sure of the finest quality, always look on the back of your cards for those three identifying words, a Hallmark card. Hallmark cards are sold only in stores that have been carefully selected to give you expert and friendly service. Remember, Hallmark cards when you carry enough to send the very best. Now this is Frank Goss saying good night to you all until next week at this time when James Hilton, author of such absorbing stories as Lost Horizon and so well remembered, will return with his story selection for next week. The unforgettable love story, Penicillinade. The deal from the Hallmark Playhouse. This is CBS, the Columbia Broadcasting System. This is KMBC, Kansas City, Missouri.
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'ଯେଉଁମାନେ ଏହି କଳାଧନରେ ସମ୍ପୃକ୍ତ ଅଛନ୍ତି ତାଙ୍କୁ ବହିଷ୍କାର କରାଯାଉ' || BJP Protest || IT Raid || Patnagarh
'ଯେଉଁମାନେ ଏହି କଳାଧନରେ ସମ୍ପୃକ୍ତ ଅଛନ୍ତି ତାଙ୍କୁ ବହିଷ୍କାର କରାଯାଉ' #ArgusNews #BJP #protest #patnagrah #ITRaids #BlackMoney #Crime #sambalpur #balangir #raid #OdiaNews #odishanews #bjd #minister Argus News is Odisha's fastest-growing news channel having its presence on satellite TV and various web platforms. Watch the latest news updates LIVE on matters related to education & employment, health & wellness, politics, sports, business, entertainment, and more. Argus News is setting new standards for journalism through its differentiated programming, philosophy, and tagline 'Satyara Sandhana'. 'ଯେଉଁମାନେ ଏହି କଳାଧନରେ ସମ୍ପୃକ୍ତ ଅଛନ୍ତି ତାଙ୍କୁ ବହିଷ୍କାର କରାଯାଉ' || BJP Protest || IT Raid || Patnagarh To stay updated on-the-go, Visit Our Official Website: https://www.argusnews.in/ (Odia) Visit Our Official Website: https://argusenglish.in/ (English) iOS App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsiOSApp Android App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsAndroidApp Live TV: https://argusnews.in/live-tv/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/argusnews.in Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/c/TheArgusNewsOdia Twitter: https://twitter.com/ArgusNews_in Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/argusnewsin Argus News Is Available on: TataPlay channel No - 1780 Airtel TV channel No - 609 Dish TV channel No - 1369 d2h channel No - 1757 SITI Networks HYD - 12 Hathway - 732 GTPL KCBPL - 713 SITI Networks Kolkata - 460 & other Leading Cable Networks You Can WhatsApp Us Your News On- 8480612900
[ "Argus News 24X7 Live Odia News", "Live Odisha News", "odisha news today", "No.1 Odia News Channel", "Argus News Live TV", "odia news live", "Live National News", "Argus News Odisha", "Orissa News", "Argus live stream", "Oriya News Live", "ଓଡ଼ିଆ news", "odisha news live", "odia news live today", "Naveen patnaik", "odisha news", "Odia News", "sambalpur", "balangir", "raid", "Crime", "Black Money", "IT Raids", "patnagrah", "protest", "BJP" ]
2023-12-12T11:13:05
2024-04-23T23:24:38
318
PCYMMvgdy4s
Ḵᵉ ᵇ ᵏ ᵏ ḇ ᵅᶀ ᵗ ᵇ ᵉ ᵂ ᵗ ᵉ ᵍ ᵏ ᵐ ᵇ ᵏ ᵍ ᵉ ᵄ �isa ᴇ ᵈ ᵍ ᵉ ᵇ ᵉ ᵁ ᶀ ᵏ ᵇ ᵏ ᵇ ᵉ ᵇ ᵏ ᵎ ᵇ ᵀ ᵏ ᶀ ᵇ ᵈ ᵉ ᵜ ᵒ ᵃ ᵃ ᵏ ᵀ ᵂ ᵉ ᵇ ᵹ ᵇ ᵉ ᵀ ᵉ ᵀ ᵉ ᵜ ᵉ ᵉ ᵏ ᵉ ᵉ ᵜ ᵀ ᵏ ᵀ ᵇ ᵀ � इंख्वारी इंवेस्टिगेशन पाई, जो दी मवर कोड़ सी प्रकार संफ्रुक्ती दिबो, तो आईन अनुसर मवर प्रती जहा तुमे आक्षन नबाखता नियो. अर विक्ती तंको पाखे बसी चन, उचन, तिट्लाग़ रो, वोर्त्मन रो महला चेर में मम्त जें. तार परे बस्छन तीपिका मेंदी रथा, ता परे बस्छन भिन्दू साँ, ता परे बस्छन आँद जणे महला ता परे दिपक साँर। जो दिय आपनों को आमा बीट्रेट की बहुल अगिला तेभे आमा चैनेल को लिएक, शेर और सबस्क्रेप करीपा को जमा भी भुलों तो रहीं
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The War on Drugs: On-Screen and Off
Author and advocate Piper Kerman (author of the memoir Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women’s Prison) speaks with ProPublica senior reporter Ginger Thompson, whose work has exposed some of the secret roles Washington has played in the global drug war. The conversation draws on Kerman’s personal experience with the U.S. prison system, and Thompson’s years of covering drug cartels worldwide. The two discuss how the drug war, both at home and abroad, fosters the incarceration of low-level offenders and exacerbates gaping racial disparities, and how the media approaches these issues. Part of the ongoing Sackler Center series “States of Denial: The Illegal Incarceration of Women, Children, and People of Color.” This event took place at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art on September 10, 2016. Video courtesy Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation. www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/video/
[ "Brooklyn Museum", "Piper Kerman", "Orange Is the New Black", "ProPublica", "Ginger Thompson", "drug war", "The War on Drugs", "States of Denial", "Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art", "Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation", "Brooklyn" ]
2016-09-16T18:27:57
2024-02-05T06:34:33
5,139
PcVUMmXk32w
Hello, good afternoon. And you made it through the heat, 72 degrees and counting. Welcome. I'm Elizabeth Sackler. And it is a delight for me to welcome you to our first of their 2016-2017 series of States of Denial, the Illegal Incarceration of Women, Children, and People of Color. Firstly, I'd like to thank the Novo Foundation, who is our senior sponsor for the series. And also thank the Brooklyn Museum for giving us a really a very important venue to bring these matters of urgency to the public and to you. I'm delighted that Piper Kerman is returning as she has again and again to open a new season. And as many of you probably know that the Troika of Michelle Alexander and Piper Kerman and Brian Stevenson during the last four years created an outreach. And we reached a critical mass of public's awareness of the horror of our penal system, which was built as we know to disenfranchise populations of people and institutions within our country, right here in our city, that continue to engage in unspeakable human rights violations. There are now hundreds of organizations and legal offices working nationwide to dismantle the system. And of course, the great news this summer, which is the move toward the closing of privatized prisons, is a very major step forward for all of us for our country. But we do obviously have to keep pushing. We have to keep educating. We have to keep talking. And we have to keep demanding. I know for a fact that the Brooklyn Museum is very proud to educate our public on the struggles that our communities right around us face and also the wonderful organizations that are here in Brooklyn that fight for our people and equity and justice. For today's program, I want to give a special shout out and thanks to Cynthia Gordy. Cynthia, where are you? You were just here. Thank you very much. Cynthia is with ProPublica. Please stand up so we can acknowledge you. It was Cynthia who suggested this program with Piper and Ginger together. And she proposed the conversation because she felt it would offer us an opportunity to focus on the drug wars from different angles. One mass incarceration of low level offenders of women who have become the fastest growing segment of the prison population. And also the international drug cartels in which American policies contribute to staggering rates of violence with impunity. So I thank you, Cynthia, and ProPublica, very much for being with us today. Before continuing with the introduction of our speakers, I'd like to point out to you that Mother Jones Magazine is celebrating its 40th year. And it has devoted its last two issues, which is July, August, and September, October, to investigative reporting. One on privatized prisons. The journalist went in and applied for a job called My Four Months as a Private Prison Guard. And the other, which is in this month, Minor Threats, which reveals how and why thousands of girls are being jailed for talking back, for staying out late, for skipping school. And I recommend both of these to you. So with that, I would like to introduce our wonderful speakers today, our conversants, Piper Kerman. Piper is the author of the memoir Orange is a New Black, My Year in Woman's Prison from Spiegel and Growl. The book has been adapted by Jenny Cohen into an Emmy and P buddy award-winning original series for Netflix. We're probably all very familiar with that. Piper works with Spitfire Strategies as a communications consultant with nonprofit philanthropies and other organizations working in the public interest. She's a frequently invited speaker to students of law, criminology, gender and women's studies, sociology, and creative writing, and also to groups that include the American Correctional Association's Disproportionate Minority Confinement Task Force, federal probation officers, public defenders, justice, reform advocates, and volunteers, of course, book clubs, and formerly and currently incarcerated people. Piper does serve on the board of the Women's Prison Association, which I'm sure most of us are familiar with. And she has been called as a witness by the US Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Human Rights to testify on solitary confinement and women prisoners. So she has spoken at the White House on reentry and employment to help honor champions of change in the field. And in 2014, Piper was awarded the Justice Trail Laser Award from John Jay, and the Media Crime and Justice and the Constitutional Commentary Awards, excuse me, from the Constitution project. I think it is fair to say, and sometimes it's awkward reading somebody's bio, but I think that we are all probably aware of the important impact that Piper's book has had and that the Netflix series has had. We're reaching population. She has reached populations with her book, with the series, that otherwise wouldn't be familiar with these areas. And so it is an extraordinary honor to continue to have you come, Piper, and I thank you very much. Ginger Thompson is here, and she is a senior reporter at ProPublica. She is a Pulitzer Prize winner. She previously spent 15 years at the New York Times, including time as the Washington Correspondent and as an investigative reporter whose stories revealed Washington's secret role in Mexico's fight against drug traffickers. Thompson served as the Mexico City Bureau Chief for both the Times and the Baltimore Sun. While at the time, she covered Mexico's transformation from a one-party state to a fledgling multi-party democracy and parachuted into breaking news events across the region, including Cuba, Haiti, and Venezuela. For her work in the region, she was a finalist for the Pulitzer's Gold Medal for Public Service. She won the Maria Morse Cabot Prize, the Selden Ring Award for investigative reporting, and Inter-American Press Association Award, and an Overseas Press Club Award. Thompson was also part of a team of national reporters at the Times that was awarded a 2,000 Pulitzer Prize for the series, How Race is Lived in America. Thompson graduated from Purdue, where she was managing editor of the campus newspaper, The Exponent. So she's been at this a long time. She's earned a master of public policy from George Washington with a focus on human rights law. So we are really fortunate to have these two incredible women with us today. We are also really fortunate to have these two incredible women out there doing the work that they do do. And so please join me in welcoming them, and I look forward to a really interesting conversation. Hello. Hi, everyone. Thank you all for being here, and thank you to the Brooklyn Museum for having us. Thank you, Elizabeth. This is a treat for me. I read Piper's book and devoured it, and I'm looking forward to our talk. So the subject that brings us here is the drug war and how images in popular culture shape our views of it. Popular culture has been fascinated by the drug war since Nixon declared it in the early 1970s. And why wouldn't it be? The so-called war seems like it was written for motion pictures. It's a colossal epic fight. It's covered in blood. It's fueled by greed and corruption at the highest levels of government. And it's led, bless you, it's led by a broad array of riveting characters, some of them larger than life, some of them totally beaten down by it, all of them deeply flawed. It's hard to keep up with who's good and who's bad. It's kind of got its own soundtrack that sort of fits all musical tastes. It's got acid rock, gangster rap, cartel corridos. And best of all, the war is an absolute mess. There's no winners or winning in sight. It's one of those subjects where real life is better than fiction. Writers don't need great imaginations. They need just good eyes and ears. The stories, when you can find people who are courageous enough to tell them to you, write themselves. But do they do more than entertain? In showing the war's myriad failings, does popular culture generate indifference or cynicism or show us ways out? Should it show us ways out? These are the subjects that I feel that Piper is particularly well-suited to explore with us. I mean, how many people in the audience have served time in prison and who are willing to talk about it publicly? Handful. How many of you have written a memoir or anything, for that matter, that has been turned into a widely acclaimed film or television series? You're about to get a firsthand look at both. I found Piper's book hard to put down. And I found the series, the characters in the series, sort of cinematic works of art. Some of Piper's story may be new to you. And so if you're OK with this, Piper, I'd like to start with sort of talking briefly about your book, talking briefly about the experience of turning the book into television and then about the impact of popular culture on these attitudes, on public attitudes. And of course, we'll leave time for questions from the audience and comments. So start with the book. Can you tell us sort of why you went to prison and what it's like to go to prison? Sure. I want to echo your thanks, Ginger, to the Brooklyn Museum and especially to Elizabeth Sackler and the Sackler Center for Feminist Art for their commitment to holding these conversations. At this point, year after year, I think this is the third year of this series. So I just wanted to say thank you, Brooklyn Museum. Thank you for coming. OK, in 1992, I graduated from college. And that was a confusing moment in time for me, that transition from adulthood or from that intermediate post childhood towards adulthood is challenging for folks whether they're fortunate enough to go to college or not. Those moments of independence when you are sort of striking out and trying to figure out what your place is in the world are thrilling and terrifying and confusing. And in 1992, that was the first Bush recession. We did have a second one. And there were not a lot of jobs to be had. So I was sort of drifting about and I was lucky enough to get a job waiting tables. And that's when I crossed paths with somebody who I became involved in a relationship with who was involved with drug trafficking. And so when I think about my own experience and the experiences of a great number of the women that I was incarcerated with and a great number of the people, the both the men and the women that I have known over the many, many years since I was incarcerated, a person's involvement in the illicit drug world always begins with some kind of a relationship. It might be a romantic relationship. It might be a friendship. It might be a family relationship. But a person's moment when they cross the line, cross a legal line, is always predicated on some kind of a relationship that contributes to that decision making in terms of, is this the right thing for me to do even though it's an illegal thing to do? Is this a safe thing for me to do? Is it not safe for me not to do this? Like there's a whole host of those decisions. The bad decision that I made was to carry a bag of drug money from Chicago to Brussels, just like in the series. Though the series makes some significant departures from my life, it's not a biopic. In 1998, two federal agents knocked on my door. I was living over on West 4th Street. I'd just moved to New York City a month before. How many years ago, I mean how many years after your crime was that? Five years had passed. I was fortunate. I was able to end the relationship, which contributed to me being involved with drug trafficking. I was able to come back to the United States. I was able to get my life back on track without, with help from friends of mine, but without me needing to rely on a social service net, which many people do. So those sort of course corrections had happened. And that's when the knock on the door came. And so two federal agents let me know I'd been indicted. I needed to show up for my own arraignment. I needed to prepare myself. I needed a lawyer. I needed a lot of things. All of a sudden, all those bad decisions I had made five years prior came sort of crashing down. And so that experience of being a defendant in a criminal proceeding was shocking to me. And it was a profoundly confusing, overwhelming, obviously, staggering experience. I brought this book as a prop because that was 1998 when that happened, when that knock on the door came. And I was just trying to make sense of what was happening to me. My lawyer was telling me that I might spend 12 years in prison for this crime that I had committed, which was a first time offense, which was what many people would describe as a nonviolent offense. And that was hard for me to understand. And I got this book, which is called Drug Crazy, How We Got Into This Mess and How We Can Get Out, which was written by a man named Mike Gray. At the time. It was published in 1998. And I can't even remember how this came into my hands, but I remember that I read it in about 24 hours. And it's basically sort of a brief and very accessible history of drug policy in this country over the last 100 years. And so right from the very beginning in 1998, I was able, in part because of this book, to understand what was happening to me in a broader context. I had no idea, I'd never thought about drug policy or the drug war or why we have the history of prohibition other than what I had learned about alcohol prohibition and the 14, you know, all that. And so I had never thought about the fact that our drug policies are predicated on foreign policy in China at the turn of the century. And that the movement towards drug prohibition had only really started in the 1900s. Prior to that, drugs like opiates and cocaine were sold over the counter. And the face of sort of substance use disorder or addiction was very much very different than our current portrayals of it. I had never thought about the connections between social control and the period of the, you know, the heyday of lynching. And that's, those things all start to intertwine when you look at the history of drug prohibition in this country. And I didn't really understand, I had never even thought about those things before, but now I was gonna go to prison, right? Right, did that help you? Did that sort of change the experience in some way of actually going to prison? I think, I mean, on a personal level, I think it did help me. When you walked through the door of that prison, you felt different than you think you would have. I think I comprehended that what I was experiencing, what I might have otherwise thought was happening to me, quote unquote, was something that had been happening to a lot of people. And at that point, for some period of time, we were decades into the set of policies which is known as the war on drugs. And so in a strange way, in a strange and very small way, I didn't feel as alone as perhaps I might have because I had a tiny bit of understanding of my own situation in this broader context. But in a way, what's so interesting about your story is that you are unique in terms of the criminal justice system. And it's kind of one of the things that I found most intriguing about the book and one of the reasons it was hard to put down was that you are so unlike most of the women in the criminal justice system. And I felt a bit conflicted about my feelings about this character, you, in that you sort of go, why is it that we're paying attention to the white middle class or well-to-do woman in this story and not sort of would this story have gotten or had the same appeal? Had it been written by one of the other women who are more representative of the population? And I wonder, did you feel conflicted? In fact, I sort of think that's the genius of the character is that you were conflicted and you sort of humanize the sort of advantages that are built into the system for women like you. So the experience of incarceration is an incredibly difficult one, but the more privilege you enter into that experience with just like any other experience in life, your good fortune contributes to your ability to navigate it. So one of the ways that I was able to navigate prison was by always seeking common ground with the women that I was doing time with rather than trying to think about all the ways that I was different from them. And there's enormous amounts of common ground to be found between one person or another, whether you're in Mexico or on the other side of the planet or you know, across town here. But as you go through such an incredibly difficult experience together, whether or not you're always enjoying each other's company or not, people's willingness to help each other survive is incredibly profound. And the fact that so many of the women that I was incarcerated with had not enjoyed some of the simple privileges that I had always taken for granted like a safe place to live and a school that functioned the way we expect a school to function. And yeah, the ability to sort of walk down the street with reasonable safety. Some of those things, access to healthcare. Some of those things which many middle-class people, fewer and fewer middle-class people take for granted, but many of us sort of go through life fortunate enough to have those things. Many of the women that I did time with had not. And leaving that experience, especially given that I left that experience after serving 13 months and some of those women were doing a lot more time for reasons not having to do with their offenses, but rather having to do with socioeconomics and in some cases race was not, that was not a sort of inequity that I could really tolerate or put behind me. Did you feel though that in writing the book was sort of the objective, was your objective to sort of turn this book into a bit of a lightning rod for reform of the criminal justice system when we at ProPublica sort of think about what stories we want to pursue, we ask ourselves, is this the kind of story that's going to cause change? Will it provoke reform? Will it start a national conversation or some soul-searching? Was that on your mind when you all those things were on my mind very much? I think one of the questions you also probably ask that's tucked away in there is like, is this story reflective of a typical truth or a broader fundamental truth or is this an outlier story? And so when I thought about writing the book and telling the story and writing about sort of the stupidest, most immoral thing I ever did and the consequences of it, I thought about what difference that story might make in terms of how people think about the over 2.3 million people who are incarcerated in this country and there are many millions more people who churn through our jail systems so that 2.3 number is actually sort of artificially low when we think about who experiences the inside of a cell. I was quite certain that if somebody sort of looked through my eyes at that one year, they would think really differently about who's incarcerated and why and what really happens to them when they're incarcerated. And so my own experience had just been so dramatically different than what I had seen reflected in popular media or in the news media. Low-level nonviolent drug offenders are not the typical characters in most of the media that I had seen growing up myself in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. And so I was pretty confident, not that I could write a good book, I'd never written a book before, I was like, let's see if we can do this. But I just believed that if somehow I was able to be successful telling the story that someone would hopefully come away from the story thinking differently about these questions and I also believed that I might be able to get somebody to read a book about prison who wouldn't otherwise read a book about prison or about these broader questions, not just prison. And so I thought that was exceptionally important. I thought that there was a core, a small group of core people who cared passionately about prison and justice and the broader questions around drug policy, but it needed to be a much bigger crowd if we were ever gonna get to a better place. And so what, in the decision to share your work with Hollywood, sell your work to Hollywood, was there some concern about losing some of the sort of, the power of authentically telling the stories of these women? Sure. What do you give up and what do you gain when you do something like this, when you let your book become a teller? So the book is, I take full responsibility for every word in that book. That book is my choice, I tell the story the way that I see it, I have full responsibility and pride of place with the book. When you hand it over to be adapted into some other medium, whether that might be a film or a TV series or a video game, there's all kinds of different ways that people have of telling stories now. You generally relinquish creative control, that's how the market works. For me, I believe that that was a risk worth taking because even the best best-selling book reaches a much smaller number of people than filmed entertainment. Particularly television has just this incredible reach. It reaches so many people. As I was thinking about the questions that we're talking about today and you start to look at what even a very average television show, the number of people that that TV show reaches, it's quite astonishing. It's far more than what a book typically reaches. I also think that visual media has a different kind of emotional power and a different modality around storytelling. To me, the prospect of extending the point of view which is put forward in the book, which is that a person in prison is still the protagonist of their own life and that other people can get on board with them as a protagonist as opposed to thinking of them solely as an antagonist or a villain. And I thought that was really, really important. So it was a roll of the dice, but I was very fortunate to have the opportunity to give the book over to an audacious female creator who is interested in provocative storytelling. And that was a scary thing to do, but I was really fortunate. And so have there been any sort of moments in the transition from book to television series that have made you cringe? Have there been scenes that you go, ugh. I mean, I don't write the scripts for the show. I know, I know. And if I did, they would probably be different and the show would probably be a lot less successful because I'm not a television maker in that classic sense. I will tell you that when season four came out, I teach in a state prison in Ohio. And when season four came out, I started to get a squirrely eye from some of the staff there. Yeah, so I think that some of the provocative content of season four, which of course does not come directly from the book in terms of narrative, continues to push the envelope. I mean, I sort of, you know, going to this question that we're raising, which is how are public attitudes shaped by popular culture? I wonder what you think in terms of, I would, I could imagine people reading your book and feeling outraged and thinking, we've got to do something about this. But somehow when you watch television, I don't know about most people, but I know for me, I suddenly feel that I'm escaping the world. I'm escaping the real world. And yes, there are themes that are reflective of real world realities, but I also understand there's a lot of exaggeration there. And so I don't necessarily watch TV with the same sort of feeling that we ought to do something about this. And I wonder, do you sort of, do you feel that television is sort of an agent for change, scripted television shows? I think that television is an agent for change. I think, again, when I was thinking about this topic, I saw that the TV show Dragnet substantially increased support for reading Miranda rights. Attitudes about torture. And attitudes about interrogation and so on and so forth. But there was the law around Miranda rights, which probably everyone here can recite. You have the rights to remain silent. You, anything you say can and will be used against you. You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided to you. So the actual Miranda decision is a little muddier than what we think of from television. But I was reading that actually the TV show Dragnet and law enforcement, unsurprisingly, wasn't that enthusiastic about having to do, having to give Miranda rights. And that the TV show actually substantially increased not only public awareness and public support for it, but then the actual actions of law enforcement officers. And so I think that's just a really small example. We could look at many, many examples of scripted television, including half hour sitcoms, and think about how those things have moved the needle on LGBTQ rights, civil rights, and awareness around AIDS and HIV. And there's a host of examples on how, especially specifically scripted fictional television has affected and transformed, in some cases, public opinion around some very central and important social questions. Well, there was actually one of the things I did when we were thinking or preparing for this is there was a study by the Lear Center at USC that talked about, it basically analyzed several scripted television shows during the 1990s and early 2000s, and found that not only does popular culture shape public views, but public views that Hollywood is very attuned to public attitudes about things. And so courtroom scenes are very rare now. Prior to 9-11, there used to be a lot of courtroom scenes, but now it's sort of considered boring television. That there was one finding in their study that said that in storylines about the war on drugs, drug users are not arrested, and drug suspects are often portrayed as morally ambiguous. And that often that shows will start with a drug trafficker being a bad guy, and then sort of by the end of the show, the drug trafficker is not so bad. And that these shows are sort of reflective of the public's ambiguity about criminal justice and about the drug war. Yeah, I think that that's true. Norman Lear is a fascinating example of somebody who not just in one show, but in multiple shows, whether it's Maud or All in the Family or a variety of programs that he was responsible for injected really serious questions about social issues that confront all of us often into comedies. So what would you say the takeaway from the Netflix series is? Like what do you think viewers watching that, how is that shaping attitudes you hope or you think? So I think when we think about these issues that we're looking at, and sometimes it can seem incredibly complex, right? And certainly if you think about the criminal justice system, it is complex. You have street level law enforcement, you have the cop on the beat, you have the courts system, which is a horrifying mess, and also in some ways at times, mind numbingly dull and hard to dramatize. You have that punishment phase, and we have virtually no punishments in this country other than the punishment of prison or no accountability measures other than prison sentences. You have reentry and probation, and so you have this sort of complex and somewhat disconnected system, they're linked, but all of those aspects of the system work in their own strange way, and sometimes at cross purposes. And then you have all of the things which are driving all of the complex issues which are driving people into the system, right? Like racism and racial hierarchy, and health crises and mental health issues, and poverty of course, those things seem really complicated too. So the thing about the chicken's eye view, a story about either one protagonist or a group of protagonists is that it starts to make complex things more understandable. And I think that's particularly true when we think about stories that are told in that entertainment paradigm because there's more leeway to tell a story in a way that's fully engaging than a journalist like you, the construct of journalism is neat, is very necessary in terms of all of the things that your entire career you've developed as a journalism in terms of how do you ask questions, how do you report, et cetera. But those are constraints also in terms of how you can tell a story. Absolutely. So pop culture doesn't have those constraints. And that means that pop culture takes license with the quote unquote truth, though John Edgar Weidman said, all stories are true. Meaning that all stories, even a fictional story, is grounded in the reality that we think we know, right? One of the things that I have learned over time about storytelling is that even when you wanna correct a misconception or something that the reader or the listener might think they know that might not be accurate, it's pretty tough to just go toe to toe. You have to sometimes lean into what people think they know in order if you ever wanna flip it on its head. Does that make sense? Absolutely. So those are things that there's more license to do with a pop culture approach than with a traditional journalism approach, which is very frustrating for journalists, I think, or for academics, folks who work in academia who put tremendous years and years of their life in incredible amounts of work towards studying and analyzing whether you're talking about the criminal justice system or whether you're talking about the broader set of policies known as the war on drugs. People put out an academic study or a report and are often frustrated that it doesn't get as much attention as it deserves from a wider public, but some of that has to do with that storytelling paradigm, which is so predicated on these things that we learn when we are little tiny children about protagonists and about different types of conflict like person versus person or person versus nature, person versus society, person versus self. And the beauty of pop culture storytelling and I think very skillful journalism as well, like literary journalism, is that you can see all of those different layers of conflict in one story. And that is what makes for truly engaging and emotional storytelling. Let's take a look at some of the clips then and take a look at the show and see some examples of what we're talking about. Cynthia's got them queued up in the back, I believe. So we're gonna start with a couple of clips from Orange is the New Black. And the first clip is about a character who I love. Her name is Tasty, or she's known as Tasty, that's not her name. And Tasty was imprisoned on a nonviolent drug charge and she had been released on parole, but a few weeks later she reappeared at Lichfield because she couldn't make it on the outside. It's a heartbreaking scene, let's watch. So if you don't watch that scene and get angry, I don't know what you do. Tell me about sort of the kind of people that you've encountered both in prison and in your current work who've shared those experiences. This happens to many, many women and men who leave prison. Yeah, countless, countless numbers of people. And so one of the things that this scene is particularly close to my heart and related to people who I did time with, it's very hard to come home. That's reflected in our recidivism numbers in this country, which are sky high. And yeah, having a system with such a high failure rate is indefensible. And what's important to me is, again, that you get to pack an enormous amount of information into this exchange between these two women that those things are important to convey in journalism or in academia, but there's the ability here to convey what collateral consequences, we start to get into jargon around collateral consequences of a felony conviction or of incarceration, but Tasty's experience makes that clear. We can talk about the consequences of maternal incarceration, but Poussé's dialogue makes that clear in a way that really gets us in the gut instead of in the head. Most women in prison are moms. Most of them are the moms of minor kids. One of the big discussions that I had with Genji when they were working on the first season, and that clip is from the first season, was the fact that the single most important relationship if you're talking about a women's prison is the maternal relationship, and that's true whether you're talking about a prisoner who has children, but also prisoner's relationship with their mothers. I'm incredibly struck. I teach now, both men and women who are incarcerated. I teach nonfiction writing, and the number one topic is their mothers. Which, you know. Both men and women. Both men and women, which I'm a mom and that gives me pause. I'm like, uh-oh. But I do think that also that scene for me just says so much about how powerful the television is in terms of, I mean, I can't imagine writing that for a magazine and having it be as powerful as that. There's so much, as you say, that's packed in there. It's poverty. It's relationships with family. It's barriers to re-entry, to successful re-entry. Completely. So, all right, so we're gonna watch another from Orange Is the New Black, and this one, let me think. Let me see if I have over a pet. Oh, this is about drug abuse in prison. And this is a character named Nikki, and she's relapsed, and it's not pretty. Again, I think a lot packed into one scene and also I find the idea of having women sort of in these positions to be particularly powerful and rare on television when it comes to the criminal justice system, when it comes to prison, when it comes to drug abuse in this way. Is there something about, you know, you're currently writing about men, and I'm sorry, I've lost my train of thought for a second. Yeah, I don't know what is going on with that, I apologize. Because, and I particularly love the character of Nikki and some of those interactions between her and Pensatucky during this most recent season, season four, because we don't see very many depictions of a person who is struggling with substance use disorder or addiction in a way that humanizes them and makes them anything other than either terrifying or pathetic as opposed to, again, that protagonist who we can get on board with and identify with. But in many ways, I think that is another sort of one of the key parts of the show is that there aren't many people who just feel like they are hardened, cold-hearted criminals either in the show or on the series. Am I right about that? Maybe I might have missed, Pensatucky doesn't, I mean, she has terrible moments, but even she becomes. Yeah, we all have terrible moments, don't we? Right, I mean, so I sometimes felt like is there sort of just a hardened person who chose crime for not because they were sort of sucked into it but because it was purely greed, purely sort of dark, horrible, hardened motives? So I, as I said, I teach now and so my students are writing their own stories, right? We've been at it for a while and now, so some of them are starting to experiment with things like literary journalism, we've been talking about literary journalism, but at a fundamental starting point, non-fiction writing, telling their own stories in ways that are compelling and creative. When I think about my students, and I have, again, a group of students in the women's facility and a group of students in the men's facility, and the stories that they've chosen to talk about and to write about because it's completely up to them what they write about. We give them writing prompts which are quite open-ended so that they have a lot of liberty and choice around what they wanna put their energy into. But over time, these questions around addiction and substance use disorder come up again and again, whether that's true because my student themselves has struggled with those things and that's certainly true in both the men's and the women's class, or because they were raised by a parent who was struggling with addiction and that's certainly true for many of the people who are in my class. Some of my students have very serious offenses and so the portrayal of sort of the drug war as necessary because otherwise we would be overwhelmed with violence, which is a very common theme in news media and also in pop culture media as well and has been for many years is not always, is sometimes present and true in my students' stories but not always and that's true of the women that I did time with and it's true of these characters which are fictional but grounded in reality. Are there other shows that you might, that you feel accomplished sort of some of what you- Well I think we're gonna look at some clips from the wire and I think that the wire was truly like a watershed moment in terms of challenging people to think differently about these questions of drug prohibition, the wisdom or the folly of the war on drugs and thinking about people who are active participants in drug selling as human beings and as driven by something other than necessarily greed or sort of a lust for violence which are sort of the sole reasons that we often are told that drug selling exists. So we are actually going to look at a couple of clips from the wire and the first one is, and you all know the wire, I should sort of describe it quickly. It was David Simon's sort of sprawling HBO series about urban decay and how it's been brought on by a lack of resources and political commitment from government institutions and the media. It may seem somewhat dated to if you go back and watch it now because you'll see drug traffickers sort of looking for street phones and struggling with internet searches but when it ran in the early 2000s it felt like we were watching sort of decay in real time and so it's often been hailed as the best series on television ever. The first clip is from season one, episode 11 and this is a, it sort of talks about how we measure success in the drug war. It depicts a police department where budgets and promotions depend on the numbers of people arrested and the numbers of kilograms of cocaine seized. So let's take a look. I've actually attended so many of those kinds of press conferences especially in Mexico. I actually worked in Baltimore for many years as a police reporter when I started my career and then in Mexico where it seems that authorities have a very clear count on the numbers of drug kingpins who have been arrested and the amount of cocaine or marijuana or heroin that's been seized but no one can seem to give a very accurate count of how many people have been killed or disappeared in the drug war in Mexico and so I feel like this is how the success of the drug war often gets measured and what gets lost except at times in television or in newspaper stories is sort of the toll that these programs take on communities. Yeah, absolutely. I mean it's really interesting to look at the role of the news media as opposed to the popular culture media in terms of setting the parameters of how we think about these policies. So the very fact of drug prohibition is only a hundred years old, right? Only a hundred years. Basically the early 1900s is when drug prohibition became a thing and the idea that the fundamentals when you look at news coverage are really never wander outside of an accepted framework which starts with social control, having those laws, having drug prohibition on the books which is sort of just this idea oh it's always been like this but it's been like that only for a hundred years and the idea that controlling supply is the approach that will get us some kind of progress even though every law enforcement officer I've ever known who is in the least bit forthright and honest about it said yeah there's absolutely no hope in this approach and yet supply reduction remains the fundamental sort of accepted approach and that's what you read about in the news media and then the idea that law enforcement is the only instrument or implement by which we can look at things like addiction and substance use disorder which is also widely debunked both by the medical establishment and also again if you go to any prison warden, any police chief, any honest law enforcement officer they will tell you we cannot incarcerate and arrest our way out of the problems which stem from addiction or substance use disorder and yet we remain in this sort of very narrow frame. It's sort of to me like I always compare it to the immigration system I feel that there is broad consensus that the immigration system is broken but you can't get people to agree on how to fix it and I think the drug war is somewhat similar in that I think many people consider it futile or failed. I think most people on the street do and I think many law enforcement when they're honest about it but I do think that it's been very other than marijuana there's no support, public support and much less congressional support for legalization and I'm not sure it's all the news media I'm gonna sort of push back a little bit. I do think that the news media has written thoughtfully and at length about sort of the costs and other avenues for fighting the supply and certainly fighting drug abuse but I don't think that somehow that message doesn't seem to translate and somehow the attitudes about the drug war haven't so far translated into sort of an agreement about a different approach. I think that the constructs I think that the way that the discussion both sort of socially and in pop culture and also on a policy front I think that race is so central to this discussion the impediment in getting to a logical place so when we think about social control social control by definition means that some people are getting marginalized right and there's many people who might get marginalized but we know that race and racial hierarchy is a really important part of social control. Well and I think that's why some of the conversation I think recently around the drug war is changing because our perceptions of who's addicted to drugs is beginning to change and no longer are they necessarily people of color and urban. They are people, they are white people and they are suburban or rural and I do think that's beginning to sort of start a conversation that isn't only supply driven. Right so when we stop thinking only about supply we have to actually be self-reflective and look long and hard at what drives demand but who uses drugs in the first place which is many of us who has used at some point who struggles with addiction who struggles with substance use disorder but that brings us back to that question around law enforcement being the only tool because if we're honest about those things if we're honest about what generates demand then we have to look at again racial hierarchy we have to look at poverty and we have to come up with better responses and that proves very challenging when you go to places like Dearborn, Indiana which is one of the most punitive places in the country and what we're finding around the country when we look at drug policy and how like the rubber is meeting the road as the conversation starts to shift is that cities like New York are making progress at doing things in at least a slightly more sensible way and that's true in many cities around the country but more rural places or county governments often remain very punitive, very harshly punitive. In fact, when you look at the populations of women and where it's growing fastest in the country it's growing fastest in counties with populations of 200,000 people or less it's not happening fastest in sort of big urban scary cities and so there is something going on there. Let's look at one more clip I think. Do we have time? And this clip is also from The Wire and let's see. Oh, I like this clip. This is a clip that it shows a scene that's not set in the justice system. It's a glimpse at the dynamics that propel kids into the justice system and the scene stars Michael B. Jordan, he was very young, as Wallace, he's a teenage drug dealer in the low rise projects in Baltimore and he's getting his siblings ready for school. Now what I love about that scene is it takes you home with the drug traffickers, it takes you home with the people who are living these lives. Do you go home with the people that you write about? Have you been home with the women from Orange is the New Black or with the men or gone to their families or hung out with them at home? You know, most, all of the women who are depicted in my book who I'm still in touch with and I am in touch with many of them are home now. I'm happy to say. Some of them have come home and gone back to prison and been released again, I'm happy to say, but I'm not in touch with every person who's depicted. Some people have sort of disappeared a little bit and you wonder and you worry, but folks ability to come home successfully and safely varies widely. But have you gone home with them? Have you gone home? Literally home? Yeah, in some cases, sure. Yeah, in some cases. I just, I find that I always, when I'm writing about someone, if I can see them where they live, you learn so much about them. Like, you might see this kid on a street corner and not have any idea where he came from that day and so I wondered in your own writing about the people that you write about. Yeah, in the case of the memoir, yes. In the case of some of my current students, I have met a number, not all of their family members, but a number of their family members, ironically, a number of their mothers. And in some cases, siblings. And that's fantastic because you're right. When you reveal or expose to a completely different layer of that person's life, whether it's via their own words on the paper or by actually standing and talking to their mom, it's just revelatory and it continually deepens your understanding of who that person is and it brings to mind Adrian Nicola Blank's tremendous book, Random Family, one of these incredible works of literary journalism, which spent 10 years with an extended family in the Bronx trying to understand their lives and their family and their reality. So we're gonna see one more clip, I think, before we open it up for questions and it's a clip from the new series, A Night Of, which is, I think, on HBO, correct me if I'm wrong? Okay, and this clip is the scene where, well, if you don't know the show because it is new, it's a show about the son of Pakistani immigrants who is accused of and arrested for murdering a wealthy white woman. And a lot of this particular scene talks about how justice is sort of, or your access to it depends on the resources that you have. And so let's run that scene. I'm sorry, I actually thought this was a different clip but this is a great clip because it also talks about a terrible reality of the current justice system, which is sort of how many people are forced to plea. Part of what is driving up incarceration rates in the country isn't that crime is going up, it's that punishments are harsher and judges have less discretion to determine how long you could be sentenced for a crime. There are mandatory minimums that if you are convicted, the judge is required to sentence you to a certain number of years. And so many people don't go before juries. Trials are becoming rarer and rarer and more and more people are pleading guilty, which is in fact what you did in your case, right? Absolutely, 95% of people plead. The vast majority of people who are accused of a crime, 80% of whom are too poor to afford a lawyer, which of course doesn't map to actual commission of crimes, right? But yeah, everybody pleads, everybody pleads. And that scene illustrates really well how much pressure somebody is under and generally a huge number of people are under that pressure, not free on bail like I was, at least with some experience of freedom in terms of their decision making, but while they're being held on, they have not been convicted, but they are still being held in a jail of some sort, be it a federal county or a city jail. And it's hard to overstate how much the experience of incarceration and confinement contributes to somebody's willingness and readiness to take a plea deal that they probably shouldn't take. This brings us back to that question of how much screen time is spent, quote unquote, on the conflict of the commission of crimes or potentially punishment, but so little at this point in time on sort of the decisions around how justice is meted out. And it's tricky because it's a wonky and disturbing process. It's part of the brilliance of some of the most recent podcasts like Making a Murderer and several other works that have really managed in a very ingenious way to get people to focus on a part of the justice system that deserves far more scrutiny and really frankly is where a lot of things, like the wheels really fall off in the court system. And so much of that does hinge on sort of access to justice and access to counsel because if those 80% of people who have been accused of a crime, who are too poor to afford a lawyer, actually got their six amendment rights and got a robust defense, like I was able to pay for an afford, you know, painful and difficult, difficult, very difficult though that was, we would have far fewer people in prison. And you know, that punitiveness is very capricious, right? So in Ohio, there's a county called Crawford County, which is just north of where the men's prison is where I teach and it's very rural, you know, it's basically Ohio farmland. And the head of the Ohio State Prison System said to me, Crawford County used to put two women a year into prison, into our prison system. There's a new judge there. And he sent 62 women to prison last year, which is staggering, like there's not a crime wave in Crawford County. Rather, there is one individual, you know, or perhaps a new prosecutor, but I think, you know, what the prison head attributed it to was, you know, was a judge, a new judge who perhaps doesn't really understand what the community needs and wants. That's amazing. Yeah. That's amazing. So I'm going to open things up to you all if you have questions. I think the mics are on either side of the room here. Please come forward. All right. Hello. Thank you. What was the process of consuming media in prison like when you were in prison? Consuming media. That's an interesting question. So there's a lot of televisions in prison. And so people do watch television. I personally didn't watch a lot of it because television rooms can be a little conflict-ridden for a variety of reasons. Access to other media other than television and the television rooms is very much reliant upon the individual prisoner and what their connections to the outside world are like because whether you can get your hands on a newspaper or a magazine or a book is completely dependent on whether somebody on the outside will send those things to you. And also what kind of censorship the prison facility or the jail facility has in place because there is an incredible, there is total latitude from a prison perspective in terms of controlling people's access to information. When you're incarcerated, one of the only rights that is ever much protected are rights around religious practice. So things like First Amendment rights or your right to communicate or to read are very limited. Now in practice, there's a lot of television consumed and so it's really fascinating actually to me what is popular. Popular entertainment is popular. People watch the news with interest and sometimes with a lot of concern. I remember when I got to prison, my monkey had been incarcerated for a long time. She was a woman who was serving a long sentence. She was at the end of a long sentence. And she talked about what it was like in that prison on September 11th, 2001 because so many of the women who are incarcerated there were from New York City and also from New England and from places like Boston. And so they cut off all their access to outside media and locked down the prison and people were really, of course, scared and confused and worried about their families and really had no idea what was actually happening outside the environs of the prison. Are there daily newspapers? Do you guys get it? When I was incarcerated in the Federal Bureau of Prisons, you were not allowed to get a date. You were only allowed to see a newspaper the day after. It was published. And why was that? It's just a measure of control. We come back to that question of social control. And so one of the things I was reminded when we were watching that scene with Nikki was that there's an earlier scene before she relapses where she's attending like an NA meeting in prison, like a narcotics anonymous meeting. And so she's talking and it's great and she's sober and she's been sober a long time and she's proud of that. And she gets her chip in narcotics anonymous and AA you get a chip when you reach certain posts, signposts of sobriety. So she gets the chip and she's talking about why she's proud of it and her life and she's fantastic. Of course, Natasha Leone is amazing in the role. And then when she's leaving the meeting, the correctional officer confiscates it because it's contraband. And that's, I love that scene because it's just so indicative of the plight of people who are addicted or have substance abuse disorder in the criminal justice system because the system is set up to punish people, not to heal people and not to help people get better. And so that in every prison at least, not necessarily in every jail, you generally do see some focus on substance abuse or substance use and addiction because so many people who are incarcerated have struggled with those problems. And yet all of any of that work which is in theory rehabilitative is also taking place in this incredibly punitive institution of social control. And so the effectiveness of that, that's another good example of a way that they show something rather than tell us. Good question though, thank you. Hello. Hello. Hi, Piper and Ginger. Thank you both. I'm big fans of both of your work. And the topic of how popular culture or TV and movies influence stuff, I'm very interested and I think there's no doubt watching Orange is the New Black that it humanizes people behind bars, the issues of reentry, substance abuse and everything else. One, another big issue, I do the media work at the Drug Policy Alliance and for a long time I felt like how do we convey that a lot of the violence that we see in Mexico or in Baltimore or whatever is a lot of times resulted of prohibition and not the fact that it's drug use that all the violence in Mexico is not necessarily marijuana but prohibition, et cetera. And so when I think about what movies have been able to portray that, I think a little bit about Breaking Bad which was very popular. And I wonder when I watch that movie I think if you think about it intellectually you could get the points that the drug war doesn't stop drug availability and it also leads to violence and stuff like that. But I don't know, it was a very entertaining show but I don't know if anyone comes away with that kind of stuff. And so I'm wondering what you think of like something like Breaking Bad, what kind of, how did something like that influence drug policy and the drug war, lessons that people may take from it? I'm just curious your thoughts on that. You wanna take that one first? I have an opinion about it, you first. Well so first of all, I have a cousin who teaches high school science in New Mexico. No lie. Breaking Bad is a really interesting example. It's really tremendous storytelling, incredibly compelling character study, sort of that classic white male anti-hero that we've become so accustomed to which is very different storytelling than in the Netflix series I think. I came away from watching Breaking Bad with a sense of futility and hopelessness which I do not think is very helpful. Now someone might say, hey, we're trying to tell an accurate and truthful story as opposed to just a quote unquote inspiring story. But if I think about the way that we think about people who struggle with substance use disorder addiction or whether there are better, smarter or different ways that we could approach problems like the violence that comes from prohibition, I don't know that it necessarily conveyed those. I think you'd probably have some opinions from your perspective in terms of cross-border issues. Well I mean, speaking of Breaking Bad, I do feel that sometimes shows like Breaking Bad can be so hopeless that you end up almost leaving with some sense of indifference. I didn't particularly love the show and I think that part of the reason was I wasn't sure how much it was conveying sort of the real world. It felt to me, it was just sort of, there were times when it was violent just in a way that went overboard for me perhaps and so I sort of turned off to that and I think I sort of feel similarly to Piper in that it just felt that instead of walking away from Breaking Bad with a sense of here's some clear problems it felt, I just left feeling sort of numb and indifferent by that. I think my last comment on Breaking Bad because I know there's more questions, I think that there's a lot of nihilism attached to that white male anti-hero and when we think about things like drug prohibition and social control, what's far more interesting is to look at the people who have been marginalized by those approaches, whether you're talking about people of color, whether you're talking about women, whether you're talking, there's all kinds of people who are pushed to the margins by these tools of social control and those tend to be the stories which are A, most interesting and also most illuminating and so the advent of storytellers like Ryan Coogler who I was watching Michael B. Jordan in the clip and I was thinking about Creed and you know what Ryan Coogler chose to start that movie with a scene set in a juvenile justice facility and Ryan Coogler of course did the amazing film Fruit Veal Station about an Oscar Grant who was killed by a transit cop in Oakland and so the advent of storytellers who are interested in telling those stories that move away from the stories we're most accustomed to based on racial and gender hierarchies tend to be the ones that illuminate the world in a way that can help us imagine a better way and so I'd be fascinated to see a film or a series set in Portugal where they have decriminalized drugs and reduced violence and reduced many of the harms that we associate with addiction and substance use disorder so that's a story I'd like to see told. Can you imagine it as a television series though? I don't know if I'm well-informed enough about how it all went down but when I think about traffic which started as a mini series I think in Britain and then was translated into a film here in the US there's interesting ways to tell a story that really compels. Yeah, no traffic is one of my favorite films and I do think that traffic unlike sort of Breaking Bad it was, it sort of captured in almost the epic way that the drug war exists for the US Mexico border and it was very much a cross-border story and what I loved about it was that because the stories I write often involve both countries and I think many times in the United States the United States feels that Mexico's drug war is Mexico's problem and it is so interconnected in terms of money transfers in terms of weapon transfers in terms of the people who are fleeing from one side of the border to the other and back the families and so a movie-like traffic to me and everything from the drugs are in Mexico being corrupt and horrible to the drugs are in the United States having a daughter who was addicted to drugs it just touched everything and so those kinds of movies while they are full and they are complicated they leave you feeling like you have a sense of how it all fits together and I think those are the kinds of portrayals that give people thoughts about what should be different or why things should be different who's involved, who's affected you have a question? Yeah, I wanna thank you both for the work that you do and for being here today and I wanted to say that there are a lot of us especially at the Brooklyn Museum that really believe that culture leads to social change and social change leads to policy and public and political change, right? So when I watched the last episode of Oranges in New Black I was amazed by how you really gave it to the privatized prison system They deserve it I was like, yes, it's great and then read the headlines two weeks ago and the ruling about federal prisons no longer being privatized and I was cheering you on and giving you complete responsibility and kind of work but I wanna know if in fact you think that Oranges in New Black had a real impact on changing the consciousness that changed the policy? I hope so, it's hard to say the current administration has done more the current, the Obama administration has done more to think about things differently than prior administrations have done grounded in a host of different values, I think that doesn't mean the Obama administration is above criticism on many of these fronts so I'm not a big fan of the DEA and its existence but that's a whole separate conversation, right? I would say that Shane Bauer's story which Ms. Sackler referred to at the very beginning also was, I mean, which just came out very recently but that's a great example of how journalism and pop culture sort of combine to create an environment where a policy change is possible or desirable and is received and understood in a way that's different, so if the, you know these questions of what creates political prioritization bedevil advocates obviously who want their issues prioritized so I was thrilled though, you know it affects a relatively small number of federal prisoners overall and would make a much, much bigger impact if the Department of Homeland Security follows the Department of Justice's lead and also because that's really where those private prisons are making all their money but we were thrilled to see that policy announcement and we've been pleased with many of the decisions of the current federal administration but it still comes back to Dearborn, Indiana or that judge in Crawford County, Ohio because those folks are the folks who are really driving mass incarceration by and large the federal government has a really important role to play very, very important and especially when it comes to drug policy however, when we think about mass incarceration and having fewer people in prisons and jails those private prison corporations are of course now scrambling to think about how they can make money outside of the walls of prisons because I think what is hopefully transpiring is that the confinement of people into cells and buildings that are brutal and punitive is becoming less acceptable but that doesn't mean that having people on probation and having people sort of under correctional control is not still potentially very profitable so that sort of broader question of the carceral state is not to start sinking into jargon but devils us like those private prison corporations are gonna be nimble and quick to try and think about how they can do things differently but it's a victory, I mean I can't describe it as anything other than a victory and we need victories because they build our momentum to have far fewer Americans in prison or jail. I also wanna thank you for all of the work that you were both doing. I'm a retired high school principal from New York City and I'm concerned about how the education system of the United States and all over are really approaching the fact of drug abuse in the schools. The money is not there, of course not and how do you feel about the reforms in education that we could possibly put in to help keep people out of the prison system? Well, we know that keeping kids in school, in school all the way through high school is a hugely important point around keeping somebody out of the system so if a kid drops out of high school their chances of going into the criminal justice system just skyrocketed and so the recognition that it's all of our shared, not only responsibility but it's in all of our best interest to make sure that kids, particularly kids who struggle in a traditional learning setting get what they need to learn, to persist and to graduate so they're able to go forward and do what they wanna do and accomplish what they're capable of and all the things that they dream of doing. We know that there have been some really bad incentives for schools to in fact push the kids who are struggling the most in a traditional school setting out of school entirely and that has been disastrous for those children, for those families, for those communities and for all the rest of us as well. So there's a lot more attention to this, of course the kids who are most likely to be affected by that sort of push out effort tend to be kids of color and there's an amazing book called Push Out by Monique Morris which just came out this year which focuses specifically on the criminalization of black girls in schools. Is there a good show today about drug abuse in schools or drug trafficking involving kids or? Not that I can think of the top of my head. I think there's a sentimentality about portraying children often which gets in the way of tackling some of those really difficult things. Yeah, hello. Wonderful segue for us because our next two programs of States of Denial have to do with children and the criminal justice system and children and their family. In fact on Thursday night at seven o'clock Jill Becker who's a trustee for rehabilitation through the arts is gonna be a moderating panel called Inside, Outside, Prison Walls, Children and Families and we'd certainly have to take a look at that very carefully. I thank you both very much for a very wonderful time. Thank you. Thank you.
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The Absurdity of The #FTC and Anti Trust #sandwichmonopoly
FULL SHOW https://www.youtube.com/live/wcNh_cokjwQ?si=r9ymQnN9uBeI9Kjr #shorts Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/@YaronBrook/join Like what you hear? Like, share, and subscribe to stay updated on new videos and help promote the Yaron Brook Show: https://bit.ly/3ztPxTx Become a sponsor to get exclusive access and help create more videos like this: https://yaronbrookshow.com/support-members/support-the-show/ Or make a one-time donation: https://bit.ly/2RZOyJJ Continue the discussion by following Yaron on Twitter (https://bit.ly/3iMGl6z) and Facebook (https://bit.ly/3vvWDDC ) Want to learn more about Ayn Rand and Objectivism? Visit the Ayn Rand Institute: https://bit.ly/35qoEC3
[ "Yaron Brook", "Objectivism", "Capitalism", "Ayn Rand", "leftists", "conservatives" ]
2023-11-29T18:55:25
2024-02-05T07:44:52
60
PC2c7DQUdyM
You know, so what is a sandwich? Tacos, taco sandwiches? What about all the taco trucks? Are they sandwich stores? Are they competing? Is this an issue? And then what about the fact that grocery stores sell sandwiches, convenience stores sell sandwiches, coffee shops sell sandwiches? The non-chain delis, lots of them, particularly in New York, does they count? Is the category, particularly sandwiches, two pieces of bread with deli meats in the middle, not hamburgers, that are not sold by... I mean, this is just the arbitrariness, the subjectivism, the complete randomness. The FTC and Elizabeth Wands complete power lust, wanting to control every aspect of our lives. It is just absurd and ridiculous.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PC2c7DQUdyM", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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CEO 2019 | NinjaKiller_212 vs Tweedy | Mortal Kombat
CEO 2019 Top 8 - NinjaKiller_212 vs Tweedy Join the MK11 konversation https://www.mortalkombat.com/esports: Subscribe To MORTAL KOMBAT: https://www.youtube.com/mortalkombat Connect with MORTAL KOMBAT online: Twitter: https://go.wbgames.com/MK-Twitter Facebook: https://go.wbgames.com/MK-Facebook Instagram: https://go.wbgames.com/MK-Instagram Discord: https://go.wbgames.com/MK-Discord Official WB Games Channels: WB Games: https://go.wbgames.com/WBGames Facebook: https://go.wbgames.com/WBFacebook Twitter: https://go.wbgames.com/WBTwitter #MortalKombat #MK11 #MortalKombat11 Welcome to the Mortal Kombat Channel – continue the epic saga through a new cinematic story that is more than 25 years in the making. MK11 will take you in a time-bending new narrative that pits Raiden against Kronika, the Keeper of Time who created existence at the dawn of history. Join us to watch exclusive content and stay up to date on everything Mortal Kombat! CEO 2019 | NinjaKiller_212 vs Tweedy | Mortal Kombat https://www.youtube.com/mortalkombat
[ "mortal kombat", "mk 11", "mk11", "video games", "video", "games", "trailers", "trailer", "netherrealm", "warner bros", "warner brothers", "gaming", "gamers", "gore", "xbox one", "ps4", "pc", "xbox", "xbox games", "sequel", "playstation 4", "playstation", "Nintendo", "Nintendo switch", "switch", "mortal combat", "steam", "ninjas", "fatality", "Fatalities", "Nintendo games", "combo", "combos", "combat", "shao", "kahn", "shao kahn", "NinjaKiller_212", "tweedy", "ceo 2019", "2019", "mortal kombat 11", "mortal kombat x", "mortal kombat movie", "gameplay", "live stream", "video game", "kombat", "top 8" ]
2019-06-30T22:40:53
2024-02-05T20:48:24
675
pCPAMZffP2g
is heavily but at the end of the day one of the best players on the planet so that's all okay let's see what it's gonna be oh my goodness what the crowd is going crazy right now there is frost in top eight for us wow I don't think anybody expected this one it's gonna be frost here for now I want to point out that over the weekend we've already seen every character in Mortal Kombat 11 on stream we only saw frost once now we're seeing her again it's in top eight and this is this is a variation of frost you know the zone is gonna be very strong here shock that we're seeing any of the shields to stop at least a single projectile while he gets his going that's right yeah she put out a shield that has a little bit of durability safe on that but of course you see the other person's turn oh I mean you're holding that that board for your minus average for sure and wow okay I'm still getting over the fact that we're seeing ice machine frost that one flying kick really turned everything around seriously yeah before that it was a lot of control at a speedy okay there you go open a snipe something out I can already tell this is not Ninja his first rodeo against frost you do the noodle inch for just a little bit and get out of that bombs range yes it's a big art trying to jump I think was tweeting and he gets it this time whoa oh put some self in the bath spot now Nijikila has the water rolls on out and not quite there on the punish it was just frames off Nijikila one bar spent delay slightly out of tweeting it's his turn okay see what he does is it back to the zoning this is what we've often seen we do oh one of the better family blows in the game upon us to blow by drag kicking away that many characters cannot there's a back to two very far-reaching myth about a big week he's gonna go forward forward right now wait a minute we need a hit away right now from staying alive amplifies there are not many characters the game far away but there it is that was not a bad round there and he did he immediately rematch back into it yeah I kind of like the idea of this it seems to me to be closer to the style that we saw Tweety you is back in injustice oh big a confirm there she's got some hefty BMBs there's a breakaway about too many wow right back in he's using it as a shimmy and that's an awful slow midcoming afterwards right yeah then you go might be catching on that and you wouldn't be surprised oh staff back in if we start to see some blood wow what a round trees right now by the way in there oh no it's a chance for Nijikila but we still has the corner oh my goodness her story makes it take so long it doesn't she's telling you to chill out man the role trying to chip it out it's not enough safe of course like I said got it very smart stuff and Tweety convincing round with frost never would we have not definitely look better there's a follow spot opportunity on that string right there haven't seen it yet Nijikila trying to threaten that's what we were talking about but as you can see it just gets blown up oh the officer for first yeah here's a punish oh no is she too stubby oh what a pick up off the little bit of chip on this no meter you can hear fatal blow any hiccup from by Nijikila could do it here oh yeah Tweety knows how Nijikila getting the hit is enough just barely but it is lost in the sauce of the forward four mix and you know you're you're looking for the three of it at least just forward four and the forward four again you know it's always a guessing game of when you're trying to press the button Tweety probably just saw it press the button too late Nijikila coming out of his head on these by one does more damage than her one those were actually in her favor which is straight with the low and the double gets the hit but yeah if she can connect with more than one yeah just like that but barely this hit is holy okay that didn't seem like it was on reaction right there for Tweety rather than just throwing it out willy-nilly this time a little bit more control and he's gonna get us why lightly no not quite in fact what a scramble and just like that we got the corner take away the kind of gap right there that pressure is really good out of cross just to stay safe poke punch well save back rushing blow while building another one yeah got him for Nijikila and so Tweety gets the full screen I love the wake up dash right there you're right he definitely seems prepared what a whip punish that's a huge down four to try to get a whip punish on yeah lucky that roll didn't go past right there as well these jump kicks have been working out there they're punishing Nijikila for his reactions wow what a amazing play right there for him and he has not gotten flustered by the fact that he's been kind of kept away playing his projectile game that seemed final so far here it comes what a decision against the projectile that last 20 years on the screen play gonna he's gonna have players take him to the corner no and time off the clock just kind of recess the neutral this is right there by Nijikila he's got pressure now two for two on that next block of the low oh oh oh oh with bummer that that's so he tried that was so close that's frames are barely off that's trigger frost travels like full screen it seems and he can keep this he doesn't need to keep it up break well there's no break away from Nijikila here and very not another round of a three-tweet ties it up fighting here one and one in games and one and one in round the surprise pick of the entire corner absolutely right oh there is for when he needs it the most in the final round what a jump over here ninja killer with momentum what a duck at a ninja killer who is absolutely ready for the high oh and he keeps it up can you believe the kid that was a flawless victory all right for somebody who backstage is telling me he's so nervous he looks pretty good up there on that stage looks at home here doesn't he david he does he's looking to muck into the crowd and everything he's adapting fast game number four oh my goodness your your instinct as a player is to block after blocking a jump in right is mine is that what you're saying i'm saying like that's kind of the standard right mine is yeah you're right i'm not up on this stage these guys have the audacity to make a read to not block at all hold down and get punishes but it's that kind of audacity that you need here in mk 11 you're right make them make the big reads ninja killer is starting to run away with this now the pressure has been good even this i don't know that frost yeah she she can't really play the full screen game right now either just no life to give at all and it's max point for ninja killer so tweedy has run all the way through with this character stuck with her at this moment and you got it like the idea for in terms of her play style does seem to fit with what he wants to do but again he had this right idea and just unfortunately a little off on the time yeah just too many frames in between the normals they're on the back two two four oh my goodness out of there you need to break away look for the max damage in the breakway as well because you are in an armored state so the down to this guy max approach wait a minute he's gonna keep him reached to it nobody's gonna cash out here 300 and then pressure you know he just wasn't expecting to jump it or maybe he was but he thought he was far enough away whoa getting it see if you can make a comeback on this one slightly will he go in window that you have to beat out the fatal blow start up perfectly timed there by tweedy get sir into the corner kill a pressuring here plenty of ball on tweedy side meet him in the sky try to keep it up and that's a punish right there unfortunately for tweedy good roll away i'm not going to go pressure my niggas that's a lot of damage ninja killer approaches here and brisk cross pick looking for the big stuff there at the end with with the back two two one two weird little thing right there look at looking for the crushing blow launcher to try to turn things around there
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SCP-375 | Temporal Credit Union (SCP Orientation)
SCP Orientation is an archive of files of the SCP Foundation. Today we will be studying Item number SCP-375: Temporal Credit Union, Object class: Euclid. SCP-375 is a former Wells Fargo bank located in Casper, Wyoming. The signage on the building and front door has been anomalously modified to read “Temporal Credit Union”. A series of eleven humanoid entities (designated SCP-375-A) remain present within the building at all times, equipped in matching uniforms and claiming to be employees of SCP-375. SCP-375’s anomalous properties manifest when any subject views its main sign and/or interacts with the SCP-375-A instances inside the building. During Phase I of SCP-375 infection, subjects will feel compelled to exchange items of personal sentimental value via deposit and withdrawal. Between 12-24 hours after a deposit has been made, the deposited item will be replaced with an extra-universal object that is superficially similar to the original, but apparently from one of many alternate realities. Proceed to begin your training. This video is derived from https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-375 and released under Creative Commons Sharealike 3.0. Contributors: Dr Kondraki (author), Anonymous (rewrite author), ObserverSeptember (rewrite author) Voice Over Artist: Greg Katerman; Twitter: @DatGreyMind Artists: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/krBBK Artist: Alexey Yakovlev https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:US-00010-One_Cent_(1974)_Aluminum.jpg Author: US Mint (coin) (Victor David Brenner, designer of obverse, Frank Gasparro, designer of reverse), National Numismatic Collection (Jaclyn Nash) (image) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Harriet_tubman_loc.jpg Author: Library of Congress https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_the_Communist_States_of_America.svg Author: Nikdog https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:German_M47_tank_in_1960.jpg Author: U.S. Army https://www.videezy.com/technology/46875-programmer-using-keyboard-of-a-laptop-at-night Attribution: Videezy.com https://youtu.be/I398elcf3rU Attribution: SCP Orientation - Live Action https://dekades8.artstation.com/projects/8noeO Artists: Dmitry Desyatov Attribution: http://artscp.com/en/ https://wallpaperaccess.com/scp-173 https://forums.alliedmods.net/showthread.php?t=306346 Music: https://youtu.be/_tTWDifeFLw #scp #scporientation #scpfoundation
[ "scp", "scp foundation", "scp orientation", "scporientation", "foundation", "class", "keter", "safe", "euclid", "reading", "SCP Orientation", "scp read", "scp reading", "scp readings", "scp file", "scp files", "scp wiki", "scps", "scp creatures", "scpwiki", "anomaly", "audio", "spc", "spc foundation", "anom", "asmr", "scp asmr", "scp375", "scp-375", "scp 375" ]
2021-10-10T13:00:10
2024-02-05T07:34:16
704
PCEODsGfS1g
Item number, SCP-375, Object Class, Euclid, Special Containment Procedures. The shopping mall where SCP-375 is located has been purchased by the Foundation and repurposed as Site-375, a site for the monitoring of SCP-375, and storage of safe-class SCP objects. The main sign on the front face of SCP-375 is to remain concealed at all times. Test subjects are to be shown photographs during experimentation. Testing of SCP-375 is only to take place on D-class personnel, who are exempt from monthly termination, in order to study the cumulative effects of SCP-375 exposure. SCP-375 is a former Wells Fargo Bank, located in Casper, Wyoming. The signage on the building in front door has been anomalously modified to read, Temporal Credit Union, while retaining the original Wells Fargo typeface. A series of 11 humanoid entities, designated SCP-375-A, remain present within the building at all times, equipped in matching uniforms and claiming to be employees of SCP-375. SCP-375's anomalous properties manifest when any subject views its main sign, and or interacts with the SCP-375-A instances inside the building. During Phase 1 of SCP-375 infection, subjects will feel compelled to exchange items of personal sentimental value, via deposit and withdrawal. Between 12 to 24 hours after a deposit has been made, the deposited item will be replaced with an extra-universal object, designated SCP-375-B, that is superficially similar to the original, but apparently from one of many alternate realities. Examples of items that have been retrieved from Phase 1 tests are provided in the table below. Phase 1 Experimental Data Subject D34924 Item Deposited Autographed Trading Card of Major League Baseball Player Albert Pujols SCP-375-B Instance Autographed Trading Card of Albert Pujols for the North American Baseball League Pujols is listed as having played for the Seattle Pilots, from 2001 to 2010, and the St. Louis Browns from 2011 to 2022. Subject D30246 Item Deposited Pennies Produced by SCP-1015 Subject was an SCP-1015-2 instance, SCP-375-B Instance 1974 United States Nichols Close examination of the Nichols revealed they do not match coins produced by the United States Treasury in the 1970s, and depict Harriet Tubman in place of Thomas Jefferson. SCP-1015's effects seem to cease while subject is inside the bank. Upon leaving, subject's anomalous properties are altered so that Nichols identical to those acquired within SCP-375 are produced in place of the previous pennies. Subject D99411 Item Deposited 2009 School Yearbook from Sandlewood High School in Jacksonville, Florida, United States SCP-375-B Instance 2009 School Yearbook from Revolution High School in Harkinsville, Florida, People's Republic of America Yearbook editorials focus on the eternal struggle against capitalism, the importance of accepting Cuban refugees from the reactionary Havana regime, and miscellaneous local developments. Subject Item Deposited SCP-375-B Instance Subject D12539 Item Deposited Autographed copy of the autobiography Under a Cruel Star by Hida Margolias-Covalli SCP-375-B Instance Autographed copy of the autobiography Fortress Prague by Hida Margolias-Covalli Narrative recounts the author's life in fascist-ruled Europe, beginning with the March 1939 invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Greater German Reich and ending with the Allied Liberation of the Continent in 1951. The author frequently expresses guilt for doing nothing to prevent the deportation and extermination of her friends and neighbors. A note has been added to the author's signature which reads, To D12539, May Europe Rise from the Ashes Approximately 80% of affected subjects will not progress past Phase 1 and will continue to use SCP-375 to exchange their possessions indefinitely. However, 20% of affected subjects will experience Phase 2 of infection within six months of initial exposure. After this phase begins, SCP-375-A instances will begin asking about participating in the Temporal Exchange Program. Consent to participate will invariably be given by all affected subjects by the third time SCP-375-A instances ask about the program. Once subjects agree, they will follow instances to the employee section of SCP-375 and enter the building's bank vault. 12 to 24 hours after their disappearance, a humanoid with physical characteristics identical or near-identical to that of the previous subject will exit from the bank. These humanoids, designated as SCP-375-C, also appear to come from alternate realities and are often wearing dramatically different attire than the original test subject. Examples of humanoids that have been retrieved from Phase 2 tests are provided in the table below. Phase 2 Experimental Data SCP-375-C Instance D99411 Equivalent Clothing worn upon retrieval Non-Standard Foundation Lab Coat Information obtained from SCP-375-C Instance claimed to be a researcher at the non-existent Site-13 and described a reality in which the Foundation and the Global Occult Coalition worked together to utilize and or destroy anomalous phenomena. Instance is apparently non-anomalous and was assigned to a humanoid containment wing at a nearby site, pending possible Foundation employment. SCP-375-C Instance D40013 Equivalent Clothing worn upon retrieval Civilian Clothing Information obtained from SCP-375-C Instance appeared to be heavily intoxicated and was determined to be under the influence of several anomalous drugs. When asked for the date, Instance claimed it was Liberary 32nd and expressed irritation at the Foundation for interrupting its participation in a hedonistic festival. If accurate, this marks the first known occurrence of a subject being successfully removed from an SCP-3455 event in progress. SCP-375-C Instance D34289 Equivalent Clothing worn upon retrieval Civilian Clothing Circa 1920s Information obtained from SCP-375-C Instance displayed anomalous monochromacy with its clothing and skin appearing as black and white in a manner similar to a vintage photograph. Instance remained highly distressed and loudly vocalized in pain for five minutes before its eyes appeared to transform into large anomalous white orbs and removed themselves from its body. Instance expired 15 minutes later, while repeatedly expressing dismay at losing contact with the beautiful blue. SCP-375-C Instance Junior Researcher Olafson Equivalent Clothing worn upon retrieval Non-Standard Foundation Field Uniform Information obtained from SCP-375-C C. Addendum 375A Addendum 375A In July 2018, it was discovered that junior researcher Olafson, a researcher assigned to SCP-375, had been using SCP-375 on himself without authorization from his superiors. After this activity was uncovered and disciplinary action had been taken, close analysis of SCP-375B instances produced by Olafson's tests concluded that he had likely exchanged SCP-Object documentation with the SCP-375A instances. Upon interrogation, Olafson admitted this was true and said each copy submitted was a printed documentation of an SCP object which had properties or containment procedures that personally interested him, thus fulfilling SCP-375's item criteria. Several SCP-375B instances produced by junior researcher Olafson are summarized below. Original SCP Documentation SCP-173, a hostile Euclid-class anomalous sculpture that is incapable of moving when observed. Retrieved Documentation Phenom No. 173, a publicly displayed anomalous art sculpture that changes its appearance when left unobserved for one second every 24 hours. Original SCP Documentation SCP-4839, a Euclid-class infohazard that causes Foundation employees to believe select non-anomalous items must be contained. Retrieved Documentation SCP-4839, an apollyon-class infohazard that caused the Foundation to destroy human civilization in an attempt to contain every object in existence. Original SCP Documentation SCP-375 Baseline Documentation Retrieved Documentation SCP-375, an anomalous bank which compels subjects to deposit items into it and eventually themselves and their family members. Subject's body parts are then withdrawn in various states of dismemberment referred to as Compound Interest. The altered SCP-375 documentation was recovered after an SCP-375C instance similar in appearance to junior researcher Olafson emerged from SCP-375 unprompted. This marked the first known spontaneous manifestation of an SCP-375C instance without an equivalent temporal exchange. Lesson Complete If you missed the previous orientation, go watch SCP-374 or Racular guillotine right now. Or for the complete course, watch this playlist.
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F, 09.25.20 || 8Box (1/2) RT #1 || 2020 Panini Chronicles Baseball (MLB)
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[ "#sportscards", "#casebreaks", "#sickhit", "#mojohit", "#bighit", "#boxbreaks", "#packopenings", "#irlpack", "#baseballcards", "#groupbreaks", "#nflcards", "#footballcards", "#nbacards", "#basketballcards", "#casebreak", "#groupbreak", "#topps", "#panini", "#upperdeck", "#bowman", "#leaf", "#tristar", "#hermosabeach", "#unboxing", "#livestream", "#sports", "#sporstalk", "#collect", "#thehobby" ]
2020-09-26T05:08:33
2024-04-24T00:08:08
2,964
pcGAkJFk4hM
Hi everyone, Joe for jaspyscasebreaks.com coming at you with 2020 Panini Chronicles Baseball 8 box random team break number one. It's a half case break boys and girls all card ship One and two are from the run into random teams are from the same case and an early bird special if you're one of the one of the first 18 spots Purchased straight up. You got a chance at an extra spot. So let's grab those 18 names Put them into this separate list right here different from the other dice roll Roll it randomize it four and one five times name on top after five one two three Four and five after five times. We got Kyle cook. There you go, Kyle The early bird catches. Oh, you were the earliest of birds. He was the first spot taken So the early bird the early early bird catches the delicious delicious worm worms All right, so there's everybody right here. So now there's 30 names on this list. There's the team list right there Let's roll it. Let's randomize it one and a four five times five again one two three four and five After five times we got Mark all the way down to Anthony one and a four five times for the teams one two three four and Fifth and final time after five. We've got the friars All the way down to the tea grays Aggressive right there we go. All right Mark with the Padres Kyle with the Royals Andy with the Cardinals Chris freeze with the Diamondbacks Raymond with the Marlins David with the Astros Asa with the Red Sox Darren with the Rockies and Indians Richard with the Giants Dan with the Blue Jays Richard with the Halos Arthur with the A's Brian with the Nats Darren with the Pirates Kyle cook your early bird spot You got the twins Brian with the Rangers Rhea with the Orioles TJ with the Cubs Charles with the Mets Richard with the Raves Megan You got the White Sox nice wit with the Reds Mike G with the Rays Nicholas Stone with the Mariners Robert Runkle with the Brew Crew Anthony with the Phillies Lloyd you got my Dodgers Nick with the Yankees and Anthony with the Tigers Let's alphabetize this by column B by team. I actually Apologize folks. I don't think I have a checklist handy, but if you go to group rate checklist calm You should be able to dig one up. In fact, should we just go there right now? Let's drop the link for you. So you have a you have a shot at You've made some trades rays are for trade by the way spinning. There we go They sure did Rex they they did put spectra in it in In it this year All right, so there it is group rate checklist calm It'll send you to that PDF page right there and you can take a look at all of All of the different hits that your teams could potentially get now while you are While you're considering trades, I'm gonna flip back to that team list in just a second But let me select eight boxes for us here You know, I was mentioning that all all during these chronicle breaks, too, right? Like I want I want spectra baseball. It's a spectra baseball its own solo set its own set So we've got one two three four five six seven eight eight on the left side eight on the right side I'm gonna select the die Just like that one one two three for the left side four five six for the right side one two three four five six And it's six one two three four five six. So this is the side we're gonna do here We're gonna mark this RT so we don't confuse them with the pick your teams that we're gonna do tonight. So this is RT2 there's RT2 right there Yeah, Sean Jaspie will go as late as you want him to ladies and gentlemen, so he's gonna come on after this break It's gonna be about 40 minutes or so You can come on right after this and we'll do a recap at the end as well if you're rewatching the video to skip ahead to the end all Right. Well, here's what I'm gonna do. I'm gonna pause the video really quick Allow for a little bit of trade a little extra trading time when we come back. We'll we'll do the break stick around All right, welcome back folks a little bit of trade chatter, but in the end there were no deals done So here in random team one right here on the 25th. Thanks everyone for getting in random team two already in the store If you want to run the second half back, so I thought I was missing a name on this list. I was like, no Couldn't spot Kyle Cook's early bird team. That's the twins. All right, let's roll who do I have in the fight tomorrow night? Well, who's fight who's fighting tomorrow? What's the big? Arasaranya Versus Costa, I mean both great fighters Who have who have a lot to fight for in this and that in that matchup in a tough matchup tomorrow? title fight even I think Certainly a style fits one fighter more than the other Punching and kicking and grounded impounding Stay up stay down. I mean, there's a lot of things that could happen in a big fight like that So that's what that's what I'm going with best analysis in the biz please and young Best analysis in the biz. All right, so I know I'm there's an all-card ship There's just too much going on here, but we'll try to catch some of the top rookies like boba shed and and Gavin Lux and Louise Robert and whatnot But all-card ships. Oh a plate that'll ship Bobby Bradley one of one That goes to Derek Redding and the tribe Nice, that's pretty cool. He's printing plates are all I mean I don't think they they sell as well as I think they should but I always think they're really awesome One of one out of fives and under get the train whistle All aboard the big head express Got Dexter Fowler all-card ship, of course And all the numbered cards and these boba sheds that I'll sleeve up right here will Will be top-loaded by our shipping team before they go out that Cody Belanger not numbered There's Matt Chapman to 99 relic Oakland A's it goes to Arthur who's looking for Jesus Lazardo. I like these mosaic baseball cards look really sharp There's Aristides Aquino 44 out of 99 for the red legs. That's gonna go to wit and The Reds There's our first Luis Robert and a Tony Gonsolin autograph on card auto for the Dodgers Lloyd Corbett With my boys in blue there you go has been making some starts And looking pretty good loves cats It's true. I'm not kidding. Look at his Twitter. Look at his Instagram speed Alonzo loves cats All these Luis Roberts will go to Megan and the White Sock all the Roberts will will add up I don't know if Lizardo's selling Especially well or not Rex He's a good pitcher. He's great But it always seems as if the pitchers never never quite sell as much as the hitters Unless they're like elite pitchers, I guess but The hitters always seem to do better out of 50 DJ Stewart for the O's Rhea But Arthur yeah, oh there Arthur said it Yeah, Arthur Arthur PCs him because he was he was born in Peru He's from Peru And then went to but I think he like moved to the States when he was really young because I think he went to high school here Oh boys of summer on card autograph 14 out of 25 Fernando that deice jr That goes to mark and the Padres These america's pastimes cards are really sharp. All right nice first box ladies and gentlemen Go with another one So still second second year Fernando to tease but I think I think even a second year card just still carrying some some solid value On the secondary market Next And like I said, we'll do a quick Recap at the end of this break second half of this is in the store jasky's case tricks. I know right One of one plate and a to tease jr. That could have been a nice personal box for somebody We do have personal boxes available ladies and gentlemen Ted is currently doing our instagram live stream tonight He'll be doing it tonight and tomorrow at jaspy's breaks On instagram live only Check it out seven nights a week And then Sean who you'll see do the main channel here later tonight also does instagram on sunday and monday's too jersey and autograph abraham toro houston astros david with that one david chan 47 out of 99 the way the hobbies explode i don't think it'll matter much on whether it's rookie or second year Your thoughts I think I mean I think rookies will always going to sell A lot better than the second year cards But I think the second year cards do have more value than they used to have though There's logan allen 94 out of 96 Well, yeah At at tetease is at an at an elite level though. So he's like there's logan allen for the uh Indians Derek redding But for tetease, yeah I think I think he will I think obviously his rookie cards are still going to be like the top tier cards, but But his second year cards. I'm still have a lot of value though And the rookies are always going to trump The second year cards in general Zach gallant of 50 And hasus lazardo jersey and autograph there you go arthur that is Kind of hard 95 out of 99. That's about it's about how fast his fastball goes 95 99 maybe Around there There you go, man PC chris frieze with dime backs gets that zach gallant card Some more gonsolin there too austin haze more louise robert Now they're louis. I wish they'd bring status back I'm a fan of that status design. They should bring that back. I think Corey seager has been swinging a good bet this year Some people in some you some people in la think that he may may get some uh MVP votes I don't think he's gonna win it, but I think he'll get some MVP votes Kyle louis For the m's that's gonna go to Um Kyle louis is gonna go to as a mariner. Nicholas stone And that josh bell with the relic in the background Goes to the Padres mark l Christopher It's not on the schedule because it's not sold out yet At least not to my knowledge unless it's sold out like Five minutes ago or since I started this break 15 minutes ago. That is there's josh rohas 13 out of 49 And a hasus lizardo for arthur all card ship folks It says sold out on the page Hmm always double check for filler breaks chris There might maybe there's a filler attached to it. Maybe that's why it's on on the schedule yet These mats now I have to do this whole thing because rex is going to cause trouble These mats are padded ladies and gentlemen. So any cards that I drop Are well protected It's going to be fine Wasn't even numbered wasn't even a hit, but it'll still be fine So don't worry about that folks There's justin done Jamming me up rex There's justin done For uh the mariners Nicholas stone There's your honor. There you go chris. Yeah always look out for those mini breaks or fillage Anytime you see something sell out boys and girls a good exercise is to kind of double check the that same sports section And be like hey, is there anything else that needs to happen before it's really sold out? Always double check that Thanks. Yeah, we got it from panini. It's a player of the day mat In fact, there's another mat underneath it for even additional protection ladies and gentlemen That's the 25 that is carlos martinez for the cardinals Andy with that one another gavin lux crusade boba shet more gavin lux and a michael baez Autograph for the padricks that'll be for mark alex brevin, I do like these specter cards. They got panini if you're listening. I know sometimes you are Specter baseball. Let's make it happen And a louis raw. I thought it might be an autograph right here louis robert Two-color jersey got a bit of the Chicago pinstripe in there Pulsar pattern and gold Nice should be out of 10 nine out of 10 That is nice. Megan got randomized the white socks in the spray I don't know how the I don't know how well the relics do for louis robert, but that's got to be nice Could be uh, could be a rookie of the year candidate this year It's either him or Kyle louis Did the angels really blow it? Are you serious? I was just joking Great great job angels bullpen just ruining sean's dreams Of of mike trout actually being in the playoffs for the second time in his life Let's uh, let's uh, let's see Let's see the misery. What happened I mean dodgers have clinched everything. So I'm just waiting for playoffs now Starver's gonna win the scion rex That's gonna happen. Let's go plays Scoring plays maybe all right bottom of the fifth Justin Turner homers on a fly ball to left field Makes it five four Angels and then will smith homers on a fly ball to left field max muncie scores Two home runs three runs dodgers up six five Effectively ending the angels dream Right there actually is a lot of game left. Okay fair enough six seven eight Going to the bottom of the six So in case you're just joining us sean jaspy We will see after this break to do all the late night breaks with you of which there should be many Angels fan and he was telling me earlier today Uh, if the angels sweep the dodgers and if the rangers sweep the astros and rangers one tonight on a walkoff Then the uh angels will sneak into the playoffs. So I guess it could happen There's Justin Upton speaking to the angels 75 Boba shed rex things darvis should win this item Other Boba shed to 140 now 199 that is And speaking of the dodgers here's edwin reos autograph. Yes america's pastime auto 12 out of 99 he's a player that can certainly uh benefit from a universal dh as an as an nl guy i'm not i'm not too too thrilled with the universal dh but He's not exactly he's been working on you know, he's got the best best guy in the field the Lloyd with the dodgers It's the edwin reos. He's got a good swing good power And then we got yonder mendez for the rangers That'll go to texas. That'll be for brian m Yeah, you you darvish. I I think I think probably was One of the people that got affected the most individually I mean the press here in la just crushed him you know Fans crushed him people were you know players saying oh he's he's tipping his pitches, you know he's tipping those pitches And you know, I think that got in his head There's a texas. Wow Another texas jr. Autograph And that's a buyback auto. You can see the stamp right up there And then you can see his blue ink autograph on this bought back card Wow Rookie texas jr. All right, so they bought this card back from last year's set Stamped it eight out of stamp ten of them stamped it on the front right there send it to texas jr. He signed them sent him back Boom, they're in this set. That's how it goes Padres mark l Now very nice That's our second buyback, too We had one in a different case earlier today So they're out there Nice boba shut mosaic silver and another mosaic Or I'm sorry another status boba shut for dan and the blue jays Yordon alvarez to 100 jd martinez Chronicles yordon alvarez and we got a timeless treasures louise robert rubnet odor Piece of his jersey back there for the rangers. That's going to be for brian Yeah, I'm not thrilled with that ink choice either mike tower I don't know for all we know panini gave him a silver ink pen or a gold ink pen and then He didn't use it but yeah Great idea Give me different ink different ink next time panini Four boxes to go We've got about another 20 minutes to go in this break There's not too many boxes. This break is always deceptively long just because there's so many So many things going on here. All right, so Almost done ladies and gentlemen halfway through this half case random team break Random team two is in the store already if you want to run this back Jasper's case breaks dot com if you want your own personal box of this jasper's dot com And you can watch that unbox right now At jasper's breaks on instagram instagram only At jasper's breaks There's even glen salvis autograph nice Twins that's going to be for kyle cook and his early bird spot To to 199 His green boba shut not numbered I think the green ones of these are out of five and domingo leba chris frieze To 99 diamond backs We've got zack collins nice zack collins For megan and the white sox losing my voice a little bit here late at night All right, so zack collins goes to the white sox megan with that one Sam you really wish tops didn't hold the monopoly on baseball card Yeah, I wonder how that I don't know if they hold the monopoly on it I think it's really what the uh It's really what the mlb and the mlb pa allows So I think it's more that Like they they pretty much They pretty much said hey if you pay this much you can't have the exclusive Just like how panini You know paid the most So I think it's really more of an argument to tell to tell mlb and the players association. Hey Make an agreement and open it up for uh You know open it up for for everybody else for other Distribute other manufacturers There's byron buxton relic Byron buxton twins kyle cook I drink both Matt solway I drink both Yeah, I don't notice the logo. I don't notice the no logo thing anymore either and also Just over the years you'll you'll have you'll notice that That panini will do better at taking photographs of maybe the back or you know what I mean where they don't show the logo or the front of the jersey So it doesn't seem as as obvious Right, so they're always in motion there. He's swinging his head and is maybe turned away So they intentionally do a pretty good job with the design To avoid that now obviously it still says chicago. You're not going to see the logo on the back of the car or anything like that I don't know I've I've not really It's not really been glaringly obvious all the time one advantage though And you'll see one advantage and you'll see this see this with a certain baseball products like nt and flawless baseball Is that since they save money Right on the baseball license because they don't have the have the logos, right? Since they save money there they can pay more to have nicer relics in baseball product. So oftentimes I think Oftentimes I think you'll see really nice relics and bat barrels and bat knobs and stuff like that So with the money they save guess what you're seeing more bat knobs and bat barrels and like nt and flawless So, yeah, so That's where it is Well, I think I think tops can't do nfl no logo nfl And they can't do no logo mba because panini has paid the extra premium to be the only people that do it You wish that tops and panini would come together for the good of the collector well It's like saying I wish nike and adidas would come together for the good of the the shoe consumer And make cheaper shoes available for everybody I mean at the end of the day, they're still businesses Why can't ford and chevy just For the good of the people Just make a make a super car. We'll put their brains together put their heads together and make a make an amazingly efficient Car that'll go really fast and be super safe And cheap 97 out of 99 Byron buxton rally But I think that's what that's what it is though mix up is that is that they're competitors at the end They're business competitors at the end of the day There's Byron buxton to 99 It's another twin Petty sleeves there It would be nice if if they were able to share but I'm not I'm not holding my breath on them There's Pablo Reyes Pittsburgh pirates that's for Darren Redding more louise roberts The status one is numbered to 99 megan 8 out of 99 on that one This one's another regular chronicles base louise robert rookie another louise robert the titan design And I hate listen mix up Years and years even even a little bit before jaspies when I was kind of Kind of reintroducing myself back into the hobby and as the years went on with with jaspies I thought that too But then I then I just realized you know what I'm not going to hold my breath. They're a business I'm going to enjoy panini baseball stuff for what it is and Enjoy tops baseball stuff for what it is and And I think the market will respond Here just for derrick redding in the indians if it's good people are going to buy it Right if it's not good people won't buy it If nt without low if nt and flawless without logos just didn't sell they just wouldn't do it anymore But guess what? People are enough people are buying more than enough people are buying it to be honest with you where There's trevor bower where they're still producing it There's Sean Murphy jersey not a graph Jesus Lizardo's battery mate Going to arthur and the a's brian. Oh, what's going on? Yeah, I mean, that's not a bad point either rex. Yeah, if If uh If tops and panini had had competing all logo baseball cards and whatnot They might cannibalize each other's value too. Maybe there is something to be said about Maybe bowman chrome is valuable just because it is what it is bowman chrome, you know, maybe nt You know would has its own little unique Kind of corner of the hobby so maybe maybe that limits the Because I think the mlb pa and the An nfl and all those organizations have a minimum or have a maximum of how many products they can release a year So for those of you who like panic about oh my god, they're an overproduced. No, they can they can only make x amount of football product a year x amount of basketball product a year and x amount of x amount of baseball product a year So if if they shared licenses tops shared a baseball license with chronicles, then both of those guys can maybe only do 15 or 20 releases a year or something like that You know Instead of one company being you know, it's the release schedule is gets all wacky and the number of releases gets gets different Here's tyrone taylor But see that that's the thing like why would if i'm if i'm the head of panini, why would I share my nfl license with tops? What's in it for me? If i'm if i'm you know looking for the best interests of panini There's tyrone taylor milwaukie brewer is robert ronkel And if i'm you know, and if i'm uh If i'm tops, what's in it for me if I share baseball licenses with panini to help improve their brand To make nt look even better a product. That's not ours look better Sure, we get a little bit a bit of money off of it But I think in the long run. I don't know if I I as if I was a tops executive would want to do that There's evan white for the mariners to 99 luminance autograph for the m's that's going to be for nicolas stone And I don't know if the tesla sticker on a chevy argument. I mean this has just no lobe I think the argument is there's no logos. Why doesn't? tops share an ml the mlb license with With panini so there could be logos on there I just don't think that would make sense now if the mlb pa and the mlb who controls those licenses say we want it split up Then there's nothing the companies could do But the truth is the base the major league baseball mlb and mlb pa You know, like I think it's easier for them just to deal with one license Instead of panini and tops Think about it if you're a There's michael baez right there for the Padres, right? If the mlb pa right there's their logo there, there's the mlb pa pa logo If I mean currently they have to deal with panini and tops right now all these players So michael baez has a sign for for panini and do panini events and he has to do You know tops events and whatnot Now it doesn't seem like a lot and I'm not sure it's not that big of a hassle But it's a lot easier if one license controls the whole thing because they're only dealing with one You know contractor as opposed to Three different contractors trying to do your roof or something like that All right mix up saying in his world you would rent the mlb license For nt flawless immaculate and maybe phoenix from tops in return and you allow tops make Football and mba products approved by panini see I mean that would never happen I think business-wise it would just never happen It's like it's like saying adidas should share some of their proprietary stuff with nike and nike should share some stuff with With with adidas and I just don't think that's ever gonna happen you know, so I think it's much more beneficial for I mean why allow If you have an exclusive on the nfl and mba why even allow a competing company to even get a foothold in To the market so business-wise. No, I don't I don't think that they would do that And remember it's not there. It's not their license to to divvy up however they want to There are deals in place Peter Lanzo Mets Charles Byrne And there's Aaron judge to 99 No, I hear here same except it just I just I just wouldn't work I think How does panini have game use jersey autos of two of them? I don't think they say game use almost all rookies At least in the last five or six years almost all rookies will all be It'll all say on the back of their cards um event worn or player worn And it's only until their second or third years where you'll actually start seeing game use stuff For for players So tool relics Will not say should not say Game use if it does it's probably just a mistake Yeah, but he's talking like That comes out so much later. They'll have game use stuff. Yeah All right, Rex. What do you got being in the talking to government? Have you ever heard why they can use Why they can use Full logo patches on the cards. I think I'm misreading that There's anthony k for the blue jays dan Yeah Well sam every time I bring that up to the angels fans here, they're quick to point out that the dodgers haven't won a world series since 1988 So I guess I'll hang on to that another louise robert Oh, oh, I see I see what you're saying. I see what you're saying. Um, that's interesting. Yeah that I don't know That's a good question actually They can't use logos on the cards But they can have patches from jerseys That jkv goes to kyle cook That must that must be a different designation Like the the material of a jersey versus Versus the production of a card and putting logos on there and the right to use Those logos must be different from when they like maybe buy A a jersey to to cut up Maybe at that point they can do whatever they want with it because they they own that Jersey right But they wouldn't have the They couldn't put a logo on a new shirt and call it a jersey, you know, there's erin savall indian darick redding That'd be my speculation that that that I don't really know for sure, but it's interesting Red hopefully the angels can overtake and knock out the assos. Well They'd have to beat the dot they'd have to sweep the dodgers and the rangers would have to continue beating the astros Then the angels could overtake The astros and get in the playoffs Could happen. There are there are angels already down a run Here's edwin reos edwin reos dinger No, they're not even pitching to him. There's glaber day going to the yankees nick alvin Along with all these erin judges on a bunch of other yankees being shipped to you, too There's mike trout There's bruce tall greater all to 99 Trey mensini Almost done folks You have zero confidence in the dodgers in the playoffs either no reason till they show they can Just can't win when it matters. Well, what about the cheating in 2017? See i'm not even pushing see the astros just go scott free. Everyone just forgets about that Everyone just goes oh the dodgers just blew it. No, they got robbed of a world series. They were cheating There were two games in houston that the dodgers could have won right That's a word then the whole narrative changes See this and the astros not a single player suspended And the narrative inside sam banks's head is that the dodgers just can't win it But they should have and 2017 was probably their best chance I don't think the 2019 team was as good or the 2018 team was as good And by 2019 they were just gassed and they just got destroyed by the nationals All right. Um, oh I was gonna do a quick recap So a lot of cool stuff here folks a little bit of a long break But I think there's a lot of it doesn't feel as long as this break really is because I think there's just so many different It's like a mixer, right? There's just so many different things that we're seeing visually I don't think the dodgers knew They were doing it I think alex wood did there was nice to tease right there. I think alex wood did maybe had a suspicion And he changed some signs in one of the games But I don't I don't think I don't think they were it was like a full team wide sort of thing A lot I think bread All right, and there or their arm is covering the logo on the front So there they find clever ways to to avoid Making it look that obvious a couple really nice I mean a lot of nice hits in this stack right here But especially these right here the buyback and the boys of summer both on-card autos look really sharp And there you go ladies and gentlemen good convo Good chatting about the hobby. We love doing this And stick with us through the baseball playoffs chat more baseball break more baseball with us. We love doing it So i'm joe for jazby's case breaks dot com that was 2020 panini chronicles baseball pick your team or random team Number one half case ramp team number one second half in the store jazby's case breaks dot com I'll see you for that one next time. Bye. Bye
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2020-06-18T06:30:30
2024-04-22T17:50:12
2,522
PCh99OtWu_I
नमस्कार, स्वागत है अख सभी कै एगवार पुना, तर्वित आलुक अनलानी श्टूट मैं, मैं आगारुम नरेंजन एक बढी मात पुन भरती परिक्च्छा, जो तेरा वर्स कि बाद, बाइस मार्च 2020 को होनी ती, लेकन कोविद उन्नीस के कारन, उसे ताल दिया गया और � अप पुरी इमान्दारी के साथ, अप वमारे साथ जुड़िये, अप पुरी इमान्दारी के साथ, हमारे अदिहापक, जो आप के साथ संखर्स करेंगे, आभ भी उस में पाटिष्पेट करीए, और निस्चित रूभ से प्रारम्विक परिच्छामे पास हो जाएएए, ल राएग बी उस में आच्छे मार्स लाकर मुख प्रिख्छामे आपको बिठाना एँ, और साथ इ साथ, साथ, चाथ कार तक आपका साथ नहीं चोरना है, अद्तिम रूभ से आपको चैनत कराना है।, आपको बुगोल परयावरन और साथ, अप अप रवी साथ, डबी साथ क अप्री क्यति देक्यर देखिजास कि,परक्री देखी आई को हमारे चिर आद्पी प्रिकाबतर मैं पुथशन, तुर लगभगभग भगभगभगज्भग, पिचन जिजासक्तान के आए फुद आपकोर, वेसे उतादी थोगर के आपकं पुफकी आदे जिचे, कि आद्पी जो उतर मेर का महादी, हम लोग भिष्छो बहुगोल का बारनें करेंगे, लग़्बग यहां से पूरे कोटिन्नट् से मिला कि लग़बग, यहां से पास ते साथ कुश्टन यहां जान्द कुश्टन तक यहां से वो फ्मुछ लेग आप से. 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सांगஙालो आप �コ truth नहीं अटी रपी, on that flame there is खौत्रीग ऱलातner Piilya. तनथा उसरउगमा की भात हैगुई क्यी प recru. अर रेखा होती है, इसी रेखा का मान है, साडे तेश दिगरी अंतर के वल ठना है, को नहाँ पर येज़ साथ है, यान तच्श्नी लोलार्द मैं. आगर अगर इसकी बात करने त्रोपे कोब कैंजर है, यान इस रेखा का नाम कर क्रेखा है, उराफ उत्री ओलाडग istem जोगा पाई तुत्मेग thejuna तुत्मेख न्तकस पोज आले और और खीसatge बूका अपर वी तो ज्त रेखा औरकि Prof M Daisuchi यह आपनिखन बनावान साले थ़िगरी साूत होता है, तो एक फ्वाँ उनी चाईई दच्ष्श्म हो न चाईई, दच्ष्ष्उनी जोलार्द मोझाईईईईईईई. कहाँपर दच्ष्श्�储 यह दच्ष् disag lagde corad mein hai. तो एक 3 रेखा हैं. अब हमारा महदिप है, इस महदिप में और अगर रेखाँ को चिन्नित कर है, के कहाँ पर कुमशी रेखा ये तु देकेख़ा, यहाँ पर एक रेखा याँ से गुजरति है, इस रेखा कनाम एक्वेटर है, यो बारत के ढचन से होगार, गोजर जाती है, ये एकविटर क्या है, एकविटर, यह विशवत रेखा, इस इकविटर को उपर में उत्र गुलार्ढ हैं, और अध ऊछे ढचनी गुलार्ढ हैं आद देकीगा याप प्र एक प्षन पूचा जाता है, यहःखार 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ले� weitere बीईली नहीं करने न सुझ हैं। दूस ह groove तूलि में पाआद न करने यkke तूल्डना ऐसुम hyp शुः आमा सागर वह अ॑ वsychय्ए। अर दचचन में बाद की जब रहे है, तो यहाँ पर गल्प आप मेक्सहो है, मेक्सहो किखाडि है. क्या है? गल्प अप मیک्सखो मैकसे को किखाडि है प्रे भी यतनी बाद के है. पूरा में अतलांतेख, पश्यम् में प्रशाथ, उतर में अरकेटिक माऽागर, डच्षन है क्या है. गल्प्ला क्झव्क्स्को मेक्स्को की खालि है, अप सि पूछ लिया जैए है कैसा महादी बताएगा, जसके उतर में आरकेटिक या चागर, प्राश्व मैं प्रशाद्च्मा सागर और दच्च्ड़ मैं गल्पाँ मेख्स्खवई आने मैख्स्खो की काली होग, तो आपता हैं उप्तर अम्मेर क्माडीप। कि जनँँ थ्द क्यट्टु कि जमिनिज� attr ko kisko bechdeya । इएईाईईईईईईईईईई इएईईईई। इस्च्टरीका। बेलीज बातेमाला। छूटुरास निकारा गोवा पनासुओ। तो इस माँचित्र में पुले 10 देस हैं जिनके आप में चर्चा कननी हैं और इन 10 देसों को हमने यहां पर क्रिम से सजाया हुए हैं कनाडा, यूएसे, मैखसो को ईल सलबदोर, कोस्टरीका, भेलीच, गौतेमाला, फुंदूरास, निकारा, गोवा, पनामा किसके आनाडा हैं अर इूएसे हैं एही दो देस हैंिएं डो नौरत of america के 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अपना भी अद्यन करते रहना है. अपना भी अद्यन करते रहना है. येस में परवत, पतार, मैधान, नदी, जहना, नाला. तिकना जल सन्दिया आदी चीजे होती है. अम उत्तर अमेरिका में आज जल सन्दियों की चरचा करते आप से. किसकी जल सन्दिए वोटर श्रेट. अगर आम बात करने जल सन्दिय की, तो जल सन्दिय की पहली बात हो ए है, कि जल सन्दिय किसे कहते है. तो जल का एक यसा सक्रा बहाग, जल का एक यसा सक्रा बहाग, जल का एक यसा सक्रा बहाग, जो तो इस्तल खनों को, जो तो इस्तल खनों को, न कर थो आप याड़़ Anyway. न भी थो ऐन मुर's आभρείन दए मरकित आए. उसकते है। उसकते है।isine's कुकरी कनो न की अद़ Despirit जल राज्सी कमलग़ आप जाएं, तो तो जल संदी जंभी आपके सब दाजाएं, संदी कमलग़ भाई क्या हुता, संदी करत हुता जोडना, किस को जोडना जल को. तो जल संदी यह जल का एक यह सक्रा बाग, जो तो तो तो तो तो पाने के बागों को जोडने. उदारन के तोर पर देखषेगा, माली जगा एक जमीन का तुक्डा है आपके पास एक एक और एक भी, एक 2 जमीन के तुक्डे हैं, एक अक्स नeast की सागर एक अक भी सागर बाग रह Москв. वाह के बागे सागर के जोडना यह कंा आपके अं सक्रा ढandom. जल संदी यह एक जामनर होन एक और नदी के 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अंばर स्यायाearwO Prevention एक अगला देख है कiens해요 यह आप एर बेखव posing a airplane Iceland यह बा Wagal एक श़़ी� और का tail यह आप यह ऍился अंदी notified यह नगी आप यह इसुल सनडी hey praktे लए Broal क� preoccupation? अटक Award मावे van मुँअन कह्छा me के अद़़ का साी वहझा थской कuten after कनाराना देश at शगवर सागर कनाम न retaining the sand… ईह पा कनाड उ instead of the rocks here… अर इह जलसन दी एक न stitch of the sand… यहerempar, अं आंे आंपा हैं, णलनदी रही, जलसन्दी, ह Specifically, is the amazing matter here जलसन्दी हां क ہے कै कहर रही अंपा था सब कुई गज्डी अद कोकि ज़ाब आलग गज्डी है उन्डरिन ख़ी। ज़ब कि बैप्षिन तुविः कोँरके लिए लक्र थृगा है, कुँँसादेस के आपडी ँत पूरा का पूरा ई, कनाडादेस. का नाडा देειςशे के की भाई थे है? के लग them麼 is the moist planet in Canada कों शaghettiDavo भkeley जली bounded अंके देछेगो यहापर dasis हमसimately कुश देस के तता pachna क экспер वहां, उवार, वहां giraya दूबः देस continue पीज my rhythmic यावपर ुग देस अएग लाईक गडीजा, यावपर दोवीप ना है यावपर उपर लाईक नाद है, अपर नीची आदर, अस बचागर लारे सागर. वयार्हाँ दीःように जाल सेंदी काउधारन६ आरा� code बल अल जल संदि हें कुंषी है? तो एजो जल संदि है कुंषी है? इजल संदि कनाम है बल अल जल संदि हैं ठिगना, मुल आल जल संदी है अपक यार तकनाडा को निूफाुन लिएंद दुईप से �alakrne wali joj sandi कनाम, मुल अल जल संदि हैsequential environment to ended during tai marine पेओ़ worker roger प्रे उणुग क Yinata प्रे उग़ Only प्रे उदू ए replacing ई� finally प्र्े फिललौव destructive प्रे उणुग यह நेचर ईसंग ठीस नाम बता थेत। अआपर उतर अक्ताठ आ्याट �始 अत्लान्डि कमार अजा़र याख शहाल संगर अखesisís Shahghar ना लीयी ता वीं अद्पार्टा � Homer आमी ल करती् है अगी है मर सागर या एद गास या या पर को नावब ये रेड़ा तो भी प्सििया शागर बேम ठभीोनी तौठा Stop Is आलि� Taking ऊपोंच्स्पूर तो यहाँ मेंविया लेंपrent- लिए शाकनें कुवा से द्रक्तिस बात्तिscenes किसंटयita सागर को हम आपनु थवो 1933 मूरत ल Nurth तो यह आप आत्लान्तिक वा सागर से ख्लोर्टा जल सन्दी के दुरा मेख्स्को की खाडि आगाए और आद आप मेख्सको की खाडि से केरे बींस शागर याना चाएते है तो यहाप और इक चेनल है, यह एक जल सन्दी है, जिसको आप पार करना होगा उखाल तान उखाल सर्दि यहाँ तक पहुशने में अगर किसी प्रकार की समस्या होँ पे महात-महात पुन जलसन दिया थी उतर मेरे का महादीप के जो भिवेन परिच्छाँ में पुषे गये हैं कहाँस तोर से जो भी आपके स्विल् सर्भ्सेच के इध्जाम होते हैं लुक सवायोग इस प्रकार के � अप उन पर में समपर्क कर सकते हैं तिरने वाद
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Ph.d.-priser 2020: Cecilie Hermansen - jordfysik
Nye genveje til at forudse funktionelle egenskaber i et jordlag. Med nye analysemetoder har Cecilie Hermansen gjort det nemmere at vurdere risikoen for, at sprøjtning af et specifikt stykke jord fører til forurening af drikkevandet.
[ "Aarhus University", "AUTV", "Aarhus Universitet", "jordfysik", "cecilie hermansen", "ph.d.-priser 2020" ]
2020-06-04T09:56:32
2024-02-14T20:05:49
139
pcTTqMpWqm0
Jeg forsker i at anvende synlignære inforhedspektroskopi til at bestemme forskellige jordenskaber. Og det kan vi for eksempel hen, fordi et spektrum for en jordprøve vil være karakteriseret af den jordprøves forskellige bestanddelen. Hvis man for eksempel samligner spektrerne for en lærede og ensandet jordprøve, så vil de være forskellige at have forskellige toppe. Og det er det, der gør, at vi kan anvende synlignære inforhedspektroskopi til at bestemme mange forskellige jordenskaber. Så kan man bruge de her forskellige jordenskaber til at vurdere sovbarheden, for eksempel over for udvaskning af foreningskomponenter. For det er jo bare så vigtigt i forhold til at vi skal beskytte vores grundvand over for nedsævning af forening. Det fedeste ved at være ung forskere i mit tilfælde er, at jeg har haft super meget frihed i mit POD-studie. Der har selvfølgelig været nogle rammer, jeg skulle holde mig ind for. Men jeg har bare haft frihed til at finde en god balance mellem laboratorie og databehandling og artigelskrivning, og det synes jeg bare betyder så meget. Noget af det mest fascinerende ved at forske, der er jo nogle gange at lave noget, der ikke er prøvet før. Hvad de første til at finde ud af noget, der kan bruges til noget godt i fremtiden, det er jo bare super fedt. I starten var jeg nok ikke så nørdet med det her jord, men det er kommet lidt sninne. Man kan jo ikke særligt sige, at jeg har krævet mig længere og længere ned. Jeg synes egentlig bare, at altid det har været spændende, og det har bare vagt en naturlig interesse. Det kan jo være fedt, hvis vores forskning kan bruges til i sidste ende, at vi bliver bedre til at beskytte vores grundvand. For vores forskning kan bruges til at hurtigere og billigere og bestemme jordenskaber, der kan sige noget om jordens sårbarhed over for forening. Så hvis det i sidste ende kan gøre, at vi får bedre drikkevand, så er det da bare helt optimelt. Og det betyder super meget. Det er jo en kæmpe anerkendelse, som jeg egentlig ikke lige havde regnet med. Det er jo bare så fedt, at der er nogen, der har vurderet, at min forskning har været supervægtig. For det synes jeg jo selv, men at andre også tænker du det, der var, det er jo rigtig dejligt.
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Arterial Blood Gas (ABG) analysis and interpretation
This video reviews the relationship of the respiratory and renal systems to balance the body's PH level and achieve homeostasis. It discusses the breakdown of carbonic acid (H2CO3) and gives several examples of ABG analysis and interpretation. A helpful table to memorize important values is provided. You may also find these other videos in my FLUIDS & ELECTROLYTES PLAYLIST helpful: Osmosis, Fluid Shifts & Fluid Administration Part 1: https://youtu.be/M6elaTxjh2Q Osmosis, Fluid Shifts & Fluid Administration Part 2: https://youtu.be/xz1GEaIKPBY Isotonic IV Fluids: https://youtu.be/1WhoygG0x7o Hypotonic IV Fluids: https://youtu.be/kh8gEbxo1KY Hypertonic IV Fluids: https://youtu.be/yCH-lmad7Qc Fluid Volume Deficit: https://youtu.be/DNcEoj3oSD4 Fluid Voume Excess: https://youtu.be/5p-A97KYsmY Arterial Blood Gas (ABG) Interpretation: https://youtu.be/pCzZXyYW8m4
null
2020-02-10T03:19:04
2024-04-23T14:23:48
995
pCzZXyYW8m4
Hello and welcome to Nursing School Explained. Today we'll go over homeostasis in the body and the regulation of pH that really helps us to regulate all of our body systems. We will look into acidosis versus alkalosis. We'll go over the different steps on how to analyze arterial blood gases and then we'll go into different examples on how to really apply this. So first let's look at the pH. A normal pH level is 7.35 to 7.45. So this is a very narrow normal range and it really helps our body to maintain proper functioning and it's really a state of homeostasis. If the pH goes below 7.35, then it's considered an acidotic state. If it goes above 7.45, then it's considered basic or an alkaline state. So these are the very basics that you hopefully remember from physiology class. So now let's see how that applies to our body system. So I've drawn out here an equation that you may remember from chemistry. So we have H2CO3, which is bicarbonic acid. And bicarbonic acid is a byproduct of cellular metabolism that can be broken down in several different ways. First of all, it can be broken down by the respiratory system by breaking H2CO3 up into H2O and CO2. So the respiratory system will break down the bicarbonic acid into water and carbon dioxide. As we know, the respiratory system is in charge of gas exchange, so it'll be in charge of oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange at the alveoli. And we'll go over it in a moment here as to how it does that. Now on the metabolic side, on the renal side here, this bicarbonic acid can be broken down into hydrogen ion and bicarbonate. So H plus and HCO3 minus. Again, we have two Hs and then CO3 right here, so this can be broken down. And the kidney will filter the hydrogen ion and the bicarbonate by either increasing or decreasing their reabsorption to balance out the pH. So now, as you can see, I have color coded here, so everything in red is acid and everything in green represents alkalosis over here. And these two systems work together to balance the pH. So typically when there's something going on with the respiratory system, so let's say the patient has a bad pneumonia, a pulmonary embolism, adelectasis, narcotic overdose, which decreases respiratory rate, there is a need to balance the pH because the respiratory system has now been compromised and so when there's something going on that's based on the respiratory system of disease, then the metabolic, the renal system will kick in to try and balance whatever is going on with the abnormalities of the respiratory system. And it works exactly the same vice versa. So the renal system, if there is something going on with the renal system where now with the metabolic system, where now the pH has got out of balance because let's say the patient is septic, they have a very bad infection, they've had major burns, they have renal failure, they have all that can be all kinds of underlying issues that I'll be discussing in a separate video that can be the cause for metabolic imbalances. So where the renal system somehow has taken an impact and now there's either too much acid or too much base in the system and then the respiratory system will try and compensate by regulating this by increasing or decreasing the respiratory rate to increase or decrease CO2 absorption depending on what's needed at the time. So in an acidotic state when the pH is less than 7.35, the body is going to try to increase the pH level. And the way we do this, it does an acidotic state, the respiratory system will increase CO2 excretion by increasing the respiratory rate. So when we increase CO2 excretion, we get rid of some of those acids and then therefore from an acidotic state we'll go back to hopefully a more normal pH state by increasing the pH level. Now on the renal or metabolic side, the kidneys, if there is an acidotic state with a pH of less than 7.35, the kidneys will compensate and they will increase our bicarbonate absorption because now we have too many acids which really represents the hydrogen ion here in our system. We will increase the absorption of that bicarbonate to balance out the acidotic state and again hopefully bring it back here into the normal. Normal state. Now in an alkaline state, the pH is greater than 7.45 so what we really need to do is decrease the pH to bring it back into the normal range. So what the respiratory system does it decreases CO2 excretion by decreasing the respiratory rate. And therefore from an alkaline state we now reabsorb we now have more CO2 in our system which we know here is more acid so now we go from an alkaline state back towards the normal pH level. Now when we look at it from the renal or metabolic side in an alkaline state which is right here basic, our bicarbonate there is too much of the bicarbonate in the system so now we need to get more towards the acidic side so the renal system will decrease the bicarbonate absorption and therefore increase the hydrogen absorption therefore balancing out this basic to the normal pH state. This really applies to ABG arterial blood gas interpretation and the first thing that we need to do is to look at the normal values. I've written these in a box in red over here and I've written big memorized. So we all know the nursing school is all about application and analysis but there are still certain things that we need to memorize in order to be able to apply the material. So this box is one of those things that you will just have to memorize. First of all pH, normal value 7.35 to 7.45 as we've just discussed over here if it's lower than 7.35 it's an acidotic state. If it's higher it's an alkaline state. PCO2 I just like to remember is the same numbers but without the 7 as the pH so it's 35 to 45 but it goes the opposite way so if it's increased if it's higher then 45 if it's acidotic if it's lower it's alkaline. Bicarbonate normal values are 22 through 26 if it's lower it's acidotic and if it's increased it's alkaline. So the pH and bicarbonate move in the same direction as so if it's higher or lower if it's acid or alkaline and the pH really moves the opposite. Again just memorize these also refer back to your professors and your textbook because values may differ by hospital, by your textbook by your professor but in general these will be much the same everywhere. So I've written out some steps here on how to go about interpreting these APGs. So first of all we're going to look at the pH we're going to look at the pH and determine if it's normal acidotic or alkaline. Number two we're going to look both at the PCO2 and the bicarbonate to see which one of them matches the acidotic or alkaline state pH. Step number three we're going to look at the opposite system so if we've now determined that let's say the the PCO2 matches the pH then we're going to now look at the bicarbonate. So that's the opposite system that's trying to compensate to try and bring the pH back into normal range. So there are three different things that can happen here. The opposite system or the EBG can be uncompensated. In that case we would have an abnormal pH and the opposite system has not responded meaning that it will be in normal range. For partial compensation the pH will still be abnormal but both bicarbonate and PCO2 will be abnormal. Meaning that now we have an abnormal pH is somewhere out of range but they're both trying so one of them is exotic, one of them is alkaline they're both trying to bring the pH back into normal. If it's fully compensated that means that the compensatory system whether it's Reno or Respiratory has kicked in and the pH is now normal but both the bicarb and the CO2 will still be abnormal. Meaning that now the pH is normalized but one of them will be over here but together they work together to bring the pH back into our normal range. So let's look into some examples to really apply this information. I highly recommend memorizing these numbers and then also memorizing these steps because then you have no problem analyzing ABG. So first example over here our pH 7.29 means that it's acidotic pH 2.54 is acidotic as well bicarbonate is 30 which means that it's alkaline. So first thing we label our pH we say it's acidotic and then we see which one of the two bicarbonate or PCO2 matches it. So in this case the PCO2 is acidic so we know that the primary offender here is a Respiratory Acidosis. These two match Acidosis and PCO2 represents the Respiratory system. Now we need to look at our compensation. So step number three the pH is abnormal and both of these are abnormal we have one acid and one alkaline. So we have an abnormal pH with both bicarbonate and PCO2 being abnormal so in this case we have a partially compensated partially compensated Respiratory Acidosis. Let's look at example number two. pH 7.49 which is alkaline PCO2 is 30 which is alkaline as well and then our bicarbonate is 24 which is actually normal. So now looking at the pH again it's alkaline what matches is the PCO2 so we know that we have a Respiratory Acidosis and now the pH bicarbonate is normal so the opposite system has not responded so there's basically the renal system has done nothing to help us decreases pH therefore it is an uncompensated Respiratory Acidosis. Example number three. pH 7.25 means Acidotic. PCO2 is 30 meaning alkaline bicarbonate is 17 meaning Acidotic. Again I determined my pH is acidic so is my bicarbonate so I know my primary offender is metabolic it's the renal system so metabolic acidosis and my PCO2 is alkaline so that means the Respiratory system is kicking in pH up so looking at my rules over here I have an abnormal pH and both of them are abnormal as well so I have an abnormal pH with both bicarbonate and PCO2 being abnormal therefore I have partially compensated metabolic acidosis Example number four. pH is 7.45 which is normal PCO2 is 31 and bicarbonate is 20 which is acidic now over here when the pH is normal it tells us that the only time that the pH is normal that means that it's fully compensated so but now how do we determine whether we were alkaline or acidotic before so if you look at this pH it's really on the alkaline side of the pH knowing that the pH goes from 7.35 to 7.45 the 7.45 is more on the alkaline side of the normal and then we look at again the PCO2 31 alkaline and bicarbonate acid so in this case because these two match although the pH is normal but it's more towards the alkaline side so we have a Respiratory alkalosis and because the bicarbonate is abnormal as well it is fully compensated so basically if you look at this back over here the pH is normal the PCO2 is alkaline and the bicarbonate is over here so those two have balanced each other out to help the system get back into normal range and then our last example over here the pH is 7.12 so it's acidotic PCO2 is 41 which is normal and then bicarbonate is 18 which is also acidotic so now we know we have to determine our pH which is acidotic bicarbonate is acidotic so we know we have a metabolic acidosis and the PCO2 is normal so the Respiratory system has done nothing to compensate so by our rules over here pH is abnormal opposite system has not responded means it's an uncompensated metabolic acidosis I highly encourage you to look at more examples either in one of your books, textbooks workbooks online to really apply this information if you know the basics of how this applies to breaking down the carbonic acid and memorize these numbers as well as these steps you really should be able to interpret any blood gas that is maybe on a quiz or that you want to practice with I am also going to have another video that explains the different causes and reasons and nursing interventions for the different arterial blood gas abnormalities and abnormalities in pH and what we can do to resolve those please leave any comments down below I appreciate those and also let me know if you would like me to review and for now, thank you very much for nursing watching and nursing school explained
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Make Your First 100k in The Music Industry
Want to market music like a professional for yourself or others?...Check out the Music Marketing Exec School to learn directly from me - https://nolabelsnecessary.com/nln-mme This channel is ran by the founders of ContraBrand Agency, Sean "Brandman" Taylor and Jacorey "Kohrey" Barkley. ContraBrand Agency is a music-first marketing agency that helps artists impact culture through digital content and marketing. To learn more visit https://www.ContraBrand.agency
[ "BrandMan", "brandman channel", "BrandMan Sean", "music marketing", "brandman network", "market my music online", "kohrey", "Music", "ContrarBrand Agency" ]
2022-10-18T17:30:03
2024-02-08T16:57:11
1,534
PCqhDMARCyI
How would you like to spend your time listening to artist music coming up with dope ideas to get their music heard and making money at the same time? Well that's exactly how I've built my career in music. If you don't know me, my name is Brain Man Sean and in this video I'm going to break down how I actually went about that path of building a successful music marketing career and if you're interested how you can do the same because at this point I've had the opportunity to do some really cool things. Having great moments like a billboard number one with an artist by the name of 24k golden we were number one for multiple weeks over songs like Cardi B's WAP featuring Meg Dostallion, Drake's Laugh Now Cry Later, The Weeknd's Blinding Lights, BTS's Dynamite, so many songs but this is only one of many moments we've been able to create for artists going viral. Helping break their music coming up with creative ideas touching so many artists lives allowing them to get their music heard whether it's through Spotify, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, you name it and as artists of all genres whether it's hip hop, country, indie pop, EDM I've helped them all and I could scroll forever talking about the cool moments I've had with artists but before I was this guy who had the opportunity to help artists get attention for their music come up with really cool creative concepts that are impacting culture and getting invited to speak at all types of events as a marketing and branding expert in the music industry I was this guy a freshman in college making music with my friends all the time doing whatever I could to just be around music I just had to be around it so whether it was going to shows helping friends set up creative events for their music being in their music videos scouting locations for their photos or being a character some of their projects it was all fun I just love to soak up that creative energy nothing felt even close to what I felt and how cool it was to just listen to music be around other people who enjoy music and want to see a creative vision come out to the world and that's what I did all throughout college even though I was majoring in computer science and computer information systems it was just natural I can't even explain it from rapping for fun to picking up the guitar I was always up to something but after college I just did what my family wanted I wasn't some music industry prodigy I didn't go into music at all I got my computer information systems degree and interesting enough I literally never thought of an actual career in music all I thought about after college was hey stability I want a comfortable stress-free life let me go get this money and that's what I did my family was proud everything was all good until I began to feel stuck thinking there had to be something more exciting for myself out there than this something that was more me because to start I had to wear a suit every single day to work and that was not my thing don't get me wrong I love a good suit every once in a while but every single day as a uniform I really couldn't take it so I started in my free time again figuring out how to be around music started helping out my friends who are artists DJs market themselves get attention build their audience sell merch set up house parties do real-life pop-ups in the middle of the street with my friend hopping out of a u-haul and interviewing people on the streets I had to keep my creative juices going but at the same time I kept working that job because this music thing this creative stuff I still to this point never even thought of doing it for a living I just had no idea where money came from it just seemed like those people never made money and I didn't grow up with money so a career not making money wasn't an option for me but boy that I love what I was doing so I kept working on the side until eventually I figured it out every time my friends came to me needing my help it was something like I need more people to listen to my music more people to show up to my event more people to buy my merch more people to follow me on instagram or youtube these folks needed marketing and for some reason for me once I was able to put it together like that I realized oh there's a legitimate opportunity in this space because there's a whole degree in marketing and there's entire marketing departments at these major corporations so it was clear that there's a career somewhere here and instead of just helping my friends out I began to position myself as somebody who actually likes to market for artists and helps them on the business side of things leading me to all types of dope experiences where I made money and I didn't have to wear a suit and creating one of the largest underground music experiences in my city bringing out artists like Cody Shane digital nizeks and ruby rose who are at the time hot up-and-coming artists and it was great because I started making real money and man I can't tell you how good it felt I was like this moment is finally finally here but I was still working on the side and for me in my experience my nine to five job began to feel like prison it was great that I started to do all these cool things on the side but at some point I began to look at it like why can't all my life be this way does it have to just be a break from my nine to five job because the way I saw things is in prison they have something called yard time where you're able to go outside but just because you have this free space it doesn't mean that you're no longer in prison because you still have to go back so you might be outside but you're still in prison so I quit and built a full life in music helping more artists get their music heard and create more moments like what you saw earlier but before I go any further I want to tell you the story of jacquory a rapper turned very successful music marketer but back then when he was rapping he didn't even know he was going to be a music marketer if you look at the name on this bad picture right here you'll read savage intuition jacquory is the guy on the left this is before he had the locks you couldn't tell him that he wasn't going to be a pop and rapper one day graduated high school he was still into the music rapper producer on top of that now until he realized I don't want to be a rapper because one day he had his first true stage performance and had stage fright and realized yo this isn't for me I don't want to be that guy living enough having a good time like college students do until crazy enough senior year he gets kicked out of college now I don't have time to get into details right here but even crazier the college actually kicked him out by mistake either way it goes he was out of luck and he had to go back home down south and while he was in this space of figuring life out he had an epiphany I love music and I don't have to be a rapper to work in music so he started to be around the industry only problem is he needed some money he couldn't use college as an excuse he wanted to get up out the house but that was gonna mean having to pay some serious bills so he worked every job that he could going from space to space trying to figure out how can I make a career out of this music thing and as you can see from the very beginning jacquory was far more aware that music could be a career than I was and was intentional and logical about how he analyzed everything that he did and he ran through nine different positions in the process because number one he knew he liked to rap but he was uncomfortable with the public figure side of being a successful rapper he tried producing and actually made a little money there but he didn't want to sit around a computer all day he found being a social media manager boring all he did was put up a couple of tweets and posts on top of that there was no money in it being a publicist was a cool job because he got to learn a lot but he had to be at events all the time and didn't want to go around hopping from event to event and that ended up being his entire life being a blogger and journalist was really cool though because he got to listen to music right he got to stay up to date with all the cool things and next things and see those people blow up because he was one of the first people on it but there was no real money in being a music journalist so then he tried being an artist manager and he really did not like babysitting most people who say they don't want to be an artist manager say it because they don't like to babysit having to tell another grown individual when to wake up when to go to this and plus on top of that you really need to have a strong music network to be a quality manager and because of all of this the money came very very very slow and jacquory needed that money to come a bit faster so he tried being a music creator then he made some money there but it was hard to scale if you don't live in a major city then he tried playlisting actually made some money again but the ceiling's low it's harder to build yourself in the industry and build a respectable brand around yourself so then he shifted into being a show promoter and that was crazy stressful barely broke even with the money even though it looks cool and then when covid came him and his partners took that as a sign to officially leave it alone and after all of this finally where i got lucky to start as a music marketer jacquory after trying all these jobs gave music marketing a try and because he had done so much in music over half a decade he was able to be pretty good at it from the very beginning and the cool part about it for him was it checked all the boxes it allowed him to get out of the jobs that he hated he could make his schedule however he wanted to whenever he wanted to create his own rules could literally work from anywhere while at the same time as a marketer you get invited to a lot of cool events and meet some of the coolest people but you don't need to know any of these people in the very beginning you can build your network from zero easily as a marketer because so many people want to talk to the marketers many people need help how can i get attention for my music or my artist which led to him making some good consistent money pretty quickly and on top of that he realized that so many music business legends are great marketers many who started as an artist just like him legendary music executive la reed of la face records was in a music group called the deal p diddy made music himself even while he was an executive rory carter who many people know as lady gakas former manager started off as a rapper and then scooter brawn who discovered justin beaver manages ariana grande managed kanye started his entire career as a marketer from day one so jacquory is looking at these things and realized this is the way to go but on top of that there was simply nothing like seeing your own creative ideas impact culture this clip posted by snoop dog on instagram is a part of a campaign that jacquory did himself from ground up with the random artists at the time from tennessee not only led it to being posted on snoop dog's page but snoop dog tagging drake it's nothing like that feeling when you see something that comes from your own brain takeoff and culture and then next thing you know you have family and friends talking to you about stuff not even knowing that you were behind it so jacquory was hooked he was in it and just so happened while jacquory was still managing an artist that artist performed at my music festival and that was the first time jacquory or not ever met and we stayed in contact after his artist performed and eventually realized we had a lot of common had similar goals so we linked up because even greater we realized something big the music industry needs good marketers because in addition to the traditional path the internet created a space where independent artists had a real shot in the industry you can make your music in your own room you can just post things on social media and build a fan base so year after year after year independent artists were making more and more and more money and as these opportunities to make more money came artists are going to need somebody that knows how to help them get their music heard and grow their fan base so they can take advantage of all the new opportunities at hand and once we realize the industry needs good marketers we also realize because of this there's not enough good marketers in the music industry and that's when we created Contra brand agency and man I gotta say just the fun alone that we've been able to have due to our position as music marketers has been completely worth it because work hard play hard when you love it it's all the same and it's brought us so many cool moments and being covered by magazines people like Lil Nas X shouting us out being so many cool people getting plaques whether it's platinum plaques for songs we've worked on or acknowledgements for what we've done on social media but it all comes down to when your clients are winning you win when you have clients that go from unknown to performing with Miley Cyrus getting signed by Sony Records collabing with some of the hottest artists out who are working with Beyonce and Drake and then being in a position where you can meet Michael Jordan when your clients are winning like this it's made it even easier for us to continue to win and boy has this been a lot of fun and many of our peers have looked at us like yo how have y'all done all of this so fast but we realized something pretty early on there's two type of people that we've seen in music the grinders who are always talking about I grind I work hard I hustle I hustle I hustle I don't sleep and then on the other side there's the rain makers the people who are getting money for real they're well rested their skin looks impeccable and they hustle too but they hustle effectively while the grinders thinking that that makes them a badge of honor are working for years and years and still struggling to pay rent and breaking down this dynamic all we knew was we wanted to make it rain and everybody that we looked at who navigated the industry well had mentors we looked at Jay Z having jazz oh as a mentor early on and when Rihanna got in the game Jay Z was her mentor and then Usher and Scooter Braun both had Jermaine de Prix and when Justin Bieber got in the game he had Usher and Scooter Braun Pete Diddy had Andre Hurrell the list goes on and on and then when we really broke things down we realized in many cases this is true outside of the music industry as well so he leaned into the music marketing opportunity but then we found a couple of mentors who could break the game down for us in ways that allowed us to move faster because the music industry is completely counterintuitive in how it works then pretty much every other industry and as a result we went from making that first money and getting that bag to making a whole lot of bags our business eventually did over a million dollars and I'll say this the money I used to make in two full hard years of work is less money than I have in my bank account today because while most people try to walk the minefield blind we wanted to be able to know where all of the problems were so we can navigate around them quickly and even fly over the minefield when we could and the same goals for you there's nothing more valuable into getting guidance but you have the ability to navigate it by yourself it'll just take a lot longer having to learn all the dynamics and politics and nuances of the music industry as you go how to actually gain the right skill sets but sometimes it's more comfortable to just say hey I'm gonna do it by myself but understand that that's at the expense of getting results quickly and you're rolling the dice on your future because what I didn't mention is before me and Jacory realized hey we should get some help with this we lost a ton of time and money just trying to bump our heads and trial and error everything so we had to figure out that betting on ourselves didn't mean that we were doing it alone so if you're down for this path I'm down to help you out we're gonna show you how to become an asset to artists and labels by thinking like an agile music marketer you're gonna get the skill sets and strategies you need and then after that you'll actually be valuable but then you have to be able to make sure people see that value which will break down to you and get people to want you on their team and after we help you become valuable in music we'll show you how to make sure people see that value and make them love you this is how you build your name in the music industry so that you build a brand that speaks for you so you don't always have to speak for yourself putting you in a position so artists and labels trust you because that's what this game is all about this is a people industry it's about trust and relationships so you're gonna have to build out a network which we're gonna break down and give you all the keys to doing it quickly so you become an attractive person to work with in this industry we have tens of thousands of dollars of business that comes to us every single month by surprise simply because we've built the name in the industry where other people are telling other people about us but understand this if you don't have proven skills people don't trust you in the music industry and again as I said music is all about trust which is why we're going to show you exactly how to deliver results and that way you can get the bag it's not about finding clients and job opportunities it's about creating those opportunities and when you do that you'll turn that one happy client into many many clients and we'll show you exactly how to do that down to exactly what to say in meetings so you get hired and paid and just to be clear this is a real screenshot just some $750 might not be a big deal but to me every time I get paid in this industry where I get to have so much fun do so many dope things it's a huge accomplishment and the fact that we get paid over and over and over again whether it's $1500 $10,000 $15,000 or $500 it all allows me to fund this lifestyle that I love especially since at first I didn't know how I was going to do this since I didn't go to school for it but what I quickly learned was no one cares if you went to school or not no one cares how hard you're going to try no one cares how much you quote-unquote want it in this industry and no one's going to give you a handout all they want is real results which is what we're going to show you and I know it might sound wild that most people don't pay attention to school but literally no one's ever asked me did I get a degree in what my major is largely because they know these schools when it comes to music don't even know what's relevant in the industry now they're teaching some general information they don't know how to keep up what's happening in the industry in real time and to be real they don't even understand the culture if you look at this picture this dude's wearing a suit where I specifically said I got out of a job that I was working because I had to wear a suit every day I wanted to be free dressed like this move how I move and if I wanted to wear a suit one day be all spiffy then I could but not as some uptight uniform to try to trick people into thinking it made me official and the craziest thing about it the in-state tuition for my college that I went to is like $9,000 and most of these schools want you to go to school multiple semesters so you're paying not just thousands of dollars one time you're paying thousands of dollars again and again and again which is why most people need a loan like I did meanwhile none of that matters to help you deliver real results so with our support we'll show you how to deliver results confidently becoming a legit music marketer in 30 days getting a full music marketer business in a box and in this 90 day program we're going to work you towards getting your first clients and we will literally be a part of your team helping you sell and manage your clients we basically will be your training wheels until you can take off and continue to build for yourself because imagine doing work you love making good money and establishing a brand presence where people come to you without you having to try and that's literally the life you live I can tell you that it's possible because I am now in this position myself and it's a beautiful thing so if you want this opportunity to work together do know that it's application only we cannot work with everybody we will not work with everybody there's only so much time in the day and we're still in the game ourselves serving clients closing deals and helping artists grow if you want to do this for real make money listen to music working a job that you will love you must have the right system and skills to generate these type of results that I've mentioned that we've created for our clients so working with us you will know exactly how your business and marketing efforts will perform building your name in the industry and bringing money and opportunities that you can't even imagine so instead of struggling and struggling and struggling to crack the code we're going to give you the messaging targeting the media approach and systems to crack it so you can go through this process and be like Simon who blew up multiple artists in Sweden to over 30 million streams worked an album that got album of the year nods and it became in the top stream albums over in Sweden and landed major investment in his company from a legendary music exec from Warner Records or like Belika who's become a gospel music and culture phenomenon she's a go-to brand in that space who gets interviews with legends makes over 15k a month and growing from her marketing services that she provides or somebody like Sam who worked with us at Contra brand and has flipped it to being what I believe a legendary management career in the making he asked artists who both have over 1 million monthly listeners got major investment opportunities has seen a lot of money and now he's actually training his marketing team through this exact same program that I'm talking about now so in short we'll be able to help you skip the hard part you've seen jacquory and I had a winding road until we finally figure this out both of us over five years of trial and error until we fortunately discovered the system but they got to start here it's still work to do but boy did you save a lot of waste and that can be you too why go the hard way you don't have to waste time figuring out yourself because fun fact just a four digit lock has over 10,000 different combinations you saw how completely different my path was from jacquory's just to get to the same point but there's so many potential outcomes and most of them actually do not lead to success we were lucky to crack the code and you'll get it cracked from day one so these are just a few of our dream clients the question is are you next if you think this could be you I want to have a personal custom tailor one-on-one meeting with you where I can get an understanding of who you are and where you are so I can determine if it makes sense for you to work with us because if we have a conversation and I think you're a great fit then I'll invite you to be able to work with us but if you're not a great fit whether it's you who thinks so or I think so then no harm no foul but I promise it'll be one of the most valuable investments of your time for your career this year because I'm going to break down and make it personal to you letting you know what you need to do to move forward now the way you'll be able to check this out is below this video whether it's an application link below this video or if you're watching this on a youtube page I'll put this in the description so then you can click over to the page and then scroll down and apply but this is application only we don't let everybody in so you do have to have a conversation right and go through this session if you are interested in working with us hope to be able to speak with you this is such an amazing time in the music industry where we don't only have the rise of indie artists we have a rise of indie music professionals and we're looking to help create the new age of music marketing executives click the link in the description hope to talk soon
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CS609_Topic092
CS609 - System Programming by Dr. Yaser Daanial Khan
[ "Virtual University of Pakistan", "VU Topic Based Videos", "VU TBVs", "VU Lecture", "VU Course", "University Course", "VU", "CS609", "System Programming", "Dr. Yaser Daanial Khan" ]
2022-04-21T07:07:51
2024-02-08T20:25:54
401
pccy-cqWffY
اسم اللہ الرحمن الرحیم، آج ہم موڈیول92 دسکرس کریں گے، موڈیول92 ہے about passing inheritable حنڈلز، پریویس لی ہم نے دسکرس کیا تھا کہ جب آپ پیرنٹ جو ہے وہ چائلڈ پروسس بناتا ہے تو پیرنٹ جو ہے وہ inheritable حنڈلز بھی بنا سکتا ہے جو کہ چائلڈ کو ریڈی لی اویلے بل ہوں گے، پیرنٹ اور چائلڈ دونوں ان حنڈلز کو ایک طرح سے شیر کریں گے، تو یہ inheritable حنڈلز چائلڈ کو کیسے پاس کیا جاتے ہیں، اس کا تریکہ بھی ہم دسکرس کرتے ہیں، صرف inheritable حنڈلز بنا دینا enough نہیں ہے آپ کو جو of course حنڈلز کی ویلیوز ہے ان ویلیوز کو بھی پاس کرنا پڑتا تو دا چائلڈ اس کے کئی تریکہ ہو سکتے ہیں ایک انٹر پروسس کمینکیشن ہو سکتی ہے میسج پاسیں کے تhough کہ جو پیرنٹ ہے وہ چائلڈ کو میسج پاس کرے اور اس میسج کے تhough حنڈل کا حنڈل کی ویلیوز اس میسج کے بڑی کے اندر حنڈل کی ویلیو رکھ دے اور چائلڈ اس میسج کو گڑھ کرے اور وہاں سے اس کو use کر لے دوسر دریکہ ہی ہو سکتا ہے کہ جب آپ چائلڈ پروسس کریٹ کرتے ہیں تو اس کو start up info بھی پاس کرتے ہیں تو start up info کے اندر آپ اون inheritable حنڈلز کو place کر سکتے ہیں جو جو inheritable حنڈلز آپ نے چائلڈ کو پاس کرنے ان کی ویلیوز کو آپ start up info کے اندر place کرنے یہ تریکہ جو ہے کافی سیمپلر ہے سیمپلر اس وجہ سے ہے کہ کوئی اس کے اندر آپ کو complicated message passing نہیں کرنی پڑتی آئے ری دریکشن نہیں کرنی پڑتی اور سیمپلی چائلڈ پروسس کے اندر کو بہت دیدہ complicated task کیے بغیر آپ اس information کو retrieve کر سکتا ہے دوسرہ ایک اور تریکہ بھی کیا ہوتا ہے کہ جو حنڈل کی values ان کو ٹیکسٹ میں convert کر کے تو ان کو pass کیا جا سکتا ہے through the command line جو command line کے تروہ آپ child create کریں تو اس کو ساتھ حنڈل کو بھی pass کر دیا جا ہے as text یہ بھی ایک technique use کی جا سکتی ہے جب ایک child ایک حنڈل کو inherit کرتا ہے تو وہ ایک child کی اپنی ایک copy ہوتی ہے وہ distinct ہے from that جو کہ پیرنٹ کے پاس ہے اس کا اپنا status ہوگا جو پیرنٹ والا حنڈل ہے اور جو child والا حنڈل ہے اس کا اپنا status ہوگا for example اگر دونوں ایک file کو read کر رہے ہیں تو سکتا ہے child کسی اور position پر read کر رہا اور parent کسی اور position سے اس child کو read کر رہا رہا تو دونوں processes کو ان handles کو close بھی کرنا پڑتا ہے ایسا نہیں ہے کہ صرف parent کلوز کرے گا تو close ہو جائے گا child کو بھی حنڈل کلوز کرنا پڑے گا یہ گرافکلی ہم اس کی description دیکھ سکتے ہیں یہاں بھی ہمیں دیکھ رہے ہیں کہ ایک process one ہے اور ایک process two process one جو ہے یہ parent processor process one parent processor process two جو ہے وہ child processor parent one نے کئی handles create کیا ایک handle one create کیا handle two create کیا three create کیا اور four create کیا handle one کو اس نے inheritable بنائیا handle two کو اس نے inheritable نہیں بنائیا three کو اس نے inheritable بنائیا four کو اس نے inheritable نہیں بنائیا now آپ دیکھ سکتے ہیں کہ child کے اندر یہ جو inherited handle ہے یہ جو inherited handle ہے یہ درکٹلی available ہے اور اس handle کے through وہ اس resource کو access کر سکتا ہے جس resource کو parent access کر رہا جو inheritable handle اسی کو use کر کے وہ same resource کو child بھی access کر سکتا ہے یعنی کہ parent ایک file a کے اوپر right کر رہا اوپر file a کو use کر رہا تو child بھی اسی file کو use کر سکتا ہے جبکہ جو handle two تھا وہ inheritable نہیں تھا جو کہ file b کا handle ہے تو child جو ہے اس کو file b جو ہے اس طرح سے deadly accessible نہیں ہے اگر اس نے use کرنا ہے تو وہ پھر create file کر کے b کو use تو کر سکتا ہے پھر اسی طرح three کے case کے اندر دیکھیں جو handle تھا وہ parent نے create کیا اور وہ inherit ہونے کے بعد وہ handle جو ہے وہ child کو بھی available ہے child کو create کرنے کی ضرورت نہیں ہے پھر اس طرح سے ڈی دیکھیں ڈی کے case میں handle four کے case میں handle four کے case میں file ڈی access کر رہا لیکن file ڈی جو ہے اس نے inheritable نہیں منائی ہوئی اب اگر child اس کو file ڈی کو access کرنا جاتا ہے تو اس کو put سے create کرنا پڑھائے گا وہ inherited handle کو use کر کے file ڈی کو use نہیں کر سکتا ہے اگر ان case ڈود پڑھتی ہے تو اس کو ایک علق سے handle create کرنا پڑھائے گا جو file ڈی کو handle کریں اور اسی طرح سے child کو کسی اور file کے زیادہ پڑھتی ہے تو اس کے لیے بھی وہ handle create کرے گا جیسے کہ file ڈی کا case ہے تو یہاں پہ ہمیں تین cases تین distant cases نظر آتے ہیں ایک case ہے a اور c کا a اور c جو ہے files ان دونوں کے handle جو ہے وہ inheritable ہے a اور c files دونوں کے handle inheritable ہے create parent نے کیا اور child اس کو directly use کر سکتا ہے case دوسرا جو ہے وہ b اور e کا ہے b اور e کے case میں b کا handle کس نے create کیا parent نے create کیا وہ parent کو accessible ہے اور یہ handle inheritable نہیں ہے اس لیے child اس کو directly access نہیں کرا e کے case میں اس کا handle child نے create کیا اور parent اس کو access نہیں کرا تو ایسے بھی ہو سکتا ہے اور پھر a case d کا ہے d جو ہے وہ inheritable تو نہیں ہے لیکن اس کا handle جو ہے parent نے create کیا اور بعد میں کبھی child کو بھی ضرورت پڑی تو child نے بھی اس کا handle create کر کے اسی same file کے اوپر operation to form کرنا شروع کر دیا تو یہ کئی ساری possibilities ہیں جو کہ ایدر ہمیں نظر آ رہی ہیں لیکن ہمارا کام اگر ایسی کوئی file ہے یا ایسا کوئی resource ہے جس کو parent تو use کر رہا تو ساتھ وہ چاہتا ہے کہ اس کا child بھی use کرے تو ان resources کو inheritable بنانے سے ہمارا کام جو ہے کافی حتک اسان ہو جاتا ہے اور یہ بھی سمجھنے کی ضرورت ہے کہ ہر process جو وہ independent تو ایک process جو وہ کئی سارے handles بنا سکتا ہے ضروری نہیں کہ ہر handle inheritable جب child اور parent کا اپس میں relationship ہوتا ہے اور parent چاہتا ہے child اس کے لیے work کرے اور کچھ resources کے اوپر کام کرے جس کے پر parent بھی کام کر رہا تو وہاں پہ ہمیں inheritable handles کی ضرورت پڑتی ہیں
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Commander, NMCSD, NMW Discusses Warrior Care at San Diego Military Advisory Council Breakfast
All Hands Update February 27, 2013 Commander, NMCSD, NMW Discusses Warrior Care at San Diego Military Advisory Council Breakfast
[ "all hands update", "navy", "united states navy", "us navy", "military", "sailors", "united states", "america", "usa", "c forrest faison", "naval medical center", "sna diego", "california", "navy medicine west", "sd mac", "wounded warriors" ]
2013-02-27T15:33:34
2024-02-05T09:03:06
60
pcK_vkBJU2A
Rear Admiral C. Forrest Faison III, Commander of Naval Medical Center San Diego and Navy Medicine West, spoke at the San Diego Military Advisory Council or SD-MAC monthly breakfast meeting at Admiral Kid Catering and Conference Center in San Diego. During the conference, Faison shared his thoughts on a national strategy to reintegrate wounded warriors into the community through medical care, education, vocation and family support. We have today the highest combat survival in recorded history. We are routinely saving on the battlefield folks that in any other war would have died. The breakfast was attended by approximately 300 to 350 military and civilian guests as well as distinguished members of the public and private sectors. From Naval Medical Center San Diego, I'm Seaman Pa Young Yee.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcK_vkBJU2A", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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Aaron Boone breaks down walk-off loss
The Yankees have lost in walk-off fashion in back-to-back games for the first time since September 2014. Aaron Boone discusses what happened in the 10th and more with the media. Subscribe for daily sports videos! YES' social media pages: TikTok: tiktok.com/@YESnetwork YouTube: youtube.com/YESnetwork Facebook: facebook.com/YESnetwork Twitter: twitter.com/YESnetwork Instagram: instagram.com/YESnetwork
[ "mlb", "baseball", "new york yankees", "grand slam", "home run", "highlight", "video", "interview", "brawl", "swing", "mechanics", "derek jeter", "babe ruth", "alex rodriguez", "aroldis chapman", "gleyber torres", "dj lemahieu", "gerrit cole", "gary sanchez", "aaron judge", "giancarlo stanton", "aaron hicks", "clint frazier", "mariano rivera", "yankee stadium", "nba", "basketball", "kyrie irving", "kevin durant", "deandre jordan", "vince carter", "corey kluber", "james harden", "jasson dominguez", "luke voit", "estevan florial", "gio urshela" ]
2021-06-13T00:43:12
2024-02-07T17:09:00
88
pcZ4oppAh5k
Aaron unbelievable grab by Urshela there but based on who was running did you think he would have any play there. No, you know because he you know he had to totally lay out so I knew it was going to be from the seat of his pants so knew it was going to be a you know do or die tough one. You know it's kind of how the day went against us offensively a lot of those kind of kind of hits all over the yard and and you know. You know it's a good place just just well enough. Second straight one for Chapman where he wasn't able to come through anything different about what you saw tonight. Yeah, I thought he threw the ball well I mean you know didn't didn't make the play on the bun you know I think he's got to come right up and go to first in that spot instead of you know feeling for that runner at third. You know gets the pop out and gets another soft contact to Geo so yeah I thought he was much crisper. You know he's got a little bit of a fiddled back but you guys really were up against it from the start with Jameson Tyone. Why did he struggle so much in that first inning. Yeah just I mean just didn't have anything to put put him away with you know they they were fouled a lot of pitches off not a ton of hard contact often but you know some decent at bats against them you know couldn't get a breaking ball you know below the zone really you know a little predictable in some spots. But just again having having some trouble putting guys away.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcZ4oppAh5k", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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I tried writing from the office for a week | A weekly writing vlog
My writing hasn't been going that well in 2021. In fact, since the New Year's long weekend, I've barely written anything. Honestly, it's been cold and dark and snowy, and all I've really wanted to do is laze in bed with a book. 😅 So I thought - what if my environment's the problem? Or, what if changing my environment would help me feel more motivated to write? I decided - for one week I would try writing from the office (i.e. the place where I go for my day job). I would get to the office early to write before work, I would stay late to write afterwards. I'd even try going in on the weekend. What happened? I had my best writing week since that long weekend! Though now I'm stuck again... this is the book that would never end. 😅 QUESTIONS FOR THE COMMENTS: - What are the best environments or location for your writing? Where are you the most productive, and where do you do your best work? TIME STAMPS: 1:33 - Why am I going to the office to write? 2:48 - Writing progress for 2021 (so far) 3:32 - Day 1 6:25 - Day 2 12:22 - Day 4 23:24 - Day 6 26:16 - Lunchtime walks in Tallinn 28:55 - Thoughts on the week! FIND ME ONLINE: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jp.writes/ Website: https://jpwrites.co/ Nanowrimo: https://nanowrimo.org/participants/jpwrites #writingvlog #writing #authortube
[ "writing vlog", "writing process", "writer's block", "writing", "camp nanowrimo", "writers block", "writing ideas", "writing advice", "novel writing", "jenna moreci", "kate cavanaugh", "vivien reis", "bookish pixie", "hello future me", "ellen brock", "alexa donne", "shaelinwrites", "authortube", "writing a book", "writing motivation", "how to write", "#authortube", "writer", "how to write a book", "author tube", "writing a novel", "creative writing", "writing tips", "writing inspiration", "iwriterly", "writing experiment" ]
2021-02-06T11:39:33
2024-02-05T06:35:08
1,960
pcTUFm7gvck
Hello and welcome back to my channel. If you're new here, my name is Jackie. I'm an aspiring writer and this week I am trying a new writing experiment which is I'm going to write from the office and maybe only from the office but let's see how it goes. So today is Sunday. I've just got it back from the gym. I've just had my lunch and now I'm going to head back to work even though it's a weekend. I've relocated to the office. If you don't know, I work for a crypto startup in Estonia and we have a co-working space but we have a private room in the co-working space because we needed a door that could lock for our like financial license requirements. So we've got this private office that has four separate desks. Most of the time when I come in I'm the only one here because we have four colleagues who are supposed to be based in Tallinn at the moment. There's me obviously. There's a girl Elena who she comes in sometimes but I think she might do like one day a week and often that's like a day when I'm not in so we sort of see each other once every couple of weeks but other than that we're both working on our own. We have our treasury manager who he has a very young child like under a year old I believe so it's easier for him to work from home at the moment and then we have like our compliance manager who is supposed to be here for six months out of the year because of the licensing requirements and he went back to Switzerland in I'm going to say November and then the Covid situation got really bad and he hasn't been able to get back so during the week I often have this space to myself. So why am I coming into the office on a weekend to write? Well there are two main reasons. One is that even though I've been thinking a lot about my work in progress fantasy hot mess for the past few weeks I haven't done a lot of writing and that's because I've just been feeling really lazy at home so I thought getting out into a different environment one where I usually work would be good for just switching off relax mode and switching on work mode. The other reason is because on the week of Christmas I tried to write this in a week and failed but I ended up with 29 30 000 words and then over the new year weekend I started again and ended up with 10 000 words that I later added some more to and after all of my thinking I've decided like a hybrid between those two beginnings would work and that means I need to be able to see three different documents at once I need to be able to see the document from Christmas I need to be able to see for the words which is where the second version was and I need a new document where I can combine them or rewrite and I can do two documents on a laptop screen but three is just too much so I thought I'd come in here where I have multiple screens and work that way I also stole one of my colleagues screens the one who's in Switzerland because he doesn't need it he can have it when he gets back so if we look at my spreadsheet for the year we can see that on the first three days of the year was doing pretty well I ended up with 12 472 words and then there's really nothing so I have a week of nothing I attempted to write on the weekend and it wasn't working and then I have from the 10th until yesterday which was the 23rd nothing so another basically two words of no writing and yes I was thinking but I haven't been getting a lot of words out so yesterday was the first day I went into the office I've got 7952 words there but that's not actually writing like that's combining the two documents which is mostly what I want to do again today it's been about an hour and 20 minutes since I started writing and I can tell from the viewfinder it's noticeably darker in here so you've got to love Estonia in winter anyway it's been an hour and 20 minutes and I'm making progress but one of the things that keeps coming up which I think is a challenge of having had something in your head for so long is that I keep thinking of all of these things I need to introduce at some point and I'm not sure when to get it done because now I have a new scene that I'm working on before Perry decides to go and steal them and often which is good because it gives us a chance to see Perry's relationship with her best friend Madeira which I didn't really have a lot of time to develop that in the last version but that then makes me realise oh we've also got this character and this character who are part of Perry's life and we should really meet them at some point and I don't know how to get all of these people in there before the plot starts happening so if you have any advice for this please let me know. One of the things that's a little bit frustrating though is that this is taking longer than I'd hoped and I don't know every like fiction in general takes longer than I expected but I was hoping because yesterday I made quite a bit of progress I was hoping that today I could finish combining the two like initial drafts I had which should get me up to the turning point moment for Perry's point of view and you know it's been an hour and 20 minutes and I don't think that's going to happen because now I've got this new scene but once I get through this scene I think the rest of it I'm probably going to be able to keep the stuff that I did in Christmas week so yeah I think I'll just focus on getting this new scene done for now and then see how long it takes but I might need to continue with combining the two books tomorrow and for the next couple of days. It is 4.30 and I'm done I didn't finish the scene and chapter I wanted to finish today but I'm at the point where I'm trying to write and it's just not working so again sometimes things take longer than expected but at least I've got something concrete to continue working with tomorrow so for today I did three hours of writing time and of that I had about 160 productive minutes and 3,180 words so not great words per minute but it was also I had a lot of thinking time today like it was quite slow going so in any case I'm glad I'm making more progress especially after the last few weeks. One of the things you might be wondering now is well working from the office on a weekend sure that makes sense but how does that work during the week and my plan is to hopefully get to work a bit early on each of the days I go into the office so that's Monday Wednesday and Friday and on the days when I don't have anything after work so that's Monday and Friday usually I can stay a bit longer and maybe do like a half hour to an hour of writing after work so this is my first week doing it and let's see how it goes. It is 9 a.m on Monday morning and I just did 20 minutes of writing I got into the office only 20 minutes earlier than expected I was hoping to do like 45 minutes to an hour earlier but I was just really tired this morning when I woke up and part of it is just that I have doms from the gym so I think you know it's natural to feel tired when your body feels tired but also you know I did a few hours this weekend and I think it's going to be interesting to see like how sustainable this is. I think I might take the days I work from home off from writing unless I'm really inspired to write so I still get some sort of a break or weekend but I'm curious to see how I feel by the end of the week. This session did not go well I mostly just went through what I did yesterday and I decided to have like a scene I wanted to have somewhere where the main characters visit another one of the secondary characters like homes he lives in his mother has a shop in the town and he and the family live in an apartment and I knew I wanted to have a moment with them just so we could see more of this other character's life but now that I'm there I don't really know what to do with the scene so and I know from when I worked on powerless generally the scenes that I was struggling to write are ones that you know readers weren't really engaged with it maybe I could have just done without so I'm also considering just cutting this bit which I could but then I don't know when to introduce this character so I think this is one of the things I mentioned yesterday like when do I introduce everyone and do all of this foundational work that needs to happen before the plot gets started because once the plot gets started things move very quickly and you don't have a lot of that establishing time anymore so yeah not a great morning I did 172 words in 20 minutes which is nothing like that's eight words per minute that's very low having said that I can't really do much more now because I need to get to work so I have my work day ahead and I'll see if I can do some more writing at the very end of the day it is now the end of the day so I'm going to attempt to do some more writing honestly I'm exhausted I don't know why I yeah I don't know if it's because of the work I did on the weekend I mean I also had a lot of meetings today and I do find meetings very draining basically from 9 30 a.m till 3 p.m today I was in meetings with the exception of about an hour because I had a half hour break in the morning and a half hour break in the afternoon in between all of those and that's a lot so since then I've been mostly focused on admin and organization and so on because when you're a manager you have a lot of admin and organization to do but professionally I haven't been doing very much creative work today so I'm not sure how I'm going to go now that I'm going to jump back into writing but what I think is I'm just going to get through this scene and move on to the next one I think the big challenge is that I'm writing something and I can see it's not working I start to put on my editing hat and then I can't continue writing and today I don't really have the energy to do good editing like I look at things and know they don't work and I can't make them better so it would be better just to push through and have something and then tomorrow or Wednesday or whenever I'm a bit fresher I can go back and improve it the problem is the new scene I'm on at the moment I need to get through there's not that much left and then the next scene is one of the ones from the week of Christmas that I'd already done that I need to like rework to make fit this version of the book so I actually need to do editing work unless I want to skip that which I don't really want to do it's a mess and I'm tired but I'm going to give myself 45 minutes to an hour and see how well I go I made it so I did write for an hour and I got 1253 words done in that time so that's much better than my results earlier today I didn't get as far as I wanted and I think I don't know I need to readjust my expectations for how long things take because I always feel like I can get to the end of a scene in a session and I don't know how often that happens to me completely honest I got here to the end of the new scene I was working on I then started the next one which was it was an iteration of that from the version of the book that I tried writing over Christmas and I thought I could get through that and I didn't I did maybe 300 words of that scene and that's because there's like some new stuff that's happening at the beginning so I'm probably taking the second two-thirds from what was already there and replacing the first third and um yeah it just fiction takes a lot longer than I expected I I feel like my experience writing non-fiction so blogs books so on emails it's given me a different perception of time and I know that it takes me this long to do a blog post if it's a really long blog post like 5000 words plus I know I can probably do that within a day and I equate that to like I equate a blog post to a scene and I think oh yeah I can do a scene in this amount of time but I feel like I forget how much thinking goes into this work especially when I'm a bit tired so I'm calling it a day it's time to go home tomorrow I will be working from home and I'm not sure whether I'll do some writing or whether I'll purely write from the office this week so maybe I'll see you tomorrow who knows it's always an adventure happy Wednesday it is 901 a.m and I'm about to start work I did not film yesterday because I didn't do any writing yesterday so it was a work from home day but we had a like annual virtual annual meeting at 8 p.m my time so I was working from 9 a.m until 9 30 p.m so it was a long day and um I didn't get any writing done I did have an idea though which if I pursued it would mean I'd need to throw out a chunk of the beginning of the book again and um on one hand I like the idea on the other hand I am so sick of trying to rework the first part of this book I just I don't know why I can't crack the beginning of this book so at the moment in the first part of the book Perry steals the MacGuffin which I still need to name and then it gets stolen from her and when it gets stolen from her that's like the turning point that sets the plot in motion because it gets stolen from her and delivered to the antagonist and one of the things I've struggled with is how she got it in the first place so in the draft I wrote in 2019 like a random cloak troll woman just gave it to her which didn't work but I just needed to get it to her somehow so in this version one of the things I needed to solve was how she got it and I had a couple of different things that I was playing with in the draft her wrote over Christmas I had her stealing it in the next version of the draft I thought maybe the antagonist team actually gets it before the start of the book and she just finds out about it a bit later which sets the plot in motion and then I had an idea which was what if the head master slash governor person whose title I still need to decide gives it to her because the lead-up of events to this is she is presenting at the international exhibition she wants to be the showcase exhibit for the opening gala and he says no I'm presenting the macguffin instead so you can't have this spot so she was going so I was going to go okay let's make her steal the macguffin instead so she gets her spot back then I have this idea which is what if he like sort of goes oh but you can hold on to it in the meantime you can guard it in the meantime is sort of like a penacea is that how you say it and I like this idea for two reasons one is because it's not what she wants and I so viscerally feel the reaction of this isn't what I wanted this isn't what I asked for so I quite like that I quite like it for their dynamic between them I think it's good for her age so she's supposed to be like 19 so sort of YA new adult but still um you know you're still at that stage where you're coming into adult would be you can still have these like tantrum-y reactions and entitlement sometimes so um I quite like that dynamic the other thing that could work about this is I've really been struggling with the stealing the orb scene so and the orb is the macguffin it's like a spherical stone thing um and in the book I'm just calling it the orb at the moment but it will need a name at some point but where it's positioned is on the top of like the main governing building in the city so it's a big domed building and it's like on the top and the building's on a hill so everyone can see it so the fact that it's positioned like this means that in order to get it it should be almost set up as some grand caper but it's too early in the book to be pulling off a grand caper because this is actually before the plot gets started so if I get bogged down into going okay here are all of the obstacles here's the plan we carrying out the plan the plan goes wrong like that turns into a new book maybe I need to have a book before this one so at the moment I sort of have this scene that I wrote over the week of Christmas where they go and get it and it's difficult but it's not really there are no stakes or anything and that means that it's not even though theoretically this is an interesting thing like they're climbing on top of the building to try and steal this magical item it just doesn't read that interesting so I need to find some way to increase the stakes here without turning this into the book and I'm not sure how to do that and if I don't it just feels like logistics it's really not interesting so at the moment I have her going to steal it and then she gets the orb the macguffin and then it gets stolen from her and chaos into use if I switch to rain giving it to her I need to like cut out a couple of scenes and figure out how that would work because he's not going to be carrying it with him when they have the conversation where she pitches him to be the one to present because he doesn't know that's going to be the conversation so yeah that needs a little bit of tweaking once again I'm thinking maybe I do two versions because I booked in a developmental edit with a friend of mine former colleague of mine who's an amazing editor and that's not until November unfortunately just because she is so good and so popular and has all of these regular clients that she books out six to twelve months in advance and one of the things I said when I booked her in was you know I haven't been able to figure out this book yet this could be the time when I figure it out so would you be okay with me cancelling with six months notice if that happens and now I'm thinking you know this keeps happening maybe it would be worth me just waiting until November like writing the book but maybe it's okay to put it on hold until November just so I can get feedback from someone on the outside and if I'm doing that then maybe it would be helpful to have the two different versions because ultimately this doesn't change the macro story because the whole purpose is for her to get the MacGuffin so it can then get stolen from her how she gets it doesn't really matter in the grand scheme of things I've just got to make it interesting so people keep reading this is turning into a bit of a ramble I don't know what point I was trying to make but yeah I suppose it's interesting knowing logically that this doesn't really affect the macro story but still being stuck on it and I could skip it and come back to it but the thing is I need to figure it out sometime so I might as well figure it out now and I'm just not sure how to do it so yeah once again I'm thinking about doing two versions of this little section from because the opening scenes I think are okay and then we've got to do this little hop between the opening scenes to her getting the orb to it getting stolen from her and maybe that little hop I need to do in two different ways to see what works best anyway this morning I was sticking with the stealing the orb scene and I've introduced another one of the characters a bit early and thought it was a good opportunity to have a bit of world building because this is a world where they've basically tried to destroy magic and mages they tried to do this in a war which ended 20 years ago so around the time that the main cast were born slightly before we haven't really had a chance to explain that at all and this is actually a good opportunity to because there's one character who the stakes are higher for him like if he gets caught whereas Madeira and Perry the sort of two best friends who are going on these hijinks Perry is like the adoptive daughter basically of rain who rules this city so whatever she does she's sort of going to be okay he'll have her back we assume so not so many stakes and Madeira she is basically a princess of the country she comes from so very wealthy very powerful they can't really do anything to her without causing major diplomatic issues between this city-state and that country so they sort of have diplomatic immunity they have a free pass to go and do bad things and that means um there aren't as many stakes to the scene whereas this third character he's just a normal boy he's a friend of theirs he goes to school he's a mage he's a magic student and he knows he needs to sort of always be on his best behavior because if he isn't like he could be lynched he could be stolen in the middle of the night and taken away to a work camp the consequences for him are real so because of that it gives us an opportunity to have this discussion where he's like look whatever you want that i can't help you with this so that's what i was working on this morning i'm really struggling to capture his voice though which is quite unusual for me but i had this idea that i wanted him to have this really you know distinctive voice one of those people who sort of has so much information going on that he starts a sentence and goes off into tangent and i was about to say um i'm a very clear and straightforward communicator so i'm not used to talking like that but look at the last you know 10 minutes or however long it's been i think we've established i can go off on tangents so i had this idea and i had this paragraph that i did in um the 2019 draft that i really liked and anytime i brought up this character i've like copied that paragraph across just to try and get a sense of the rhythm of his um of his dialogue and i'm really struggling so this morning what i did was sort of like just a script so i had you know midirah dialogue parry dialogue trevor dialogue and just sort of had the conversational back and forth and i'll go back and try to polish it a little bit um but yeah so this morning i was working on that bit before when he backs out before they go to steal the mcguffin i did 558 words in 30 minutes so that was 18.6 words a minute that's pretty low to be honest but there was a lot of time thinking they're like trying to get his words right and also um i wanted to introduce the fact that daromon is patrolled by guards and i don't know i want to have like a nice little paragraph that talks about you know the utopia that daromon is seen to be um and then sneak in and oh by the way there are armed guards who patrol the streets so i'm not sure i'm okay with the armed guards patrolling the streets but i'm struggling with the utopic depiction so if you know any books that have cities that are presented as you know utopias paradises perfect worlds please let me know because i'd really like to see how the authors tackle this anyway it is now quarter past nine so i've really got to get to work after work today i do have a singing lesson which means i won't be doing another writing session in the office after i finish however i might take a lunch break in the office and see if i can do some writing then it looks like i'm going to be on my own again today so it shouldn't be too hard to focus as long as i close email and slack so i didn't have lunch today in fact it's five thirty four and i haven't done any more writing but things have come down a bit now so i'm going to see if i can squeeze in half an hour of writing before i finish for the day and then head to my singing lesson it is Friday and i'm back in the office so yesterday i worked from home i didn't end up doing any writing so i didn't record anything but um it was kind of crazy day for the company i work for so i work for a crypto company and the way crypto projects tend to get funding is through an i ceo rather than ipo so an ipo is when a company goes public and issues shares for the first time and you know the public can buy them um an i ceo is when a crypto project creates their coins and people can buy them as part of the initial coin offering so our um company has its own crypto token so its own version of bitcoin if you like and um when i started last year in july it had just hit like an all-time high of 17 cents and it sort of dropped down and fluctuated between about 8 cents and 12 cents for the rest of the year until we get to mid december we launched a new feature and then it shot up to 18 cents and then went up to 33 by christmas so like everyone was over the moon and for the past month it's sort of been steady up there which is really good and then suddenly this week it's like all-time high week so on tuesday when we had that virtual event i mentioned like it was just going up and up and up and hit i think 42 cents and then yesterday it just started spiking again when we released a new product or a new feature so um it went all the way up to 62 cents i think and it's just it's so cool to be i know to have this vested interest in something doing well and just watching in real time as the price goes up and everyone on slack was going mental and everyone on twitter's going mental so um yeah it was a lot of fun and even though i could have done some writing i was i know so so caught up in that that i didn't want to and honestly um i'm not too worried because i think it's nice to have you know for the purposes of this experiment to have a week when i only write from the office to see how i do so today is actually a quiet day i don't have any meetings um and my boss also said i could take the afternoon off if i wanted because i was working until like 30 p.m on tuesday so i think i'll leave slack open but i might just move on to my writing after lunch and if anything happens at work i can check it but i'll have a good few hours and the writing goal for today is to one get through this stealing the macguffin scene and two i'd like to get started on the aftermath scene so after everything that happens and perry suddenly realizes oh my god what have i done and i had some ideas for that last night so i might start with that one and then go back to the stealing scene because i don't know if this will work but i have a feeling that if i do the aftermath first then it might be easier to make the stakes feel higher when i'm back in the stealing scene so we'll see how it goes now three p.m and i started writing at one p.m and something that was really nice was just to like have this whole afternoon available for writing it was nice to sit down and not have to rush or not for it like for it not to be the end of the day and feeling like i had nothing left and i was really pushing having said that now it's three p.m i stopped about 15 minutes ago to have a bit of a break and i was just looking over what i'd written and i'm not really sure where to go i think i'm at that point where i just need a bit of a mental break from this session because one of the things i've noticed i tend to do is if i get into like a new scene and i haven't really planned it that well or i only know how it's going to start i have these circular dialogues i get started between characters where they sort of have this conversation that goes in a spiral until we finally get to the point that's in the middle and that's not an ideal way of doing things even though it might be realistic so i think it's time to have a bit of a break so i'm going to go home in fact i might go to the shops and pick up some groceries and then go home and depending on how i'm feeling i might do some more writing from home so on one hand i'm really glad that you know my boss said i could have some time this afternoon and i have still been online responding to things but um like it's been nice to have this time where i can legitimately work on my own stuff as opposed to you know sort of sneakily working on my own stuff which to be fair i don't really do in this job but i have in the past um yeah so that was really nice but on the other hand i sort of feel like oh normally i have like another three hours in the office i wouldn't be leaving until six so technically i should have another three hours of writing today so on one hand it's a bit disappointing not to have had that extra time but on the other i see my writing that there's no point in pushing when i'm at the point in this discussion where the like urgency from the scene is getting a bit lost and then there's no point in having it if there's no urgency so i'm going to have a break now and i will check in later if i start writing again as you can see i'm back in the office so last night i tried to do some more work on the book and i'm still stuck on this scene where perry steals the orb so i started googling what you can do when you're stuck on a scene as opposed to just having general writer's block and i came across an article that said reverse what happens in the scene and there were two ways the author approached this one was literally reversing every single action that happens so you end up with like sort of the multiverse of this scene and then um the other one was simply reversing what happens at the end so most scenes are built around a character either achieving or not achieving their goal so in this case perry wants to steal the orb from a guffin she steals it so what would happen if she didn't steal it and i thought because it is like balanced on top of the building on top of a statue maybe she could like reach for it and just knock it off rather than getting it and in the macro story that could work if somehow the antagonist was going for a midnight walk and happened to see it and pick it up the problem is if i do that then i basically lose two of the major characters from this book or i need to find some other way to bring them in because they were originally part of the sequence where it gets stolen and falls into evil hands so um yeah that threw me through a bit of a loop and i was incredibly frustrated because i just don't know why i can't figure out the beginning of this book and it's easy to go oh well just skip this scene and come back to it but the thing is i sort of already skipped the scene or i've already gotten the benefits of skipping the scene because i do have a full draft i already have the stuff that comes after this so i need to figure it out sometime i might as well push through and do it now so um i think yeah i think i'm just gonna try and get through this scene for the next week and if it doesn't work then maybe i'll move ahead in any case it is the end of the week i have done my week long experiment of writing in the office so i'm going to bring this video to the close all in all i really really like going to the office to work i like having a set workspace i like getting out of the house so um i think i'm going to continue doing it the only real downside was that on Monday morning when i went back to the office for work i did feel like i hadn't had a weekend however by the end things seemed to have evened out and part of that might have been because i finished early on friday but i think also because i work home on tuesdays and thursdays like it didn't feel like i was just always there even though i was working on those days i sort of still got the weekend break of being in the same place if that makes sense so by the end of the week i felt like i do at the end of the normal week it wasn't like oh my god i've been working for so long so i'm going to continue going to the office on a weekend like today um and yeah keep doing this for as long as it works um in terms of word count this was my best week since the uh new year long weekend so i did um 14,524 words take that with a grain of salt because the first day in particular was just merging a couple of documents and i had 490 minutes of productive time so eight hours eight hours of the bit if that's wrong i'll put a number on the screen so in terms of writing time it was better than just like trying to get it done at home in terms of word count it was better than trying to get it done at home so i'm going to continue coming into the office to write so i hope you enjoyed this vlog if you did please give me a big thumbs up um leave a comment below telling me like which environment you work best in and i will see you next time bye
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Janata Mood || ୨୦୨୪ ନିର୍ବାଚନ ପାଇଁ ରେଢ଼ାଖୋଲ ନିର୍ବାଚନ ମଣ୍ଡଳୀରେ କିଏ ଅଛନ୍ତି ଆଶାୟୀ ପ୍ରାର୍ଥୀ?
୨୦୨୪ ନିର୍ବାଚନ ପାଇଁ ରେଢ଼ାଖୋଲ ନିର୍ବାଚନ ମଣ୍ଡଳୀରେ କିଏ ଅଛନ୍ତି ଆଶାୟୀ ପ୍ରାର୍ଥୀ ? #ArgusNews #JanataMood #Redhakhol #Election2024 #RedhakholConstituency #Candidates #PublicOpinion #Voters #RedhakholVoteHistory #political #Sambalpur #OdishaNews #Odisha Argus News is Odisha's fastest-growing news channel having its presence on satellite TV and various web platforms. Watch the latest news updates LIVE on matters related to education & employment, health & wellness, politics, sports, business, entertainment, and more. Argus News is setting new standards for journalism through its differentiated programming, philosophy, and tagline 'Satyara Sandhana'. Janata Mood || ୨୦୨୪ ନିର୍ବାଚନ ପାଇଁ ରେଢ଼ାଖୋଲ ନିର୍ବାଚନ ମଣ୍ଡଳୀରେ କିଏ ଅଛନ୍ତି ଆଶାୟୀ ପ୍ରାର୍ଥୀ? To stay updated on-the-go, Visit Our Official Website: https://www.argusnews.in/ (Odia) Visit Our Official Website: https://argusenglish.in/ (English) iOS App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsiOSApp Android App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsAndroidApp Live TV: https://argusnews.in/live-tv/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/argusnews.in Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/c/TheArgusNewsOdia Twitter: https://twitter.com/ArgusNews_in Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/argusnewsin Argus News Is Available on: TataPlay channel No - 1780 Airtel TV channel No - 609 Dish TV channel No - 1369 d2h channel No - 1757 SITI Networks HYD - 12 Hathway - 732 GTPL KCBPL - 713 SITI Networks Kolkata - 460 & other Leading Cable Networks You Can WhatsApp Us Your News On- 8480612900
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2024-02-19T10:04:40
2024-04-23T23:22:22
322
PCdNPhgqvKU
Ashanta nirpachanori konhebo pidhayakta tha sambal purchilla bijadi sabha pati Rohit Pujaring ko bhagya. Puri redakholru prarthihbe na au kyauthu ladhibe obatankku lokosa bha nirpachanopain ticket debo dada. Redakholre dajoriti ko khoti rebe jor thari chiyei charcha. Tbhe abhithare bijadi ticketa saibhabe aago ku asu chi bijadi ro bhet ranzi dar prasanna aachar chankana. Nirpachanopain ticketa saibhabe prasanna aachar chankana poster bhi chai jaichi. 2008 hujiti bijan sabha jaithi re prasanna. Yano prarthihbe dalaibhaku chai le bhik yata drustiru prasannanku bachi pare bijadi. Sibhale Rohit Pujaring ko bhagya chata konhebo ebe bhi sandihaan. Ucha sikhya bhi bhagya ro khra pradarsan apain tanku mantri mandala ro baad jaya thi la boli sethe bhele karna darsa jaya thi la. E bhehara kichidna purparu sathe varshabhaya su upare bantapya dai bhi baad johi pritile rohit. Sathe varshabhaya odi kohile rajanitru abhasarana ba uchit boli kohitile rohit. Ternu sathe varshabhayaan rohitanku apain aada boli charcha hoitila. Eha purparu matya rohit toni ek mamala re bhi baad johi pritile. Ternu ithara ticketa panti ba bhele bijadi suprimanku manoreshe sabhu jini samath hi ati banis chaiya. Te bheha baad gandupatra karma chari sanghara shawapati sanjit mahantim ka supramod bhehara o pradip pradhan maddha bijadi roti ketas ae rahi chanti. Daga ame gute din la hi rajan nanditi nai kohi nirbachan ke dekhike, ame janda bija pidala nirbachan ke dekhike jhan nanditi koruchan. Pura abhuta purpa marjina ba. Mane ame bhi nai jani. Ita ikain ki muni janda kohili ita lukongar nirbachan hai. Jaan nipura mukhya manti marha dhae abang bhayi, ptya adhika marhthae marha dhae. J곡di mohro purpa tehna kes, judo chakri rekoduko dekhhi prudapot karati nishita abhure mor abhigaatanku pada hi ahkari. Mol rulalaan kolo jihitu baswas ko ri asiti, tankoro cholo ne jani chi, kono tankoro dharkar. Demilaman na kemiti taran nandi ahi pare. Nishita abhure abhigaatanku pada hi ahkari, te safal hi pari ohli ba asakoruchi. ন�ï গ্ঢতিন���রু, গไীীীবব, আতীববব আতীবববববববব ইাযাসরু. নবববব গไববব নবববববব নববব সরাসরেবব. নবববব সহিুু নবববাসরু. সববব ম ঌ নবব� ಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈಈ
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCdNPhgqvKU", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCSmheuqpa0deotgNSlVtzNw
Going for a solo win in warzone
Support the stream: https://streamlabs.com/kickinitwithross
[ "call of duty", "call of duty cold war", "call of duty warzone", "call of duty season 3", "warzone", "modern warfare" ]
2021-05-13T04:29:11
2024-02-07T17:00:47
7,706
PCNUWPbTV4Y
What up? What up? What's good? What's going down man? What's going down with y'all man? What's good man? What's good everybody? Appreciate y'all joining in Joining in checking the checking out me stream tonight. Let me see if I can get me a dub man See if we can get a W in warzone Appreciate you guys so much man See what class I'm gonna run. I think I'm gonna run this one. I had pretty good success. What's good sir dance lot It's going down homie Had good success with this class right here, but I think instead of battle-hardened. I'm gonna run tracker a Real good success with this class real good success. So See if my class is good Oh, I ain't got the perks on that. That's what I need So I'm thinking of taking that off I'm gonna probably put fully loaded Fully loaded with probably well, I can find some ammo But I'm gonna go with fully loaded. That's a solid setup. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, man This is this is what almost almost won my last solo with this setup right here. So I think I'm gonna run with this I think I'm gonna be good with this right here. So All right, let's try to get this going, bro When will I run with see the problem be running with subscribers is it's gonna be hard for me to talk? Because I finally realized running discord. I would actually need I Would actually need like I guess you could say An actual PC because I'm running things to my laptop So I would actually need like a PC for it to actually work In a sense like this is one of those type of situations where If I'm running it strictly through the PC and playing the game through the PC Then I'd be able to use discord But since I'm playing the game on the actual console and running everything else to my PC It's gonna create that echo that you guys heard well, you you'll hear echo if I'm trying to talk to people in party chat and Talk to you guys on the stream. So yeah, cuz it's I'm gonna have to invest in the PC pretty much That's just know that I'm gonna have to invest in the PC killer cam man Killer X cam Ross. Can we collab on some wars on some time for my YouTube 1k special? We would have to do it, but I wouldn't be able to do it on stream. I would not mind collabing with you I would definitely do that for you, bro. It'll just have to be off stream because like I said It's gonna cause some echoing problem, but yeah, I'll definitely do that for you, bro. Ah man, so All right, let's get into this battle royale solos Appreciate everyone joining in thank you killer cam for that, bro. I really do appreciate that I really do appreciate that man. You guys are amazing You guys show major love and I want to say thank you Do you think Seth Rollins would be the perfect man to be Roman Reigns? No No, Seth Rollins He's a heel. So he needs to remain a hill for a little bit. He's not no one's taking the title from Roman Let's just get that. Do you got his right now? He's gonna probably hold this championship for the rest of this year, which I'm okay with it depends But right now they don't have anyone I would even closely booked to take the champ championship away from Good let my boy. Thanks, man. So yeah, definitely I probably will play with subscribers again But just in multiplayer only because in war zone you need it you need to communicate and It's one of those things like I said I'm not to actually get a PC so I can run war zone and stuff through my PC instead of through my laptop So I think the only way Roman will keep the universal championship back to us if he has help from the usos That's probably what will happen. Even though He's still retaining it regardless And I give in a strap to Cesaro I get I'm never actually been up here before I'm not even allowed to you guys. I suck at sniping dude with standing steel. I suck at sniping Oh What's good, man, oh You the CIA was good CIA. I ain't doing anything. Oh, yeah, we will be checking out the J. Cole freestyle tomorrow So be on the lookout for that. You're one of my favorite youtubers. Thanks, Glenburr They meet a lot to me. I'm gonna go storage town because storage town is fun. There's a lot of action in storage town Let's get it cracking. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry about that I mean to do them dirty like that. He was just landing. You know, I'll take this one Well, it's the same fucking gun. God damn it I hate this site on here try to loot up over here as much as possible Yeah, I ain't mean to do them dirty, but you know saying I had to do what I had to do You know saying if it was me, he would have definitely shot me out this guy Let me turn up the volume in my headphones Should be something good in this chef. Yes, it is Damn, there's nothing but AK's over here. I'll take that. I can work with this. I'll almost have enough for a load out y'all I'll take this one I'm really like the only one that landed over here. I hear somebody You know what? Let's go hunt somebody. Fuck it. Check this chest out. Oh, there's a chest over here Are they running for me? Let's chase them down y'all. They're over here. They're moving Switch. Okay, so even in the house next over I know where you are Wait, holy shit. Oh my god. Oh my god who Holy shit. Oh my god All right, got some more money. We got a vehicle coming this way. See what they about to do Okay, he hopped out. Oh my name Mike. Yeah, my aim was awful, bro Yeah, my aim was awful. I should have had that kill. My aim was really all over the place Because I knew where he was. I just was not hitting my shots. I've been good, bro. Can't complain Sub Ross, did you see the two nude? No, I didn't That's my favorite place to go in warzone. Oh Yeah, man Yeah, my aim was terrible there Bad bad bad Do you think Jeff might return soon because I know Matt is an AEW? That's a good question. Hmm. Is there a loadout anywhere? Hmm Money outskirts Oh, yes It's a call of duty God to bless me. There's another one. So there should be some more people over here Okay, I'll take it. You know, I might change fully loaded I'm out to do it after this game Because I like my ADS speed a little bit faster. Oh, I gotta get that quick y'all. Oh Oh, no. Oh my god Holy shit Yep, I probably shouldn't have switched my gun. I probably should have stayed get my gun out. That's on me Let me lead again because I need to switch. I want to switch to Um Pardon me wants to run a dull dual SMG class. I don't know if I should Pardon me does want to run a dual SMG class. I got a lot to you Let me do this Instead of that I'm gonna run this let's try this again Do you WWE will bring back the attitude here, what do you huh? We're talking about What are you talking about, bro? Appreciate the stream. Hey, appreciate you joining in man You could have been watching anything else, but you chose to watch me stink up the joining war zone So I appreciate that bro. That means a lot to me. I gotta get get things situated, man Anyone has any female wrestling crushes MP5 is no longer meta. I don't really use the MP5 much Now you're gonna lie to you. I really don't use it much You doing one tomorrow. Am I doing a stream tomorrow? Uh, maybe depends on if I had the time for it Can y'all react to a show called bar rescue? maybe just status can Bart for me, bro. Wait, what? Just try this break. That's that's that's what you wanted to do for you Seeing punk versus rum and rain would be an awesome match. Yeah, it would But you know seeing punk is is done with the wrestling scene. So Hey, K. I think it's now the new meta. That's the new meta Me I'm all about just playing whatever I want to play, you know, I'm saying if there's a new meta cool It's not you know, I don't like to just be in now just using The meta that everyone else use. Oh, I shot him in his leg. I think I'm not sure yet This sausage brings for me facts be your own man, my brother meta's on lane. Yeah I just read a just rather use whatever I want to use I ain't trying to use the overpowered best metal weapons because it's like, you know, I'm saying it Hit different when you win with guns that most people stop using or they don't really use as much You know, I'm saying or you do well with you know, I'm saying I'm gonna drop a factor. I know there's gonna be some people here I'm gonna drop in one of these fingers. It's it's about the it's about to go down. I Don't give a fuck. I'm playing up. Oh, does he see me? Does he see me? Yep, he sees me come on in here. Come on Damn it, I heard him at the last second If this is a metal wall, I like it. Okay, but if it's not that I'm still like the gun. I'll still use it Damn it, and I heard him at the last thing. I just didn't know exactly where he was coming from up from above Do you think raw will get better soon? Probably not probably not. I'm gonna be honest with you It's not looking too good for off. God damn it, man They should put rock versus Roman battle the real tribal chief That's the plan at a future WrestleMania. That's the plan. So I've actually gotten used to this gulag Weird as attachments on this. Oh, well, I wasn't there. That was not fair. That was not fair at all All righty What's good Huh, where should I land? I don't know. I guess I'll end out here. Hopefully it's not looted You're right, man, I'm gonna win this whole game. I mean because you said it Somebody Wow damn it, I didn't even hear into the last second. Oh Yeah, yeah, I none's heard him into the last second Not even hear him to the last second Like I heard something because I thought I was tripping and the next thing I know he jumps around a corner jump shot And I was dead, but it was nothing to do. I tried Oh Not gonna lie to you a little bit tight. I know she's not a wrestler for me scholar Bordeaux Not sure who that is Solo's as full as campers. Oh, what the hell? Disconnected. Okay. All right, that's cool Well, I don't think he was camping. I just didn't hear him. I none's heard him So I really don't think he was camping though. I'm waiting for it to update It just kicked me out. So I don't know what's going on here If it's auto shotgun, you're good even with the gallow. No, what's going on here? Yeah, I don't know if I'm gonna be able to play some was on because it just gave me the boot I don't know why not even sure why have you ever seen New Japan pro wrestling? I have Not a lot of it, but I have seen a few matches for my new Japan Shit, I was trying to react to some of their content, but nah, they gave me a strike on my channel a year ago So I was like, you know what you guys have it Alrighty, so Ladies and gents, I can't do nothing What download was canceled What the fuck I've been playing rebirth or rebirth island. I don't know what's going on y'all. I ain't gonna lie to you The only thing that's good about raw is is the wrestlers I mean, yeah, you got some talented wrestlers, but the storylines don't mean jack squat. So that's a thing Restart the game that happened to me. I'm probably have to do so Wait Gotta love call of duty, bro. I don't have GTA. So God love you some call of duty man get kicked out of a lobby and every start Game is probably corrupted. Oh, hope not. Hey, if I join then we might play plunder Get the get this dub, bro, bro. Hey, I'm gonna try to appreciate that certain stuff for the $10 man I really do appreciate that bro means a lot to me, bro I'm gonna try to get this done, man. If you don't know What what that is? All right, see if it works this time. Can y'all react to Jurassic Park best kills? Probably not man Probably not only because of copyright issues and stuff Is there like a new update or some shit? Oh All right, let's try this again I'll only be playing with subs and multiplayer, but not warzone only because I The mic set up I have right now. So I can do it with multiplayer because I don't have to talk as much but warzone You gotta talk. I'm gonna do solo at same time What you talking about? That AK is good. That's what I heard from people. Yeah, I heard that's the new meta Just restart it. He already main. I don't play 2k. I haven't played 2k since like 2k 11 It's been so long since I played 2k This is not my game. I used to be big on the sports games, but I stopped playing them after a while because they just you know They just didn't really seem Worth buying them every year, you know, then for me personally, so try this again, man She's Trying to get this dog for you. I like Mother Russia for the guns they have Really, nah, I don't really play the wrestling games to be honest with you Me and Dub may get the next 2k WWE 2k 21 and We'll probably play it on that on the on the main channel This gun is so good, bro. I would like for you to read to some WWE memes Hey send it to me. I'll actually check out some WWE Okay Can't get ready to own his pranks KFC Ultimate rage brains. I think we're supposed to be checking out the next one out That was supposed to be the next one. He goes to check out. All right Come on, man Let's do this Can we get to the top 10? Don't know where I want to land. I'm going back to the hanger again. Why not? It's about to get real. That's not one person in the next person Ain't that all bitch Cool, I'm back. I Seen it with my gulags, but I can't can't get out the just can't stop going to that motherfucker, man Where are my damn it put me on the way back here? Hmm? What's good? Probably hit up this police office station Stack up Is he the best heel sensor anywhere? No, I think so in recent years. Yeah, I think so I Can agree with that. I think there's one on the roof. I appreciate you sliding through hoping I get the W You're real one. Let me get this bounty I don't know if Jeff's gonna retire soon And it's just came back so I don't see him retiring soon Just came back. Oh, yeah, we got some Heat over here They at that house Let's do this. What? Oh, I saw him at the last second man. God. Damn it. Fuck. Oh Yeah, he saw me first before I saw him. Oh I can't get nothing going y'all. I can't get nothing going Are you gonna do a movie review to spy? Oh, yeah, I am I am I'm actually gonna check it out tomorrow in theaters. So Damn, what time I'm a code. I know we got a record I'm not to figure that out. I should have enough time to check it out and then do the recording session. I should have enough time I Appreciate the love man appreciate the love Can y'all react to a quiet place to trailer on the main channel, please? I'm not sure if we will be honest with you all that ammo just to get killed. Yep Just to get killed, bro. I heard him and I looked up and he already saw me before I saw him So it is with this. Hey that venom trailer definitely was dope looking forward to checking that out too, man It seems like it's gonna be a good year for movies, bro Seems like it's gonna be a real good year for movies. Where you from? I'm from Houston, man There are stinks as our got Romans number. Nope, and I like Cesaro, but it's not happening man Cesaro He's not being Roman Reigns for the title. I think it ain't can't Cain is the most brutal intense heel Nah, it was Triple H, bro. Triple H was us. He was a sixth son of a you know what Triple H was savage, bro. Hey, hey, you Ross. Can I watch venom with y'all? Uh, I don't know about that cuz we're going to the movies to watch that probably so I don't know about that one Are you from Maryland appreciate it from the love and support all the way from Maryland Are you playing on PS5? No, I'm actually playing on the Xbox one S previous gen Apparently there's a it's gonna be a shortage of the Of the PS5 It's gonna be hard to get the PS5 Born in DC moved a man, okay? Triple H was sadistic man. I'm telling you Yeah, it's gonna be hard for anybody to get a PS5 unless you get it from a salper, bro Cuz they don't have I guess it's like certain type of chip. They don't have or something like that It's gonna be hard to get it Which college is game was your favorite? Feel like I asked into this yesterday black ops 3 Sitting in love from Hawaii. I appreciate the love all the way from Hawaii. What time is it out there in Hawaii? I Know it's like early. You gotta be early in the day in Hawaii right now, right? Can I do something bro? This is a weird ass circle. Holy shit This circle is weird as hell damn near on the outskirts of the map Majority of it. Fuck it You know what guys I'm give a shit. I'm gonna keep laying in here. I'm gonna get some good luck. God damn it. Damn it fuck Fuck fuck fuck ain't that a bitch ain't that a bitch, bro? I can't get nothing going off Can't get nothing going with a 70 inch TV plus a soundbar Um Shit, I know the delay on that is fucking awful. I'll teach me some dance moves man. Look, bro. I Barely know how to dance myself man God damn it man. I should have had that God damn it How do I add you just add me by my name my gross zero nine Man, it's been I've had three warm-up games, man. I kill I do good in the gulag Every time bro. I end up dying Let's see where I'ma land that bro I'ma land right here bucket Get down here quicker. Oh almost didn't pull it. I'll take some dead silence cuz why not be stealthy? Yeah, he didn't see me He didn't see me now. I prefer a dead silence. I'm sorry guy. Sorry my guy. I Ain't mean to do you like that. I really didn't mean to do you like that. I Promise I didn't mean to do you like that. Yeah, he was definitely caught lacking. I Know how he feels. Oh Oh, I Think he may be coming back. Damn my aim was off Yeah Yep Ain't was definitely off. It's crazy how they added called World War two gun in the game. Yeah Yep, yep, yep, yep Swords on shit, man. I'm trying to get me a good game And I can't get shit going right now. I am stinking up to join right now, bro. Hey bad Yo, Ross. I've been watching you for a while You anyways make me smile keep doing what you're doing man. Love you. Hey appreciate that logic. Thank you so much Can you react to a la carte? rap walk Level zero probably not not gonna lie to you to so many other videos. We gotta check out Why does it keep doing that? Every time I get kicked out now it checking for an update, bro I don't know if I'm gonna be doing warzone Right now, man, I think I may go back to multiplayer, bro. Cuz look at this. I'm stuck at the screen Yeah, I'm not the fucking geez. That's so annoying, bro I'm probably do some multiplayer now that actually sucks I still wanted to at least try to do something but it seems like every time I get kicked out It has to download a fucking update. So it's like Yeah, bro, I'm gonna just go do me some multiplayer right now. I love these streams. Thanks, man I love doing these streams for you guys man. Like this is this is fun. Wait, hold up There was here a yo, that's anime rap, bro There's an update in a couple of hours. That's why That girl that was just on the screen is funky, huh? Stop my man But hold on y'all. All right. I'm back. Try this again Do you do what nah, no fire shotgun not not this time not this time Oh, no, no, like I said, I only like to pull out the fire shotgun when necessary. You know what I'm saying I don't think this is a necessary time Boys be trying to give me the troll man Pull out the B zone the bison Y'all really want me to pull out the fire shotgun, bro Yo, why y'all got to be like that? Why you gotta be so toxic man Toxic Tuesdays only. Yeah, we're on Wednesday right now. I Wouldn't even talk to yesterday. I was actually going off yesterday. I saw someone when one of my homies up I guess he got the new ps5 trying to see how much he paid Because I'm guessing he probably got it from a scalper, bro all right Let's do this. Let's get this going man. Oh I wasn't trying to play free for all y'all What the fuck I was not trying to play free fall. I thought I was playing headquarters Figured. I ain't got my streaks and one dude getting pop He keeps spawning over here. That's fucked up. Yep. He sees me. Oh my god, oh Shit, ah, I was trying to go for the nuked out Well, if it's over bro, this game's over it's over. I was trying to go for the nuked out I'm on out. Yeah, man. No one's out Yeah, I must get now Someone's in here. I'm trying to find people. Oh my god. I'm dead. Y'all. Goodbye. Yep There was nothing I can do and I got stunned into oblivion, bro You know how this game? Oh Shit, oh, he was looking for me. It's only four of us in here. This is boring. Is he above me? Well, this is so boring, bro. Yeah, he's above me Mm-hmm. I People are camping. It's only four of us. Come on. Goodbye Huh That was boring. It was fun at the beginning. They got boring real quick He was dead Yeah, this is why I don't really play free for all much in this game Because it can get kind of campy kind of boring real quick. All right edit Oh Yes Go back to what I know this Do you watch youtubers or or use to what? Do you watch any youtubers are used to oh? Yeah, I'm subscribed to quite a few youtubers So yeah, I do I watch my first year youtubers every day, man Yeah, we've checked there is no more Booker T commentaries as of right now You should record your best play highlights. I could But I would have to download the whole stream and then upload it and I'd be like, ah I just posted a whole stream People want to check it out and check it out You cope somewhere. It's it's cool Yep back in here quarters man the quarters that are the head I'm trying to figure out what is my homie got the damn PlayStation 5 from because I want one I'll drop a couple couple hundred on it. You know I'm saying All right Come on. I figured someone was gonna be there waiting for me Fuck oh damn this team about to lose horribly. Yeah, I'm telling you bro When you get stunned in this game, you might as well just say you're dead because there's Literally nothing you can do Hey, man. Yeah, I joined in late Everybody's just running the same ways and I'm not trying to hit the flank or I saved somebody like Road to 40 K main Damn damn I'm shooting at one person I'm dead, bro I'm telling you dog. You get hit with a stun in this game. You're fucked I think they got this one man. Oh Man Well, I know which way he's coming I knew which way he was coming You got me. You got me Try this again joined in Very late. I was sniping unlike you using the MP5 Oh my god, what the hell? Okay That was interesting Jesus, bro Jesus Man Well, I tried y'all I joined in late, but hey, it's okay cuz I'm gonna have my chance to redeem myself thing I wonder if that's the same people We got a TTV person in here So they may be sweating See if I can get some dubs Let's try to get the dog at least I'm not a fan of this map. What's good there? Tyler I don't have mortal combat. I suck at that shit Son of a bitch you saw you Oh Where am I? Okay, we have to better spawn. So let's spawn back here. Okay, of course course I Didn't even know I ran in here. Of course. They already had it Jesus Christ, they're already gonna be up here. Oh my god Oh Damn it, we can't push that Jesus Yeah, it's getting tense. We're still losing but we can make it come back. Oh, he said easy. Okay. Oh I didn't even know he was right there. No, damn. They got the cluster on it. I mean, it's only one person left on it Yep, he's dead. Mike Ross's soul is bad Who said that I don't even know who said that He's seemingly has six kills He only has six kills That makes no sense to me. Oh my god. God damn it Damn it, damn they all they were already on the rooftop damn I didn't even see him there Damn, I'm trying to get over there y'all Look at the spawns. Look at the great spawn Bro, I dare this dude has 24 kills on my yawn It's like they're not trying to play the OBJ That's it. I'm gonna just close this door and just call it a day Yeah It's no point There's really no point. Yeah, they got all the streaks or you might as well just chill this game is over Yep, nothing I can do Nothing I can do this guy Cold AS bound Crossbow and sword Here we go Ross you get them next up. Hey, man. If I have a better team You saw dudes running with a crossbow and sword so he really wasn't trying I'm the only one trying to get kills to keep them off the objective. They're dying off spawning shit I'm like, ah Jesus Christ, bro. It's only so much I can do by myself. Are you trying to win Ross? Yes, I am trying to win Look at look at that. I had the most kills on my team. I was trying It's only so much I can do Only so much your boy can do I usually play solo so oh wow I Couple my old Instagram videos got blocked for like years ago. That's fine. I don't really care. That's it's fine Man Well, I don't know why I'm tired See I've been well rested. Ross. How are you doing today, bro doing good? Can't complain. I had a pretty productive day. So Trying to play with me then. I don't like to tube my own horn, but I'm fairly good at the game I'll probably probably playing with subscribers later on this week. I told you that's why I always play FFA for For for me don't stress. No, I'm sorry. I play other games. So I don't Get addicted to war zone. You love war zone that much, huh? You get addicted to it. Hey, it's no wrong We're loving the game as long as it don't take away from other stuff I'm actually a little bit tired. I'm not even sure why watching you all playing day days gone Days gone. What is that? Appreciate everyone still watching on the stream. I'm probably gonna go to sleep early tonight, man I ain't gonna lie to you. I'm a little bit tired. I still got a Video, do you have a second job? No, YouTube is my only job, bro Ross, I'm doing good today, bro Muro one and new AEW TNT champion overall. I honestly don't want to play rust. I really don't If a woman dies during birth, can you press charges against the baby? What type of question? I'm not doing this with you boss man. Bam. Bam. I'm not doing this with you, bro So I missed your stream yesterday. Didn't know you were doing it doing it. Oh, no, it's fine I think I'm gonna start like scheduling it. So that way people, you know, kind of have an idea Throughout the day tomorrow. I'm not even sure if I'm gonna be able to stream Because I'm supposed to be checking out the spiral movie. So I don't know But I'll let you I'll let you guys know if I do stream, but most like I don't think I will I'm telling you you get hit with a stun in this game. It's just not even fair Fuck you. That was a fucked up spawn to still fuck you. Oh Wow, okay. All right. Oh, I don't know how you didn't hear him. Oh, I got him Oh Wait, what I Thought I was a frilly Shit Yeah, but kind of okay watching soon from now. Hey, man, if you do get into it was honest, it's cool. That's cool Just gotta play your game, man That really didn't say much of anything, but still it's cool. It's a cool experience A lot of people using that burst rifle this thing is literally laying Over there not even trying to push it. I'm gonna get that son of a bitch. Yeah, I was gonna get Yeah This is my fuckers love staying back there, bro. Oh shit. Yep Yeah, well, I can't really even move on my spawn really. Oh, he's trying to get me, bro Oh Of course, I'm the only one that died from that, bro, I keep getting killed by this motherfucker, bro But I just spawn, bro Bro, I keep getting killed by the same son of a bitch, bro I probably won't be streaming Friday Gonna be reporting the podcast What? Oh, I got him with that name. That was nice I was a change of pace What got it sold up right now? We got it here, but I got them That's all I cared about When that next one though Damn, how do you know I was right there? Oh, we got it. We got it. It's gonna be a close game. God damn it All right, let's do this God damn Shit. Oh my god I got oh my god, let's do it Let's go these engines. I think when you want kills We got the dove 71 and 37 Put W's in the chat W's all in the chat. That was a good one. Need a time man W's all in the chat. Can I get some dubs in the chat? Can I get some W's? Just a couple dubs. That was a nice dub, too It wasn't no regular deco one nice W's man That was fun. Wee. That was fun for real I will be right back Thank y'all for joining in should I do it I Will do it Wow Do y'all see this lobby hopefully more people join Where's my team nigga wasn't even playing bro That just irritated me. I need my teammates to push Fuck you. God damn it. This is one of the hardest ones to get bro Yeah, they definitely was on the beef jerky break What? Thank you. Ah, what type of fucking spawn was that? Oh, this game I think it should be over here. I Think it's over here. Oh Yeah He saw me. Are you gonna do a free for all match this time? I already did one earlier, but this it was boring I wanted but it was it was born. I think it's over here this time. I Hope it's over here this time Hmm. Oh my god Hey, I spawned right on it. Awesome Okay Y'all better kill him upstairs What is my teammates doing? He's in us God damn Fuck they got it, bro. Fucking teammates, man Fuck to keep this from them They're pushing the back of Dammit. That's a good spot. Oh Great Swear, I got the best teammates man Boys don't want to push up. I'm no I'm running with a fucking fire shot gun, bro. Thank you Doing all I can Yep, there was a night Where my teammates a can y'all tell me where my teammates are no no one can tell me all cool I didn't think no anyone knew anyway. Okay, cool fucking idiots, bro Fuck Yep, I gotta go back to the regular gun. I can't do this with them Fuck I got the wrong load out. I might have to pull out the regular gun, bro Because they're idiots. Look at this. Look what they're doing. What they're doing. Thank you. There we go Doing this all by myself whoa, I Can't even fuck around Can't even fuck around, bro Yeah, my squad is literally playing like fucking bots, bro, and it's pissing me off Those can't get a kill to say they look at this, bro They didn't even Like nobody's getting I want y'all to see this Yes, I because I'm actually trying to win this shit. I'm actually trying to win this shit, bro Like look at my team. They're just getting trounced Thank you, come on y'all teammate shooting on teammates Thank you, bro I'm doing all I can Doing all I can I don't my team is ass Fuck I can't even fuck around good Cuz the niggas suck Thank you, did you he didn't kill him Now they're playing back around now. They're actually playing this I can rock He wants to shoot my dead body a Super cute They still captain y'all. I want y'all to understand that they still kept it they still kept it, bro Course we lost the lead If we lose this game, bro, if we lose this game, bro I'm gonna be so fucking mad. We about to lose this game, bro We lost this game because these niggas is trash, bro. Wow We lost the game, bro I can't believe. Oh My god, bro. This I can't believe my fucking team is Idiots, bro. I literally Handed them the wind I'm actually upset right now. I'm actually Pretty fucking mad, bro. My teammates didn't really help me Only look no one really had no defense, bro No, only when I had the most defense in the game most kills. Oh I'm actually upset I'm actually so fucking up. I dropped 80. I want y'all to see this. I went 82 and 33 from what? Plain the objective and everything Yeah, I'm still playing solo. I'll be doing playing with cells probably on this week. Oh My that's my goodness. It's time to roll. Yeah, if I smoked I would definitely roll a blizzy, bro I will roll a blizzy real quick God damn, man. Oh, we're gonna get some full party, bro I'm gonna try I'm gonna try but I'm willing to bet. I don't know. Maybe my team will be good But we're gonna get a full party. So we'll see how this plans out, man Fucking shit, dude Fucking shit. Yo, what's good Bryson? Appreciate you joining in on the stream. I was playing warzone earlier, but it kept Every time I lose the game. I I would have to restart my damn game just to play another one So I was like, no, I'm not doing that today It's one of those feelings when your girlfriend left you I don't know about that. I think that's a different feeling, bro That's a much different feeling man. Let it go I'm trying to man. God damn, dawg. Oh, yeah, this is probably oh, yeah, they're definitely it's gonna be a sweat test Yeah Oh, you got a knife now spawned in I got him once. I can't even see the place I'm gonna push back Tell me how that makes sense Damn, dude, they're doing what I just spawned. Why am I being flashed? Oh, I didn't even see him. Jesus Christ. I'm gonna see if I can get the hundo bomb Damn it. This not gonna work in this building. It's the worst building for it. I mean it kind of works I mean it kind of is working It's actually working. Holy shit. You know what corner he was in. This is a better team. Oh What was wrong with me? What was wrong with me? Oh Whoa, they left the game. Oh Easy doves y'all easy doves Another W in the chat man Another W. All righty, man. Well, I'll take it 49 and 12 Not too crazy. Not too bad. That was definitely fun. Okay All right, man. I appreciate y'all Ross, you're not not you when you when you hungry I appreciate y'all man for joining in checking out the stream. I'll try to do some more war zone At a later day when stuff is situated and it's not tripping out like it was today But thank y'all so much for the love and support roll to 40k new video We'll be dropping on my personal channel in the main channel tomorrow
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UCGqP6bsV2j8kyv1g_z3TyFQ
Definitions and Logical Method (by William Stanley Jevons and Blaise Pascal)
This is chapter 13 from William Stanley Jevons' book "Elementary Lessons in Logic": https://mises.org/library/elementary-lessons-logic
[ "Logic (Field Of Study)", "Definition (Quotation Subject)", "method", "william stanley jevons", "Blaise Pascal (Author)", "logical method", "elementary lessons in logic" ]
2013-10-14T19:05:40
2024-02-05T08:07:53
534
PCaPdETbS1g
It may be doubted whether any man ever possessed a more acute and perfect intellect than that of Blaise Pascal. He was born in 1623 at Clermont in Orvern, and from his earliest years displayed signs of a remarkable character. His father attempted at first to prevent his studying geometry, but such was Pascal's genius and love of this science that by the age of twelve he had found out many of the propositions of Euclid's first book without the aid of any person or treatise. It is difficult to say whether he is most to be admired for his mathematical discoveries, his invention of the first calculating machine, his wonderful provincial letters written against the Jesuits, or for his profound pensets or thoughts, a collection of his reflections on scientific and religious topics. Among these thoughts is to be found a remarkable fragment upon logical method, the substance of which is also given in the Port Royal Logic. It forms the second article of the pensets. As I know no composition in which perfection of truth and clearness of expression are more nearly attained, I propose to give in this lesson a free translation of the more important parts of this fragment, appending to it rules of method from the Port Royal Logic. The words of Pascal are nearly as follows. The true method which would furnish demonstrations of the highest excellence, if it were possible to employ the method fully, consists in observing two principle rules. The first rule is not to employ any term of which we have not clearly explained the meaning. The second rule is never to put forward any proposition which we cannot demonstrate by truths already known, that is to say in a word, to define all the terms and to prove all the propositions. But in order that I may observe the rules of the method which I am explaining, it is necessary that I declare what is to be understood by definition. We recognise in geometry only those definitions which logicians call nominal definitions, that is to say only those definitions which impose a name upon things clearly designated in terms perfectly known, and I speak only of those definitions. The value and use is to clear and abbreviate discourse, by expressing in the single name which we impose what could not be otherwise expressed but in several words, provided nevertheless that the name imposed remained divested of any other meaning which it might possess, so as to bear that alone for which we intend it to stand. For example if we need to distinguish among numbers those which are divisible into two parts from those which are not so divisible, in order to avoid the frequent repetition of this distinction we give a name to it in this manner. We call every number divisible into two equal parts an even number. This is a geometrical definition because after having clearly designated a thing, namely any number divisible into two equal parts, we give it a name divested of every other meaning which it might have, in order to bestow upon it the meaning designated. Hence it appears that definitions are very free and that they can never be subject to contradiction for there is nothing more allowable than to give any name we wish to a thing which we have clearly pointed out. It is only necessary to take care that we do not abuse this liberty of imposing names by giving the same name to two different things. Even that would be allowable provided we did not confuse the results and extend them from one to the other. But if we fall into this vice we have a very sure and infallible remedy. It is to substitute mentally the definition in place of the thing defined and to hold the definition always so present in the mind that every time we speak for instance of an even number we may understand precisely that it is a number divisible into two equal parts and so that these two things should be so combined and inseparable in thought that as often as one is expressed in discourse the mind may direct itself immediately to the other. Geometers and all who proceed methodically only impose names upon things in order to abbreviate discourse and not to lessen or change the ideas of the things concerning which they discourse. They pretend that the mind always supplies the entire definition of the brief terms which they employ simply to avoid the confusion produced by a multitude of words. Nothing prevents more promptly and effectively the insidious fallacies of the soffists than this method which we should always employ and which alone suffices to banish all sorts of difficulties and equivocations. These things being well understood I return to my explanation of the true method which consists as I said in defining everything and proving everything. Certainly this method would be an excellent one were it not absolutely impossible. It is evident that the first terms we wish to define would require previous terms to serve for their explanation and similarly the first propositions we wish to prove would presuppose other propositions preceding them in our knowledge and thus it is clear that we should never arrive at the first terms or first propositions. Accordingly in pushing our researches further and further we arrive necessarily at primitive words which we cannot define and at principles so clear that we cannot find any principles more clear to prove them by. Thus it appears that men are naturally and inevitably incapable of treating any science whatever in a perfect method but it does not thence follow that we ought to abandon every kind of method. The most perfect method available to men consists not in defining everything and demonstrating everything nor in defining nothing and demonstrating nothing but in pursuing the middle course of not defining things which are clear and understood by all persons but of defining all others and of not proving truths known to all persons but of proving all others. From this method they equally err who undertake to define and prove everything and they who neglect to do it in things which are not self-evident. It is plain in this admirable passage that we can never by using words avoid an ultimate appeal to things because each definition of a word must require one or more other words which also will require definition and so on ad infinitum. Nor must we ever return back upon the words already defined for if we define A by B and B by C and C by D and then D by A we commit what may be called a circular indefiniendo a most serious fallacy which might lead us to suppose that we know the nature of A, B, C and D when we really know nothing about them. Pascal's views of the geometrical method were clearly summed up in the following rules inserted by him in the Port Royal logic. One, to admit no terms in the least obscure or equivocal without defining them. Two, to employ in the definitions only terms perfectly known or already explained. Three, to demand as axioms only truths perfectly evident. Four, to prove all propositions which are at all obscure by employing in their proof only the definitions which have preceded or the axioms which have been accorded or the propositions which have been already demonstrated or the construction of the thing itself which is in dispute when there may be any operation to perform. Five, never to abuse the equivocation of terms by failing to substitute for them mentally the definitions which restrict and explain them. The reader will easily see that these rules are much more easy to lay down than to observe since even geometers are not agreed as to the simplest axioms to assume or the best definitions to make. There are many different opinions as to the true definition of parallel lines and the simplest assumptions concerning their nature and how much greater must be the difficulty observing Pascal's rules with confidence in less certain branches of science. Next after geometry mechanics is perhaps the most perfect science yet the best authorities have been far from agreeing as to the exact definitions of such notions as force, mass, moment, power, inertia and the most different opinions are still held as to the simplest axioms by which the law of the composition of forces may be proved. Nevertheless if we steadily bear in mind in studying each science the necessity of defining every term as far as possible and proving each proposition which can be proved by a simpler one we should do much to clear away error and confusion.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCaPdETbS1g", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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One painting's crazy journey: inspiration, mistakes, creation
Sometimes a piece of art goes through an extraordinary trip - between creating and rejecting one version to going back to the drawing board/sketchbook to work out ideas! Don't be afraid to admit if something's not working; take a step around where you were headed, and remember that you can let go of things you thought were must-haves and move in a different direction! RSVP for the premiere of Saturday's paintalong video - join in the chat with your watercolor questions! Supplies for that one are in the description here: https://youtu.be/gi2yCtInzd4 See supplies below as well as the blog post that has more info and pinnable images: http://bit.ly/3D94YnJ ═╬════════ W E B S I T E S ════════╬═ B L O G : https://sandyallnock.com C L A S S E S : https://art-classes.com A R T V E N T U R E N E T W O R K : https://artventure.mn.co A R T S U P P L I E S : https://sandyallnock.com/studiosnacks/ B O O K : https://biblejournalingmadesimple.com F I N E A R T : http://sandyallnockfineart.com C O L O R C H A R T S : https://art-classes.com/charts ═╬════════ S O C I A L ════════╬═ A R T V E N T U R E : https://artventure.mn.co I N S T A G R A M 1 : http://instagram.com/sandyallnock I N S T A G R A M 2 : http://instagram.com/sandyallnockfineart P A T R E O N : http://patreon.com/sandyallnock F A C E B O O K: https://www.facebook.com/sandyallnockllc T W I T T E R: https://twitter.com/sandyallnock ═╬════════ S U P P L I E S ════════╬═ Some product may be provided by manufacturers for review and use. Compensated affiliate links may be used, but this video was not sponsored or requested by any manufacturer. For affiliate and product disclosure, visit https://sandyallnock.com/faq - My trusted partners in art: https://sandyallnock.com/partners Bee Paper Mixed Media Sketchbook • AMZ https://amzn.to/3BdOt90 • Blick https://bit.ly/3QhOcWX Alvaro Castagnet Sketchbook (not available publicly, purchased from the artist) Artist tape 3/4" https://amzn.to/3rF90MT Da Vinci Mottler Flat Wash https://bit.ly/3HOA1EX Da Vinci Maestro Kolinsky Sable Round 10 https://bit.ly/38ev9wi Da Vinci Maestro Kolinsky Sable Round 4 https://bit.ly/37LzvLo Da Vinci Maestro Kolinsky Sable Round 0 http://bit.ly/3YZ0wkr Da Vinci Series 17 Maestro Long Needle, Size 9 https://amzn.to/2TZsFYs House of Hoffman Palette - https://bit.ly/3hH5fnP Phthalo Blue Turquoise: https://bit.ly/3kTQCeV Cobalt Blue: https://bit.ly/3nq9Da Transparent Red Oxide: https://bit.ly/38flJyw Sap Green: https://bit.ly/35aC3P7 Green Gold: https://bit.ly/3905LHE Cascade Green: https://bit.ly/39azr6j Quinacridone Rose: https://bit.ly/2ImZAnd ═╬════════ N O T E S ════════╬═ My Sony A7iii camera is mounted on a DSLR stand: https://bit.ly/3uChLbb For 20% discount on any purchase at https://arkon.com use coupon code sandyallnock Details on how I produce video: https://bit.ly/37DttJ5
[ "cardmaking", "coloring tutorial", "crafting", "how to", "sandy allnock", "art", "copic", "watercolor", "pencil", "drawing", "painting" ]
2023-01-17T20:00:08
2024-04-23T16:49:09
1,564
Pc3blxM8s3k
Hello, and welcome to my YouTube channel. My name is Sandy Allnock, and I'm an artist. I work in a lot of different mediums, and I love to teach. That's my real passion. And I include something teachable in each one of my videos. So whether or not you work in that medium might just learn something from it. And today is a prime example. I'm going to be doing a real-time watercolor today, but I'm going to show you in the first portion how I got from a really complex idea down to something really simple. You would think it would go the opposite direction, but if you're somebody who tries to throw the kitchen sink into all of your work, when you really want to pare it down to something simple, this might be a big help to you. Before we get started, I want to let you know that on Saturday I'm going to be posting, get this, a second real-time watercolor in a row. I know Sandy who never does real-time watercolor. Is now doing two in a row. And I want to let you know that because I would like you to paint along with me in the description section of the premiere of that video. You can go find that with the link in the doobly-doo. Then you can find out what the colors are that we'll be using, the supplies you'll need, and you'll be able to download the reference photo that we're going to be using and paint along with me. It'll be noon Pacific because that's where I live and you can translate that into your time. I will be in the chat that day and answering questions along the way. So if you want to just watch the video and ask questions while the painting is going on, we can do that or you can paint along that day. All right, let's get started on painting the cute little alpaca. This piece, as I said, went on a long road and the initial idea started with a photograph. The website Paint My Photo, where they have all kinds of pictures that you can paint from without copyright worries, had this photograph on it. I've had it in my collection for a long time, waiting for the time and the inspiration to do something with it. I loved this cute little alpaca and decided that was going to be the subject that I was going to work with next. I decided to begin with basically an exploration of composition. If I were to create a portrait of this creature, what would I do with it? And if I were to do a straight up portrait just as is, I just wanted to assess some things about the photo. What's in the background? What's not in the background? Where's the lighting coming from? What's the expression on the face? Thinking about what medium would be best for it. And as I saw all that crazy fur, I was like, oh, it would be kind of fun to get into all that with colored pencils. So maybe I'll do a colored pencil drawing. I had all these things running through my head and taking the time to do these quick little thumbnail sketches gives me time to process and picture what it is that I want to do with it. And, you know, just take some time to see what else I could do to the photograph to change it for my drawing. So here I decided to see what would happen if I tilted it. If it looked like he had his head cocked or he was peeking in from the side. That would add some whimsy to it because he's kind of a whimsical creature. And, you know, just put the same background in, see what happens. So for any photograph, you can do this kind of an exercise. Just sketch it in a bunch of different ways. Move the main image from one place to another. Try eliminating some parts of it or adding something else to it and see what you like. So there I added a tilt. I thought I'd try doing it as a landscape rather than portrait. So horizontal rather than vertical. You can flop it the other way. If you have a photograph that's horizontal, you can make it vertical and see what that does for you. And here it leaves me lots of room to explore a background of some kind and put something else in there. I have lots of space. My initial idea is almost always my worst. And my initial idea was either to throw a barn in there if it's a domesticated type of alpaca or a mountain. If it's a wild alpaca, which would require a little research to figure out the proper landscape and that sort of thing. So you can change the orientation and add a landscape, a background. You can add some context basically to it. So think about, you know, what each orientation will do. Sometimes if you're moving an image into a portrait, then you're leaving a big sky. You can have something going on up in the sky. Some really amazing clouds or something like that. Lots of different ways that you can change things when you start adapting placement of the image. So here I'm exploring lighting. What if I change the lighting to be from the upper right and maybe a stronger lighting rather than weaker lighting. More of an overall kind of lighting. And here I'm going to really emphasize that by putting a dark color on the right side next to the highlight, which is going to make the highlight pop more and then let it fade into light color on the other side. Because on the other side, I have a shadow. And so I'm going to get double contrast if I change just flipping left to right that background that was in the original one photograph. So next up, okay, let's see if we can push this further. And I wanted to do something whimsical like tilting the head was great. What if I go further? And when you're trying to add some whimsy to something, you could put them in a sweater. You could make their tongue stick out. You can, you know, make their eyes look different directions. Lots of different elements that you could change in this. I decided I wanted to keep that, that dark on the right hand side and the light on the left hand side. There were a lot I liked there. And I thought, what if I just did something as simple as adding a monocle? You know, make it a smart alpaca because it looks like there's some intelligence going on in there. So I added some personality and then take it one step further. You could go 20 iterations on things like this and then really adapt your photograph to turn it into something really amazing. Here, I am going to keep the same lighting. I'm going to keep the monocle. But if this creature is really smart and needs some kind of a setting, some kind of a location, what if there's a library back here, you know, bookshelves or something so that this alpaca is a librarian? And that seemed like a reasonable place to go. So I decided that would be the one. Now that I've got my location settled, I'll just dive right in and do the drawing. And I got my pencils out and I shouldn't have. I should not have done that because I was not done with the explorations. But I wasted three days on a drawing I did not enjoy. And I know a lot of people will look at this and they'll think, why didn't you enjoy that? It's great. I'm having a discussion right now with my patrons about what I didn't enjoy here, what I didn't like, what didn't work. So if you want to hear part of that crazy discussion, then go join Patreon. But for the purpose of this video, we're going to go that step further that I should have done in the first place. I thought, let me pull back on the alpaca. And if this is a smart alpaca working in a library, it needs a way to carry the books around. A pack of some kind to hold the books. And then there's got to be a patron that they're helping in the library. So what if there's a little frog with a backpack and a sweater on sitting on a bookshelf? And I realize that might not be very realistic. So let's take the animals outside with the frog back on the ground where the frog would be. And turn the alpacas attention to lean down to the frog. There's a relationship going on there. I liked the relationship in the earlier one, but I really liked it here where there's some engagement and they're actually having a conversation. And here I was playing around with colors and what was I going to use for colors on this? I didn't like the gray a whole lot where I really lightened the alpaca to be a super white. Decided I didn't quite like that much, but I really liked connecting the frog and the backpack. So I changed the color of the pack to make it green. I put a bunch of little accoutrements on it. There's a cover that can pull down over top of the pack to keep the books all dry. There's a pocket in the front for a clipboard so she can keep track of who checked out which book. There's a pen pocket on the side, just lots of fun that I put into that. And I let all the detail be put in there instead of in a crazy background or in a pencil drawing where I was going to try to capture every piece of fur. Because I realized that was not making me happy. That was not a place that I had really intended to go. I should have simplified that much more than I did and it just hadn't worked. So let's try doing what I did in my sketchbook. I should have done that sketchbook exercise first because I would have gotten here much quicker and not spent a couple days on that other drawing. But I'm working in a sketchbook that has rough watercolor paper. It's Arches watercolor paper. And I'm putting a flood of color very simply in the background filled it with water and then just drop some color in. I wanted it darker at the top. So tilting the paper so that it collects that color upward and we get lighter color down at the base of the painting. And one of the reasons that I wanted to explore something this simple is because I've been talking to my pastor about working on a book with him, a children's book. So I cannot tell you what the book is about or anything like that. But suffice it to say we're just now having some discussions and getting started on thinking through it. And as the spring and summer goes on, we'll start doing more of the heavy lifting. What I have been kind of in the mindset of thinking about for the last couple of weeks is if I'm going to illustrate a children's book, I need to start working on simplifying my style at least as I'm thinking about the illustrations for that book. I don't picture them being super complicated pictures because the time setting that I'm imagining we're going to be working on with this is kind of an old timey historical type of thing. And I want to have the outfits from the historical time period, which means I can't have a whole lot of crazy detail detracting from that. I want the clothing to look just right. I want it to really stand out. And I want the kids to be impacted by what they're reading and by the pictures that they're seeing. So I'm going to be in the coming months. I don't know how much I'll do on YouTube, but I'm going to be practicing in my sketchbook a lot, taking complex things and simplifying them down and breaking them down into their main elements and not getting lost in the, oh my gosh, I have to draw every hair on the alpaca, which is where I went with the alpaca, that pencil drawing, just went a little bit too crazy with it. So I don't know, as I said, how much is going to make it onto YouTube, but my sketchbooks are going to see some simplicity coming their way. The colors that I've used here for the sky was phthalo blue turquoise. I love that color. It doesn't mix to make a gray very well. So in this particular one, I had to switch to mixing cobalt blue with my transparent red oxide to make a gray. I do mix my neutrals for the most part. I don't tend to, you know, just use something out of a tube. I try to mix those colors just because I can push the tint of it just a little bit. I can put more blue in it if I want to have something that's a cooler type of gray, or I can warm it up by adding more transparent red oxide. For the olive drab color that I wanted for the canvas, there's no olive drab color in my palette. So I mixed some transparent red oxide with sap green and a little bit of green gold. If you're trying to figure out how you can mix that from colors that you have in your palette, just mix something that's got an orangey color to it, like the transparent red oxide or if you've got some burnt sienna, that kind of thing. Mix that with your different greens that you have to see what kind of olive drab that you can make. This was the point at which I realized that I hadn't sketched in the pocket that was going to go on the side to hold pens. So I had to paint around what I thought I was going to use there. I could have stopped and grabbed a pencil and sketched it in, but decided to trust myself that I could withhold my little white spot with the pens of the pens and then moved on to messing around with the froggy. Frog a little bit of color. And the frog is based on a bullfrog. I did some research to try to figure out what kind of animals live in the same habitat as an alpaca out in the wild. And it turns out there are bullfrogs in Peru, where I was kind of looking at alpacas out in the wild. And they didn't have any pictures, though. I couldn't find out what kind of bullfrog. So it's an American bullfrog. However, what I realized is that this alpaca, since it is a bookmobile alpaca, it's carrying the books out to the other animals, could actually be in any setting. It could be visiting the frog in whatever country that frog lives in. It does not have to be where the alpaca lives. And maybe this alpaca is like Santa and Gary's books year-round to everywhere. I don't really know. But nonetheless, I decided that I was going to go with it and not really worry about whether or not it was the appropriate place for the frog and the alpaca to meet. It was the right country. The brushes that I've been using here are my good sable brushes. And for those who want to yell at me for using sable brushes, I'm sorry. I'm going to use them anyway. They just hold more water than other brushes do. And they release water differently. And that's what I like about them. And I find even though I have all the silver brushes, I have a whole cup full of them, but I just don't use them all that often anymore because I really like how these brushes release the water. There's different brushes that do different things. And this particular brush is a number four. And it holds enough water and enough pigment to paint with, but it doesn't hold so much that it splooges anything out for the most part. And I really like that about it. When I move to a zero brush, then that one doesn't hold practically any water or pigment in it. So I can hardly get any color off of it at all. I've been using it a lot in my gouache studies that I've been doing. And it works well for that because I don't want a lot of water. So that one has been particularly good for gouache, but it's not as good for watercolor. I know there's a lot of people who use tiny brushes all the time and then they wonder why they don't get any flow going. And that's because the brushes don't hold water. But for something like this small detail, the eye, I didn't want big sploogee water and I wanted to have something just much calmer. I didn't want the color to go crazy. So I switched to the zero. And then I went back for another darker layer to add some shadows onto the legs of the alpaca using the number four brush again. Because that I could get enough color into the brush to do so. And there's some brushes where you can get a dry brush look and some brushes where you're just going to get linear detail. And knowing your own brushes and your own painting style is going to tell you whether or not a brush is going to be correct for the purpose that you're using it. Just because some artist on YouTube, me or anyone else, says use brush X doesn't mean you should use brush X. So for there I wanted to get some really sharp detail in there. So I used the very tiny zero brush in those deep dark shadow corners because I wanted those shadows to have a really strong contrast. Adding some detail now onto the backpack as well. And putting some shadows under there. I don't have a heavy, heavy light source on this. There's kind of upper right is where the sun is. But there's not a whole lot of contrast in this. I decided I wanted to keep it much lighter and simpler. Again, as I'm thinking about the children's illustrations, there might be some night time seeing things in there and I need to start working out how to keep things simpler and keep the lighting more convincing and simpler for children when I get to that stage. But now I'm just trying to keep it simple. Painting in that pocket where the pens are on the right-hand side of the pack. The little roll, I thought that was a nice touch. It's almost like a brush roll, a piece of canvas fabric with a button on the end of it that the alpaca can use to save the books from the rain, if need be. Just kind of having fun painting the details here. I tend not to, as you may know, use tiny brushes very often. I don't tend to do little details like this because with watercolor, I prefer a looser, kind of crazy wild look. And to do that, I need bigger brushes. I need bolder strokes. I don't want to get into all these super fine details because then I get lost in details. Here I decided that the fine detail on this particular watercolor was okay because I had simplified the scene enough. If I had done a giant painting and then this was just a small element of it, I don't know if I would have gotten into this much detail because the bigger painting would be at stake if I was pulling all this attention down to these very fine details here. But for a small painting like this, this worked well and for a simple painting like this. There's just not a lot of detail. There's no scene behind it. I had debated the idea of putting trees in the background so that they would actually be in a forest. And it's not that I couldn't add them at this point. I could still decide to. And who knows, maybe I will at some point. It is a sketchbook and sketchbooks can evolve. But I wanted to try it with just the simple creatures and the grass underneath of them. And that's all. You know, right now it looks like they're in the snow because it's still white down there. But I wanted to finish them before I started painting in the background. I wanted the toes, especially of that frog, the back toes, to be in place before I started the background so that they will hopefully retain just a little bit of definition when I do a flood for that green background all the way around. Add some stitching onto the backpack. And again, this is detail that it was fun to add. Typically, I would not add that much on a lot of other types of paintings. But in this particular one, when everything's really simple, it can handle having this much detail poured into the pack itself. And that doesn't take away from the rest of the painting that's going on. Adding a little more shadows, just a little more context to where the light's coming from. And then worked around with that tiny brush, the pens that are in the pocket, because we've got to keep track of who's checked out the books. And they've got to return them. Just like people do, animals have to return the books. The board had kind of disappeared into being the same value as the green backpack. So beef that color up as well as the color in the books. And then it was getting close to the point of moving toward that green on the bottom. Often I'll paint in something like the green background, or the green grass early in a painting, because I want to see how much contrast I need to add into everything else. In this particular case, I decided to add everything else first, because I wanted to get those things set, because I didn't want to get carried away. If I put too much color down here in the green before painting everything else, I would end up unfortunately just making all kinds of other decisions on the backpack based on how much depth I put into the grass down here. I started with a lighter flood of color than I intended to have in the long run, because I knew I was going to have to keep putting more paint into this ground area in order to keep it wet and be able to pull the grasses up from it. So I saved myself the ability to add some depth to it later and got out my needle brush, love my needle brush, or things like grasses. It has a wide belly to it and a very thin tip on it. And while it's an expensive brush, it is save my bacon on enough times that it's paid for itself, which is good. You could also do similar things with maybe a number two brush, number two round, which you can get a little less expensively. But I'm just keeping that area right underneath of the grasses nice and wet so that I don't end up with too much of a hard edge. There's going to be somewhat of a hard edge, but I wanted the grasses to feel like they really grow up from that. You know, not necessarily smoothly, but now I can add more depth to the color, because I wanted this to again be cool since the greens in the frog and the pack are warm. And this allows me then to just do some quick strokes pulling upward, and then I have multiple colors in the greens. But the colors that I added to this to cool it off are a little bit of sap green and some cascade green, which has more blue in it, so that those would feel very different than the greens that I had in the rest of the picture. By the time I finished painting this, I felt so much better. I felt like I had recovered from the effort that I had put into the other drawing and all of the planning that had gone awry, and I felt good again. And I hope this made you feel good too. I also hope you're going to join me on Saturday for the real-time video of a snow scene. This is actually the value study, so it's a smaller study of a larger painting that I'll be doing. You can work small or you can work full-size, whatever you would like, and you can see more details about that in the description of the premiere of that video. And please do join me in chat live that day. I will see you guys later. Have a great week. Bye-bye.
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UCyN7zreAYtk9mRmuCw4ZzHA
Mikhala Barasa | 'Human Body is limitless', that is the motivating factor behind who i am today
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2021-04-03T14:13:06
2024-02-08T20:35:03
1,157
pCOzdNfklHg
Good afternoon and welcome back to the touchline on Y25, my name is Maxwell Waseke, we are now three on the set and our guest has joined us in the name of Michala Baraza, she's a bodybuilding athlete and we're going to speak about the development of bodybuilding as a sport. It was in the village of public domain some time back but it is standard dwindled in between what happened, of course we will be getting into that to see what happened and going forward what is the expectation like in terms of revival of the sport that you know a few people are passionate about. Good to see you, Christine. Lovely to see you, Celestine. Celestine, oh my goodness, because I'm getting problems pronouncing Michala. Michala Baraza, I actually quite like Michala Baraza. It's a good name, a very beautiful one. Thank you. How is it like outside there though? Bodybuilding wise? Yes. It's tough, it's extremely, extremely tough. We just completed our last tournament of the year last Friday, it was supposed to be held on Saturday but turns out with the presidential address we couldn't hold it on Saturday so it was rushed and we did it on Friday evening. By the standards it was a success, like we did our best, it's called the annual Kamukunji annual talent search. It's done by this bodybuilder called Christopher O'Keech, he's the world's strongest man in Dubai and Kenya and he's also a bodybuilder who's performed very well in the international bodybuilding association competitions. How was the talent search? Did you get a few people the upcoming potential? Definitely, definitely. It was very beautiful, like it was a lot of talent considering the short time span and considering the pandemic times. The guy that won is I think 26, a 26-year-old guy and he packs a lot of muscle for his age and for his physique. He's I think at most five foot seven and is in the 90 kgs. I wish I could show you a picture. He's actually very big and very good. So I know Ken is wondering, because bodybuilding is not a sport meant for, there's a perception that it's a sport meant for men. You sought to demystify this myth by joining the sport. What was the driving factor, what's the inspiration behind you starting to love bodybuilding as a sport? So this is a question for Ken. No, maybe we read it on the same screen. I come from, I always come from a place of what is it that I cannot do. Like the human body for me is limitless. So you cannot just tell me, by the way I'm an advocate of the High Court of Kenya by profession. So what you guys call a lawyer, those are two very different things, but that's a story for another day. And most of the time they'll tell you a lawyer cannot do ABCD. A lawyer cannot be seen walking on stage in what is most likely just their underwear. And for me that was actually one of the motivating factors. I was like no, you can do whatever you want, you can be whoever you want to be. But the fact that it's a very masculine sport, it's really not about just how we've been conditioned to think. Because women are a bit scared to get on stage in their underwear. But when you think about it, there's nothing big to eat. My inspiration has always been what a man can do, a woman can do better. And what is it that I cannot do? But there's a lot of things that women can't do or I can't do as a person. But if there's something that I can put my foot out there and try my hand in, I will always try and poke that hole as long as it's of interest to me. Ken? My question to you would be, you said you're a lawyer and you're also into bodybuilding. And both of these things require complete immersion into the trade. Law is very serious and bodybuilding, to follow a routine daily is very serious. So sometimes you have to pick one of the two and if you have to pick one, which one would you say this is my go-to thing, if it's law or bodybuilding? So let's start by saying law pays my bills. Law enables. So any day, any time, I'm sorry bodybuilding community, but any day, any time my fallback would always be the law. But that being said also, you being in sports and you being a player as he has said, you know training maybe is two, three hours a day. You're up 12, 13 hours a day. The rest of those hours I'm doing my law thing. I'm doing whatever my side hustle is. Because bodybuilding does not take your whole day and that's the other misconception people have that you'll be the whole day in the gym. No, it's not humanly possible for me to be the whole day in the gym, but it's possible for me to take two hours out of my day. There may be one hour that my friends go out drinking and the other one hour that they spend in bed. I take that one hour for the bed and the one hour for drinking and I immerse it into something that I love. And that's how I balance the two. So you don't drink. Well... You won't disclose publicly. No, we'll talk about it anyway. We'll talk about it off the set. So has it been like in terms of the experience and journey since you joined this sport that needs and relating commitment and in terms of journey, the experience, has it been very difficult, the challenges you've come across and even the beauty about it? When I started, I really struggled. I really struggled with the balance and I also really struggled with where I draw the line of what people say and who's going to give me support. And initially when I said bodybuilding I never used to put... I would never come to this platform and told you I'm an advocate of the High Court of Kenya. That was always out of the question. So I used to treat them as two complete opposites and that's one thing I struggled with for two, three years. Then after I gelled into it and the legal community started being accepting towards my bodybuilding journey because I'd been consistent, it became easier. Commitment wise, I will not say the struggle was too much because it's something that I've actually liked doing and the beauty of the journey is actually what you were just talking about with you before I came on set. The competition in India. So I go to this competition. I am the only person with black skin and tough hair in the whole room. Everyone else is light, white and even the dark Indians don't have this kind of skin. But you get on stage and you do your thing because you're given one minute. I did my one minute, I did my posing, I had practiced, I had dieted, I had gotten my suit, I had gotten my shoes and I came in second. Which was a very big deal for me, a very big deal for my gym and actually a very big deal for Kenya if you're listening to this, I'm in a Mohamed. It was a very big deal for Kenya and I feel that is one of my highest moments in bodybuilding because it was something that I did for myself, for my gym and for my country like it was good. So after girl and show overseas in India during the international competition where you say you are probably the only African who was taking part in the competition did you feel appreciated having back the medal of course a margin second overly? By the country? Yes. No, by my gym very much. Why not by the country? Because you know me from social media so I'm not asking you. Did you know I had a silver medal in India? No. Exactly. That's exactly why. Like there's a very small crop of people that one know about bodybuilding, two know about women in bodybuilding and three know about even the international competitions that bodybuilders go to. So I guess it's just what it is for a lot of women in sports. That's just what it is. We want better. We hope our sports ministry does better but no I did not feel. By the country no. By my gym, by the pole in bodybuilding very much appreciated. Good. And the question is has there ever been a private person who's like walked in and said I'm going to support something between all the gyms or it's just every time there's a competition you guys look to the government or is there a private body or investor who does, who shakes things and makes these things happen? Aha. So that is the question I was actually waiting for. For me all the competitions that I've gone to have been supported by my coach in my gym. So my gym is called Ultra Fitness Gym. It's in Kilimani. Any time I go for a competition anywhere be it local, be it international they'll brand me, they'll pay for my ticket they'll pay for my supplements, they'll pay for my training like they'll make sure I actually go out there and do my thing. And it's like that with a lot of bodybuilders. The competition that we just completed in Kamukunji, the guy is sponsoring six athletes I believe to go and compete in Romania. And this is one of those things that I wish and I feel that the sports ministry should be looking at and saying actually these people are going for an international natural bodybuilding competition because there's a lot of issues around doping in bodybuilding and probably that's one of the reasons why the sports ministry might not want to associate itself with a lot of bodybuilding but this person is taking people to a natural it's actually called the International Natural Bodybuilding Association. So this is where they can come in and actually help Chris with some of the sponsorship for these athletes. There's been a concern over existence of briefcase federations in the country. Lack of activity has been witnessed from Kenya bodybuilding federation. I don't know where you sit objectively speaking as a player. Do you think much has been done in terms of even enlightenment putting in place structures, policies to ensure that these sports grows from where it is right now to another level? Not to rain on my federation's parade but I think we at the moment might be the sport with the laziest federation and I say this with a lot of pain but also a lot of love because I know I see the heart and commitment that bodybuilders put into training for a competition. If we took even just half of that into building what kind of federation we want would have an amazing federation because when you look at it objectively the way you're putting it in 2018 is the last time we had an international Miss Kenya bodybuilding competition which again is a title I still hold to date so the people that held those titles in 2018 those titles have not been challenged so if you ask who is Miss Kenya Bikini right now they'll tell you mihalais simply because in 2019 and 2020 there were no competitions and in 2021 it's looking like there's not gonna be another competition but we have to wait and see who will come up and say oh well I want to run for the federation elections and be the chair and probably do another competition which in my opinion will be another 2 or 3 years I don't see it even happening in 2022 honestly I see it starting from maybe 2023 onwards Maybe as players do you think you should take the challenge in your hands and why for these positions rise to the mantle be in charge and do whatever you want to wish you want it done for the sake of the growth of the sport I feel like that's a very small percentage of players because when you look at it and Ken will agree with me on this I hope a very small percentage of players want to actually be involved in the politics you just want to go to the field or to the stage and just play and just do your craft and just be the best at what you do unless the time has come for you to exit the sport and actually take a more active role in the leadership you just want to play and if you're being a leader like me I try to be a quote-unquote leader from just being a bikini athlete that I let the bikini athletes that are coming up look up to me I help them with 1, 2, 3 things but I'm not running to be the chair of the federation tomorrow honestly because I still want to play this sport Of course we're talking to Mihala Baraza the bodybuilding athlete talking about the development of the sport in the country she's also an advocate of the high court and she's put things into perspective saying that there is a difference between being a lawyer and an advocate of the high court and it looks like she was addressing me because I've been misusing the two thanks for coming through in terms of that rectification and of course she spoke very well with regards to how she's been juggling between the two good question from Ken and multitasking she says hasn't been that a concern of course between law and between the sport she loves now let's talk about the way forward of these sports even olympics is around the corner we've seen how those perceived to be small sporting disciplines are preparing we've seen even badminton guys preparing to go to Tokyo Japan to take part in this global sporting extravaganza you think if there were concrete association in place locally bodybuilding would also be taking part in the qualifiers for Tokyo so I'm not sure bodybuilding features in Tokyo but our olympics is called Mr and Miss Olympia so I feel like if we had a solid federation solid federation that would help us get points because I think it's just like any other sport it's point based the more points you have the easier it is for you to be able to qualify for Olympia I think we would get there because when you look at it we have had bodybuilding athletes like Crashid Gift Issa Evelyn Okini Oala Meshako Ching Shital Kotak Farah Ismail that have actually gone out and performed exceptionally well in bodybuilding events different bodybuilding events around the world so if you put all of these athletes together and say well we won't have a team of say 10 athletes to take to the Olympia if we had a solid federation yes we would actually be preparing for something close even if it's not Olympia something very close to it this year Ken are you seeking joining bodybuilding because you said age is not a factor and anyone can enroll even at 40 but you are too young engineer I don't think I joined bodybuilding but I do work out bodybuilding is something really serious proper emotion but I had a question like you said the federation is defant it's not working it's not there does that mean that are there lesser gyms who are willing to step up and hold these competitions or there are a lot of gyms apart from your gym which other gyms are really stand out when it comes to competitions and stuff so my gym is in fact exclusively a boxing gym so the good thing that they did we have two bodybuilding athletes myself and some the current Mr. Kenya physique but there's different gyms that are actually very willing to support and bring up talent in bodybuilding there's a gym initially called fitness empire you'd be surprised it's actually a gym initially that is very big on bodybuilding it hosts the two time Mr. Kenya Rashid gift ISA there's a gym called hood gym and that's all the way in Kawanguare it supports bodybuilding there's colosseum fitness center that is the gym that my mentor goes to that is also another gym that supports bodybuilding in terms of them coming together to hold a competition that's something I'm not sure they've ever considered I'm not sure they'd be close to it but it's not I've not seen them consider it in the past before so bodybuilding is classified under fitness sports and there are plenty boxing wrestling what's the relationship what's the similarity and compare and contrast for someone who is a boxer can they comfortably become bodybuilders or wrestlers well I think for anyone that has played as sport before it might be easier for them when they join bodybuilding because you really know the commitment discipline that goes with it that being said also I think another thing I have appreciated about bodybuilding which is similar to every other sport is you get to do the same thing over and over every day like it's monotonous but it's structured so I feel like the relationship comes in the commitment and the discipline that comes with it the difference comes with the skill because they say bodybuilders are very stiff so I'm not sure if is it true? I don't think so I move quite well but the skill is the difference but the discipline, heart and commitment is where the similarity is at how many people you've enrolled yourself after talking to them especially for ladies who think that probably this sport is not meant for us and you've spoken to them or they have watched you in the gym playing even overseas have you managed to leave a few? I think I could say maybe five or so but the one that I have actually gone through the journey with and taken her up to the stage with me is one and that was in 2018 and that was a very proud moment for me standing next on stage with someone that I have actually mentored and trained with for 12 to 16 weeks it was a very proud moment for me and she was 39 at that time and on that note let's just take a short commercial break it's 2pm then we will back to continue with development of bodybuilding as a sport in the country
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UCmuP70--NYoqgyo3N0ZwDCA
Van Helsing Movie Roast - One Of The Dumbest Fun Monster Movies Ever!
Van Helsing is the definition of schlocky action/adventure movie. Hugh Jackman and Kate Beckinsale fight Dracula, werewolves and a string of other monsters in this over-the-top film. The performances are pretty funny and 80% of the movie takes place in the sky. Seriously... everyone is in the sky, all the time! Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmuP70--NYoqgyo3N0ZwDCA/join My Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/adamdoesmovies My Social Media: https://linktr.ee/adamolinger Narrated by: Adam Olinger Edited by: Adam Olinger
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2023-09-15T16:00:06
2024-02-05T06:23:19
1,305
pcf89m85w20
Hugh Jackman takes a break from fighting evil mutants to hunt down universal monsters in 2004's Van Helsing. The film features werewolves, vampires, jackals and hides, and it even has Celine from Underworld in it. Sounds great, right? Today I'll be roasting Van Helsing, a title that one might describe as the X-Men origin's Wolverine of classic monster films. Let's begin. This roast is brought to you by Patreon supporter Isaac over at patreon.com slash adamdoesmovies and he actually says this film's a guilty pleasure of his. It's not a guilty pleasure of mine. So we're roasting it today. Thank you for the support, Isaac. Buckle up. The film opens in 1887, Transylvania. The cast from January 6th is storming down the castle. Victor proclaims it's alive as he brings his monster into this world. And I know his name is Victor because Dracula's here too and he says it like a thousand times in two minutes. Victor. Victor. Dracula also has plans for Frankenstein's monster but old Victor isn't feeling it. Oh yeah, Vic? Feel this. Frankenstein's monster is pissed. He chucks a giant something or another at the Prince of Darkness and they both disappear on impact of the fireplace. Look at this. What's going on here? Just gone. I thought maybe Dracula used some sort of vampiric powers but no, he's in the fireplace. They show him a couple shots later. He turns into Mothra. Filch from Harry Potter yells to the mob, burn it down. The vampire tries to get to Victor and his creation but it's too late. They both fall to their death in a fire below. Tasty. One year later in Paris, we're introduced to the titular character Ban Helsing played by huge Jackman. He's tracking down an unconventional killer of the night. Well, good thing for him. He's an unconventional tracker. It's Mr. Hyde, a cigar chewing, hat stealing, CG reject from Scooby-Doo. They duel for a bit. Helsing takes off one of Hyde's arms. We get a tasteful ass shot followed up by a beautiful Cirque du Soleil performance that ends far too soon. Hyde turns back to Jekyll. That's gonna be final curtain call. It was Beauty, killed the beast. There's our hero shot. Vatican City, Rome. We get an exposition dump about how Ban Helsing was delivered to the Vatican as a wee little pup. Clearly, it was a sign from God to do his bidding, which is to hunt down creatures of the night and kill him. This is Hugh Jackman we're talking about so naturally his character doesn't remember his past. Maybe he too was part of the Weapon X program. Helsing is given a new mission if he chooses to accept it. He's to head East and take on the most fearsome rival yet, Dracula. Now the priest is praddling on at nauseam about some nine generations of family that's sworn to kill the fucking Dracula. I don't know, I'm starting to check out. Bottom line is they've failed. There's only two siblings left, a brother and a sister, and if they don't complete this mission, all of the relatives before them that also failed will be stuck in purgatory or worse. They need to get to the gates of heaven. The only way to do so is to kill the Prince of Darkness. Also during this scene, we find out Van Helsing has this special little ring that he wears and it matches the insignia on a torn up tattered piece of parchment. Can't imagine either of these things are gonna come into play later in this film. That'd be far too convenient. This movie has been on for 17 minutes and we have enough story here for three full films. Faramir enters the picture. He's kind of the James Bond Q of the team showcasing a lot of inventions that he conjured up and his name is actually Carl which seems very out of place for this movie. One of his experiments is 12 years in the making and he's not entirely sure how to operate it. Theoretically, when this bad boy's fired up, it will emit a range of light so powerful it rivals that of the sun. I don't even know why we're talking about this piece of equipment. How could this possibly be relevant in a film where the main adversary is a fucking vampire? You should imagine that. Helsing's making friar, Carl, come with to Transylvania. He's gonna be the comic relief of the film. We're now in the woods with the valerious siblings as they're attempting to capture a wolf of the were nature. This plan plays out in what I can only describe as dumb as fuck. They trap the creature fairly easily, raise it up into the branches and then decide the best route to take now is have the dumb ass townspeople just open fire on the cage that's being held up by frail ropes. Oh, also the brothers up there so they could easily graze him or straight up blow his brains out. But no, let's keep shooting even after the ropes start to snap. It just makes sense. Needless to say, this doesn't go well. All the ropes are destroyed, the cage breaks open and the beast is freed. They are also aware that silver bullets are required to kill this creature. So naturally, none of them have silver bullets except for the brother. It just makes sense. The really convincing, not at all fake werewolf starts heading after Anna. She's played by the super unattractive, not at all appealing on the eyes, Kate Beckinsale. The CGI now has her cornered at the edge of a cliff. Thankfully her brother who probably has a name that I don't remember or care to look up gets there in time to save her. It is gonna come at the cost of his life though. He takes out the beast with a beautiful shot but he goes off the side of the cliff. That's gonna be game over for those two. A Lord of the Rings-esque travel montage kicks in. The two men make it to Transylvania where they can hunt down and kill Dracula. Revolting on the eyes star Kate Beckinsale shows up to greet our heroes. This cold welcome doesn't last long though as she's interrupted by the three vampire ladies from Resident Evil Village. Thankfully Van Helsing packed his trusty wooden steak gatlin gun. At one point Anna has dropped on Van Helsing's face, crotch first, and now it's the only way I can achieve climax. Nipples McGee grabs Anna and they start to play fetch for a while in the sky. Everything's in the sky. She then home alone falls down a bunch of branches and right into our hearts. Side note, I freaking love Van Helsing's weapons. They're easily the highlight for the movie. Oh, well that and his whole look. I like the duster, I like the hat, I like the attitude. Let's continue. Not even 30 minutes in, it's already become Billy Crystal clear that the wire team on this movie is working triple shifts. People are flying through the air so much, not just CG creatures. Real effects work is taking place with towns, people, main characters. They're just always in the air. Van Helsing thinks fast, dips his wood into holy water and then sticks it in one of the ladies. The other two vampire brides feel their Mormon sister getting the shaft and they take off. Needless to say the count isn't thrilled about what transpired and he wants to move full steam ahead with his secret plans. His brides object, but he quickly responds with. Oh my God. And then this happens for some reason. What is this? What happened to them? Oh, what the fuck? At the Valerius estate, Van Helsing chats for a little bit with dog ass ugly Kate Beckinsale. She wants to go out and hunt alone, but he will not allow it. He Cosby's her quick with some gaseous Jello pudding shot. Not much good it did as she awakes in the middle of the night anyways. She hears a noise so she starts wandering about the mansion when suddenly the hunter becomes the hunted. The werewolf shows up, but wait, this one looks awfully familiar. And that's because it is, it's her brother. But before Van Helsing can show up to kill it, it escapes. Now Helsing's on the move, trying to hunt it down. Now the hunted becomes the hunter, becomes the hunted again. The town mortician digs his own grave as the werewolf from Fever Swamp knocks him backwards into it. On his pissed that Van Helsing tried to kill her werewolf brother. So he has agreed to help her look for him and not kill him, I guess. Dracula, Igor and evil Willy Wonka, Oompa Loompas are firing up the monster maker machine again. Wolverine and the actress from the 35 Underworld movies track the werewolf to Frankenstein's old abandoned castle, which appears to have some residents inside. The werewolf brother tries to fight back but then Dracula fingers him in the throat and then his evil despicable me minions strap him back down. And now I'm half-massed. The two heroes slowly walk between giant testicles. Inside of all of these sacks are tiny vampire babies. Yeah, Dracula's been getting busy. The machine works and the babies are brought to life. Helsing wants to see what these little bastards look like so he starts slowly digging his hand into one of the sacks like he's pulling out seeds from a pumpkin during carving season. It's disgusting. Peek-a-boo. A baby appears behind Anna and we're off to the races. At this point, I pause the movie thinking maybe we're close to the end. There's still an hour left. This movie's over two hours long. It's feeding time. The moms and their pups take to the sky to head towards town. Helsing opts to dine in. He has a couple of solid one-liners here. Perfect for the trailer. This is where I come in. Not that I have your attention. So what do we, some kind of monster squad? I added that last one. After a pretty lousy game of hide and go stab, Helsing completes his mission by plunging a stake right into old Drax's heart. Only he doesn't die? That's not how you kill him? Also he keeps calling Helsing Gabriel like he knows him or something. There's a mystery afoot here and I don't know about you but I can't wait for this movie to be over. Meanwhile, Anna fights a bunch of Ewoks. The baby vampires unfortunately have a gluten allergy and start blowing up. This provides the perfect distraction for Helsing and Anna to blow out a dodge via grappling hook. And once again, another badass weapon for the movie. No idea how it can hold what looks to be 14 miles worth of cable but we're gonna move past it because it looks pretty sweet. The two celebrate their escape by drinking Frankenstein's Monster Seaman but it doesn't last long because we get a life lesson here. You should never drink and stand on top of centuries old rotten wood. They fall to their presumable deaths and we're gonna shut this movie off because it's over. Thanks for watching. I hope you, oh nope, it's not unfortunately they lived. At Hogwarts, Friar Chad or whatever his name is smiles when he remembers he had a nice fling with one of the local whores. He conveniently rests his arm on a switch which reveals a mural. Back in the cave we have a boss fight against Frankenstein's Monster. Wait, Frankenstein's Monster's still alive? What? He explains how he's the key to bringing Dracula's children to life because of course that just makes perfect sense. He also explains that Dracula has way more of those baby sacks ready to blow. I cannot stress enough how much Dracula's been getting it on with these ladies. That's the movie I wanna watch. The hunters attempt to bring Frank's Monster back to London but they're ambushed during the map transition. One of the vampiric brides is on their tail. Making matters worse, there's a large gap in the bridge. One that I don't even think the dudes from Road Trip could jump over. They lose the carriage but keep their lives. The same can't be said for the second vampire bride. She attempts to rescue the monster not realizing at the time that it's a trap for her. Yeah, big mistake. Actually a whole lot of big mistakes rip right through her body. Exactly zero time to celebrate though because the werewolf is also hot on their heels. And now we have the coolest scene in the movie. This is definitely a trailer shot. Hugh Jackman spins around, fires off a shot right into the werewolf but did he survive with his own life intact? It's hard to know because there's explosions. People fall into the bramble. We're gonna need a transition to see. Yep, he's fine. He's okay. And might I just add the horses that got away with their lives intact? They got one hell of a story to tell. Let's summarize. The brother is killed for reals this time. Van Helsing has been bitten and the final vampire bride shows up. Sucker punches Anna and they take to the sky again because I cannot stress enough. 80% of this movie is airborne. These people are in the air more than they're on the ground. In the very next scene, vampire tits returns to announce, I don't, what was I talking about? A masquerade boobs or something? Sorry, I was really distracted for some reason. She unfortunately leaves. Van Helsing blows Frankenstein's monster with a dart and they put him in a tomb in secret so that no one can find out where he's at and Dracula cannot complete his- I should have! And he found him. He found him in the very next scene. Now at a ball, a lady starts singing like she's the blue alien from Fifth Element. And there's Dracula having a dance with one of the most hideous people he could find. Kate Beckinsale. Yuck. Just thinking about her. Ugh. I can't. Dracula points out that Van Helsing is in the room. Thankfully at that very moment, Fire Bob or whatever his name is, figures out how to use that little energy ball and boom goes the dynamite. The entire vampire house is taken out in one foul swoop. This caught me completely off guard. I had no idea that weapon was gonna come back into play. What smart writing we have here. Very, very chef's kiss. The movie should be winding down but we still have 30 minutes to go. Van Helsing has an angry wolfgasm. Upon finding out, the Vatican wanna kill both Frankenstein and him. Sherlock and company find out that Dracula was offered a second chance at life from the devil. A bunch more monologuing, a bunch more backstory. Let's keep going. They go back to the mural. He uses this piece of parchment which of course reveals an ice door that leads right to the final boss battle. He steps through, Anna joins him and together they're gonna take out Elsa at her frozen palace. That was a frozen reference in 2023. Subscribe. Helsing uses his newly acquired wolf arena abilities and leaps up into the castle with his friends. Frank's monster, now encased in a block of ice like a fucking cartoon character, is slowly being raised up via old timey chains. Why is this so elaborate? On his way up, he conveniently notes that Dracula has a cure for the werewolf disease and that cure is more cowbell. Side note, Frankenstein's monster is an absolute diva in this movie. This is just one scene of him and how he acts. The whole movie's like this. Save yourself. Oh my God, Hugh Jackman giving us his most convincing performance to date has to kiss ugly ass Kate Beckinsale right on her dumb lips. Could you even imagine such? I might just leave the acting industry if that's what I'm set to do. Oh my God, I don't even think, I don't know how he did it. Bravo. Absolutely bravo to him. Yeah, they're in love now. I guess all the talk of killing her brother and then actually killing her brother really got her in the mood. The superconductor monster is now in place. High above Dracula's castle and high above the mucky muck. With him now in place, Dracula can give the go-ahead to flip the switch, igniting electrical jolt the likes you've never seen, forcing through these giant testicles, giving life to the vampire babies inside. What a story. What a rich story we have here. Dr. Evil Henchmen are just doing their jobs when douchey Van Helsing jumps in and crashes the party. Meanwhile, a good old fashioned bat fight is taking place between sugar boobs and Van Helsing's new girlfriend. The vampire bride is acting more and more like Sindel from Mortal Kombat and I love it. Meanwhile, Friar Mitch is duking it out with Biff from the end of Back to the Future part one. The machine is fully activated. Frank and Weenie reach his climax and of course this leads him to fall around in the air for quite some time. This whole movie's in the air. Everyone's in the air. Dracula, Frankie, the hunchback of Notre Dame. Anna, everyone is in the air. Vampire lady starts tonguing Kate Beckinsale. Yup, 100% up. Friar Cuck saves Frank. Van Helsing kills a bunch of shy guys, then transforms in what can only be described as one of the greatest CG creations since Dwayne The Rock Johnson and the Mummy 2. We have a Mortal Kombat Annihilation showdown. It's the werewolf versus the vampire. And now Dracula will fly to him and they will battle to the death. Black and blue, fight night. It's the greatest gladiator matchup in the history of the world. God versus man, day versus night. Son of Satan versus Wolf of Vatican. Frank starts hot dog and in front of Anna. He tells her to go help Wolf Helsing as he Looney Tunes throws the lady across the room. This leads to the most humorous exchange in the film, which is saying a lot. What are these faces? What is this reaction? In a scene straight out of Indiana Jones in the Kingdom of the Crystal Skullfuck. Anna starts monkey on Vine swinging from, I don't know what these are, cables, ropes arbitrarily placed in the air. Everyone is in the air all the time, always. We have a very nice Spider-Man 2-esque rain moment. Wet T-shirt, rain tattering down on her. It's unfortunately over quickly. Anna turns her into flubber. The killer instinct final battle finally concludes with a now shirtless, smoking hot Hugh Jackman going mano e deado. Oh wait, no, they're back in animal form and he's dead. Okay, well, that's fine. I guess he just wanted to communicate a little as a human and then take him out. Fryer Todd's back, baby. And he attempts to penetrate the Wolf-Man with his long steel shaft. But Anna beats him to the punch. She sticks him with the antidote. Unfortunately, it came at a price. And that cost her life. We get a final shot of her dressed up, laying on her back. Looks terrible, of course. She looks just absolutely atrocious through this whole film. Kate Beckinsale, I can't stress enough how horrible on the eyes she is. Just completely disgusting to look at. Monster Mash Waves Goodbye takes off to sea where hopefully the waves swallow him up and he's killed later off-camera. That's it. In my head canon, he is. Van Helsing looks up to the heavens. Everything's in the sky. And he sees his beloved Anna looking down, teardrop and all. She's reunited with her family up in the clouds like it's some sort of Lion King Mufasa bullshit. Helsing and Fryer Craig or whatever his name is right off into the sunset and onto their next adventure. And I'm sure it's gonna be a fun time with tons of mystery, tons of wild lands to explore. I can't wait to see what amazing quests our heroes go on to get. And it's canceled. They don't do another one. This is a one and done situation. It's a one and dumb situation. The movie's a train wreck. It has some good ideas. It has some cool moments. I like the tech. Jackman's fine as kind of your no-nonsense hunter. Very cool. Obviously, Kate Begincel is smoking hot. If you didn't pick up on my sarcasm earlier that's on you, not me. And out of all the movies I've had the dishonor and the displeasure of roasting this is probably the best. The performance Richard Roxburgh gives his Dracula is so schlocky, complete and full on ham. And you can't help but smile a little bit at it. And Kate Begincel, her accent in this movie is leagues above everyone else. I don't know what movie she thinks she's in but her Transylvanian dialect is comical. Well, there's the roast of Anne Helsing. Hope you enjoyed it. Thank you once more to Isaac for being an awesome Patreon supporter at the Mithril level at Adam Does Movies. I'd appreciate it if you liked the video since you made it this far. Subscribe if you haven't. I post tons of movie reviews, rants, live videos and of course these roasts every single week so the more the merrier sticking around would be great. Also, if you've been here for a while and you don't get these in your feet all the time you have to hit the notification bell. That way YouTube will say, hey, on your homepage you're gonna see a little bit of this guy's mug every once in a while instead of me being buried under a bunch of bullshit. Thanks again for watching and hopefully I see you next time. And if you're wondering what roasts are coming up I have two more planned out already. One for showgirls and one for street fighter the movie. We're gonna be good. ["Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy"]
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UC-mConRSkyYyFrvMH3zQNMQ
MOVING DAY VLOG!! getting the keys, buying a new house, moving in & unpacking!!
MOVING DAY VLOG! getting the keys, buying a new house, moving in & unpacking!! Subscribe: http://bit.ly/SubKenzie Einstein movers- https://www.einsteinmoving.com/kenzie Check out my TopVideos! http://bit.ly/KenzieElizabethTopVideos WATCH MY PODCAST: https://www.youtube.com/@ilysmpodcast9355 Casper mattress- https://bit.ly/3JeT7Xe Blanket robe- https://bit.ly/41WnEBx Einstein movers-  https://www.einsteinmoving.com/kenzie LISTEN TO MY PODCAST: https://goo.gl/Xc5gh5 Join my newsletter: https://bit.ly/2uumkus ILYSM YOUTUBE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/3e0kFRP DOOR DASH LINK: https://drd.sh/p59222/ --------------------------------- IG: https://www.instagram.com/kenzieelizabeth Podcast: https://goo.gl/Xc5gh5 Secret FB Page: https://bit.ly/2zEx3BM Twitter: https://twitter.com/kenzieelizabeth Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3nDnq0K Geneva group chat: https://bit.ly/3hBBpjw For business and promotional inquiries: kenzie@kenzieelizabeth.co #Vlogs #KenzieElizabeth About Kenzie Elizabeth: Hi everyone! I’m Kenzie, a 24 year old lifestyle vlogger & podcast host from Dallas, TX! Here you'll find vlogs, cooking videos, GRWMs, book recs, product favorites, fitness vlogs, wellness and morer. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss out on any new videos! ILYSM! MOVING DAY VLOG! getting the keys, buying a new house, moving in & unpacking!! https://youtu.be/pCZ9ThJGjGA Kenzie Elizabeth https://www.youtube.com/UC-mConRSkyYyFrvMH3zQNMQ
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2023-03-15T13:36:05
2024-02-05T20:50:13
1,193
pCZ9ThJGjGA
Well, congratulations. I remember those years ago. Happy moving days, moving weeks, I think, guys. I'm back from Nashville. My voice is shocked. It is Monday. I'm going to work out and then I'm going to go close on the new house. We're gonna start moving a few things over and then tomorrow is the big moving day. We're like the actual movers come and are just like I'm taking like bags and stuff like myself. I'm a little concerned. This looks nothing. Like my coffee order. Anyways, we'll see you in a bond. Like there's really no one in this world. It's funny. I rise like I love that man. I also I'm gonna film an empty house for today and we're taking the dogs over so Fitz can see his new yard. I'm very excited. I'm really ready for it to be Friday, and I'm in the house and things are unpacked, and I'm just there. If y'all are new here be sure to subscribe. There's going to be so many moving decorating vlogs. I still have to build a guest house. So much furniture is coming over the next couple months. It's gonna be actually a really fun time on this YouTube channel, so subscribe if y'all are new. Well, congratulations. Thank you. Thank you. All right guys, I am a homeowner. Again, it's time to go home. Do some laundry, get ready, and then I have to head over to the house today because we have Wi-Fi. We have security. We have people coming, okay? Anyways, my realtor by the way in Dallas is Melanie Bray. My fave. You guys can just DM her on Instagram. I'm so happy. All right guys, I don't know when it got hot in Texas, but today. I just ran home. I have movers coming tomorrow. I'm signed movers, but um, oh my god, I'm so hot. I like looked at outfits for myself, and I'm dying. We're going to the house for the first time since I'm the owner. Taking the dogs, but we've got like Wi-Fi everyone there, so we're in a rush my grandma's with me. Whoo, wait, it's coming right over here. Oh my god. She's so happy fit. Okay. Let's go outside. Let's go. It's no. Come over here. I'm gonna start running. It is just me in the house for the first time. The dogs are really loving it. It's very echoing because there's nothing here. The Wi-Fi has not set up. My security is coming in like an hour to set up, and I'm going even more intense with this house than last time, so I'm tired. Anyways, yeah, I think it won't feel real until I move. I just posted the video, like of the buying townhouse, real intent on getting posted, and I'm like, I'm actually like so sad. I'm so grateful and so excited for this move, but every moment gets so like sad to leave the place, and I'm like so dramatic, and it was my first place that I bought, and it was like the most growth I've ever had in my life. Dogs at the best, it was our highest highs of our absolute lowest lows, and it's just sad, but this house is obviously so much better. The whole thing is better. I just like mumbled this the rooftop that I really didn't even use enough, but having a garden, having everything on one story, especially when you have dogs, is so much better, and try out different places to vlog. We even have one here for the kitchen. Guys, this is gonna be fabulous. I don't even know where I'm gonna put my coffee machine, because really, here's the thing. I could, I don't think I'll put it in here. No, I won't, there's not enough counter space. I mean, I guess over there, over here, I feel like it makes the most sense, but I think that this is not tall enough. I don't know, it feels kind of gross. I need to clean this stuff up. This is the mattress we've been going, we've got the callisters, and this is the gift my realtor gave me. Guys, by the way, I'm so excited. I'm obsessed with cookbooks, like there's nothing like actually having a cookbook out. This one's like kind of dumb, because it's just like obvious, but instead of being on your phone, because when I'm in the kitchen, I like to not have my phone, and it's actually like relaxing. So I'm really excited also to have so much space to store all of my cookbooks, and then everything in here is just fabulous. My new fridge, which is actually smaller than my last fridge, needs to be clean before I like put stuff in it, but my fridge and my townhouse is massive, and that was like this space which is massive, you don't really get to decide what the size of fridge you have unless you're building. So have that, my Wi-Fi is set up, and pretty soon, aka tomorrow, things will be here. There's also like so much lighting, it's just amazing. Guys, these dogs aren't exhausted, like they really don't know what to do with themselves. It's so cute. It is now 11 p.m. I was at the new house for like 12 hours or 11 hours, unexpectedly, I had no idea. I mean, they're not long, had to go a little bit earlier for Wi-Fi, and then its security come at like four or five, and it's so intense that they're not even done, and they've been setting it up. I mean, they took like so long, they're so nice, like it's obviously just like we're getting a lot done. I just didn't know it would take that long, so I think I would have like scheduled it differently. I just, I don't know why I just am dumb. Also, I added a lot more stuff. Anyways, so it's the last night in the townhouse, but it's like not the same, like everything's packed up. It's sad. I'm kind of getting emo today. But yeah, everything's already packed up, and it's whatever. It's not really my last real night in the townhouse. Wait, guys, I'm getting really sad. I don't know. This is like the best townhouse ever. I don't want to say it's much better than this one, because this townhouse was the best townhouse ever, and I'm really really sad to leave, but it's part of growing up, and I'm growing up, and we just needed some different things in this part of my life, and it's just time to grow up, move on, and I'm sad. Very, very sad. But I'm really excited for the new house, so hopefully the mood doesn't take that long. I have to wake up really early again, and I'm just so sleep-deprived and irritable, and like, oh my god, guys. It's okay, though. Moving, we're moving along, and hopefully moving will be, I'm hoping that I have everything unpacked, like, this week. Like, my life is devoted to setting up my new life and my new house, until further notice. Taking the dogs over for the last time. This is your last time in the townhouse, guys. They do not care. Okay. It is moving day. I've picked up Starbucks before. Hello, everyone. What is happening? I picked up Starbucks, heading back to the house. The movers have arrived. My grandmother has arrived. I was just getting everyone Starbucks, so I'm coming a little bit late. I dropped the dogs off, so they're not in the way, and they're not, like, freaked out. Yeah, I am just, I'm trying to just, like, be in a really good mood, and I am really excited. I'm just overwhelmed, and all these people were being really mean to me yesterday, so it was really putting a little damper on my day. But anyways, I'm hoping that we're only at this house for, like, three hours, and then we move to the next house, because I need to be there by a certain point, because more people are coming to the house, and I also just want to be out. But the last time the dogs will ever be at that house, most likely the townhouse. I am selling it, by the way. I don't know if I have said that officially on here. I was originally going to rent it, and then I just realized I don't want to be a landlord, even with the property manager. Like, I just, it was just, like, too much, and also I can make a lot of money off of it. So, that was the choice. Anyways, Einstein Movers. They are moving me today. Pdler and Dallas. They're great. I got them from Recommendation 2 with other people. Oh, they're here. Anyways, so they're so nice. I talked to them on the phone this morning, and they were, like, really, really nice. All right, y'all. They had to bring out another van, or truck, because there's more here than I think anyone realized. So, anyways, lots of progress. They're so nice. They're so vast. I'm gonna take stuff over for the fridge. We're gonna head over pretty soon, because we have our cars packed. Everything's done. All right, y'all. So, my car is packed. They had to bring another van. They are so nice and, like, helpful and so fast, and I have those, like, Ikea closet things, which are, you know, pain. They're, like, a custom closet, and I guess they're, like, a big pain to take apart, too. They said it normally takes longer, so then they, like, had other people come, and they're just, like, so nice. So, I'm heading over now. Pretty much everything is out of the house, besides, like, a few things. Um, so, I'm heading over. I just ordered McAllister's for lunch for everyone, so I- they're not gonna be that much longer here, because they said that was fine. So, anyways, it's the new house we go. It is literally only- it's not far from where I live now, so it's really not the movie deal. But anyways, all right, I'm out of the house. Gonna start unloading my truck- or my truck, as if it's, like, a movie truck. My clothes and my stuff will be stuffed in here. All right, so, one amber. Moving supplies, actual bag. This is, again, the best bag ever, the Calcock Luca Duffel. See, and I went over to, like, a vanilla soup and cold brew. I need rands to clean. Mint chip. Oh yeah, well, um, I don't know what to say about that, but I have a few jowls. We're making good progress. It's only 12.30, and I'm feeling very good about this. Okay, this is stuck. Guys, something that we need to go. I forgot to vlog last night. Jessica and Lauren came over. I don't even know if I vlogged this. I was here until 11.30. It was really rough, but look, guys. Lauren got me these olive oils. This is the 100% garlic olive oil from Brightland, and this is the 100% olive oil. Lauren's really good at gift giving, because she always remembers the most random things that I want, and I said olive oil, like, I don't even know if she knows. I remember that. I said that, and just, like, maybe separately, thought this was a good gift. I'm so excited. I've wanted this stuff for so long. Good olive oils, like, you really just, you can't, you can't do better. Also, my realtor got me the half-baked harvest cookbook, which I'm really excited to use. Oh my God, recipes for my barn in the mountains. I didn't even realize how personalized this was to me. Anyway, I'm really excited to do this. I'm excited to be cooking and eating healthy and going to the farmers market. Everything is here. Besides, I have to do the closet room tomorrow, so I'm just getting some more boxes done. I need a shower. I feel disgusting, but it's a fine shampoo and conditioner, so I'm packing some more stuff. I feel like I'm going to get a second wind, second wave, second wind, and then tonight, my friends are coming over for dinner, and we're just going to, like, chill and probably order pizza and whatever, so they can do the house. Jess and Lauren already saw it. They're coming over. I'm going to take my first shower and the new house, and, like, look at how fabulous the shower is. Also, the tub is huge. I also have bugs everywhere because we've had the doors open. All right, guys. I have unpacked a ton more. I showered. I changed. Lots of boxes are gone. The couch is going to get washed. Do not worry. I ordered the brooding house I've set, which, by the way, is probably available right now, but it won't be available much longer. I got XL's in them, and they're so comfy, but I do have every single size because you never know what fit you're going to want with, like, crews and sweats, and you know what I mean. Like, I literally buy everything in every, like, a brooding house in every size. So, I love it. Anyways, the girls are coming over. Vintage cola. They're bringing dinner over. I'm on FaceTime with Dominique. She's also working on house projects. Dom, do you want to say hello and give them a little update on your little roommate situation that we have never been able to talk about? At least the same thing right now. Dom, go on her TikTok. You need to, like, use so many more things to say. Dom just got out of the craziest roommate situation. It's something that all of our friends have known about for a year. I mean, a while, and it was horrible. So, anyways, she's, she was very, very wrong. So, she's now taking me to TikTok to share with you guys. I'm glad that we're here. Anyways, I'm going to pull in for the first time in, like, two and a half years. The lighting in my bathroom is kind of fabulous. So, tonight, the girls are coming over, and then I ate. Someone is coming over to set up my bed, and then, um, I guess I can get this stuff out of Casper, or out of my Casper boxes, because that's going to be, like, my sheets and stuff. Casper sent me a mattress. They sent me a robe. They sent me, like, a bunch of bedding and pillows and whatever, and my favorite pillow ever, by the way. I was already Casper. Um, but I put on Dom's bed in this house, because I am getting new ones, I think. And that needs to be fixed over there, okay? But it was, this is a huge, huge rug. The Casper mattress isn't sitting there. Nightstand's the whole thing. It feels so good in my room. All right, guys, it is 10.30 p.m., and everyone finally just left, and I'm finally in my home alone for the first time. Um, by everyone, I mean, like, the security and, like, those people, not my friends. Um, but they're all very nice. Anyways, had a good night, my friends came over, we hung out. There was, like, actually eight of us, with a lot of us over here. Um, I'm drinking my water. This is the only cup that I have right now. Awesome. My bed, actually, guys, I just can't get set up. I'm gonna actually set up the bed tomorrow, because the box brings it in tomorrow. But I got this, like, blanket robe thing from Casper, and it is unbelievable. Like, it just is the best thing ever. Like, I'm going to wear this around the house literally on top, and I want it in every single color. It's so good. Both the dogs are exhausted. I just feel amazing. And let's go see the bedroom. So it's literally the bed, but just in king size. So, anyways, this is the update on the room. Not much. In tomorrow's vlog, there's gonna be a main focus on the closet room. Lauren, last minute, got us carrying our tickets, so I'm going to that. Um, and then just more unpacking, house stuff, I have to go to the old townhouse. A lot is happening, okay? I'm gonna wake up and gonna walk. I just, like, desperately need to be back in my routine. And we're getting there slowly, but surely. I'm thinking by this time next week, I'll fully be back in my own routine. I guess I'll be figuring out a new routine in the new house, but it's so weird. Like, sleeping here in this is my house and not my townhouse. I know it might be really annoying, like, sentimental, whatever, but like, I am, like, kind of sad. Like, the townhouse is like my first, like, home, home, you know? I know this is much better, but still, I just love that place. So, anyways, hope you guys enjoyed. I'm sleeping in Dom's room because that bed's actually set up, and I will talk to you guys in my next vlog. Hope you guys enjoyed my little moving day. Love y'all. Okay, bye. It doesn't scare me because I chose this, but like, it is interesting when you have so much wrapped up into your career that's not just how you make your money. No, it does scare me. Yeah. It's also like, but I more so just get so annoyed of myself.
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UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
"Nökər kimi baxırlar millətə, ölkə Qazaxıstan hadisələrinə doğru gedir"- Cəmil Həsənli
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[ "xeberler en son xeberler", "xeberler 2020", "son xeber", "xeberler bugun", "xəbərlər", "son xəbər", "xəbərlər 2020", "aksiya", "mitinq", "kanal13", "kanal13 xeber", "yeni xeber", "tecili xeberler", "en son xeberler", "bugun xeber", "xeberler 2021", "ən son xəbərlər", "son xəbərlər", "son xeberler", "gunun son xeberleri", "günün son xəbərləri", "günün xəbərləri", "günün xeberleri", "etiraz aksiyası", "bakıda aksiya", "mitinq aksiya" ]
2022-01-19T13:00:10
2024-02-14T18:44:19
390
Pc8X4jwKj9c
Əcər dünya bazarında taxılın qeyməti artıpsa, Cürcistan'da, İranda və diğer ölçələrdən ya çöreyn qeyməti artmayıb, bu sözləri kanal 13-ə müsahəbəsi zamanı Milli Şuranın sədri Profesor Cemil Həsənli deyib, Profesor çöreyn qeyməti artmayan Cürcistanın hər zaman istihlaq üçün taxılı Azərbaycandan aldığını bildirib. Bu cün təkçə çöreyn yox, hər şeyin qeyməti artmaqdadır deyə Cemil Həsənli əlavı edib. Əhalisinin qida rasyonuna biz dəqət etirsəc, o qida rasyonunda birinci yeri çöreyn tutur, on tutur, on məhzurları tutur, o şeyləri ki, o insanlar onu yəndə birəs tutumu olmalıdır, onu birəs saxlamalıdır. Və bu günləri, sen bunun qeymətin artıranda və istinad edəndə ki, dünyada taxılın qeyməti artır, əgər dünyada taxılın qeyməti artıbsa, İranda niyə o çöreyn qeyməti artmır? Diyək ki, Türkiyədə niyə artmır, Gürcüstan'da niyə artmır? Bəyəm, Gürcüstan həmin ölkədir ki, tarixən taxıda həmişə gəlib Azərbaycandan alıptı. Və yeri gəlmiş gən, hazırda da, o Azərbaycan məmurlarının persona non-grat-e ilan elədiyi taxılı, gəlib Gürcülər alırlar. Olar ki, deyirlər, idxala görək ki, bu, yararsızdır, o taxılı gəlirlər, Gürcülər alırlar və gözəl çöreyn də düşürürlər, laqqaçapuru də düşürürlər, həmin o taxıldan. Və bu günləri, nədir? Bu günləri, o dünya bazarı zədə boş sövəndir. Ölkədək, diyəmətlərin artma tendensiyəsi gedir. Rüsumlar artıb, cərimələr artıb, qazın qeyməti artıb, suyun qeyməti artıb, yanacağın qeyməti artıb, hər şeyin qeyməti artıb. Məsələn, nə bilim, bir 100 adda rüsumun qeyməti artıb ki, rüsuma ait olan elə bir sahəyı yoxdur, orada qeyməti artımı olmasın. Yəni, ahıv ölkədə yalnız çöreyn qeymətin artmasından sövbət yetmir, hər şeyin qeymətin artmasından gedir. Və nəticə etibari ilə çöreyn də daxil olub hər şeyin içerisində. Elbət də mən deməzdim ki, əliyiblərin karrupsiyasında taxılın üstün rolu var. Taxıl onların karrupsiyasının pərsənci sebiyyəsindəd. Oların karrupsiyasının mənbələri daha böyükdür. Məsələn neft, məsələn verci, məsələn çömrüc, məsələn dövlət satın almalarında qeymətlərin şırdilməsi, karrupsiyanın şəbəçələşdirilməsi, manapolyanın bərqərar edilməsi, və sədəcə olaraq, elbələr bu millətə nöcər kimi vaxtır? Nöcər tələb etməməlidir, nöcər ona veriləndən hesablaşmalıdır. Çvaət etməldi və nəticə itibari ilə məsələn vaxtı ilə Roma quldarlıq devlətində qullara o dərəcədə qida verirdilər ki, o həm iş qabiliyətin saxlasın, həm də nəsil artırma qabiliyətin saxlayabilsin. Bu günləri, Azərbaycan xalqına səni iş vermirsən, çöreyn qıymətin vaxtlaşdırırsan, pensiyə vermirsən, pandemiə şəraitində normal deyəndə heç qeyri normal də pacet vermirsən, iki dəfə ya üç dəfə 190 manat verdilər, onu da dolayındırdılar. Həni bu devl, bu milləti saxlayan yicağına qida məhzuru çöre yedindir, onu da vaxtlaşdırırsan. Və sigaretib vaxtlaşdır, yaxşır, yarı çəkir, yarı çəkmir, bunu anlamaq olar. Amakı çöreya münasibət belə deyil və çöreyn manapolyasının üzərində eləyə bilərdə ayanır. O çöreyi vaxtlaşdırmaq, taxılı vaxtlaşdırmaq, kimlənsə bağlı deyil. Yəni bu iş adamı ilə bağlı deyil, iş adamları çörek istəhsali ilə məşhul olan iş adamları bəyanat veriblər ki, dünya bazarında qeymətlər vaxtlaşır, nəblin nə olur, nə olur. Yenə deyirəm, əvvələ siz niye çöreyi taxılı satın alırsınız? Bu Azərbaycan torpaqların bütün məmurları min hekdər, min hekdər götürüb öz aralarında bölüşüklər. Ək millər, biç millər. İçincisi, ölkənin icrimi faiz əraziləri işxaldan azad olunur. Hamsilə əkinçilikçin yararlıda ərazilərdir. Məsələn, ağdan kimi böyük bir taxılçılıq rayonu, fizioli kimi böyük bir taxılçılıq rayonu, cebrail kimi böyük bir taxılçılıq rayonu işxaldan azad olunurdu. Taxıl əkiləcək ərazilərin işxaldan azad olunduq bir devirdə, niyə Azərbaycan idxal taxılı üzərində oturmaz?
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pc8X4jwKj9c", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCG6usHVNuRbexyisxE27nDw
My Journey Through Hell And Back
Vegan Campout Speech 2017 See where your food comes from- watch1000eyes.com FOLLOW ME ON : Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/joey_carbstrong/ Facebook:https://web.facebook.com/joeycarbstrong/?ref=settings
[ "vegan", "speech", "drugs", "sober", "peace", "animals" ]
2017-07-14T00:23:45
2024-02-05T08:33:23
1,598
PcVVBBO6gaU
What are you touching dude? I don't even need to do my speech now. That was enough Yeah, really good to see everyone together here. I've had such an amazing time already some of the speeches have been just overwhelming to listen to namely Ed's was really really full-on Showing my love all the other amazing activists out here deserve much respect. So I have quite a colorful past I'm gonna get into that a bit. I mean If you've seen my YouTube channel, you might know a little bit about my story, but It's quite interesting and I'll try to start it from Day dot see how we can go, but there's a lot to it. So we'll try to get through it, but So I'll start with the story when I was a really young kid I was about five years old and I still remember this story and it come back to me when I went vegan I was at the backyard of my mum's house and it was Christmas morning, right? And my little brother was playing close to these ants and he nearly stepped on one, right? And I was like, what are you doing? What are you doing? Don't just step on the ants. It's Christmas And I was like something so Insignificant in many people's eyes as an ant. Oh, I didn't want to see the aunt get hurt and now that just speaks to children's innate compassion that they're born with and somewhere along the line That is programmed out of us. We're taught that eating Animals is natural that it's normal like I went from not wanting my brother to step on an ant to thinking It's normal to eat a piece of a cow who'd been bolt gunned in the head and suffered greatly So we were deceived we've been deceived by society and you know, I Had an awakening. So let's get into my how I fell into The the colorful past I did so Around 15 14 15 years old. I started experimenting with drug use Um, I had some trouble with sleeping. I had some nightmares and sleep paralysis And I don't know whether I found solitude in the drug use But I know that I had a very extreme personality and I wanted to Explore my psyche and I wanted to take things to the extreme and I found Because I was such a lost youth. I feel like I found solitude in these drugs and It started off just experimenting, you know as you do having fun. I didn't think there was nothing to it I thought it was pretty cool really and I Really didn't know that I had this Predisposition to addiction which many people do a small Percentage of people have a predisposition so some people can have used recreational drugs and they're fine They can do it on the weekend, but I wasn't one of those people I wasn't and what ended up happening is I fell into this drug use I started hanging around with you know a group of kids from a similar demographic to me You know they might have had they might have lived in a poor neighborhood They their parents might be split up. They've had a bit of a rough Bringing up and we shared a brotherhood. So we started hanging around and you know We were boxers will we all had a head shaved and we thought we were pretty cool and tough and all that stuff, but What ended up happening is as you progress in this lifestyle and you grow up and Things started to get more serious. It started off with just you know Hanging out with street gangs, you know having street fights with people You know committing acts of violence in the street for reputation Major Pub rules where there was bottles being thrown people going to hospital. This was a normal thing I mean twice a weekend during the week this started happening and it started progressively getting worse And I progressively got more conditioned to the violence Because of the environment that I was in the environment you're in is the most determining factor to how you turn out So a lot of these kids they're in this environment with violence and gang life and stuff. It's all they got That's all you've got like, you know, they they they're living in poverty They're there's drugs everywhere and they there's no purpose. They have no purpose. See I fell into it and Like I cultivated this side of myself That was just there's two wolves and there's a great Indian proverb It speaks of two wolves a negative wolf and a positive wolf and The wolf that wins is the wolf that you feed the most Now I had a good compassionate heart a heart inside I know I was a compassionate person, but it didn't take long for me to condition this this side out out of me And I had to do what I had to do in that environment that I was in I mean, it was a very tough time and what what ended up happening is it My drug use Got worse. I Was using it more frequently. I started dealing drugs and then I fell into it went from a normal You know street gangs to a more serious organized crime groups Some of the most notorious criminals in my part of Australia. I was hanging out with our my friends and if anyone knows anything about Friends you become them you become them. So these were my the people I looked up to the most so there's things that you did to earn respect and They're not moral. They might be in that in that world The code of morality is a lot different to a normal society So I felt like it was you know, it was okay like it was justified to commit these acts of violence When it's not but that that was just my conditioning, which is interesting if you think about Carnus conditioning is very similar to think that violence is normal natural necessary or justified so what ended up happening is I As because I was dealing these drugs I started using them more often and I got into a toxic relationship Which was very detrimental to me and I wear my heart on my sleeve and I was using these drugs in the toxic Relationship hanging around a new group of friends that didn't have my interests at heart and I had a really really hard time And this is where my depression was rampant my anxiety. I didn't know who to trust. I had paranoia I I remember sitting on the edge of my girlfriends. I always had a gun on me I always had a gun on me because I was afraid of these Enemies in my head artists and there was imminent danger in my environment. So it was a very serious thing I had to do that for my own defense But I remember sitting on the end of my girlfriend's bed and I stuck it in my mouth And I was just like flirting with the idea of pulling the trigger because I felt like that was the way out I almost thought like a Wow, this is the way out. I want to talk about another epiphany. I had after a violent confrontation with another game I'd went out I had an argument with my girlfriend and I went out that night and I had a weapon in my pocket So I already I already come went out with this anger inside of me And I already had a preconceived idea of what was going to go down and as soon as I as soon as we went to this Bar there was some some blokes there that looked like they would want it to fight I knew I was waiting for that opportunity. Okay, so I already had that in my mind and I started Fight that could have been avoided it could have been avoided and it turned out really bad It was a really bad thing and people got hurt Badly and what ended up happening is they got in the car and they drove past us once and I moved out the way Okay, and I thought that left they'd circle back around and come back through that same Bar and like in the car park really fast and one of my friends was on this side of me The other was on that side and they broke up just in time and as the car hit me I jumped up in the air and I flung he hit me really hard And I went about roof height in the air and I remember while I was in the air was like Slow motion and I thought to myself. I've brought this myself My actions are repeating on me and that was the first time I sort of understood that concept of karma and I was like I'm dead. I mean, yeah, I'm dead right now and I caused it through my actions now. I didn't learn my lesson then I needed to learn lessons the hard way You would have thought that would have brought me out of the games. Yeah, yeah, Joey's clear now No, I wasn't like that. I learned I hadn't made many mistakes and it took me a long time to finally learn my lesson But what ended up happening is it all come to a head around the time my grandfather died and I was very paranoid this time. I was carrying a gun as usual I was afraid that people would kind of get me. I was paranoid and I was Running away from the police and they come to my mother's house And I couldn't attend my grandfather's funeral because they come on the day of the funeral thinking I was going to be there But they ended up getting me at a hotel room with it down my pants They they found it down my pants I was out the front of this hotel room and they pulled it out and that was it so my first experience with prison lasted a week and It was in I was on suicide watch in solitary confinement and that is also punishment unit So there's ten guards that come in twice a day search yourself has to be perfect It was a horrible experience I was mourning the death of my grandfather and coming off of all these substances very hard I was released on home detention for 18 months. Okay now while I was on home detention I hadn't learned my lesson again Just it wasn't enough for me. I still fell back into the games even though I couldn't leave my house on home detention You can't leave your house. I still fell back into the games I fell back into the drug use and back into the violence It's very seductive lifestyle and that's all I knew What ended up happening is I put on a lot of weight. I'm talking a lot. I put on 30 kilograms I was 115 kilograms obese depressed Very negative mindset and I was looking for a way to lose weight and I was on the internet and I found this guy His name is Dan McDonald the life regenerator. He's a raw vegan and he does juices and I was watching him for weight loss advice and He said something really significant to me and What he said was if you eat suffering and death it becomes you And already understanding the concept of karma it really spoke to me And it wasn't like he was telling me something you knew like it was like he was telling me something I already knew Like he it was the truth and when you hear the truth, do you understand it? You know it? Time goes by That was the seed that was planted, but I didn't go vegan from that. I lost a lot of weight got down to 90 kilograms I've got I went to prison Okay, when I went to prison to serve my sentence it was I was given 11 months and I had to serve six in there Okay, now this was the longest period of time that I've ever been sober for 12 years since I was 14 So that was 12 years of drug abuse 12 years of these games 12 years of fighting these demons inside of me And I've never stopped to look at my life and look at the mistakes I've made I Was sitting there in a cell and I could see the other prisoners and I was like this is no life to live That's where all the gang members go That's where you go you either go to jail hospital you end up with a serious drug addiction and you know possibly dead I know people that have died from that lifestyle so I Looked at things from a new perspective Like a bird's eye view of every mistake I've made and that led me to there. I had an epiphany and The thing was I was forced to be sober I changed my environment I was pulled out of the environment I was in I was put into an environment where I couldn't use And I had to just be there with my own thoughts So when I was released I was released of where all I had to stay sober Okay, and I had this spiritual awakening. It was like my true self come out and I was still involved thickly in these in these games is the organized crime games so as I was on Home detention the second time when I was released from jail I Was talking to my mother about smoking now I'd already been sober and I'd stopped smoking So I was like giving her a bit of stick for I was like my money doing smoking and she's like You know, there's a lot of vices people have that they don't change and what whatever she said was very profound it's significant for me because it Made me reflect and I was like I've always said I'm gonna go vegan I've always said like since I've got planted that seed that it's hypocritical to say that you care for animals Like save the whales, but you've got a stake on your plate. I've seen the hypocrisy on that I've seen I knew it and I've never taken action and when my mom said that to me I was like I'm going vegan the next day. I lived in alignment with my own beliefs and I went vegan so Further on from that. I was released again, and I was on parole and I went and left the gangs I went and met up with them and I said this life isn't for me and they understood They'd seen the awakening that I had and from that day, thank you Not everyone sees it that way a lot of them did see the waking I had But there was a serious thing happening at the time, and I really had to pull myself away. I Didn't associate with any of my friends anymore. I was on my own So once I left my my game. I was on my own any enemies. I've made in the past I was on my own anything any rivalry I had to look after myself and it was a very hard thing to deal with I was just learning to read socializing like Reconditioned myself to communicate sober. I was just like what is this sobriety thing everything was new to me And at the same time I had this major anxiety because I just didn't know what was going to happen to me It was like a big question mark. So I have to spend a lot of time by myself it was Really full on really fall on but the same time the message of animal rights was galvanizing in me every day And I just had this story. I had to share I remember saying to a girl that I was seeing at that time I was like all my inspiration like when you first go through You just want to tell the world and no one wants to listen mom dad everyone Listen to this and you think they're gonna be like, oh, well, I'll just go big a bit. Never happens like that. So Anyways, like I felt like my inspiration was falling on deaf ears And I was like I need a platform to share this I need a platform to share this and there was a few people on YouTube doing it and I was like I've got to do that one day Spontaneously, I just whipped out my phone and started filming and I let a lot of things out I felt like I needed to help people. It was like right here burning inside my chest and once I've expressed myself and started Speaking what I had in my heart. I didn't have that anxiety anymore. I felt like Wow, this is what I need to do. This is what I need to do now The reason I mean I help people getting sober I help people get off drugs and if they if they want to talk about that But the reason I focus on the animal message so much It is because animals are so innocent like they have done literally nothing wrong to us I remember my friend said this joke He said Joey used to be that guy who would walk up and just stab a human And I was like and he goes now you won't even heard a chicken They're laughing at me and I was like, yeah, but dude the chicken never did nothing wrong to me or you okay? I mean this person might have done something to affect my life personally like really bad to me That's what happens. It's you know this chicken and that's what I understood I said these animals are so vulnerable and innocent and they trust us They trust us and we're their guardians and we chuck them in a gas chamber and chop them up into pieces We betray them on every level and I just think that is the that is the worst betrayal To lure someone into a false sense of security feed and nurture them look after them and then put them in a slaughterhouse This is just an injustice on a massive scale. So that's why That's why I felt obligated to the animals to speaking the animal message and I know it's easy to get set off track There's a lot of things that send your training just gonna remember the animal the animals need us the animals need us So YouTube is a fantastic platform for that. I mean, it's just look at this festival How many people would never have heard this message if it wasn't for the internet? How many wouldn't have seen James's speech it interviews, you know, Gary Rofsky, but wasn't on YouTube This is the platform now social media is where to spread this message. I mean We can talk about types of activism when our first Started doing my activism. I was angry. I was angry I was just going out of games and I didn't know how to like not swear when I talked I didn't know how to not get aggressive and angry like you remember the environment I came from Like this is actually the longest I haven't sworn for Give me credit for that. Come on So I have to be training this side of me but you find with my older videos I was angry and I was swearing and I was aggressive because I was like this is Use the bullies. What are you doing? You're eating that burger like this But now I've realized that the best way to communicate with people is like they're your friend You know that your brother you were there You know where they're at, you know what I mean? And you can do you can be just as powerful as I was when I was swearing and carrying on being aggressive and brilliant motion But by logically responding calmly and asking them a question that will lead them to the conclusion You just have to ask the right questions. I mean as a human being they already know that they desire a life of freedom and justice And a life without slavery and suffering. We know that as a human So you need to speak to that compassion and then we need to put them in the animals position Okay, explain it to do you think would you would you accept a bolt gunner in your head for humane slaughter? But you do you think that's justified so we need a sandwich with some flesh in it No one does unless they're being intellectually dishonest, but they wouldn't they wouldn't so so that's how you speak about being as you have to ask them a question Do you think it's justified to push a pig into a gas chamber for some bacon now? The gas chambers really spoke to me. Oh, I Just can't stress this enough when I've seen that footage that some courageous activists got out of those gas chambers It's just shook me. It's shook me. This is the most humane method For slaughtering pigs for stunning pigs dropping them into they did what they do is they've brought them through this cage-like tunnel And they are scared they're terrified and they brought them and forced them into this gondola this revolving cage And they drop them into this gas and they scream but it's horrible. It is horrible and I Just Can't believe this is the this is like the pinnacle of humane slaughter in Australia and UK like this is this is what we consider humane You know that it's humane dairy standards highest welfare standards for dairy that a 24-day I don't know a 24 hour old calf can be killed with blunt force trauma to the head a Sledgehammer to kill a one-day old calf in the dairy industry now This is she made this is humane. Well, check it out. She look it up. It's horrible what we're doing to these animals That's why we need We need to start thinking about how we speak to non-vegans as well. We need to Be be firm be truthful But be be careful of your approach because I'll let that lesson I'll let that lesson There's some great activists James with a major inspiration in that he told me two years ago Joey The truth is powerful enough. You don't need to swear You know what it's right what we are saying is so powerful. It's so horrific It's so meaningful that you don't need to go get all angry even though I know where you're at I know how that feels but we need to Respond calmly logically and ask legitimate questions. So How much time we got? Eight minutes Now I'll talk to you a little bit about Socratic questioning because there's a bunch of activists that do it really well Really really well and to be honest when I first started doing interviews I didn't even know what who's socrates was. I was like, I think like a pair of socks But I just found it come naturally because it's the least intrusive way to lead someone to the conclusion You don't they didn't you're not forcing anything on them You're not die downloading all this information into them, which is still good But you're just asking a leading question leading in there. So you just start off with one so The slavery is wrong. Oh Yeah, you wouldn't like to be enslaved, right totally against it. Okay, okay, so You know about the dairy industry, you know Cows held against their will. Okay, baby's stolen from them. Okay in slave for four years while they're serial Forcibly impregnated serial child kidnap. Okay, and then once they moved to production declines, they killed Okay, just in case there's any non-vegans in the crowd that weren't sure what I was talking about when it comes to dairy But that's the closest thing to slavery. It is literally slavery. Have you heard of the dairy industry? So did you realize that by buying? Dairy, you were directly funding slavery and Do you think that's justified for a glass of milk almond milk soy milk oat milk rice milk? See what I'm saying today. I've already told you they're against slavery because they wouldn't want to be enslaved They've already told you that you've got them to that point. You've already Now if they say that it's justified to drink dairy or enslaved cow it's cows They created the double standard they could they literally said they're okay with being a hypocrite and that's fine Well, it took me six months of being a realizing that I'm a hypocrite before I changed But I think once you get them to that stage and you really and you get them to understand that they're living Inconsistent with their own beliefs Their own beliefs that they've just stayed to show me that that is the first step now They can leave that conversation and and feel Uncomfortable for the rest of their life with the fact that they're what they're doing is hypocritical Or maybe one day it might just they might just take action But what all we can do is try and plant that seed and post it all over social media so everyone else sees And hopefully people are watching so and that's all we can do so Planting a seed plant them wherever you go and I would say if I would also say this There's a lot of activists out there that see what me James Edd other fantastic activists do and they like I feel inadequate because I Can't do that. I can't get up there and just I can't you know hang out the front of a slaughterhouse I can't stop a truck with my bare hands and save all the pigs that or you know, I can't get up there and talk That's fine. I'm not asking you to do that What we're asking you to be proactive Proactive spreading the message it might be at your house talking to your mom Just speak up about it. Just you know ask your mom some questions Do you think that you know so not everyone has to do what we do? But everyone can do something and just be specific to your skills like you know, you might be really good at baking vegan cakes Invite me over because I'll be there You know, you might be really good at you know, organizing, you know Organizing activist events for other activists, you know, that is a very important thing because sometimes it's stressful being an activist You know, you need people to do other things that we don't that's why all our skills together Is creates a stronger movement? So don't feel inadequate if you can't get out there and do these cool interviews and stuff But you just just be proactive. You know what I'm saying proactive. So I Will leave you with this quote. I think it's amazing. It says So the truth doesn't need to be defended. It's like a lion. You set it free and it would defend itself Okay, so you've got the truth on your side. All right
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How Does The Narcissist React To Failure?
Website - https://www.narcsurvivor.co.uk Coaching - coaching@narcsurvivor.co.uk Merchandise - https://teespring.com/stores/narcsurvivor Donations - https://paypal.me/narcsurvivor Narc Survivor Raw (No Music) - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2d3HEQ8fuW0_tPLXaSdbyOfx89lO5F4k Pain To Empowerment Online Course - https://narcsurvivor--zensensa.thrivecart.com/pain-to-empowerment/60e2e1368fe54/ Professional Counselling with a Licensed Therapist - https://betterhelp.com/narcsurvivor (Narc Survivor is sponsored by BetterHelp. I only recommend services I know and trust.) The background checking service I trust: https://checkbv.com/narcsurvivor Avoid potentially dangerous situations with your current or potential partner This sponsored link gets you 15% off Narc Survivor is no stranger to narcissistic abuse. With a lifetime of personal experience and psychology research, he is someone who truly understands what it is like to fall victim to a sadistic emotional predator. #narcissism #narcissist #npd DISCLAIMER: The information contained within www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk is not a substitute for professional advice such as a doctor, psychiatrist, or other counselor. The information provided by www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk does not constitute legal or professional advice nor is it intended to be. Only a trained medical professional can diagnose psychological or medical conditions. Any decisions you make and the consequences of your decisions are your own. Under no circumstances can you hold www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor or www.narcsurvivor.co.uk liable for any of your actions or decisions. You agree Narc Survivor (www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk) or any employees of Narc Survivor (www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk) are not liable for any loss or cost that you, or any person related or associated with you has incurred as a result of information, techniques or coaching offered by www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk Narc Survivor cannot guarantee any results. www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk holds no responsibility for the actions, choices, or decisions made or taken by the client. The owner of and contributors to www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk accept no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any harm, whether real or imagined, from the use or dissemination of information contained here. The video does not refer to any specific person and it should not be used to refer to any specific person as having narcissism. If you do not agree with these terms, do not engage in the services. By engaging the services of www.youtube.com/narcsurvivor and www.narcsurvivor.co.uk, you have agreed to all of the terms and conditions.
[ "narcissist", "narcissism", "npd", "narcissist personality disorder", "narcissistic personality disorder", "narcissists", "narcissistic", "envy", "jealousy", "gaslighting", "narc", "narci", "psychology", "sociopath", "psychopath", "aspd", "borderline", "bpd", "flying monkey", "flying monkeys", "discard", "scapegoat", "black sheep", "golden child", "empath", "stalking", "harassment", "ptsd", "cptsd", "a narcissist", "bpd symptoms", "manipulator", "manipulation", "abuse", "narcissist definition", "narcissist meaning", "narc survivor", "what's a narcissist", "can narcissists change" ]
2020-09-26T17:45:10
2024-02-05T16:00:55
1,498
pcrMOJ6TFu4
How does the narcissist react to failure? How does the narcissist react to their lack of success? How do they feel when they do not meet their desirable, or intended, objective? When a normal, healthy person experiences failure, they might be dissatisfied or discontented in the beginning. But when the narcissist experiences failure, they become very angry, hurt and resentful, they are very ungrateful. Nothing is ever pleasant or acceptable for them, so they can never be at peace. They can never be free from any inner disturbance. When the narcissist experiences failure, it's more than just an annoyance for them. They will be resentful, they may even hold a grudge. They may act as though you were nothing special. As though you were worthless or insignificant. But the main reason why the narcissist targeted you is because something attracted them to you. You have to have something that interests them. Something that makes them notice you. Something that makes you stand out amongst everyone else. Whether it was your characteristic traits, qualities, abilities, talents, there was something that you possessed that the narcissist wanted to take from you. That's what made them want you. They recognise that you held something of value when they lose you. That's when you might see their reaction to failure. The narcissist has to control their environment. They need to have the power to influence or direct people's behaviour and the course of events. They need to be able to determine your next moves. This is all designed to manage the risk of failure. They have to control the environment because they don't know how to deal with the emotions that might arise from them failing. When they do fail, they get angry at the people around them. They blame them because they cannot deal with their emotions. It's too painful for them to deal with even after the relationship is over. They are still holding on to bitterness, grudges and resentment. They are resentfully unwilling to allow you to move on because they believe that you caused those emotions. They believe that you caused them to feel that way. They might find a new source and act as though everything is going good. But they will never be happy. They will never be satisfied because they are always ungrateful with whatever they have. They are holding on to bitterness, grudges and resentment from their past failures, which are keeping them down and holding them back from ever experiencing real happiness. They can never be happy because they have all of their own emotions. They can never resolve pain and traumas. Their bitterness and resentment fuels their dysfunctional behaviour. They get envious and jealous when you try to move on because they are not happy. They are dissatisfied. They are never happy because they have a lack mindset. They always feel as though they are without something or as though they don't have enough. This is what causes them to feel discontented, dissatisfied. They look at what other people are doing or what they have, constantly comparing themselves to them and this is what creates the pathological envy and jealousy where they are always trying to take something away from you. Whether it's your happiness and contentment, energy or resources, they have to take that from you because they are deficient. They don't have enough. Even if they find someone else, they are still not happy. They still feel as though they are without something or as though they don't have enough. They can never be satisfied and as they go from source to source, it begins to build up more bitterness, more anger and hurt, more grudges and resentment. Because they never look at themselves. They never look at what they could have done differently or what they could have improved. They have these impossible expectations that they expect everyone else to fulfil. And when they don't, it creates a sense of unjust treatment. They feel as though you have failed them because whatever painful emotions are going on within them, they don't want to deal with that. So they project those emotions onto the people around them. They shift the blame onto them. They take their anger, hurt and resentment out on other people, including new sources. They become so bitter and angry because they have lost something of value. This is why they become obsessed. This is why they begin to stalk you. This is why they might track your every move. When the relationship is over, they may act as though you weren't anything special. They may treat you with contempt and act as though you are worthless or beneath their consideration. But that's only because they don't want you to know your value. They don't want you to know how great you are. When a narcissist gets around a person of high value, they always have to target their self-esteem. They have to make them doubt themselves. They have to make them feel insecure because when they are around people of high value, it makes them look at themselves and then they feel inferior. They also realise that if you knew your true worth, you would never desire to be around them. You wouldn't be worried about losing them. You would realise that they were the only thing holding you back from being the person that you were always meant to be. They had to keep you in a state where you were always doubting your worth, doubting your abilities. Always feeling as though you're never good enough. That was so they didn't have to look at themselves and accept that they were the ones that weren't good enough. The narcissist greatly fears that you will realise your worth, realise your abilities and then you would never want anything to do with them because you would realise that they're not benefiting you in any way. They're just keeping you down, holding you back. They do everything to control the environment so that you will never see your true worth. You will never have the opportunity to demonstrate your true ability because they don't want to see that and they don't want you to know it that you are something great. You always were. They just had to make you doubtful and make you lack confidence to keep you around them when you finally begin to realise your value and you try to move on. They get bitter and angry. They start stalking you. It develops an obsession because they always knew that you held something of value and while they managed to trick you and keep you within their possession they were fully aware of this but they also knew that if you were ever to realise your value you would then begin to wonder what you are doing with them. You would begin to realise that you don't need them. They're the ones who need you but they had to trick you into believing that you needed them to keep you around, to keep you trying to serve and satisfy them, to keep you trying to prove your worth and giving them whatever they did and giving them whatever they did and giving them whatever they desired from you. But they never had anything to give to you. The only thing that they possessed which had any true value the only thing that sustained them was you. You gave them the power, energy, resources, stability and security that they needed to do the things that they needed to do and when you realise this and try to move on they start stalking you. They start tracking your moves if you were nothing special they wouldn't be worried about you they wouldn't have to be so involved in your life if something has served its purpose and it has nothing more to offer you throw it away it's garbage, it has no value but when it's something of value you can't just let it go that easily you might even chase after it because you recognise its value you recognise that by consuming it it has all of these nutritional benefits to offer you it makes you feel good it sustains you and that's why the narcissist gets so bitter and angry when you try to leave that's why they have to chase after you that's why they begin to obsess, stalk and track your every move because while they may have tricked you into believing that you were worthless and insignificant that was only because it reflected on how they felt about themselves it made them feel inferior it reminded them of their deficiencies and they knew that if you were to realise your value you would realise that they were keeping you down and holding you back and then you wouldn't want anything to do with them all of their past failures build up this frustration and resentment within them failures which they never took responsibility or accountability for they always projected their feelings of failure onto the people around them when you try to leave it brings up all of their past failures which they never took responsibility or accountability for all of their unhealed pain and traumas and you are then held accountable for every painful event that they had to experience when they are attacking you they are expressing their unfulfillment they do the same thing again and again expect any different result and each time they don't get the result that they want it builds up more anger and bitterness more frustration and resentment these emotions are never resolved they hold these beliefs and impressions that are contradicted by reality but just because they think it in their minds they believe it will happen in that way they never look at themselves and correct their way of thinking or their behaviour so they blame the people around them instead they lie to themselves and if you ask them they will tell you that they are doing great but the truth is they are never happy just look at their actions and behaviours it reveals how they are really feeling inside they are never at rest they are never in a state of peace there is always something triggering in their minds always something inflicting severe mental suffering within them and this is why they behave and react in the way that they do when you're trying to move on and they're stalking and harassing you it's because they need positive people they need a positive person around them to unload all of their toxic energy onto they have so much anger and bitterness within them they need to express it to someone but it has to be someone who is happy and contented someone who is positive it doesn't do anything if they express it to someone who is already miserable that's why narcissists don't usually go to each other to express these emotions they have to take it out on someone who is happy and contented someone who is positive so they can watch you going through it they can watch you being brought down from a state of happiness to a state of unhappiness that is what regulates their emotions it's seeing a significant change in how you feel if you're already miserable they don't need to bring you down all they have to do is look at you and it makes them feel good but if you're in a state of happiness they have to affect you for them to feel better about themselves when they're stalking and harassing you that's what they're trying to do they don't want to look at themselves and deal with their own emotions they don't want to deal with their mess they don't want to clean it up they would rather lay it in their filth they would rather continue to engage in their corrupt behaviour and when you realise what they're involved in and you try to remove yourself from the mess that they have created they chase after you and try to bring you into it because they don't want to lay in that filth on their own and then it causes you to be negative it causes you to experience harm or unhappiness when you are around these types of people who are always angry, bitter and resentful it can cause you to become dissatisfied and unfulfilled it can cause you to become depressed it spreads and influences everyone who comes into contact with it they imprison themselves by blaming the people around them for their failures or misfortune which locks them into a state of unhappiness and the only thing that can free them is accountability being accountable for their actions understanding that they neglected their responsibility to take action rather than holding these idiosyncratic beliefs and impressions that are contradicted by reality or rational argument which is a typical symptom of any mental disorder if they were to take responsibility and be held accountable for their actions only then would they be able to change the situation they would look at themselves and resolve what is going on within them instead of projecting their feelings outwards and shifting the blame onto other people and it would then give them the ability to experience real happiness satisfaction and fulfilment but of course narcissists don't want to look within they don't want to self reflect so they continue to remain in the state of unhappiness bringing misery and pain to anyone who they come into contact with thank you for watching I hope this video resonated with you please like, comment, share and subscribe click the bell icon to receive notifications for my future videos if you would like to donate my PayPal link is in the video description coaching enquiries you can email me at Narx Father Coaching at gmail.com check out the new merchandise in the Narx Father store where you can purchase your own Narx Father t-shirt tank top or mug the link is in the video description thank you for watching and I'll talk to you soon
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Advances in Proto-Basque reconstruction | SOAS University of London
"Advances in Proto-Basque reconstruction: Internal and comparative evidence for initial *sC clusters" was given by Prof. Juliette Blevins (City University of New York) as part of the Recent Advances in Comparative Linguistic Reconstruction Workshop held by the SOAS South Asia Institute at SOAS University of London on 26-27 March 2019. Find out more at http://bit.ly/2LC9vq5
[ "SOAS University of London" ]
2019-05-13T19:16:30
2024-02-05T06:13:23
1,905
PC5pEjJaJzY
So what I decided to do for this audience is to focus on one of the many controversial points in my recent reconstruction of ProtoBask, or the oldest form of the Euskadian language. Sorry, I know as I was here. Just for those of you who don't do much with Bask, some of the reasons why it's thought to be sort of a difficult language to work on are no longer probably that relevant. I mean, the language is still spoken by very many people, under a million, but still it's quite healthy. It's spoken, as you probably know, in the Bask country. There are at least seven major dialects. Some of the big dialects have disappeared in the last 100 or so years, but there's still a lot of diversity. There's also the Aquitainian language, which most people agree is a relation of modern Bask. And this language is attested in Latin text, dating from about 0 to 300 before the Common Era. There are also many place names from antiquity that can be used in the reconstruction. I think some of the medieval data will be discussed in this workshop as well. And yes, well, the language is considered an isolate by many, including those who are producing the etymological dictionary that will appear this year. There's been a lot of work on Bask historical phonology, the best known being the work by Martinet and Michelina. There's been work on Aquitainian. There's been work on the root structure of proto-Bask, on the accentual system, starting with the different dialects and reconstructing back from there. And there's also been work on the phonetic basis of sound change in the history of the Bask language. And again, you'll hear more about that later in the workshop. And the reason I said that I think the situation has changed from early in the 20th century is because there are now a great deal of lexical resources on the language that are searchable, including the 16-volume orotarico escaricegia. Asque is 1905, 1906 dictionary, which is full of useful cultural information, is available electronically. And now we also have collections of Aquitainian data. Actually, the last thing on this slide is the collected digital version of the cartularies compiled around 1100, which contain place names and personal names, many of which maintain sounds that have been lost in modern Bask. So for the past five or so years, I've been working on reconstructing proto-Bask, which would be meaning methodologically using both methods of internal reconstruction and the comparative method where the Aquitainian and dialect data is available. And much of this builds on the work of Michelina, in particular, as you'll see, the debu-calization of initial P-T-K to H plays a central role in my reconstruction. It's something that Michelina thought was going on, but I think I've found many more examples of that. So what I'm presenting today is a very small piece of the big puzzle relating to the status of sibilance in the oldest form of the Bask language. So I'm just reviewing here some of the problems with reconstructing isolates. I think most of us are aware of these here, so I'm just going to go quickly the comparative method. I didn't know whether we would all be Neogramarians using the same method, so these are reviewed here. But there is a problem in working on Bask, and that is in identifying inherited words, because we know from the known history of Europe that Euskadian has been in contact with at least three branches of Indo-European. The Celtic languages, the Romance languages, beginning in about 200 BC and continuing, and then Germanic languages as well. So a big part of the difficult work is separating out potential loans from inherited vocabulary. And of course, it really helps to have a good sense of what the proto-language looked like to start weeding these things out. But I think you have to try to be doing both things at the same time. In the etymologies that I offer at the end of the book that I've published, I've tried to stay away from any term which has what looks like a potential cognate in Celtic, Romance, or Germanic, unless I have a good argument why it could not be borrowed. So here, words that appear to be native, maybe loans, and seeming loans may be native. So here we have a word that you might see later today or tomorrow, Ibaii. That's medieval Basque for river, so it's attested with that H in the ultimate syllable. And this is considered by most Basqueologists to be a native term. But there is a Celtic form or proto-Celtic form which looks very similar. We can't definitively rule out that it could have been loan from some Celtic language. We have other words. If you go skip down to the bottom here, like the word bara, it looks like the word for bar or barrier in vulgar Latin. But I think there are reasons to believe that actually bar is a native Basque root. It occurs in constructions like this term elbar, which has a semantic range that's sort of been extended outside of barring with an obstacle. But what's important about the word elbar is the initial part, the el, which I believe comes from del, which is a proto-Basque root. So this just shows you the difficulties inherent in this kind of exercise, especially if it turns out that proto-Basque is related to proto into European. That means there are going to be roots that look similar in the two languages. So as a background, and some of this is on the handout, the proto-Basque vowel system is a five-vowel system. On this slide, the diphthongs are in parentheses because, in many cases, things that look like diphthongs in modern Basque would have had an H or an N between the two vowels. But I'm following Michelina for the most part in this five-vowel system. And the big differences that come up are in the consonant system. So here you see Michelina's 1977 system. There's no P, but there's TK, BDG, and then at least two series of affricates and fricatives. That's the focus here. The two fricative sounds. You see that these are also reconstructed in Nakara's work. And they also are in the forthcoming Basque etymological dictionary. There is a contrast in all of those systems between an apical S-like sound and a laminal S-like sound, which still persists in some modern Basque dialects. And that is reconstructed back to the oldest form of the language. I am contesting that. This is my revised consonant inventory on this slide. As you see, there's only a single sibilant. So the problem here is, how do we get from a one-sibilant system to a two-sibilant system? And that's what I'd like to talk about. Summarizing agreement with earlier proposals, everybody, I think, agrees that Proto-Basque had a voice series BDG, sonarance NLR, and H, which was not reconstructed by, for instance, Trask. He did not have an H. That there was a single rhodic in Basque, not two is in the modern language. And that all consonants except for this rhodic could occur in the onset. Codas were limited to R, L, N, S. And in the coda, you could have R, L, N, followed by S. The differences here between my proposal and others are I'm arguing that Proto-Basque had an M, that Proto-Basque had a P, a voiceless bilabial stop, that Proto-Basque stops were aspirated. I think you'll hear more about this when Kanda Egretsegi speaks. And the focus today, that there was only a single sibilant in Proto-Basque, and that the origin of the contrast between the apical and the laminal sibilant originates from sibilant consonant clusters in the Proto-Language. So in reconstructing Proto-Basque, I have come up with sort of syntagmatic versus paradigmatic properties that aid reconstruction. Syntagmatically, most of these are the same as those used by earlier linguists such as Michelina, that you could have a bare root, a root in a compound as first or second element and reduplicated roots. What's different are the paradigmatic properties. I have identified what I think are two well-attested prefixes. One which is a nominalizer, ha, often expressed as ah in modern Basque without the H. A collective prefix, H-I, the verbal prefix H-E, which usually again is surfacing without the H, is a verbalizer which has been well recognized in Basque historical linguistics as has the participial agitival suffix. And then the two elements at the bottom, number four and number five on this slide, which are new, is an S which serves as a nominalizer, suffix and an S prefix which can produce an SC cluster from a single consonant initial root. And here this is illustrated with the protobasque root bil, which I think is going to appear in the Basque etymological dictionary. It's a well-recognized root meaning turned around as in the modern verb ebili to go or go around. And you can see that this root occurs with the ah prefix, the A prefix. It occurs as an agitival or participial form. It occurs in the word, I believe, it occurs in the word beats, which means like to meet or to come together. It can also be to round up. And perhaps even in the word si, siya, which is the word for belly button, okay. Another small difference between this approach and others is what roots look like. So I've identified, yes, monosyllabic roots, but also disyllabic roots. And you see in the first column, the last two entries here are roots that are claimed to begin with SC clusters. Okay, so let us talk about the single-siblin hypothesis. All the previous reconstructions of protobasque that I'm aware of using the comparative method, I should say, pause it, a contrast between an apical S and a laminal S that's continued in common Basque. And the motivation for this contrast are minimal and near-minimal pairs in the modern language where the two sibilants contrast. So we have words like shu for fire versus su. And as I said, in many modern varieties, the contrast is preserved, okay. That between the apical and the laminal. This contrast also exists in medial position, in intervocalic position, and in final position where the sibilant is africated, okay. So this is a general property of Basque that a sibilant fricative becomes an africate in word final position, okay. So from hach, you get hach. And so this is the big stumbling block to reconstructing a single sibilant. These two sounds contrast. Nevertheless, I believe there are five distinct types of arguments for a single sibilant in the proto language. Okay, the first argument here says, well, if you have a vowel, a sonarant, and a sibilant, you never get a contrast between the apical and the laminal in this position, okay. So that's one position where the two sounds do not appear to contrast. Furthermore, there are synchronic alternations between roots or stems that show a sonarant followed by the laminal, z, where there may or may not be a sonarant present suggesting a sound change where erotic was lost in erotic sibilant cluster. I'm gonna go through the evidence for these. Third, there are root doublets where a z in one form corresponds to an sc cluster in another. Fourth, there seems to be a distributional asymmetry between the s and the z sound. The z sound seems to be at least twice as common in basic vocabulary items. And finally, there appear to be related stop and laminal sibilant initial roots where, well, that capital T represents a historical PTK that's undergone in most cases, initial debucalization. Okay, I mentioned the initial debucalization at the start as something that Michellena had discussed briefly in his work on bass historical phonology. And so I spent a lot of time trying to dig up roots that when they were not in initial position had initial PTK in initial position. They have H to support this general sound change of PTK to H in initial position. If we see then T or PTK with z initial roots, it suggests a possible spustusca to z, the laminal sound change. Okay, so the first thing I mentioned were inherited monosyllables with vowel sonar and sibilant rhymes where there's no contrast between s and z in this position. Here are some roots that I have reconstructed. You've already seen the second one, that root, pil. Okay, and what you notice here is that after a sonarant, you find the laminal africate, not the apoco, the t-z form. So the suggestion here is that at the bottom, these all derive from sonarant plus, well, but what that really is is s, right? Because the africation is a late rule. So to go through the steps, right? The distributional asymmetry suggests a single sibilant, s in the coda. There was a sound change then of coda cluster s-laminalization, taking s to a laminal when it's preceded by a consonant in the coda. And then the common bass final africation, which results in now a contrast between two africates as opposed to the two fricates. Just to show how this works, right? We have a form like protobascache with s not in a cluster versus the word for alder, which has an s that is in a cluster, okay? And what we get on the surface is two africates that are distinct because one originates in a cluster and one does not. So then the obvious question one poses is, wait a second, you said that the africates contrast post-vocalically. So what do we say about words like guts, right? This is the word for salt and huts or ats, the word for finger. Well, in this case, I'm arguing that there was a sonorant there. It's been lost, but we have other arguments that it actually exists. In the case of the word for salt, gud is a root, which means grain, okay, as in a grain of salt. And there's a lot of evidence supporting that root in bass. So I said at the start that there was other evidence for this coda cluster simplification, okay, namely actual stem variants within the language, okay? So you can see that whatever the simplification is, it's sort of continued to a point where we can recognize it. So we have the word, for instance, ats, bear, these are modern bass terms. The word for badger, which seems to be derived from bear, right, has many forms actually, but one of them of interest to us has an R and one does not have an R. And the one that does not have an R is showing this laminal fricative exactly where we would expect it, right? Because historically the claim is it's laminal because of the preceding sonorant, okay? The same is true for these forms, for aldergrove and the word for butter, okay? So these alternations motivate a prosodically conditioned coda cluster simplification. Notice the simplification is going on in diselabic or longer forms, okay? So the actual exceptions, I would say, are words like gotts and ats. We don't expect the R to be lost in the monosyllable, but it is. In diselables it seems like it was a fairly regular process. Okay, so again, just showing how this would work. In the case of the finger paw word in the last column of this little table, you see the reconstruction with a root pa, which means like foot, actually. And then a stem, final R, the nominalizer S, okay? So from this we get things like modern pats atts or a patch in the form with the historical ha prefix, okay? The other two words you already saw. With the coda cluster S-laminalization process and coda cluster simplification, we're now in a situation where actually we can show there's no evidence for an S versus Z contrast in the coda in protobasque, right? All of the instances of the laminal can be derived from clusters, laminalization in clusters, okay? So we're now left with the question of, well, what is going on in other positions of the word, okay? The, in medial position, my claim is that the medial position of these roots are cases which were historically final. They've had suffixes added. So the position we're left to deal with is initial position. The only other position where S and Z could contrast is in the syllable onset. S is well attested in the onset, sometimes affricated to tz, and you have some examples here of what I think are true continued S from protoforms with S as in the word for fire or the word for moth, see? But obviously you see there were words that begin with Z in the modern language, so what do we say about these? Well, the third argument for a single sibilant is that there are things that look suspiciously like doublets in the language, okay? The pair in A on this slide, you have two words, ashtun, which is the common word for heavy. This would be a word that would be on a Swadesh list, okay? It has an S-T cluster exactly in the position where I would expect a root initial segment or series of segments because A looks like the ha prefix that I mentioned. And then you also see there is a word, not very common in modern times, a sun, which means full loaded pregnant. So there's an overlapping meaning here between the pregnancy of people and animals. There's a semantic field, which is not uncommon cross-linguistically, right? Heavy meaning, pregnant, weighted down, and so on. It very much looks like a set of doublets. And the same is true for the word for skin shell bark, a sun, okay? I'm comparing this to that Ska cluster in Asaska, assuming that there's been sibilant harmony in this word. Sibilant harmony is a common process in Bask. Okay, there are more of these doublets in the languages, in the language. Here's just a few more sets. Istil is mud-filled puddle pond effluent sindu, means to dirty or muddy. So the idea here is that S-T-I-L is the historical form of this root. Okay, I spent some time talking about these things. That there are doublets, so if we have doublets, we propose then Sphastuska clusters. What happens to them? S becomes Z in a cluster, and then we have simplification of the cluster where the output is just the laminal sibilant. On the handout that you have, there's a paragraph or so about the phonetic basis of this kind of sibilant retraction. Cross-linguistically, there's been quite a bit of work on the phonetics of sibilant retraction in clusters. It is not an uncommon process. I know we have many people here working on Indo-European languages, so I'm sure you can think of many cases in Indo-European, including things like German, Ska, Tusha, okay? That's exactly the kind of sound change I'm talking about here, except that in Basque, all three clusters, Stospa, Ska, became something like S. I mentioned that there are asymmetries in the distribution of the sounds S and Z in Basque, and it's hard to express that by just showing lists of words, but there are many words like za, sa bada, zain, and so on and so forth, which would be considered inherited Basque words. They begin with Z, and I imagine this will be a big letter in the Basque etymological dictionary, because these are all considered native words. There are many more beginning with Z than beginning with S. And finally, and this is sort of very interesting property, there are roots that appear with Z, which then can be related to things that occur on the surface with a P-T-K that has been debutalized in initial position, so it shows up as H. And I think, yes, I've included here sort of my favorite word because if this etymology is correct, it's very interesting also from a comparative perspective. So I think the word for 10 in Basque, which is at the top of this list here, a la, has puzzled people, there are many different etymologies of the word for 10. Basque has a base 20 counting system, so 10 is sort of only halfway, but under my analysis, this word for 10 actually means at the top, or top of the count. The question is, on what basis do I reconstruct a T for this form? Well, I do it on the basis of some other words that don't really look necessarily like they're related to the word 10, but the one that really caught my interest was the fourth entry down here where you see tamar in a word, shash tamar, which means residue remains, waste, flotsam, the things that float on top of the water, the dirty things. Shash in Basque means dirty, and it shows up in lots of words, it shows up in the word for broom to clean up and so on and so forth. But the point here is, literally this would be, mean something like dirt at the top, okay? So it's an attestation of tamar, which I'm relating to amar, the word for 10, meaning top. There are other words like gardama, which means the, seems to mean the milk fat, and it means milk fat in modern Basque, but literally the drops things at the top, and what's interesting here is that there's a very common Basque word, samarra, which is the Basque sheepskin coat. It has many other meanings in Basque, including skull cap, frontal piece put on an ox, a blacksmith's apron, a smock. It is a piece of clothing or paraphernalia that goes on top of something, okay? That seems to be the general meaning of the term if we put everything together. So why does it have a z? It has a z, I'm saying, because it is historically derived from an ST cluster. So this is the point at which there's some other forms like this that I've given you information on. This is the point at which I say, well, this is all very interesting, the internal reconstruction of ST clusters in Basque because with things like spustasca, we have more material for a comparison between this language and this proto-Basque language and proto-Indo-European. And for this, because I'm out of time, I can refer you to the handout and to more information in the 2018 book. And thank you all very much for listening.
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Said Ouissal, Zededa | VMware Explore 2022
Said Ouissal, Founder & CEO, Zededa, sits with John Furrier & Lisa Martin at VMware Explore 2022 from Moscone West in San Francisco, CA.
[ "SiliconANGLE Media Inc", "SiliconANGLE", "SiliconANGLE Inc", "theCUBE", "Wikibon", "John Furrier", "Dave Vellante" ]
2022-09-01T20:49:23
2024-02-05T08:42:21
1,134
PC44yrh01w8
Hey everyone, welcome back to San Francisco. Lisa Martin and John Furrier, live on the floor at VMware Explorer 2022. This is our third day of wall-to-wall coverage on theCUBE. But you know that, because you've been here the whole time. We're pleased to welcome a first-timer to theCUBE. Saeed Wiesal is here, the CEO and founder of Zedida. Saeed, welcome to the program. Thank you for having me. Talk to me a little bit about what Zedida does in Edge. Sure. So Zedida is a company purely focused on edge computing. I started a company about five years ago after Edge. So what we do is we help customers with orchestrating their edge, helping them to deploy, secure, monitor applications, services, and devices at the edge. What's the business model for you guys? We're going to get that out there. So the targeting the edge, which is everything from telco to whatever, what's the business model? Yeah, maybe before we go there, let's talk about Edge itself, because Edge is complex. There's a lot of companies that call them an edge company nowadays. If you're not a cloud company, you're probably an edge company at this point. So we are focusing something called the distributed edge. So distributed edge is when you start putting tiny servers in environments like factory floors, solar farms, wind farms, even inside machines or well sites, et cetera. And a question that people always ask me, like why would you want to put servers there? Aren't servers supposed to be in a data center, in the cloud? And the answer to the question actually is data gravity. So traditionally wherever the data gets created is where your applications live. But as we're connecting more and more devices to the edge of the network, basically customers now are required to push the applications to the edge because they can't get all that data to the cloud. So basically that's what we focus on. People call it the far edge as well. You know, that's the term we've heard in the past as well. And what we do and our business model is provide customers a software as a service solution where they can basically deploy and monitor these applications at these highly distributed environments. Data gravity comes up a lot. I want you to take a minute to explain the definition as it is today. And people have used that term, you know, with big data going back to 2010 Lisa when we covering the Hadoop wave which ended up becoming, you know, data bricks and snowflake now, but a lot's changed. But what does it mean to be data gravity? It means that staying local is just what's specifically described and defined what data gravity is? Yeah, so for me data gravity is where you need to process the data, right? It's where the data usually gets created. So if you think about a web app where does the data get created? Well, people click on buttons, they interface with it, they upload content to it, et cetera. So that's where the data gravity therefore is. Therefore, that's where you do your analytics, that's where you do your visualization, processing, machine learning and all of those pieces. So it's really where that data gets created is where the data gravity in my view sits. What are some of the challenges and opportunities that data gravity presents to customers? Well, obviously I think every enterprise in this day is trying to take data and make it a competitive advantage, like faster decisions, better decisions, out-compete your competition by being first with a product or being first with a product with a feature, et cetera. So I think if you're not a data-driven enterprise by now, then I think the future may be a little bit bleak. Okay, so you're targeting the market distributed edge, business model SaaS, technology, secret sauce, what's that piece? Yeah, so that's where the interesting part comes in. I think if you kind of look at the data center in the cloud, we've had these virtualization and orchestration stacks create. I mean, we're here in VMware Explorer as an example. But basically what we saw is that the edge is so unique and so different than what we've seen in the data center in the cloud that we needed to build a complete brand new purpose-built orchestration and virtualization solution. So that's really what we set off to do. So there's two components that we do. One is we built a purpose-built edge operating system for the edge and we actually open-sourced it. And the reason we open-sourced it, we said, hey, edge is so diverse, depending on the environment you're running in a machine or in a vehicle or in a well site, you have different hardware, different networks, different applications you need to enable. And we will never be able to support all of them ourselves. As a matter of fact, we actually think there's a need for standardization at the edge. We need to kind of cut through all these silos that have been created, traditionally from the embedded way of thinking. So we created basically an open-source project in the Linux Foundation in LF Edge, which is a sister organization to the CNCF. It's called Project EVE. And the idea is to create the Android of the edge. Basically what Android became for mobile computing, a common operating system. So you build one app, you can run on any phone in the world that runs Android, build an architecture, you build one app, you can run on any EVE powered node in the world. So distributed edge, you get the tech here, got the secret sauce, we'll get more into that in a second, but I want to just tie one quick point and get your clarification on. Edge is becoming much more about the physical side too. I mean, so when you talk about Android, you're making the reference of a phone, I get that metaphor to what you're doing at the edge. Wind farms, factories, alarms, light bulbs, buildings. I mean, that's what you're talking about, right? We're getting down to that. Very, very physical, dark, distributed locations. We're going to come back to the CISO CSO. We're going to come back to the CISO versus CSO question because is the CISO or CIO or who runs that? Anyway, so that's true. What's the important thing that's happening? Because that sounds like old OT world, like operating technology is not IT, information technology. Is there a complete reset of those worlds or is it a collision? It's a great question. So what we're seeing is, first of all, there is already compute in these environments. Industrial PCs have existed well beyond an industrial automation that has been done for many, many decades. The point is that data has been collected but never connected, right? So with edge computing, we're connecting now this data from an industrial machine and industrial process to the cloud, right? And one of the problems is, it's data that comes of that industrial process too much to upload to the cloud. So I got to analyze it locally. So one of the things we saw early on in edge is there's a lot of brownfield. Most of our customers today actually have applications running on Windows and they would love to make in Linux and containers and Kubernetes but it took them 20, 30 years to build those apps and they basically are the money makers of the enterprise. So they are in a transitionary phase and they need something that can take them from the brown to the green field. So to your point, you got to support all of these types of unique brownfield applications. So you're saying, I don't really care if this is a customer, how you get the data. You want to start new, start fresh. That's cool, but if you want to take your old data, you don't take that. You don't want to rebuild the whole machine, you just want to, yeah. And they can lifecycle it out on their own timetable. Yeah, so we had to learn, first of all, how do we take and lift and shift a Windows-based industrial application and make it run at the edge on our architecture, right? And then the second step is, how do we then siphon off that data that this application is generating and do we fuse it with cloud-native capabilities? Cloud-native capabilities. So your SaaS is your open source that you're giving to the Linux Foundation as part of that EVE project. That's available to everybody. They can look at the code, which is great, by the way. People want to do that. Your self-service, I'm assuming, is your hardened version with support? Well, we took what the open source companies did. Open source companies traditionally have sold basically a support model around the open source. We actually saw another problem customers has, like, okay, now I have this node running and I can do this data analytics, but what if I have 15 or 20,000 of these nodes? And they're all around the world in remote locations on satellite links or wireless connectivity. How do I orchestrate them? So we actually build an orchestration service for these nodes running this open source software. So that's a key secret sauce right there. That is the business model, that taking open source and allowing it to run. And you're taking your own code that you have, okay, got it, cool. And then the customer's customer piece is key, so that's the final piece, I guess. Who's using it? Yeah, well, and... And one of the business outcomes that they're achieving. Oh yeah, well, so maybe start with that first. I mean, we are deployed in customers in all in gas. For instance, helping them with the transition to renewable energy, right? So basically we have customers, for instance, that deploy us in how they drill wells is one use case and doing that better, faster and cheaper and less environmental impacting. But we also have customers that use us in wind farms. We have, and solar farms, one of the leading solar energy companies in the world is using us to bring down the cost of power by predicting failures ahead of time, for instance. And when you're working with customers to create the optimal solution of the distributed edge, who are you working with within an organization? Yeah, it's usually a mix of OT and IT people. So the OT people, typically they're- Arm wrestling? Or are they getting along? Actually, I think they're getting along very well. Okay, good. But they also agree that they have to have swim lanes. The IT folks, obviously their job is to make sure everything is secure, everything is according to the compliance, it's the best TCO on the infrastructure, those type of things. The OT guy, they care about the application, they care about the services, they care about the company business. So how can you create a model that too can coexist? And if you do that, they get along really well. You know, we had an event called SuperCloud and it's at the urlsupercloud.worlds, if you're watching, check it out. It's our version of what we think multi-cloud will merge into, including Edge, because Edge is just another node in the network, as far as we're concerned. Hybrid is the steady state. That's distributed computing. On-premise, private cloud, a public cloud. We know what that looks like. People love that, things are happening. Edge is like a whole other new area that's blossoming and with disruption. There's a lot of existing markets and incumbents that need to be disrupted and there's also new capabilities that are coming that we don't yet see. So we're seeing it with the SuperCloud idea that these new kinds of clouds are emerging. Like, there could be an Edge cloud. Why is there a security cloud? Where is the financial services cloud? Where is the insurance cloud? Where is the... So these become SuperClouds where the capex can be done by the Amazon, whatnot. You've been following that. Is Edge cloudable? Can you make that a cloud? Is that what you guys are trying to do? And if so, what does that look like? Because we're adding a new track to our SuperCloud site, I mentioned, on Edge, specifically. We're trying to figure out, and if you share your opinion, it'd be great, can Edge clouds exist and be run by companies? Or is that what you guys are trying to do? I mean, I think first of all, there is no Edge without cloud. So when I meet any customer who says, hey, we're going to do Edge without cloud, and I'm like, you're probably not going to do Edge. And the way we built the company and the way we think about it, it's about extending the cloud experience all the way into these embedded, distributed environments. That's really, I think, what customers are looking for because customers love the simplicity of the cloud, they love the ease of use, the agility, all of that greatness. And they're like, hey, I want that, but not in an Amazon or Azure data center. I want that in my factories. I want that in my well sites, in my vehicles. And that's really what I think the future is going to be. And how long have you guys been around? What's the history of the company? Because you might actually be that cloud. And are you on AWS or Azure? You're building your own? What's the... Yeah, so... Through the architecture, because you're a modern startup. I mean, and the Edge is you're going after, you got to be geared up. So the company's about five years old. So when we started focusing on Edge, people didn't necessarily talk as much about Edge. We kind of identified the... It's like, how do you find a black hole in the universe? Because you can't see it, but you sort of look around. That's where you read it. And so we were looking at it like, there's something going to happen here at the edge of the network because everybody's saying, we're connecting these vice upload the data to the cloud, it's never going to work. My background is networking. I worked at companies like Juniper and Ericson, ran several products there. So I know how the internet networks are built. And it was very evident to me it's not going to be possible. My co-founders come from open source, companies like Pivotal and Cloudera. My other co-founder was an engineer at Sun Microsystems, built the first network stack in the Solaris operating system. So a lot of experience that kind of came together to build this. Cloudera, it's a big day. That's where theCUBE started, by the way. Yeah, so we have, I think a good view on the stack, the cloud stack, and therefore a good view of what the ad stack needs to look like. And then I think, to answer your other question, our orchestration service runs in the cloud. We have, we actually are a multi-cloud company, so we offer customers choice where they want to orchestrate the nodes from. The nodes themselves never sit in a data center. They're always highly embedded. We have customers are putting machines or inside these factory lines, et cetera. Are you running your SaaS on Amazon web services or which cloud are you using? We are running it on several clouds, including Amazon. All of them, pretty much the cloud. Yeah, so some customers say, I'd prefer to be on the Amazon set. Another customer say, I want to be on Azure set. And you leverage their CapEx on that side. On behalf of the cloud. Yes, yes. But the majority of the customer data and all the data that the nodes process, the customer send it to their clouds. They don't send it to us. We don't get a copy of the camera feed analytics or the machine data. We actually decouple those still. So basically the IoT and production data go straight to the customers cloud and that's where they love us. And they choose that. They can control their own desk. They control that, yeah. So we separate the management plane from the data plane at the edge. That's a good call, actually. Yeah, that was another very important part of the architecture early on. Customers don't want us to see their highly confidential production data. And we don't want to have it either, so. We had a great chat with Chris Wolf who works with Kit Colbert about control plane data plane. So that seems to be the trend. Data plane customers want full management of that. Control plane maybe have multiple versions. So our cloud consumption, what the data we store is about the apps, their behavior, the networking, the security, all of that, that's what we store in our cloud. And then customers can access that and monitor that the actual machine data goes somewhere else. Here we are at VMware Explorer. Talk a little bit about the VMware relationship. You just had some big news the other day. Yeah, so two days ago, we actually made a big announcement with VMware. So we signed an OEM agreement with VMware. So we're part now of VMware's edge compute stack. So VMware customers, as they start using the recently announced edge compute stack 2.0 that was announced here. Basically, it's powered by Zdita technology. So it's a really exciting partnership. As part of this, we're actually building integrations with the VMware organization products. So that's basically now extending to more, you know, other groups inside VMware. So what's the value for VMware customers? Yeah, so I think the benefit of VMware customers, I think VMware customers want that multi-cloud, multi-edge orchestration experience. So they want to be able to deploy workloads in the cloud. They want to deploy the workloads in the data center and of course also at the edge. So by us integrating in that vision, customers now can have that unified experience from cloud to edge and anywhere in between. What's the big vision that you see happening at the edge? I mean, a lot of the VMware customers here, they're classic IT that have evolved into ops, now dev ops, now you got second data ops coming. The edge is going to right around the corner for them. They're dealing with it now. Probably just kicking the tires, telling the water kind of thing. Where do you see the vision going? Because now, no matter what happens with VMware with Broadcom, this wave is still here. You got AWS, got Azure, got Google Cloud, got Oracle, Alibaba internationally and the cloud native surges here. How do you see that disrupting the existing edge? Because let's face it, some of those OT players are a little bit old and antiquated, a little bit outdated. I mean, I was talking to a telco person and they puked at the word open source. I mean, these people are so dogmatic on their architecture, they're going to get disrupted, it's a matter of time. Where's the new guard come in? How do you see the configuration changing in the landscape? Because some people will cross over to the right side of the street here, some won't. Open source will dominate, cloud native will be key. Yeah, well, I mean, I think again, let's take an example of a vertical that's heavily disrupted now as the automotive market, right? So look at Tesla and look at all these companies. They built software first cars, right? Software first delivery of capabilities and everything else. And the incumbents, they have only two options, right? Either they try to respond by adopting open source, cloud native technologies like these new entrants have done and really compete with them at that level or they can become commodity, right? So, and I think that's the customers we're seeing. The smart customers go like, we need to compete with these guys, we need to figure out how to take this technology in and they need partners like us and partners like VMware for that. Do you see customers becoming cloud, super cloud players, if they continue to keep leveraging the capex of the clouds and focus all their operational capital on top line revenue generating activities? Yeah, so I think the capex model of the cloud is a great benefit of the cloud, but I think that is not what's the longer term future of the cloud. I think the cloud operating model is the future, like the agility, the ability, imagine embedded software that, you know, you do an over the air update to fix a bug, but it's very hard to make an embedded device smarter over time. And then imagine if you can run cloud native software and you can roll out every two weeks new features and make that thing smarter, intelligent and continue to help you in your business. That I think is what cloud did, ultimately. And I think that is what really these customers are going to need at their pitch. Well, we talked about the value within it for customers with the VMware partnership, but what are some of your expectations? Obviously, this is a pretty powerful partnership for you guys. What are some of the things that you're expecting that this is going to drive? Yeah, so we have always operated at the more OT layer, distributed organizations in retail, energy, industrial automotive, those are the verticals. So we've developed, I think, a lot of experience there. What we're seeing as we talk to those customers is they obviously have IT organizations. And the IT organizations, hey, it's great you're looking at computing, but how do we tie this into the existing investments we made with VMware and how do we kind of take that also to this new environment? And I think that's the expectation I have is that I think we will be able to talk to the IT folks and say, hey, you can actually talk to the OT person and both of you will speak the same language. You probably will both standardize on the same architecture and you'll be together deploying and enabling this new agility at the edge. What are some of the next things coming up for Zedita and the team? Well, so we've had a really amazing few quarters. We just closed a series B round. So we've raised, the company's raised over 55 million so far. We're growing very rapidly. We opened up new international offices. I would say the early customers that we started deploying with a while back, they're now going into mass scale deployment. So we have now deployments underway in the 10 to 100 thousands of nodes at certain customers and in amazing environments. And so for us, it's continuing to prove the product in more and more verticals. Our product is really built for the largest of the largest. So for the size of the company we are, we have a high concentration of Fortune 500, Global 500 customers. And some of them even invested in our rounds recently. So we've been really honored with that support. Well, congratulations. Good stuff, Edge is popping. All right, thank you. Thank you so much for joining us, talking about what you're doing in Distributed Edge, what's in it for customers, the VMware partnership. And by the way, congratulations on that too. Thank you, thank you so much. Nice to meet you. All right, nice to meet you as well. For our guest and John Furrier, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching theCUBE live from VMware Explorer 22. John and I will be right back with our next guest.
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Galaxy's Edge Props and Storyboards - Dark Artifact BTS Part 2
#starwars #fanfilm #darkartifact Part 2 of the behind the scenes making of series for our Star Wars fan film continues here with some shots from Disney World Galaxy's Edge park and some of the items we purchased there for this fan film including the Sith Holocron. The sample footage included was shot with the Black Magic Pocket Cinema Camera 4k (BMPCC4k) with the Panasonic Lumix 25mm f1.7 lens and it was on a Moza Air 2 gimbal for the outside shots. I also talk about how we created simple storyboards and how helpful they were to the process. I'll be doing that every time in the future to make things easier to keep on track. 🔔 Subscribe for more video and music creation tips: https://www.youtube.com/BrianRogersVideo?sub_confirmation=1 Here are some links to learn more about Story Circle and how to use it to help you tell more stories with writing or video. https://channel101.fandom.com/wiki/Story_Structure_101:_Super_Basic_Shit https://gointothestory.blcklst.com/dan-harmon-the-heros-journey-and-the-circle-theory-of-story-b64bb77d6976 https://b-makes.com https://jbrianrogers.com
[ "star wars fan film", "star wars fan film sith", "fan film", "galaxy's edge lightsaber", "savi's workshop", "storyboarding for film", "storyboarding short film", "short film storyboard", "sith holocron", "galaxy's edge footage", "galaxy's edge holocron", "fan film star wars", "savis workshop lightsaber", "simple storyboard examples", "dark artifact", "dark artifact fan film", "behind the scenes", "making of", "star wars fan film making of", "galaxy's edge", "fan film storyboards" ]
2019-12-30T04:07:52
2024-04-18T18:35:54
421
pC4QUtK5emQ
Hey everybody, thanks for checking out the second part of our Making a Star Wars fan film video and this one we're gonna talk about the props that we're gonna use for this first one and some Test footage that we've done with it. I give you a little bit of a sneak peek on what's coming So we're making pretty good progress on this. We've got almost all of the shots completed Got a handful more to do the storyboards really helped out This is our first project that we're doing like this probably will do a few more. This one's pretty fun so far it's been a neat process to Write out the story using the Dan Harmon story circle as you can see in the previous video so in this video we're gonna go through some of the storyboarding and Some of the props that we purchased on our most recent trip to Disney World think to the galaxy's edge park Awesome experience highly recommend that for anybody that has the opportunity to go Not a lot is open just yet, but it was still a great time lots of shopping obviously So that was where we got some of these Little props that we would probably use in this You know these props are okay. They're gonna need some weathering They're gonna need some some updates to make them look pretty good and not quite just like little toys But they're a pretty good start if you checked out the previous video in which we Started to come up with a story concept and we're using the Dan Harmon story circle to do this for this experiment You'll see that you know This story is going to be about a Jedi who is on a search for a Sith holocron And then he's going to get the holocron and then he's going to be tempted by the dark side And this is going to be his small circle of his story in this case. This is going to be his You know where he has a task he has to complete this task He's going to experience some change because of this task So one of the props that we got of course we need this Sith holocron. So This is a pretty interesting little toy Make some neat sounds has some interesting lights we're gonna add quite a bit of special effects to this I think for our vision We may even wind up making one of our own of this just to be a little bit more Cinematic with it eventually but for this one, we're going to stick with these easy props So we also got this Jedi holocron too, but we're not going to use that in this one We'll save that one for another short film that we do maybe the next one when we continue the story so of course what Jedi story would be complete without the the lightsaber here Right, so this is going to be our heroes lightsaber This is one that That's one of my kids built in the Salvi's workshop They both got to go through and build theirs. We're going to use this one for his story And also these Jedi robes back here that I got off of Amazon pretty inexpensive Maybe 40 50 bucks or so for the whole set. So in some of this test footage that you'll see here We've started to test out the costumes. We went to Florida for our vacation. So we took advantage of some of the Nature outside there For some of these outdoor shots to make it look like we were landing on a on another planet So also wanted to show some test shots here just to give some example of what this is going to look like This kind of helps the kids get into The character and see what I see how it's going to be some of these shots may not actually be in our fan film But you know this sort of sets the stage for the continuation of this story I hope we wind up doing two or three more of these So in this one, you can see the the sith red lightsaber. It's pretty cool effect I think you know considering that we haven't done any special effects with this This is just straight out of the camera and then here's some outdoor shots of our Jedi landing on the remote planet looking for The sith holocron we filmed these outside using the black magic pocket cinema camera 4k on a mosa air 2 gimbal with the Panasonic 25 millimeter 1.7 And it came out pretty good. I think you know, this is kind of looks like a remote planet I did a little slight color grade here just to the clouds just to kind of make it look a little less like Florida But obviously Florida has some pretty good scenery for this type of thing these trees look pretty neat here So then as you can see in this clip here is the sith holocron And I've added a little bit of a special flair to this and made a track to the holocron Just so it looks like the light is emanating from inside of it So part of this experiment is to use the Dan Harmon story circle to quickly develop a story around this Jedi And then to also follow the process through and to actually create storyboards for the first time So to do this, we just took a piece of paper We just drew some rectangles on the paper and we started to fill in these are the main shots that we need to get Okay, and so this basically gave us, you know, 12 to 16 For shots that we knew that we needed to be able to tell this three to four minute story This is a great way to do it. I'm going to be doing this every single time in the future because it Basically creates your shot list for you. So now the important thing about these storyboards is, you know, you don't have to be an artist You can use stick figures like I did here You know, we're just basically trying to tell the story with a little bit of a text to the side Just to kind of give us a reminder of what we're trying to do for this particular thing So then as we film each piece, I can just go through and check each one of these things off And I realized at the end that I've got Everything that I need for this whole story and then I can go through and begin to edit it This first one is just, you know, right out of the gate. Just keep it simple Try to do this within two weeks I'm really trying to release this by the new year So that we can just sort of, you know, time box it and be finished with it and then move on to the next one I'm not trying to be a perfectionist with this I'm just trying to tell a basic story and follow through this process And show the kids that this is a pretty fun thing to do, you know And not too bad of a way to spend a family vacation. So we're not experts in this This is our first time trying something like this We're learning a lot and we'll learn a lot more for the next one and for the next one and for the next one So this is just a process of creating these short videos so that we can improve each time so that eventually We're pretty decent at it. So if you're new to this channel, I like to make these types of videos to You know, show how I'm learning these things as I create these films on my own So if you're enjoying this series, please drop it a like and make sure you subscribe so that you don't miss future installments in this series and then future videos that we're going to be doing As well as, you know, how we create some of the props and how we do some of the special effects with the green screen We're just learning all this as we go. So, um, you know, stay tuned and you can learn along with us, right? So that's it for the second installment of this series on creating a Star Wars fan film In the next one, we're going to talk more about some of the special effects And then probably around that time, I'll actually have it ready for release And I will also put it out on the channel so people can see it We'll continue doing a couple of more of these behind the scenes as we go Just to kind of fill in the gaps of of what else we learned along the way of doing this one And then we'll probably start on the next one. So thanks for checking out and we'll see you next time
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UCwBK7Cdk0wq8rCjxcvaoHzg
BJD's Link In Hundreds Of Crores Liquor Scam || BJD Link || liquor scam || Crime || Argus News
BJD's Link In Hundreds Of Crores Liquor Scam. #ArgusNews #bjd #bjdlink #liquordealers #dipakshahu #TukuniSahu #moneyseized #OdishaNews Argus News is Odisha's fastest-growing news channel having its presence on satellite TV and various web platforms. Watch the latest news updates LIVE on matters related to education & employment, health & wellness, politics, sports, business, entertainment, and more. Argus News is setting new standards for journalism through its differentiated programming, philosophy, and tagline 'Satyara Sandhana'. ଶହ ଶହ କୋଟିର ମଦ ଘୋଟାଲାରେ ବିଜେଡି ଲିଙ୍କ || BJD Link || liquor scam To stay updated on-the-go, Visit Our Official Website: https://www.argusnews.in/ (Odia) Visit Our Official Website: https://argusenglish.in/ (English) iOS App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsiOSApp Android App: http://bit.ly/ArgusNewsAndroidApp Live TV: https://argusnews.in/live-tv/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/argusnews.in Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/c/TheArgusNewsOdia Twitter: https://twitter.com/ArgusNews_in Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/argusnewsin Argus News Is Available on: TataPlay channel No - 1780 Airtel TV channel No - 609 Dish TV channel No - 1369 d2h channel No - 1757 SITI Networks HYD - 12 Hathway - 732 GTPL KCBPL - 713 SITI Networks Kolkata - 460 & other Leading Cable Networks You Can WhatsApp Us Your News On- 8480612900
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2023-12-10T02:34:13
2024-04-23T23:24:42
80
pcD4FoUR-gE
하는데 క్ిోకోఢిасибоటింనిచువం గాస౦ునండిని. квิ imagin सब्राजा लाल डायरे लुचे ची यही सब प्रष्नरा उतर
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UCjFmkmzvMl5pwHgFVV7F5gw
M. 3/221/21 - RANDOMIZER FOR 400 POINTS! 2019-20 Panini Mosaic Tmall Basketball 3-Box Break #1
* JOIN our group breaks on https://JaspysCaseBreaks.com/ * WATCH seven nights a week from 1p-9p PT (4p-12a ET) on this channel! Some nights will feature a LATE NITE program! * VISIT our 3,000 sq. ft. shop at 1402 Pacific Coast Highway, Hermosa Beach, CA! - Open M-Sa from 11a - 6p - Open Sunday by appointment - We're following all Covid-19 safety protocols for your safety and ours! :) * FOLLOW us on Twitter and Instagram @JaspysBreaks https://twitter.com/JaspysBreaks https://instagram.com/JaspysBreaks * THANK YOU for watching and subscribing! * CONTACT us via the "Support" button on JaspysCaseBreaks.com * FAQ here: https://jaspyscasebreaks.com/a/faq
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2021-03-23T04:03:27
2024-04-24T00:07:19
52
PCkhlSiTrMk
All right, sorry about that guys separate video for this, but um forgot about this foreigner points that we had here In this break here, so separate video So here the customer names. I just copied and pasted them customer name at number one We'll get the foreigner points a little added bonus to their hits and if you didn't get any hits There you go a little extra a little something for you. So let's roll it. We got ourselves a four or two six times good luck one two three four five and Sixth and final time Nick there you go. Foreigner points coming your way buddy. Appreciate it
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UC52c9qC4SgnvxusSQrMF2UQ
Prayer & Intercession | Lecture 17: BC113-P&I-20231004
This is a lecture video from APC Bible College. Classes are offered On-Campus, Online and via the E-Learning portal. Please visit: https://apcbiblecollege.org for more information. APC Bible College is a ministry of All Peoples Church & World Outreach, Bangalore, India. Watch our online Sunday Church service live stream every Sunday at 10:30am (Indian Time, GMT+5:30). Spirit filled, anointed worship, Word and ministry for healing, miracles and deliverance. YOUTUBE: / allpeopleschurchb... LIVE SERVICES: https://apcwo.org/live Our other websites and free resources: CHURCH: https://apcwo.org FREE SERMONS: https://apcwo.org/resources/sermons FREE BOOKS: https://apcwo.org/books/english DAILY DEVOTIONALS: https://apcwo.org/resources/daily-dev... JESUS CHRIST: https://examiningjesus.com BIBLE COLLEGE: https://apcbiblecollege.org E-LEARNING: https://apcbiblecollege.org/elearn WEEKEND SCHOOLS: https://apcwo.org/ministries/weekend-... COUNSELING: https://chrysalislife.org MUSIC: https://apcmusic.org MINISTERS FELLOWSHIP: https://pamfi.org CHURCH APP: https://apcwo.org/app CHURCHES: https://apcwo.org/ministries/churches WORLD MISSIONS: https://apcworldmissions.org Download the free church app. Search for "All Peoples Church Bangalore" in the App or Google Play stores. #APCBibleCollege #AllPeoplesChurchBangalore #BibleCollege #OnlineBibleCollege
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2023-10-04T08:32:16
2024-04-18T17:39:54
2,819
PCsBcUiMiuw
Okay, so good morning and welcome. We'll pray and get started. So would someone like to lead in prayer from the on-campus batch? Abhishek, can you just pass the mic to him or someone else? We don't have time. Thank you, Heavenly Father. We give thanks for this beautiful time, Father. As we are going to start our studies, Father. We give thanks for this time, Father. We give thanks for Teacher, Father. We pray for the teacher. You bless the teacher, Father. Father, we pray for ourselves, Father. You give us wisdom and knowledge so whatever she will teach us, we will understand it properly. And whatever we will learn, Father, we will use it in your mighty way. Father, we submit this matter in your mighty hand and we ask in the name of Jesus, Amen. Amen. Thank you. Thank you there for praying. In the last class, I think we had a good discussion about prophetic prayer and how we must hear from God. And that's how, you know, sometimes God leads us by speaking to us and telling us, you know, what he's going to do, whether in our lives or in someone else's life. So apart from normal prayer, normal prayer is we have some set of prayer points and we seek God for those. But prophetic prayer is when we pray on the basis of revelation or hearing from God. And each one of us can practice that. We can hear from God about what he wants us to do and who he wants us to pray for. So that was a very helpful subject. Now we can move on to the next subject here, which has to do with prayer and persisting in prayer. So the term persistence or persisting, this is chapter 10 in our notes. It has to do with being consistent, being patient and continuing to pray those requests without giving up. So persistence is to keep praying till you see the result. Some of us, we could pray about a matter, but when it doesn't come through, the tendency is to question God. Why is it not happening? What happened? What did I do? What is God thinking? And somewhere in between, we have this tendency to just let it go. We don't pray about it anymore. But persistence means when we know that something is the will of God or something is in God's heart for us, we should not stop praying till we see that happen or the fulfillment of that matter. So that's what we will discuss right now. So in the Bible, Jesus spoke about persistence or he spoke about being consistent and following up on our prayer points. So there are two passages, Luke chapter 11 and Luke chapter 18, where we will read how exactly Jesus meant persistence to be. So one of us will have to read from Luke 11 verses 5 through 8 and another person could please read from Luke 18 verses 1 through 8. Luke chapter 11 verses 5 and he said to them, which of you shall have a friend and go to him at midnight and say to him, friend, lend me three loaves. For a friend of mine has come to me on his journey and I have nothing to say before him. Verse 7 and he will answer from within and say, do not trouble me. The door is now shut and my children are with me in bed. I cannot rise and give to you. Verse 8, I say to you who he will not rise and give to him because he is his friend yet because of his persistence, he will rise and give him as many as he needs. So thank you for reading that portion Abhishek. So here we see that in this situation, there is a person who has a friend visiting at a very odd hour, which is midnight hour and obviously at midnight people are resting in their homes. But then this person, he wants to provide for the visiting friend and so he asks another person, another friend, he goes ahead and asks and says, you know, lend me three loaves for my friend has come to me on his journey. But you see in a situation like this, nobody would like to feel disturbed. Like, you don't want to be disturbed, right? But one of the qualities of this host is that he doesn't give up. He is insisting or he is persisting. Let's see what he says. Even though the friend says, don't trouble me, the door is now shut and my children are with me in bed. I cannot rise and give to you. The response is the next passage or the next verse that we see because of his persistence, because of his persistence, he will rise and give, whatever is required. So in this situation, we have to understand that there is a person who is unwilling. So at midnight, everybody is unwilling. But even an unwilling person, when there are repeated requests, what happens? Sometimes they yield or sometimes they change their mind and they say, okay, fine. You're asking so many times, you just take it. Okay, so that is the picture which is being painted for us. But is God like that? Is God somebody who is unwilling to give us? What do you think? Maybe the time that we are asking is disturbing God or what we are asking is too big for God. And that's why he says, don't disturb me. Come tomorrow. Does that ever happen with God? It doesn't because the thing is that though the example here is mentioning a person who is unwilling, God is not like that. So persistence is necessary, but we have to understand it with God in the picture. So obviously God is not someone who will make us wait and make us suffer and make us struggle. He is not that kind. Even then, Jesus is talking about an attitude on the part of the person who is asking, what is that? We must have persistence or we should not give up. That attitude is necessary to see answers to prayer. So that's the focus. It's not that God is not willing. God is very much willing, but he likes an attitude where we don't give up. And we say God, your word says, you have promised, you have spoken. I'm standing on your word. I'm standing on these scriptures. I want to see the fulfillment of this promise. So the persistence on the part of the person who's praying or on our part is what is necessary. Now let's look at one more passage. This is in Luke 18. This is also a parable about persistence on the part of somebody making a request. So Luke 18 verses 1 to 8. Sister, can I read? Then he spoke a parable to them that men always ought to pray and not lose heart, saying there was in a certain city a judge who did not fear God nor regard men. Now there was a widow in that city and she came to him saying, get justice for me from my adversary. And he would not for a while, but afterward he said within himself, though I do not fear God nor regard men yet because this widow travels me, I will avenge her lest by her, coming see very me. Then the Lord said, hear what the unjust just said, and shall God not avenge his own elect who cry out day and night to him, though he veers long with them. I tell you that he will avenge them speedily, nevertheless when the son of man comes, will he really find faith on the earth. Okay, so very similar story here where there is a widow and she goes to the ruler of that city and she is asking for justice. What does it say about this judge? In verse 4, the last part, the judge makes this statement, though I do not fear God nor regard man. So this judge is not, doesn't seem like very righteous because he is not thinking about man or he is not thinking about God. And then we go on to read in verse 6, unjust judge. Okay, these are the qualities of the judge. Now a person like this who is unrighteous, unjust, we don't even expect a result. Sometimes when we approach, you know, some person or some agency where we feel they won't respond, our hope is very small because maybe, you know, it's just a waste of time to approach such people. But in this case, though the person is unjust, unrighteous, he still responds to the request of the widow. Why? Because of her persistence. It says here because of her continual coming. Continuously she's coming back to the ruler and saying, you have to do something. You have to do something. I won't leave you. You have to give me justice. So the persistence is what pushed the ruler to help this widow. Now again, in this passage, we have to understand there is an unwilling, unjust ruler. Is God like that? No, right. God is willing. God is righteous. God is gracious. So actually to be persistent with God, it should not be so difficult because it's easier to trust God. It's easier to believe that God will do it for us. But the focus of both of these passages is the persistence or the consistency on the part of the person who is making the prayer. If we ask and then we let go, it's unfortunate because even though something may be a promise from God, we may not see its fulfillment. But if we are consistent, if we are persistent, then we will see a fulfillment of that promise. In fact, if you go back to Luke chapter 11, just go back there, Luke 11 verses 5 through 8. So we read about this friend, isn't it, who was unwilling to give. But we saw how he gave because of the persistence of the one asking. What continues after that? What continues after verse 8? Just check in the Bible. Yeah. So Jesus is teaching about prayer after talking about persistence. And he's saying, so even somebody who does not want to give will give if you ask again and again. Then why don't you ask God? Because God will give you. If something is in his plan, if it is in his purpose, God will give it. Therefore ask, you will receive. Seek, you will find, knock, the door will be open to you. Don't give up in prayer is the point that is being made here. And in Luke 18 verse 1, just look at that. Luke 18 and verse 1, what does it say? Yeah, correct. So there is a word of encouragement. What does Jesus say? He's speaking a parable to them that men always ought to pray and not lose heart. Meaning keep praying. Don't get discouraged. When you don't see immediate results, don't be discouraged. That's the whole point. So sometimes when it comes to prayer, we need patience. Okay, and I've been saying in some situations, we may see, it depends on the timing that God has assigned for that promise to be fulfilled. Sometimes we see it happen in weeks, sometimes we see it happen in months, sometimes it's even a matter of years. But if we become tired, if we become discouraged and we give up, then we can't blame God. That God didn't do it. It's us who actually gave up. And that is why God's word says, don't be discouraged. Don't lose heart. Men must always pray. We have to always pray and not be discouraged. Okay, now in Hebrews chapter 6, we read about, you know, rest. God giving us or with the example of the Israelites. If you remember the Israelites, they were journeying to reach the promised land. So you read like as you move towards Hebrews chapter 6, you read about them and how finally they reached the promised land and all of that. Okay, but like in Hebrews chapter 6 and verse 12, there's one statement that the writer makes. Can somebody read that out? Hebrews 6 verse 12. So that you may not be sluggish, but imitators of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises. Okay, so there are two qualities which we need to fulfil God's purpose. What are the two things it's mentioned here? What do you need? Faith and patience. We can have faith, but if we lack patience, then even then it's difficult to inherit the promises of God. We may have a lot of patience, but if we don't carry faith, it's difficult to receive the promises of God. But there is a combination. When we are people of faith, along with patience. So when we talk about the subject of prayer, yes, there are many prayers that get answered like that. And when we look at the ministry of Jesus, especially in his ministry, in his personal time, he spent hours of prayer with the Lord. But in public ministry, it was like quick, right? We healed. We set free. Demon, come out. Lazarus, come forth. And it happened. So those were all commands that he issued on the basis of his strong relationship with God. He didn't sit for hours and persist with God in that moment. But throughout his personal journey, he has already been spending time with God. He's already been praying about all these matters. So the answers were very quick, so quick. You hardly find Jesus commanding twice. I think in only one situation, he commands twice. But otherwise, it's all instant, immediate, okay? Peace be still. The storm just calmed down. Any prayer that, you know, you find Jesus, especially in the ministry, results are immediate. So today, when we pray, we pray for people, we get excited, right? I prayed and they got healed. We prayed. This pain disappeared. We prayed and they're able to move their hands. Do immediate things happen? Yes, they do. Immediately, a lot of results take place. That's part of the way our faith works. That's part of the way our prayer works. But there are other prayers that fall in categories where we need some patience. We cannot get immediate results for certain prayers. So what tends to happen to us as believers is we become discouraged. We feel, in all these things, I'm praying for these matters and I'm seeing quick results but I'm praying for other matters in my personal life. I'm not seeing any quick results. Something is wrong, okay? Maybe something is wrong with me. We begin to ask such questions but what does God's Word teach us? There is also the element of persistence, patience. There are some prayers for which we must be persistent means to consistently come back to God like that friend or like that woman again and again, again and again, okay? So again and again asking God, is it, do you think it's okay or what do you feel about that? Asking God repeatedly or is it a sign of lack of faith? We already prayed about something. We prayed with faith, okay? Now, to ask God about the same thing again, is it okay? Is it not okay? It's okay? All right. So you see, when we pray for the first time, faith is necessary because without faith our prayers will not get answered. So we have to pray with faith. Sometimes when we don't have faith, we do this thing of, you know, begging God, please, please, please, again and again, right? You ring the bell again and again, hopefully he'll open the door for us. But that's not what we are talking about. That's not what we are talking about. The first time we pray, we must have faith. How will we have faith? As long as we know that it is the will of God, the purpose of God, it's in the word of God, we'll have faith. Because if we ask according to his will, he hears us, right? We've already discussed that. So when the first time we pray, it's in the will of God and we believe that God will do it for us. But there are some prayers where we know that it may take time. So we may need to go back and keep expressing our desire for that to happen. For example, I told us when we pray for revival, so many of us we are praying for months, for years, our churches are praying, okay? For a long time, we can't stop praying because it's in the heart of God. But God also wants us to pray, that is co-laboring with God. There is value to that. It's not that we are begging God and he's not listening to us. That's not the picture. He's definitely listening to us but he wants somebody to labor in prayer. For these matters, that is why we must be persistent. That is why we need some patience. So in life, like the Israelites, like the people who receive the promises, those who receive the promises, the Bible tells us two things are required. Faith, patience. Without these, we will not inherit the promises of God. Both of these are necessary. Okay? So this is how we understand persistence in prayer. And Hebrews 1035, that's also a really nice scripture. Kindly turn to it. And who would like to read that? Who would like to volunteer? I can read, sister. Okay. It's already, Mike is already there. You read it. Next, you can pass it. Therefore, do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward. Okay. So what does it say? Therefore, do not throw away your confidence, which has great reward. It's just like Jesus speaking in Luke 18 and verse one. Therefore, men always ought to pray and not lose heart. Same way, Hebrews 1035, do not cast away your confidence, which has great reward. In other words, keep having faith in God. Keep hoping in God. Keep asking God. Keep trusting God. Keep praying. There will be a time when we will see the promises of God fulfilled. So what if, you know, you are convinced that this is God's plan and God will do it for me and you're like thoroughly convinced. But it's still taking time to see that plan fulfilled. How will we pray? Let's say we prayed by faith once. Okay. And then we continued praying in faith for like two months. But by that time, we already have revelation from God. We have promises, pictures, scriptures, everything. We are sure. 100% sure. But this matter will only happen one year later. You still have time, right? For the whole year. How to pray? Good. Praise. Yeah. So we must praise and thank God. You remember Abraham? Yeah. He gave glory to God. He gave thanks to God. So once we are convinced that something will be fulfilled, we must start thanking God. So we can spend time thanking God. And that is also prayer. That's also persistent prayer. You got it? So this is the way in which one must confidently continue in prayer and not give up. There are, you know, quite a number of scriptures in our notes that talk about continuing earnestly or continuing sincerely, continue sincerely in prayer. All right. Now, why is it that some matters take time? Why is it that some answers take time? Let's look at that question. What do you, what do you feel? What could be the reasons? Sister, because it's not in God's timing or God's will. God knows best. Okay. Okay. God knows best. Sister, it is not in God's timing. I can see that somebody is trying to answer online, but we can't hear a person. So sister, please excuse us today. There's some issue. We're not able to hear the audio of the online students. So if you don't mind, please type in the chat, then I can read out your question. So the question I'm asking is, why do some answers take time? God knows best. That's one answer. What else? Correct. Okay. For everything, there is a time that is observed in the way God works. God works very wisely according to His timetable. Okay. So that is one of the main reasons why certain answers don't come immediately. There is a timing. Remember, we talked about the appointed times of God or the Greek word is kyros. The kyros moments of God. So in God's time at the right time with even Bible even says Galatians 4 that the Lord Jesus he came in the fullness of time. If you go back to the book of Genesis, we'll see there that God created Adam and Eve and you know the serpent came deceived, but you find a promise of God in the book of Genesis where God says that the seed of the man will crush the head of the serpent. In Genesis, God said that that Satan will be defeated. It's way back. So once Genesis has happened we are wondering God when are you going to send the seed of Adam? Who is this seed of Adam who will come and crush Satan? Everyone's waiting for the promise of God, but in Galatians chapter 4 and verse 4 it says in the fullness of time God sent Jesus. So there was a timing like 2000 years had passed and then later you find that at a certain time Jesus Christ is being born. So we cannot function you know according to our own timetable there is a certain timetable that God has in mind. So there is God's timing we have to be patient enough to wait for God's timing for things to be fulfilled in our lives. This applies for everything. In personal life there is God's timing in ministry life there is God's timing you know we may start in the ministry and we may think by this time I should do all these great things and I should have a building and I should do I should go here go there but there is a timing we just have to patiently journey with God at the right time God will make all those things happen or how about the way the world functions or the way things happen in the nation there is a timing we are all aware that we are living in the last days or the last of the last days and there are so many things happening in the world we hear about matters that are going on in the world things are progressing according to God's time table ok so that is something we have to understand we must be patient and be understanding of God's timing if it is the right time to move we should know this is the time come on let's do this ok but maybe there are times when we have to wait at that time we should just wait trust God pray thank God and hold on for the right moment this is very very important this again is sort of discerning discernment from our side wisdom from our side God can give us that wisdom that we require so timing because of God's timing sometimes we feel that there are delays now what other reasons could be there why the answer doesn't come immediately any other reasons timing is one timing is ok ok maybe it's not according to God's will fine see your answer is right but because we have already understood that we should try as much as possible to pray according to God's will we are working with that in mind that we have already prayed according to God's will and still it's not happened according to God's will then you know it may not happen ok a lot of codes coming from Akhil today so God's delays are not God's deniers that's true but why are there delays one is timing God is testing us could be yes sorry he's building you up fine alright ok God is building us up that's also correct God is building us up any other reasons ok so Amman is saying that there is evil or there is the demonic kingdom they will try to stop the answers to prayers in our lives which is true it's true ok so we find in the book of Daniel Daniel chapter 10 verses 12 and 13 there is a situation where Daniel prays to God and God answers him immediately but the answer doesn't reach Daniel and he is fasting and praying for 21 days 21 days right for the answer to reach him why when God has already answered the moment he prayed God answered him but there was a demonic sort of interference which stopped the answer to from coming to him so in the same way in our lives there can be certain situations where it's not like God is not answering he has answered engage in a certain level of spiritual warfare ok so when we engage in spiritual warfare what happens you in this particular situation in the case where Daniel prayed God sent angels to fight the demonic rulers same way when we pray God is already granted this approved take it but the hindrance which is there because of demons as we pray what happens is that God will destroy that hindrance how he does it that's up to him but in the case of Daniel we see that angels go and they start fighting the demonic rulers that's when actually the answer is release to Daniel so these are all you know some points to keep in mind when there are delays maybe maybe there is some form of a hindrance in the answer from coming through while I agree like what Akhil said God's delays God's delays but even when we say God's delays I feel like God actually doesn't delay you know what I mean we are combining those two terms God's delays as if God is working late and you know God is postponing things and making it late for us he never does that he's always working on time but there are other factors in the picture which are the problem which we have to identify first is we must be discerning of timings is this the right time I'm asking God God you do this do this do this is it correct like can God do it now or is it meant to happen in another time and the second thing is yes I know God has answered me but I have to engage in spiritual warfare to destroy the works of the demons okay so that is the second thing the third one why there could be delays is some of the other points that all of you shared so just quickly look at the chart here I had asked the question why don't we receive immediate answers and there are responses a parmita says satan satan at work your sister Ghatru it's not in God's will and timing Jennifer God knows the timings Sanjay wrong motives in prayer yeah correct so we don't receive because we ask a miss the Bible says that's true then Jennifer God has a specific plan for us and in his timing our prayer according to his will will be answered according to the time that will be a great blessing for us maybe satan is responsible for the delay satan is hindering our prayers okay thank you so much for your responses as we've examined what you are saying is correct okay now timing we have some understanding about timing second is we have an understanding about demonic interference okay the third reason the third reason is God wants us to be fully obedient before we can see certain answers that was put in a different way by some of you I think Asapu said test yeah he said test and somebody said God is building a character that is true you know sometimes what God does is he allows us to go through a season where we are built up as a person as a believer as a child of God as a minister think about the life of Paul okay Apostle Paul you probably have done this in fulfilling God's purpose you know ministers foundation when Apostle Paul was called by God the historians say he was roughly around 30 33 years old yeah around that age so what will we think oh this person is already 30 something years old you start the ministry now your whole life you can serve God as long as you live so we are always in a hurry we want to do it immediately but when you study the life of Paul you understand that there were at least 16 years 16 to 17 years in the life of Apostle Paul which are called as silent years silent years where the Bible doesn't comment about it like what was he doing where was he serving what exactly happened not much information but what is going on in those years he's he his character is being developed as a minister of God he's being grounded in the doctrine of God's word he is ministering to people you know teaching the truth of God's word would that have been easy for Paul I don't think so 16 years nobody even knows the name you don't read up Paul at all you read in Acts 9 and then suddenly in Acts 11 again Paul comes back but in between like Acts 9, Acts 11 17 years so we may ask God God why are you delaying you know Paul is like your best candidate put him to work immediately let him start his work let him do all the missionary journeys God says I'm not in a hurry I need character to be built up in this individual so the greater the work it is said I'll give you one quote the greater the work the greater the preparation so God is not in a hurry he's happy to prepare us he's happy to allow us to go through that journey so that everything in us our knowledge our skills our character, our values standards all that is put in order to some extent obviously we're not saying perfection but to some extent some maturity when God sees that ok now you're ready you're mature come on start the work so God is waiting for that preparation God is waiting for that kind of obedience from our side only then he can say ok now you're ready come on do this till that time we may question God why are you not doing why are you not opening the door and God is saying you're not ready you need some more time to prepare yourself you need some more time to set everything right in your heart pray correctly the answer for that prayer comes so in various matters this happens the attitudes of our hearts becomes the problem well God wants to answer but maybe for example I'm praying for somebody to be blessed but in my heart I'm very judgmental about that person or I carry some kind of bitterness that person maybe on the surface I just prayed for them because they asked me to pray but deep within my heart I have unforgiveness, bitterness anger and then I'm asking God God why are you not answering my prayers God is saying your attitude is not correct that attitude needs to be set right within our heart so sometimes it's God's grace actually God is very gracious to us he allows time and he says this is the time I'm giving you where you can rectify change these matters within your heart so it tends to be the fact that we are not completing all obedience or we are not completing all God's requirements in order to walk through that open door or receive that blessing or see the fulfillment of that promise so even that can we are saying delay it's not because God is delay where is the delay on whose side is the delay it's our side so the faster we respond and yield to God the quicker the answers will come so these are all some of the reasons why there can be delays in our prayer we are talking a little bit more about persistence in prayer we already talked about Elijah you remember Elijah we said he is a prophet of God so he knew how to hear from God and he heard from God that there is going to be rain there is going to be drought so he already knows in 1st Kings chapter 18 he communicates it but we saw how he prayed isn't it he prayed seven times now the seven times is the persistence that we are talking about where even Elijah knew that he has to pray again and again and again for this particular matter for it to be fulfilled now if a man like Elijah and this is way back in the Old Testament today thank God we have the Bible in our hands we can read about all these people and get the wisdom from their lives but think about Elijah at that time you didn't even have the written copy of what scripture has to say but by insight and wisdom and revelation this man knew that there are some matters where one needs to pray repeatedly and that is why he prays and he even understands what is the time the moment he sees some manifestation he starts to move isn't it so that discernment Elijah had and the Bible teaches us in the book of James there is a scripture it's in James chapter 5 it's verse 17 where it says Elijah was a man with a nature like ours he prayed earnestly that it would not rain and it did not rain on the land for 3 years and 6 months and he prayed again and the heaven gave rain and the earth produced its fruit so what does it tell us it says Elijah was a man who are we we are human beings when it says Elijah was a man it simply means he was just a human being we are also just human beings but if Elijah could pray and it rained or there was drought on his word same thing is applicable to us today if we pray earnestly we can also see results so I am just going to stop here we can come back maybe have some discussions and then close off this chapter and we will move to the next chapter so we can stop now there are no questions so we will go for a break thank you
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UpLink Innovation Day
One year on from its launch, UpLink has acquired more than 17,000 registered users, over 1,000 solutions have been submitted to the online platform, and 100 companies and entrepreneurs have been recognised as UpLink Innovators. Join us from the World Economic Forum studio to hear directly from the innovators on their UpLink journey so far, their ventures s which address urgent global issues, and the upcoming Innovation Challenges soon to be launched on UpLink.
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2021-04-29T15:55:47
2024-02-05T06:31:24
3,224
pClOO9fpVqM
Welcome to Uplink Innovation Day. I'm Emanuella Orsini and I'm joining you from the World Economic Forum in Geneva. I'm very happy to be your moderator here today. We're celebrating Uplink's first birthday this month. It's one year since the launch of the World Economic Forum's open innovation platform, founded in partnership with Deloitte and Salesforce, where bright ideas can gain the visibility they need to become a reality. Uplink is a place where anyone, anywhere, can share their idea to make the world a better place and gain access to the resources, expertise and networks they need to have a global impact. It's also a place where investors, academics and other experts can find the next game-changing solution they'd like to get involved in. It's fine. The webcast for the thousands will be fine, I think. Over the next hour, we're going to learn about the real impact Uplink has had in its first year. Watch on the webcast, okay, Emanuella? Here are some numbers. I can't hear it though. Can you guys hear it? We've launched around 20 challenges and over a thousand ideas have been submitted to the platform. We're now working closely with over 100 innovators to help scale their solutions and maximize their impact. We're currently running 13 open Uplink challenges for solutions on topics like deforestation, protecting ocean ecosystems, clean air, the circular economy, and fighting COVID-19, with many more planned in the coming months. We'll be announcing two of them at the end of this event, so stay tuned for that. We're going to be hearing from two innovators who recently began their Uplink journey. They'll tell us a little bit about their innovation and what they hope to achieve in the future. We'll also talk to one Uplink innovator who has been with us from the start about the impact the platform has had on her company and the global challenge she's working to solve. But first, let's watch a video about Uplink's journey so far. Two startups of young people. Planetary boundaries are crashing with dire implications on health, on the quality of life, and these are systemic issues. We all could be tremendous platforms for change. We all could imagine a better, safer, healthier, more equitable, more sustainable world. We can do it together. We must use this moment to truly catalyze change. Quartolio helped researchers find cures and treatments that they wouldn't otherwise have been able to find. We've developed a technology that can take seawater converted into drinking water through the photons of the sun. We're exploring how we can unite art, science and local communities to accelerate marine restoration. Being part of a platform like Uplink and benefiting from the exposure that this platform has was a real game changer. So to kick things off, I want to introduce you to one of Uplink's very first innovators. She's been with us since the beginning of the platform. Elise Van Middlem, CEO of SUGI, welcome to our first Innovation Day. Thank you for having me, Manuela. Now SUGI is an app that lets anyone anywhere plant a small forest in urban areas. Tell me more. I was one of these people overwhelmed by the ecological problem. I wanted to make an impactful contribution, but I couldn't quite find the answer that satisfied me. I was looking at all these tree planting organizations, many of which are monoculture, and they actually also are doing harm sometimes and not always restorative. And I thought, you know, I'd like to find the solution that allows me to track and stay connected to my forest. I wanted to follow the journey and be part of the story. And I remember reading about Miyawaki Method. It's amazing. It's 100 times more biodiverse, 100% natural, 30 times denser compared to conventional tree planting. And I thought, that's it. I'd like to create a platform that allows anyone anywhere to plant these ultra dense biodiverse forests in urban spaces. So what is the Miyawaki Method? Can you tell us a bit more about that? Certainly. So Dr. Kiyomiyawaki, a botanist, pioneered this method 40 years ago in Japan. It's been hugely successful. He's planted over 3,000 forests himself. The basic idea of the method is that we mimic ancient forests. So if you think about it, most cities are built upon forests, and it's the idea of bringing them back within our environment. That's why we call it rewilding our lives. And the way we plant the forest is that we start with the soil, we bring back natural ingredients to the soil, and then we plant three to five trees on a square meter. So ultra dense. Plant shrubs up to three canopy and four layers. And for that, we really have to understand how natural forests function, what are the percentages, and we plant native species. And so what are the benefits of having these tiny small forests in urban areas? The benefits are, as you can imagine, on both levels, not only scientifically or climate-related, but also on a human level. For climate, they're fantastic. Because of the density, they really allow, as a sound barrier, they're really great for temperature reduction on heat islands. They are also phenomenal with stormwater mitigation, because the forest floor acts like a sponge, absorb a normal amount of water. And then, of course, there is the carbon capture. But now on a human level, because of that density, it allows also for biodiversity to come back at rapid pace. Small birds and mammals, that is already an incredible moment for human being when you're in a forest and you hear a song where just your senses, everything calms down. And an idea of having that close to you, and if you're in an office and you can go and have lunch in your small urban forest, what would you rather do, stay at your desk or go into the forest? So, yeah, that's the idea, just bring it back to the people. And especially this year, with the COVID-19 pandemic, there's been an urge and need to be closer to green spaces. 100%. I think there's not one magazine or paper you open, or there's something written about the healing effects of urban space. In Japan, they speak about it already for a long, long time. The forest, Shinryuoka, you know, that idea of forest baiting, 10 minutes in a forest really can reset so many of your senses and just reconnect us. We're also constantly, all the time, connected to technology and just to be surrounded by the forest being alive. You know, it's a sensation, yeah. And so some of your projects also have these healing effects for certain communities. Can you tell us a bit more about those? Yeah, certainly. In Chile right now, we're still in the midst of raising the funds, but there we're going to create Healing Islands within the Children's Hospital. It's one of the most emblematic hospitals in Santiago. And that idea will be to not only create medicinal herbs within the forest, but also allow for meditation spaces. Again, because of the density, you can really feel wrapped around the forest. Now, in the U.S., for example, we planted a healing forest with the Yakamination. It's a native tribe on the east of Seattle in Topanish. And the idea of the forest there was really reconnect the tribe to their roots in a way, you know, bring back what was once there. Plant a forest that not only will allow them to do the gathering with the medicinal herbs, but also have, you know, that idea of bonding, you know, to plant a forest with a correctional facility is quite a moving and powerful moment now. Very powerful healing and moving as well, as you mentioned. So how many of these forests have you planted and where in the world? So we started with the first forest, actually, almost two years ago in Beirut. That was quite a feat, because if you think about it, Beirut was actually, it's a forest on a landfill. I think we took over 300 liters of plastic. Today, that forest, the soil is almost like an ancient forest. Because of the technique, actually, you speed up the process of the forest soil. And in 10 years, you have a 100-year-old forest. So from that forest, today, we have about 90 projects in the portfolio. I mean, one project will be 200 schools in India, so many more projects. But, yeah, we planted about 80, yeah. Oh, that's incredible. So now you've been on uplink for over a year. How has it been, and can you tell us a bit about the impact that it had on Sugi? Yeah, I mean, it's been an incredible journey. Also, to have or to be part of this community within this year, where we're all locked inside, I mean, locked inside. We were lucky in Switzerland to be able to get out. It was very bonding to actually be able to exchange with the cohort members all doing incredible work in their field, allowed also to see that we're not alone in this. It's very motivating, I will say. And then something that happened to us, and there was a really quite incredible uplink allowed us to create a video. So with that video, we got enormous amount of visibility. We had incoming requests for forest from Kazakhstan to Kenya, from Manila. Chile actually, the team in Chile came through the video that they saw on uplink. And with that growing demand for this forest, we thought, OK, what do we do now? And so it allowed us actually to create a Sugi fellowship. So with that fellowship, we'll allow anyone anywhere to become a Sugi forest maker, trained in the Milwaukee Method by our expert forest makers, because we have now a network of 22 forest makers around the world. And we'd like to expand that rapidly. Oh, that's great. So you're expanding. And you've also collaborated with some other cohort members that are part of uplink. We're in the midst of actually creating collaboration. So Sarah and Tanzania, we had a fantastic exchange. I mean, definitely in Dar es Salaam, there's this opportunity to re-wild and this need. Because again, as I mentioned, these forests, because of their density, they're fantastic for heat island productions in cities, storm water medication, very necessary in these cities. So yeah, we're excited. That's incredible. So now what's next for Sugi? What's next? As we just discussed, you know, further expand the network, further build the stories, because this is where we really want to go the extra mile. It's really understand why are we planting a forest there? What are the benefits? What can you do to the community? So when you go on to our website, you can always see that the way we tell the story, you have all the details, also the geotag and the images of the plant. That takes some extra time, because we'd like to expand that growth of the forest. But then it's the UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration coming up. In June, it's going to be launched. So we're excited to be part of it as an official partner. So there's a lot to be done around biodiversity and ecosystem restoration. Well, best of luck. Thank you. And thank you so much for joining us here in the studio on Uplink's first Innovation Day. Thank you for having me. Now let's meet some of the most recent innovators to join the Uplink community, two of which participated in our recent ocean and circular economy challenges. Joining me from SACO, based in Maine in the U.S., is Brianna Warner, CEO of Atlantic Sea Farms, and from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Zafri Zainuddin, CEO of Sticks Fresh. Now, Zafri, let's start with you. Sticks Fresh created a safe, natural sticker which can make fruits stay fresh two to three times longer, up to 21 days. Where did this idea come from? The idea started in, I'm not mistaken, in 2015 or 2016. So during that day, I was involved in fruit business and also owned a fruit farm. And also I was surrounded by friends and family that sell fruits. And when we, you know, like doing some gathering, meet up, one of the hard topics of the discussion is the shelf life problem and also the food waste. So during that time as well, most of fruits has a sticker on it, right, that represent branding and also have a very small QR code for traceability system. So actually that sparked the idea of using a sticker as a material that can extend the shelf life of the fruits. So how does this exactly work and what is the material made out of? Basically, we created a formulation from natural resources or it's extracted from plant that has anti-fungal effect. Yeah, but how does it work, right? So generally, plants produce a compound that can protect themselves from any harmful environmental condition. So what we essentially did is we repurposed that compound and applied it on the top of the stickers. When you stick stick pressed stickers on the fruit, it will create a protective barrier around the fruits and will make your fruit fresh longer up to three to four times longer. Now let's go to you, Brianna. What was the idea behind Atlantic Sea Farms? I started working with the company in about 2018. It was the first commercial seaweed farm in the country in 2009, which is a really neat claim to fame. But what I was really doing, I come from the world of economic development and we here on the coast of Maine have a coast that is almost completely dependent on the lobster fishery. And as Zafri said, he stated kind of this problem statement also this opportunity statement of that region of the world grows so much of the world's fruit. Well, here in Maine, we don't have a lot of diversity, but we do have a lot of lobster. And it's really the only way that people are able to make. They're living along the coast in some of these coastal areas. Having said that, the Gulf of Maine is warming faster than 99% of oceans in the entire world. And so that industry, even though it is very conservation minded, it is not overfished, is really threatened by the continual climate change. So right now, people are still doing pretty well. They have pretty big boats. It's an owner operator fishery where everyone, if you're on your boat, you fish that boat that day. There's no like fleets of boats. So the challenge statement is the water is warming. The opportunity statement is there's a lot of people with a lot of equipment right now that have a lot of social capital on the water that know what they're doing on the water and that only fish two or three seasons a year and aren't doing a whole lot in the winter without equipment. And so kelp farming, which happens in the winter, can be a perfect supplemental income source as the lobster industry becomes increasingly volatile because of the climate change. At the same time, it also helps remove carbon and nitrogen from the water. So it's both a mitigation strategy as well as an adaptation strategy for climate change. And then what we do is we turn it into value added products that people want to eat. Because if people don't want to eat it, we can grow it all day. It doesn't matter. So we turn it into products that people actually want to eat that people are excited about. And so we can kind of drive that demand and therefore amplify our impact back on the coast. So what does kelp taste like? Is it delicious? Do you have any recipes to share with us? Yeah, so here in the United States, people don't love loud flavors. It's not something we know for throughout the world. I think anyone can know that about us here. So what we try to do is, you know, take kelp and seaweed and make it into products that are really accessible, really easy to use. You don't necessarily have to know how to cook to use them. So our products range from things like kelp cubes, which are pureed blanched kelp. These bright green cubes are bright green, not because they have any dyes, because they have nothing in them, but because they get blanched in water. And then people put them in their smoothies, pastos, those kind of things. To fermented seaweed salad, which is a fermented product that is fresh, all fresh kelp. We never jar anything. And it's got that kind of like taste of that bright green seaweed salad that's ubiquitous throughout the world, except without the dyes and without dehydrating it and then rehydrating it. So our products are basically meant so that any pun in the U.S. can just stick a fork into it or stick it into a blender and eat it and not be sort of overpowered by the flavor. Now Zafri, you recently changed your business model. Can you tell us a little bit more about that? Basically, before this, we are aiming to approach B2B market because we're helping companies to reduce their food waste using our stickers, right? So after our video will be published by the uplink in combination with the WEF World Economic Forum, we receive a lot of questions from all of our industry, especially our green industries, retailers, distributors. And the interesting part is the consumers are starting to reach out first. They want their experience on using these stickers by themselves actually. So what are some of the reactions you've gotten from the public? I think your video has gotten millions of views. Yeah, basically one of the best reactions is people want to use these stickers in their home, in their house, right? So they want to use in their vegetables as well as smaller types of fruits such as grapes and also strawberries, right? So we are very close to, right? One finding, you know, every fruit and every fruit used up there will have steep price technology to eat, to extend shelf life. All types of fruits make the fruits more accessible to a place or to a community that has never been accessed before. And as well, of course, reducing the food waste starts from the fridge at your home. Now Brianna, we haven't produced your video yet because you're one of the most recent joiners. What do you hope to gain by being a member of uplink? Yeah, I mean, like you said, we're just at the beginning on our part with uplink. Like Zafri, I'm being part of an ecosystem where people are doing really innovative work. I mean, our food system is broken and the people that you have involved in this project are people, not just in food but elsewhere, who are trying to fix systems and to revolutionize systems that have really denigrated not only the planet but our health. And I think that it's really exciting to be part of this group and meeting people like Zafri who are making a substantial difference as small and as big at the same time as a sticker or a kelp. You know, this is stuff that it's just very practical and it makes sense and there are changes that can actually make a difference and that's what gets me excited about being part of this community. Now Zafri, what are some of the needs of Sticks Fresh right now? You know, as for us as an early stage company here in Malaysia, actually we need a group of people who can help us especially expertise in a variety of ways to bring our technology in the market properly and aggressively and we see uplink can help us succeed on that. I would say uplink is a mass-joined platform for innovators, entrepreneurs out there to connect with the industry player, decision makers as well as we can share our views, comment and contribute to our ideas, especially in SDG and strategies. Now Brianna, if an investor is listening to this program, what would you tell them are your needs right now for your business? Yeah, so right now we're actually going into funding round right now mostly because we are moving into a new facility but also, you know, we're in kind of a cramped space right now but also because we're trying to bring on more marketing and sales team to make our products more efficient to create because what we really want to do is get kelp on everything. You know, it's not this isn't just about somebody eating our fermented seaweed salad or kelp cubes which is great but I want our kelp powder and I want our kelp puree to be in soup brands that have nothing to do with kelp on the shelf because it's got umami in it and they want to do the right thing. I want it to be in crackers. I want it to be in drinks. I want it to be everywhere so that you walk into the grocery store and there's 2% of, you know half of the products in there have some kelp in it because with us it's not the bottom line of making money although we need to be profitable in order for us to succeed and that's key I mean in order for our farmers to be taken care of but every time someone eats some of our kelp I am getting another fisherman in the water and right now we have an incredible sense of urgency as the climate warms to give people a different way to work on the water or else 30, 40 years from now the coast of Maine which is a microcosm of a bigger problem of what our coastal communities can look like across the world as the climate changes because those coastal communities are going to feel at first you know if we can come up with solutions before there's disaster then we've done something very right in economic development and I think if we can prove out that proof of concept this kind of thing not necessarily with kelp but with other products can be done or with other ways of thinking and other ways of farming can be done across the world so we're urgently working to kind of prove out this proof of concept and we have to get the product you know price point down we have to get it out there to everybody we need the marketing to get people to know what kelp is and then that's really where we're raising money to continue to kind of amp up that impact Thank you so much to both of you for being with us here today it was a pleasure talking to you and all the best thanks for being with us and we'll see you next time on Uplink it's now time to reveal our two new challenge areas this is an opportunity for you if you have a big idea to solve one of these problems to submit it to Uplink and join our network of innovators the first is the generation restoration youth eco-preneurship challenge this is a search for nature-based solutions which are either run by young entrepreneurs or are aimed at benefiting young people the solutions are open until June 15th let's take a look at what that's all about to truly conserve and restore our world we'll need fleets of unreasonable optimists and that's you so if anyone has any ideas or even before an idea a passion to restore our world conserve our biodiversity I encourage you all to apply for the one trillion trees challenge and spread the word I see eco-preneurship having a great role when it comes to tackling the climate crisis and especially when it comes to improving the quality of our environment because we are looking at eco-solutions solutions that are not harming the planet now we are the stakeholders of the future so if there's going to be urgency there's going to be action happening it has to come from the generation that is seeing that it's going to be the most affected and whose children are going to be the most affected Joining me now is Ariana Day-Un CEO of Forested Foods our youth eco-preneur representative in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and from Salesforce one of uplink's founding partners and a sponsor of this challenge Suzanne Dibianca who joins us from California welcome to the both of you thank you thanks it's great to be here great so Suzanne let's start with you tell us a bit about this challenge and why is Salesforce launching it yeah we're really really excited to launch the challenge I think these uplink challenges we have really unearthed some incredible innovators over the over the years that we've done them and for me you know and for the planet really this is the decade of action around climate and we both have to reduce emissions which is why Salesforce is a net zero company and we have a great product called sustainability that helps people reduce and track their own emissions but we also have to sequester carbon it's why we launched along with you at the World Economic Forum went T.org earlier in the year and we know that nature race solutions are super powerful and we know that young people are driving this movement so you know we won't be effective if we just sort of count trees on the platform but we do know that big key component is how many young people are able to do successful businesses like Ariana and impact the ecosystem overall so really excited for generation restoration Great. Now Ariana we saw you in the video earlier you're an ecopreneur you founded your own organization can you tell us a bit about it and why it was important for you to start this organization Sure so Forested Foods is an early purpose is to combat deforestation which we do by building and working with networks of small holder forest communities to earn more from conservation based agroforestry so we produce things with our partner farmers like forest honeys spices gums resins and fruits we're essentially trying to build the cargill for deforestation free and regenerative agriculture products starting in Ethiopia but hopefully expanding across the global south of things I think I never really you know saw myself as an entrepreneur my whole life I think at heart I'm just like a big problem solving nerd and after I got my first experiences learning about agriculture and emerging markets small holder farming and food supply chains and really just seeing how food systems don't work as well as they need to in favor of people on the planet to really you know define deforestation and really building a nature-based solution to climate change just became the issue that I found was incredibly complex and the one that I really wanted to throw my own energy and resources behind so Suzanne why is it important for Salesforce to invest and promote youth entrepreneurship because this challenge is all focused on youth-based solutions well I think youth are really driving this movement I mean I've been inspired by so many people to help the world wake up and like Arianna I was really inspired by Felix who is incredible entrepreneur started nine years old an organization called plant for the planet and you know he has he's now 23 years old he's planted billions trees 14 billion I think and you know think of a scale that we'd be able to unlock if we can just you know meet youth where they are and really put wind in their sails I think that this is where I'm inspired this is the generation where climate change is going to impact more than you know anything is in future generations so you know we have to get behind these incredible young people and enable them yeah and Arianna why do you think it's important for your generation to be so involved so I think there's a few reasons so the first one might be a little sad but I think you know you will have a longer time with on and in our earth and so it's reasonable to assume that you know there should be more mass buy-in and urgency for our generation to make sure that our ecosystems, natural resources really our home and basic needs like air, water and food can sustain our generation and future generations to come the second thing is that there's a higher proportion of idealists in our demographic you can call it the reality is that the world needs it climate change is you know an incredibly overwhelming daunting topic and it can be really paralyzing and so you almost need this unreasonable level of optimism and people who persist in an uphill battle to really restore the earth and I think the last reason is that environmental issues both systemic drivers of them and solutions are incredibly intersectional environmental issues intersect with politics economic and dynamics locally globally and you know what that means is that we'll need more collaboration than ever to restore our environment and no generation has had as much access to the tools platforms and technology to do so than today's youth So uplink definitely is one of these platforms Suzanne what will Salesforce and uplink offer some of the entrepreneurs or all the ideas that are coming through for one it's a huge connect the dots moment with other entrepreneurs that are working in this space with businesses that are making a difference you know we have technology to offer we have 60,000 incredibly passionate employee volunteers that I know would love to be of assistance and you know we have a France program that gets behind some of the nonprofits we have an impact to get behind some of the for-profits so you know we're just one company but I think the key power in unlocking these kind of innovators is sort of connecting them with companies like Salesforce but at scale and Ariana what advice would you have for any entrepreneurs or I would say ecopreneurs that would like to submit their solution for this challenge I would say do it stick with it whatever it takes to finalize the solution I think you know applying for a lot of these competitions and programs that can be quite overwhelming and time-consuming but I think a program like this being able to get the support of companies like Salesforce you know organizations like the World Economic Forum is just an incredible opportunity and a lot of you know the good work that we're all doing really needs you know that amplifying effect thank you so much to the both of you for joining us today thank you good luck to everyone who applies the next challenge that we are officially launching in May is the World Class Education Challenge the COVID-19 pandemic has sent shockwaves around the world highlighting and in many parts of the world widening the global education inequality gap this new challenge is looking for solutions focusing on equitable access to education investment in teachers and skills for the future submissions are open until June 18th let's watch a video to learn more about the competition Education is a building block for a strong well functioning society it is required for long-term economic growth it provides the tools needed to solve a set of social political and economic problems and crises uplink will enable Deloitte and the public to identify bold high impact ideas and approaches to address the global education challenges now is a young voice in education Ilana Milkis the founder of World Tech Makers in Bogota, Colombia as well as Michelle Parmoli from Deloitte our founding partner and sponsor of this challenge welcome Ilana Michelle now Michelle let's start with you why is it important for Deloitte to have solutions for the future of education Education is fundamental to progress it empowers and it uplifts but COVID-19 has disrupted students education worldwide 1.6 billion children were out of school at the height of the pandemic educational inequality was an issue well before COVID and the pandemic has only widened the learning gap unless the impact is taken now this moment could be a year of lost learning and growing education and equity but there is also room for optimism this past year has illustrated the possibilities for learning in the future we saw schools and educators adapt their teaching we saw students learning in new ways and this is inspired Deloitte and the forum to launch this challenge to improve education opportunity for more billion children that step into the classroom each day this will be the first challenge on uplink to address sustainable development goal number four we have an opportunity to identify innovations that are delivering results for students and determine what we can scale we will look for solutions in Africa and Asia where most of the world's children and youth will live and learn over the next decade we want to find equitable access for students who are being left behind models that invest in teachers and educators helping to bridge the gap between what is taught in the classroom and the jobs of the future this challenge builds upon Deloitte's world-class ambition to support 100 million individuals to access equality education skills and opportunities by 2030 our primary goal is to prepare people for the jobs and opportunities of the future we don't want our world's youth to be left behind by the workforce of tomorrow and how will Deloitte support innovators and their ideas so it is clear that we need to accelerate progress towards the sustainable development goals based on current trends it may take until 2073 to achieve these goals young people will be the most impacted by an action today as an employer as a global citizen we believe business must play a role in addressing these issues particularly inequality of opportunity but we don't have all the answers to make an impact we must collaborate across sectors with the leading innovators in the space and that's why I'm so excited to be able to leverage the power of the uplink platform to surface solutions to education inequity we will invite the selected innovators to a year long program led by Deloitte and supported by global education experts to scale and advance their impact we want to work hand in hand with the innovators to bring their ideas to life and scale their solutions we will provide mentoring we will bring leading practices from the business sector and we will work with them both on their clients but on a pro bono basis we aim to partner with education leaders and innovative thinkers who are deeply committed to making a positive difference and that's why we're joined by Alana Milquez the founder of world tech makers who Deloitte has supported as one such leader who is positively impacting education in Colombia so Alana let's go to you now can you tell us a bit more about world tech gaps you've seen in education yeah thank you so at world tech makers we're free to prove in education on three verticals so one we focus on personalization of learning to make sure everyone receives a personalized learning route we're also focused on access so just to give you an example in Colombia 70% of the schools are rural and only 16% of that 70% have internet access so covid that gap and we're focusing on narrowing it down and the third vertical is relevancy most of the jobs of the future haven't been invented yet and we believe that we need to make sure the skills that are being acquired and learned by the students are relevant for the next 10 years yeah so can you tell us a bit about what are those skills that are needed for the future of education yeah so we focus on different categories from digital to cognitive to personal to emotional skills social we have this technology called digital DNA where we understand learners and provide learning routes so that they can receive personalized opportunities in terms of content but also job connection and we do this leveraging different technologies like online learning and also adaptive AI so what advice would you give to other entrepreneurs who maybe want to participate in this challenge yeah well first think about awesome partners like Deloitte second think outside of the box I think the future needs us to think beyond what's already there and third focus on applying and of course like doing teamwork to face all the challenges we have in the next decade great well thank you both so much for joining us here today for uplink innovation day I want to thank you all for joining us here today for uplink innovation day whether you're an innovator investor or expert I hope you'll become a part of the uplink community as we continue to grow and find solutions for real change if you're not already a member make sure you sign up to uplink by scanning the QR code on the screen which will direct you to our uplink app thanks again thank you
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UC1dlmB1lup9RwFQBSGnhA-g
Mycroft Dev Sync 20201202
How can you get involved with Mycroft? Download it and join the conversation on our forum! https://mycroft.ai/get-mycroft/ https://community.mycroft.ai/
[ "#opensource", "#opensourceai", "#ai", "#voice", "#artificialintelligence", "#machinelearning", "#hardware", "#software", "#linux", "#foss", "#mycroftai", "#python", "#coderslife", "#devlife", "#iot", "#design", "#designthinking" ]
2020-12-03T21:54:41
2024-03-04T14:50:18
1,174
pCv_dEMf10c
Welcome, it is December 2nd. This is the Minecraft Developer Sync. And we're just going to go around real quick and check on everybody's status. Giz, how's it going? Yep, you went through the Pantscore, you went through vocal images showing the GUI and some minor fixes on the back end, which means that all the Minecraft CLI and all those tools are now working again, which is good. So, and Ken's got his PR up, so I think once we get that in, it should work. The Wi-Fi Connect is not wired up yet, but they're working on that at the moment, and then we'll get back to the things like the UDEP rules and those little things, which should theoretically be fairly quick. Okay, was there a problem with the Wi-Fi Connect? I thought that was the next thing on the list from yesterday. Yeah, they were working on it yesterday, and I thought they were going to have it done by the end of the day, but I didn't have something working this morning, so presumably not. But they're asleep now, I'm sure. Right. Okay, but no, you don't know of any blockers that have come up. That's just taking longer than expected. All right. What's important for me, by the way, is that they get them so they can boot off of a USB drive, since I can't burn an SD card here without going out in mine. All right. Well, hey, Josh, you're next on the list, so do you want to go now? I broke my touchscreen. So yesterday we had a good sit-down in the afternoon and came up with a long list of questions that needed executive action. Forward those on to Michael for consideration and action, and then the decision was made to go ahead and start moving forward with getting dev kits shipped. Gez has asked me to make sure to let everybody on this call know that the dev kits will be in people's hands by December 24th, so please feel free to buy them and give them to your family for Christmas. No, we still don't have an actual ship date. We're targeting the end of this year or early next year provided that we can get all of the stuff that is coming in. The decision was made to ship the dev kits as three separate SKUs, the basic dev kit that folks bought on the Kickstarter, the basic dev kit with a camera is the second skew, and then an advanced dev kit that includes laser cut parts and resonating chambers and additional driver and all of the other goodies that allow you to actually open up a box and assemble this, so that will be available to folks who are interested in upgrading from the basics. And then I had a good meeting with Derek about all of these parts that he's been going, so that has now been handed off to the business development team. And finally, they got new resonating chambers printed. We're trying to get these to the point where they can be printed as an easy to do print. There's still some quality issues with infill and some overhangs that are properly supported, but we're getting very close to having something that you can just stick on an FDM with no support and hit print and it goes. So that's very exciting. When that's it, it's still early in the day. I'm looking forward to spending the afternoon on the phone with China and Taiwan and starting to get all this stuff moving through the door. We have a product, so I'm excited and I hear through the grapevine that we'll have an image in the next short period of time. It has been promised in the near term that I've been working with developers long enough to know that that's not always the case. It's not over. Tell it's over. So, all right. Well, thanks, Josh. Chris Vair. What did we decide on? Well, I have spent last 24 hours. I went through, excuse me, I went through JIRA and I talked to Michael about my next project. So I went through JIRA and did a little cleanup while I was waiting to talk to him. There's a new epic called account management. One of the things on my desk is going to be to make sure all the bugs and little things that are niggles with account management get solved. So onboarding is a good experience or a better experience is already good. So I went through all of our tickets. I also close a bunch of them. There are a bunch of key me tickets I closed because as won't do because we've mostly abandoned that. So that kind of stuff. I did a lot of that. Today was a lot of meetings. I talked to Michael a lot today about metrics and user management and what we're going to do with the memberships going forward. So that's the kind of stuff I'll be working on coming up. And I also talked to Ken a little bit about the API call on providing him for precise model training. So I just need to give him some examples of how to call that endpoint and then you'll give that some testing. And tomorrow we'll be trying to implement a couple key metrics. Josh is maybe listening. One of them being daily user activity. So once those are done, then I'll start doing some of the other things. I thought you'd enjoy that, Josh. Once he starts doing that, then I'll start doing some design work on the new account management stuff that I talked about today. All right. Sounds good. Ken, how goes it? Fine. As Chris mentioned, I went over some of the API stuff with him and I'll be moving on to that probably tomorrow. I spent the day getting the pull request actually working because, you know, it was working on my device, but my device turned out had artifacts from an old code line. So when I finally got my new pull request up, my new branch up, and then overwrote everything on my system with that branch, there were breakages, which really surprised me because I figured that would have got caught in Voight-com for in the build process. There was like missing modules and it was throwing exceptions. So I don't know why it built cleanly and I got a clean bill of health. We'll have to look at that moving forward. But yeah, so I actually got everything working on here. Just because you have an image doesn't mean it's going to work. I have no idea if the VF control USB that we have for 64-bit will run on their 64-bit image or not. So there's that sort of stuff. There's permissions regarding being able to run a pseudo. I have an easy fix where I can give you a one line to add to your pseudo errors until the Udev's done. But the point is it's going to be a little bit of a hump. So that's why I'm kind of pushing to get this code into the next build and then I'll recreate the image on this device here from the Panicor stuff clean and be in the same boat as everybody else. So that's kind of what's going to be consuming me is tracking still on the Panicor stuff and getting that build working on our devices and then moving over into the new training stuff and building out some code. I mean right now that stuff is a very simple script and what I really want to do is break it into a Python file so that each of the decision points calls out to decision makers. They can be really simple now and say if the file count new file count is greater than 100 that's great but at least it'll be a placeholder and then later we can enhance that and expand it to the actual balancing algorithms and stuff. So I'll be working on that and again looking at the closely at the Panicor stuff. Yes, when do you think you'll have the pull requests that I put up there merged into feature slash mark dash two because I'm assuming that that will be magically available the next time I go to burn an image, right? I'm muted. That's yeah that's right. I think there's just I want to just make sure that yeah it's it's it's all working so there's a couple of little things we'll need to change that I mentioned in the chat just before. Yeah, the off you're going to have to talk to them about if you don't want it in the main config, right? Sorry what was that? The opt config if you want me to pull that out of the main config and put it there you'll deal with Panicor about that. Yeah yeah so we'll put that in the in the etc config in the device level config. I also yeah I just want to like pull out like the vf control usb driver you know we don't want that in core and then there's some like where do you want to pull it in? Well at the moment we're just going to have to put it in the build recipe but but I also would see that build recipe is going to come from it's going to have to pull it from some static asset location, right? Yeah the file's got to live somewhere. Yeah so I think I think we'll throw it in like micro-off devices for the moment until we get the actual how. Well why don't we why don't we do this why don't we leave things as they are on that pull request for now and let's get this working and then what we can do is we can go back since we're going to have a bunch of other things that probably have to be altered for the Panicor build and we can get all those at the same time rather than holding the process up at this point until we can get the opt config deploy and until we can get all the others. Just if we eventually want to merge. You guys can problem solve one-on-one. I appreciate that you're eager to solve problems but let's get to that right after this meeting. Two comments, well questions I guess. Ken, that the VK test didn't catch things and said that your pull request was good when it was not is concerning so. I don't think the VK test runs on that PR so because it's not going into our mainline code and I just had a quick look. Okay so it didn't run at all that was the thing got it. Okay well that's good and maybe something to look at. Well wait a minute I'm not sure that's true. Well I thought in my thing it did run. Okay well that's another thing to look into then because it really should catch those things and then the other thing was yeah I mean ultimately I don't want to you know pollute core anymore than it already is right. We should be I mean I think we discussed putting all the driver stuff in the in the HAL repository and that VF control should be built from source right it shouldn't be a binary file so. Well wait a minute wait a minute so this was my response back to guess which is the HAL is a concept right now. Yeah. So don't speak of it as if it's a tangible object. Okay well you know it's like well we should get this in the HAL well we don't have a HAL right the point is we don't have a working image. I'd like to get a working image from PanaCore that I know is not going to work until I have a chance to spend a day or two with it and then back and forth repartee with them to get that stuff in the process. And so all I'm recommending is we get it working first we can worry about optimizing it and making it look pretty and extra spaces and changing the names after it's functionally working. I thought I heard somebody saying they wanted to send out dev kits sometime this year. All right I just want to make sure that that this doesn't become another one of those artifacts that we're you know gnashing our teeth about. It sure does sound like it's not going to get overlooked. So you can spend an awful lot of time picking things like this. I mean we really need to get you know some traction we need to get some images out there we need to get the product in people's hands I actually have a luxury all right all right all right and we need more skills. I wonder if we I wonder if we actually intentionally never merge this into you know if the aim is to not merge this into mainline like we put it in the feature branch but instead of merging that feature branch into mainline we should be pulling most of that all that stuff out to the how for the production release. There you go so let's just go ahead and get this image built and get everything working on this branch. We can worry about merging in the master town stream when we have something working that we want to merge. All right okay so it sounds like you're still wrestling with some of those issues and you're not going to be able to get to the wakeboard stuff for you know no no no no that's wrong I'm done I'm now blocked by Panicor and having a working USB bootable image from Panicor that fires up and does wi-fi and gotcha okay so you are moving out of the wakeboard stuff now but you said something that concerns me so is it the intent moving forward that things like vf control usb and possibly the kernel driver will be built at on-demand and not having a binary elf created and then that deployed because if that's the case then we need to again that probably falls on Panicor but we need to communicate that to somebody. Yeah let's talk about that I mean there was a make file concept that we talked about in each of those HAL directories but as you pointed out we don't have those yet but there's going to be a lot of you know firmware and stuff like that that needs to be captured and maybe get updated you know from time to time so we need to make sure that that stuff is is getting built properly. Yeah so basically the the status for me is unblocked until Panicor has a USB bootable 64-bit image that I can then see if our stuff works on and if not get it working on it so while I'm blocked I will go off and work on the wakeboard stuff because there's going to be some you know uptime I haven't worked on that in two months it's pretty complicated I got to get back in and look at the documents I put on wiki and get my bearing so yeah I'll move on to that. Sounds good right thanks Derek. All right so yeah I had a good Josh mission to sorry but a good meeting talking about how we move forward ordering parts so I kind of handed off this is kind of what we're working with now and you know I talked about you know we could maybe shave some costs off and we negotiate here and here or you know explore this alternative parts for a couple of things so Josh and Chris and Johnny thankfully for me have offered to to take that off my plate and to start that problem which leaves me to work more on you know documentation and continuing to tweak and refine things so that's mostly what I'm working on today is getting things ready to talk to a possible assembler solution tomorrow so I sent out an invite for that just a little bit ago haven't hurt back yet but I hope they've been working something out he's got the parts I sent them overnight so he should have those to evaluate and I've been working on other things to kind of describe what that is in terms of pictures and documentation and stuff. Yeah so we continue to do that and then based on Josh and Josh's conversations I do have a couple revisions that I'm going to try and make pretty quick to mostly audio chamber so I'll be working on that tomorrow as well so I can just get that done and then start a test print the idea there would be to try and get the audio chamber down at just one part which could save us a cool box and then so some possibly don't need adhesive such so yeah that's me for today and tomorrow. Awesome okay thanks as for me I think pretty much everything I've touched in the last today has been covered by somebody else Chris Vair I've been working with and prepping for earlier today and then I've been in meetings all day with Josh and other people so so that's pretty much it for me we have yeah we're moving on to some discussions with the people who are going to be doing fulfillment hopefully tomorrow so that's something to look forward to and yeah so still looking forward to getting my getting the software deployed on my device here so eerily awaiting that but sounds like things are going we're moving and there's a chance that we'll we'll you know get these things out by the end of the year but that's certainly not a promise and especially given the holidays in the covid situation but but we are ordering parts now so it is in process that's it we'll talk again tomorrow thanks everybody guys are you and I supposed to result
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Family Theater - In Shining Armor
Family Theater - 09/05/51, episode 236 OTRR version 2302 This episode provided by the Old Time Radio Researchers
[ "1951", "Old Time Radio" ]
2023-04-23T07:00:10
2024-04-23T14:13:48
1,750
PcsyAyj2A4s
Family Theater presents Ruth Hussie, Lee Bowman, and Roddy McDowell. From Hollywood, the Mutual Network in Cooperation with Family Theater presents Ruth Hussie and Lee Bowman in In Shining Armor. To introduce the drama, here is your host, Roddy McDowell. Thank you, Tony Lofano. Family Theater's only purpose is to bring to everyone's attention a practice that must become an important part of our lives. If we are to win peace for ourselves, peace for our families, and peace for the world. Family Theater urges you to pray. Pray together as a family. And now to our drama, starring Lee Bowman as Bill, and Ruth Hussie as Linda in In Shining Armor. The scene, the suburban home of Linda Mountain, separated wife of Bill Mountain, the time evening in early summer. I tell you all the daddy and I did today. Now Judy, it's your bedtime. Daddy wants to know if I could come to him on Sunday instead of Saturday. Well, I don't see why not. Mommy, why do I have to go alone to visit daddy? Why don't you come too sometimes? Well, no, Judy, that, that wouldn't work out. Now tell me what happened today. Well, not everything, because it's bedtime. Just what was best fun of all? You mean best best? Well, I guess it was the story daddy told me. What was it about? Oh, all about a knight in shining armor and a beautiful princess. And you know what? What? The princess's name was Linda, just the same as yours, mommy. You know, I think I'd like to hear this story. Do you suppose you could remember it? Sure I could. You really want to hear it? Yes, Judy, I do want to hear it. Well, once upon a time there was a beautiful princess named Linda, and there was a knight in shining armor. Who came out of the West? How did you know? Oh, I didn't, I just guessed. Go on, darling. Well, one night in the big castle, a lot of knights and ladies were gathered around the round table, and the princess was there. Of course, the knight in shining armor, he just came out of the West, so he was a stranger like at the round table. And well, it's a very special magic hour of midnight when important things are supposed to happen. The Geoffrey party, we must hear you. At the round table there on the terrace. Thank you, they're expecting me. Excuse me, but is this... Well, you're Brenda, Tony's sister. If you mean Linda, you've got the right girl. Yeah, that's it, Linda. I remember the picture on his table of Stanford. Stanford? Or then your Bill Monkton? From out of the West. Sit down, we've been hoping you'd turn up. The others are all dancing. Would, uh, would you like to? Oh, thanks, but I can't. I twisted my ankle the other day. Oh, I'm sorry. Oh, it's nothing. Will you order whatever you like? Oh, hurry. Tony said you'd opened an office here. Yes, yes, I, uh, got the office, plus a fine assortment of important-looking law books. In fact, there's only one thing I'm short on. You're psychic. But Tony told me you'd made such a fine start out West. Why did you decide to come here? Well, you know, I've been wondering that myself. At least, uh, till about five minutes ago, I was wondering. Oh, and then you knew? Then I knew. Oh. How's California? I, I love it out there. Do you know Carmel? Know it. Do you? We spent a summer there when I was 15, and I decided I was in love with one of the captains in the Sicilian fishing fleet. Oh, he didn't know it, of course, but it was painfully real to me. I used to stand up on the cliff, watching the boat sail out of the bay, and just knew I couldn't live till I came back again. What, what, what's the matter? Uh, the matter? Nothing. So, uh, so you were Linda. Hey, Bill, you got here. Hey, Tony, how are you? Glad to see you. It's great to see you. Oh, you and Bill found each other, Linda. Yes, Tony, we did. We found each other. They tell me it's only the lowest breed of man who holds a girl's hand during a concert, especially a girl he's known only six days. You're right. What, uh, what's he playing up there? A violin or an accordion? Personally, I wouldn't know. I think it's a zither. Let's, uh, let's go after this number, hmm? But the man's a great artist. Well, I've just found out that love is deaf as well as blind. Come on, we're going to get out of here. Just think, Bill, if it weren't for you, I'd have been at a football game today, I and 90,000 others. Oh, that's the conventional way to spend Thanksgiving. Besides, I'd rather have you to myself. And I did want to show you the farm. You like it? Do you, uh, think it would do for a summer place? I can't imagine anything more perfect. Good, and I'll buy it. But, Bill... Uh, never mind. Maybe if you won't marry me from my face, you will from my farm. Anyway, I... I'm not overlooking any chances. The new year's almost here, Bill. Don't you want to go inside? No. Cold, are you? No. Linda... Hmm? It doesn't make sense. You know that. One minute you admit that you love me, the next you say that you aren't sure you should marry me. Darling, it's only in bad novels that saying you love someone automatically leads to a wedding. It isn't as simple as that. And I do love you. More than I've ever loved anyone. Almost as much as I ever thought I could love anyone. Almost? Well, there's one thing missing, Bill. You don't need me. Of course I do. No, you don't. Not actually. Oh, perhaps it would make you happier to have me as your wife, but it wouldn't make you... I don't know how to say this. It wouldn't make you any stronger. Well, it's the first time I ever knew a girl wanted weakness as in a man. Well, she does, and usually it's there. Some chink in her night's armor, some quality lacking in him that she has and can contribute to the marriage. But you, Bill, there are no chinks in your armor. It's strong and solid and shining. You're a world under yourself. Maybe it's foolish, but that's what makes me hesitate. Linda, I don't anymore know what you're talking about than you do. I love you. I'll always love you. I want to marry you, and I'll... Well, there it is. Happy new year, my dear. Say yes. Now, Linda, it's the perfect moment. And I'll be as weak or as strong as you want me to be. I promise you that. No, darling, you'll just be you. And I guess I'll take a chance on that. Darling... Night's so awful much she couldn't say no to him, so she said yes. And then they were married. But what about them living happily ever after, Judy? Did Daddy mention that? Uh-uh, he wouldn't. I asked him, but he said not till next week. He said this was a continuous story. Oh, I see. Gosh, I want to hear what else happens, don't you? Yes, I do. Now off to bed with you, young lady. Come along. Daddy told me a lot more today. Of course I do. Here, suppose you sit right down here beside me. As well. Now let's have chapter two. The night in shining armor and the Princess Linda were married. We learned that last week. Then what? Well, then they went on their honeymoon to another country on a big boat. I'll bet it was a Viking boat, huh, Mommy? Or maybe it was the Elizabeth. Maybe. But anyway, when they got home again, the night decided to start on the quest of high-up castle. So we joined different armies of the one he'd been fighting for, and he came home to tell the... It means less money than private practice, Linda, to start, anyway. But it also means a chance to get somewhere politically. After all, Hudson really got his start as a special prosecutor right in this town. Hudson? Oh, you mean Governor Hudson? Yes. Oh, you're looking a long way ahead. Anything wrong with that? Of course not. It's only that... Well, it's only what? Well, as a defense attorney, you can more or less pick your own cases, defend only the people you actually believe are innocent. But as a... As a special prosecutor, I'd have to convict people who are guilty. What's the difference? Well, suppose they're not. Guilty, I mean. You'd still have to try for a conviction, wouldn't you? Linda, look, the law... Bill, the one thing I'm fighting for is for you to be free. Free? What's this got to do with my freedom? Everything. Well, maybe I'm saying this badly, darling, but your life, our lives, they're getting out of focus. In a way, the farm is an example. We were going to do so many things. Fix the old mill and make cider in the autumn, and you were even going to dam up the stream for swimming holes. And we'll still do those things. It's just... Well, it's just happened that things kept coming up. Something will always come up. More than ever, if you take this new job, oh, it's not that your work isn't important, Bill, and I'm not thinking of myself, you have such a capacity for enjoying life. Oh, don't let that get away from you. Linda, Linda, you don't understand. Yes, I do. And the final decision is up to you. It's only that... Oh, Bill, you're right, I guess. You must know best. I believe I do. Anyway, I'm glad you talked it over with me first. Well, Linda, there really wasn't much to talk over. As a matter of fact, I've already accepted. You've accepted... I told Johnson this afternoon. Oh, well, that's fine, Bill. I'm sure it's for the best. This means a start on the road you seem to want to follow. Hello? Tony? It's Linda. How would you like to escort your sister to the theater? Yes, Bill got tickets, but he can't get away. The Parker case, I think. Well, the jury's out and he has to stay there in case they come in. No, I don't know why a deputy can't do it either. It's bound to be another conviction. Fed up? Of course I'm not. It's Bill's job. Well, can you make it tonight? Good. For the reception, it won't take me long to change. I, uh... Well, Linda, you're not dressed. We're not going to the reception, Bill. Not going? Oh, because I'm late? Well, you know how the Governor's shindigs are. They never start on time anyway. Well, I called and made our apologies. You what? When? This afternoon, hours ago, I wanted one evening of my husband's time for myself, so I stole it. You can indict me for it tomorrow. Linda, I left a lot of work tonight because I'm supposed to go to the Governor's. You know as well as I that the Matthews girl comes to trial next week. And every hour lost from working on that case means less chance of a conviction. And you're sure there should be a conviction? What are you talking about? Jane Matthews' mother came here today. Jane Matthews' mother? Well, you don't mean that you saw her. That you talked to her. Well, of course I talked to her. And she swears her daughter's innocent. And I believe her. Linda, the girl is guilty. Naturally, your mother would lie. Well, isn't it possible that she wasn't lying? I don't want to discuss it. But isn't it possible that... Oh, Bill, it doesn't matter. I don't want to talk about Jane Matthews. Some other time, maybe, but not tonight, please. Tonight, let's forget about convictions or governors or anything except a couple of people named Bill and Linda. Linda, I'd love to, but we can't. We've got to go to the governor's reception. All right, Bill. All right. We'll have other nights. Please, leave me alone. Linda, you're crying. Oh, it's nothing that matters. Or maybe it does. Maybe you'll have a much better chance to be elected. I can see the pictures in the paper. Candidate Moncton and family. Linda. Linda, what are you talking about? Oh, I know it's not important. Not nearly as important as the governor's reception or the case of the state versus Jane Matthews. But I did want to tell you tonight, Bill, I'm going to have a baby. The princess was the mommy of a little teeny princess. I asked Daddy what her name was and he said, why don't we call her Judy? Isn't that funny? I like people in stories to be named after me, don't you? Yes, dear, I think it's awfully nice. Well, that's all there is till next week. Oh, except about the night's big battle. He won and that made him the most important night of all, except the one who lived in high-up castle. Do you think our night will ever get to live there? I think it's quite likely. You know, I was just thinking. What? I like the story Daddy's telling, but it's kind of sad for a fairy story. Isn't it, Mommy? Yes, Judy, but that's the way some stories are, darling. And there's nothing you can do about it. He told it to me while we were having lunch. He took me to the athletic club, Mommy. And did you like the story this time? Well, kind of. Only he said it was the last chapter and it doesn't end right. Doesn't it, Judy? Oh, that's too bad. Suppose you tell me. Well, remember last time a baby princess came to live with a knight in shining armor and Mrs. Knight in shining armor? A little princess, Judy. That's right. Well, then let me see. Oh, the knight loved the new little princess, but he never got to see her, Mommy, much, because he was fighting more monsters than ever. So the big princess got lonelier and lonelier. But, Linda, why shouldn't I have a talk with Bill? No, Tony. I don't think he quite realizes how much you are alone. Now, tonight, for instance... Well, it's not your affair. But I feel responsible, in a way. After all, I... Tony! Not quite so fast, you mind? Oh, forget it, Linda. I could drive this road in my sleep. But how about Bill? Bill's all right. It's me. I should be glad I'm married to a man who knows where he's going and who'll let nothing on Earth stop him from getting there. The governorship, eh? Well, there's a swell chance of it. And I was talking to some newspaper men just the other day. They said that with his past record and any kind of a publicity break between now and August, Bill's essentially... Tony, look out! There's a dog! Linda, let go of my arm! Tony, look out! I don't believe it, Bill. I won't believe it. What else can I do, Linda? The boy was riding in the other cars, barely hurting. If he dies, my department has to prosecute Tony. Remember, he already has three convictions of reckless driving against him. We can't ignore that. I've told you a hundred times the accident was my fault. I grabbed his arm. A dog ran in front of the car. Tony hadn't seen it. And you think a jury will believe that? It's true. But you can't prove it. Wait. It isn't just that a jury wouldn't believe me. You don't believe me yourself. I'm sorry, Linda. Since Tony's your brother, you don't want to protect him, but... Bill, even if that boy does die, you're not going to prosecute Tony for manslaughter. I'll have no choice. Of course, I won't handle a case myself, but I will have to turn it over to one of my deputies. I wish there was some way out. There is. You could resign, Bill. You could defend and you could get him off. I don't expect you to understand this, Linda. But I happen to think the job I have to do is even more important than your brother. Or me. I didn't say that. Well, I did. The job you have to do. You've honestly made yourself believe that, haven't you? You're the torchbearer, the champion of truth and right and justice. Well, you're not, Bill. You're blind and selfish and you care about only one thing and that's your own success. Linda. Tony doesn't matter now. In fact, he's a help. It would be marvelous publicity to convict your own brother-in-law. It would mean 100,000 votes on election day. I'd better go, Linda. We'll discuss this again when you're less upset. No, we won't because we're through discussing anything. I said once that you didn't need me. Well, that was true, but only half true because you've made me sure today of something I've suspected for a long time. I don't need you. Linda, listen to me. No. Go ahead with your plans for the prosecution because if Tony comes to trial, I'm going to fight you. I'm going into court to tell the truth and trial or no trial, win or lose, it's over between us. Now and forever. Bill, it's good news. Colin's just called from the hospital. That boy's definitely out of danger. You won't have to indict Tony Jefferies after all. Yeah? That's great. Sure it is. Hey, what's that you're reading? A subpoena, Joe. A subpoena. Haven't you ever seen one before? Oh, what case? A new case. Moncton versus Moncton. Oh. A legal separation. Oh, I'm sorry, old man. That's tough. I didn't ask you for your opinion. I'm sorry, pal. I guess you better leave me alone. The princess found out they weren't happy together anymore and the princess lend the moves away. But the night kept going on toward the hill where a high-up castle is. Daddy says that's the end of the story. Well, it isn't quite the end, Judy. When you see Daddy next time, you tell him Mommy said he left out one awfully important thing. What's that? That deep in her heart, the princess Linda wishes the night well. She hoped that somehow he'd find happiness. And most of all, that he'd finally get to the top of the hill where high-up castle stands. Mommy? An answer? About the story. Remember what you told me to tell him? Well, I did. Only you said that the night changed his mind about going to high-up castle. Changed his mind? Uh-huh. Because he said the night got to looking over and finding armor and he found a big hole in it. Right where his heart was supposed to be. And so he decided not to climb the hill to the castle after all. He said he couldn't without princess Linda beside him. Is that what he said, Judy? You sure? Quite sure? I'm awful sure. Gosh. Mommy, you're crying. Yes. Did I make you cry? Well, yes, you did, Judy. But I could hug you for it. Can't do it, Bill. You can't withdraw now. You've got to run for governor. No, Linda. You told me once exactly what I really am. I didn't see it then. I do now. Maybe it took loneliness to show it to me. I was upset. The things I may have said, I... No, what you said was true. I sold myself on the idea that I was the... the people's champion. But I forgot that to help people, you've got to understand them first. To know them and their problems. I never thought of that, Linda. I guess I was too busy thinking of Bill Monkton as governor. And you should be governor. You're the man for the job, the best man they can find. I don't think so, Linda. Not anymore. Oh, Bill, don't you see? You found the only things you lacked, humility and understanding. I might lose them again. But you couldn't. Not if I'm there to remind you. Linda. I lied, Bill. I was wrong. There's nothing for me without you. Nothing. Oh, darling. Oh, Bill. Bill. I've missed you so terribly. I know. Bill. Your story. Did you know Judy was telling it to me? I, uh... I hope she would. Look. She's asleep. Oh, we've got to tell her. Judy. Judy. Judy, wake up. No, Daddy. Hello, darling. Did you decide how the story ended? Yes, Judy. We did. Is it happily forever after? Forever after. That's good. Good night. This is Roddy Mcdowell again. Come Labor Day, come school days. Whether you live here in California, where the weather gives little warning that the summer is over, or whether you live in parts of the country where very gentle signs of fall weather announce that vacation time is closing, Labor Day is the great divide. And for youth from primary school to the university, and for parents as well, the school year is definitely in. We call all this actual going to school to learn formal education. Formal education is a blessing so great that we must ever underestimate its value. We reverence it and thank God for it. And we thank God that we live in a country where it is so widespread and obtainable. I hope that it won't sound preachy to put in a word for informal education and what that means. It means that we learn not only from books and instructors, but from every casual word and look and gesture and attitude with which we come into contact. Informal education is not dealt out lesson by lesson, assignment by assignment, term by term in calculated stages. It's breathed in, absorbed, is taken into the blood, and is not just a matter of the head, but of the heart and soul. It comes by chance and fortune. It is gained outside of school in the marketplace, in the street, in groups, and in the private sessions of thought which each one of us sometimes has with himself. But the home is the university as well as the grammar school of informal education. The home and the family. No home is too poor, no home is too overdressed with wealth and fortune to have God as a teacher. The family, rich or poor, which gathers together to ask the guidance of God and his instruction in the basic and ultimate values of life is the unique school. We are all, continuously, the learners. And one important chapter of learning which we can master is the family that prays together, stays together. More things are wrought by prayer than this world dreams of. Family Theater by Joseph F. Mansfield. This series of Family Theater broadcasts is made possible by the thousands of you who feel the need for this type of program, by the mutual network which responds to this need, and by the hundreds of stars of stage, screen and radio who give so unselfishly of their time and talent to appear on our Family Theater stage. To them and to you, our humble thanks. This is Tony LaFranco expressing the wish of Family Theater that the blessing of God may be upon you and your home and inviting you to join us next week at this same time when Family Theater will present Maureen O'Sullivan in the hand of Saint Pierre. Join us, won't you?
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Fuel Price Hike: Yoruba Youths Council Calls For Sack Of Mele Kyari | NEWS
The Yoruba council of Youths worldwide has raised an alarm over the current increase in petroleum products, calling for the resignation of the managing director of the Nigeria national petroleum company, Mele Kyari ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Watch More: https://bit.ly/2KLQxbI Watch PlusTV Africa Lifestyle: https://cutt.ly/tbdOHzQ Watch via our Website: https://plustvafrica.com/live-tv Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PlusTVAfrika/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/plustvafrica/ Tweet us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PlusTVAfrica Comment on Whatsapp: http://ow.ly/d4kQ50pT4Bt #PlusTVAfrica #News #NewsOnPlusTvAfrica
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2022-11-21T10:31:36
2024-02-05T06:25:14
154
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The Yoruba Council of Youth worldwide has raised an alarm over the current increase in petroleum products calling for the resignation of the Managing Director of Nigerian National Petroleum Company Melia Kiare while urging that businesses which solely rely on diesel are on the brink of collapse, the youth group says that the highest cost of transportation has also worsened and the level of inflation as well. Addressing newsmen in Abuja, the president of the council, Ola Dutun Hasan acts president Muhammad Abu Hari to intervene. The council also raised alarm over the importation of adulterated fuel which he said had cost unbearable damages to Nigerians. I deliver to the entire Nigerian populace to know that as Nigerians we cannot be shot down, we can never be intimidated. We were confronted with the Melia Kiare's team of security who intimidated us from presenting our peaceful demand. Our knowingfully world, the nation is biding hard on the premise of its excesses, of its incompetence, of its misplaced priorities and total neglect of the Nigerians' pains. Considering the total fallout of the astronomical increase in diesel and phone price of petroleum and a lot of other issues which was what led us to host in this all important rally. We will still maintain it as a rally because that is what we intended to achieve. To let Mr. President know that we are angry, we are frustrated and our citizenship is put at risk because of the daily atrocities being perpetrated by the new management of the Nigerian Petroleum Corporation led by Melia Kiare as the chief executive officer. It is in this regard that we would like to present formally what we intend to present to Mr. Melia Kiare which is a letter of immediate replacement as the CEO of the Nigerian National Petroleum.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PcKMnOiS_iA", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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0-DTE Power Hour Live 2-8-24
To learn more about our memberships, visit: https://navigationtrading.com/pricing/ Happy Trading! The NavigationTrading Team https://www.navigationtrading.com info@navigationtrading.com Connect with us! YouTube.com/navigationtrading Facebook.com/navigationtrading instagram.com/navigationtrading Twitter @navtrading1 Stocktwits.com/navigationtrading linkedin.com/company/navigationtrading
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2024-02-08T23:02:13
2024-04-19T16:32:26
4,271
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Almost time for the bell, how many options will you sell? Fire up your platform, get ready to enter But first let's get the mindset centered Let's then trade it, have success Find what works for you and forget the rest Stats and probabilities is what we're a dismiss green And doubt, focus on the process Not the money and the profits will flow our lives Let's start the show, come on trade hackers Just get ready to go, zero day options Time to make bank, get locked and loaded Then be ready to plank What's up everyone, welcome to Power Hour Live Thursday, February 8th What a day Oh yeah Right? Oh yeah What do we got here, 87 low, high of 97 Go back to yesterday too Yeah, besides that little Bump in the late morning or mid morning Yeah, it's been in a 10 point range for a day and three quarters And it can stay there, noses So I've got Of course as we all always do as traders We wish we would have had more on, right? But Here's what I've done today So my one DTE iron condor hit 45% That was good for about 3,000 I did the Thursday AM 2-1 That was good for 50%, about 2200 And then in my Other account, I did some re-entries Now that's what a daily P&L curve is supposed to look like, right? Oh yeah That doesn't get much better than that So in this one on the re-entries I hit one closed out for 90% I just ratcheted my stop down I never even took profits until 90% So that was good for 3,000 And then another one It's currently at 84% I've got a profit target at 90% on that one as well And then another re-entry came in And it just got filled not too long ago So just got the one position on And it's this one here It actually took inverted strikes But somewhere between 90 and 95 would work Yeah, as far as power hour today I'm not really interested in adding anymore We're talking about 6 bucks at the money straddle Yeah, I've closed out my 2 AM iron condors I almost had to force the lunchtime number one that I'm in And booked 20% on that So I've got four contracts left And like Steve just said When it's like this I'd almost rather just scale out a little slower Instead of adding a new position when the premiums are so low So I've got four contracts left here I can cut one Cut one more Or cut two than one and one Instead of going two and two We had the third year bond auction And Vick started popping I thought, okay, maybe we're going to get a little something And it was nothing I mean we got one little five minute push-up Right to the top of the range But oh yeah, I do have a Rick on I did that in my tradier account And that one's not doing so hot So that would be my negative for the day Bumblebee? I was just saying on my Rick I just thought, man, we've been in, like we just said We've been in this consolidation for so long At some point we're going to move, right? Yeah, I fully expected it I fully expected it I was looking at my lunchtime I actually skewed it a little bit to the downside Because I fully expected to maybe push up through the highs of day But it never did Bumblebee, the zoom link is in the trade plans Plans channel, I believe Yep, trade plans channel I'll repost it here I just wanted to let everybody get into power hour So they didn't get confused Let's see Yeah, I was really, I was about 20 minutes ago I was looking to maybe add one But when the market moved down here a little bit Because I skewed my lunchtime number one to the downside So it was testing my downside So I was looking at one and I just couldn't get it $5 I almost put one on for like $4.90 honestly But a centered one Chose against it and then it ended up popping up So it was a good, good no trade I'll be interested to see if it does Break highs of day here, you know Hour and five minutes left, so anything can happen Eurytic may come profitable Howdy's just booking profits I'm going to I mean it's a discretionary rick anyway to begin with So I'm probably going to If we get anywhere close to getting some profits I'm at least going to close some out So this is one of my re-entries I'm just waiting, I'm waiting for 90% To close that out, it's currently at about 84 And then this is my, the one I just entered Not too long ago Will the S&P break $5,000? Yeah, $49.99.89 yesterday But for sure we'd blow through that today Mm-hmm, same here Alright, let's take a look around Nasdaq is slightly green Our little buddy Ruddy Look at that little Ruddy go, it's up a percent and a half Dow's flat Gold flat, silver is up Almost 1.5% Notes and bonds are red Ten-year yield up almost 2% Oil up 3.5 Add a gas down 3.5 Soybeans up a half percent Wheat down 2% Corn down a little bit Euro and the pound flat Bitcoin up about 2.5% Vix at 12.87 Kelvin, when you decide not to take Profit targets for today Do you just stop down? Do you adjust it to price? So, yeah, so, you know, I've been kind of testing NTT I've been testing some other bot reentry You know, obviously for those of you who use trade steward They just came out with trailing stops today Or last night and then Another feature of it today So today it was more of testing One thing I'm thinking about doing Kind of starting March 1st Is I'm going to allocate some money to a To one account, you know, I always I trade different strategies in a few different accounts So I've never been able to really compound And so one thing I'm considering doing for March is Leaving one account to only do A specific reentry strategy And then in compounding the position size So that was part of my testing today And so the way that I was doing my reentries today was When I got to 30% profit I wouldn't take any off, but then I would ratchet my stop down So, like, I did a couple different versions I did a 3 to 2 version Puts the calls and I also did a 1 to 1 version And so I was using a fixed stop So my 3 to 2 version It was a $12 stop And then I ratcheted it down to 3 On my 1 to 1 version It was a $6 stop and I ratcheted it down to 2 Once they hit 30% So that's what I did today I wonder if Pricel Sorry, go ahead, Jed I wonder if Pricel just stopped at $5,000 today PayPal down 11% On earnings When you could do a $5,000 straddle right now if you wanted to On the green side, Riot blockchain up 13% Wow, Disney up 12% on earnings Wow, I didn't notice that earlier Just not going to lose my profits during Power Hour right now With this little room for air Firm up 10% Coinbase up 8% Crypto stocks having a day My lunchtime Number 1 is almost dead center Build it 40% Lunchtime number 1 So how many trades did you end up entering today, Jed? 3 And they are both all 3 going to be winners So that's what I'm saying Like I skewed this last one a little bit to the upside You know, it started out to the left of center Which ended up being perfect based on what's happening right now So I got 2 of my 8 contracts left So I'm just going to try Instead of getting out at both of them at 60% Since I'm not entering a new position I'm just going to try to get out of 1 And then I'll see if I can get out of my last one at 80% It's very easy to come into Power Hour when you've been up For the day and have a lot of confidence And you know, you're feeling good And then sometimes you can get a little greedy And you can lose Lose a lot of profits So it should also be part of your risk management When you're thinking about where you're at With your profit loss throughout the day Yeah, traditionally my allocation to position size Has been significantly better for Power Hour than anything else And so for me, I would just It didn't matter Up or down Going to Power Hour doing the same thing Right But yeah, on a discretionary basis If you're especially the way you're doing it You definitely want to decide on that Or have it pre-planned regardless of what happens 5-point range and 20-point wide strikes That was a beautiful thing 3-2 needs a little pullback here So if SPX really wants to accommodate me today What it's going to want to do is just pull back a little bit Let me get out of this one at 90% Wait for this one to at least let me lock in some profits And then give me a big rip through 5,000 To end the day for Rick I mean, you know, since we're asking I'd do it for you Thanks, Chad Anybody new or have questions? Obviously, we got a lot of time here Feel free to post And I just posted in the chat again It's also in the Zero Trade Plans Channel Dr. Chad will be presenting the details Around his methodology of how he's been trading And that is 30 minutes after the bell today And yes, if you can't be there, it will be recorded I ended up so in my brother's account I don't have the same trade on in his that I got In the one in mind that I post the fills in discord But I did take the 5,000 strad on his With 30 points wide 625 That's not the account that I post my screen shots And his account isn't as big as mine So I only did four contracts So 5,000 would be a pin for that one DRB I It's been a while since I looked at that by day of the week From my actual statistics But there was a period Early in 2023 when Thursday was terrible And then there was a period in 2023 when Thursdays were the best And Wednesdays were the worst And Wednesday used to be the best So personally, I don't get to cut up in day of the week Specifically for power hour But I know a lot of people Really tailor their tests more to days of the week But you could certainly run a quick test And in an option I may get a better idea about that Oscar, we can't tell you how to manage your own trades We can just show you what we're doing But it goes both ways You're going to have situations where you wish you would have taken it And it turns into a loser There's going to be situations where you're going to wish you'd let it ride Because you could have held it all the way to expiration So that's really just a personal choice That you've got to kind of work through And if you want to do some testing in Option Omega That's a good way to do it too Is just look at different strategies Or something similar to what you're doing And then look at how that tests out With that position size of doing one contract Of what you could find What might give you the most confidence as far as when to take it off And DRB going back to that comment about days of the week What we do know is that And you can see this by just looking at your platform on Mondays And looking at VIX VIX is nearly always elevated Going into Mondays They pump that premium in over the weekend And so Mondays have traditionally been the best I mean there's no way around it because of that elevated IV Both morning trades, afternoon, power hour, whatever it is Mondays, there's no question have been the best Now Mondays mornings have actually struggled recently And so there is That's definitely a factor for Mondays For me And then today, on Thursday There's a two to one puts to calls that just continues to do really well Back tests all the way back to May of 2022 Over 90% win rate It was the one I took today that was a winner And so I trade it Now is that an anomaly Or is that really a Thursday pattern that will continue We don't know But So One of the, you've probably heard this quote by Van Tharp We're not trading the markets We're trading our beliefs about the markets So it's something that you'll develop over time And you'll decide what kind of filters and criteria you want to use And different, you know, in this community There's a lot of different You know, opinions about that So But, you know Remember, these everyday expiration options have only been around since May of 2022 So the longer we trade them, the more data we'll have The more conclusions we can make about these different things But just going back to May of 2022 There's, you know, that's still not a Especially if you're looking at a trade one day a week Going back that, you know, that's There's a lot of statistical evidence still to be Still to be gathered about that And you know, really, I get people ask me about And I'll talk about this in my presentation But if you're doing like what I'm doing Like, there's no set way of, you know, scaling out You can scale out whatever you feel is best for you I've had people tell me that they do two contracts And they get out at 10% on their first one And then they get out at 25% on their second one You know, so just whatever you feel comfortable with SPX 49.98 Currently trading at the highs of day I'm just betting, betting is gonna stop at 5,000 I'm betting it's gonna go through Yeah, it might. If I was a betting man actually I probably would bet that it would go through it as well I just happen to have a 5,000 straddle You're just talking your book Yeah, and I mean, you know, it's I'm setting two points obviously from a pin right now So it can, you know, if it gets up to 5,000 I'll probably get out of 20% I'm, you know, state is starting to decay now So honestly, if I get out of it Decay's not with us today He had to run I saw he posted So I can't, I can't bet Decay on this one Here he comes He's timing in He must be listening at the doctor's office They got doctors on islands? He couldn't stay away Well, he has his own personal doctor Oh, gosh Yeah In house, on site Doctor, just for him He's got to keep Dick in tip top shape Oh, he's not on the stream He's just seeing the chat Somebody tell Dicky what the bet is Will price stay below or above 5,000 Chopping at 97 Dead center, my, in my account, my last At lunchtime iron condor Dead center is 49.97 That's where it's at right now I hate when Dick and I agree He'll probably come back and say the under Elliot, you still, you still holding your Rick? Waiting for a late day push So what gets you out of the valley? Let's see, I got it in trade here Let me see Looks like I need Above 506 5,006 You know Decay, or you know Decay pretty well I knew it He just wants some action Double or nothing Yeah, he still hasn't I've been bugging him to take advantage of his Barbecue situation, he hasn't done it So Geez That's something you want to take advantage of Alright, double or nothing, Decay You're on, buddy I think he's just doing that to be nice to me So he can get out of getting his barbecue He tried to, he tried to get out of it And I was like, no, no, no I'm sending you barbecue You see what Anne Greed had the chiefs Sent to him in Vegas? No Q39 BBQ just masked Tons of boxes of Q39 BBQ At the airport yesterday He had it sent himself or somebody sent it to him For the team, sent to, for the team Oh, gotcha Currently the probability of the bet is favors Decay There's a 52% probability we End under 5,000 47, 48% Close above Gotta give Dec a little edge I don't know about the bulk discount I'm sure they did for Andy Greed and the chiefs Yeah I didn't know they shipped The only one I thought shipped was the Jack Stack Yeah, I was crazy It was just boxes of Q39 At the airport Somebody snapped a picture of Still waiting on my 90% on this guy 4999 Testing all-time highs almost Apparently the market has come Become immune to the Fed speakers They're like, yeah, yeah, yeah We've heard this over and over Michael Todd, you Took the bait on the ricks for sale? Sorry about that Yeah, they were on clearance for a reason, that's right Tried to get up to all-time highs Didn't quite get there Vicks got down to 12.81 yesterday Currently at 12.87 Still sitting at 83% No, making another run I'm out of 20% of my straddle I did take, I did a I wasn't here for Power Hour yesterday But I did do a Well, I did a discretionary Just a 5,000 straddle Because I thought we were hitting there yesterday Or no Anyway, I ended up getting stopped out of that one Oh yeah, I was on this last little push-down And then I got stopped out And then I pinned my Tronch 3 I launched them manually from my phone So made a little bit yesterday In Power Hour And then my PM iron condor pinned Or hit 90% Wait a second You were at your kids' function yesterday And you were trading Power Hour? Yeah, from my phone Dude, I called it yesterday I said that I said it when I was live Yesterday, I was like Power Hour, I can guarantee it Yeah, I used my trade steward bots And just launched it manually Holy said that I think he chimed in at the beginning Of Power Hour on something I posted, good luck everyone Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's what it was And I was like, he's trading man You know, that Power Hour FOMO, it's a real thing I even did the Fred Flintstone Bet, bet, bet, bet, bet, bet Even though it's not a bet But I like that, you know what I mean Most of these people, most of our members Probably weren't around when the Flintstones were on It was one of my favorites Growing up It's just, you know, Power Hour is just part of me It's just part of my DNA, I don't know what to say I don't make cartoons like they used to Saturday morning cartoons still a thing? And you get them 24-7 now Yeah, it was a special thing To wake up on Saturday morning and be able to Watch them My parents limited me to two hours with the cartoons Then I had to go outside So I had to be very specific about the ones That I wanted to watch Very true, Naughty Dog, very true Trying to remember Smurfs was a big one Yeah, Tom, David and Goliath Remember that one Yeah, Tom and Jerry was a good one Oh, DuckTales, that was after school though I don't think that was the Saturday morning Yeah, Ninja Turtles I was a big fan of those Yeah, you'd have to brush home from school To catch DuckTales 49-99 again Just trying Rick is the only thing that really wants Over 5,000 I don't care if I lose money in my positions Or if I just want to beat Dick K in the bet That's my biggest position right now Scrooge, jumping his money pit 644 million buy side Early indication So in case we've got people on our stand We've got some new people, Steve What exactly does that mean when you say that? Yeah, so the If you go to the ZeroDTE course channel There's a, I put out a little mini course about it Wait, no, where did I put that? Trade plans, maybe Yeah, in the ZeroDTE course channel Yeah, trading the market on close and balance So you can watch that for more details But what happens is All the big money managers Your state streets, Vanguard, Black Rocks Fidelity They all manage Obviously billions, trillions of dollars And if you're contributing to your IRA Your 401k, all that There's inflows and then people Some people are taking money out Those are outflows and so All those firms are required to report What their net inflow or outflow will be At the end of the day And then they have to execute that order In the form of a market on close order Executes as a market order right on the close And so these early indications I don't really know as far as what They just, they have to give kind of an early indication Of what they think their flows will be But then at the 10 minutes until the bell That's the final number that they're held to That they have to execute the order on And so that's why you'll see if there's a big MOC number, you know Over three billion to the sell side Or three billion to the buy side That it'll, that the market will A lot of times move in that last 10 minutes And so that's what that is So what I've been doing is If there's a number that's greater than three billion If it's to the buy side, I will buy futures If it's to the sell side, I'll sell futures And try to catch, you know Quick little, quick little move And then from a power hour Or DTE perspective, you know It's just good to know if you're in a position If there's a big number You're probably going to expect to move in that direction So you may want to consider doing something Especially if you're in a straddle Benji, you always attach longs to your shorts Yeah, I typically have new longs I typically do new longs You know, like a day like today though Where the price hasn't moved Like I could close my longs out Five cents, ten cents When the position was When the shorts were closed Just got filled on 60% Of my Last time, number one So instead of a new position, like I was saying earlier I just took one contract off So instead of, I still now have one left Instead of, so I can try to close this 80% It's sitting dead center, so Anybody do the one DTE today? I think that's the first time I've had one of those Hit the profit target before Power Hour even started Trade Scout Feesh Hey Feesh, thanks for Thanks for that update on portfolio margin Through Schwab too, that's interesting Info, I had not heard that SPX 49.98 Just hovering Waiting to rip Dick K's heart out At the end of the day They call me, I'm gonna say, no No, no, sorry, not doing it Michael Todd, does your account Have portfolio margin Access? If not, it's a Non-factor If you're a standard margin account, it wouldn't apply Yeah, so it wouldn't It's just the way that Schwab looks at portfolio margin accounts For buying power on positions Versus how TD does Yeah, I don't know, Calvin I keep hearing Discrepancies Certain people saying they have Schwab And it Nothing changed, and other people who have Schwab and say it They're treating them like naked options So I don't know, I haven't I haven't been graced with The presence of Being on Schwab yet, so Not sure I don't think there's any update on Schwab They're just Sounds like they All the TD accounts will be transferred over To Schwab by May And Jordan At Trade Steward seems to think That the API will be out before That That's about the Only detail I know All right, this little re-entry Is getting close to my 90%, currently at 88% I'm gonna go ahead and press my bet with Dick K and just go ahead and buy some Two or two into the close Gonna make sure and let him know And this thing is just Hovering near my profit target Not quite hitting Go ahead and close this one Got it at 260 And I still have this one Which I'll let ride Calvin, it's not in discord It was just emailed to those who Registered, but Email Email Landon To support At navigationtrading.com And he can send you the link Calvin, you can also have your friend Book a zoom call with me That as well Back if anybody has anybody interested Learning more about trading Send them my link There's the link To cute pink shirt, Chad You know, that's when I was a principal So I always would Match my ties, my shirts Bands and my socks The Ladies I work My three secretaries always got a Kick out of all that I would actually match my underwear too, but nobody ever saw that Stay tuned on that white tiger We've actually tried a few different Kind of third party Platforms to track that kind of stuff But they were just clunky and I didn't like them so we never We never kicked that out but That's kind of, that's actually coming soon I think I think we've got a solution for that Yeah, it's just really not doing much right now 4998 Yeah, I don't know what Schwab's I need to, I need to talk to Schwab I'm not sure what their Structure is, I've just been kind of holding off Until everything gets cleared up As far as the accounts transition, but Yeah, especially now that there's Vegas, Michelle Especially now that there is Trailing stops You know that, I was A, I was wanting to work through all the Nuances and I was kind of waiting for That to come out and so Yeah, I'm gonna start I probably won't do a class necessarily But I'm gonna I'll do a series of videos That just on different I'll do kind of a high level Overview and then I'll pick out some Specific kind of most Most used Features and Try to hit those and then obviously get Feedback from those of you Who use it and we'll Build a little library of stuff SPX hanging around 97 I just got Got my straddle I had another position on and my Brothers just got filled It's 40% Still at 644 million to the buy side Final numbers out in 5 minutes Yeah, I'm on team 90 95 as well For this one Slowly digging myself out from that Wretched start in February I don't even want to hear about a drawdown From you Chad I've The last two days I've Trapped my red month and I've had So far in half pretty much Nice Theta it's always good Such a great feeling to feel that 20% You hear that 20% ding It's an even better feeling to Feel that 40% ding Vicks new lows of Day Is probably in there sitting down with his doctors Doctors like sir I need you to drop your pants He's like hang on, hang on I gotta check the S&P Coming down 95 Did not like 5000 huh Interesting Two days in a row 5000 rejected it I've seen what 10 minutes Can do 5000 10 in the next 10 minutes 850 million sell side So pretty low number but it did Flip from buy to sell Nice Michael Todd Daily almost 4k Uh oh Uh oh Dick K 5000's a pin for me Don't look now Just filled 40% of my straddle Hey was I why Check the trade plans channel Right below this one you'll see it I've got over 5k And Dick K has under 5k MOC I needed a big I need a bigger MOC number is what I needed I'm not sure if it's going to give it enough gas Settling back into 95s Nice white tiger Nice There you go naughty dog Stick to your guns Trust me it's hard I know That first month I was up 60k Paper trading and I Won another 6 weeks Come on go get me a 10 at 5000 Up in the matters I only have a couple contracts left Just don't think it liked it 5000 I don't know Job Elliot nice job Neil Open at today it opened at Back down below 95 It opened at 49.95 today Here it did Get back up there Is going to settle in the valley it looks like We get a swift move here in the last 5 minutes Nice job theta Well at least I made enough money today To send Dick K BBQ Times 2 5 minutes to go Got a big jump in him Now he wants my beef broth Stopped out of my straddle Darn it on that little down move Vicks cracking new lows As we fade into the close That's it naughty dog I finished Plus 3133 In my Brother's account I'm going to be over 4k In mine Here it goes My straddle would have been nice right now Close my last contract At 50 cents Whatever percent that is That's my That was my lunchtime So I ended the day In my re-entries 1500 1600 3100 On my 1DTE 3000 2200 Nice little day Now if we could just Get a little rip into the close Above 5000 That would just be icing on the cake I forgot about Rick He's done He's toast Vicks fallen 49.95 Right where we started Right where we closed yesterday Right where we opened today We're going to close there We've got one minute Howdy, 6 iron condors all green Very nice 30 seconds I need 3 points in 30 seconds please Wow look at it It would have been my straddle Let's go Let's go Dick K It would have pinned in my straddle Get up there Get up there Close Oh my god It would have pinned my straddle Get up there Oh come on What a tease What a tease I can't win I'm never betting Dick K again Oh my gosh Alright, so Chad 30 minutes from now We'll be presenting his trading strategy I'll repost the link here in the chat in a minute Alright and then live stream tomorrow Tomorrow is the 9th So Chad will be streaming live in the morning and then we'll be back for power hour Alright all Take care for those of you who are joining us with Chad See you in a bit, if not see you in the morning Cheers
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PM's speech at commemoration of 1111th Avataran Mahotsav of Bhagwan Shri Devnarayan(With Subtitles)
The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi addressed the ceremony commemorating the 1111th ‘Avataran Mahotsav’ of Bhagwan Shri Devnarayan Ji in Bhilwara, Rajasthan today. The Prime Minister performed mandir darshan and parikrama and also planted a neem sapling. He also performed Purnahuti in the ongoing Vishnu Mahayagya at Yagya Shala. Bhagwan Shri Devnarayan Ji is worshipped by the people of Rajasthan, and his followers are spread across the length and breadth of the country. He is revered especially for his work towards public service. Subscribe Now: https://goo.gl/8qsb5E Stay Updated! 🔔 Follow us to stay updated: ► Download the NM App: http://nm4.in/dnldapp ► Like us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/narendramodi ► Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/narendramodi ► Follow us on Instagram: http://instagram.com/narendramodi #BhagwanShriDevnarayanJi #AvataranMahotsav #1111thAvataranMahotsav #bhilwara #rajasthan
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2023-02-14T04:53:34
2024-04-23T01:11:03
1,708
pcc1squrkjM
माला सेरी दूंगरी की सादू माता की सवाई भोज महराज की देवनारें भगवान की सादू माता गुर्जरी की इटपो बूमी महादानी बगलावा सुर्भीरारी करम बूमी और देवनारें भगवान री जनम बूमी माला सेरी दूंगरी न मारो पनाम स्री हेम्राज जी गुजर स्री सुरेजदाज जी दिपक पातिल जी रामप्र साद दाभाई जी अर्जून मेगवाल जी सुबाज भहेड्या जी और देज भर से पड़ारे मेरे प्यारे बहाई योर बहनो इस पावन अवसर पर बबाग्वान देवनाराईण जी का बुलावा आया और जब बबागवान देवनाराईण जी का बुलावा आये और कोई मोगा चोडता है क्या मैंबी हाजीर हो गया और आप याद रकीए ये कोई प्रदान मंत्रिया नहीं आयाए बबखति भाव से आपी की तरा एक यात्री के रुप में आश्विरभार लेने आया आप अभी मुझे यकगे शाला मैं पुनुना हुती देने का भी सवबहागे मिला मेरे लिए ये भी सवबहागे का भीषे है कि मुझे से एक सामान ने वेक्ती को आज आपके भीच आखर के बभगवान देबनारावड़ी का और उनके सभी बवब्तों का आशिडबाद प्राप्तटगर ने का एब पुन्ने प्राप्तट हूँए भभगवान देबनारावड़ और जनता जनार्धान दोनोंके दरशन कर के ये सबिज तर दाँनों की भाति मैं भग्वान धें� off. से आनवरत आस्स्ट सेवा के लिये गरिबोंके खल्यान के लिये आशिल मागने आए एहू. सात्यो, ये भग्वान देबनारें का 1111 आबतरन दिबस है, सबता बहर से यहाँ इस से जुडे समावरो चल रहे है, जितना बड़ा यह आवसर है, उतनी ही फव्व्यता, उतनी दिव्यता, उतनी ही बड़ी भागिदारी गुर्जर समाजने सूनिषित की है, इसके लिए में आप सभी को बड़ाए देता हूँ, समाज के प्रतेग वेक्ति के प्रयास की सराना करता हूँ, भाहिवर बैनो, भारत के हम लोग हाजारो वर्षो पुराने, अपने इतिहास, अपनी सभिता, अपनी संसक्रिती पर गर्व करते है, दून्या की अने एक सब भिताए, समःे के साथ समाप्त हो गए, परिवर तनो के साथ, कुद को द्हाल नहीं पाए, भारत को भी, बहुगोलेग, संसक्रिती, सामाजी, और वैचारिक रुप से तोडने के बहुत प्रयास हूँँ, लेकिन बहारत को, कोई भी ताकत समाप्तन नहीं कर पाए, बहुग नहीं बलकी, हमारी सब भिता की, संसक्रिती की, सदभाँना की, समभाँना की, एक अभी वकती है, इसलिये, आज भारत अपने बवववशाली, बविष्य की निएव रख रहा है, और जानते है, इसके पीषे सबसे बडी प्रेडा, सबसे बडी शक्ती क्या है, किसकी सक्ती से, किसके आसिरवाथ से, बभारत अतल है, आजर है, आमर है, मेरे प्यरे भाई योर बहनो, ये शक्ती हमारे समाज की शक्ती है, देस के कोटी कोटी जनो की शक्ती है, वारत की हदारो वर्षों की यात्रा में समाज सक्ती की बाईद बवी बूमी का रगी, हमारा ये सवबा गे रहा है, कि हर महत्पुं काल में, हमारे समाज के भीटर से ही, एक आईसी उर्जा निकलती है, जिसका प्रकाश सब को दिशा दिखाता है, सब का कल्यान करता है, बखवान देवनाराण भी आईसे ही उर्जा पुंज ते अवतार थे, जिनोने अत्या चार्यो से हमारे जीवन और हमारी संसक्रती की रक्षा की, देव रुप मात्र, मात्र 31 वर्ष की आईु भिताकर, जन मानस में आमर हो जाना सर्व सिध अवतार के लिए ही समवो है, उनोने समाज में फैली बुरायों को दूर करने का, साहस की आ, समाज को एक जूर की आ, सम्रस्ता के बाव को फैलाया बख्वान देवनाराईन ने, समाज के विबिन वर्गों को साज जूर कर, आदर स्ववस्ता काएम करने की दिशा में काम की आ, यही कारन है, कि बगवान देवनाराईन के प्रपी, समाज के रब वर्ग में स्थदा है, आस्था है, इसलिए, बखवान देवनाराईन आज भी, लोग जीवन में परिवार के मुख्या की तर है, उनके साथ परिवार का सुख दुख बांता जाता है, भाई योर बहनो, बखवान देवनाराईन ले, हमेशा सेवा और जन कल्यान को सरवोच्छता दी, यही सीक, यही प्रिना लेकर, हर स्रद्दालू यहां से जाता है, जिस परिवार से भे आते थे, वहां उनके लिए, कोई कमी नहीं ती, लेकिन सुख सुविदा के बजाए, उनो ने सेवा और जन कल्यान का कतिन मारग चुना, अपनी उर्जा का उप्योग वुनो है, प्रानी मात्र के खड्यान के लिए क्या, भाई यहि अर महनो, भला जी भला, लेव भला, भला जी भला, देवबला, इसी उद्कोस में, भले की कामना है, कल्यान की कामना, बागवान देवनारान ने जो रास्टा दिखाया है, वो सब के साथ से सब के विकास का है, आद देश इसी रास्टे पर चल रहा है, बीते आध नुव वर्षों से देश समाज के हरुस वर्ख को सबसक्ट करने का प्रैास कर रहा है, जो उपेक्षित रहा है, वन्चित रहा है, वन्चितों को वरियता इस मन्त्र को लेकर के हम चल रहे है, आभ यात कर ये, रास्टन मिलेगा या नहीं कितना मिलेगा, ये गरीब की कितनी बडी चिन्ता होती थी, आज हर लाभारती को पूरा रास्टन मिल रहा है, मुप्त मिल रहा है, अस्पताल में इलाज की चिन्ता को भी, हमने आविश्मान भारत योजना से दूर कर दिया है, गरीब के मन में, गर को लेकर, तोयले, भीजली, गेस कनेक्षन को लेकर, चिन्ता हूँए कर थी, वो भी हम दूर कर रहे है, बेंक से लिन देन भी कभी, बहुती कम लोगो के नसीव होती ती, आज देश में, सबही के लिए बेंक के दरवाजे कुल गये है, साथियो, पानी का क्या महत होता है, की राजस्तान से बहला बहतर कोन जान सकता है, अज आज अदिक अने एक दसकों बाद भी, देश के सिरब, तीन करोड परिवारों तक ही, नल से जल की सुविदा थी, सोला करोड से जाडा ग्रामिड परिवारों को, पानी के लिए संगर्स करना परता था, भीते साथे तीन वर्षों के भीतर, देश में जो प्रयास हुए, उसकी बजे से, अब ग्यारा करोड से जाडा परिवारों तक, पाइप से पानी पहुच चुक लगा है, देश में, किसानो के खेथ तक, पानी पहुचाने के लिए भी, देश में हो रहा है, शींचाए की पानंपारी क्योजनाग का विस्थार हो, यार फिर नई तेक्निके सींचाए, किसान को आज, हर संबहों मदद दी जान रही है, छोता किसान, जो कभी सरकारी मदद कलिए तरस्ता था, उसे भी बहली बार पीम किसान सम्मान निदी से, सीथी मदद मिल रही है, यहार राजस्तान में भी, किसानो को पीम किसान सम्मान निदी के तहाए, 15,000 करोड रब यह से अदिक, सीथे, उनके बेंग खातो में भेजे गे है, साथियो, बबाग्वान देवनारान ने, गव सेवा को, समाज सेवा का, समाज के ससकत करन का, माद्दम बनाया था, भी ते कुज वर्शों से देस में भी, गव सेवा का ये बाव, निरन्तर ससकत हो रहा है, हमारे यहार, पश्वोंग में, खूर और मूह की बिमारिया, खूर पका और मूह पका, कितनी बडी समस्या थी, ये आप अच्छितर जानते है, इस से हमारी गायों को, हमारे पशुदन को, मुक्ती मिले, इसलिये देश में, करोडो पशुं के मुप्त टिका करन का, बहुत बड़ा आभ्यान चल रहा है, देश में पहली बार, गव कल्यान के लिए, राश्ट्रिये काम देनु आयोग बनाया गया है, राश्ट्रिये गोकुल मिसन से, वैग्यानिक तरीकों से, पशुपालन को पुज़ सहित करने पर बल दिया जा रहा है, पशुदन, हमारी परमपरा, हमारी आस्टा काई नहीं, बल की हमारे ग्रामिड अर्ततंट्र का भी मजबुत हिस्सा है, इसलिये पहली बार, पशुपालकों के लिए भी, किसान क्रेटिट कार की सुभीदा दी गया है, आज पूरे देश में गोबर दन योजना भी चल रही है, गोबर सहीट, खेती से निकलने वाले कच्रे को, कंचन में बदलने का भ्यान है, हमारे जो देरी प्रांथ है, भे गोबर से पहडा होने भाली, भीजने से ही चले, इसके लिए भी प्रयास की है जा रहे है, यो पिजले वर्ष, स्व्टन्त्रता दिवस के अजर पर, मैंने लाल किले से पंच प्राणो पर जलने का आग्र की हआपा. उद्देश यही है, के हम सभी अपनी भी़ासध पर गर्व करे, गौलामी की मानशिकता से बाहर निकले, और देश के लिए, अपने कर्टंब्यों को यान्द रखे, अपने मनिश्यों के दिखाए रास्तो पर, चलना और हमारे भलिदानियों, हमारे शूर्विरों के शाव्रिये को, यान्द रखना भी, इसी संकल्प का हिस्सा है. राजस्तान तो दरो हरो की दर्ती है, यहां स्रजन है, उट्सा हो और उट्सो भी है, परिशम और परुपकार भी है, शाव्र ये यहां गर-गर के सुस्कार है, रग-राग, राजस्तान के पर्याए है, उतना ही महत्वा, यहां के जन-जन के संगर्स और सैं्यम का भी है, ये प्रेरे नास्तली, बहारत के हने गवर्वशाली पलो की, बक्तित्वो की सक्षी रही है, तेजासी से, पाभु जी ताक, गोगा जी से, राम्देव जी ताक, बप्पा रावल से महराना प्रताब ताक, यहां के महापुरुशों, जन नायकों, लोक देवतां, और समाज सुदारकोंने, हमेशा, देश को रास्ता दिखाया है, इतिहात का शाएदी कोई कालखन है, जिस में, इस मिटी ने रास्त के लिए प्रेना नादी हो, इस में भी, गुर्जर समाज, शौर्यों, पराक्रम, और देश भक्ति का पर्याय रहा है, रास्त राक्षा हो, या पिर संसक्रती की रक्षा, गुर्जर समाज ने, हर कालखन में, प्रहरी की बूमी का निभाई है, क्रान्ती वीर, बुप्सी गुर्जर, जिने विजेसी पतिक के नाम से जाना जाता है, उनके नेत्रुत में, भीजोलिया का किसान अंदोलन, आजादी की लडाई में बढ़ी प्रेरना था, कोत्वाल, दन सींजी, और जोगराज सींजी, आजे अनेग योद्दा रहे है, जिनों देश के लिए अपना जीवन दे दिया, यही नहीं, राम प्यारी गुर्जर, पन्नादाई, जैसी नारी शक्ती की, आजी महान, प्रेराई भी, हमाई हर पल प्रेरीत करती है, ये दिखाता है, की गुर्जर समाच की बहनों ले, गुर्जर समाच की बेट्यों ले, कितना बडा योग्डान, देश और संस्क्रती की सेवा में दिया है, और ये प्रम्प्रा, आज भी, निरन्तर सम्रत्द हो रही है, ये देश का दुर्बागे है, के आज से अंगिनिट से नान्यों को, हमारे इतिहात में वो स्थान नहीं मिल पाया, जिसके वो हकडार थे, जो उने मिलना चाही है ता, लेकिन आज का बहारत, नया बहारत, बीते दसको में हुई, उन भुलों को भी सुदार रहा है, अब बहारत की संसक्रजी, और स्वतन्त्रता की रक्षा के लिए, बहारत के विकास में जिसका भी योग्डान रहा है, उसे सामने लाया जान रहा है, सात्यों, आज ये भी बहुत जरूरी है, के हमारे गुर्जर समाज की जो नहीं पीडी है, जो यूवा है, वो बगवान देव नारान के संदेशों को, उनकी सिक्षांगों को, और मजबुते से आगे बडाने, ये गुर्जर समाज को थो भी सजक्त करेगा, और देश को भी आगे बडाने में, इस से मदद मिलेगी, सात्यों, इकी स्वी सदिका ये कालखन, बहारत के विकास के लिए, राजस्तान के विकास के लिए, बहुत आहेम है, हमें एक जुट हो कर, देश के विकास के लिए काम करना, आप पूरी दूनिया, बहारत की वोर, बहुत उमीदों से देखरी है, बहारत ने जिस तर, पूरी दूनिया को अपना सामरत दिखाया है, अपना दमखम दिखाया है, उसने सुर्विरों की इस दर्दि का भी, गव्रों बडाया है, आज बहारत, दूनिया के हर बडे मंज पर, आपनी बाद, दंके की चोट पर कहता है, आज बहारत, दूसरे देशों पर, आपनी निरभरता कम कर रहा है, इसलिये, आज सी हर बाद, जो हम देस वास्यों की एक्ता के खिलाप है, उसे हमें दूर रहना है, हमें अपने संकल्पं को सिथ कर, दूनिया की उमिडों पर खरा उतरना है, मुझे पुर विस्वास है, की बग्वान देव नाराण जी के आसिर्वाज से, हम सब, जरुर सफल होंगे, हम कडा परिष्वम करेंगे, सब मिलकर के करेंगे, सब के प्रियासे सित्टी प्राप्त हो के रहेगी, और ये भी देखिए, कैसा सन्योग है, बग्वान देव नाराण जी का, ग्यारा सो ग्यारवावा अवतरन वरष, उसी समय, बारत की जी त्विंटी की अद्ध्स्ता, और उसमे भी, बग्वान देव नाराण का, अद्टरन कमल पर हुए ता, और जी त्विंटी का, जो लोगो है, उसमे भी कमल के उपर पूरी प्रत्फी को बिठाया है, ये भी बडा सन्योग है, और हम तो वो लोग है, जो पैडा इसी कमलस के साथ हुए है, और इसलिये, हमारा अपका नाता कुज गहरा है, लेकिन मैं पुज सन्तो को प्रडाम करता हूँ, इतनी बडी तादाद में, यहां आश्वाद देने आए, मैं समाच का भी रदाई से अभार वेकते करता हूँ, के एक बकते के रुप में मुझे आज यहां बुलाया, बकती बहाव से बुलाया, यह सरकारी कार कम नहीं है, पुरी तरा, समाच की शकती, समाच की बकती, उसी ने मुझे प्रेदित किया, और में आपके बीच कोछ गया, मेरी आप सब को, अनेक अनेक सुभ्काम नहें, जै देव दरबार, जै देव दरबार, जै देव दरबार,
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Prophetic and Apostolic Ministry | Lecture 20 : BC207-PAM-20220324
This is a lecture video from APC Bible College. Classes are offered On-Campus, Online and via the E-Learning portal. Please visit: https://apcbiblecollege.org for more information. APC Bible College is a ministry of All Peoples Church & World Outreach, Bangalore, India. Watch our online Sunday Church service live stream every Sunday at 10:30am (Indian Time, GMT+5:30). Spirit filled, anointed worship, Word and ministry for healing, miracles and deliverance. YOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/allpeopleschurchbangalore LIVE SERVICES: https://apcwo.org/live Our other websites and free resources: CHURCH: https://apcwo.org FREE SERMONS: https://apcwo.org/resources/sermons FREE BOOKS: https://apcwo.org/books/english DAILY DEVOTIONALS: https://apcwo.org/resources/daily-devotional JESUS CHRIST: https://examiningjesus.com BIBLE COLLEGE: https://apcbiblecollege.org E-LEARNING: https://apcbiblecollege.org/elearn WEEKEND SCHOOLS: https://apcwo.org/ministries/weekend-schools COUNSELING: https://chrysalislife.org MUSIC: https://apcmusic.org MINISTERS FELLOWSHIP: https://pamfi.org CHURCH APP: https://apcwo.org/app CHURCHES: https://apcwo.org/ministries/churches WORLD MISSIONS: https://apcworldmissions.org Download the free church app. Search for "All Peoples Church Bangalore" in the App or Google Play stores. #APCBibleCollege #AllPeoplesChurchBangalore #BibleCollege #OnlineBibleCollege
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2022-03-24T05:39:00
2024-04-18T17:40:12
3,126
PCgAXH1EpbM
morning okay I would like to request anyone on the call right now to please lead in prayer yeah yeah go ahead go go ahead brother thank you no no no you carry on okay thank you so much good morning ma'am yeah am I audible ma'am yes yes I've been asked yes okay okay thank you ma'am so let's pray our gracious heavenly father we thank you for this beautiful time and beautiful day Lord Jesus this morning we choose to praise you we choose to honor your Lord Jesus we choose to glorify your name Father God thank you for this time Lord Jesus as we are going through the session Lord Jesus we ask you your presence Father God we want to be in your presence Lord Jesus still the end of this glass Lord Jesus and we ask you more of your revelation Father God we ask you more of your understanding Father God help us to in a deeper way Father God so that we can learn your word Father God and so that so that we can apply in your word Lord Jesus not for ourselves but it's for your kingdom Lord Jesus we submit pastor Nancy to your mighty hand Jesus Father God as he is as he is speaking Father God speak help help us to speak to 85 years Lord Jesus to comfort us comfort us Lord Jesus thank you Father God we submit all the fellowships to your mighty hand Jesus and we ask this prayer in Jesus mighty name we pray amen thank you ma'am thank you amen thank you thank you Abhinash welcome once again some more friends have joined so glad to have you in this class and excited to learn about the next topic in this course which is the apostolic we have seen that the Lord Jesus has given gifts we call the five-fold ministry offices as the gifts of Christ in Ephesians 4 verses 11 and 12 we see this one is the prophetic the other is the apostolic okay and we have also seen with regard to the prophetic we've seen the progression we've seen how prophecy is a gift of the Holy Spirit and someone can exercise it as a believer someone can have the grace gift of prophecy thereby their ministry is marked with prophecy and then there are people whom the Lord Jesus has appointed in the office of a prophet and the apostolic is very similar so we will try and understand it the best way to understand you know biblical truth is from scripture I know that there is a lot of content out there there's a lot of teaching out there there are you know many references to this word apostolic apostle so our tendency is that you know we we want to get a hold of everything that is available I understand it because we are hungry and we want to find out more but the best way to get a hold of God's word is always through scripture so even when we studied the prophetic you will realize that we began with studying passages in God's word about what it meant to hear from God then how did people hear from God in the Old Testament so every incident in the Old Testament where people are connecting people are picking up the communication of God we studied it and then we went on to the New Testament and we saw there you know how was it that that the prophetic looks there and the progression of the prophetic so every conclusion that we came to was based on God's word you know then we built on it we came to the practical aspects and said that in the in the interpretation of personal prophecy in the application of personal prophecy here are some practical things that we must bear in mind in the leading of a church as a prophetic congregation or a ministry so that you know we are prophetic in this ministry how do we do it so you see that there is a good foundation of scripture and on that we have understood the practical aspects of applying what this entire anointing is about and another thing that you know we saw is that over the years the the truth about the prophetic has become clearer and clearer and the same applies to the apostolic we will build from scripture and then we will come to the practical aspects of it and you know the truth about the apostolic once again it's becoming clearer and clearer as the church is experiencing more of this anointing and we said that we will see more of the manifestation of the prophetic and the apostolic in the in the church or the global body of Christ and so you know it's something for us to keep our eyes open for and also pray that we will be able to release this anointing to whatever extent God wants us to so let's begin with our first chapter here I have posted the notes for the google classroom students on your classwork page so if you have I mean if you've if you've gone there you could just download it and follow along yeah all right so chapter one here and I am on page two it's just an introduction of the apostolic and that's what we have for today so what we see here is that the apostolic you know the age that we are in right now we know that God is restoring the five-fold ministry offices and I also touched upon the fact that we are beginning to see more of it and our understanding also is deepening as far as the anointings of the five-fold ministry offices is concerned so just looking back at church history a little bit I know that this is there you know we touch on this on many courses in many courses in the bible college so we've seen that in the between like 400-2400 AD the church was a spiritually feeble entity during the dark ages and post that the the revival and restoration of the church began to come through so then we see the emergence of the Protestant movement where people had an understanding of salvation through grace we then see the Puritan movement where people understood the importance of water baptism and also the separation of church from state in the 1700s there is the holiness movement that we talk about you know names like John Besley are all very popular with regard to the holiness movement how the church understood that you know along with along with our committing ourselves to God you know comes this this requirement for us to live a sanctified life and so a believer has to have a holy life and therefore God poured that out on the hearts of people and then you know globally you see different parts of the world people had this this emphasis and holiness was was something that the church was pursuing then in the 1800s you know it's a time where there are many many you know occurrences of healings divine healings and you have notable men and women of God who were anointed by God to minister healing and deliverance to people and so the church began to understand that yes you know this is also something that God is demonstrating in his body and people had that confidence that you know the way the Lord Jesus spoke in his word that yes he is somebody who heals the physical body of people 1900s 1900s we see the emergence of the pen movement the baptism in the Holy Spirit you know Azusa street revival all those all those things took place and so the understanding of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit and the gifts manifestation of the gifts of the Spirit now that is something that people began to accept and teach all around so following the Pentecostal movement in the 2000s this is where we've been saying that there is I mean it's not that when we say that you know all these truths were restored to the church it's not that they were non-existent but it is more like the understanding became deeper and the work of the Holy Spirit in all these areas became stronger and and so you could say that the church or the global church was kind of fortified in a way with these truths you know in in a in a very strong way so that's what we mean so from the 2000s this whole understanding of the five-fold ministry offices and the anointings pertaining to the five-fold ministry offices is being restored back to the church more and more and you know many things could have all the manifestation of these anointings has always existed not that it hasn't existed but you know when we say understanding it's more like we now have in a way language to explain you know what what exactly God has been doing so uh that way many people understand what the apostolic is about or the what the prophetic is about and of course you know God is pouring out more of a spirit greater works are being performed so that's what is happening and thereby as believers we should understand the importance of what God is doing so now that we have touched upon the prophetic we know the importance and we also realize that as an individual or as a leader we have to move in that direction and similarly the apostolic we will understand the importance and we'll know why for us as believers we need to have that apostolic mindset so our best example always even when we talked about the prophetic we said that Jesus was a prophet in himself and so you know there were scriptures we looked at where people where Jesus said a prophet is not respected in his own among his own people so he was calling himself a prophet and we saw how the prophetic anointing worked through him Jesus is somebody who has the anointing in all the areas of the five-fold ministry offices and that is why in scripture we see that you know Jesus is said to be someone who had the spirit without measure spirit without measure is all the five-fold ministry office anointing where in one person now that is unusual you generally don't have that among you know regular people may be a couple of anointings manifest here and there but the Lord Jesus is somebody who's appointed in all the five-fold ministry offices so Hebrews chapter 3 and verse 1 could somebody please turn to that scripture and read it for us in this course I will be asking us to read passages of scripture so please be prepared if you have you know your Bible's open online then that would be good just keep a copy of the Bible with you so Hebrews 3 1 if someone can read that we can explain it and move ahead thank you Hebrews I am reading please yes yes go ahead Dilesha go ahead Hebrews chapter 3 verse 1 I am reading from the ESV therefore holy brothers you who share in the heavenly calling consider Jesus the apostle and the high priest of our confession amen yes thank you thank you so what was the ESV English standard ESV okay thank you so I'm looking at the same scripture NKJV version and again you know it says the apostle and high priest of our confession Christ Jesus so clearly the Lord Jesus is an apostle and there is reference to that in the scripture that we read but more so from the life that he lived and the ministry that he performed so what is this word apostle if you just look up that word apostle the Greek it stands for apostolos okay apostolos means sent one or a delegate and I know that because of you know studying believers authority we know the meaning of delegated authority somebody who has been sent in the name of a person of authority and somebody who has been approved to carry that person's authority and thereby you know they all they exercise that same authority through whatever they do a good example would be let's just say you know there is a school and there is the principal of the school who is responsible for the administration of the school but maybe for a season he is not there in the school what happens is he might assign a teacher you know one from the existing set of teachers to to function with his authority so though this individual is a teacher you understand that they have been vested with delegated authority from a higher a person in a higher position and so when this teacher carries on the administration of the school for that duration of time they have the powers they have the rights of that principal to whatever extent it has been it has been listed out and within that boundary that teacher is allowed to use that power so that is a delegate so you're able to use the powers which are given to you the authority which is given to you we've seen that isn't it we've seen exosia or authority that we have in Christ Jesus to do the works that the Lord Jesus did so now that we have an understanding of authority and being sent and being delegated apostle simply means someone who has been sent or that person is delegated okay now in the case of the Lord Jesus it's it's quite clear for us that he was sent from heaven from by the father to fulfill his work of of his mission of redemption so that's how he is an apostle he is a sent one he is a delegate and therefore you know we we see him as an apostle so the word apostle okay if you also kind of break it up we know that it is sent the term stallers refers to from okay so apostle sent one from God from heaven and he became a representative of God for us here on the earth and we have seen his authority and power and everyone who looked at the Lord Jesus you know remarked and said oh what authority he speaks with great authority and the disciples were also amazed when they saw him do the works of the kingdom so you know he demonstrated the authority and the power of the kingdom of God or the kingdom of heaven and in that manner you know he he showed that he is a sent one apostolos from heaven and the Lord Jesus you know very simply put you know he is an apostle and his life and ministry talks about it now in the writing of the new testament obviously words of that time would be used isn't it so if you go back to the language the Greek language and the usage of the words people had a certain understanding of the things around them and that is why they used you know that kind of terminology so coming to the word apostol in Greek apostolos apparently during the times when this word was used that is the New Testament times you had a very strong Roman Empire you had the the Greeks and the Romans who would send out envoys to go and carry out these these invasions or you know they would they would conquer regions around them and they would try to establish their own kingdom so when they would send out these envoys you know they would they would call them apostolos okay so when the term apostle is used in scripture the people of the those times understood in a in a way what it meant because it was referring to you know somebody like an ambassador somebody like you know a conqueror who would be sent out as a representative of the you know the Romans or the Greeks they would go and they would take over a land and not just that they would they would establish the kingdom or establish their own kingdom in the new region so that would involve you know subduing people that would involve conquering if there are opposing voices conquering those opposing voices it would mean let's say you know they have taken charge of the place and now everyone is is is in line with what they want to do from that point on there's some amount of equipping training you know and and establishing the new subjects of the land according to the the the government rules that they have so if it is the Romans then they would have their their rules that will apply to that region so in a matter of time like if you if you go to that place and you look at the place you would see you know like a small Roman kingdom established in in that place but earlier it was a completely different land a rule by somebody else having different principles values standards and all that but an apostle or you know an ambassador sent during those times had the responsibility to enter this place and establish the kingdom that you know they represented so for the new testament believers the word apostle brought that understanding okay somebody who is leading the changed in a new territory okay so that is the understanding of the term apostle and they obviously sent from a kingdom to do this and so when we apply it to ourselves you know we now have the understanding of the kingdom of God and so as representatives of the kingdom of God we here who are living in the world we're not of the world and we represent a spiritual kingdom we are not talking about some kind of a literal kingdom which exists in on the earth right now that's not what we're talking about it's a spiritual kingdom the kingdom of the Lord Jesus the kingdom of the Son of God the kingdom you know that has the light of the Son of God so you know we are citizens of this spiritual kingdom and in the way we approach the things of this life and you know new doors that open to us or new territories again in a spiritual sense that are given to us you know our responsibility is to see the kingdom of God come upon that so that is why Jesus also taught us to pray thy kingdom come thy will be done you know that's very apostolic prayers so what are we saying we're saying God you know let your kingdom take over the kingdom of righteousness peace joy justice you know all that whatever the kingdom of the Son of God represents let that take over and here we are as representatives of that kingdom so you know when we use the term Apostle apostolic that is what should come to our minds and that is what we see you know in the usage of that Greek word apostolos and obviously our best example again about someone who established the kingdom of God kingdom of heaven on the earth who came from Stolos came from heaven is the Lord Jesus okay so we always look to the example of the Lord Jesus as an Apostle so in scripture we see that the term Apostle is also used for the 12 disciples of Jesus in the book of Revelation Revelation 21 and verse 14 refers to these these disciples of Christ can somebody turn to Revelation 21 and verse 14 please you can read it out to the class 14 the city yeah the city's wall was built on 12 foundation stones on which were written the names of the 12 Apostles of the Lamb thank you Anita so it's quite clear there so we're talking about the the heavenly city that you know everyone is looking forward to and over there there is a reference of the 12 Apostles okay who on whom does it say the foundation stone can you please read that again it says of the 12 foundation stones that's correct ma yeah yeah 12 foundation stones and also notice here it says the Apostles of the Lamb yeah okay the Apostles of the Lamb so then it's understood because in the book of Revelation the Lord Jesus is the Lamb of God who was slain for us so the 12 Apostles of the Lord Jesus and they are called as the Apostles of the Lamb so obviously you know we will see further we are going to look at scriptures and passages from the New Testament to see the the function of these 12 Apostles now some of you may have the doubt okay what about Judas is he also considered as you know one of the Apostles of the Lamb but you know we know that he he denied his calling so in the book of Acts you know Peter calls for the selection of a new person in the place of Judas so Matthias is the one who is you know appointed by God so they they do this lots thing and then they pick Matthias as somebody who has been selected by God so there is a replacement that has already taken place and there are these 12 Apostles of the Lamb so they are known as Apostles so Jesus we saw he's an Apostle there are there is something called 12 Apostles of the Lamb that refers to the disciples okay before I go forward say did you have a question I saw you raise your hand yes you answered it already was pertaining Judas thank you very much yeah that's great thank you and Elisha has posted here on the chat does this list have the name of Apostle Paul you mean the Apostles of the Lamb Elisha no yes ma'am yes ma'am okay no Elisha it doesn't have um simply because you know Paul was not one of those disciples of Jesus during his earthly ministry it's very clear that you know he he was somebody who emerged on the scene later on so if you study the life of Paul um he was impacted by the um the martyrdom of Stephen and it is said that he could have been roughly about 25 years at that time but it's you know a few years later that he had his own encounter while he was going to persecute the the children of I mean the the believers in Christ Jesus he had his own encounter on the road to Damascus he gave his life to God and so you know Paul's story is completely different and you do see that in some places he also talks about the fact that he never physically walked with Jesus or he didn't learn some things firsthand from Jesus so some things came to him by revelation okay so yeah he is not considered as the Apostle of the Lamb and that's very very clear but he is included in another set of apostles uh this reference is Ephesians chapter 2 and verse 20 could someone turn to it please Ephesians 2 and verse 20 yeah I'll come to you Louis Ephesians chapter 2 verse 20 built on the foundation of the apostles and the prophets Christ Jesus himself being the cholesterol okay wonderful wonderful so thank you Elisha so we see you know the the context here about the believers and the church we are built on the foundations of the apostles and prophets so if you look at most of the New Testament it was written by apostle Paul so there are these foundational truths that have been established by apostles because obviously as we have seen the meaning of what an apostle means you know bringing the kingdom bringing the the values and the standards of the kingdom God empowered certain men apostles to give us the scriptures okay so Paul is one of them so Paul is considered as one of the founding apostles okay so today we will look at this hopefully later as well we have people other people in the apostolic office yes very much like the way we have people in the prophetic office we do have isn't it and none of us will deny that so other do apostles exist today they do but can today's prophets be can today's apostles be apostles of the lamb no apostles of the lamb is you know reserved or restricted to the disciples of Jesus founding apostles are those who have given us the scriptures so today we cannot have founding apostles so the apostles that we have today their function is different but the scripture has a reference to founding apostles that would include people like Paul who have given us the scriptures and so you know someone can't come up with a new epistle and say hey come on include it in the Bible because I am in the office of an apostle no that that can't be done anymore but can they be an apostle with a different function very much so okay so that is our understanding okay yes Louis had I saw Louis raising his hand so I can answer try to answer his question and then come to you say Louis did you want to ask anything okay let's go with your question say please go ahead my mind is just an observation that just you know according to me when we read Ephesians 2 verse 20 just to say that Paul here actually acknowledges the teachings despite the fact you know most of all that he wrote us by revelation direct revelation of what Christ had revealed to him but I see here that he actually kind of acknowledges the teachings of the apostles who were with Jesus Christ so it just goes to show again that again not not every not not all that he wrote to the churches were exclusively his revelations but also in harmony with the teachings of the founding apostles I just wanted to raise that up just so yeah excellent observation say yeah that's that's so wonderful isn't it those who were with Jesus and those who came after they were in harmony so praise God only the Spirit of God can do that across you know time across years so you know we praise God for that integrity thank you for that Louis your back you had locked off and then now your back did you have a question just a bit of concern yeah the timeline was kind of quite long between when what his name was appointed as the 12th Apostle and when Paul came on the scene but Jesus Christ was the one that picked up selected his 12 apostles is it is he reasonable to say that that space was still vacant until Jesus himself appointed the 12th Apostle not by lots but by the election of grace so if you want to extend the hands of an election by grace we'll have said that Paul was the one elected by grace to fill up the 12th position not what was done by lots considering the sequence in which the first founding apostles were were selected so there is a different school of thoughts with different preachers to say that the one that was considered by lots did not stand spiritually as 31 that was done by election of grace i agree with shea that most of the conversation that Paul had were based on the the the foundations of the founding the founding fathers but those revolutions also he said i went up to arabia by revelation such that when it was time for Christ to be revealed he separated himself onto that revelation so i don't know where we can have to put that that balance i'm not negating the fact that the 12th was selected by the 11 apostles doesn't stand but in terms of the election of grace considering the fact that Jesus was the one that hand picked his own apostles so do we so extend that that paradigm or protocol to Paul or we just leave it the way it is in terms of um historical sequence okay thank you uh thank you louis for that observation and that concern um so you see when we when we think of this is again you know my interpretation and i'm sharing that with you you can definitely have ask another person as well or you know research more and then come to your own conclusion but see from what i see if you go to ax chapter one and versus 20 onwards we see that you know Peter kind of comes up with this request and he says that okay you know we don't have there's one person missing uh and we have to we have to elect somebody in the place of Judas all right so uh but there is a prerequisite or there is a criteria that that they put in place and that was that somebody who had been you know with with the Lord Jesus so verse 21 therefore of these men who have accompanied us all the time that the Lord Jesus went in and out among us verse 22 beginning from the baptism of John to that day when he was taken up from us one of these must become a witness with us of his resurrection so you see it was not random they were uh in fact the 120 people that you saw gathered in the book of Acts for the output of the Holy Spirit they were all people who were with Jesus and uh though it's not mentioned you know 12 were close to Jesus and you know they were uh day in and day out with Jesus but then you see here in the selection of a person they are looking for somebody who has been around who knows the teachings and who is you know well versed and uh and my assumption is that obedient not to the teaching of God's word as well so that kind of an individual they look for and I'll just read for the verse 23 and they propose two so they selected okay they selected Joseph called Basibus who was surname justice and Matthias so according to the apostles they picked two um you know suitable candidates so these were not like random people that they they put a lot for and picked so they were selected by the apostles there were two people it was 24 and they prayed and said you oh lord who know the hearts of all show which of these two you have chosen to take part in this ministry and apostleship from which Judas by transmission fell that he might go to his own place 26 and they cast their lots and the lot fell on Matthias and he was numbered with the eleven apostles okay so we see that it's very very clear that a replacement for Judas is um sought for and two among you know two were picked by the people but they prayed and asked God God who do you want to put you know in in the place of Judas and the lot fell on Matthias now coming to the casting of lots you see in the old testament uh we we saw the practices isn't it we said you and the spirit of the lord would come upon a prophet so one would go to a seer to know the word of the lord but the old testament believers or under the old covenant people had the practice of casting lots and uh if we call you know Jonah when when they had to throw somebody into the sea for the sea to come down they the the people we don't know you know if they were devout Jews or what kind of Jews they were but they had the practice to hear from God let's cast lots okay so it's a it was if you want to call it so it was an act of faith on the part of the apostles here so they used that same practice of casting lots but it was an act of faith we would say so why did God allow them to cast lots you see it's only in the next chapter that you know after a few days that you would find the Holy Spirit being poured upon the people you know baptism in the Holy Spirit and then coming the the manifestation of the gifts of the spirit one of which is prophecy you know through which they could they could they could just prophesy and say you know and of course it's if the Lord were to reveal that to them they could have prophesied or got it in a dream or something like that and then pick Matthias but this happened before the outpouring of the Holy Spirit and that is why the casting of the lots is not negated okay so um as far as I'm concerned Louis I think uh from this passage uh it's quite clear that uh Matthias was a unanimous choice of the 11 and was God's choice in place of Judas and so I wouldn't even consider Paul to be put into this list of the apostles of the Lamb but yeah he will fit into the founding apostles category and I mean I would just let him stay there and not worry too much about apostle of grace and all that so I mean does it make sense or yeah pastor you are very you are very correct I understand your your thought is valid I understand that very valid um by just doing it for academic sake and the the thing is that Paul what he wanted is seen uh when this choice was about to be made Paul came about years later so they worked with what they had at the point in time and now but we have it in rest in retrospect that um they they they didn't know that Paul was going to come on the scene but we know the sequence of history now so we're trying to just oppose the the loopholes as they were quote the loopholes as they were so I'm saying that you are very correct I'm saying that just in retrospect that we have history to work with based on because even Peter had to consider say they think that Paul wrote were very hard to understand so they recognize that they have recognized the apostorship of of um of Paul but the choice already been made even before they are pouring out the Holy Spirit so if the spirit was there maybe they have not have used lots they will have used the the concept of the the the witness of the spirit so we are very I'm saying you are correct my point just that because we have the the patterns of history we are trying to see where they fit and if the choice is if you hold you know if you hold option now that's what I'm saying but you're correct my own that's not what you're saying okay yeah sure Louis uh so okay I have an echo of my own voice okay great um so I mean what I'm saying is uh uh you know the apostles of the lamb or whether it's Paul or you know other apostles will see some more names uh they're all apostles in their own right the way God has appointed them and so uh I mean I wouldn't I wouldn't want to worry too much about you know whether they fit into a certain category apostles of the lamb of founding apostles so everyone is an apostle of a certain type so you know I would be like okay fine you know let them be so uh what was their function I would probably be more concerned about that so that I can understand the outworking of the apostolic anointing what are the things that the apostolic anointing brings to the the uh family of God what does it bring to the world so you know that that perspective anyway nice discussion there and thank you for that question we'll move forward so I've just been touching on categories of apostles and I said okay there are the apostles of the lamb and there is the list of founding apostles who gave us uh the you know the the scripture that we still follow uh and then you know we we see that there is something called as the ministry gift of the apostles so remember I said that we can't uh we can't write out a book and say okay come on include it in the bible because we will never uh be one of the founding apostles but if God is called people in in the body right now to be in the office of the apostle uh yes that is acknowledged that will be affirmed uh just that the outworking of that anointing will be very different from the the out go outworking of the apostles of the lamb or the founding apostles so there are people today in the body of Christ who are appointed as apostles let's just read once again um you know uh Ephesians chapter 4 versus 11 and 12 a very familiar passage uh good to reread reread it once again Ephesians 4 11 and 12 please anyone Ephesians 4 11 and 12 yes and he himself gave some to apostles some prophets some evangelists and some pastors and teachers for the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry for edifying of the body of Christ amen amen amen so you see that you know there is there is appointment of certain people in these offices okay so uh we we do accept people as prophets apostles pastors teachers evangelists uh in today's time God gives the anointing he gives the grace and you know there comes out the release of that anointing through people's lives uh now there can be you know we we will see uh later on that as you look at scriptures in the new testament there are many names mentioned as apostle so and so and apostles so and so and apostles so uh there can be um uh there are apostles you know across the board uh there can also be apostles uh of both the genders so there is a reference in roman 16 7 of um a lady by the name of junior who uh paul comments as a notable apostle okay so uh what we are saying is similar to what we said uh under the prophetic prophetic anointing is both for men and women uh the prophetic office can also be for men and women uh similarly talking about apostle office of an apostle there can be women also in the office of an apostles so roman 16 and verse 7 can somebody please uh turn to that a roman 16 and 7 can i read yes yes elasha thank you roman chapter 16 verse 7 greats adrenicos and joania my kinsmen and my fellow prisoners they are well known to the apostles and they were in christ before me so yeah there is a um you know that scripture also tells us that people junia was a woman and yet she was uh she was recognized among the apostles so uh what we'll do is i think we will stop with this and then we will begin with a study on the scriptures in the new testament that give us an idea of um you know who what the apostolic is all about you know from scripture so then we will try to build our understanding and then come to the practical aspects of you know how it is applied in our day and time uh so tomorrow we can begin with chapter two for now i'll pause here uh if at all you have any comments anything else that you want to share with the class then we can do that now can i say something ma oh yes yes louis please go okay um it's an observation i don't know if it's if it obtains in every any part of the world but there's a soft tool um conversation among the apostolic community that suggests that christ has to appear to you physically before you are authenticated as an apostle i don't know if that is correct or i don't know if that is um obtainable okay yeah uh thank you for sharing that louis so you see i mean that's the reason i i began by saying that um there's a lot of theories and philosophies out there about the apostolic so uh the best and the right way is to go from scripture so as we look at scriptures i think tomorrow uh we will have the answer to your question uh in short that's not required that's not necessary you know uh an encounter with christ doesn't make one necessarily i mean a lot of people have encounters with christ does that make them an apostle no right so uh anyway the answer is no you don't have to have an encounter okay all right yeah thank you louis and shikumar has a question here yeah i'll come to you say shikumar has a question here he says how can one someone come to know whether he is and called as an apostle or a prophet or a pastor so um two ways shikumar from the example of paul we we know got very clearly right even when he was having that encounter jesus spoke to him about you know you will go you will represent me to to leaders and things like that so at the very outset god can give a person clarity on their call so that is why sometimes to see like little kids they may be in school or you know i've heard of so many preachers who were preaching at the age of 10 at the age of uh you know 15 16 because the calling was very clear to them at the beginning so uh that way one can know that they are called to a certain office but it can be the other way as well which is one has no idea that they are called to be an apostle like peter is a good example you know peter he walked with jesus he was a disciple he knew he had to represent jesus and do the works of god and all but you see his his graph right it was like up and down and pretty chaotic but uh after the death and resurrection of the lord jesus something just came upon him you could say that because he was so different from the person he was when he denied christ you know during the trial but after the resurrection he was a new man and you know he was a completely new man after the baptism in the holy spirit and then you know he is he's he's very focused single-minded and going about his work so uh my inferences he probably did not have a good idea of what what god wanted to do through his life only later he realized so i i think both ways uh it can happen uh but for the second category what i say what i would say is just be obedient you know at this point in time god has called you to do something be obedient just keep being obedient and then you know eventually you come to recognize oh this is what god is doing this is where he's positioning me okay so yeah that's my answer and i hope your doubt is cleared thank you pastor thank you yeah sure thank you shri kumar oh we've run out of time with two hands raised and one uh okay so uh rose is um providing some clarification here she says uh peter was personally commissioned by the resurrected jesus to feed my sheep sure uh rose and you know you see again you know this came a little later right in the in the journey of peter that's what i meant in the beginning he didn't know but eventually he he knew his role okay so thank you for for sharing that and say elasha please hold on to your questions don't forget it we will we will take up your questions tomorrow and continue all right so let's okay mouth yeah yeah thank you thank you let's uh close with the word of prayer uh anyone yes elasha i'm guessing you want to pray father we thank you oh god okay louis go ahead no problem thank you mom uh father we thank you god we pray sincerely that everyone here finds the grace for which they were called oh lord in the name of the lord jesus we also pray for the boldness and this skill and understanding to work in this grace as we had thought in this class we thank you for our pastor and thank you for the utterance that you're giving her to speak the word of god with all boldness and not clear understanding thank you for everyone that today is blessed and we prospered dearly in lord in the name of jesus amen amen thank you thank you louis thank you everyone god bless you see you tomorrow we'll pick it up from there
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What happened to employees with 3&6month World cup jobs in Qatar#short#04
What happened to employees with 3&6month World cup jobs in Qatar#short#04 #shortsclip#shortsstart #shortscraft#youtube#youtuber#subacribe#shortsadoptme#shoftsroblox#shortsanity#shortsbeta#shortsfunny#shortsasmr#youtubers#subscribers MEXCREATIONTV: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5xVbN6Bn76GSGp0Qryo0cw MALCOLMMEXTV https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVRJTPlEY1HTgeNNwL8VlRg TIKTOK ACCOUNT tiktok.com/@mexcreationtv INSTAGRAM https://www.instagram.com/p/Ce8AGvQI8qi/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= FACEBOOK PAGE https://www.facebook.com/mex.sherine?mibextid=ZbWKwL DISCLAIMER: Mexcreationtv channel doesn't promote or Encourage any illegal Activities. lam not a recruiting agent, All Content provided by this channel is based on my personal experience, Research and opinions. I give information and advice free of charge All the videos on this channel are made for Education and knowledge purposes: IMPORTANT LINK 🔗 IN QATAR https://empcont.adlsa.gov.qa/ checking employment contract in Qatar https://portal.moi.gov.qa/wps/portal/MOIInternet/services/inquiries : checking all visa inquiry online https://portal.moi.gov.qa/wps/portal/MOIInternet/services/inquiries: Qatar I'd check online
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2023-01-02T22:32:32
2024-04-23T13:33:36
60
PCoCjIAW-mk
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#1256 | Staying Motivated Working Out At Home, Value Of Splitting Home Workouts, Fatigue Vs. Failure
In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about what to do if less motivated to workout at home vs. going to the gym, the best way to implement an at home exercise program, what to do about a dramatic appetite increase while sheltering at home, and what it means to workout to fatigue vs. going it to failure. Sal’s connection to the situation going on in Italy. (8:08) Updates on COVID-19. (14:00) Sal’s self-inflicted paranoia. (15:59) Justin is a perfectionist. (19:35) The benefits of ‘all-day’ workouts to break up your day. (22:47) The power of positivity. (26:30) The illusion of control. (31:13) The value of being silly and having fun in these crazy times. (33:45) Strategies to bring down stress and anxiety. (36:17) How Facetiming people may be better for your psyche. (38:58) #MindPumpKitchen updates from the Tahoe House. (40:50) Exciting news from The Di Stefano’s! (42:05) Updates on the Mind Pump Gym in Tahoe. (44:08) Fun Facts with Justin. (45:30) #Quah question #1 – I find myself less motivated to do home workouts on a consistent basis vs going to the gym on a daily basis. Any insight into why this is and advice on improving the consistency of workouts at home? (49:42) #Quah question #2 – What is the best way to implement our at-home exercise program? One hour a day of body weight and resistance bands or should we split it up into 2 or 3 20-minute workouts? How can this affect our mental health? (56:00) #Quah question #3 – I’ve noticed since being confined to my home, my appetite has dramatically increased. I know I’m not alone in this. Why are we so hungry and what can we do to regulate our intake? (1:01:23) #Quah question #4 – Can you guys define what it means to take a workout to fatigue? How does this relate to taking it to failure? (1:06:15) Related Links/Products Mentioned March Promotion: MAPS Powerlift ½ off! **Code “POWER50” at checkout** https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/maps-powerlift Special Promotion: MAPS Anywhere ½ off!! **Code “WHITE50” at checkout** https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/maps-anywhere Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! https://helloned.com/ Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin as a treatment of COVID-19 https://www.mediterranee-infection.com/hydroxychloroquine-and-azithromycin-as-a-treatment-of-covid-19/ DJ D-Nice hosts social distancing dance party on Instagram Live https://thegrio.com/2020/03/20/dj-d-nice-social-distancing-instagram-live/ Wake Up With Rita Wilson Crushing “Hip Hop Hooray” In Quarantine https://www.barstoolsports.com/blog/2155214/wake-up-with-rita-wilson-crushing-hip-hop-hooray-in-quarantine How social distancing could ultimately teach us how to be less lonely https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/how-social-distancing-could-ultimately-teach-us-how-to-be-less-lonely/2020/03/20/ca459804-694e-11ea-9923-57073adce27c_story.html Houseparty https://app.houseparty.com/login Telegram https://telegram.org/ Visit Butcher Box for this month’s exclusive Mind Pump offer! https://www.butcherbox.com/MINDPUMP/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=offline&utm_campaign=&utm_term=mindpump&utm_content= Ambergris — How Rare Whale Vomit Ended Up In Your Perfume https://allthatsinteresting.com/ambergris-whale-vomit World’s Oldest Fossilized Mushroom Sprouted 115 Million Years Ago https://www.livescience.com/59399-oldest-mushroom-fossil-on-record.html How To Stick To Your Diet – Mind Pump Podcast https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdDzjRUMNdo&feature=youtu.be Mind Pump Free Resources http://www.mindpumpfree.com/ People Mentioned Arthur Brooks (@arthurbrooks) Twitter https://twitter.com/arthurbrooks Joe DeFranco (@defrancosgym) Instagram https://www.instagram.com/defrancosgym/ CONNECT WITH US: INSTAGRAM: http://bit.ly/mindpumpmedia TWITTER: http://bit.ly/2vN1qpE FACEBOOK: http://bit.ly/2vq95cd SHOP MIND PUMP: http://bit.ly/2uvQY6b PRIVATE FACEBOOK GROUP: http://bit.ly/2vuntia PODCAST: iTUNES - http://apple.co/2vMEPcA STITCHER - http://bit.ly/2hQSIAS
[ "mptv", "mind pump", "mind pump radio", "mind pump media", "mind pump podcast", "health", "health & fitness", "muscle", "build muscle", "weight training", "strength training", "working out at home", "tips for working out at home", "at home workouts", "how to split up at home workouts", "going to failure", "going to fatigue", "failure vs fatigue", "health & fitness pocast", "quarantine podcast" ]
2020-03-25T01:35:16
2024-02-05T07:06:38
4,730
pcdIF6DpAN0
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. Mind pump. Mind pump. With your hosts, Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. In this episode of Mind Plump, so I'm one of the hosts of the show and I've self-quarantined because I've gotten sick, so you'll hear me from a distance talking to my host, my co-host Adam and Justin throughout this entire episode and probably the next few episodes. Now, in this episode, we answer fitness questions asked by listeners like you. A lot of these questions have to do with what to do at home and we totally understand. You're probably not allowed to go to your gym right now. So in this episode, we answer a lot of questions in regards to at-home fitness, but we open the episode with introductory conversation. We basically catch up. We talk to each other, talk about how we're feeling about what's going on right now. I start out by talking about Italy and the circumstances over there. I have family in Italy, so I have a little bit of a personal connection to what's going on over there. If you're listening from Italy, we love you and we stand with you. I talked about how households should isolate themselves. That's probably the smartest thing to do right now. I also talked about how I did the dumbest thing ever yesterday. I thought it would be wise to use a little bit of cannabis and give myself more paranoia at a terrible time. Yeah. Add on the paranoia and fear. Woo-hoo. Super stupid. Then I talked about all-day workouts. All-day workouts have their own value. I've experimented with these in the past. I've gotten great gains with them, but under normal circumstances, all-day workouts are super inconvenient. But not right now. We're all stuck at home. You have time. You got time to test this out, basically. Then I talked about a trend that I'm seeing in my neighborhood and on social media. I hope this becomes a nationwide phenomena. Kids are writing positive messages on sidewalks and driveways. I saw quite a few of them on my walks yesterday. I love it. Let's do that. Let's uplift each other. Power of positivity. That's right. Adam talked about how there was a popular DJ who did a nine-hour virtual dance party. Thank goodness for him. I talked about the illusion of control. I think we're all being reminded right now that we're not in control of as many things as we thought. It's really no different than it was before. Adam brought up Rita Wilson. This is Tom Hanks' wife and how she did some fun stuff on social media. Good for her. I talked about strategies to bring down stress and anxiety. Things like using chamomile tea, passion flower, both of them have been known for a long time to help the body feel more calm. Then we talked about the use of full-spectrum hemp oil, which contains CBD. Our partner, Ned, makes some of the best full-spectrum hemp oil extract that you'll find anywhere. The biggest amount of responses that we've got from our listeners is that full-spectrum hemp oil really does help a lot with anxiety. That's the number one thing people are telling us, that it helps them relax. I think we could all use a little bit of help right now, relaxing. Of course, we have a discount for you because you are a mind-pump listener. That makes you awesome. Here's what you do. Go to helloned.com, that's H-E-L-L-O-N-E-D.com forward slash mind-pump. You'll get 15% off your first purchase. Then I talked about an article written by Arthur Brooks and how he talked about how FaceTiming people is probably a lot better for your psyche than just getting on the phone. Adam brought up a house party app and telegram app. These sound like awesome things to be using right now to connect with people around you. He talked about some big news. Justin gave away some cool, fun facts in regards to perfume. You won't believe what makes your perfume smell so nice. Spray that on your face. Then he talked about giant white mushrooms. Yeah, that's more interesting stuff. I was high when I came up with those. Then we got into the fitness question. Here's the first one. This person's finding themselves less motivated to do at-home workouts versus when they used to be able to go to the gym. They wanted some advice. How do I get myself to stay consistent at home because I'm finding it to be difficult right now? We give some strategies on how you can help yourself stay consistent while you're stuck at home. The next question, this person says, hey, what is the best way to implement your at-home exercise program? Would you do an hour a day or should you split it up into two or three 20-minute workouts? How can this affect our mental health? We actually all agree that there's a better way to do this. We give you guys advice in that part of the episode. The next question, this person's noticing that since they're being confined to the house, their appetite has gone up quite a bit. Totally normal. You're all probably experiencing this. It's stress-eating. We all do it, but now we're stuck at home. The refrigerator is literally right across the room. We talk about strategies on how you can prevent yourself from gaining the COVID-15 that we're finding right now, people are gaining. The final question, this person wants us to define what it means to take a workout to fatigue. You may have heard us say the way you should work out at home right now is you should do your sets to fatigue. What does that mean? Is that the same as failure? What are the benefits? Why should I train this way? We explain why you should train this way and why you should not go beyond that level of intensity. Also, all month long, because of what's going on right now, because people aren't able to go to their gyms, we have a very effective at-home workout program called Maps Anywhere. Maps Anywhere utilizes body weight, it utilizes resistance bands, it utilizes a broomstick for tension movements. This is totally unique to our program. I don't know of any other program that incorporates all three of these methods and modalities in a well-programmed workout. There's also a TRX or suspension mod. If you have a suspension trainer at home or the brand named TRX, these are the handles that hang from a bar or whatever. We have a mod in this program that takes you through a whole workout utilizing those as well. This entire program, super effective, minimal equipment, it's the best at-home workout program that you'll find anywhere. We put this program 50% off. We weren't planning on doing this, but given the current circumstances, we thought we might as well put this on 50% off to give people more access to this amazing workout program. Again, it's 50% off. Here's how you get that discount. Just go to mapswhite.com, that's M-A-P-S-W-H-I-T-E dot com, and use the code WHITE50, that's W-H-I-T-E-FIVEZERO, no space for the discount. T-shirt time! And it's T-shirt time. Ah, shit, Doug, you know it's my favorite time of the week. We have very light reviews this week. We have one winner for iTunes and one winner for Facebook. Wow! The iTunes winner is Lian Trong. And for Facebook, we have Ricky Sire. Both of you are winners. Send the name I just read to iTunes at mindpumpmedia.com, include your shirt size, your shipping address, and we'll get that ride out to you. Get those reviews in, easy chance to win right now. I have a direct connection to Italy, so I know what's going on over there, okay? And you need to designate one person by themselves to go. If you have a mask, wear it, and you wear gloves. When you come back, you got to clean all the fucking groceries with either soap and water or liceol. Oh, man. You got to, yeah, you guys got to start taking it seriously and not go out there because what's happening in Italy, people aren't listening and you're getting pockets of people infected and then it just spreads. Well, what's happening over here, though? What are we, it seems that we're dampening the curve pretty big right now. No, well, it's hard to tell because they're doing a bunch of tests now. So right now what we see is, I think 41,000 confirmed cases now in the US. So last week it was, you know, 4,000 or something like that, 3,000? 13,000. So it's just because there's a lot more testing, but, you know, this is how it ramped up in Italy and in Spain is it just, it was because people weren't listening, they weren't listening to the, they're, you know, visiting, you know, family members, you know, oh, I'm okay. I don't feel anything when they go visit a family member and then enough of that happened to where they now are in the situation they're in now. So you don't want to, you want to isolate into your household because the way that it's spreading is mostly through person to person. So, you know, you don't want to visit anybody, not your parents, not your siblings, just isolate yourself in your house and then take all the, you know, and everybody has to do that. If everybody does that, then we'll, we got a chance, but we're still going to see a spike. We're probably still going to see a big spike. We're supposed to see it right now, right? I mean, this is supposed to be the, last week they were saying the next six to 12 days, I think is what I saw because we're only supposed to be one week behind Italy, right? It's hard to say, dude. It's really hard to say if we go the way of South Korea and in Taiwan or if we go the route of Italy, Spain is seeing an explosion of cases. Now, we're two days now where Italy has seen lower slightly lower death rate in cases. So hopefully that's the, it looks like, hopefully they hit the peak and they're starting to drop. But, you know, my family in Sicily, and I haven't seen this anywhere in the news. This is just for my family in Sicily, but they apparently someone from the North visited their parent in one of those like care homes or whatever, one of those nursing homes and didn't have any symptoms, but apparently had the virus and it just exploded now in this nursing home. I know that's what happened over in Seattle too, right? That's what spikes some of these death numbers is when you get somebody who infects a community like that. And did you know that Italy is the second oldest country in the world? Yeah, they have a very aging population. Yeah, they live on top of each other. You know, like the way the houses are over there, a lot of the cities is that It's like San Francisco. You have a building and then you have floors and then typically in those floors are connected families. So like the top floor is grandma and grandpa. The second floor is, you know, one of their kids and their families, the next floor is their other cousins. So you've got like five families living in the same building and what they're not isolating themselves to the floors. So they're like, well, what's the big deal? So now instead of a group of six people, you have 40 people who are visiting each other in the same building and that's why Italy is having such a rough time. If it starts to get out of hand, then it just starts to compound. Well, rumor has it we got National Guard and everybody's coming out right now, right? So it's supposed to hit, I know Trump said something about San Francisco Bay Area is getting it now where they've already deployed a bunch. Yeah, well, and I think what they're, I'm not quite sure what the guard is gonna do. I think they're just there to help. So if like hospitals need help, if they need to build, you know, makeshift testing facilities and stuff like that. But we don't wanna be in a, it's so funny. I was, somebody tagged me on shared a Twitter link with me of the messages that Italian mayors are telling their cities. I almost fell out of my chair. Why, what are they saying? Oh, they're like, what the fuck are you doing? I'm gonna come to your house with the flamethrower if you leave your fucking house. Everybody stay, like they're cameraing people in Italian style, which is just, it's comical, but it's also just a sign of how desperate a lot of those towns are getting over there because, you know, I think today they're, today and yesterday we saw a slight drop in cases and in deaths. So if that trajectory maintains that they might have, you know, hit their peak or whatever, but sometimes what happens with these pandemics is it'll, you'll see like bursts. So it'll spike real high kind of drop and then somewhere else in the country will have a, you know, explosion of cases. And then they'll take care of that and then it goes down and then you see another one somewhere else. What are you reading right now with? I've seen quite a few things pop up as far as a vaccine and I've seen some, I saw some pills that were being pushed through right now that supposedly helped a bunch of people. There's all kinds of stuff that I'm seeing surface. I don't know what to believe. I don't know what's true and what's approved. I haven't, I don't know. Yeah, I've seen some anti malaria type of medication they're trying to use right now too. So it's interesting to see what's popping up. Yeah, that's the one that's so far, that's the one that so far has the most promise is a malaria drug. I can't remember the name of it, Hydra. It's a chloroquine, I think it's called. Yeah, I've seen a lot about that, yeah. Now that drug, which is kind of cool. That's a, that's been, that was discovered in 1934. It's a drug that we've used a lot for decades. So, which is cool because if it actually does help, we're working with a drug that we've worked with, you know, for decades, you know what I mean? Yeah. And we have a lot of it and it's inexpensive. There was a French study that combined the anti-malarial drug with Azithromycin, which is a popular antibiotic, you've probably taken it before, it's like a Z-PAC, they call it. Yeah. And that in the French study seemed to be, you know, effective, so. Was it the malaria medication that would make people have like crazy nightmares? I remember like reading something about that, about getting like these vaccines and things like going to visit countries and like some of the malaria medication like made people get like insomnia and crazy like crazy dreams. Oh, I have no idea what the side effects are. Yeah. I have no, yeah, no idea. Did you watch, did you watch the conspiracy video that I sent over to you? No, what would it say? Damn it, come on, man. Hey, listen, I sent it, I think I sent it to you privately. This is the world CEO. When I see you something privately, that means you have to watch it, you punk. Let me tell you about my current state of mind so you can understand what's going on, okay? Yeah, we gotta lighten you up, dude. I've been self-quarantine to here at home. I can't see my kids. And so last night, right, Mike, I'll tell you what happened last night, you guys are gonna crack up. I have no idea why I thought this would be a good idea. It was, it's literally the most bonehead thing I've done a long time. So I'm at home and I'm like, you know, I'm feeling a little lonely, you know, missing me. I've been FaceTiming my kids and everybody, but, you know, missing you guys. I haven't been able to fucking see you guys since last week and, so my cough is getting a little better. So I'm coughing here and there. So I'm like, you know, I'm gonna chill out a little bit. You know what I'm gonna do? I'm gonna, I have a vape pen that I haven't used in a little while. And I thought, you know, this might be a good idea. Just hit the vape pen and, and you know, chill out for a bit, watch a movie or whatever. Well, first off, because I just, I'm still getting over whatever I'm getting over, I had a freaking asthma attack and coughing my ass off. Oh no, dude. And immediately after I took the hit off the vape pen and I could feel myself like, oh man, I'm gonna start coughing. I was like, the realization, you know, like, what a fucking idiot. What are you thinking? Of course it's you. Yeah, go with the animals, dude, are you done? And then because I haven't had anything like that in such a long time, one, you know, dose off of it got me super blazed, right? So the next thing you know, paranoid as hell. Yes, dude. Oh no. I'm sitting there on the couch and, you know, Jessica's sitting there and she's just, you know, doing something. And then she looks at me and she's like, you're okay right now. And I'm like, I think I'm getting a little paranoid right now. I told Adam, I had a dream. Like I had a legit nightmare about this whole coronavirus thing. Like it was like some kind of mutating genetically like modified like virus thing that everybody all of a sudden started like changing. And I was like, oh my God, I've been watching too much sci-fi. Yeah, you know, we watched a lot of Westworld over here. Yeah. Oh dude, so freaking me out though. Yeah, so, and you know, sometimes those bad things can, you know, they can put things into perspective. And so I was like, you know, it's probably wise to organize my life. And this probably, I mean, this might be valuable for the audience if they're feeling the stress of, you know, just unknown and self-isolation is to kind of organize your life around, you know, relaxing around taking your mind off things. Like, you know, you probably want to stay away from stimulants. You probably want to, you know, keep yourself healthy, break your day up into segments because that, you know, whenever you read studies on how people handle stressful situations, like really stressful situations like POWs and stuff like that. One of the, you know, psychologists will talk about a strategy where you break up your day and you could break it up with your workouts. So like we talked about doing, you know, three workouts a day. You could meditate, you could pray. You can, you know, break up your day. Yeah, walks, puzzles. That's what we've been doing pretty good. We've been doing a lot of that. I think, yeah, just keeping your mind busy, doing things is really helpful. Like, Ed, I love like projects around the house too. And like, so I've definitely got into this platform thing. It was funny today. I was gonna set Adam up for this because he got me really good this morning because I've been like so obsessed of every little detail of like this logo. So we're trying to improve, you know, our gym here at the house. And so I decided to like take on this do-it-yourself project of, you know, building this platform for deadlifting and powerlifting and whatnot. And so I'm basically putting it all together. And then I get to the part where I'm painting this logo on there and it's like so detailed that the Mad Mike and everything has so many details and little intricate things to it. And so I'm like out there with a razor blade every day, like making sure like I'm taping just so. And then, you know, I'm adding like four different layers of paint to different parts of it. And so I'm just like fixated and obsessed with this thing. Oh, he's put in, he's put in at least 40 hours into this platform, dude. I'm not, he's not, he's not, he's underselling it right now. Like it's been ridiculous. It's been a lot. And the deep. It's gonna be the best looking platform. Oh, well, he's, and he decided instead of like doing, like Doug like suggested doing like a decal, like just buying it and sitting on there. And Justin's like, no, I won't look as good to wear out. He's like, I want to paint it on there. So he went and has stenciled the Mad Mike logo and he did it stenciling with spray paint and tape and razor blade. So you can imagine with all the different colors that are on it. And I mean, he's literally been going just every single night over and over and over and over. And it's like, he's really close to being done. Like he's, he was about to lacquer it today. Yeah. Wow. And I came out in the garage. Like, I mean, this guy's been just like pouring over. And you know, Justin, you know, Justin gets right when he's like focused on something and he's frustrated about something. He's like to himself and just wants to power through it and get it done. He's got my horse blinders on. And I don't say anything, right? Like I don't, like I can see it in his face that I'm not going to go over there and like give my suggestion on what he should do or be like, that was a really bad idea, right? Like, I gotta say shit, right? I'm just going to let him do his thing. Well, he's almost done, right? And he was, he was finishing up the last touch ups and it's going to get lacquered today. And I came out of the garage where it's at and he's sitting on the couch. This is first thing this morning. He's having his cup of coffee. And I walked by according to go, hey, I'm going to fuck with your husband right here. And I come walking. I said, Justin, what, why did the, why did the mind pump logo bleed all together from the lacquer stuff that you poured on it? He's like, what? I'm like, oh, the whole thing, the thing jumped up off the couch. He shot out of the couch. 10 feet in the air. The look of his face, bro. He would like pale white. It was so messed up, dude. Oh, so pissed. Everybody's like in their, the kids are over. Everybody's laughing. Yeah, the kids are over doing their homework and Bree's here now and Doug was in the kitchen and then Katrina was in the living room and Doug back working on this computer. Everybody just started dying, laughing cause they don't know how much he's been putting on it. And you could see the, he's shot up and the look in his face, dude. He was so fucked up. Freaked out. He's fucked up, Adam. Yeah, I'm gonna mess you guys. Hey, so how are you guys doing the all day workouts? Are you guys going like a few times a day going in the garage and like throwing some squats and some dead lifts and stuff? 10 to 20 minute intervals, like pretty much sporadic all day, man. It's been really fun, actually. Like I felt like energized and stronger doing it that way for sure. I was just gonna ask, like what have you guys, because I'm only done like scheduled all day workouts. I've only done it twice or three times. And what I noticed was, cause here's the way I organize it, right? I picked three exercises. So, you know, squat, I did squat, bench press and barbell row. And what I did was I would do like, you know, three sets of five or six reps and the intensity I'd say was like maybe 80%. So, you know, I would do six reps with something that normally I would do, you know, 10 reps with or maybe eight reps or seven or nine reps with or something like that, right? And I noticed by the second or third, and I would do it every other hour. So I would start at 9 a.m. then, you know, I wouldn't do anything at 10 a.m. then 11 a.m. I'd go outside, do the same thing. Then I wouldn't do anything at noon and then I'd do it again at one or whatever. And I noticed by the second, third and fourth session, like the first session I'd have to warm up, I'd have to get myself ready, whatever. But the second, third and fourth, I'd get right into it and I just felt stronger like as the workouts progress. Are you guys noticing anything like that at all? Well, I'm getting really sore. So I'm doing, I'm doing something a little bit different. I'm not quite doing like an all day thing. What I do is I just, I pick two exercises per workout and I'm trying to do three workouts in the day. So I'll just pick, I'll pick two things. And it could be as skull crushers and squats. Like it doesn't even matter. Like I just decide I'm gonna hit my triceps and I'm gonna squat for the first two exercises. And then the next one I'll do later on in the day, I was doing like a stiff-legged deadlifts and rows. And so I pick two exercises. I do five sets. It takes me about 15 to 20 minutes to do the two exercises, five sets. And I do that three times a day. So I'm getting about 30 sets, total working sets for the day. Wow. And because it's broken up, the workout doesn't feel hard. I'm not breaking a sweat really when I even do them. But the next day I'm sore shit. So I know, I know it's more than enough volume. And then we try, I try to break it up with it. Yesterday was a good day. I went for a really good long walk with Katrina and Max. And so it's nice over here. Obviously there's nobody out. So it's, you know, we get a nice good long walk throughout all the houses and the snow out here. So, you know, if I can do that, the main thing that I have to worry about right now, even more than I think the, even the lifting is, you know, I've had a couple of days where I didn't lift and boy, I could probably, I'm probably getting under a thousand steps. So you gotta be really careful to not graze on food all day too. So it's, you know, if I'm sitting around all day long in the house and on top of that, I didn't get my workout in and then it could get really tempting to be grazing all day. So those are the, and I think that's the challenges I think a lot of people are having right now. I think a lot of people are at home, even if they are getting a little bit of a workout in, they're still sedentary for a majority of the day. And then they're tempted to be kind of snacking and grazing. So that's, I think that's probably an area that I think everybody is probably struggling with. And I too know what that feels like because I've had a couple of days like that where it's felt like that. Yeah, so what I started doing yesterday was I'll do three 30 minute walks a day. So I'll do one in the morning, one in the afternoon, and then one in the evening, just to go outside, move around. And man, I tell you what though, I've had some of the most amazing experiences going for a walk in my neighborhood. Like, and I've done this before, I have this route that I take, right? So Jessica and I will take a walk or I'll do one with my kids. And it's the same route, takes about 30, 35 minutes. And typically when you're walking on this route, you walk by people, you see people, and nobody says anything, you just mind your own business. But it's so different now. Whenever I see somebody, and people are keeping their distance. So if I'm walking on the sidewalk and someone's walking towards me, one of us will walk over to the street to maintain distance. So everybody seems to be pretty aware. But every single person smiles and says hi, which I've never experienced that in my neighborhood before. I mean, every single person, every person, I don't care how old, young or whatever. Everybody's saying hi, people are, and I feel like I can feel how people, they feel a sense of unity, a little bit of a sense of unity because we're kind of, and then I noticed something else yesterday. And I started seeing this kind of sporadically, but now I'm seeing it everywhere. I don't know if you guys have seen this yet, but our head walk chalks and they're writing, did you guys see my posts on Instagram? I did, I saw kids are starting to draw all over the chalk, like hope and positive thoughts and like all kinds of rainbows and cool stuff on the sidewalk. Dude, everywhere, it's happening everywhere. All over my walk, I'm seeing it, like at first I saw it once, now then the other day I saw it four times. Now I'm seeing it in like just tons of driveways and on the sidewalk. And they're like these hopeful messages from kids and I think that's so amazing. It was making me think like last night, after I got over my self-inflicted paranoia idiot poop or whatever, I was thinking to myself what it's gonna be like when everything calms down because at some point it will, at some point it's all gonna calm down and we're going to kind of go back to regular life. And I thought how different it's gonna be going to like a restaurant, like normally you go to a restaurant with your wife and whatever and you eat your dinner and you hang out a little bit or whatever. But I thought man, the first time I go to a restaurant when everything calms down, I'm gonna feel, I'm gonna really wanna talk to everybody around me. I'm gonna wanna, you know what I mean? I feel like we're gonna all feel like we wanna smile at each other and talk to each other. So, and I don't think I'm the only one that I know, there's definitely a sense of community and empathy that is kind of bringing all of us together during this time. I can definitely see the silver lining and what's going on. I think a lot of people are forced to be with their thoughts and it's ultra present. A lot of us distract ourselves with things outside of your home and I think that everyone being forced to be home and be with your family or you're having deep conversations and like I said, time with yourself. And there's some really cool things that are happening. I don't know if you saw, so DJ Nice, the famous DJ decided to do like a tribute to all the, everybody, the men and women that are serving and are still going out to work and dealing with all these people that are contagious and they're the real heroes right now. And so he did a live dance party and streamed it for nine hours. And yeah, it ended up getting so much traction like Michelle Obama and Bernie Sanders was in there and all kinds of celebrities. And so it turned into this big dance party that hundreds of thousands of people were tuning in live with yesterday and hanging out and dancing with him. I thought that was really cool. It's cool. I honestly feel like there's gonna be a creative explosion after all this is the dust settles. I really feel like people have enough time to then, like you said, be present and reflect and think about things and try to really figure out like some of their passions and reconnect to their passions and hobbies and things like that. I've seen some people just willingly giving out free guitar lessons and things and have been streaming with students and other teachers that have taken it upon themselves to structure a lesson for like my seventh grader and like all the rest of the seventh graders because no other teachers are doing it. So somebody just did it and they did this live class together and they're all talking. And it's really cool that, you know, what people are coming up with right now. Yeah, for me, the lessons that I'm starting to take out of this, and I think this is important. You know, I want to share that with the audience. You know, if you're, anytime you're going through a difficult, stressful time, one of the, in my experience, one of the best things you could do is try to ask yourself, what can I learn from this and how can I grow from this? That way at least it gives your, that stressful time a sense of meaning and purpose. You know, it kind of reframes it. You know, here's what I got from that, from that, you know, stressful situation. And for me, one of the big lessons, it was two of them. One is, you know, the false sense of control that I think we all, that we all had and that we're all, right now we're being reminded that we're not as in control of everything that we think we are. And that's something you need to expect, you know, you need to accept regardless of what's going on is that there's a, there are certain things you can control, but there's a lot that you can't and just focus on what you can. And this is a reminder of that. You know, this is a reminder that you can't, that you're not as in control as you think. And then the other thing is just how spoiled and easy it is for all of us to forget the things that are important and how we've become so easily attached to material things, things that aren't important, you know? And it's like, this is a huge reminder, you know, it's a big reminder like, look, these are not important. Here are the things that are really important. Like I said, walking around outside, I never think to myself how happy and grateful I am that there's other people walking around that I can say hi to you. I don't give a shit. Normally I walk, I do my walk and I'm done. And if somebody says hi to me, I'll say hi, I'm not an asshole. But my attitude now is like, if I see someone, I want to make eye contact. I want to say hi to them. Well, yeah, imagine the extreme version of that, right? And you're getting, we're all getting a taste of that right now. If you were on an island stranded by yourself for weeks or months or years at a time and you walked by the first other human being, like how excited would you be to fuck just to see another human being, right? So I think you're getting a, obviously a very small version of that because we've only been like what, a week now that we've all been confined to our homes. So I definitely feel the same thing too. I mean, I also think there's a lot of, I'm liking the trend that I'm seeing right now on like social, I feel like more and more people are being playful and fun and the attitudes kind of changing. You still have some of your people that are like negative Nancy's and doom and gloom and shit. But for the most part, I think we're seeing more and more positive, fun message and people getting created. Did you see Rita Wilson, Tom Hanks' wife? Oh, what's going on? Oh dude, you have to get on your phone right now and fricking look at her Instagram page. She, she posts this, I think Barstil Sports also repost it, I think, but she just, you know, she had COVID-19, right? Her and Tom. Yeah. So she's, she does this video and she's like reading a book and then Naughty by Nature comes on, hip hip hop hooray, right? Comes on. Yeah. And she's like, it's in the background. She's a verbatim. And then she fucking rips the whole song verbatim, dude. Oh, that's great. Oh, it's so good. It's so good. So, yeah. So I, you know, I think there's just, and it's so cool to see her do that, considering that she's gone through it right now, which I think is so, so important because I think so many people are, are freaked out. I mean, right now she's fully recovered, right? Or she's recovering. She's recovered. I don't think, I don't think consider them fully recovered until they've actually had a few weeks, right? Of recovery. But I mean, I think it's like, well, if anybody knows- I think it's a few weeks without, I'm sorry. Oh, if anybody knows how to do isolation, it's Tom Hanks from Castaway. You know what I mean? Yeah. Here is experience. Well, you know, I think it's important that people know that, I mean, we are in the four, we're up to 42 or 47,000, I think is what I've seen in total cases. But 97% of those are mild cases still. Only 3% are considered serious cases. Still, that's a thousand people that, you know, have a serious case of COVID-19. But, you know, there's still a majority of, even the people that are getting it are mild symptoms. So I think knowing that, or letting people know too that, you know, it's not that doom and gloom. What we're doing right now is a precaution to not overwhelm our hospitals. And I think it's smart with what we're doing and everybody should take heed to the advice of staying home and not gathering with social events or going places. I think it's really, really smart of all of us to band together and do that. Yeah, you need to be, you need to be rationally cautious. So do the things that you know that are, you know, that are smart to do. So, you know, isolating yourself, not hanging out with people, not visiting people, talking to people through FaceTime. You know, that's very, very, washing your hands. You know, that's very, very smart. Sitting at home and freaking out over stuff that hasn't happened or watching the news 24 seven, like that's, it's not helping you. It's not helping you. It's just gonna make you stay at home and be scared. This while I was telling this to my aunt, I told her, I said, okay, look, you wanna watch the news? I said, that's fine. Designate one time during the day that you watch the news. You're gonna check in, you know, at whatever time and then that's it. Keep yourself away from the news. And, you know, if something big happens or whatever, I'm sure you're here about it. Yeah. But, you know, and then, and also the strategies of, you know, keeping yourself kind of feeling good and calm. So like chamomile tea is really good for that. That's something you can use on a daily basis. It's a natural, relaxing herb. It's very, very safe. Even children can take chamomile passion flower. That's another herb that you can use. That one's a little stronger. So if you're having, if you're feeling a little bit more anxious and you need to add something, you know, passion flower, although I don't think you wanna take passion flower on a super regular basis. No, I can't chamomile on some CBD, bro. That's what I was just gonna say. Ned, you know, like our sponsor Ned, their product are, you know, listeners have been using that for a long time. And what's the number one thing they say helps with anxiety. You know, so do those things and be proactive about it. And, you know, I was thinking about, remember when we went to listen to Arthur Brooks talk and how profound that was? One thing that he said that really stuck out to me that is true was that the opposite of love is fear or the opposite of fear is love. You know, you think that the opposite of fear is bravery or the opposite of love is hate or whatever, but it's not, it's fear. So if you start to feel fearful, start thinking of all the, how much you love the people around you, the gratitude that you have for, you know, being again, like saying hi to people as you walk by them, talk to people on FaceTime. He posted an article about, you know, how our bodies react to human contact and how humans need, you know, human contact. And he says that studies show that FaceTime does that a lot better than just a phone call because you can see the person's face. I got something for that. I just, I actually, I forgot to send it to you. It seems like you weren't responding. I just downloaded the app. Okay, good. So House Party is made by Epic Games. It's an app you can download for free. And it's up to eight people at one time on your phone. So it's, yeah, yeah. It's like a mini Zoom, but then it's nice because then you don't have to have a Zoom account. It just, everybody can get in, get in on it and you can all be talking. It doesn't matter if you have... It's the old school party line. Yeah, it doesn't matter if you have a droid or you have an iPhone, everybody can get it. So it's blowing up right now. It's pretty cool. So I had everybody on the team download that so we can get on later on as get the staff on and have some fun a little bit. Along those lines, I'm glad you went that direction too, because I had some things like that. I'll try it every time we have an episode and bring some cool things that I've read as far as what are some people doing. There's an app called Telegram app. I guess it's kind of like old school chat rooms. So yeah, it's all encrypted too. So it's as far as privacy is concerned or something like that. It's popular, it's blowing up right now. It's called Telegram app and just allows you, you can create your own group, private group. You can create a public group where people can come in. You can add, join other groups, have discussions like and it's everything. You can, it's pretty cool. Well dude, I tell you what, I can't think of a better time for this to be happening. This was 1990, we'd all be calling each other on the phone, but now we could like FaceTime and get on group calls. We had like AOL, it'd take like an hour for it to get fired up, but yeah. Hey, what are you guys eating over there? How are your meals going? What's going on? Much better now. Once we hit the grocery store, got restocked. So we actually were able to get some good stuff. Last night was butcher borked. Butcher boxes pulled pork. So Katrina made, the girls have been kind of bouncing back and forth between nights. So last night Katrina made pulled pork sandwiches. Yeah, we had that with a avocado cucumber salad that she makes. Oh, that's awesome. And then the night before, Courtney made her like her famous meatball. She's spaghetti. Yeah, her meatball sausage spaghetti. Yeah, it's really like meat-skitty. It's not like a whole lot of spaghetti in there, but yeah, it's really good. And of course I got my gluten-free pasta in there, so. Yeah, so we were able to get some chicken thighs. So we got, I mean, the girls brought the crock pot, the insta pot, the Doug brought an air fryer up here. So, I mean, we're pretty much- Yeah, we're set now. Yeah, we're set. The first couple of days that we were here, we were a little limited to our options, but now we're loaded up with like good choices. So it's been pretty solid. Awesome. So I thought right now would be a good time to share some good news that I've been sitting on for the past 10 weeks. I think now I got the clearance from Jessica to be able to share this. So the audience doesn't know that this, but we are expecting. Oh, that's right. I just remembered that we only told that to the live audience, huh? Yeah. Yeah, never. Yeah, this is it. I haven't told anybody. We waited, you know, for obvious reasons or whatever, but yeah, Jessica's pregnant and we are expecting. So, you know, due date is in October. Oh, yeah, wow. So super, super excited about it. Congrats to you guys, yeah, for sure. Super excited about it. The kids are super excited. My daughter is just beside herself. She's like, you know, when we finally told them, she's like, take me to this was weeks ago, right? She goes, take me to the store. I need to be able to buy the first present, you know, for the baby. And so she bought the baby a blanket, you know? She draws pictures for the baby and so, yeah. So that's good news, you know, so. That's exciting. So cute too. Yeah, you guys are waiting to hear the sex, right? You're gonna be surprised. We're not gonna get, find out the gender until the baby's born. So, now walk school. Well, yeah, walk me through this. So now do you guys, do you pick a boy name and a girl name early? And have you done that? We have, I don't think she wants me to share the names that we do. Yeah, you don't wanna do, yeah, you don't want to either. Cause then everybody puts their fucking two cents in. I just wanna know if you did. No, yeah, we did. We picked two names. Okay, so you got two names already and then like, how do you paint the room right now? Yeah, what do we call it? That's a good question. I think we're gonna try and paint it kind of neutral. You know, I have that room with the sauna, you know, I put that sauna in the room. So that's gonna be the baby's room. So I gotta figure out what to do with the sauna now. I'm gonna see if I can fit it in the garage with my home gym, but that'll be the, that'll be the little baby's room. So I'll be getting no sleep at the end. You didn't respond to the cable setup that I sent a picture of. Did you see that? What do you think of that thing? No, I didn't see that. What was it? Man, you were really, for a guy who's just sitting at home doing nothing. He doesn't look at any of your checks, I guess. Don't worry, I'll have Justin send it over to you. I put it in the thread. We went over to go get some dumbbell racks for the dumbbells over here and walked in. And so far, you know, obviously the red and black theme is coming together. You saw the pictures of Justin, obviously finishing the platform up and you saw the rubber mats going on below the PRX setup, right? So we went over there to get dumbbell racks and then I came across, and it's in the group thread. So if you go back, you can probably see it's right after the pictures I sent of Justin doing the platform. But it's red and black and it's a full cable setup and you can actually hook where the dumbbells would go. It's really nice. It's got a ladder. It's a little expensive, but it's sick. Wait a minute, that is in our garage? No, no, no. I want to put it in our garage. No, we're trying to pitch you guys on it because it'd be a great way to kind of store the dumbbells while also having cable access. Dude, you don't got to pitch shit to me. This equipment, you want to put more equipment in the garage, do it. All right, all right. We've been trying to convince Doug over here. We'll see. I'm working some deals to make that happen. Doug's been tightening down the hatches over here financially and stuff like that. Justin and I have to measure out everything we buy and stuff right now. So I have been reading a little bit of fun fact stuff just to try and see. Because I get inspired once I've listened to or I hear about another podcast, some random facts. I've never even known before. So one of them I thought was pretty funny and gross at the same time. You know, one of the, I don't know if it's 80%, but it's a large majority of the substance of these perfumes that you're commonly, like some of the higher end perfumes out there that smell really good. Do you know what they consist of? What? Is this where they use like extracts from like, like there was like something like from animal. I feel like Sal would kind of know. Yeah. Yeah, it's actually from sperm whale vomit. Oh God. Sperm whale vomit or like excrement. So isn't lipstick made from their dicks or something like that too? It could be. I mean, apparently whales are very much the cosmetic. Is it something like that? Yeah. Am I wrong? It's called amber grease and it's like produced from sperm whales only. And so it's like, it's in their intestines and then I guess they either vomit it up and then it like solidifies on top of the water and then they collect it and it has kind of a musky smell once it kind of dries out. And then they can also extract like some kind of like smell-free alcohol from it as well too. I don't know, it's just weird. Yeah, it's really weird. Like who just thought that? Yeah, I always want to know how something like that starts. Yeah, I think it started as like soap. Like they started like kind of grabbing some of the fat and stuff and then they found that. And I don't know, I feel like some people just grab things in the sea and then they just like hold it to their face and smell it. They're like, oh, that's really fishy. Oh, you know, that's a musky. I like that. Let's rub it all over me. I wonder where this comes from. Well, when something says all natural and we think, oh, that must be, that's good then. That's sometimes that's what it is. Like, instead of getting the chemical smell, you're getting, you know, sperm whale puke or, you know, beaver anus extract. Beaver anus? Yeah, another one I thought I would share was, I guess they had found a fossilized big huge mushroom which was used to stand like 24 feet tall. What? And in three feet wide and they think that they existed before trees. So they found this, I guess they had just like done this archeological dig and they'd found this and it's all over like the scientific journals and all these other like Smithsonian magazines. 20 foot mushroom? 24 foot mushroom. Whoa. White mushroom. Yeah. How old was it? Oh my God. Yeah, a couple of million. I forget like how many millions of years old but very old. Well, isn't the currently the biggest organism on earth? Isn't it a mushroom? Yeah. Yeah, yeah. That's because it's, you know, all underground connected. Like it connects like all under the soil. And so like the largest living land mass is, I guess it's like up near Oregon, I think. If I remember correctly, I remember hearing that on a podcast with one of the mushroom experts. Oh wow. I'm pulling up some stuff on it. It seems like that, I guess that was more common than not, right? That they just had all these mushrooms that were mapped before trees. Yeah. That's so. Well, mushrooms are fascinating. They're fast. They have their own health properties that are independent of vegetables, fruits, nuts, and meats. The more you learn about them, the more you realize that you probably should consume them on a regular basis like you would with vegetables and meat. Yeah. They're awesome when you're quarantined too. Yeah. Oh yeah. Right. Totally. This clause brought to you by Organify. For those days you fall short on getting your organic veggies or whole food nutrition Organify fills the gap with laboratory-tested certified organic superfoods to help give your health the performance the added edge. Try Organify totally risk-free for 60 days by going to Organify.com. That's O-R-G-A-N-I-F-I dot com and use a coupon code MINEPOMP for 20% off at checkout. Our first question is from A to FAO1. I find myself less motivated to do home workouts on a consistent basis versus going to the gym on a daily basis. Any insight why this is an advice on improving consistency of workouts at home? Oh yeah. This is expected for a lot of people and part of it is the, you know, think about when you go to the gym, the ritual that you inevitably have that leads up to going to the gym and then the process of going to the gym. You know, it's like you're preparing yourself for a workout and that preparation is what puts you in the mental state to want to have your workout. So, you know, maybe you go to the gym after work. So what do you typically do after work? Once work is kind of done, you think to yourself, like, okay, I'm going to start getting ready, you know, to go to the gym and you get your gym bag and then you take your pre-workout and then you drive to the gym and you might have a certain music that you listen to on the way there and then the ritual of checking in and changing in the locker room. And by the time you're ready to work out, you've done this whole ritual to prepare yourself for your workout. And so one of the best pieces of advice I can give you because, you know, if you're at home, it's almost like you take, you know, you don't have a ritual, right? So it's like, oh, time to work out. But, you know, five seconds ago, we were just on the couch, you know, surfing against, you know, Instagram or Facebook or, you know, watching, you know, scary news or something like that. My recommendation is to ritualize what you do before your workout. So that may mean drinking your pre-workout or your beet juice or, you know, something like that, priming your body, turning on a specific type of music to prepare your body to work out. Maybe move to a segment of your house that you've only designated for workouts. Maybe it's your living room or a part in your bedroom or whatever. Get your equipment out, set it all aside and ritualize yourself, you know, create a ritual before the workout that can really help. The other thing is that, you know, and we've talked about this, I don't know, probably a million times on the podcast is that motivation is a terrible way to get yourself to work out on a consistent basis because motivation, regardless of who you are, it's gonna come and go. It's like a feeling that you have and it's impossible to always be motivated. So the important thing to focus on is discipline, meaning you're gonna have to force yourself when you don't feel motivated. And even if you just go through the motions and that'll help carry you through and be consistent until you do have the motivation again, which inevitably will come back. Motivation, you know, it waxes and wanes. It doesn't stay with you forever, but it doesn't stay away forever as well. So something that's been helping me out, it's been helping some of my client friends and stuff that I've been talking to with this. So up here where it's cold outside and it's, you know, nice and warm and cozy by the fire in here, it's really easy to sit on the comfy couch and watch TV and relax. And it's really hard to even just, even having a nice garage gym like we have here to get up off the couch and then head over there. So one of the things that it helps me a ton, it's not that hard to get up and go for a walk. So I do the walk first. So if you set a time in your day and I do recommend ritualizing it somehow, whether it be first thing in the morning or by noon or by whatever, that you make your time that you're gonna go for at least like a half hour walk. And because you're out and breathing fresh air and you're getting the blood pumping and the heart rate going up a little bit, it's really easy from there to transition into the workout. I find it more difficult to transition from sitting on the couch to, okay, it's time for me to get in that mindset of lifting. So a nice way to kickstart that is to at least get out there and go walk. And so if you ritualize walking every single day, it'll probably promote you getting at least your three to five workouts in the week. You know, I think that's a really good way to stay on top of it. Yeah, I think too, one of the benefits of going to the gym is that you sort of make your way in one section and then kind of move to the next section. And you sort of have this idea based off of visuals, what you're gonna accomplish while you're at the gym. And I think that, you know, at home, it's a totally different story. You just kind of see the same equipment you've always had. It's in one specific spot of your house. And after a while, like the idea is just don't, you know, keep coming and aren't as fresh. And I think that, you know, riding out specifically what you're gonna do, whether it's on a whiteboard or you have it on a piece of paper. That's a good idea. And just really, you know, hone in specifics and try to be a little bit more disciplined in that because of the fact that if you're just gonna wing it, there's a lot less likelihood that you're gonna get a great workout. And so again, to pile onto what you guys said about ritualizing, I think that's very important to have a specific time, to have a specific type of a warmup priming kind of a session, go outside, go for a walk, get your mind right first and then have that plan there available. And then just try and hammer it out as much as you can on your own. Yeah, and you know, here's the other thing too, is that it's easier to stay consistent when you do it on a daily basis than if you do it on a every other day type basis. So you're more likely like to keep the ball rolling, you know what I mean? Well, if you do it every day, you know, before you eat breakfast or after you breakfast or you know, after lunch or before lunch or whenever to structure it and to do it every single day so that you get into this kind of habit of doing it on a consistent basis versus every other day I work out because then when you have that day off, it tends to be harder to get the ball rolling again. For sure. Next questions from fitfunfather. What is the best way to implement our at home exercise program? One hour a day of body weight and resistance bands or should we split it up into two or three 20 minute workouts? How can this affect our mental health? Oh, 100% it's so much better for you mentally to have your workouts be broken up into shorter sessions. Number one, let's talk about the physical attributes. Like why it's good for you physically? It's good for you physically because if you've been going to the gym for a long time and now you're stuck at home, you've probably never worked out this way. You've probably never split up your workouts into shorter workouts throughout the day. So, you know, we've talked about this before that, you know, changing the stimulus and, you know, novelty. Yeah, it's novel. So it's going to benefit your body because it's different. So that's number one. Number two, it breaks up your day. So you have something to look forward to every two or three hours. That kind of structure is excellent for mental health versus I work out once and then the rest of the day I'm sitting around and I think my thoughts can get away from me and, you know, when you're working out it's exercises and movement is a great way to be present. And being present is excellent for mental health because you're focusing on right now. Right now I'm moving. Right now I can feel my biceps. Right now I can feel my legs. Right now I'm healthy. Right now I've got music on and I'm not thinking about all these other, you know, potential, you know, scary things or whatever. So 100% man, if you're listening right now I highly recommend you do short workouts throughout the day versus one workout. And by the way, one workout a day is a million times better than no workout. So I don't want you to think this is the only way to do it but I think it's a lot better to do it this way. I think there's also some major productivity benefits from this too. So, you know, there's a lot of people that are working from home now. And if you've ever, and I remember I used to tell clients that were like desk jobs. They had eight hours in front of a computer all day long. And I'd tell them like at every hour just get up and do 10 squats and 10 push-ups. And that seems so basic. And it's not like you're gonna get this great massive workout from that. But one, the accumulation of it throughout the day you end up doing quite a bit. And then two, pay attention to how you feel right after you do that. And then you go back to work again. So I think the benefits of the productivity that you'll get for those of you that are quarantined to home but still have to do at home work. I think that's a great strategy for those reasons. Forget the benefits that you'll get for the gains and the novelty of that. And I think all those great perks. I also see there's a lot of perks to that just for being more productive throughout your day. So if you can break it up. Yesterday that's what I did was the three 20 minute workouts. If you can do that multiple times a day I think that you can see a lot of benefits from that. Yeah. Oh dude, then go ahead. Go ahead. No, go ahead dude. I was gonna say this is how people work out in prison a lot of times. Yeah. They'll do workouts. And now you gotta ask yourself why do they work out like this in prison? Part of it is because it helps with their mental state. So here they are forcibly locked up and the ones that tend to have the best outcomes are the ones that have structured three workouts a day. And then in terms of the results that they get, this was one of the inspirations behind trigger sessions which you find in maps and a bollock. So if you don't have maps and a bollock trigger sessions are not intense. They're lower intensity type workouts that you do throughout the day on the days off in between your heavy and hard workouts. And this was one of the inspirations for it is that I knew a couple people that had served some time and this is how they worked out. And they're like, dude, when I came out I was able to do hundreds of pushups at a time and pull ups like crazy and I got super fit and this is how I worked out. I did 20 minutes, three, four times a day type of deal and I got great results with it. So highly recommend it, highly recommend it. Yeah, I was actually gonna contribute. I saw a post that inspired me. I think it was Joe DeFranco. He always has great exercises that he's putting out there. But he brought back to my attention some isometric poses that he used within his body weight training. And then I thought about that and was gonna structure a workout a couple of times a day where I messed with the tempo on each workout. So one was a little bit more focused on isometric holds. One was then more focused on eccentric, like negatives. So going really slow on the negatives. And then the last one was obviously like a little more explosive, a little more strength driven working out. So there's different ways that you can mess with the variables to give you a different kind of stimulus as well with just body weight and bands. There's a lot you can do. Next question is from Ms. Adam 224. I've noticed that since being confined to home my appetite has dramatically increased. I know I'm not alone in this. Why are we so hungry and what can we do to regulate our intake? So I think this is an example of when we confuse like true hunger. And cravings. Yeah, with cravings, right? Totally. And I think we're so used to being distracted and doing things that you're kind of just at home. And I felt this too. So this isn't me like singling this person out and being like, you're not hungry, you're just craving. I get the same issue. It's your- It's more accessible, it's like all over, yeah. Right, you're very close to your refrigerator all day long now. Where there's only so many hours a day that I'm by my refrigerator or my food cupboard or whatever. So yeah, I think that this is an example though of when we start to confuse real hunger with just pure cravings, right? Totally, this is, it's stress eating. So you're at home, you're not supposed to go anywhere. You're maybe not working. You're hearing all this uncertain news. You're right next to your refrigerator and food temporarily makes you feel better. It's a fact. Like when you're eating something that you enjoy eating it puts you in the moment and it gives you a temporary break from fear or from stress. This has been well known forever. This is one of the main reasons why people overeat is because they, especially when people are really obese when you look at, whenever I've worked with clients we're in the severely obese category, 50, 60 pounds or more overweight. Almost all of them used food as a drug as a way to escape whatever negative feelings that they have. So that's what you're doing right now. So number one, I want you to emphasize with yourself and forgive yourself because if you start to think how angry you are with yourself or how could I do this and why am I doing this? Those negative feelings will fuel more of that kind of feeding. Because think about it this way. If negative feelings are driving you to eat more than you normally do what do you think more negative feelings are gonna do? So step number one, empathize with yourself and forgive yourself. That's number one. Don't get pissed off and hate yourself because that'll just make it worse. So that's number one. Number two, now that you've acknowledged what is going on you need to actively think of how you can take care of yourself and you need to actively think how you can care for yourself while you're feeling these feelings. And there's a couple of things you could do. Number one, every time you feel like you wanna grab some food and snack on something or eat and you've identified that I'm not really hungry I'm just stressed out. Get on the phone with someone. Call someone, FaceTime someone, family or friend and talk to them. Create a little bit of a space between you and the food. Create a barrier. You could also meditate or you could exercise. You could say to yourself, wow I'm really craving some food I'm gonna go for a walk instead. You gotta interrupt the cycle because the longer that this goes on the more it becomes a solidified behavior and the more difficult it is later on to stop it. But I do wanna be very clear, totally normal and probably common. I can only imagine everything. I guarantee lots of people are going through this right now. I know I am. And you just gotta stop the cycle. Don't get super angry with yourself, be kind and replace, because you can reinforce other behaviors. So if I'm stressed out and I'm reaching for food and I interrupt that with a walk or a phone call with a family member or friend then not only am I stopping a behavior that might be bad for me but I may be creating a new behavior that I can reinforce. So then what ends up happening the more you practice that is next time you're stressed out your instinct isn't to grab food. Your instinct is to do the other thing that you've now started doing whether it's calling a friend and FaceTiming them or going for a walk. So you can hack this by creating healthier behaviors but first you have to identify it and again, don't judge yourself for it. Okay, next question is from our Yang 9015. Can you guys define what it means to take a workout to fatigue? How does this relate to taking it to failure? So I picked this question because this is how we recommend in maps anywhere. And I've got a lot of DMs of people confused on fatigue and failure. And it was something that I remember when we wrote the program that we talked a lot about what that looks like. And I think when we, first of all when we discuss failure, our definition of failure I think is a lot different than a lot of other people when they explain failure. When you are doing, let's just say, for argument sake, bicep curls and you are keeping really strict good form for 10 reps is what you're targeting. And at rep nine, you begin to rock your elbows or lean back to get the weight up like that you've gone too far, right? Like the minute that form starts to break down that's failure to us. So when we explain in any program where we talk on this podcast about exercising to failure it's not for to failure of the entire body or breaking down, it's failure to be able to perform the movement with perfect form. So I think it's important that we make that clear. Totally, and that's an excellent explanation. We use the word fatigue because like Adam said when you say failure, most people have a different understanding of failure than how we would. And typically when you say failure people think, oh, I'm gonna do as many as I can until I can't do another one. Until you flop on the ground. Well, there's acronyms in the fitness community that's become very popular, right? With the Enom, right? As many reps as possible. And that's AMRAP. What's EMOM is every minute on the minute. Yeah, all these, and right now I'm seeing this everywhere. Like obviously everybody is posting at home workouts. And I remember when we first wrote MAPS Anywhere the motivation behind that was how lackluster effort I think there was towards programming at home stuff. Yeah, and I think too that people don't realize how difficult it is to maintain really rigid, tight technique and form in your exercises. I think it's just a natural propensity to wanna kinda cheat your way through because your body wants to make these movements a little bit more efficient, a little bit easier for you to get through them. So it's a different mindset. It's not about getting through the reps and it's not about accomplishing and tackling the workout. It's performing each one with the best intent and what it's supposed to do. And so once that breaks, once you have little bits of variance in your form and you start paying attention to that, that's where we say stop. So that's the difference. You do get fatigued in these movements and tired and that's one thing, but if you can still maintain a nice rigid technique then it's fair game. Yeah, to put it in a nutshell, you want to keep going so long as your form is perfect. So the word is perfect, okay? So you have to be very honest with yourself. If your forms deviate at all, you're done. That's when you stop the set. So it's not keep going until you can't do anymore. It's keep going until your perfect form is no longer perfect. And Adam touched on why we created maps anyway. Because remember, we created maps anywhere years ago before all of this stuff was going on. And when we looked at the space and we looked at workouts that were at home, I mean, they were better than nothing, but what they basically were was just the combination of body weight exercises. That's what at home workouts were. And they were all randomly thrown and all of them designed based off of intensity. That's it. It was like, how many exercises can we throw together? How can we make you jump in place? How can we make you do burpees? How can we make you sweat and get tired? And of course that's better than nothing, but if the workout isn't programmed well, just like with any workout, just like with a workout at home, at the gym, if the programming isn't good, you're just not gonna get the best results. And what you don't wanna do is fall into the following trap. You don't wanna fall in the trap of making up for bad programming with intensity. This is a huge mistake. And to be honest, I see this mistake being made not just by average everyday people, but by fitness enthusiasts who should know better because what you're having right now probably is a lot of people who go to the gym on a regular basis, super hardcore. Now they're stuck at home. And of course, they're worried about losing their gains. And so all they're doing is just beating the crap out of themselves at home with insane workouts, which after a couple weeks, that's not gonna, not only is it gonna yield you no results, but it might even start to take you backwards. Well, that's all I'm seeing right now. All I'm seeing right now is the EMOM, the AMRAP, the Tabata, all these circuit-based body weight programs are what people are, all these fitness professionals. Lots of aimless movement. Yeah, and so yeah, there was a lot more thought put into maps anywhere. I mean, the idea was, and what we wanna do was to show people that you could train from home and progress. This isn't just a program to get you by because you don't have a gym right now. The idea of it is that you can get into an at home program and actually see progress in your strength, your gains, your body fat loss, whatever your main goal was. And it wasn't just centered around intensity. It's not just can we make you sweat and burn a bunch of calories. It was very methodical the way we structured that program. And so yeah, I'm seeing a ton of the high intensity circuit-based jump around plyometric type of at home stuff. It's pretty weak. No, those workouts are terrible whether you had a gym or at home, they're terrible. I mean, what you find in a well-planned at home workout, and I'll use maps anywhere as an example because I'm familiar with that program. That's the one we created is, yes, you do have some body weight exercises, but you also have band exercises. You also have exercises designed with a correctional component. You have tension poses, which are very important that almost nobody ever does. And these are using a, like a broomstick, just a regular old broomstick that'll give you feedback. So you have a whole variety of different ways of training the body all put together in a very effective, well thought out program that as Adam said, we designed it to be standalone effective on its own regardless, not as a poor replacement, but you know, and one of the keys in there is we tell people on some of the sets, and it has to be done appropriately. It's not on every set, it's not on every exercise, but it's done strategically, are to do reps to fatigue. And we do use intensity, but we use it smart and we apply it properly. And that's the type of intensity we want you to go for. And that does not mean you go until you can't go anymore. We almost never recommend that kind of failure or intensity because here's a couple reasons why. Number one, when your form breaks down and it's no longer perfect, now all you're doing is you're training shitty recruitment patterns and shitty form. Now you're pushing your body super hard, but the technique that you're now solidifying, because anything you train, you train, you know what I'm saying? So whatever it is you practice with your workout is what you're training your body to learn how to do. So if you're doing a set of 50 push-ups and the first 30 were perfect and the last 20 were less than perfect, well, now you've got about 60%, you're hammering your body with good form and 40% is shitty form. Now you keep that up long enough and use that consistently enough and you're gonna start to solidify bad recruitment patterns that's going to increase your risk of injury. It's going to take the focus off of the target muscles and not only that, but intensity for intensity's sake, it compromises your body, your body's ability to adapt. Remember, your goal with exercise is to send the right signal, the perfect signal to get your body to adapt. You go too far beyond that, all your body can think about is recovering. So yeah, you're gonna get sore, you're gonna sweat, your body's gonna recover, but it's not gonna adapt. It's not going to add strength, build muscle. It's not going to improve, you're just gonna survive and that's a terrible approach to exercise. So we almost never, and any of our programs tell people to keep going until you can't move anymore. Almost always it's the high intensity that we recommend is when your form breaks down, you're done. There's no need to practice and teach your body less than perfect form. There's no, why practice less than perfect form? Practice, perfect practice may be perfect, right? That's what you hear in sports all the time and that's true for exercise as well. So regardless if you're following maps anywhere or not, you're doing your own at home workout, do perfect reps. And when your next rep, your form is awesome, perfect. You're done with that set. Take a break, rest, gather yourself and then go again and then follow that same strategy. As soon as your form is less than perfect, stop the set. There's no need to practice and train your body to move in ways that are less than perfect because again, you're in this for the long haul. We're not just looking for one hard, short workout or make me sweat today. You want a lifestyle, a lifelong fitness. So practice perfect, that's the key. And with that, go to mindpumpfree.com, download all of our guides and resources. We have a lot of free resources on that page so you can read them all stuff and there's all kinds of different topics, how to build your arms, how to get a tighter midsection, how to squat like a pro, how to burn more body fat. There's a lot of different resources on there. They're all free. Every single one of them you can download all of them. Again, it's mindpumpfree.com. You can also find Adam, Justin and myself on Instagram so you can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin. You can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at mindpumpmedia.com. The RGB Superbundle includes Maps Anabolic, Maps Performance and Maps Aesthetic, nine months of phased expert exercise programming designed by Sal, Adam and Justin to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels and performs. With detailed workout blueprints and over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having Sal, Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers but at a fraction of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30 day money back guarantee and you can get it now plus other valuable free resources at mindpumpmedia.com. If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five star rating and review on iTunes and by introducing Mind Pump to your friends and family. We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mind Pump.
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Sci Fi Anthology Recommendations
30-second Sci-Fi Book Review #113 Sci-Fi Anthology Recommendations BECOME A SPONSOR! http://30secondscifi.50th.st
[ "30secondSciFi", "science fiction", "book review", "anthologies", "Terry Carr", "Donald A. Wollheim", "David G. Hartwell", "SFF", "booktube", "Gardner Dozois" ]
2015-08-03T01:56:27
2024-04-23T14:37:12
269
pcPJniKkQs8
In one of my monthly roundup videos a while back I said that at some point I was going to do a special about these short story anthologies edited by David G. Hartwell. They're gigantic and I haven't gone around to them. The point I was making was that I liked his taste in stories for his anthologies and I always have. I was working on my July monthly roundup for tomorrow when I saw that Becky posted her July wrap up and she mentioned a large science fiction anthology that she didn't enjoy that she had trouble getting through and that gave me an excuse to talk about anthologies to recommend. Becky in this particular case I don't think it was the fact that the stories were all unrelated and there was such a variety on that that gave you so much trouble. I think it's the stories were bad. You're going for real traditional classic science fiction and that particular book you have there was edited by Gardner Dojois and that's not what he does. He emphasizes style over story and the the kind of classic authors that that you've been reading style doesn't come into their storytelling at all and I think that's the problem. I noticed it a few years ago when I was buying stacks of science fiction short story anthologies and I was noticing that every time I picked up a book that was edited by Gardner Dojois I immediately didn't like it. It was the stories. It's the stories that he was choosing and I think that's the particular problem here. I'm going to recommend some anthology editors that I think cover classic sci-fi really well. First of all I've covered these before the science fiction hall of fame from the 1970s. Each these are giant collections and they have real classics real reputable classics in them. Each volume was edited by a different author Arthur C Clark edited one of the volumes by the way. Also the annual world's best SF anthologies from the 1970s and 80s edited by David A. Walheim. This has I think the classic kind of stuff that you're looking for and I recommend them to anybody. Also from the 1970s the universe series edited by Terry Carr. I have volume three and volume 10 here. These are always good stuff. Terry Carr had great taste in classic science fiction. He would choose classics and also stuff you hadn't seen before. The analog best of science fiction series I have a large collected volume here. I believe this was a series of edited by Lester Del Rey. Lester Del Rey was a big name in science fiction publishing for decades and he has really great taste in classic sci-fi. So look for stuff edited by Lester Del Rey. As far as more modern stuff goes this was one of the first things that came to mind. It's a collection called Redshift from just a few years ago maybe 10 years ago. It's edited by Al Sarantonio is someone that I'm not familiar with but I remember thinking that this was a really unusual collection and it's modern stuff too. After I had bought it I was looking at a copy of it in the store once and a guy who worked at the store came up and said people really like this and I said I know I've read it is great. Now I'm going to come back around to David G. Hartwell. He's my favorite. Any time I see an anthology edited by David G. Hartwell I know it's going to be good. He has a series called Years Best SF that's been going on since the mid 90s. This is volume one and I've got looks like three six nine and fifteen here. David G. Hartwell has great taste that meshes very well with mine and I think it would mesh well with yours Becky seeing the kind of stuff that you like. My biggest problem with with this collection and usually most of these collections is they'll say Years Best SF and they'll say which numbered volume it is but they don't put the year on the cover. It's infuriating. Someday I will get to these giant collections. These are monsters but I will and I may review them individually. Until then see ya. You can support 30 Seconds Sci-Fi and my other projects by becoming a patron. There's a link in the description below. And visit the 30 Seconds Sci-Fi Tumblr. That's my headquarters. In addition to my videos I publish links and updates there every day.
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