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UC13NIM-ePLUiKf37-ZhVMkw
Prega News lauds women's ability to gracefully balance commitments.
🚺 @PregaNews lauds women's ability to gracefully balance commitments. The campaign #SheCanCarryBoth has been released ahead of Women's Day 2024! Read more: https://lnkd.in/gjvGeGbJ #WomensDay #InternationalWomensDay #IWD2024 #GenderEquality #GirlPower #WomenEmpowerment #HerStory
[ "Marketing", "Media", "Advertising", "Ad Reviews", "Media News", "Marketing News", "Latest industry updates", "Print", "IPRCCA", "Events", "IDMA" ]
2024-03-04T09:23:53
2024-04-22T18:20:20
159
3k5AOEFym2Q
वगानने, मैंवोंरहीग बहुं, मैं, उआखह ज़ान ती लीफ भी जानेगे आनगे जाने सेझा? वह, साझ लास दे है! बच्चुगे प्री बोट रिस्जानश देक né क़ा, ती एल भी अगगगग! चां जो जी जान ची एगा! आप धिदादी सब टो। आप जीब शुब खुडिवालता, उरली आप ग़ वेड़ा कि रहा हैं. अखर आप लोग भी बहुत है. अप भी रहा हो Du. आप लुई वरी यहाप लोग ग़ाजान जीब आगे. लिहावी लिए बगा के वरागा कि माखनी रहा है. आच अट्ज़ा अब का लास टिए है आप पी फ्रपेर दी की बोड इजएम तुque आप बोड इजएम सोप प्रुठा है कि अपने पुड साल पड़हे तो कीणी यह जोन का सकने लिएक रब आप भी � सक कर सब रथ समहिएक बोड उज़ा क्यूल ज़ूँन नही बखजाजी में चुत्त्तिया नहीं ले लेई मेरी कुथ चुडन्स को ऐक्स्त्रा क् налासिस की सथा। मैंग माँई अपका लास्ट महीना चाल रहें यंबध्यो का भी डो लास्मन चाल रहें यप्सेव अज्च भेछ में हुते न अदम तुजी से आज आज है, तुजी से कल का नाम है तेरी लगन को हूँस लोग को हमारा हर सलाम है प्रेगा नीुज विशिस यूव आप देरी हापी विमिन्स दे बकुष शी जे खारी बोत
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3k5AOEFym2Q", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCApKWe9YYSzSsZ0m5mLhl7g
2 DAYS TO GO | One-handed gift wrapping with Darby and Clarke
2 days until Christmas and today's gift is Stephen Darby and Nathan Clarke attempting to wrap a gift with one hand.
[ "Stephen Darby", "Nathan Clarke", "Football", "Football League", "Football League One", "Christmas", "English Football League" ]
2016-12-23T22:34:13
2024-04-23T01:06:32
198
3kajHv3C1CQ
I love it. The best one though, isn't it? It's not a quick kiss. Is your clothes on first? I just want to have a close-up of the spectrum. Okay. Oh, wow. Oh, let's have a look at the old. If you made up, you could have done that. We'll have a close-up in the camera. Really? You'd be delighted. That's what won. Has it got fishing chips inside? I don't think so. I think there's a winner. There's a few easier ways of doing this present. Thanks a lot. Thank you everybody.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kajHv3C1CQ", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UC4al3A_gysYEIzAM1L2qZbg
The Reconstruction of Custody Suites
A new detention facility currently under construction in the nation's capital. Read more: https://www.govt.lc/news/new-detention-facility-currently-under-construction
[ "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" ]
2024-01-05T16:18:19
2024-02-05T16:06:44
116
3K54B2Kasf4
I remember before the demolition of what we had previously. It was easy when persons were apprehended to be taken to custody suites. And of course the SIS major crime and CID in the investigations. But we do not have custody suites. This is the challenge that major crime faces because of the volume of crime to investigate and to be going the length and breadth of St. Wusha to find a cell to keep these offenders. It's a challenge. When somebody is arrested, the officers at CID and major crime have a very difficult task because we have no place, no way in the city to keep these offenders. For instance, if you apprehend three persons or three perpetrators for a homicide, you cannot keep these three perpetrators, these three accused in the same cell Now, if you have custody suites, it's easier for you. But if you do not have custody suites, you have to go to the length and breadth of the country to keep these offenders. So having custody suites, whether it's before the casters or ever, for us now as in casters, it's a plus. So I'm looking forward to the completion of custody suites. And I don't think I'm the only one. I think the entire executive and of course the rank and file of the organization. I look forward to that and I really want to thumb the promise.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3K54B2Kasf4", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCkOuZ5jhoA_b6knWz943g1Q
Animation Workshop Krystal Huynh #3
Need animation tips and help with your animation? ► Sign up for my workshop! No minimum level requirements! You can show me beginner animation all the way up to advanced acting pieces. You get 16 submissions, which can be weekly or every other week or whenever you want/can submit. The reviews are in video form as seen on my channel. 16 weeks of feedback can be yours for $500! Email: signup@spungella.com FAQ: http://spungellaonline.blogspot.com/p/faq.html Prefer to listen to my posts? ► Check out my Spungella Playblast Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sqSDwmhe2AI ► Did you like this video? Subscribe! https://youtube.com/jeandenishaas?sub_confirmation=1 Follow Me: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jeandenishaas Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jeandenishaas Website: http://jeandenishaas.com ▶ Need animation resources recommendations? https://kit.com/jeandenishaas The screen capture tool I'm using: https://screencast-o-matic.com/refer/cIef3p8q7 The critique tool I'm using: http://zurbrigg.com/keyframe-pro Gear and services used in my clips: Music - Epidemic Sound: http://www.epidemicsound.com Camera - Sony a6500: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01M586Y9R/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=jeandenishaas-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B01M586Y9R&linkId=124db498b70bc2e94ff80e25a19814ab Mic - Sennheiser ME66: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004S4AK4U/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=jeandenishaas-20&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B004S4AK4U&linkId=627bbc38515a3fd7d4c95491726135d2 Lens - Sigma 16/1.4: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B077BWD2BB/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=jeandenishaas-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B077BWD2BB&linkId=237db9fb4af4ba35209ecbedaf78fcbf Follow Specifically: Spungella Twitter: https://twitter.com/spungella Spungella Website: http://spungella.blogspot.com/ Animation Buffet Twitter: https://twitter.com/animationbuffet Animation Buffet Website: http://animationbuffet.blogspot.com/ ___ DISCLAIMER Some of the links above are affiliate links, where I earn a small commission if you click on the link and purchase an item. You are not obligated to do so, but it does help fund these videos in hopes of bringing value to you! For sponsorship, product reviews, and collaboration, you can email me here: youtube@jeandenishaas.com
[ "how to make animation", "how to create an animation", "how to animate", "how to animate for beginners", "animation tips and tricks", "animation tips in maya", "character animation", "animation workshop", "animation acting", "animated character", "animation feedback", "animation critique", "spungella", "spungella workshop", "jean-denis haas", "student animation", "student animation demo reel", "animation study", "animation tips", "animation demo reel", "acting for animation", "demo reel", "animation", "tutorial", "how to" ]
2018-08-14T04:44:43
2024-02-05T08:00:07
618
3ke_ZbldAPo
Let's check this one out. You're in the previous email you were saying about character being even nervous. Let's see here. So I was looking at your email, right? So we're talking about her being even nervous, jumping through the pool, and then she panics and darts her head around before realizing she's okay. Yeah, it's a tricky one because there's no beginning to that. I've got the slipper as well here. I'll have her kick off her slippers before she runs. She adjusts the motion. It's to simplify and make her super excited. So the tricky thing is watching this, right? She just goes right away into it, and she seems pretty happy. Everything is great. Then it comes, she comes out. Then it gets confusing if you don't add anything at the beginning, meaning we just see her come in, she's happy, everything works out. So we don't know if she can swim or not. If you're not supposed to swim or jump in or not. Unless there's a big sign here that says no jumping. And then you have her kind of look left and right. So we're kind of maybe connecting that. Obviously you don't have to write because it says no jumping, but then she jumps anyway because she loves jumping. And then she checks, ha, did anybody see me? Good, no one saw me, yes. So that's the only problem. So right now we're just jumping in, and to me as an audience I'm going, what is she looking at? Who is she looking for? Weirdly freaked out. And then she's relieved, but why? And then and so on and so on. Other than that, these are my acting questions. Just the performance questions, so that this makes a bit more sense. You would have to add something a bit bigger, or she just goes out like that, cut all of this and go straight into that. Maybe she comes out, doesn't look over, she comes out and you go straight into that move. Head up, leaning back, and this. So she's basically just overall super happy. That could be something. Animation-wise it feels like your timing here is a bit accelerated. It feels like you want to go up, hold this a bit longer, and then come down, because right now it feels like you're going up and straight down, versus whoa, have a little bit of a hold and zip down with better art than my drawing. But that just feels a bit too short and to accelerate it to rush through here. A longer hang time. Comes out, same thing here, and then suddenly, I buy that you want to go up, hold, hold, hold, then zip in, just for the zippiness and the cartoon feel to it. But then that feels a bit weird where you come out and you kind of zips down again. I would keep that a bit more traditional and just come up and drop, just a bit more whoa, just a bit slower on this drop here. If you want to keep this, it greets well in terms of, oh, what's going on? Well, where is everybody? It's one of those, but then again, then you would have to add something here. Let's pretend we're cutting this, so you come out straight into that. Same thing here, this feels a bit fast. It also feels like you're zipping down. It's a funny expression here. Zipping down and then boom, look at your spacing. Get your nose here, here, here, and then bam, it's in the same spot. Let me bring this back here. So you can see, it's hitting a massive wall. So you would have to, if she goes like this, you go and start going there versus yours is just doing this. It feels like it hits solid concrete down there. So watch your spacing for that and that it makes sense water-wise. Also, you're going to have to potentially swing these guys up a bit higher and potentially push the legs down so she feels like she's trying to get that forward momentum. It's a bit of a magical rotation forward and move forward so that comes a bit late. I think you could try to, as she goes up here, she's already pushing forward a bit higher to arms so that you have a bigger swing. And then she does that a bit and then it's okay and you can push those legs in. And then it's just overall, it's a bit clunky in terms of how things move, meaning it's very big. That beginning feels better, but it's just a bit harsh in how you go back and then suddenly stop and go forward. So it feels like a first or second rough pass and there's a movement spacing-wise and also posing-wise like that. It's a bit of a weird pose. We could have a bit of a lower shoulder and an offset that arm a bit. Offsets are good here, but then it feels a bit too twins. There's a type of offset there, but it just feels still too twins. It's not like you're breaking a shoulder. It just feels a bit much there. It's just some more appealing poses throughout. But then this gets cut all this going into here. So that just feels a bit clunky. So it hits this in a harsh position there and it feels like arm, chest and head are kind of one piece. It feels all of it locked. The root is very locked. There's the pointy up and down. You could have a bit of a side rotation. She feels very clean. This feels like one ginormous unit, meaning it's like one piece rotating off of here. The whole thing just kind of moves versus kind of dragging a bit and getting a bit more detailed in the movement. Spacey-wise as well, like the legs hit a very, very harsh frame here. It's like a one frame direction change. It's underwater, so it's going to be no pun intended. Swimmy. Just a bit more. Just overall, stuff like that. It feels a bit clunky. Same thing with the arm coming down and then suddenly stopping on a dime here. So it just feels actually rougher than that beginning here. The overall thing about this, it feels like you're suddenly getting into a cycle and go, go, go. This is where you could have some variation. It goes in here, comes back up and then that's a bit slower. It gets into this and then faster and faster. So she gets a bit more contrast in the movements here. It goes also a bit fast and poppy like stuff like this where that leg goes up really high and it's probably a bit high as well. Maybe not go out as high. Swimmy-wise like that. It seems a bit, a bit better distance-wise. Work on your spacing. And an overall thing, that is going to screw you over, but just overall, it feels like it's completely in one axis, which it is. It seems like all straight, straight, continuing on my nice straight, straight in a straight line versus whatever you want to do here acting-wise if you want to do something, but yeah, the coup, I know it's a pain, but a little bit of an arc getting in there just sits a bit more organic, a bit messier then that's fine being one, one axis. But then when she comes out, so she lands here-ish, there, comes out here. You know it could be something where she lands and it lands a bit more out on the side. I mean, you might argue, well, if that's her path, you don't really swim over, but it's just something, something that's a bit, a bit off and also the rotation so she's not looking straight forward again in that straight axis. So she could come out, you know, a bit more to the side and maybe overall globally rotate a bit more this way. And then when she does that, here it could be, you know, down maybe a bit more towards us again. And then as she starts swimming, maybe she changes direction or you know, something where she does all this and then actually starts going this way because it's, it's a massively huge pool that you can almost imagine. Well, it's longer this way than this way so she could jump in and start swimming out this way. And then maybe, you know, she starts going this way. I don't know, there's something where, to me, it would be a bit, I'd say messier, but it's a bit more lifelike, more gang, not so computer-y where it's stuck within one axis because that's, it's easy to animate along that path. That makes sense. But it would change some things but could potentially just have global translates, right? So control that with the whole character just come up, you know, since it is floating around. You could cheat off-screen here and never come up this way and then potentially even try as you do this, have a global offset where she starts changing a path or whatever it is, right? It's whatever you want to do but that would be my overall a bit animation destroying note that it just feels simple in its one axis direction. Alrighty. That is about it. Thank you. Alright. There's an email. You can sign up. You can start whenever you want. You can submit whatever you want. You get 16 submissions. Either way, the like and subscribe would be awesome. Alright? Thank you.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ke_ZbldAPo", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCutYPaRzKulQnHM23z9HU9w
The North Face FUTURELIGHT™ Collection l Ellis Brigham
What if waterproof gear could breathe as hard as you do? Defy The Past Wear The Future Explore the new The North Face FUTURELIGHT™ collection here: www.ellis-brigham.com/futurelight If you have any questions do not hesitate to ask in the comments box below. Thumbs up and subscribe too! Subscribe to our channel here on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_... [Follow / Subscribe] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ellisbrigham/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ellisbrigham... Twitter: https://twitter.com/ellis_brigham Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/ellisbrigham/ Goggle+ https://plus.google.com/+ellisbrigham Subscribe to our channel here on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=EllisBrigham [Follow / Subscribe] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ellisbrigham/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ellisbrighammountainsports Twitter: https://twitter.com/ellis_brigham Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/ellisbrigham/ Goggle+ https://plus.google.com/+ellisbrigham
[ "ellis brigham mountain sports", "ellis brigham mountain sports outdoor clothing", "ellis brigham mountain sports outdoor equipment", "ellis brigham mountain sports snow sports clothing", "ellis brigham snow sports clothing", "snow sports clothing", "ski clothing", "ski equipment", "climbing equipment", "Summit Series", "Steep Series", "The North Face", "FUTURELIGHT", "Mountaineering", "Backcountry", "Ski Touring", "Climbing", "Alpine", "Flight Series" ]
2019-10-01T08:20:00
2024-02-05T07:12:39
61
3KijXQaQTes
What if? What if you could go further than you've ever gone before? What if you took on the impossible? What if you could be a mum and be the best outpournest in the world? What if you could climb that with no ropes? What if you could create a jacket that feels alive? What if you gear to breathe as hard as you do what if you could wear the future? What if? There was no if.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KijXQaQTes", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCIP99i3azLdyYRxnUkSLJ7g
CAR SALES TRAINING: 0% LUCK...100% HUSTLE & SKILL! THIS VIDEO TEACHES YOU HOW TO GET IT!
If you’re looking for the BEST sales training videos on YouTube you’ve found it! If you want to make more Money selling cars & learn how to close any customer then Andy Elliott is the sales trainer to study! Grab your copy of my book now & get $942 in training for FREE!!! Click the link below 👇 https://elliott247.com/get-swpb-free Train Live With Andy Elliott https://elliott247.com/events Get 20% off Any Virtual Training with code: YT20 https://elliott247.com/online-training Join My Elite Fitness Program & Take Your Body, Business, & Life To The Next Level! Text "EARN IT ALL" to 602-900-8703 TEXT ANDY WITH ANY QUESTIONS!! 👉918-210-0254👈 To Receive FREE Daily Training & Motivation to Keep You Fired Up and Dominate the Competition! Click the Link Above and Add Me to Your Contacts Now!! For exclusive content, add me on Instagram: Officialandyelliott CONNECT WITH ANDY ON SOCIAL MEDIA!! Private Facebook Group ► https://www.facebook.com/groups/carsa... Instagram ► https://www.instagram.com/officialand... Subscribe to my channel to receive The NEW Weekly Sales Videos! Stop Selling, Start Closing. If It Doesn't Challenge You, It Doesn't Change You! #carsalestraining (https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/carsalestraining) #andyelliott (https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/andyelliott)
[ "Car Sales Training", "Car Sales", "Car Salesman", "Car Salesman Training", "Salesman Training", "Sales", "Sales Training", "Car Sales Closing Techniques", "Car Sales Phone Training", "Training For Sales", "How to sell more cars", "Automotive Sales Training", "Automotive Sales", "Car Sales Training Tips", "Andy Elliott", "Car negotiations", "How to hold gross in car sales", "Tony Swedburg", "Steve Richards" ]
2020-01-12T01:32:18
2024-02-05T06:10:55
176
3kc2v0AkZCM
Let's get crazy Okay, so you're negotiating a deal and the customer says I'm not paying that the price is 189 We'll give you 16,000 do me a favor take 16,000 back to your manager and see if we'll do that If you'll sell for 16 will take it if not, we're not paying that price 500 a month We can't afford 500 a month. We told you five times on the lot 300 is where we want to be if you can't get us to 300 give us the keys to our trade-in We're not buying anything from you 6,000 from my trade. I was thinking more like 10,000 6,000 That's not gonna work if you can't get us the 10,000 we want. We're not gonna be buying the vehicle I appreciate everything that you told us we still need to go home and think about it me and my wife and We'll end up getting back with you tomorrow now. We saw your car advertised for 189, but we're not paying 189 What will be your best price on the vehicle because if we don't get the best price and a price We're happy with we're not going to be buying anything from you today Yeah, your price is $1,500 higher than your competitor down the street So we're just going to go down to ABC motors and buy their car. We appreciate you. You're way too high Appreciate you showing us the car, but we hate the color so we don't see anything else on your lot that we like So we're going to go down the street and look at another one That's actually the color that we like before we do anything. I need to know exactly what my trade is worth I'm not going inside the dealership and spending hours in there until you can come out here and tell me exactly what I'm getting For my trade in I'm not doing anything. This isn't the deal. We wanted give me my keys. We're leaving Thank you so much for everything you've done, but this isn't the great deal that you told us about guys in the list goes on and on I'm gonna talk to you about mistakes to avoid the right questions asked ask great questions Get great answers guys. The cell can't be closed until it's open I am going to teach you the magic to closing any card. We're talking about the banker blood flows Secondary closing on the pencil in three or four different ways equity closes cash down clothes I teach you five ways to get cash down at any customer phone training from a to z be deadly on the phone How to pull a co-signer on any deal? This is my first stop 10 plus payment closes I'm going to teach you stuff. I've never taught on YouTube before my other half isn't with me What's my interest rate give me the price on all three of those cards? You know that guy I don't see anything in life. We won't drive the vehicle until we know the price guys a hundred Plus closes. I'm gonna be teaching you. It's gonna be incredible guys So what's the next step join me at the 2020 master clothes for seminar? Send me a text 9 1 8 2 1 0 0 2 5 4
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kc2v0AkZCM", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCkY5L8JYwx7BT0cOXYZX_dw
R21/Matrix-M Malaria Vaccine: W.H.O Calls For More Trials.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Tuesday stated that the R21/Matrix-M malaria vaccine given provisional approval by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) still needs to undergo more trials. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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" ]
2023-04-26T07:20:55
2024-02-05T06:24:45
132
3kppsGVzxQg
Now, the World Health Organization on Tuesday stated that the R21 Matrix M Malaria Vexin given provisional approval by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control NAFTA still needs to undergo more trials. Nigeria became the second country in the world to approve the use of the Malaria Vexin developed by the University of Oxford and manufactured by the Serum Institute of India. However, WHO, country representative to Nigeria Dr Walter Moulambol restated the importance and efficacy of the RTSS vaccine adopted by countries like Ghana and Kenya. Moulambol, while speaking, during a media poll at the UN House in Abuja on Tuesday emphasized the need for proper policy funding and education in efforts to get Nigeria and Africa to zero malaria. After approves, provisionally approved, in this speech I mentioned RTSS Malaria Vexin. This is not the one we are talking about, the one that NAFTA gave provisional approval and this is also in a way understandable because to get full approval, you need approval from WHO and that particular vaccine is still being studied. WHO does not have the full complement of data and information to enable it to endorse it or recommend it for use and you've seen the same process during the COVID-19 when we started seeing a new vaccine coming up. There was a dossier that went to WHO with a group of experts to review the evidence before recommending so that we are at that stage.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kppsGVzxQg", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCqheS9rd4_nojHk3H-FR2XQ
Destiny 2 - WTF - Unlimited Loot Glitch?! - Top 5 WTF Moments / Episode 114
Submit clips here - destinytop5plays@outlook.com ►LIKE ►COMMENT ►SUBSCRIBE ►PRESS THE BELL BUTTON All My Social Media Links! ►Join My Discord - https://discord.gg/RB2muVF ►Subscribe to my channel here - http://goo.gl/qPP7K ►Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dpjsc08 ►Like my Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/YTdpjsc08 ►Follow My Instagram: http://instagram.com/ytdpjsc08 Submit clips here - destinytop5plays@outlook.com 1, n/a 2, n/a 3, http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4yGB56wWgoWMM1oBc0zq7g 4, n/a 5, n/a Get A Discount On The Products Below By Using Code "DPJ" ►5% Off - ControllerModz - http://goo.gl/jm3CpZ ►10% Off - X-Gamer Energy Drinks - http://www.x-gamer.co.uk/ ►5% Off - GtOmegaRacing Gaming Chairs, ►UK - http://goo.gl/4fV3RL & USA - http://goo.gl/65hO9M
[ "destiny 2", "unlimited loot", "unlimited loot glitch", "unlimited exotics", "unlimited legendaries", "unlimitd glitch", "glitched", "how to", "wtf", "top 5", "top 5 wtf moments", "wtf plays", "funny moments", "epic plays", "top five", "top 10", "top ten", "clips of the week", "dpj destiny 2" ]
2019-01-03T01:11:35
2024-02-05T08:36:29
596
3kqj1eq9AII
What is going on guys, welcome back to the channel and I appreciate you being here today I am back with another Destiny 2 top 5 video and today we have top 5 WTF moments But before we get into the video people if you do enjoy it and would like to show you support You can by hitting that like button if you are new around here and enjoy daily destiny to your videos Be sure to subscribe and if you have any clip you think is worth sharing with the world Send it into the email address linked at the top of the video description. Let's get straight Into this top 5. In at number 5 we have a clip sent in by a zeal rapture Not even sure what happens here, but his game definitely has a meltdown In number 4 we have a clip sent in by Mikemasterj99 Who captures the perfect moment a walker tank decides to strike a sick ass bolt Three we have a clip sent in by QPWolf. You guys ever see an exploding glimmer? Rise of the day he was red legion Oryx's long day There's no one left to take Ikora was telling me about a hide tome called the book of sorrows that Oryx has sisters In at number two we have a clip sent in by Powley19 when you clearly lose But you actually get the win. Wow You fight like that every day. I don't ever want to see you go to war There'd be no one left. In at number one we have a clip sent in by zero tyrant818 Okay, so this guy somehow has unlimited Offerings to the Oracle consumables and can constantly use them to get that loot Wow, I would love to know what triggers this glitch Guess you're too wrapped up in your own affairs to be a good queen Marasov We need answers and your people need help They are suffering while you're busy with what exactly I Don't know because you don't tell us you never say anything nothing plain nothing useful Guess you're too wrapped up in your own affairs to be a good queen Marasov We need answers and your people need help. They are suffering while you're busy with what exactly I Don't know because you don't tell us you never say Nothing plain nothing useful Guess you're too wrapped up in your own affairs to be a good queen Marasov We need answers and your people need help They are suffering while you're busy with what exactly I Don't know because you don't tell us you never say anything nothing plain nothing useful Guess you're too wrapped up in your own affairs to be a good queen Marasov We need answers and your people need help They are suffering while you're busy with what exactly I Don't know because you don't tell us you never say anything nothing plain nothing useful Guess you're too wrapped up in your own affairs to be a good queen Marasov We need answers and your people need help They are suffering while you're busy with what exactly I Don't know because you don't tell us You never say anything nothing plain nothing useful Guess you're too wrapped up in your own affairs to be a good queen But guys that has ended this top five if you enjoyed it leaving a like really does help out if you are new around here and Enjoy daily destiny to videos like top fives guides reviews gameplays just about everything make sure to subscribe If you never want to miss a video upload turn notifications on by hitting that bell button again if you have any amazing clip You think it's worth sharing with the world can be absolutely anything a glitch an epic PvP play a fail a three cat reaction a Lucky loot drop or whatever send it into the email. I just linked at the top of the video description guys Thanks as always for stopping by and hopefully I will see you on that next one
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UCxjucNg-gYn6A_2hbRbeP_g
Growing closer to Christ in roll of Jesus - Jonathan Roumie
FROM THE ARCHIVES - A clip from our exclusive interview with Jonathan Roumie! Star of the groundbreaking web-series The Chosen! Click here for the full conversation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-c4jed27g8Q Follow The Chosen here on YouTube: @TheChosenSeries *** Learn how to encounter Jesus in the Gospels with this free series from Dan Burke: https://spiritualdirection.com/into-the-deep-sign-up 🎥Please consider subscribing! What questions do you have after watching today's video? Were you impacted in some way? If so, comment below! #Catholic #TheChosen #JonathanRoumie ______________________________________________________ ☦ABOUT US: Under the patronage of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, the mission of the Avila Foundation is to draw Christians worldwide into deeper union with Christ. Support the mission: https://www.avila-army.org/ ______________________________________________________ 👨🏽‍💻Websites: Home: https://spiritualdirection.com/ School: https://avila-institute.org/ Community: https://www.apostoliviae.org/ Events: https://SpiritualDirection.com/Events Books: https://SpiritualDirection.com/Shop
[ "Dan Burke", "Catholic", "Spiritual Direction", "Avila", "Faith", "Apologetics", "Meditation", "Spiritual Direction Training", "EWTN", "Divine Mercy", "Spiritual Guidance", "Readings", "Books", "Warfare", "Church", "Radio", "Rosary", "Saints", "God", "Podcast", "Roman", "Authentic", "Contemplative", "Christian", "Worship", "Teaching", "Prayer", "CatholicTV", "Mass", "Pope", "Answers", "Beliefs", "contemplative", "Contemplative Catholic", "Contemplative Prayer" ]
2024-01-23T17:00:01
2024-02-08T20:32:44
60
3KTM1cuLbyU
Getting to know Christ on a deeper level, it's fructified my dialogue with God and with Christ on a daily basis in a way that I hadn't anticipated. It feels, I feel God's presence always there. And even when I don't necessarily agree with some of the things he's leading me through or directions he's shoving me, it sometimes feels like. But it's been, I think that's just the relational aspect and also how the work has affected people is something that has been profoundly eye-opening and life-changing.
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UCyXC9Ogr1Qzp65KQokggoZA
Vlog 6-16-19 To 6-22-19
Thank you for watching today's video. I would love to hear your thoughts and adventurers in art. Also don't forget to look below for links and more! Support My Adventures In Art: https://www.paypal.me/ginabahrens Join my Inspiration team here on YouTube today and support my channel! just click the link below and click the join button: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyXC9Ogr1Qzp65KQokggoZA You can find my Facebook groups, Etsy store link, Patreon, Instagram and more here: https://linktr.ee/ginabahrens Happy Mail Address: 12210 SW Main St. #230202, Portland, OR 97223, USA E-mail: artist@ginabahrens.com *****WARNING!!! Disclaimer: Content on Gina Ahrens YouTube channel is intended for adults ONLY. Due to the glues, solvents, materials, tools, techniques, and supplies used, tutorial videos by Gina Ahrens are NOT appropriate for “kids” (children/viewers under the age of 13) and should be followed by adults ONLY. Some of the supplies and mediums used in the tutorials are considered unsafe and toxic. Sharp craft knives, scissors, sewing machines, and paper cutters are also used. For these reasons, Gina Ahrens is an adult ONLY channel and provides NO content for children/”kids”. Furthermore, all projects created by Gina Ahrens are intended for adult use ONLY.****** Some items, products and images in some videos on this YouTube channel are copyright, trademark and intellectual property of others. I do not claim any rights to them. Please visit the artist or company website for more information on purchasing their items or images. "Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for -fair use- for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use." All Music is on his channel to my knowledge is royalty free from Amazon or YouTube's own music library. Some is from Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100514 Artist: http://incompetech.com/ And used with permission via YouTube's Free music Library. Be the kind of woman that when your feet hit the floor each morning the Devil says ... "Oh Crap, She's up!"
[ "salvage", "gluebook mixedmedia", "fineart painting", "artjournaling", "watercolor", "expressive", "lifecoaching", "Chronic Pain", "originalart" ]
2019-06-26T15:00:00
2024-02-15T16:08:19
1,582
3KQAD6S2k7w
what time it is this morning. I ate something? I don't know. And he made my father, my father, my husband is inside talking to his mom and we're gonna be getting together with the kids later and calling my dad to wish him happy Father's Day before that but anyway it's a beautiful bright sunny day out so we're gonna go explore downtown Portland and spend the day out. So I'll bring you with us where I can. Happy Father's Day. Tell you dad's out there. I'll be back. By the way it's 944 a.m. I just checked. East Portland. We've got the whole family in the car including Lily Bean back there. See here? She can't decide which window to look out. The whole back of my car is gonna have doggy nose prints to take pictures and they all kept walking without me. He's back there. Portland Rose Garden. International Rose Garden. They supply the roses to the Rose Garden where we used to live in San Jose. Fun fact. But now we need to test the bench. Yeah gotta test out this bench. Make sure it fits. It's stable. Yeah for like five minutes. Yeah. Really quick good morning to you. It is Monday morning June 17th 9 24 a.m. Don't get all excited. Hello the iPad's right there. I am up and showered. I have been for a few hours waiting for workmen to get here to fix a couple things around the house and I needed to get some stuff done before they got here and I you know don't want to have them show up and me still be in my pajamas so I got up and got early and got dressed. It's a beautiful sunny day out. It's not gonna be warm but not too hot so I've got windows open. This Monday June 17th unfortunately a very dear friend of ours and her husband are laying their son to rest to his final rest. Chris passed away last month right before Mother's Day. I wish her and her family my sincere condolences on such a loss that something no parent should ever have to deal with and although I can't be with them today my thoughts are with them and their family and we're here for them always so I know you all don't know her and her family but if you would send your love and support her way regardless that would be great and anyone else who's suffering such a loss right now anyway before I cry I'm gonna get off the phone and get a few more things done before the workmen show up they should be here any minute so they're due within like five minutes so let's hope I don't hear that's interesting oops oh shit or huh today because all of those phrases when the contractors and repairmen say they always cost you money so and we have two different repairmen coming today to fix two different issues so holy cow all right I'll be the awning people have come and gone they fixed the broken piece in the awning but then said you have a bad gear we're gonna go check our warehouse and we'll hopefully be back today with a gear to fix it I still haven't paid them a dime they didn't ask we're maybe gonna replace the fabric on the awning so they left some samples here that I looked at I did pick a couple and a fabric so the guy's gonna they took some measurements he's gonna get me an estimate and then the plumber has been and gone and figured out what was wrong with the toilet and nothing major no holes in the wall thank goodness but he is gonna fix the problem and I'm just gonna have him put in a new toilet because there are some pieces inside the toilet that are a bit past it anyway so you know what I don't want to have to call him to come back he's a nice guy but you know let's just be one and done so he's off to get a new toilet and he'll be back this is what the bathroom looks like because yeah this is the bathroom where I wash my paintbrushes by the way my paint washing things yeah it's gonna be uh probably 1500 dollar a day and I haven't even been anywhere gone shopping done anything fun just getting stuff fixed around the house joy for me holy cow at least I didn't hear oh that's interesting or oh shit or any of those other things contractors say that you know when they say them all you hear is kaching all right that's it for the moment I'll be back that over my shoulder so I tried the polymer clay thing again with my wax seals only this time they baked correctly so I do think it was maybe a combination of me not maybe having the temperature right on the oven but also the clay this clay is brand new very easy to condition very soft the old clay super hard so maybe that's it I don't know maybe I didn't condition it enough because it was really old clay that I mean you know I'm just assuming user error anyway now I have them sitting in the molding putty cross your fingers it works the way I want it to we'll find out hey everybody it's Tuesday morning june 18 I think listen I only know that or sort of know that because yesterday unfortunately was the memorial service for the son of a dear friend of mine I think I mentioned that yesterday so you know yeah even I kind of remember what day it is and you say this sewing machine repair and vacuum repair place has a really good reputation on the internet and good reviews on yelp and it's on main street which is a cute little street in Tigard but it's right next to a massage parlor which I'm sure is legitimate I'm sure but you know yeah anyway I'll be back okay searcher all dropped off for cleaning and maintenance ace sewing and machine and vacuum they have two offices one in here in Tigard and one in Newberg and they have good reviews online some of the reviews involve them working on vintage machines and those reviews are very good and my my searcher unfortunately I think qualifies for that category I think it's old enough anyway so they are going to spruce it up it'll be a week or two and then when I get it back I'll be back to selling the nits so yep now I'm gonna head home and put my groceries away hopefully the ice cream is not too melted and then I need to go upstairs and make an ATC card and a paper clip today maybe chat with my art friends and yeah I'll be back hey everybody it is Wednesday June 19th 1 11 p.m. don't get excited hello I'm scanning a bunch of old painting papers mostly of mine I think one might be my friend Shannon greens I know somebody gave it to me I know I didn't do it at least I'm pretty sure I didn't this one I love it so much I'm gonna make a personal use copy of it before I cut up the original and so anyway I'm doing that today and I've already got all of my social media stuff done today and the artwork obligations I needed to have done I'm doing laundry downstairs stuff like that keeping myself busy because I have a doctor thing in the morning early that's got me a little bit stressed out nothing bad it's just a test but I stress about it all the time so so y'all know I'm stressed out about tomorrow's doctor visit not because it's a big deal just because I don't like doctors hey doctors hey doctors yeah but we're gonna go for a walk I'm trying to keep busy not eat chocolate it looks like according to the scale I've lost at least three pounds and so yeah let's keep it up anyway we're gonna go see what we can see we're gonna go a new way right yeah all right so we'll be back good morning everybody it's Thursday morning April uh April holy cow June 20th I think 6 56 am I am not awake that's obvious I've only had one cup of coffee I am headed out this morning for my doctor's appointment yeah anyway and then I gotta run a doctor visits all done but how annoying is it that they pushed your appointment out two weeks so they could get your old records and then when you show up this morning they still don't have them yet so after I was done with the doctors I had to sit in the car and make a bunch of phone calls and step on some toes so hopefully they get those records that they need in a timely manner back seals I've been doing them in polymer clay I shared on social media so if you don't if you didn't see that you don't follow me on social media how come if you look in the video description and if you're on a tv when you get onto your pc um or your phone go to the brow facebook in your browser app and not in the in the facebook app it's easier um the facebook go to youtube in the browser and not in the youtube app anyway in the video description there is a link tree list of links and in there besides all the places you can support me on social media like my etsy shop 28 new stencils hello uh merch on teespring and society six and amazon affiliate all that stuff you can also find my social media links instagram twitter facebook and all that so go check it out anyway I made some more of those clay tiles and and I put a box together for my sister she's she makes she is a feng shui expert and she's studying to be a feng shui master and she makes fairy houses her business is very feng shui I will link it in the description below and um she helped us um she's also an expert at organizing and moving people packing people up like that whole business anyway I'll link her business in the description below she's helped us so much anyway she also makes fairy houses and uh for her property she has this beautiful piece of property in Utah and she was she saw the wax seals I think I mentioned it before in the vlog and she loved them and I was and she says they would be cute on the fairy houses and I laughed and said honey you live in Utah they'll melt their wax so then that got me thinking though and I've been making them in clay and resin and I kept some for myself but I'm sending her a whole box of stuff including some of the mistakes I thought she might be able to use some of the ones that didn't come out so well for like little fairy stepping stones or something so I'm gonna send her a box of stuff got that done got some bookkeeping a little bit of bookkeeping done um got the social media thing done late but I got it done and now I'm gonna empty all the garbage cans because yeah up here I'm gonna do all the ones up here and then downstairs and then I'm gonna eat lunch I don't know what I'm gonna eat yet I kind of want to boil some eggs maybe all right I'll see I'll see well I'll think about it we'll be back the light's kind of weird uh it's overcast outside um and it is a typical overcast Portland day it can't decide to be cloudy and dark or sunny and it doesn't know what it wants to do so the light's weird june 21st 11 57 it's been a crazy morning it's gonna be a crazy few days it's gonna be I said before a few days prior and the week after gonna be a bit stressful there's just a lot going on um so stressful that I've started doing daily pages again to deal with some of the anxiety I really do find that therapeutic I don't know that I need to definitely for myself do it all the time but when I am feeling anxious and stressed out I definitely find it very therapeutic to get it out on three pages of writing um in the morning or in the evening I'm trying right now in the morning I think the morning might be a little bit better for me but in the evening if it's really bad it does help quiet my mind so I can go to sleep so um I just write three pages whatever's on my mind I don't stop and bother with spelling or punctuation it's one giant run on sentence for three pages so anyway um I did that this morning I did my paper clips for the next couple of days my atc cards for the next couple of days social media I have to update the website I haven't done that yet right now we're going to go take some etsy orders over to mccann's and drop them off and I need to mail a box to my sister the awning people were back again today fixing the awning so that's all fixed it's so strange though we haven't paid them evidently they're going to bill us they do the work first and then they bill you afterwards the installer guys do not accept payment it's it's weird anyway they did a great job it's just odd I'm not used to that we're just too tired walking tonight we've got a we're dog sitting again anyway it's okay it's all good we're in the airport again we're in california just for the day and they're both rolling their eyes at me anyway I'll be back in a crazy day we're on the way home now we flew down to california for the day for some appointments and things um this is a mad rush we did have time to go to lunch at the counter which is great and also a quick trip to daizo so I'll share what I got later right now we're going to find the gate and we all need a drink so we'll be back we are back in organ was it tiring but quick trip I wanted to show you guys really quick before I close the vlog vlog what I got at daizo so daizo has these face masks this one particularly it's one of the few that will moisturize and condition my face without making me break out so I really do like this one they did have a cucumber one so I'm going to try that I found these pens that uh appearance wise look very much like the stubilo markers I did test them out while we were having um some drinks at the airport before we flew to came come back home so I'm going to give you my thoughts on those and compare them to the actual stubilos in next week's vlog but we are going to do that because I do own the other stubilos somewhere upstairs I also picked up three more of these so daizo has these wire cups they hang on they will fit on the side of the Ikea carts I don't think that's what they're for but and I use them at the work table and I hang them on the sides of the wire shelving at either end of the work table they work great so I picked up three more of these that was all they had so I got them so that's it we're really tired but we're home yay it's been a interesting week we hope you've had a good one we have and if you have any questions comments or concerns please leave them in the description down below and if you want to follow me on social media support the free content here over on facebook or send me happy mail or any that links on how to do that are in the description below in fact you'll find a link to a site called link tree you click on it you're going to find me everywhere that I am on the internet so check it out so that's it now I'm going to get ready for bed and get some try to get some sleep have a good one everybody we hope that you have had a great week go out and do something nice for yourself because you deserve it and I'll see you later bye
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UCyvEONnqE2Krm9Zi0LVvGmA
Apology to Inuit for the management of the tuberculosis epidemic from the 1940s-1960s
March 8, 2019 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau apologizes on behalf of the Government of Canada to Inuit for its actions during the tuberculosis epidemic from the 1940s to the 1960s Iqaluit, Nunavut
[ "Prime Minister", "Justin Trudeau", "Canada", "Inuit", "Apology", "Tuberculosis", "Iqaluit", "Nunavut", "Nanilavut Initiative" ]
2019-03-20T17:52:59
2024-02-05T08:20:20
1,326
3kx0NPtlYf0
Good morning, everyone. Bonjour tout le monde. What a pleasure to be here today. Let me begin by recognizing that we are in Inuit Nunangat, the Inuit homeland. I want to acknowledge ITK President Natan Obed. It's great to see you again. Today, we're fortunate to be joined by representatives from across Inuit Nunangat. NTI President Aluki Koturk, thank you so much for everything. President of the Kivaluk Inuit Association, David Ningungan. Thank you for being here, David. QIA President PJ Aki Aguk and the Inuit Regional Corporation Chair, Dwayne Smith. I want to thank you all for being here, recognize everyone who is here, who's traveled a long way. As Aluki pointed out, the weather is boss and we certainly knew that yesterday, but it was extraordinarily important for me and I think for all Canadians that we be here today, that we be here for this moment of recognition and indeed reconciliation as we recognize the past, the mistakes of the past, and pledge to move forward together in much better ways. I also want to recognize Andy Peartey from the Makavik Corporation and John Charles Lyle from the Kitikmi Inuit Association. My thanks goes out as well to Premier Savikatak and Mayor Redfern for welcoming me to Akhaluit along with two ministers, ministers Bennett and Oregan who are here as well. We need also to acknowledge the elders who are with us today. Thank you for being here. Thank you for starting things off in the right way that reminds us of how important it is to listen to our elders, to respect our traditions, to remember the past and build the future together. My friends, we know where we are and where we're going, but to really know we need to know first where we came from. We have to know our history. We have to face the hard truths that are part of our past because for too long, the government's relationship with Inuit was one of double standards and of unfair, unequal treatment. While Canada was busy adopting the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights many years ago, it was treating people throughout Inuit and Anangat as inferior, identifying Inuit with numbers instead of names. While kids in the south were being praised for learning their ABCs, Inuit children were being punished for speaking their own language. While the government was hard at work creating universal health care, it was forcing Inuit into settlements where disease and infection were rampant. And 70 years ago, while tuberculosis was raging across Canada, the government responded decisively in the south by opening new clinics and training doctors and nurses. But in the north, the government's approach to TB wasn't to show compassion or care but to separate families and ignore people's rights. It was colonial and it was misguided. It wronged and harmed Inuit. I know that many of you present this morning were touched by this unjust policy and too many of you are still grieving the loss of loved ones. Today, I am here to offer an official apology for the federal government's management of tuberculosis in the Arctic from the 1940s to the 1960s. Many of you know all too well how this policy played itself out. Without their consent, Inuit were screened. Anyone thought to have TB was sent south to cities like Hamilton and Edmonton for months or years of treatment in a sanatorium where almost no one spoke Inuit. For a long time, people believed that if you got on the ship in the harbor, you may well never come home. Many people weren't given the time to prepare or to say goodbye to their loved ones. Many children were pulled away from their parents. Many elders were torn away from the homes and communities that were all they'd ever known. It was a grueling journey of thousands of kilometres on ships, on trains and on planes. A trip that took days or even weeks. A trip that took lives along the way. And the mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters left behind, often weren't told where their loved ones had gone or for how long. When someone passed away during treatment, they were buried in the south. Only sometimes was it in a marked grave and only sometimes were their family even told. When people did make it home, they were often dropped back into their communities in the middle of winter without warm clothing, without their family being alerted. Those children that did return often came back to a family they didn't remember, a language they didn't speak and a land of which they had no memory. These were years of isolation, confusion and pain. But the government's management of TV wasn't one bad policy. It was only a piece of the larger history of destructive colonialism. History that the late poet Alutuk Ipili described saying, I did not ask to be forced to learn an alien culture with an alien language. Inuit children sent to residential schools and federal hostels were forced to learn an alien language. They were neglected and abused. But just like in Ipili's poem Destiny acted itself out, deciding for me where I would come from and what I would be. Only it wasn't Destiny deciding. It was the federal government. It was the federal government that decided that families, your families would be moved off the land. The federal government that decided Inuit would be exploited to assert Canadian sovereignty in the high Arctic. I know that people here today and across Inuit Nananga live with the consequences of these policies. Of these years when your communities and your rights were not respected. Because all of this forced relocation the residential schools the TV policy it happened at the same time to the same people within just a few decades. It happened during the same years when the government identified Inuit with numbers on discs and when families had entire teams of Kimit sled dogs killed by officials. This was a shameful chapter in Canada's history and you in this room and across this land know the results all too well. Culture and language eroded families would never again be whole. Lives were shattered beyond repair. These wrongs will never fade. Canada must carry that guilt and that shame. The forced relocation of Inuit the pensioners the government policy concerning tuberculosis all of this happened at the same time within just a few decades. It happened at a time when the government identified Inuit with numbers on discs and when families had entire teams of Kimit sled dogs killed by officials. This was a shameful chapter in Canada's history and you in this room know the results all too well. Culture and language eroded families never again be whole. Lives were shattered beyond repair. These wrongs will never fade. Canada must carry that guilt and that shame. Today, I am here to say sorry to offer an official apology for the federal government's management of the tuberculosis epidemic the policy wasn't an accident it was purposeful it was done even though the government of Canada knew the toll on Inuit families it was done when the best interests of communities were not put first. I am here today to present an apology an official apology for the management of the tuberculosis epidemic between 1940 and 1960. This policy wasn't an accident but intentional. It was done even though the government of Canada knew the toll on Inuit families even though they didn't put the interests of communities first. To the people who were sent south we are sorry we are sorry for forcing you from your families for not showing you the respect and care you deserved we are sorry for your pain to the people whose loved ones were taken away we are sorry we are sorry for breaking what is most precious the love of a home to the people who still don't know what happened to your children your mothers your fathers we are sorry to the communities that are facing the consequences of this policy and others we are sorry we are sorry that because of our mistakes many Inuit don't trust the healthcare system so they can't get help when they need it we are sorry for the colonial mindset that drove the federal government's actions the government has apologized to former residential school students and to Inuit who are forced to relocate but the trauma passed from generation to generation remains and it runs deep we know now that what we did was wrong we know now that we must work to make it right it shouldn't have taken us so many years to tell you that we are sorry that you have carried this burden for too long we are sorry that because we waited there are many loved ones who will never hear this apology today we take responsibility for the harm caused by the policies and actions of the federal government the racism and discrimination that Inuit faced was and always will be unacceptable but an apology alone is not enough we must also promise to do better and although as a country already done we can choose what we do next today we are choosing to create a better future a future built on respect and partnership as prime minister I have pledged to renew the relationship between the government of Canada and Inuit to work together to correct the paternalism and colonialism that was visited upon your communities to continue on our shared journey of reconciliation the path ahead will be long but every step we take we will take together as prime minister I have promised to renew the relationship between the government of Canada and Inuit to work together to remove the paternalism and colonialism attitudes that targeted your communities and to continue our journey on the path of reconciliation the path ahead will be long but we will take each step together and without writing past wrongs we cannot move forward today the federal government is officially launching the Nanilavut initiative a truly collaborative effort with Inuit partners and providing funding to support its work in Inuktitut Nanilavut means let's find them and that's what this project is about about finding and honoring Inuit who went missing during the TV epidemic and bringing healing and closure to everyone who was left behind I can't begin to imagine what it would be like to lose someone you love and to go on never knowing what had happened through this initiative people will have access to information about what happened to their family members and we're providing funding for the four regional land claim organizations to support travel for some families who found where their loved ones are buried we're also providing money to mark graves and create plaques nothing can bring back the voice of a parent or the embrace of a friend but acknowledging where they were laid is a start in honoring their memory because all too often what is done to Inuit have been forgotten or shrugged aside we can't let that happen again that's why we're supporting community-led events and memorials and public education campaigns to keep moving forward with reconciliation as a country we must all take ownership of our history and just like we have to learn from the past we also have to look ahead to a better future a future without tuberculosis TB is preventable and curable it doesn't have to cost lives but TB is still taking away children elders and leaders for Inuit in Inuit Nunangat is more than 300 times that of Canada's non-indigenous population that is unacceptable last year the government of Canada and Inuit Tapirit Kanatami committed to eliminating TB across Inuit Nunangat by 2030 and reducing active TB cases by at least 50% but beating this disease isn't as simple as vaccines or screening although that's certainly part of the equation to end this crisis we have to acknowledge that people live every day with the legacies of colonialism if you remember being South, of course you're wary of government treatment today we cannot repeat the mistakes of the past we cannot impose solutions that's why we're taking a new approach and following your lead our government is investing in your plan an Inuit-led plan with more than $27 million over five years five years towards the elimination of TB in Inuit Nunangat with this investment we're also supporting Nunavut Nunatiavut Nunavik and the Inuvialuit settlement region in developing their own action plans and just like our new approach is founded on working in partnership it's also based on seeing TB for what it truly is a disease that cannot be cured by medicine alone we must address poverty, food insecurity and inadequate housing alongside our work to tackle TB directly we're investing in the basics including more than $640 million for housing in Inuit Nunangat this housing strategy was designed by Inuit in partnership with the federal government and will be delivered by Inuit we are committed to finding community-owned solutions whether it's in this investment the Nuninavut initiative or any of the work we do through the Inuit Crown Partnership Committee of course I don't have to tell anyone here that although we're making progress we still have a long road ahead there's no question that communities face very real challenges but there's also no doubt that Inuit are resilient of course even if we're making progress together there's still a long way to go on the path of reconciliation it's certain that communities are facing real challenges but if there's one thing that I know it's that Inuits are resilient moving forward requires us to be willing to admit that when we're wrong to be ready to do real work to make amends that's why I'm here today this morning's apology is a promise to you it's a promise to never forget the harm that was done to Inuit and to your families a promise on behalf of all Canadians to build a brighter future and to build it together Kujan Namik Thank you
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UCMP5_7v48WfDKfoirLCcNgQ
President Reagan's Photo Opportunities on June 17-18, 1987
Full Title: Photo Ops. President Reagan Meeting with United States Ambassador Designate to Bulgaria Sol and Kathryn Polansk, President Reagan Meeting with Ambassador Designate Denis Lamb and Family of The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, President Reagan Meeting with Ambassador Designate to The Marshall Islands Samuel B. Thomsen and Family, President Reagan Meeting with Ambassador Designate to Lesotho Robert M. Smalley and Family on June 17, 1987, President Reagan Meeting with Key Lithuanian Leaders, President Reagan Meeting with Departing Mark Brazil, President Reagan Meeting with departing Bob Pearson of NSC and Family, President Reagan Meeting with U.S. Secret Service Agent Bob and Family, President Reagan Meeting with U.S. Secret Service Agent Chad and Family on June 18, 1987. Creator(s) President (1981-1989 : Reagan). White House Television Office. 1/20/1981-1/20/1989 (Most Recent) Series: Video Recordings, 1/20/1981 - 1/20/1989 Collection: Records of the White House Television Office (WHTV) (Reagan Administration), 1/20/1981 - 1/20/1989 Transcript: N/A Production Date: 6/17-18/1987 Access Restriction(s):Unrestricted Use Restriction(s):Unrestricted Contact(s): Ronald Reagan Library (LP-RR), 40 Presidential Drive, Simi Valley, CA 93065-0600 Phone: 800-410-8354, Fax: 805-577-4074, Email: reagan.library@nara.gov National Archives Identifier: 313324207 https://catalog.archives.gov/id/313324207 License Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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2022-09-26T17:06:00
2024-02-05T06:32:52
1,207
3kKCLsVtV18
Mr. President, may I present, please? Ambassador Desi Knight, Alaska. Mr. President, I'd like to see you. Thank you very much. Let us get a picture of you first. Then I think we'll take a picture of my wife. Mr. President, how are you? And our son, Stephen. Mr. President, thank you so much. Why don't you get in the middle here? In the middle? I'm going to put my bookends here. So nervous for so long. Well, I know of all your great service, and I know it's time to put you exactly in the garden spot you're going to. Got some problems with the Bulgarian. And yet, we've made some progress in drugs and terrorism with them, and so I know you're going to make more progress. Well, we want a second here, but I just don't want you to forget it. So we're going to put our booksends in your room. Thank you very much. Thank you very much, Mr. President. Well, we go right there, but I hope you're doing a good job, and I'm sure you'll appreciate all your help. I took a post that you served in. Well, I've learned some of that. Do you know what it goes? I think it's close enough for Russian and Polish so that both those languages help me, and we'll give it a good try. The whole extent of my foreign language at the moment now is a phrase that I've learned from my meeting with Gorbachev. Do I, no pro-EI, trust and verify? But you also have a term, and you also have a term. When you're in Berlin? He's still a fanatic. Works not important. Well, thank you very much. Well, it's very nice of you to have us come by. Thank you for what you're doing. Pleasure to meet you, sir. Bye, Mr. President. Goodbye. Thank you. Good luck. Present Ambassador Lam. Mr. President, pleasure. Nice to see you. This is my son, William. Hello. President and my wife, Phillip. You and me just got a picture here first, and now let's have a family picture. And I think you should be in the middle of this. Which are? What are you asking? You're so good to do this. We're going off to the OECD, and doing some work on the summit, the issues of agriculture, structural adjusting, things like that. I know, and it's most important that we make progress, yes, we have, to keep it going, in particular, in that agricultural thing, because we all agree there in Venice is a world problem, and it has to be solved. We'll be pushing out to you. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. Don't want you to forget us, Mr. President. Thank you very much. Thank you very, very much. And the time is up. Thank you for doing this. Yes, well, listen, thank you. We really appreciate it. Thank you all for doing it. We will try to serve you well. I know you will. Thanks, man. Please present Ambassador Thomas. Oh, very pleased to introduce you. Nice to see you. Thank you very much for the time. Turn it around, we're meeting now. All right, thanks. Very good. Okay, now I'm going to introduce my wife, Judy Thompson. Sam Robert-Brandon, my daughter, Katie. Hello, there. Nice to see you, Robert. Robert, Sam, I'm kind of proud of you. Well, now let's get a family picture. I think you should be in the middle. Very good. And then kind of spread out one couple on each side. Okay. All right. Good. Yes, I've got to take the consequences from my actions. Well, the climate is certainly all right. It's going to be beautiful almost like California, but I mean it's quite fine. That's right. We're looking forward to going. Unfortunately, the children can't go with us. They're too old to go with us. Okay. Well, we'll get them out there one way or the other. Yeah. Well, Robert. Yes. I don't think it should be so hard to persuade you to make a visit now. That's right. Wait one second. I was going to say, now you don't really need reminders here. The cuff links are for you. Thank you very much. You don't want you to forget us. The pin is for you. And so we might as well. Thank you. We'll also do that. And the gentleman can have key rings. That's great. The seal on it. That's so you lock up the house when you're leaving to go over and visit. Great honor to meet you, Mr. President. Well, do our job as best we can to serve you in the country. Well, I know you will, and I'm going to speak with you in three weeks. That's great. It's such a good place to be. Yes. Our ranch is just a little further up the coast and up on the Santa Inés range. I used to drive up in those mountains sometimes. There was a little pale refuge over on the coast right by us. And it used to be, as a matter of fact, it used to go right through what is our range. But this one will be a refusal of prayer. A little history there. One day some rustlers ambushed a foreman from one of the ranches coming over the mountain. And then they kind of had the sheriff of Santa Barbara in their pocket. So they went, rode in immediately to Santa Barbara and told him that this man had attacked him. And they killed him in self-defense. They didn't know a Mexican goat herder was coming along the same trail. And on our ranch picked up the body, put it on his burrow, and took it into Santa Barbara. Worst case of suicide, they'd ever seen 36 holes in his body. Hold his gun. Hold his gun. Well, thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you. Thank you. Good to see all of you. Thank you. Bye. Bye. Bye. How do you do, Mr. President? Very nice to meet you, sir. Nice to see you. Let's turn around and get it. Thank you, sir. The man is at Mrs. Smollett. Yes. And now we have a photo of you in the middle. I won't sit for a little sample. It's just being nice. You're really going to get away with it. Oh, we really are going to get away with it. It is indeed. We're looking forward to it. It's a great honor. It's a privilege to serve you. It's almost great for three of you for doing it. Thank you, sir. Thank you. We're going to give you a minute. Here we go. A little souvenir so you won't forget us. Oh, we won't forget. Thank you, sir, very much. Thank you for all you're doing. God bless you. Thank you. It's a great pleasure. Good luck. Thank you, sir. Very much. This is my name delegation. Mr. Michael from Washington. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Mrs. Nelsis from Los Angeles. Nice to see you. Make sure you're the best. Mr. Kovalunas from Chicago. Hello there. Mr. Maltakis from New York. Mr. President. Thank you. This is Excellency Dr. Bochkis. Charges, Lithuania. Nice to see you. Thank you. My goodness. Mrs. Stuckas from New Jersey. It's a great pleasure. Father Kugavich is from New York. Hello. Sister Agena from Connecticut. Thank you. Well, I think everyone's now in a group picture. Let's have a look. I don't have a couple. We'll move down here and then we'll be balanced here. We're in the center. We're okay. Thank you. All right. Can you come? I think they like spaced between us. Okay. That'll be our group. Now, the time of release. Thank you. Thank you. Well, I'm very pleased and proud to be here on this 600th anniversary of Christianity. Lithuania, it isn't true that I was present to the first anniversary. And I hear persecution that continues to go on. There are some that feel it because it's been going on for four years in the occupation that it's an old issue. But we don't feel that way. And I can assure you that any time that Secretary Schultz or I are meeting with the Soviets, we will continue to bring up the issue of the persecution of Catholics and Lithuania. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I appreciate all comments, as I'm sure it's taken. Mr. President, your recognition of the 600th anniversary of the Christianization of the Lithuanian nation is deeply appreciated by the Lithuanian Americans and Lithuanians in their own country, suffering for the occupation since 1940. On the behalf of 14 organizations comprising the Lithuanian Christianity Jubilee Committee, Committee, we thank you for repeated message of hope, inspiring the Lithuanian people to persevere in the religious faith and defend the national identity. We thank you for continue to recognize the sovereign rights of Lithuania as well for your uncompromising defense of moral values in private and the public sector in the education of youth and your defense of life. We ask you at your earliest opportunity to urge Mr. Karvichov that Lithuanian prisons of conscience and the political prisoners be released. Mr. President, we attach the list of these prisoners. Mr. President, second, thank you and please accept greetings from the underground Lithuanian usurpation on the occasion of your election and the Lithuanian Christian Jubilee Meadow. Thank you very much. Mr. President, when we thought of what to give you on a personal level, we thought this would be the best. This is the actual address from the students of Lithuania underground coming across the translation that two years ago they greeted you when you were reelected to office. This is our official Lithuanian Christianity Jubilee Medallion which we hope that you will display proudly. It depicts the three rulers who were instrumental in bringing Christianity into Lithuania and some of the symbols, ancient symbols including the cathedral across the land of our heritage, Lithuania. We give to you with our greatest thanks. Well, I'm very pleased and proud to have it and I have a feeling that maybe this would be seen by more people if it is hung in the presidential library. Oh, that's wonderful. Mr. President, this is somewhat smaller in size but it was designed in Lithuania for the Jubilee and it's given to you with our love from Lithuanian people in the occupied land and also from all the Lithuanian Americans living here and elsewhere, especially from California. Thank you very much. Well, thank you all very much. And you said something about a list of... Yeah, that's the list of the prisoners. I'd like to have that because... Thank you so much. So we feel that Mr. Gorbachev talked so much about glass most these days that it would be a very appropriate... Well, we've had some success with getting some people freed. Yes. Mr. Squids is coming. We hope to happen to them in Rome on the 28th of June. Well, thank you all very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much for the special reading from all the Lithuanian Americans in California and the western region for the words that you have spoken regarding the wall in Berlin. And I promise that we are behind you a hundred and ninety percent. Thank you very much. And you may tell all the Californians I lived in a sort of perpetual state of homes. California is a way of doing that. I just thought I would bring that to you today and the special, special love that we have for you back there in your own state. Thank you very much. Thank you. I'll put a pause. Thank you Mr. President. It means a lot to the people behind here in Curtin when they know we're only like yourself in favor of their cause. Thank you very much. Thank you sir. Mr. President. Yes, hello there. Mark Brazil. I know. I just wanted to say thanks for everything. You've been the greatest person I've worked for. No, really. One couldn't ask for more. I would say thanks to you for all you've done. I know what I've done, but I've tried. And good luck back in California. Good luck to you sir. Really? All right, the best to you. He's just a worker. We're trying to bring him a key ring so that you won't forget. I won't forget you. Believe me that. Believe me. Thank you. Thank you sir. Mr. President, may I please present Bob Pearson. How are you sir? Hello there. Well, it's good to see you. My wife Margaret, son Madeline. Nice to see you. Hi. How are you? I think we need a picture with you in the middle. Hi. Is it? I love you very much. Thank you. Well, I thank you very much for all that you've done here. We're really going to miss you, but I know how important the post is that you're going to. And you're going to be helping Al Keele. Yes, exactly. Oh, that's wonderful. And I said I'll be playing Brussels soccer. Well, now I shouldn't really have to hand it. Cuff links. Thank you sir. I'm suing it for you. Thank you very much. There's a young man there. That is one of our described genres with jelly beans in it. Oh, thank you. That is so nice of you. Thank you very much. We really appreciate it. Well, let's appreciate all that you've done. It's been a special pleasure, Mr. President. Thank you for all the support that we've enjoyed. And you've been a tower of strength. Thank you sir. Thank you sir. Thank you very much. Thank you. Goodbye. Some more? Hey, thank you very much. All dead. He looks like he's dead. Here. Why don't you come get in the middle? In the middle. Yeah, next to that? Yeah. Okay. Can I look up? He'll get you to look right this way? Well, with this year, except that I have to feel good for you for where you're going. We'll have to warn you. We will have to hear you there. You're in the northern part of the state, though. Yes. It could have been better. It's gone. A little further south. I have one more riot camp, David, on the 27th cell. We'll see you up there that day. Okay. It's going to miss rioting. Thank you all very much. You're going to enjoy that. Yeah, it's going to miss rioting for years and a half. Come on, right. This is Christopher. I don't think you're going to miss rioting. Well, you should be in the middle. Okay. And that can be in front. Okay. I want to smile. Thank you. Thank you. Well, I know you're just moving across the street or something here. Yes, sir. We're public affairs. Yeah. Well, good luck. Thanks for everything you said. Thank you. Thank you. We'll see you next time. Okay, please. Take good bye. Take good bye. Good luck. Look at Christopher.
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UCBa_T9fY5UwT5-f1A6VRx2g
The Hidden Stash: My Massive Puzzle Collection Revealed
I'm sure most of us are guilty of having too many puzzles. But anyways, here's is my large pile of puzzles I collected in January. I know it's a bit late, but I honestly didn't realize that I never shared them with you. So here they are! Enjoy! Join my puzzling community on Discord (Join link in video description): https://youtu.be/Dhi2HQMzKHQ Mailbox: The Puzzled Mandy PO Box 587 Lake Harmony, PA 18624 0:00 I'm Not Ready 1:06 The January Haul 14:09 Final Thoughts #puzzle #haul #disney #3dpuzzle #jigsaw
[ "puzzle", "puzzle haul", "jigsaw puzzle haul", "budget puzzles", "used puzzles", "second hand puzzles", "milton bradley", "kodak", "rose art", "spin master", "ceaco", "buffalo", "galison", "good puzzle company", "ravensburger", "schmidt", "masterpieces", "trefl", "springbok", "KI puzzle", "buffalo blanc", "true south puzzle company", "white mountain", "puzzle timelape" ]
2023-03-04T17:00:05
2024-02-05T16:14:33
908
3Kr5DtN2Www
I'm sat here looking at this pile and I have absolutely no clue where these are going. Hey guys, so I was trying to clean up my room earlier and I realized that I actually have a pile of puzzles that I realized I never actually shared with you. And these are all puzzles that I had either picked up or were given in January. Hit that like button if you're guilty of buying too many puzzles, like me. I also realized whilst I was cleaning that I am in desperate need of places to put the rest of these puzzles, because the original pile that I had I was able to find a home for, but now I seem to have developed another pile and now I need to make more space for them. Now I know some of you may suggest that I should probably start giving some away, but to be perfectly honest, I don't think I'm ready for that yet. But I'm sure at some point in the future that time will come and I will be ready to part ways with some of my sets. But as of right now, that isn't happening. So anyways, here is my secret January pile of puzzles that I've accumulated. Our first one today, well actually these, there are two that are from kind of the same set, same series. But the first one of that is a Robbins Burger puzzle from Disney's Villainess. And this is the Maleficent set. It's 1000 pieces and it is 27 by 20 inches when it's completed. And this particular Robbins Burger Villainess puzzle set contains a collector's piece from the actual Villainess board game. And I really like the design of this Villainess collection. So obviously for this one, this one is Sleeping Beauty. So we got scenes and picture frames from the film as well as a nice really big picture of Maleficent. And the other Villainess set that I have is of the Evil Queen. And again, this is from the Robbins Burger Disney Villainess collection. And this one also has a collector's piece for the Villainess board game. It is a 1000 piece puzzle and is 27 by 20 inches when it's completed. And again, like the Maleficent one, this one has different scenes of the Snow White movie and picture frames. I feel like these sets are really nice if you want to display them on your wall in a picture frame or something like that. And I do like, for example, in the Evil Queen set, how, you know, you still have pictures of Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, basically the other characters in the movie. I do also have the Gaston set and I showed that in an earlier haul video. But I'm happy to be growing this Villainess collection. I'm not sure how many there are in total. I think there might be, I don't know, at least six. No, there has to be more than that. I've seen a ton of them. But I don't actually own the Villainess board game. And I feel like that's something I should pick up at some point. If any of yous have that game, let me know what it's like in the comments. I think I'm definitely going to pick it up at some point so I can make use of the collector's pieces that are included because you're meant to use them in that game. These I didn't actually pick up myself. My husband picked these up for me when I was home sick and trying to recuperate and he surprised me with them. So that was, that made me feel better. The next puzzle I have in my hidden pile here is one that I picked up from Walmart. Well, actually it's one of two or three that I picked up at Walmart sometime in January. And this is from Disney's Thomas Kincaid Studios. It's called Mad Hatter's Tea Party and it is 750 pieces and 24 inches by 18 inches when it's completed. And this one is by Seco. And like all Seco puzzles, it does come with the puzzle poster. And I was really excited when I saw this at Walmart because I had not actually seen an Alice in Wonderland puzzle from this series. And I'm sure it may have been out for like the longest, but none of the Walmart's that I had been to and I actually had it until I stopped in at that Walmart that particular day. Now aside from the fact that Alice in Wonderland just happens to be like my earliest memory of watching a Disney movie, this image is absolutely fantastic. There's just so much fun stuff going on here. You have the Cheshire Cat. You have the white rabbit on the bottom looking all frantic. There's Alice there looking all curious. You got the Mad Hatter, that crazy bunny. And the poor little clams on the side there that happens to be my earliest memory of being traumatized because you know the poor things get eaten. That was quite depressing really. I'm pretty sure I wasn't the only one messed up by that scene when I first saw it. I love how this image is so colorful as well. And this is going to be a great addition to my you know Disney Seco puzzle collection. Even though I don't honestly think much about Seco, but I mean I have to admit I love the Thomas Kincaid designs. The next puzzle that I picked up from that same trip from Walmart is also by Seco and also from the Disney's Thomas Kincaid Studios collection. And this one's called Gepetto's Pinocchio. It is 750 pieces and it is 24 inches by 18 inches when it's completed. And again with Seco you get the puzzle poster as well. You know which is always a plus for me. Now Pinocchio is one of my absolute favorite Disney movies. And the image in this set is absolutely gorgeous. You have Gepetto playing with Pinocchio. You have all his clocks and toys in the background. He's got something boiling over the fire. It's very homey, very cozy in here. It gives me like a very warm feeling. Now I absolutely love this image. Although it's a little bit confusing considering that the Blue Fairy just so happens to be in the middle of the room here and Gepetto doesn't really seem to notice her. But you know that's okay. He's not really looking through his glasses so that's probably why he can't see her. She kind of gives a pop of color to this whole scene. But yeah this is gonna be a fun one to put together just by the image alone. Now the last one that I picked up from that Walmart trip is actually from a brand that I do not, well I did not own at the time but now I do. And this one is from Spin Master's Puzzles. It is called Gloria Rose General Store and it looks like it's from the series by Tom and Tonyshak. This is a 1000 piece puzzle and it is 27 inches by 20 inches when it's completed. Now the reason why I picked up this set from Spin Master's Puzzles is because when you look in the back here it does talk about it having what they call a satisfying snap. And they use precision cut dies and advanced machinery to create unique puzzle pieces that fit together securely every time. And I found that interesting. I wonder if it's gonna be a more satisfying experience when you pop those pieces in. The colors of this image look very vibrant. For one I love the image that's depicted here. Something about this image reminded me of like it took me back to Oregon Trail for some reason. You have this general store here. It really looks to be depicting a time period during the times of the pioneers living on the frontiers. I really love that part of American history and that's really what this image reminded me of. I mean that lady could be me. I mean she looks way older than what I am but you know I wouldn't, I could say I could see myself walking out of that general store. They look to have some really good things just by judging what's on display at the windows. And look at those prices. Five, six, seven cents. Those are my kind of prices. This is gonna really make me feel like I'm living on the frontier. I find that time period very fascinating. But yeah I look forward to working on this one too. Especially getting to experience that satisfying snap. The next one that I picked up was during my quick trip to Niagara Falls. And this one is a masterpieces puzzle. And it is called Old Fort Niagara Castle. It is 500 pieces and it is 21 inches by 15 inches when it's completed. Now I recently worked on my first masterpieces puzzle. So I know I'm gonna enjoy this one. Of course it has the poster included. We have a really good puzzle piece size. And I picked this one up at the Old Fort Niagara gift shop. It's actually a whole site where you can visit this castle and walk inside it and walk around the entire fort from like the 1800s. It's very fascinating. We love going there. So it was nice to be able to take something back this time because I don't remember seeing these the last time we went to go visit. I did wish they had 1000 piece puzzles but you know I can't complain. At least they had something. So this is great because I can actually say that I have been here quite a few times. And I have walked in this building. So I know what it's like in here. So it's really gonna kind of take me back as I put this image together and give me you know some good memories. And I'm pretty sure the next time I go back I'm gonna pick up the other two sets that they have there. The next one that I have here is one that I picked up at Hobby Lobby. And it's from a brand that I didn't own before. And this is from the company Euro Graphics Puzzles. It is called Cookie Party. It is 1000 pieces and it is 19 and a quarter inches by 2658 inches. And the main absolute reason why I picked this one up as I'm sure you saw on the box was that it was reduced all the way down to $3.99 from $14.99. So that was a huge savings. I figured I can't pass up a price like that especially for a puzzle from a brand that I didn't have at the time. But you know on top of the fact that the price was super dirt cheap this image is a lot of fun to look at. I love cookies. Don't tell me you don't love cookies. And my second favorite cookie with my number one being chocolate chip of course are the sugar cutout cookies. And you got tons of fun designs here. I'm pretty sure I can eat all these cookies in one sitting and then you know cry about it afterwards while suffering with massive heartburn. And then you have this awesome looking cup of coffee on the side here as well. So this puzzle was like a real treat to me especially being dirt cheap. But yeah I'll be interested to try a puzzle from Euro Graphics. I've heard some good things about them but it'll be nice to actually try it out for the first time. I'll make sure to have plenty of coffee and cookies next to me as I do it. Now I wasn't actually going to show the next two puzzles until I kind of did like the puzzle review reveal of it. But I figured you know considering that I did get them in January I might as well just show them to you because they're really cool sets. And these were ones that were also sent to me from the company Cubic Fun. So you know these next two are going to be 3D puzzles. Now you saw my first one which was Neuschwanstein Castle. But they also let me have the Paris Notre Dame set. And this one is 128 pieces. And it measures at 14 by 7 by 9.4 inches when it's completed. This one's going to be really awesome. Notre Dame is definitely a place that I want to visit one day which was one of the reasons why I picked it. But I don't know how much harder or how much easier this is going to be compared to my Neuschwanstein Castle. This one does not actually have LED lights to it. So it might be slightly easier but I don't know we'll see right. Now that I have kind of like an idea of how to go about 3D puzzles I don't feel like this one is going to be as confusing to start like Neuschwanstein Castle was because I kind of like already have the experience if that makes any sense. But yeah I can't wait to do this one. I'll just have to figure out where I'm going to display it afterwards. And the last puzzle that I chose from their website and they sent it to me as well. This is a big one. This one I know is not going to be easy because it is much bigger and looks way more complicated. This one is called Queen Anne's Revenge Blackbeard's Ship. It is 340 scary looking pieces and I cannot picture exactly how big this one's going to be because I'm not very good in visualizing centimeters but I'm going to give you the measurements anyways. It is 67.7 by 25.4 by 63.3 centimeters when it's completed. I kind of have a feeling this is going to be a really big one just by judging from the size of the box. Now in terms of where I'm going to put this when it's completed my husband's already claimed this one for his room so that's not going to be a problem. I think my bigger problem is having the patience to put it together. This one has a complexity of eight stars which is pretty much a different scale compared to the Neuschfenstein castle which only gave me three six seven stars. Neuschfenstein was six out of seven stars but this one is showing me eight stars. So that doesn't really give me an idea but I mean considering that it's a higher number than Neuschfenstein yeah this one's going to kick my butt. It's a fantastic looking ship though. I love the dark colors. I think this one's going to look absolutely amazing and this one does have LED lights in it. This one's going to be an absolute beast when it's done aside from I'm sure being an absolute beast whilst completing it but we'll see right. It's definitely not going to be an easy one but I look forward to completing it because I think it's going to look absolutely amazing. So that'll be coming up in the future. Well that was a big pile. Let me know down below if you have any of these puzzle sets and if not did you pick up anything interesting recently? I'm sat here looking at this pile and I have absolutely no clue where these are going. I really need to sit and think about how I'm going to reorganize all my current sets so that I can somehow fit them along with the other ones here. I just gotta like kind of plan it first and figure out what I'm going to do in terms of making space in my current space but we'll figure it out but that will for sure be another organization video that'll be coming in the near future. If you'd like to catch me putting these puzzle sets together be sure to subscribe so that you can follow along with me on my jigsaw journey pick up any tips and tricks that I come up with and of course see what else I get up to with puzzles. Anyways guys thanks for watching and I will see you in the next one.
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Man Killed Over Suspicion Of Performing Black Magic In Odisha’s Malkangiri District
Man Killed Over Suspicion Of Performing Black Magic In Odisha’s Malkangiri District. #ArgusNews #Malkangiri #Superstition #DeathCase #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'. ଗୁଣିଗାରେଡି ସନ୍ଦେହରେ ହତ୍ୟା || Malkangiri Superstition 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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2024-01-11T05:45:35
2024-04-23T23:23:44
176
3KqQQkQ89B4
GUNI GARIDI SANDHRE GOLA KATI HATYA MALKAN GIRI ADARSHATHA NAA TANDA PALI GANGRE AGHATRANA JANA BYAKTINGKU GOLA KATI HATYA TI NIRMA MA BABE RE HATYA KARCHANTI DURBUTA MURUTA KA JANA KA TANDA PALI GAMRAL LAKHMI KA BASI DURBUTA MA NE LAKHMANG KA BEKHAKU DHARWA ASTRA DE KATI BAPARE MURUTA DE HAKU SABERI NADI RE FOPADI DE DE THEBE MALKAN GIRI STPO THAN ADIKARI ASI POLICE TEAM GHATRAN ASTRA LAKU JAI LAKHMANG KA MURUTA DEHU KU JABAT KATI BABE SABA KUMALKAN GIRI GILLA MOKHHA CHIKESA LAKU PATHAI DE CHUNTE THEBE SABAKER ADIKARI ADARSHATHA BAPARE AMA SETTA FONELANDE JODI HUCHANTE AMA PRATINEDE BIKRAM SWAIN BIKRAM PRAKUTRE PURA GHATRANA KANA GHAHTICHI ABANG BARTAMAN POLICE TEH TU GHATRAN ASTRA LAKHMANG CHI TADANTA AARAMBAKARICHI TADANTA KETE BAAT GALA NI NITUR VEDAKANTU MAVKA NIGRI GILLA RE BUNINGARI DI THANDAHRA HAKTYA KICHI NUANG KHATRANA NUANG KINTO SPAFFI SABAR RUDI KHAHI BA BUNINGARI NI PAN KICHINANG KICHI GHATRANA GHATRANA KUTTE KHAFFAN CHI TADU KUTTAI KIMA ASTRA TATI BA TEVILI GHATRANA THANDAH PALI RAHI KAY ADIKAR THANDAH MALKANI DI VALE PAKTE GHARTA DHAA SULU PODI AY AY MUNDA GAWI CHAWI CHI BIKRAM JEMTYA PAAN LACHANA KHARU CHANTI GUTTE VARSARE PAKHA PAKHI KODI RU TIRIS MUNDA GAWI CHI KEVALA GUNI KHAI RADI SANDHRE KINTO EPPAR CHANTA PROSASAN PAKHYARU KONUSI PRAKA RABI SETHA RE SANDHRE JAWNI BA LOKUNKU EBA BADRE KUHA JAWNI BA BUJHA JAWNI ABANG BARTAM AAPRAI NARCHARA KHADU BOD BODANDA BAD BIKRAM AAPRAI TAMAM जादि आपनों को आमा भीट्रेटी बहल लगिला तेभे आमा चैनल को लएक शेर और सबस्क्रेप करीपा को जमा भी भुलों तो नहीं
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THIS IS WHY The Narcissist Will NEVER Let You Go
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 (I receive commissions on referrals to 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", "narcissisticabuse", "narcissistic", "narcissism", "nocontact", "npd", "sociopath", "narc", "psychopathfree", "narcissistredflag", "redflag", "narcissistrecovery", "divorce", "mentalabuse", "evil", "abuse", "narcabuse", "escape", "survivor", "toxicrelationship", "clusterb", "narcissisticinjury", "narcissisticfamily", "toxic", "narcissisticmother", "gaslighting", "domesticabuse", "toxicfamily", "selflove", "toxicpeople", "relationship", "relationshipadvice", "relationshipproblems", "motivation", "inspiration", "psychology", "mentalhealth", "ptsd", "empath", "bully", "boundaries" ]
2023-07-26T16:00:10
2024-02-05T16:00:28
500
3K76-G-evhE
This is why the narcissist will never let you go. In some situations the narcissist will discard you and then they will move on to someone else but that's not what I'm talking about in this video. In this one I'm talking about narcissists who are more possessive and controlling and if you are dealing with someone like this, it's likely that you are their grade A primary source of supply. So in these situations the narcissist will never let you go. They will never let you escape or be free. They will never release their hold on you because they don't want you to act or do as you wish. They want you to remain under their control which is why they confine and imprison you. It's why they isolate you and cut you off from other people because they want to be your only source of influence. You may be under the illusion that the narcissist has gained access to your life and that you need to get them out but it doesn't work that way because you don't even have a life of your own, you're not even experiencing real life because they have brought you into their fake world. Into their false reality and to achieve this they had to strip you of your power, of your identity and character traits, of everything that makes you who you are so that you could be a false character in their fake world because nothing real can exist in their world. It would destroy the illusion, it would bring the truth to light which is the last thing that they want. So you have to be fake too, you can't have any real identity of your own. You have to be whoever they need you to be so that the false narrative can continue. So what do you do when your entire world is fake? You have to resort to visualization, you have to use your imagination to represent objects, situations and information as something more positive and productive. As something that will be more beneficial for you, you have to picture in your mind the things that you want in and out of your life because that is how you're going to heal and recover because you can't get them out of your life. Once they've got a foot in the door they're never going to leave, it benefits them to remain with you so they're going to hold on to you for dear life, they're going to trap you in their web, in their world of lies and deception so you have to remove yourself from their world because that is the only way that you'll be free. The narcissist will pull you in but then you have to be the one who leaves because they can't change, move or adapt, they stay the same and sometimes they get worse as time goes by as they begin to feel more comfortable around you but they will continue to repeat the same behaviors until the day they die, they will only adapt if they think that it benefits them. They won't do it for you, it's only to further their own agenda, the primary trait of a narcissist is that they can't adapt or change, instead they will blame you and resent you because they know that they need you more than you need them and they also know that in fact you would be a lot happier without them but they're still not going to leave and you won't be able to get rid of them because they're not going to go anywhere, they need you, they feed off you, they depend on you for their own survival so you have to be the one who leaves. The narcissist may cheat, they may keep other people as secondary sources if you're no longer meeting their needs but that doesn't mean that they're going to leave, they will still keep you on the shelf for when they need you but they will entertain other sources of supply when they go out and they will keep you at home as their primary source because they need to have other options at the ready just in case something goes wrong because they always find a way to mess things up so they need to be prepared, they need to have people ready to support them. Thank you for watching, if you found this video helpful please give it a thumbs up, share your thoughts in the comment section, hit the subscribe button to receive notifications If you would like to support the channel you can donate at paypal.me.narksurviver You can book a one-on-one with me on my website it's narksurviver.co.uk Thank you for watching and I'll talk to you soon
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RAVENS GET GREAT NEWS ABOUT RONNIE STANLEY‼️
RAVENS GET GREAT NEWS ABOUT RONNIE STANLEY 0:00 - 2:28 I love yall TKIC 2:28 - 4:47 Ronnie Stanley News 4:47- 9:50 Lamar Jackson Presser Review 9:50-10:46 Bateman & Boykin Clarification 10:46 Ravens mentality TKIC Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/ingravenvids 🤔Thinking of other ways to support the channel❓ Here are a few: 💲PayPal: paypal.me/IngravenVids 💲Cash App: $Ingravenvids 💲Venmo: Ingravenvids 💻Business Email: ingravenvids@gmail.com 💻Questions From Subs Email: Teamkeepitclean@gmail.com 📬Want to send us something?: Ingravenvids PO Box 971236 Boca Raton,FL 33497-1236 🎙New TKIC Podcast episodes every Wednesday : https://www.youtube.com/c/TeamKeepItCleanPodcast/videos 📱Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook: @Ingravenvids #BaltimoreRavens #Ravens #NFL
[ "nfl highlights", "baltimore ravens", "ravens", "nfl", "nfl news", "baltimore ravens news", "baltimore ravens highlights", "baltimore ravens updates", "nfl game highlights", "ravens lamar jackson", "ravens defense", "ingravenvids", "team keep it clean", "nfl news today", "nfl reaction", "lamar jackson highlights", "ingraven", "ravens talk", "lamar jackson", "ravens 2021 highlights", "lamar jackson 2021 highlights", "RAVENS RONNIE STANLEY", "RONNIE STANLEY INJURY", "RONNIE STANLEY SURGERY", "RAVENS RONNIE STANLEY UPDATE" ]
2021-09-30T13:58:17
2024-02-07T17:11:36
771
3KrgTvUwTSA
Let's keep this good news coming, shall we? So YouTube team keep it clean. What's going on is engraving here with another video. And in this video, there was just a lot of good news that we got yesterday. Well, actually today, but when you see this video, it will have been yesterday. But anyway, that's beside the point. But this news was also sprinkled in with all the good news that we received. And this was about Ronnie Stanley and his injury update because we've all been wondering, like, what's going on with Ronnie Stanley? You know, he's been out of practice for the longest and they expecting to be out for a little while, but they didn't put him on injury reserve. So could he be back sooner rather than later? What's going on? But we got an update from one Ian Rappaport. But before we get into this, team keep it clean. I love y'all. I love y'all and I appreciate y'all. One thing that I appreciate y'all about y'all the most is, and I saw this yesterday is that y'all got my back, man. Y'all really do. And that's what I feel like with team keeping it clean. It's like, it's just, it's family, man. Y'all like extended family. And I appreciate that. I appreciate that we can get on here. And we of course talk Ravens, but a lot of times we just talk in life, man, because a lot of things that need some lessons that we learn and some different things that apply to football, they also apply in life as well. And one thing that's very, very important to know, especially when it comes to like the players and the coaches and everybody that's involved with the whole business of the NFL, you got to remember that no matter how you feel about somebody, no matter how you feel about a decision that they've made, no matter how you feel about their play, they are people too. They are human beings too. They have families just like you do. They have jobs just like you do. They got kids just like you do. They got wives just like you do. They got mothers, sisters, brothers, father, everything just like you do. Their jobs are a little different than ours. And they make a little more money, but they're human beings at the end of the day. So always keep that in mind, but I love y'all. Anyway, oh, and shout out to the team, keep it clean. Patrons, I can't give a shout out to everybody without giving a shout out to the patrons. But anyway, we've been talking enough. Ian Rappaport, he reported that, and let's just read it verbatim. He said, following a visit this week to the doctor to check in on his ankle, Raven's all pro-left tackle, Ronnie Stanley will continue to rehab for a couple weeks with hopes of returning sooner rather than later, so I said. Now that wasn't even the best news because he's obviously been rehabbing because he hasn't been playing. So, and he's been wanting to get better. So we would all assume that he was rehabbing and he was resting and whatnot. So that wasn't even the big news, at least in my opinion. That's good news, but that wasn't the good news. This was it right here. No surgery is planned, just rehab, and that's big because that lets us know that the injury is not a super long-term injury and that it can be healed without the surgery because with surgery, it cleans it up, it'll get it right, it'll get it fixed, but it'll also take that player out for an extended amount of time. And a lot of times, a much longer amount of time than if something that can be rehabbed would just be rehabbed. So that's a very, very good sign for the Ravens and Ronnie Stanley. So now it's just a waiting game. I mean, as it always has been, it's the waiting game. One thing about Ronnie Stanley throughout his career, he has been pretty banged up. He plays in more games than he misses, but I think like every year that he's missed at least one game, I believe. Now with that being said, Deshaun Elliott the other day, I love how he put it because it's true. He said for all the people that be talking about old players' injury prone and players always getting hurt this and that, he said, do you think we go out there, we wanna be hurt? Do you think we wanna get injured? And it's just like, it makes sense. And I mean, the same thing, and us as fans, we look at things differently, obviously. We're not looking from the player's perspective, but I know fans, we can be frustrated like, oh man, this guy's always hurt, he's always injured. But again, they are human beings. Things happen. That's something we always gotta keep in mind, always. Now the Ravens, they had a presser yesterday that featured John Harbaugh, I missed his part, I don't know how. It also featured Chuck Luck, that's why I came in it. I saw that. Featured Lamar Jackson and Kaleis Campbell. Now I did catch Lamar Jackson's part. The rest of them, I was sort of in and out, so I can't really speak on those. But Lamar Jackson, he was asked about Teddy Ridgewater. He said, that's his boy. He said, Teddy Ridgewater used to come back to Louisville a couple of times, but they never really get to chop it up back then, but he said, that's his boy now. So that's always a good thing. And of course they also got that South Florida connection that y'all already know. Ryan Mink asked about the offense, having led go ahead drives in every game this year so far. And that's something that we talked about too. That is so significant, the fact that the Ravens have done it literally in every single game. They have gotten the lead in the fourth quarter of those games and put the defense in a position to close it out. Now, in a couple of those games, well the Lions game was, that was a little bit different, but in the Raiders game, again, there was 32 seconds left. Lamar Jackson, Ravens offense gave the defense, they said, hey, these boys got 32 seconds left and no timeouts, defense, go ahead and do y'all thing. We know y'all been struggling all game, but go ahead and close it out. But then they got to go ahead and touchdown against the Chiefs. And of course, Adafi away, made the great play where he knocked the ball out and recovered it. Again, no such thing as luck in Adafi away showed you just that. Cause a lot of Chiefs, oh, it's luck, no, it wasn't luck. There's no such thing. That was just skill and will. And then of course, with the Lions, all that drama. Anyway, so that's a good thing because some people, they've been doubting Lamar Jackson if he got that clutch factor or not and he's been showing you. So that's been nice. Anyway, Lamar said he isn't surprised that he's leading the league in whatever stats. He said the only thing that he's worried about is winning. And that has just been a reoccurring statement for Lamar Jackson. It's the only thing he cares about is winning. And we know that because his stats, they're not always the prettiest. I'm now on just past Sunday. They should have been a lot prettier, but we love you Hollywood. You know we do. And we know Hollywood's gonna bounce back. And Lamar said the same thing too because he was asked about Hollywood. He was asked about what's going on with Hollywood, having a Hollywood, how you feel about Hollywood, how you gonna get them back to having a strong game? He said the Hollywood gonna be fine. He said he ain't worried about Hollywood. Somebody asked him about how they, even on Marlon Humphrey, his IG life is victory IG life. It was always nice to have those. They talked about how they showed, he showed Lamar and Hollywood sitting next to each other. And he's like, yeah, that's my brother. And we all know that. They both from the, anyway, we ain't gotta get to that. But they, when they were on the plane, they just came off a win. And they sitting there watching film together, watching film together. And somebody that I talked to, they were like, man, see, this is what I'm talking about. That's a leader right there. That's the leader of this team right there. Just came off a win. Like a lot of guys will come off of a loss. And they be like, ah, that's what we need to do better. Okay, that's what we need to know. They just came off a win and a win like that. You're supposed to be celebrate. You're supposed to be like, oh yeah, all right. Hey, vowed the whole bar when we celebrating Justin Tucker for what he did. Oh yeah, doing all that stuff. Sitting there watching film. You leaving Detroit with y'all, you watching film. That's great. And that's not something to be underestimated. And it's not like Lamar Jackson is the only quarterback that does it. But it speaks volumes that he's doing just that. He also talked about in OTAs, because somebody asked about the deep ball. He said in OTAs, they were working on a deep ball a lot. And he's hopeful to hit a lot more throughout the season. And of course, we definitely are. We're hopeful that he continues to hit those deep ball just like he did against the Lions literally all day. All day. Now of course, we want them to be caught. And but also with the expectation, we can't expect him, every deep ball, every deep pass that he throws, it's not gonna be a completion. Every deep pass that he throws, it's not gonna be on the money. That is, that's life as a quarterback. That's life as an NFL player. So anyway, he was also asked what he's seen this year as far as growth from himself. He said he's not focused on that. He said he don't be like over critiquing himself or anything like that. He just said he wants to win. It's again, the same thing. So we've been hearing this from Lamar from jump before he even put on a jersey. That's all he talked about. He just wanna win. That's it. That's it. He just wanna win. He talked about Rashal Bateman about him coming back cause this was again, this was before practice. He said that Bateman is a great route runner with strong hands. And he said that he knows that Bateman will be hungry and ready when his time comes. Oh yeah. And we know that for sure. And we saw like clips of Rashal Bateman and Miles Boykin running and stuff. And again, it's just practice, but it's nice to see them out there. So we hope that they, when they are finally implemented into the offense. And that's another thing too, something that I was confused on earlier, but got clarification on it, that they have been activated from injured reserve, but they're not on the active roster yet. Cause I know that was really tricky. It was tricky for me. I know it's been tricky for some other people though, but they are not on the 53 man roster yet. Not yet, but they have to be activated to the 53 man roster within the next 21 days. So just a little heads up with that. And also he talked about how with when he was speaking to Hollywood and they were going over film, he said they were just focusing on the things that they gotta hit on. Just the fixing the mistakes, correcting errors, fixing any issues, and so on and so forth. So that's just that, that lead of mentality, man. And something with this team, I know I talked to my guy JT about it a lot. Something with this team that has really been affecting in the past couple of years, especially come playoff time, and what it seems like is just mentality. Like there's a lack of focus when it's crunch time. You can see it on the field. Sometimes you can even hear it in their voices when they have the presses and whatnot. But there would just be a lack of focus, but so far so good this year. I mean, again, they just gotta clean up some of those. They gotta clean up some stuff, but it's really nice to know that the stuff that they need to clean up, it's all fixable. It's all fixable. It's nothing where it's like, oh man, this ain't nothing that they can work on this year. They gotta wait till next year to fix it. No, it's all simple stuff that they can fix right here and right now. It's just a matter of time with getting it done. Anyway, Team Keep It Clean, I love y'all. Again, I appreciate y'all so much for riding with us, man. Thank you and we out.
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The State of Harm Reduction in Europe (Sub: ENG, HUN, SPA, SER, BUL, POL, RUS)
The film crew of the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union (HCLU) attended the first meeting of the European Harm Reduction Network (EuroHRN) in Marseille, France. We interviewed professionals and activists from several countries to give you an overview of the current state of harm reduction in Europe -- please watch and share our movie! #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/
[ "marijuana", "HCLU", "legal highs", "drugs", "Drug Policy", "drogok", "Drugreporter", "Harm reduction", "drug policy", "Drugs", "cannabis", "TASZ", "cocaine", "heroin", "Drug War", "Drogriporter", "psychoactive substance", "human rights", "eurohrn", "amphetamine", "harm reduction" ]
2011-10-29T17:07:07
2024-04-22T18:34:08
799
3KxldfcQlQE
We are at the first meeting of the European Harm Reduction Network in Marseille, France, where harm reduction activists, professionals and policy makers gathered to discuss the challenges and problems ahead of the harm reduction movement in Europe. I know the impact of harm reduction in my country. Drug users have a job, have a home, are in treatment. If they use, they do it in a safe environment of a consumption room. Last year, in 2010, in the entire country of the Netherlands, there was only one infected person with HIV reported, one new case of HIV among drug users in an entire country. Thirty years ago, that was 30% of all infected drug users. Same rates about overdoses that has dramatically gone down. So if we want to talk about evidence about harm reduction, that battle has been won. We don't need to talk about evidence. It has become European policy, although harm reduction has become mainstream, there are still huge challenges ahead and that's one of the issues that we're going to discuss over the next days. We witnessed the emergence of new populistic policies and serious budget cuts in all countries of Europe. This year we went to the European Parliament, there was a hearing on public health issues and we asked the members of the European Parliament what can they do to support harm reduction in the European level. And one member of parliament answered that, you know, now we are struggling for keeping together the European Union, so we really don't have this issue in the agenda. One of the major problems is to keep this issue on the agenda. Harm reduction works. I mean, it works everywhere and it works also in France. We have basically reduced the prevalence of HIV among people who inject from 40% to 11% today. I mean, the result has been really immediate. In terms of overdose related to heroin, the reduction has been by 80%. That is an absolutely amazing success in terms of public health. And also in terms of criminality, the drug related crime also has decreased by 80%. So all these are like the major successes of harm reduction in France and I'm happy to say that still today, the French harm reduction system is still largely publicly supported for the long term. We are very happy about what we got in the 90s. Right now, we're basically trying to save the system. A lot of NGOs are facing very severe problems because of the budget cuts. We still do not have safe consumption rooms, even though in some neighborhoods they will be really life saving for many people. We still do not have any needle exchange in French prison, even though we know from Switzerland, for instance, right next door, that it's really simple to implement. We have a French government that has some populist tendencies that actually like to blame some people for the problem of the social problem that we're facing today and drug users are really an easy target. The simple use of drugs in France can be very harshly punished. Use and detention of drugs in France can be punished from one to ten years in prison unlike fines ranking up in the thousands or even millions if you look at the law. And this law is actually applied. You have tens of thousands of people who are facing serious personal problems because they're just users. And just stopping that oppression of drug users because it costs a lot of money, it costs a lot of police time for harassing poor people basically. Just stopping that will actually save a lot of very needed governmental cash that could actually be used to develop social programs. I think we do have achieved quite a lot, although not sufficient, consisting of needle exchange programs all over the country. In 200 cities there are automates outside, publicly available, 24 hours, seven days. We do have some 80,000 drug users in substitution treatment. There is heroin assisted treatment available. We do have some 25 drug consumption rooms in 18 cities in Germany. In 2010, only 3.2% of all the diagnosed HIV cases were drug related. And this is quite the lowest figure we ever had in the last 20 years. And this is, I think, the most striking success. Another success is that drug users get older and older. Germany is quite heterogeneous and very diverse. And there are huge treatment gaps from north to south and from east to west. Most of the people in prisons will not have access to opioid substitution treatment. Only a tenth of those in the community, there are only 3 to 5% of those who are in need of this treatment, will receive it. There's only one out of 220 prisons who offer a needle exchange program and automate and other services like Naloxone on release to prevent overdosage after release are non-existent. The most important policy action would be a decriminalization, a drug policy reform, which is badly needed. At the moment, it's completely untouched the whole area, although we have got a quarter of a million drug-related offenses year by year and 100,000 of them only for the possession of small quantities for personal use of cannabis. Oslo has a very, very large amount of overdose deaths. One of actually the cities in Europe with most overdose deaths per capita. In Oslo, there is one consumption room and that's the only consumption room in Norway. It is a very important harm reduction measure, but the consumption room still has a very small capacity. It has opening hours that are quite rigid and it's not open for a very long time. We have a lot of harm reduction measures. We have both a lot of cafes where drug addicts can come and get food. We have a needle exchange. The substitution treatment has grown and before it used to be a very rigid system. There has been a softening up of the system, which is very, very good. Spain had half a tradition of hard production about 15 years ago. Barcelona had seven consumption rooms, more or less maybe 15 drop-in centers. We have a lot of themes of outreach work in the streets. Did these consumption rooms change the picture on the street? Like there are less drug users using on the street and going more to consumption rooms? Is it an effect like that? Yeah, of course. I think that these kind of resources are very, very effective. But now we need to work for the hepatitis. 70% of the drug users, injected drug users, are infected by the hepatitis C. We have a decreed law that frameworks the harm reduction intervention in Portugal. So that's a great achievement. With decriminalization, we start to look at users, not as a criminal person, but as a person with a disease. Some people from the Portuguese state and from the Portuguese government, they could look at harm reduction as a philosophy that believes, accepts and tries to work with the drug user, not as a sick person, but as a citizen. The state has instrumentalized NGOs from civil society to do a great hell of a job with a few amounts of money. For sure, between 3% and 5% of the Portuguese budget state to the drug field is only dedicated to harm reduction between 3% and 5%. And I'm being generous with the numbers. Even though harm reduction is officially recognized, it is not directly supported by the state, with one exception, which is the Ministry of Justice, the National Prison Administration, which introduced funding for syringe exchange programs and opiate substitution treatment in prisons. Most harm reduction services are based in Bucharest. Even though we have scaled up needle exchange programs and substitution treatment in Bucharest, the access is still low compared to the full population of drug users, especially opiate users. Well, I think the main success is that we are still existing, that there is some harm reduction, which is existing. And while we can't even speaking about the scaling up, because in the last years there were closed of the project, some of the project has been closed, and because of the budget cuts and the situation we have, we just don't know what will be the next year. People are going to prison and serving in the prison for very small dosages. The IRA made a global state of harm reduction report a few years ago and it mentioned Hungary as a good example, which has a very progressive harm reduction oriented drug strategy. And last year our new government just rejected this progressive drug strategy and now they are retrafting a new drug strategy based on zero tolerance approach. In Poland there is access to the opiate substitution treatment, but there is still very limited. There is big region, a geographical region of Poland where there is no any opiate substitution treatment. We have also needle exchange programs. There are in two, the biggest cities, Krakow and Warsaw. Last year we parliament approved new law, which opened the little window of opportunity because in cases where somebody possesses a small amount of the drug, prosecutors can abandon the idea to start prosecutions. So this is really small liberalization. 80 million swathes, so approximately 40 million of dollars, are spent for that very restrictive law. What have you achieved in terms of harm reduction in the past in Ireland? The HIV within IDUs is falling. Hepatitis C within the IDUs is obviously rising. And obviously services are being curtailed back. I would love to see drug consumption rooms in Ireland to actually roll out have a national hepatitis C strategy. Again, that's not there at the moment. National overdose prevention strategy as well. The UK is one of the birthplaces of harm reduction in Europe and the world, particularly with the initial projects in Liverpool that then spread across the rest of the United Kingdom. And through the 80s and 90s we had very successful harm reduction programmes and there was a very strong awareness that these programmes should be driven by public health and the need to prevent HIV and other blood-borne viruses. The way we have set up our drug services in the UK, I think, stifles innovation. It makes for a very bureaucratic response and this is not helpful when drug scenes are changing very, very fast. What do you think about the smaller coalition partners' idea to decriminalise drug use? I think it's very positive that we now have two political parties in the UK that are talking about drug law reform very openly, which is the Liberal Democrat Party, which is part of the government, but also the first Green MP from Brighton is now also talking about the need for drug law reform very seriously. And my hope is that actually the financial crisis may actually be the thing that says this is not about ideology, this is not about morality, this is about funding. And prohibitionist models are very, very expensive and lead to growing costs as you do more damage to the health of people who use drugs. So I hope that we actually may persuade people that of all times it's in the middle of a crisis that you go for the best value for money model, which is harm reduction.
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ECE204_Topic057
ECE204 - Independence, Self-Management, and Ethics in Early Years By Dr. Tariq Mahmood
[ "VU Topic Based Videos", "VU TBVs", "VU Lecture", "VU Course", "University Course", "VU", "ECE204", "Independence Self-Management and Ethics in Early Years", "Dr. Tariq Mahmood" ]
2022-11-18T06:16:36
2024-02-08T20:25:13
418
3khFGUc3cto
عوز بلاح مینشیطان رجیم جسم اللہ الرحمالرحمد ایک بیسکتا ہے جو سمجھنا جائے گا ہمیں بیسکتا ہے بیسکتا ہے کالی مجھے حقیقتی پر اور یہ ایک بیسکتا ہے جب ایک بیسکتا ہے یہاں بھی بیسکتا ہے جو ایک بیسکتا ہے لرننگ بیسکلی یہی ہے کہ ہم کس طرح سے بچوں کے اندر ان کے ایکشنز میں کلیکٹف ایکشنز میں چیز لے اور صرف چیزوں کو ریٹین کر کے اس کو کممینکیٹ کردنا کنوی کردنا لکتنا this not only education or learning بیسک لرنگ ہے کہ ہم بچوں کے اندر وہ تبدیلیاں لے آئے جو ان کی مسلم کممینکیشن میں helpful کممینکیشن میں یہ تاکہ we make them to analyze the situation اور پھر we make them to think about thinking کے لیے یہ بڑا ضروری ہے کہ what they to think ان کا subject ہے اس کے اندر ان کا purpose ہے اور پھر یہ ہے کہ what they are to communicate کس طرح سے وہ اس کو کممینکیٹ کر رہے ہیں سورس کیا ہے کیا اس میں سورس جانا وہ افیشنٹ ہے سمارٹ ہے اس میں problem situation ہے یا up to the mark ہے آج کل سورس of communication very efficient ہم ایک سیکنٹ کے اندر پوری دنیا کے اندر اپنہ مسئل ترکتے ہیں پیر able to discipline اے تو یہ چیزیں بچوں کو تکھانے بتانے کی ضرورت ہوتی ہے whatever we are sharing with the technology that would be shared in the world اور اس میں کنٹیکس بھی تکھنا ہے whatever we are sharing اس کے بارے میں ہم وجیلنٹ رہے ہیں کہ what we are going to give the message to the others یعنی باس جیزیں ہمیں اب اس طرح سے کرنے کی ضرورت نہیں کہ وہ دو لوگوں تک نہیں پہنچنگی وہ بہت سارے unlimited number of people can see and also react اور پھر یہ ہے کہ اس میں multiplication ہے of the dissemination of that ایک پتھ کے جتنے لنگس ہیں اس میں وہ ساری جیزیں دیسیمیریٹ ہوں گی اور پھر یہ ہے کہ we are to see the evaluative methods for evaluating the message کہ اس میسج کا impact کیا ہے اس میں کیا correction ہونی چاہی ہے اس کو یعنی better بنانے کے لیے کیا چیزیں ضروری ہے اور اس کے impacts کیا ہوتے ہیں باتوں کا جی ہے کہ ایک چھوٹی جی بات communicate ہوجاتی ہے اور اس میں اس کے impacts جانا وہ ہمیں اس کا ندادہ نہیں ہوتا تو ہمیں moral analyze کرنے کی قابل بنانا چاہیے باتوں کو what you are communicating to دیاتا ہے لنگ ویج ایک چھوٹی اور اس میں جو باقی replections ہے with the help of technology کو involvement اس میں ہم اس کو اس قابل بناتے ہیں کہ they to listen others very effectively listening is a very best activity action کہ ہم دوسروں کی بات کو more سے سنتے ہیں with full forces of attention ہم اس کو سنتے ہیں سننے کے بعد ہم اس قابل ہوں گے کہ ہم replections ہم اس کو بات پوچھتے ہیں اور جب سن لیں گے پھر ہی analysis ہوتا اور پھر ہی ہم innovation کی طرف جاتے ہیں and this is leading towards the creativity اور this listening ability is not only helping us to generate creativity or other potential یہ ہمیں اپنی life کی اندر success will ہوتی ہے ہم دوسروں کی بات کو گوہر سے سنتے ہیں اور پھر امل درامت کرتے ہیں گوہر سے نہیں سنیں گے ابھی دوبارہ سننا پڑھیں گا i.e. ہم time saving activity کے طور پہ بھی ہم اس کو لیتے ہیں کہ ہماری activities ہماری exerptions ساری کساری save ہوتی ہیں جب ہم just listening پر امل درامت کرتے ہیں اور دوسروں کو اس قابل بناتے ہیں اور اس میں ہم یہ بھی دیکھ رہے ہیں کہ مثلن reading کے لیے we are ensuring communication تو ہم بات سیدوں کو وہ الفاظ دے رہی ہوتے ہیں یعنی اپنے ideas کو الفاظ دے رہی ہوتے ہیں اور وہ ہم communicate کر رہی ہوتے ہیں اور دوسرہ فرد کیا اس بات کو سمجھ رہا ہے ہم مرسہ کاری کے آدی ہوتے ہیں بات اکات اس کو شیر کی زوان میں کہنا چاہ رہے ہوتے ہیں بات اکات اس کو مختلف ایسے الفاظ سے کہنا چاہ رہے ہیں جو ہمیں تو سمجھا رہے ہیں ہوسکتا دوسرا اس فرد جانا اس بات کو اس طرح سے لنہ سمجھیں تو communication کے لیے بڑا ضروری ہے کہ we make it very simple سادہ الفاظ استعمال کریں خواہت فرد بچوں کے لیے تو مرسہ کاری in advance وہ stage پر ہم اس کو دیں گے لیکن یہ ہے کہ basics سکانے میں سادہ زبان اختیار کریں جسے وہ اپنی ability کو بہتر کر سکے اسی طرح speaking ability ہے اس میں سب سے پہلی بات تو یہ ہے کہ selection of the words اور پھر ہے articulation پھر full articulation پورے الفاظ کی اتائگی جو اس کے لواز مات میں ہے یہ بہت important ہے بچوں کو ہم پورے الفاظ اتائگ کرنا سکھائیں بعض قادہ ہم بچوں کے ساتھ short code میں بات کر رہے ہوتے ہیں یا یہ ہے کہ ہم کہیں کہ الفاظ کو ہم کتر کتر کے پیش کر رہے ہوتے ہیں جلدی تیز رفتاری سے بولنے کی کوشی کر رہے ہوتے ہیں تو اچھی listening یہ ہے کہ ہم پورے الفاظ کے ساتھ وہ بیان کریں دوسرا فرد اس کو پورے انہماغ کے ساتھ اس کو سنے اسی طرح writing ہے whatever we are writing we to write things which are very targeted and very comprehensive or very easy language be used اور پھر یہ ہے کہ collaboration of resources مختلف طرح کے those sources کو کس طرح سے use کرنا ہے کس طرح سے ہم اس میں coordination develop کر سکتے ہیں and all this will lead towards the decision making ability کہ وہ choices or priorities اور پھر اس میں decision یہ شامل ہے اور یہ چھوٹی چھوٹی ability جائیں جو ہمیں پڑے big decision کی طرف لے جاتے ہیں اور اس طرح evaluation ہے evaluation of all the process اور ہمارے resources اس کی utilities اس کی usefulness اور اس میں کس طرح سے ہم اس میں پھائدہ اٹھا سکتے ہیں تو this all will lead towards the basic learning skills Thank you very much
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UCjFmkmzvMl5pwHgFVV7F5gw
5/6 - 2019-20 Panini Donruss Optic Choice 1-Box Break #9 *TRT*
* 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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2020-05-07T06:54:56
2024-04-24T00:08:42
221
3kqMA6rg3nw
What's up everybody? This is optic choice basketball Random tiered teams break number nine. Good luck everybody. Here is the list of customer names And I got a copy from this list right here All sorts of tabs open Remember if you get if you get the urge to trade you have to trade the whole tiered Teams the whole block of teams we're gonna go six times on both lists Good luck. One box break of optic choice the next one is already in the store. We're going six times three four Five and six We got Matthew down to Brenton and remember we randomize in both of the tiers and the names So six times six times on this one two three four five Six and final the wizards block down to the Celtics Matthew you have the Wizards sixers blazers Brian you have the Lakers Rockets Pacers Brenton you have the heat Sun's Bucks Zack you have the Grizzlies Nets Nuggets Matthew with the Hawks Hornets Raptors Nick with the Bulls Warriors Kings Matthew S. Cavs Pistons Jazz Brian Nick Spurs Clippers and with your last spot Mojo spot You get the Pelicans the Thunder and the Magic and Brenton With the Celtics T Wolves and maps So let's actually just a through Z it by your name Let's see if there's any trades be right back All right, there are no trades. So the next one is in the store Appreciate it. Thanks everybody Sean you sound like that person who like they were emailing us every time I sent an email blast And I hopefully and he's probably located hopefully he's not watching He was like, can you please say hi to Joe for me? And it's been like 10 emails like that Like you can just come in the chat and say hi. All right. Here we go. Op the choice Miles Bridges Green and red Tremont waters Choice parallel another Celtic Grant Williams couple C's Boston Celtics We have a Cameron Johnson optic hollow for the Sun's It's going out to Brenton young. We got a Kevin love 13 of 88 I have another one in the store Eric So if we sell it out the next hour or so, I definitely rip it 10 left in the next one Cavs that's going out to Matthew s and Dylan windler autograph For the Cavs. That's another one For Matthew s So if my memory serves me correctly, nothing crazy from this case yet I've broken a few I know Joe and Jason a broken a few but I would have gotten a picture feels like a Zion or something crazy So nothing crazy in this one. So we can run it back tonight if everybody wants to jazby's case breaks calm
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UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA
Read by Alex Wingfield Non Fiction Audiobook Sample ISBN9780744029017
https://gobalex.info/The-Art-Thief-Kindle-Edition https://bit.ly/AIFN https://bit.ly/m/LSUNIQADENTAL https://bit.ly/ABOOK Audiobooks have many benefits for listeners and audiobook lovers. Here are some of them: 1. Improves Listening Skills: Auditing audiobooks can help you develop active listening skills. 2. Enhances Productivity: Another critical benefit of audiobooks is that it helps you to multitask. 3. Helps to Improve Language Skills. 4. Reduces Anxiety and Stress. 5. It Makes the Story Memorable. 6. Help To Build Your Attention and Focus. 7. Prepares You for a Good Night’s Sleep. 8. Audiobooks Can Help You Consume More Books. 9. Introduce students to books above their reading level. 10. Model good interpretive reading. 11. Teach critical listening. 12. Highlight the humor in audiobooks. 13. Introduce new genres that students might not otherwise consider. LibriVox volunteers have recorded full versions of public-domain audiobooks and made them available to everyone. Concise excerpts of contemporary and cutting-edge audiobooks performed by professional voice actors and digital catalogs of audiobooks. If you follow the link in the description or the digital catalog blocks and make a purchase, we may receive a commission. For which we would be grateful! Thank you! #audiobooksfree, #audiobooksfree90, #audiobooksfreeyourhands, #audiobooksfreedom, #freeaudiobooks, #freeaudiobooksforkids, #freeaudiobooks365, #freeaudiobooksmotivational, #freeaudiobooksonyoutube,#2freeaudiobooks, #8freeaudiobooksleft
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2021-03-03T05:52:59
2024-04-23T22:45:36
187
3KrOiSK_SjA
DK Audio presents 13 and a half incredible things you need to know about everything, read by Alex Wingfield. What will you hear? Find out things you never knew you needed to know in this catalogue of curiosities. From bees to blood. Money to mummies. Each entry offers up 13 and a half incredible facts. Keep listening to hear where you'll go next. What did Earth? Earth came into being about 4.6 billion years ago. This huge spinning ball of rock and metal is not as rigid as it seems. The surface of our planet is constantly changing as continents collide, mountains rise up and oceans widen. 1. The ground may feel firm beneath your feet, but Earth's rigid outer layer, the crust, is only a few kilometres thick in places. This rocky surface makes up just 1% of Earth's total volume. 2. The crust is broken into pieces called tectonic plates, which fit together like a giant jigsaw puzzle. However, unlike jigsaw pieces, these plates are constantly on the move, shifting around and crashing into each other. 3. Earth's largest layer, the mantle, is about 2,900 kilometres, 1,800 miles thick. The tectonic plates float on the mantle, which is made of solid rock but flows very slowly due to the extreme temperature and pressure. 4. Wrapped around the centre of our planet, the outer core is a liquid layer of iron and nickel. These swirling metals create Earth's magnetic field. 5. Tectonic plates all move at different rates, and the Nazca plate, the plate to the west of South America, is the fastest. Every year it moves approximately 8 centimetres, 3 inches, about half as fast as hair grows. 6. Earthquakes and volcanoes often happen along plate boundaries. One such hotspot is the East African Rift, where the African plate is slowly splitting in two. Eventually, a new ocean will fill the ever-widening gap. 7. Sample complete. Ready to continue?
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Is Coffee DEAD?! My 30 Day MudWtr Review Shocked Me!
This is MUDWTR, a mushroom coffee alternative made with organic ingredients and nootropics that apparently deliver a strong energy kick, and boost your focus and immunity without the jitters and crashes. But does MUDWTR really work? Well, I’ve tried it for a month and in this video, you’ll learn everything you need to know about it. ✅ Get MudWtr here: https://www.yourinception.com/recommends/mudwtr/ 💊 Have trouble deciding which nootropics are the best for you? Complete the nootropics quiz and get my suggestions for nootropics that fit your brain chemistry, goals, and budget. ➔ https://www.yourinception.com/recommends/brain-assessment/ 🧠 My top-rated nootropic stacks of this year: http://www.yourinception.com/best-nootropic-stack 💌 Sign up for my weekly Limitless Monday newsletter: https://www.yourinception.com/subscribe/ 😎 Join our BRAINHACKERS Facebook GROUP: https://www.facebook.com/groups/990072205135164 Follow me on: ➔ 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yourinception/ ➔ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ggyourinception Subscribe to my YouTube channel: ➔ http://bit.ly/yourinceptionyt Have questions? Ask me using #askyourinception in the comments below. LUT made by: https://sebastjankravcar.com/ -- Please note that the information provided in this show is not medical advice, nor should it be taken or applied as a replacement for medical advice. The Your Inception Team, its employees, guests, and affiliates assume no liability for the application of the information discussed. We do not attempt to diagnose, treat, or prevent any diseases or illnesses.
[ "your inception", "greg gostincar", "nootropics", "mud wtr", "mud wtr review", "mud water drink review", "mud/wtr review", "mud water coffee replacement", "mud water", "mud/wtr", "mudwtr", "mud water review", "mudwater review", "mud drink", "mud drink review", "coffee alternative", "mudwater", "mud coffee", "mudwater coffee", "mud water ad", "coffee review", "drink mud wtr", "coffee replacement", "energy drink", "healthy energy drink" ]
2022-11-28T18:46:35
2024-02-05T08:05:38
575
3ksp3v9CDVk
Have I just found the best coffee alternative on the market? This is Mudwater, a mushroom coffee alternative made with organic ingredients and nitropics that apparently deliver a strong energy kick, booster focus and immunity without the jitters and crash. But does Mudwater really work? Well I've tried it for a month and in this video, you'll learn everything you need to know about it. Hi friends, welcome back to the channel. My name is Greg Gostinkar and I'm the founder of Your Inception. On this channel, we have professionals achieve peak break performance, so if you're interested then subscribe below and join our amazing community. Let's talk about my experience with Mudwater. The actual benefits, effects, its taste, why you shouldn't drink it in the afternoon and much much more. By the way, what's your opinion about coffee? Do you like it or do you prefer to avoid it? Let me know in the comment section below. Now Mudwater was designed to help you establish a new morning routine with an energy-boosting drink that contains only a little caffeine and some of the most potent natural compounds for performance. Now in the past two years or so, I've been seeing more and more coffee alternatives hitting the market because people are getting more aware of the coffee side effects such as jitters, daily crashes, negative impact on sleep, headaches and many others. But since we all need a booster now and then, can such a natural solution provide the promised boost without causing any of its side effects and is it tasty enough to drink it daily? Well, I've been drinking Mudwater daily for the last month, so let me share with you what I've learned during this test. So I've just made my first cup of Mudwater, so let's see how it smells and tastes. Yeah, it's like, that's an interesting smell. It's like a Christmas cookies or something like that, it reminds me of that. But yeah, I think taste is more important. Hmm, okay, it's all right. Not sure what I expected, but it doesn't taste too bad. I definitely have to get used to taste, that's for sure, but it's kind of, it's earthy, it's very earthy. I think by default it tastes better than a cup of coffee that is, if you're not used to it, but once you get used to coffee, most people really like it's taste, so this is quite different. So I think it's something you have to get used to, but it's not too bad, it's not too bad, that's for sure. Let me drink this for a while for a couple of weeks and then let's see how I get used to the taste. Now, first of all, I had a hard time getting Mudwater shipped to me because the brand doesn't ship to Europe, which I understand, but they could ship me one package at my costs, as I suggest, just to try it out. Anyhow, I later got the product from a friend, so that was fine. So let's start with the taste, because if people won't like its taste, this will never become a real coffee alternative. Now, personally, I think it has a decent taste. It tastes very earthy, and you can feel the masala chai and the mushrooms, but not so much the cacao, Mudwater more tastes like a chai than cacao actually. Its taste and structure is not something that made me extremely excited about the product, but I think it is drinkable and you can get used to it. Now I haven't tried their creamer and sweetener yet, but I can imagine that when you combine them, the taste is actually even better. Now, I personally added a bit of monk fruit to Mudwater, this is by the way my favorite sweetener, which improved the taste by quite a lot. Also, I found the taste better when made in plant milk, I generally drink rice or almond milk, so that's something for you to experiment with. But of course, if you're going to make Mudwater in milk every day, this will increase the cost a bit. Now, if the taste is not that bad, how about the actual effects? Well, I've tried Mudwater on different occasions, but I mainly drank it in the morning as my coffee substituted. After a month of testing, there is no doubt that drinking Mudwater boosted my energy and improved my focus, which was slightly surprising, but it made me very, very happy. I got into this calm, focused state for the whole morning, probably around four hours or so. And after that, the effects slowly winded off. Now, what should I say about the effects? I honestly expected a bit more because the kick was quite mild compared to a cup of coffee. My motivation wasn't the same as with a cup of coffee, so that wasn't optimal. But on the other hand, the effects lasted much longer. I didn't crash after four hours and I felt very calm, unlike with a cup of coffee. So overall, I really liked Mudwater. But is it good enough to substitute your morning cup of coffee or is it more of an afternoon coffee alternative? Now, before I answer that, let's quickly mention Mudwater ingredients and a few unexpected benefits you can get from this drink. Now, the base of Mudwater is Masala Chai. Masala Chai is particularly popular in Southeast Asian countries, such as India and Pakistan. It consists of black tea and various places and herbs, which is the reason why Mudwater has such a particular taste. Now, if you ever drank Masala Chai and you liked its taste, then you will love Mudwater. But if you don't like Masala Chai, I don't think Mudwater will become part of your morning routine. Now, other crucial ingredients in Mudwater are lion's mane, cordyceps, chaga and reishi. Chaga has potent anti-inflammatory properties and it also helps promoting brain health by preventing it from deteriorating diseases such as Alzheimer's. Lion's mane mushroom is an edible mushroom that has anxiolytic and antioxidant properties. So it plays a vital role in calming you down, but it is also great for your brain because it helps in the repair of damaged nerve fibers. Reishi is yet another mushroom that is often underestimated. It's strong antioxidant and great for reducing stress, which is why you won't get nervous after drinking Mudwater. Then there is cordyceps, another mushroom that has multiple benefits. Among other things, cordyceps may boost exercise performance. Now the less important ingredient I think in this drink is cacao, which is jam packed with flavonoids. I'm not sure if you knew, but cacao can improve blood circulation, which leads to enhanced alertness. Now, keep in mind that most mushrooms have quite a bitter taste. That's why some people would prefer adding some kind of a sweetener to this drink. Now, as you can see, with drinking Mudwater, you will get many special effects. You cannot get bad drinking coffee. So this alone may convince some of you to say goodbye to coffee and welcome Mudwater into your home. But there is still one problem with Mudwater, and that's its caffeine dose. Yes, Mudwater contains 40 mg of caffeine. For comparison, a standard cup of espresso contains in average about 75 mg of caffeine. That's why you will feel that cup of espresso much more than Mudwater. Now, if you're sensitive to caffeine, you'll probably want to avoid Mudwater. However, I want to share something very interesting with you. So personally, I'm a fast caffeine metabolizer. I get a very strong energy boost with coffee that lasts for about one hour, and then I crash every single time. And that is one of the reasons why I try to avoid coffee. But with Mudwater, I had no such issues. Mudwater didn't make me nervous, anxious, or anything alike. This pie the caffeine. Now, I could drink it daily without any problems, so you may give it a try even if you generally have issues with caffeine. But you shouldn't drink it too late in the afternoon because of the caffeine's half-life. As you probably know, caffeine stays in the system for about 10 to 18 hours. This means that if you drink it too late, it will negatively impact your sleep. Similarly, like coffee. Because of that, Mudwater is a great morning coffee alternative, but not optimal for the afternoon. Now, before I share my verdict about Mudwater, let's first look at the price and then compare the pros and cons of Mudwater. By the way, guys, are you searching for the best natropics for your individual needs? If yes, go for a free brain assessment, link below, and get a personalized recommendation for the best natropics. So, 30 servings of Mudwater cost about $50, or $40 if you subscribe, which is way cheaper than drinking coffee in Starbucks, but probably more expensive than making it at home. Now, in my opinion, you can get so many additional benefits from Mudwater, and this price is a no-brainer. But of course, I know that not everyone can afford it. Having said this, let's talk about its pros and cons. Now, the pros of Mudwater are, it can boost your focus and energy, it has potting ingredients and natropics, it does not contain a proprietary blend, so all the ingredients have their dosages enlisted. If you alter its taste, you could learn to love it, and it provides multiple benefits that coffee cannot. Now, how about the cons? The facts are milder compared to the cup of coffee. It's a bit pricey for some, and the taste and smell are a bit off. I still prefer the taste of coffee. So, to my verdict, if you're hoping to get the same kick as with your regular cup of coffee, you won't get it with Mudwater, but you will feel energized and focused for much longer than with one cup of coffee. Mudwater is a unique innovation and definitely a good alternative to coffee, it has no side effects. Plus, it offers a lot of health benefits, thanks to its natropic-affiliated ingredients list. So, if you care about your long-term energy, your focus, and overall performance, and if you don't want to burn out, then I'd give Mudwater a try. There's a link below if you want to get a special price, and of course, if you want to try Mudwater, but if you want to get similar effects in a capsule form, then Kualia Mind is a product for you. You can watch my full review up here. Thank you guys for watching, and I hope to see you soon again. Stay well.
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Managing Anemia: Point of Convergence for Heart Failure and Chronic Kidney Disease? | RTCL.TV
### Keywords ### #cardiorenalsyndrome #anemia #HIFPHinhibitors #erythropoiesisstimulatingagents #irontherapy #hepcidinantagonists #RTCLTV #shorts ### Article Attribution ### Title: Managing Anemia: Point of Convergence for Heart Failure and Chronic Kidney Disease? Authors: Oana Nicoleta Buliga-Finis, Anca Ouatu, Daniela Maria Tanase, Evelina Maria Gosav, Petronela Nicoleta Seritean Isac, Patricia Richter ,and Ciprian Rezus Publisher: MDPI AG DOI: 10.3390/life13061311 DOAJ URL: https://doaj.org/article/56c686c429a64803ba839e2c43d2653d Source URL: https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/13/6/1311 ### Image Attribution ### We used stable diffusion to programmatically generate the background images. Viewer discretion is advised. ### Channels ### YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@stemrtcltv Odysee Channel: https://odysee.com/@stem_rtcl_tv ### Video Timestamps ### 0:00:00 - Summary 0:00:26 - Title 0:00:33 - End
[ "HIFPH inhibitors", "RTCLTV", "anemia", "cardiorenal syndrome", "erythropoiesisstimulating agents", "hepcidin antagonists", "iron therapy", "shorts" ]
2023-09-15T21:51:46
2024-04-23T23:55:55
34
3KVFyxfSGJY
Anemia is a common complication in patients with advanced heart failure and chronic kidney disease, and it can worsen their prognosis. Researchers have been looking for ways to treat this comorbidity, including targeted hemoglobin therapeutics and novel drugs like hypoxia-inducible factor-prolyl hydroxylase domain inhibitors and hepsidin antagonists. These approaches could help improve outcomes for patients with cardiorenal anemia syndrome. This article was authored by Ona Nicoleta-Boligafinus, Ancawatu, Daniella Maria-Tanas, and others.
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UCv8O9vXuvJGY7PAy_rohQpA
When Humans Lost the Peni$ Bone - Seema Anand Storytelling
This post is in response to the hundreds of men who write in to me asking how they can “last longer” in bed so they can be better lovers. - Unending penetration is NOT the mark of good lovemaking - S3X is NOT a competition of who has more stamina or who’s left standing the longest. - “Lasting longer” in bed is NOT about longer erections. Pleasure comes in a million different forms. Do not limit yourself to this one thing. There’s a whole universe of pleasure out there. Go explore. Here’s the link to the article: https://religionnews.com/2015/07/28/was-eve-made-from-adams-rib-or-his-baculum/ Latest in Seema Anand Storytelling: 🎧 The 3000 step stories - https://anchor.fm/seemaanand Seema Anand Book: The Arts of Seduction: The 21st century guide to having the greatest s3x of your life 📚 https://www.amazon.in/Seema-Anand/e/B... Official Social Profiles of Seema Anand (Don't forget to follow and subscribe) 🌐 https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCv8O... 🌐 https://www.facebook.com/groups/96043... 🌐 https://www.instagram.com/seemaanands...
null
2022-04-12T11:44:33
2024-04-23T15:52:12
56
3kYrJTEr1ig
A baculum is the bone inside the penis. Most mammals have it. Human men don't. And the story goes that Eve, as in Adam and Eve, was made from Adam's baculum. So not the rib, as we've always been told, but Adam's penis bone. And that's why men no longer have one. Now, as you can imagine when this theory first came out, the Christian community was absolutely outraged. And I can understand that. I've actually put the article in the caption for you to read as well. But all that aside, I think that this story makes a brilliant lesson because the purpose of the baculum is to make penetration last for a long, long time. And removing it all together from the humans should be your first clue that unending penetration is no woman's idea of pleasure. You know, women can receive pleasure in a million different ways. So don't just always be stuck on that one thing. Go adventuring. Go experiment.
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How JRF Toppers Make Notes & Study for UGC NET English Exam | Part 1
Cracking UGC NET Exam in the first attempt is a universal dream for all the students who appear for this exam. Well, it’s not an uphill mountain that you can’t climb. If certain strategies are followed just like the toppers, then you can sail through the exam in your first attempt. UGC NET English Exam is right around the corner. The irony is that everyone tells us to study during the exam time, no one teaches us HOW to study. We all know that the syllabus to be covered for UGC NET English is very vast. So in this video, Arpita tries to simplify the whole process for you by presenting some important, indispensable note – making tips. She will also explain in detail, SMART NOTE MAKING TECHNQIUE that will help you learn important information quickly and easily. #ToppersSecret #UGCNETEnglish #HowToMakeNotes Struggling to find NTA UGC NET/JRF coaching near your home? Join India's finest Online Coaching for NTA UGC NET Exam only at https://www.arpitakarwa.com Online Courses available for: ⏩ NTA UGC NET Paper 1 (General Paper) ⏩ NTA UGC NET Paper 2 (English Literature) ⏩ GATE, PGT, TGT, SET, SLET, DSSSB (English) ⏩ M.A Entrance & Ph.D Entrance (English) To get complete details about our Online Courses: ⏩ Call/Whatsapp: +91 7976603731 ⏩ Website: https://www.arpitakarwa.com/ ⏩ Email: contact@arpitakarwa.com Follow us to receive GoNETQuiz & latest UGC NET updates: 🌎 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/arpitakarwa/ 🌎 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/arpitakarwa/ 🌎 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/arpitakarwa/ 🌎 Telegram: http://www.t.me/arpitakarwa 🌎 Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/arpitakarwa/
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2022-05-15T11:10:59
2024-02-05T08:01:21
803
3k7JHMoPZqk
अटी् Ne B Daily ता करอน सो убийु और फी腔 स کا उगला होरत हीं। कि10 ते लाई चामनगका।े2019 बवाई अनगता शादते के च्नल काी और look the Kiju ता न �します Curseगन फी� प्षटम ला� mayonnaise ैiałरणी न वरäs चैंत में अ आप चाँच तने एक च्नाम लगाis ये देखे कहा within only exam, it is not very easy. ती आ हम बे लिnt after that, but when you give a mock test, तो उनगी चाई रहे था पने लेजे दिब नहीं। There is not much good score गई सारी चीजे के परने के बलगजुड अप हर बार एक्जाम मैं केर रहेण। Despite reading so many things, उनके गजाम कलेर नहीं कर गजाम भाजी। you cannot clear exams every time बड़े नहीं कर अजाम भी आप देखा इ पाजदी भी बहुप यहुत यह। यह अजामने लाग़ बाऑबजुत ये देखाना के देखा लिए बहुप गे तेदी ताब लेओद. थो भी लोगा कर बाबाब देखापा पहले लगा तो और नहीं कर थी लगे रहाँ. वही वही चीज़े पड़े जा रहे हैं बार-बार और बार आप इज्जाम में अच्छे माख्स नहीं लापाते तो इस विदियो में मैं आपको बतानेवाली वे एक बहुत सिंपल स्ट्रातजी जिसे यूस करके आप रेलिविन देटा सुजल्ये स्टाट करते हैं आपको बताती हो नों साड आद आप की एक जा होता हमें पताही के लिट्रच़्च्योगा फेप्वर है कि इस तरीके से विज्ची नेथ का डिशाएंद होता है कि आप सिफ वरट्टा मार के उज्जाम में नंबल नहीं लासते अप आप भने सब अलके आप थके यह कोई ग XD षकीन कोई सूब अला से जा Kathleen अंुक के आपसे टिल अप्मगो जा हँ यह आप उपने पहत्ते यह itís त locale आप पहत आनहीं कोगे吉 back आपको पताऩाचे त्ऊट दिनेस्टी के बारेँ। आपको पताऩाचे कि जो रेनेसा चागा गो अग्डिंज humanus chogas afti häabka fatahona chie tudaa dainesti ke baareme. आपको पताऩाची के उस्टैं, कोन सा राजा रूल कर रहा था, aapko pataona chie koeon sa raja rule kar rahata and अपको पता उना जीे मरीस, कुईन अफ सकोट्स कुन ती, एलिसबित जब कुईन बनी तो उने क्या मेजो चेंज्जिस करें, पको सारी चीज़ है, अपके वरक्स मेड्ठ्लेक्षन लाती है. आप सोचके देके आज ब फोलिवोड मेजो बी बनती है, आप सोचके देके आज बोलिवोड मेजो बी बनती है, क्या आपको नहीं लक्ता की वो हमारे एन्डिन सोचाटी का माईंच्ट को जलकाती है, पोर उग्ढामप्र, तरी इड्दिएद्ज जब बनी, आप सोचके देके, अगर आपको विक्तोरिएन पीरिएड, के पोलिटिकल बाग्राउन के बारे में समज नहीं सकता, वो समथ सता है कि किस टाएके कोलगेज है, किस टाएके लाईस्टाईल है, कोलगेज तुडन्स की, सिम्यल रड़ि आप आप अगर आयुश्वान खुराना की कुछ से बूवीज्गेगेगेगे, जो मीटलखलास फाम्लिट्टेझ में बासड आप देकेगेगेगेगे, अप देखे कि अच्टिल एंगा विक्तोरिएन पीरिएड के, उसी दहंख से सुचती है जैसा मूओवीग में देपिक्तटड है अं इसी तर है, बॉक्स भी रफलेक्च्छन होती है अपकी सुचाइती का अब सुचके देखे कि अगर अपको विक्टोर्यन पीरिवड के तो जब आपकी अपकी आजान लगाई थे जाल्स दिकन्स के पीरिवड को समजना या मिल आन तर पलोस को समजना पुत आपकी आपकी बता हुए चाल्स दिकन्स इसली ये चीजे लिख रागता कि उस जमाने में जीजे हो रही थी जब आप जेन अस्टन को परते हैं या जब आप शार्टिद भ्रोंटे को परते हैं ता अप समझेंगी कि उस ताईम की फीमेल्स के दिमाक में चलता क्या था हाँ दे वो रिस्ट्टिक्तिड इसिलिए शार्टिट भ्रोंटे ने शैजेन आयल लिकी अस्टन इस्टन आप आप आप परटे हैं हैं जब आप नोट्ट बनाते हैं अमेशा याध रखखे कि एसी रइटर के से वक्स को मत पडये उस रइटर की बायुगरफी को भी पड़ये बायुगरफी से बहुड सारी अजी की वोगी जो पुची जाती है रादिचीच़े अथमाटिकली समजाएगी पूर इज्ँम बले के बहद फेमिस रोमान्टिक पोईट है जो काफी सारी ट्याटे टिक्ट बूक्स लिखा करते थे पूइट़्ी लिखते थे सात में दाइगराम्स या फिर आप आप आप सोचेंगे के ये इन्फमाशन मुझे याद करने है मैमराईस करनाई के एसा कुँईट्टर लाईटा था लिए ट्ट्टरेऊन्स लिए बूक्स के सात बआद अगर अपने कीट विलिम बलेक को बहद अच्छे से जो नहीं परना उसको ना परने की बजे से अप इतना डाइं सेप करेंगे कि आप वो सारी चीजे पभड पाएंगे जो आख्चल में इंपोट्टंट है जब आम बात करतें एक राइटर की बियोग्रफी के तो यह बच्ट इंपोट्टंट शीज आती है उसका पने नेम बहुत सारे आजटर से जिनको ताइटल जीए गगागे ते फोर इख्टम्ट शेली को बोला जाता ता सेज अप हाईगेट तो आब बहुत बर कुछश्टन्स आजाते है सेज अप हाईगेट की से ताइटल दीआ गया था अपको पता हुना जीए बहुत सारे विक्टोरिन फीमेल राइटर सती जो पन नेम के पीछे लिखा करती ती उनका रील नाम कोच अर था जोरज ऐलिएट, शारलिट भ्रोंटे इनका रील नाम अलक था क्यो? क्यो के उस ताइम पे फीमेल वोईस को जाड़ा तवजजो नहीं दिया जाता तो वो सारे नाम आपको पता होने जीए मैंने बहुत बार नेट में कुछ्छन देख हैं वो चार राइटरस के रील नाम देंगे उनी चार राइटरस के आपको मैच करने ये सारी चोटी चोटी दीटेलग आपको अपने नोट्छ में इंकलूट करने है इसले हम आमविश अपने students को बोलते है कि हमारी साइट पिफ फ्री अप कोस तमने लिस्ट अप राइटरस डाल रगटर की है अपको आप इसी डंख से पड़ीए जिस डंख से मैं आपको इस लेक्छर की सीरीज में बतारी हूँ की नोट्ट स कैसे बनाने है तो आप देखेंगे की हर राइटर पे आप बहुत रेलिवेंट नोट्ट स बना पाएंगे अप बतारी राइटर की बाईअगरूफी पे तो ये जानना जरुड़ ये उसका चाँलडूड कैसा रहा ये जानना जरुड़ ये उसके अप इंपलूटिए से किस किस किस चीजो का हूँँ जैसे कि कीट्स पे बहुत जाडा इंफलूटिए से ग्रीक लिट्रेचो का जो बहुत एविदेंट है, उसकी उनकी बहुत सारी पोईट्री में, जैसे एव अप सेंट एगनीस, जब आप अप पोईट्ची अप विल्यम बलेक को समच भी ले, अगर आपने विल्यम बलेक और मिल्तिन के बारे में उंका क्या सोच विचार था, इसे दंग से नहीं समजा, इसे अपने नोध बुक में नहीं लिखा, इसे याद नहीं किया, तो हो सब ता है, एक जामने कुछ अपने बारे में उंका क्या सोच विचार था, इसे दंग से नहीं समजा, इसे अपने नोध बुक में नहीं लिखा, इसे याद नहीं किया, तो हो सब ता है, एक जामने कुछ अझई कुछच्च्च्चन्स आए, अब अलग-ुजँ राइटस को फोलो करते ते, कझ़़ ओभ अच्छा मानते ते, कझ़ओऊ को बूरा मानते ते, और अन सब के बारे में उने कुछना कुछ खोमव्ट गया, तो हमेशा इस यस यन्तर्लिंक्नेस को दियान मेरकतेवे अपने नोट्स बनाएग. बहुत बार आब देखेंगे कि हुँरग जो क्योंट्स्छन्ज आते है पेपर तुमें उस में से दिरिक्ट फिफ्टीं तुंटी क्योंट्स्छन्ज आसे हुटें एक रिटर ने दुस्चे रिटर के बारे में ख्या बुला वो आपको कोट्स में दे दिया जाएगा और बोला जाएगा बताएए ये शब्द किस रिटर ने किस के लिये बोलें तो बहुत थिमझबआट्ट्ट आप पूँप इन चीजो को दियान में रख है तापी लोनिं किप लविं लिट्चो अं स्ते टिझूं तो अर्प्ता करवा डाट काँम
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SONCHIRIYA MOVIE REVIEW!! | Sushant Singh Rajput | Manoj Bajpayee
Here is our review of Sonchiriya! #SushantSingh #OSRMovieReview THANKS SO MUCH TO OUR EXTRA JUICY PATREON SUPPORTERS HANOZ NAVDAR & SASI KUMAR Be a patron for us and support more videos like this! https://www.patreon.com/OurStupidReactions If you would like to send us something 18960 Ventura Blvd. #76 Tarzana, CA 91356 Korbins Personal Youtube page- https://www.youtube.com/user/KorbinMiles Ricks personal Youtube Page- https://www.youtube.com/ricksegallchannel Korbin Miles - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm4716836/?... Rick Segall - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0781848/?... For Business - oStupidp@gmail.com Follow OurStupidReactions On FACEBOOK & TWITTER: FB: https://www.facebook.com/ourstupidpod... TWITTER: https://twitter.com/STUPIDREACTIONS
[ "our stupid reactions", "korbin miles", "ricksegall" ]
2020-06-30T03:02:00
2024-02-05T07:33:08
1,541
3knlNMyGb3E
We're very monotoned today. Those. We'll go back to where Stupid Arr Grace is getting its up Corbin. I'm Riggs. And you can follow us on Instagram. It's a Twitter. More juicy content. It's so juicy. The Belly Record notifications. What Belly? Anyways. Uh, today. Uh, you little stupid. We are doing a movie review. Yes, you had to watch a movie. You should go watch it and then come back There you go. Ha fastest we ever gotten through that. I beat him to his own joke. It's true. Ah today. We're watching the Hindi film Sun Rayya So I'm sure I'm sure. Yeah, so I'm sure yeah, so I'm sure I'm not sure so I'm just a bomb Chucky bomb bomb bomb bomb Name that song shake bomb It is my man. Okay. If y'all didn't know Ricky Martin is my man crush Oh, no, he's been relevant in what 20 years relevance is immaterial sexiness. Have you seen him recently? Yeah, have you? No man's aging well The man is aging well. Anyways, that's all this is about this is about this film This is a night 2019 film. Yeah, it was a Sushant sing Rajput Man, uh, Manaj Banarjee Bajpayee Bajpayee. Yeah, and Hold on Was she the girl Yeah, she was say her name Boomie peddner car and then Who the other guy was oh who played? Vikal Singh, yeah Kill sing Ranveer Shorri Ranveer Shorri. Yeah, okay Anyways So he's the golden bird apparently that's the title Set in the Shambhal Valley the film follows the story of a legion of dreaded warring Drakoids Who which is bandits we learned that recently who once terrorized the Indian heartlands? Yes directed by and the ravines Directed by Abhishek Chavi who also did a Ota banja. Yes, and was also one of the writers of the story was co-creator of the story and composed by Vishal Bhagwash our unashamed band crush Just art Ah Anyways a hundred percent spoiler of you if you haven't seen it go watch it come back and then you can you know I'm sure I think a lot of you saw this. I don't know how I don't know how I have no idea I don't know but anyway, anyways initial thoughts I Really wanted to like this movie Ended up freaking loving it I was wondering I was like, yeah, I Told he like about I told I told him Johnny I said I'm gonna I'm gonna piss Corbin off cuz I'm gonna start it with and he's gonna think there's no way He's about to say what I think he's gonna say. Well, I was like, okay. Where the hell is that going? Here's my here's my paragraph. I was like, what didn't you like about here's my paragraph If you want to know how to make a movie watch this one. Yeah Yeah, it really does over it really does grip you right away It's it's first. Yeah, it starts fast first friend And this is what and obviously they were completely different films I actually feel like consign to my help to me understand this film. Hmm more You know, I would agree even though obviously I think this film is better, but it's not totally fair No, it helps it helped inform it. That's for sure But it's not so not totally very bad that one was made right a decade ago. Exactly this it's it's hard to compare but anyways This film I felt like just all the way through was just a gorgeous film But also just a really entertaining Well-acted well written every minute just every like every friend. It's it's captivating Well, they're doing and they're not doing anything complicated. No, what they were doing in the beginning. They kind of just finished finished doing they died Like they were just trying to get away like they were rebels And they were trying to get away from the police and that's basically what they were doing the entire time Well, it's not it wasn't it's not a complicated story Not at all as as simple a story as I don't know if you guys have seen an old Western with Robert Redford and Paul Newman called Butch Cassidy and the Sundance kid Really simple Western butch Cassidy and the Sundance kid Their thieves and they're running away from the law. What's it? That's the premise I the first thing I want to say And I I I want to say these names and I'll tell you who I'm referring to. Okay Koran Alfonso the here by the koala Bolganin Baroush Sage and Chavri Borhan Karwala again Drift Parath doesn't surprise me. There's this many people on El Radhakrishnan kumal Sharma Sanma Chetty Connell Singh Shreejesh and Omkar Tamhan That's the sound team. Oh, wow This is without question the best sound editing and sound mixing of any film that I've seen out of India This is the kind of sound that if this had come out as a film here in Hollywood I would have said if this doesn't get an Oscar nomination for sound mixing and sound editing I'm gonna be really angry. Yeah, the sound mixing and editing were Un Reaking believable Just as good as it gets so I just can't we're gonna praise this from a lot I'm just gonna praise a lot of stuff the one negative Sometimes the stunt work wasn't as good as you only I thought the stop no Mostly time it was but sometimes you could see that they were faking it like some of the people that were acting We're a little slow in doing some of these stunts Sometimes okay, this is not like I'm just I like I said I'm gonna praise most of the film I'm pretty critical of that sometimes. I actually I didn't see that few times where I just saw somebody punching and then you clearly they didn't Okay, yeah, and it I didn't pick up on it. Those are the that's like the only thing that I can We can be seriously we could be here for two hours. Yeah, we could talk just the acting alone We could go through everybody in the cast. Let's start with the acting. Let's start with you Let's start with Great so shunt and I'm feeling them more and the more and more we're getting to yeah And the more obviously you guys were very frustrated and really sad when he died, right? We sadly did not know him yet, right? I haven't seen the thing and so we were like that's very sad Obviously, you never want to see somebody that happened to anybody correct But obviously we had no personal connection like we did with earphone I'm now understanding. It's similar to like When he thought obviously Heath was really young. He was 28. He is and he so Sean was a little older, but You see the town exactly you see the talent and how many great stuff that they're going to do in the future That's one because somebody's asked me before it's like who would you bring back Robin Williams heat ledger? I would bring back. He's Robin even though I would bring him back in a hard beat if I could sure But you got to see so much greatness From him you just got the start of what Heath was going to do exactly in the industry And that's how I feel about Sushant and how how devastating it is to lose a talent like this He has the charisma of Ranveer and I think I said in the last one like every single time Ranveer's on the screen I'm like oh he's such screen presence and obviously he's a talent I feel the exact same way about Sushant and his talent level and his screen presence And it's it's so so sad this completely different character what we saw in the detective Thank you Completely different character and a completely different vibe I got from him yeah in this and that was fantastic to see because you know I love when actors kind of just Do different types of characters and I like that he doesn't he never wanted to do like the Stereotypical well, I don't know if he did maybe he did but at least late later in his career He wanted to do these mid-year roles Yeah, and I love that and it's Ridiculously sad and I know you guys already know this that you won't be able to see him anymore Yeah, so his last film that's coming out here later in July, but I don't know how you feel about him I thought he was phenomenal in this film phenomenal. I got mad After this one You know the same it was different with Heath obviously because we already knew yeah, but I have the same anger About his departure for selfish reasons because I saw not just what you said I absolutely agree. He carries a similar screen presence of charisma and energy and danger That reindeer carries. Yeah He also carries a groundedness to his acting and a believability That's comparable to his counterpart in this. Yeah, my nose bush pie. Who's who's always we'll get to him. Yeah, I I Think had he been able to stay with us and kept making the choices He would have been free to make to do the projects. He wants to do I think he could have been somebody that the industry saw was instrumental in this era that is is the believability factor He would have been a monumental contributor And I think he could have I think the sky was the limit for this guy and it pisses me off. Yeah, that he's gone Yep, that's what we have to say about that. Yeah, obviously. We don't want to talk on that too long yet No, no, no, no, no, everybody your feel the same a while more than us He is severely missed we can't wait to watch more of his stuff So before we get to the rest let us know what of his we should watch next for obviously his last film comes out Which we will watch yeah immediately Anyways on to Minaj who? Had almost a supporting role. I thought he was actually the lead in this and I was so glad We had some flashbacks. Yeah, so it was as if this if you haven't seen this go watch it and come back Because here we go when he died. I was mad like no, I Thought he was like supposed to be like the main character in this and I'm glad Sushant was and I enjoyed his performance But I I was expecting to see it like a full thing of And I was excited and he died. Oh, okay. Well, that was nice to see him. I guess So when they gave a couple of flashbacks, I was very thankful I also felt that well, let's stick stick with with him. Yeah, you know I was instantly thinking about him in terms of the last role We saw him and yeah, and they're two completely different people. Yeah They're just two completely different people even I don't know what he did with his body weight for this But he had he looked like he might have been 25 pounds 30 pounds lighter for this film Then he was for the the teacher You could see it in his face his face actually looked longer and and he he's just in The list of actors that are grounded believable make it look easy and have shape-shifting capacity He's a he's in that list. Mm-hmm. Yeah, I mean and We said it before we watched his last film that we knew that's what you guys have been saying about him Yeah, and we agree It just took us a minute to get to him. Yeah, but he is up there with no was it in city? Yes He is up there with I'm drawing a blank on my favorite actors. Yes. Thank you Those types of actors who are just so grounded and so believable and so just effortless In what they're doing. Yep. He is a hundred percent in that conversation of the best artists Currently acting. Yep. Not just in general and much less India Especially in the world the world of acting He he's as exciting an actor to me like you said it is as no was if I see he's in a film I'm gonna be as excited as any actor male and female that I see in a film right now His his name's attached and I'm excited. Yeah. Yep. Yeah, so he did he did phenomenal, of course he brings In this he brought a sense of Obviously, he brought a ton of innocence in his last character, but this one obviously as a gang leader To have that element to it Because certain actors and I don't know obviously I haven't seen all of his roles. I've seen two of his roles Three because we saw him in gangs gangs. Yeah. Yeah Certain actors just have this quality about them that brings an innocence to almost every character they have and I I'm not sure that's him, but in these two Last ones he brings almost an innocence and a love ability to him because Johnny's Johnny Depp is that same way He and I'm not comparing the actors No, just the quality of the person the quality every role they bring Yeah, they bring a innocence and love ability to it, right even though Johnny plays like dark like Tom Hanks Yeah, they bring these dark roles like Johnny plays, but he there's always an innocence about it Yeah, it's past to not so much in gangs. I guess You're right though because it's different like No, I was and it may just be the parts I'm sure he can play he can probably play like a run the dog of two hundred percent a hundred percent Yeah, where you're there you just are totally just a fact at least the past to correct He brings this like love ability and innocence to his roles even a little that you got Playing this film. Yeah, but I loved it and then the film as a whole I love that they killed him off in the beginning because I wasn't expecting that I Love the way that they they didn't give them an honorable day They dropped him off with a frickin room. They dropped it. That was a beautiful well done shot Just to have them following Shashan and they have the either the stunt person or the the CGI Whatever they did for him go in front of frame and then they pulled back and he's come in and has laid down in the spot It looked like he fell down face first onto the ground and he He is such even with the any person he's working with He must be a joy to work with because he's one of those actors that I would refer to as he's clearly a generous actor And that he's gonna give you so much to work with that You won't even have to you won't have enough work because what he's giving you is that you're gonna so much to react to I bet I could be ready. I bet he is a theater background. I'll be astonished if he doesn't I'd be Astonished he seems like one of those actors all 100% 100% and I felt a Round your shory. Yeah, he did for now. We've seen him before. Yeah, we have I don't know what it was several people We've seen my obviously bunty was here. Yes Excited to see him as was from pot a look are Even on the yeah, we call him the white boy, but he's not he's not white But he just looked white Yeah, he's a really good actor for the little parts that he's been given in both the things Yep, I like him a lot. I think he's a really really good actor Yeah, brings like a danger. He's like he's crazy. Yeah, crazy eyes Yeah, that's crazy intense eyes. Yeah. Yeah, but I do want to talk about her. Yes. That's the next I wanted to talk about When we pet in the car She did so well Didn't have a false mom. I loved her character. Yep a lot and I don't know if we've seen her before She looked a little from I think we've seen her in a trailer. She's in toilet. Mm-hmm. That's with ox. She I believe Yeah, I think we've seen her in a trailer or two, but we hadn't seen her work, but this clearly was Like everybody in it she just doesn't have a false moment She's completely believable every moment of the time and what I loved about her character was that even though she was Some what the damsel in distress. She wasn't the damsel in distress. No, she had that power and Yeah, she was a wrong woman. Yeah She was in distress, but she doesn't come across as having she needed help. She didn't need saving. Yeah, and All the way through her character. There was just a strength about her which is hard to convey It's it's a testament probably to just who the woman is and that she can convey a female character who is Scared and wounded but doesn't come across as fragile or incapable And that's that's not an easy thing to convey This character could have easily and I feel would have been ruined if she wasn't coming across as someone who's strong You know, it would have it would have really done a disservice to the to the story I think if she wasn't someone that you felt, you know She'll be picking up a gun right alongside the other guys and the shooting people and yeah And I thought she did phenomenal job And that's obviously an attestment to not only her but the writing the right the right writing and the directing by Abhishek Chabi Chabi. Yeah, who was in the point the director of the Punjab Punjab who I love that film Great movie But I felt like the writing of this was so interesting and it was almost sometimes really hard to watch the way they handled the cast Issue and the fact that at certain times you're like, okay Oh these guys respect women But then right when they find out that she's from a different cast right they and then they just let that the family come and take her and then obviously that the one guy who Was just awful and then the son kept slapping her and then that whole scene was really well done Really well done, but hard to watch hard as was the sequence that you knew was coming when the when he's Describing when Shushant is describing the curse and the five-year-old girl and That was an amazing through line throughout of her appearing in the water at first and then the also the Later part where you find out the real story behind why they went to the village and how Manaj's character was really Sacrificial lambing himself Going in for the sake of the other person and the whole concept of we're doing this for Dharma We're doing this because this is our responsibility But the the sequence where they shoot up all the kids I Felt they did an amazing job of making this gritty and hard to watch But also they I wonder how hard this was editing and shooting and if they had any challenges to maintain a rating that the Censorship board probably they had a great bullet shots Oh, there's some great with the sound editing obviously, but some of the great bullet shots of blood just scored not everywhere I loved it But yeah, I loved Just almost the entire thing I thought all of it from just from beginning to end really really well made and the the costumes We could talk about our man, but she'll bar watch. Oh my star As good as the sound The score it was subtle But powerful is how it was absolutely perfect. Yeah This is this is without question One of my absolutely favorite films. They've seen it's also one that would I recommend you bet Oh, I understand like I could absolutely I could send this to an American Person right now and I think almost anybody could watch it I don't like you know violence if they've got it if you got a thing with some violence And they also if you just can't get past the subtitle thing which I'd force people to watch it Oh, no, I don't care about that force them to watch it and say get past your thing about subtitles Please don't we live in an international world start reading subtitles But yeah 100% and you could give this any American anybody and they would enjoy this they would I can't imagine anybody watching the movie Especially from what the Western mindset wants to see in the films and not watching this and thinking man That was really good. Yeah, all the all the actors in this regret I'll just I love the the one the later gang the woman gang leader. Yeah, I thought she was great I loved her. I was upset that they didn't show her killing the guy. I know I wanted to see it No, like real bad It would have been nice to have had a pot a local moment of the hammered of the brain and the I didn't know why because they had some go maybe maybe I think the censorship issue or because sometimes People don't like I've seen in a couple Indian films where they don't show the violence against the woman Or the woman doing the violence. Let's that's part of the censorship board Yeah, but it also could be a directoral choice because it's that I just I just really wanted. Yeah It's the balance between there's sometimes a director's just gonna push the edge And then sometimes they'll pull back because they don't want to disassociate an audience I love her care. I did too. I thought that actress did a great job. It's just everything the writing in this It's just a really well-made entertaining film yep And like I feel like I learned a lot about and I don't well I don't know if I learned a lot I guess because I still don't know like the history of these Whatever they're called tracoits tracoits. Yeah, or is it duck whites? I keep saying draw duck whites duck whites But yeah, you know, I I feel like I would especially starting with them bouncing tomorrow and then going to this I feel like I got a good vibe for what the those are if I ever hear about them again Yeah, yeah, cuz we haven't even gotten into I told you we could talk about just for three hours because we could talk about Not only the story but some of the messages that are being conveyed in the story Which obviously you brought up the cast and the female being treated differently based on cast but then all within that is also the idea of what it means to actually be a rebel and and like she repeatedly says just goes here with rebel doesn't mean you're not a good person and The the police officer just because you're the police, you know, I hit where he ends up at the end I thought that was a great moment. Yeah, it was a good ending. Yeah They goes to that line that they said at the beginning and at the end the I think it's the The hawk hunts the snake or yeah, there's something with yeah, the The snake hunts the mouse or something like that the Snake gets the mouse then the vulture gets the snake. Yeah That way, yeah, that's basically the whole butchering the whole message of it basically right is Basically that yeah, and so I thought yeah, I thought the film was great. I would love to see more from Habashek Oh, I think he's I don't know if we've seen anything other than what a good job I know we saw it up one job and I'll tell you what if if he's putting something together and directing it And he's got the team that he has for his art direction his costuming his sound and his casting He was an associate director on on the moon and on car So he did he learn from Vishal, which is probably why he worked with Vishal right and Vishal did the score for him. Well Abshik sir You made a film that I would point to people to say if you want to want to see how you're supposed to make a film across the Board lighting sound art direction costuming acting story Editing cinematography across the board just picture perfect. Here's how to make a movie make it entertaining Let it have a message Believe the characters be engaged and want to watch it again when it's over Period good work to you sir. Great. Let us know What of his we should watch next? Sushant's his and then obviously everything by the nudge by Anything I am obviously we're gonna watch yeah But let us know what we should watch down
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NDSU Extension Horse Management Webinar - June 03, 2020
This webinar will focus on the horse immune system and biosecurity protocols.
[ "NDSU", "NDSU Extension" ]
2020-06-05T06:20:21
2024-04-18T17:57:26
3,948
3KG2OT1cyuw
Alright, good afternoon. Thanks so much for joining us. This is our last horse management webinar of spring. And so I don't want to say I'm excited it's the last one because this is kind of been fun. I sort of missed you guys last week a little bit. It felt like it was a long time. These last two weeks have felt like a long time between them. But it is getting really nice out. And so I think you guys are probably ready for these to be done. So I am excited about today's biosecurity is something that we maybe don't think about a lot. But it is something that if we used it and just employed some of the tactics that we're going to share today, I think we could avoid some of the issues that we run into, especially with our horse health a long way. So today my name is Mary Keena. I'm the livestock environmental management extension specialist. And I am based out of the Carrington Research Extension Center for NDSU Extension. And with me I have Dr. Stucka. And Dr. Stucka is our extension our extension veterinarian. I was going to say extension equine vet, but he's just all the things. So he's our extension vet. And so he's going to start off with talking to us about some immunity issues with horses, just just how the horse immune system works and what that even means. And then Paige Brumman from the Ward County Extension office. She's the A&R agent there is going to talk a little bit about biosecurity. I'm going to come in with some manure, of course, and Rachel Wald from the McKenner County Extension office, she's the A&R agent there is going to end us today with some more biosecurity tips. So with that, I'm going to I'm going to page forward here. Oh, I forgot. So with us today, we have 35 people registered and there's a handful of you on. And again, this will be recorded. So some of us were having issues with the internet earlier. So don't worry about that. We'll record it and then we'll get it sent out to you. So a lot of again, North Dakota, which is awesome to see. We're so glad you guys are here. We have a couple of Minnesota and Montana and then one from India today. So most of the people had four to five horses and there were a handful of you attend to 15. But for the most part, everyone on here today had four to five horses is kind of where we're at. So let me slide forward. Okay. And with that, I'm going to give control to Dr. Stucka and he's going to get us rocking and rolling. So thank you, Mary. Thank you, Paige and Rachel. And it's good to be with you this afternoon. I will say that I'm getting a little weary of not being in front of people. I guess we still are, but it's we're just in front virtual, I suppose. But this is a very interesting topic. And I put that background behind my face there just to remind people that I'm much more of a livestock cattle veterinarian than I'm a horse veterinarian. Although having been in practice in the Cooperstone area, we were sure exposed to quite a number of horses in our practice. And I just want to begin by telling you a little bit of a story that we used to run horse vaccination clinics in the spring. And the reason was was to keep up annual vaccination on on groups of horses. And we pretty well knew everyone who had at least one horse. And so we'd schedule a date and the time that we were going to shop at the place and go and vaccinate horses. And so we did. That was kind of our spring standard in the country work for a while trying to get all these horses vaccinated. So one day I'm on the road, I'm going pulling up to this place. There's three horses in the pasture. There's two adult horses of normal size. And there's one that looks more like a Welsh pony. And so I pull in there to do the vaccination and we we accomplish our tasks. And I was getting ready to leave. And the young man that was helping was a teenager. He asked me if I trim the feet on this little wealth pony, which we managed to accomplish with some difficulty, I would say. But we got enough restraint and were able to pick up the hooves and and trim them at least to a certain extent. And finally, when we got completely done, I asked this young man who was 15 or 16, I says, I says, do you ever ride this horse? And by that, I meant this little Welsh pony. And this wealth pony had some years on it. There's no doubt about it probably between 15 and 20 years of age. And you could tell that he was the boss of the horse group, this horse group of three. When I asked him if he ever rode this horse, his answer to me was, I like life. Which the meaning of it should have been apparent to everybody that's listening. This horse was knowledge of the boss of the other horses, but he was the boss of the people on the place as well. So that little story stuck with me for a long time as we talk about horses and biosecurity and vaccination and health and all those things that go into keeping these horses, whether they're just done the pasture for show and looking at or whether we actually use them for the purpose for which they were intended. So I want to start off with this slide right here because it's a reminder of a very important concept that while we have great vaccines in the horse industry, you can't keep all potential pathogens away or what we call harmful biological agents. So there has to be something in place that we call biosecurity procedures in place that intended to protect not only our animals, but ourselves against disease or harmful agents. And it's very important as we get into this a little bit further, we'll talk about what some of those are and why this biosecurity is important and why vaccination may not be the complete answer. And then finally, we're going to talk about vaccination. And we'll use it in this context. It's it's actually the process of inoculating an animal or human being with a vaccine to produce immunity against a specific disease. And that little part at the end there, specific disease, we have to remember that's what a vaccine does. It doesn't protect against disease in general. It protects if the immune system responds against a very specific antigen, very specific protein that's associated with that biological agent or that pathogen. Somehow I got to go to the next slide here. There we go. So you probably didn't enter into this zoom meeting with the idea that you're going to listen immunology, but I'm going to make you and I want I want to have you understand what's going on with this slide. It's not like you're going to take a test at the end. But this is really important to understand. There's a there's a gold colored at least on my screen is gold colored kind of an image has an AP in the middle of it. And that's AP stands for antigen presenting. In other words, it's a cell that you and I have in our own bodies, that the horse has in his or her own body that takes these vaccines or takes parts of a pathogen and internalizes that pathogen and expresses it to the immune system. So that's what I have in those blue stars in that little box with that gold AP that's a cell immune system cell. And these little blue stars are what we call antigen, it'd be the same thing as equating that with a vaccine. So I've given this horse a vaccine, the blue stars of the vaccine, they're parts of that potential pathogen. And that AP is internalizing internalizing that part of the vaccine into its inner parts, if you will. And then what it does, it presents that antigen, you can see that blue star then off to the right of that AP in the next big box. So that antigen presenting cell is presenting that vaccine or that pathogen to the immune system. And that immune system had there's a cell there called a T it's got kind of a star shape, got spikes on the outside, it's called the helper T cell that helps the immune system figure out what it needs to do. So let's say that this is a tetanus toxoid vaccine that I've given in the blue stars, the antigen processing presenting cell takes that blue star that tectastoxoid presents the tax tetanus toxoid piece to the immune system, and then the immune system does two things with it. Okay, it can either go to the to the bottom here and present it to a B cell. And in the end, it produces antibody and that's what most of us are familiar with. So if I vaccinate a horse with tetanus toxoid, presents the antigen presenting cell presents it to the immune system, most of the response is going to be antibody. Okay, and that antibody what that does it binds if if a cluster of the organism that's associated with tetanus produces this talk toxin that can cause tetanus in a horse, that antibody is there. It's there to bind that antigen so it can't cause damage to that horse by messing up its musculoskeletal nervous system. Okay. On the other hand, if I take a different virus, let's say I'm taking herpes virus. And I present that herpes virus is now in that blue star presented to the immune system. Not only will I get antibody produced, but I'm also going to go up to this top part says cell mediated immunity. And that part is really important when it comes to viral infections like herpes viruses, because now I've created a population of immune cells that actually kill virus infected cells. So which vaccine you use, what you're trying to prevent and how the immune system responds is going to be a little bit different, it's going to be different for herpes virus. It's going to be different for that tetanus toxin, toxoid vaccine. I hope that makes some sense because the next time you're involved in vaccinating horses kind of think of this diagram and what's taking place. And of course, it all depends on a functioning immune system. Let me just make one important point. This is like cattle. This is somewhat like pigs as well. So newborn baby calves as well as newborn foals are born essentially without an immune without immunity. It's not that they can't build immunity because they can. But early in life that colostrum that first milk from the mare first milk from the cow is so essential to setting that full or that calf up for health, not only in the early stages of life but later on as well. So I can't overemphasize the importance of colostrum and managing that full when it's born and making sure it's it nursed and got enough immunity in it to its system because if it didn't even this part of the immune system doesn't work as well as it should. Okay. Alrighty. Okay, just this is just another reminder as well. This applies especially to young horses that are receiving their first dose of vaccine or an adult horse that's receiving a vaccine for the first time. This just a reminder that in most cases, that second dose of vaccine is critical to developing enough immunity in that horse or even a cow or even human beings in order to provide protection. So those lions in there give you an idea of this at antibody level, you give a first dose of a vaccine, they get a little bit of an antibody response. But because there's memory cells created after that first dose, now I've got a whole lot more of those B cells that can build antibody around. So when I give that second dose of a vaccine, whether it's at three weeks or four weeks, or I would even say six, seven, eight weeks later, there's memory cells are still there that can create much more antibody, create a much more powerful immune response. That's how critical those two dorses are, especially in naive, naive foals or an even a naive adult horses. Okay. Yeah. So let me just talk a little bit about this eastern or about core vaccines. Okay. This comes directly from the American Association and B coin practitioners and I think it's a really sound list. And this list is very sound basically according to where we live today. If you're living in the southern Hemisphere, especially as it relates to encephalomyelitis, then there's another encephalitis virus vaccine that you may want to incorporate and that's called the Venezuelan encephalomyelitis virus. So but for our purposes, and in our area and these northern plains, eastern and western encephalomyelitis, tetanus is critical to include on a yearly basis on these horses, certainly West Nile virus. Remember that some of these, some of these viruses, not that the horse is necessarily involved in transmitting to human beings because they're not, but some of these viruses because they're transmitted by mosquitoes can also impact humans. West Nile and these other encephalomyelitis can do that as well. Tetanus as I already indicated is important in annual vaccination and I would argue that rabies the same. We have skunks in our part of the world and skunks are the reservoir for rabies and it's just a very sound vaccination strategy to conclude rabies in your annual vaccination protocol. And here's a very important point I want to make about this list right here is that all of these require individual immunity as none of these are transmitted from horse to horse. It's an important concept to remember. Now, we'll talk a little bit about some other vaccines quickly, but these you're trying to build individual immunity. You're trying to protect that individual horse. So these vaccines and if it's a naive animal they'll in all likelihood require that two doses in order to get them started on the right track. This is just a comment about individual immunity and it's so important to understand this because most of the time a vaccine doesn't actually prevent infection, but it does induce protection against clinical signs. So let's say I have accident horse for West Nile trying to build immunity in that horse. Can that horse actually get infected? Yes, it can, but because the immune system is heightened and is ready for that challenge, it'll fight it off so rapidly that you basically never see the clinical signs. So and also that point number two when an immunized horse is faced with a West Nile virus infection, it requires a higher dose of virus in order to establish that infection and even if it does become infected, it reduces infectivity after the incurred some infection. So it's not going to last very long in the system. It's not going to shed very long to two other animals and so it this individual immunity for those diseases that we just talked about the encephalitis, the West Nile, the tetanus, the rabies can't be overemphasized. These these are a list from ABP on risk-based and depending on where you are, depending on whether your horse travels to shows or not and so on and so forth, these are certainly optional. The horse is much more resistant to anthrax than than than our cattle, but if you're in an area where you've had losses with anthrax, that's one you want to consider. Some of these others, the herpes, the influenza are considerations when you're showing horses and going different places and then some of these obviously are a little bit down the list in in in terms of whether you would consider them or not. Just one comment here and then I'll finish up I think and and turn it over to Paige to talk a little bit more about biosecurity but as it relates, let me back up one slide. As it relates to some of these viruses here like herpes virus like influenza, those would be the the big two that I would talk about. This is where herd immunity comes in. When we vaccinate, this is be a little bit like coronavirus that's impacting people today. The quicker we can build herd immunity in the United States, the less of an issue this becomes. So it actually instead of quarantining everybody and thinking that you're going to escape, it will better off for the young people that are somewhat just not immune but resistant to this to become infected because the more people that are immune in a population, the less likely the ones that are susceptible like the elderly, like the immune suppressed, the less likely they are actually to become infected. So that's that's a big issue in a relationship like the herpes and the influenza. The more horses in a population that are immunized against those two viruses that are shed from horse to horse, the less likely it is that a horse that is susceptible will become infected because you are you have built herd immunity. I hope that makes sense and we practice that quite a bit on the cattle side as well. Okay, so perfect. Why do we care about biosecurity? We want to reduce the chance and the risk of these diseases being brought onto your farm and exposing your animals and they can be brought by people, animals, equipment, vehicles, items like tack and and brushes that sort of thing and you're not going to be able to maybe 100% eliminate the risk but you can reduce it by implementing some of the things we'll talk about today. The benefits that you're going to seize that you'll have a healthier horse, hopefully fewer vet bills if you have healthier horses and less disease coming through. It's also a human safety issue. There's some of these diseases that are zoonotic, meaning they can be transferred to humans. So it's also a concern of human safety and that's why we want to do our best with biosecurity. And then also it's an environmentally disowned decision to manage your manure, manage standing stagnant water, those sorts of things that are good decisions as well. And we want to point out that it's prevention's best. It's always, you know, easier to prevent things than to deal with treating things after they've been infected. So what are some of the challenge specific to horse owners and stable managers and event centers? Well, some of these places depend on public traffic to their barn. So if you are giving lessons, if you're training horses, you're hosting horse shows and events, you can't just shut down and say nobody can come to your facility ever and that's how you're going to keep some of these risks down. Some of these places rely on frequent participation in shows and events. If you're a rodeo competitor, a horse show competitor, a trainer that is competing and exhibiting, again, you can't just stay home. You're going to have some exposure. You want to be aware and consider some of the risks and losses that can occur from outbreaks just so you can think through all of these things. There can be an economic loss treating diseases and illnesses can be expensive. There's an emotional loss, an emotional toll on the owners and these horse owners and facility managers. It can be stressful. It can affect the reputation of these facilities and sometimes it can be life threatening to the horses. So specifically think about people that come on to your property and you can categorize them into different risk levels. So low risk would be people that don't own horses and rarely visit rural agricultural areas. So maybe a field trip coming from a school or a city or relatives that don't live in a rural area, they'd be low risk visitors. Medium risk visitors would be people that maybe frequently attend farms or go to farms in rural areas but they don't have real direct contact with horses. So think of people delivering feed and shavings, maybe some repairmen coming out. And then our high risk visitors are going to be people that regularly make trips to horse farms and have close contact with the animals. These will be your vets, ferriers, trainers, maybe other horse owners and neighbors that have horses. And I think it wouldn't be unusual and it may be a good idea to visit with those people that are in that high risk category. Especially if you're not the first stop of the day, maybe your ferry has been to somebody else's facility. Ask them if they've been willing to wash their hands. Maybe if they have a change of clothes, those sort of things are good ideas to implement. So management strategies for visitors. Keep a visitor logged. That way if there's an outbreak at your facility, you're able to notify people. You can provide hand sanitizer, hand washing stations, and boot washing stations. Clearly mark off areas where you don't want visitors to go. So if you have high risk animals, maybe a mare and foal, maybe an animal that is sick, make sure that you mark off those areas that visitors are not to enter. Set up some parking areas that are away from your feed storage and manure sources and see if you have a dog policy stated. If dogs are welcome on your place, do they need to be leashed? Do they need to make sure that they stay out of some of the areas on the property? I'm going to turn it over to Mary. She is going to talk a little bit about a vector as it pertains to manure and manure management. Okay, let me just scoot us out of the way so I can see. Perfect. Okay, so the first vector then that we're going to talk about. What's going the wrong way? The first vector we're going to talk about is manure. And so manure can harbor pathogens. That is something that we've talked about in previous webinars. And so those webinars that those specifically the manure management on is linked here at the end in the resources so you can go back and get the full manure download. But manure can harbor pathogens. And so and it's also a breeding ground for insects, both internal and external parasites are something that we worry about. Insects carry and or transfer diseases. And so you can see here that we have what would have been an internal parasite. And then we have our flies, our external biting parasites as well. So of course there's the manure management side of things that I mostly talk about. So I talk about the manure containing valuable nutrients. That's there's nutrients in there that plants need. And if they don't, if we don't manage them, they become an issue. And so Paige had touched on earlier is it's an environmental issue. So that's where we have excess soil nutrients. We have some potential runoff. They become a soil and a water pollutant. However, there's other considerations for manure to not just from an environmental standpoint, but from an animal standpoint. And specifically today, a biosecurity or disease standpoint. So we have the bacteria and pathogens, flies and internal parasites like to breed in manure. And so that is something where if we manage our manure, we can also then manage our fly and parasite populations. Rodents really like manure, especially when it's warm. It's a nice warm area. And in North Dakota, they don't get that too often. Odors and weed seeds. And so those are just some other management considerations when you're dealing with manure. So there's four options we're going to roll through today. So manure management options. And again, you can get all of the details in the manure management webinar. So dry lotting, stockpiling, spreading, and I put rotate in here and we'll talk about that and then composting. So just some quick considerations for dry lot. And this one was more so talked about in the grazing webinar, where we have a dry lot area are some people called a sacrifice area. So basically we're giving up a piece of land to use for putting our animals in instead of using that for pasture. But we're using that area all the time. And so that's an area that's going to become full of manure and we're going to have to manage that manure. And so soil characteristics and structure is something that we want to keep in mind when we're looking at a dry lot area, how we want to how we want to maintain the structure of that ground that we're on. Clay versus sand. So that's going to be a pollution issue. So we want clay because it's less permeable. And then a hoof traffic is something else too that we have to keep in mind what can handle extra hoof traffic on there. What's going to stand up to having several horses around. Ease of use. So if you're going to use a dry lot area, is it useful? Is it easy for you to use? Is it accessible? Or is it something that you're like, well, our dry lot area is over there, not anywhere close to any of the rest of the things we do. So it's harder for us to manage our manure. So we just don't use it. And so those are just some things to keep in mind as you're going through and deciding if you're going to have a dry lot or not. And the manure collection, most people say should be weekly. Some do it daily. Some do it every couple weeks. And so I'd say the more often you collect your manure and manage that area, the cleaner it's going to be. And the less issues you should have. Okay, so here's an example of why to dry lot. So you can see that this was an early spring picture. It was raining out. It was muddy because we were thawing. And I put this up here for a couple reasons. One, we're saving those pastures. You can see the green in the background. If we had horses just running everywhere, it would all look like this. And we don't want that. We want those pastures for grazing. However, when we look at this, we think maybe we could change the footing. Maybe we could change the structure. Maybe we could change the slope of these pens so that you can see in the back there's some pooling of water. And so maybe we can use this picture as a good example of how to change how we're dry lotting. But then also the manure that's in there. Miner is something that we want to make sure we're considering in this dry lot. Are you managing it? Are you able to get in there and manage it? Is it dry enough that when you are using the dry lot, everything is draining correctly so that you can get in and manage it. If not, you're going to have horses that end up with manure up to their hips. And sometimes that's going to happen is North Dakota, no matter what we do, sometimes that just happens. But we can walk through the steps of mitigating those issues. Okay, so another thing we talked about was manure stockpiling or some people call it stacking. And so there's some rules and guidelines in North Dakota that we should follow. So short-term manure stockpiles are anything that is stockpiled and maintained in one area for nine months. It cannot be there for more than nine months. And you cannot use that same location from year to year. The second option is a permanent manure stockpile. And that's something that you can use for more than nine months in the same location so you can use it all the time. But you do have to go through some soil investigation and some regulatory oversight to make sure that that is in fact the best area on your operation to have that permanent manure. And that's just because of the initial manure considerations I talked about with the leaching and potential pollution issues. So sandy soils have rapid permeability and we've talked about this before. So we want to they allow the nitrogen or the nitrate to flow through really quickly and we want to avoid that. So that's what we call leaching. Well the lomere clay soils have a slower permeability. So basically they just help to maintain. They hold those nutrients there and then we're actually able to take those nutrients and move them off then to an appropriate place. Or if it's in our stockpile already so that would be if it's in a dry lot if it's in our stockpile already we're able to maintain that until we go spread or compost that manure. So common sense right don't put it in a gravel pit other excavations along streams or lakes basically anywhere where you think if it rained it could flood and if it if I put it here it might potentially affect water. Those are places to not put your stockpile area. Okay so now you have the stockpile of manure and you want to spread it. So spreading is another option and you can spread rominar it's not something that we necessarily recommend. If you go to the parasite webinar which was one that we gave two weeks ago we talk a little bit more there about spreading rominar versus spreading compost ciminar and how to manage that and if you're going to rotate pastures as you're grazing or if you're going to rotate and you're not going to have those animals on something that you're going to be grazing where you're spreading that manure then it's okay go ahead and spread your rominar but we really want to watch that we really want to make sure that we're maintaining that rotational schedule. So if you are going to spread and you're working with a custom hauler so something big we have something big that we're working with we have a lot of manure or we have a few years of manure something that we have in the state our custom manure haulers and there are actually several states that have them so what we want to do is just make sure that we are when we work with them we have a place to spread the manure we know how much it's going to cost we know how much manure is there and all of this stuff you can find in the very first winter webinar where we go through the calculations of knowing how much you're actually going to have so you know what to tell them when they come and one of the biggest parts and the reason I put this in here is because if you're going to do a stockpiling area it's really important to make sure that if you're using a custom hauler this kind of equipment fits these trucks and these tractors are what they're going to come with however there's at home spreading options too and so maybe you have just a couple horses or you spread often or you you just want to do it yourself that's totally fine too so there are smaller more pull type auctions ground driven spreaders you can use an ATV lawn mower some people use horses for spreading their manure and so there's a handful of then these little at home manure spreaders as well so you may have gathered if you've been on a few of these now that composting of course is one of my favorite management techniques so what the heck is compost it's a mixture of organic residues it's been piled mixed moistened and decomposed so it uses heat so thermophilic is a heat loving process where we have a heat mixed with all the other things that we talked about some carbon and some nitrogen which means that we have the wood shavings in the manure mixed together to make a crumbly low odor substance it's nutrient stable and it decreases the volume so that's great for you because there's less to spread so less to worry about okay so the benefits of composting we reduced our weed seeds that's big especially even our pastures if we're maintaining we reduce our pathogens something that we're talking about today with biosecurity that's big we also reduce our nutrient loss and increase our nutrient stability big things and then something else I added to this one that I don't normally have and here's we're reducing our flies and parasite populations again with a biosecurity issue with parasite issues with horse health all important things and then I just put in here's the last couple of slides reducing weed problems and so there's the I'm not necessarily going to go through this but this is just to show you the temperature so we're composting we're typically typically getting our compost between 130 and 150 degrees and this actually goes through and shows you then what kind of weed seeds are killed during that process at that temperature but then also the American Association of Equine Practitioners says that there's very little actually says no development above 104 degrees Fahrenheit for internal parasites so not only are we getting rid of the weeds not only are we stabilizing the nutrients we are also getting rid of those parasites too and then of course there's always off farm disposals an option for keeping our pens clean and being the most biosecure we can so we have the soil conservation districts maybe you want to talk to them we have some local vegetable growers that are always looking for a really great fertilizer product like manure some landfills will take it potentially community compost projects and then working again with a custom manure hauler and I just want to go back here something else that we we talk about with biosecurity most of the time we're thinking animal health and the live animal but I think that biosecurity can also be weed seeds too because we are spreading this this plant around are the states potentially so if we're using a custom hauler and they come in we want to make sure when they come in we tell them this is how I expect your equipment to look when you get here now is it going to be pristine and perfect probably not these guys haul manure every day but do I expect them to come in with if they come in with stuff on their wheels just like Paige talked about like how do you want this stuff to look when it comes into your yard and what you allow into your yard and so I think that's important to keep in mind so whether that's weed seeds or manure important to keep in mind with that I am going to let Paige take back over okay so next we're going to talk about rodents as a vector so rodents in North Dakota you know we'd be looking at mice rats gophers moles bowls squirrels those sorts of things are considered rodents they can carry diseases bacteria ticks fleas mites intestinal parasites those sorts of things they cause a lot of damage in spoiling feed and consuming feed and they can also cause damage to your buildings they can be a fire hazard when they're chewing through walls and and tearing up insulation so what can we do to prevent them the probably the most popular thing is to make sure you're storing your feed in hard sided containers most of our feed comes in paper bags or plastic bags that rodents can easily chew through and set up shop and have quite a of a fay line so make sure you're sealing those in hard containers keep your garbage covered eliminate any holes in buildings that are larger than a quarter inch plug those either with more insulation wire mesh more siding those are options keep your weeds in long grass around your buildings trimmed especially in the fall time as we go into winter make sure that you really reduce the height because they are going to use that to hide and to burrow into remove hiding places like wood piles and any clutter around the place that can house rodents as well as far as controlling goes just about every farm and barn is going to have a small population of rodents we want to keep it under control and one way to do that would be traps poisons there's different fumigations and other rodent control options out there I do want to note that if you're using these items make sure that you're following the label very specifically they are they do pose a risk to human health and other pets children that sort of thing so make sure that you're following the labels and being cautious when you're using those another option we see a lot of people have to control rodents is have barn cats and a few barn cats can really help keep the population down but if you have uncontrolled population of barn cats they can actually become a vector and a bit of a pest as well next vector we're going to talk about is birds and there's a variety of different birds that can carry diseases in order to prevent birds keep in mind that they are drawn to an easy source of food so again keeping your grains covered and even your haze as much as possible cover that garbage container again and keep your manure and compost piles covered and or at least away from the facility if you're feeding a lot of whole grains to your horses birds will dig around in the manure and feed off of that and if you do have spills because every facility typically does try to clean them up as soon as possible if you have a high population of birds that are causing problems on your facility consider maybe some netting to keep them out of your barn there are a lot of things on the market as far as noisemakers and visual repellents things like hanging an owl or a scarecrow hanging pie plates or CDs all of these are temporary solutions that don't typically work long time the birds come very accustomed to them they might work for a couple hours or even a couple days if you're lucky and then they figure out that it's not a real threat and they set up shop again so keep that in mind there is an option to use pesticides to control birds but what you do want to make sure is that you're using a product that is legal to use in the state of North Dakota and that you're using it against a bird species that is legal to use it on a good source for that information will be the North Dakota Department of Agriculture website and there's a link there for the Kelly Solutions website which will give you a list of all of the pesticides that are labeled for use in North Dakota and then also there's natural enemies of birds that sometimes people try to discourage from coming on to their property I think predator birds and again some of those cat populations can reduce the population although probably minimally at best the next disease vector we're going to talk about is insects and we covered this a little bit more in depth on the last webinar but insects are going to be carriers of things like West Nile and EIA and they're going to breed especially in the summer months and a lot of them breed in either manure which Mary talked about or wet standing water areas so to prevent them store feed any spoiled things like manure compost grain that got wet clean up spills quickly get rid of stagnant water and clean out your feed and water buckets regularly every place is going to have some level of insects so what can we do to get rid of the ones that develop into mature insects well we can use feed additives that have IGR insect growth regulators that will inhibit the larva from developing into adult flies fly predator wasp or another option keep in mind that you don't want to use both of those options together so if you give the feed additive that is going to kill the insect or kill the developing larva and then you also are using the predator wasp you may end up killing your predator wasps so one or the other or rotate their use you can use screens to keep them physically out of the barn physical barriers on your horses such as fly sheets fly mass and boots or leggings and then of course there's a whole bunch of sprays and repellents that are contained insecticides that can either kill the fly on contact or they can repell them slightly for temporary periods of time landscaping solutions to use would be say if you have a pond at your facility maybe you can get that water moving put an aerator or a pump in to reduce breeding grounds draining standing water or dumping out buckets that are tires that are collecting small amounts of standing water and then the last thing we put up there is traps and traps we talked about before well they may be really exciting to see your gallon pail full of gallon jug full of flies that's really really very few flies that you're actually catching in the environment so while they may look rewarding they're best used in small enclosed areas like tack rooms or smaller barns setting traps outside typically is not going to be effective at reducing the population significantly briefly we'll talk about other wildlife in North Dakota we'll start with the unwelcome ones and Dr. Stucker briefly talked about skunks being a leading carrier rabies and transmitting that to horses and raccoons are often also unwelcome as well but what about the good wildlife hawks and other predatory birds can cut down on your rodent population and some of the smaller birds non-venomous snakes like our bull snakes they also consume insects and rodents as well as our gardener snakes and then fish and frogs are desirable as well okay so that kind of wraps up our discussion about vectors we're going to move into talking about some biosecurity options while hauling so the first thing we're going to remember is to be clean your trailer out after each time you use it get rid of that manure and compost it properly disinfect your trailer regularly both inside and out and regularly is going to depend on how much you use it if you're hauling daily or multiple times a week you're going to want to disinfect much more frequently than if you're maybe only hauling once or twice a year to do a little bit of trail riding keep in mind that hauling is stressful to most horses and stress affects the immune response and another thing to keep in mind when hauling is to allow that horse to lower their head to clear their airway regularly so if you have them tied up short with their head tied up a little higher they're unable to cough and to clear their respiratory system while you're traveling away from home remind yourself that typically outbreaks spread much more rapidly at large group events so think about things before you travel to make sure you're not bringing the disease to an event check your horse prior to travel take their temperature and don't transport a sick animal and make sure your vaccines are current to protect against disease spread when you're at the event stay separated as best you can try not to group house your horse with other animals minimize that nose to nose contact when you're riding or kind of standing around and visiting don't let your horses sniff their nose right to another horse if you can while stalling if room allows at the facility try to separate those stalls with a tax stall or a feed stall so your horse isn't having nose to nose contact with another horse from another facility as far as equipment goes as much as we like to share and be friendly and helpful don't share your supplies and tack with other people if you must make sure you disinfect them before Rachel's going to talk a little bit about how to do that later before you use them and then disinfect again before returning them to whoever you borrow the product from so that includes things like feed and water buckets tack grooming supplies nerve forks wheelbarrows all of those things that can be fomites for different diseases and then while you're away from home keep a vital signs chart before you leave during the event and after you turn from the event and usually the recommendation is to check their temperature at least once a day twice a day is even better so what about new horses coming onto your place whether you're boarding horses have a friend staying over for a weekend or you purchased a new horse it's recommended that you quarantine these animals for a minimum of two weeks and the longer you can do it the better so if you can quarantine for three weeks or four weeks that's even better quarantine means keeping them away from nose to nose contact with horses so not just merely putting them in another pasture next to the horses where they can reach over the fence or through the fence separate them as far away as possible so if you can get a couple hundred feet away from where the other horses are at that would be more desirable don't have these new horses in common areas so don't bring them into your wash rack your round pen the tie rail where you tie all the other horses along the side of the arena cross ties those sort of areas and again it's recommended to monitor new horse temperatures daily while in quarantine also it'll help to have the history of that new animal so if it was purchased was it purchased at a sale auction facility or was it purchased private treaty if it was purchased privately from another horse owner did it come off of a facility where they had a closed herd where no horses had been coming or going or was it a horse that had been you know recently exhibited or being hauled regularly for the past few months so knowing that history lets you assess the risk level some other commutations that I just want to share with you is some of these things to think about when you're at away from home or even when you're at home and are having new horses introduced communal water sources are becoming less popular than they used to be but it's still not unusual to pull up to a rodeo or a horse show or a trail ride and have a big tank of water that all the horses are led up to or ridden up to and drink out of avoid that at all costs if you can that's a really easy way to spread disease amongst horses bring a pail of your own and fill it up from a hydrant or a hose when you're using a hose avoid letting the end of that hose hang out in the water tank or the pail the hose then becomes a fomite that transfers disease from pale to pale to pale so keep that in mind these are just a couple common things that we see while co-mingling of horses may not always be easy at events try not to tie them right next to another horse or again allowing that nose-to-nose contact and then a lot of the shared equipment that we don't always think about you kind of have to develop a habit of thinking about all these areas and what you can do to reduce your risk so face rags is a common one somebody comes up and says hey can I borrow that rag I just need to wipe some snot off on my horse's face and they do so they give it back to you you use it on your horse and you just transmitted a respiratory disease or a bacteria like strangles buckets are another area oh I forgot my water pail or my feet pail at home can I use yours not ideal unless you're going to be disinfecting before and after use we haven't focused a lot on skin diseases like the fungus and bacteria that can be transferred through girth and saddle pads and brushes but that's a common area for issues to pop up as well so again don't share those things and even at home if you're using the same girth and saddle pad amongst many horses disinfect those regularly and clean those regularly so that you don't end up spreading diseases through horses halters and bridles are another common area do you think that that bit that goes into their mouth and then if you immediately take it out and put it in another horse's mouth you can be transferring diseases that way as well so just some things to to think about so it all kind of sounds like a lot and we come down with a question of how strict do you need to be about these things and really it's up for you to decide are you competing regularly on a horse that it's very important to you that they not come down with influenza or strangles or something like that or do you have a past you're a companion animal that maybe you only haul once or twice a year to go on a trail ride and then it returns home to a small closed herd of only a couple other animals that don't do a lot of hauling or competing there's going to be a difference in the level of biosecurity that you want to implement for these animals the value of the horse sometimes comes into play and the value of lost training or competition time if that horse becomes ill and then also think about the cost of treatment of forest specific disease versus the cost of the prevention measures or sometimes what we think of as kind of a hassle of presenting preventing diseases and implementing biosecurity measures regularly evaluate your protocols because every horse facility is unique every horse owner is unique and those plans should be tailored to fit your needs if you're a small facility maybe you can say no I'm not going to let it be come onto my place if you're a large boarding facility you host shows and clinics or maybe you're a horse trainer that isn't going to be as easy to do but you can still set up guidelines and rules that you're going to follow to minimize your risk all right I'm going to turn it over to Rachel and she's going to talk specifically about how to disinfect items on your farm okay so now that page has covered everything off-farm while you are out doing you're showing or you're rodeoing or whatever else works she talked about disinfecting your trailers or or cleaning out those areas as you go places now I'm going to talk about disinfecting your farm it's important to do both both the trailer and the farm and when you come home if you have several different horses you know maybe 15 or 20 and you've been gone for a week with one at a show especially if it's a big show you want to take that horse and put him in a secluded area by himself for a week to 10 days just so that if anything does come up his symptoms will show up in that time and you will be able to manage that disease better because he that horse will will have not gone to the rest of your herd so this will help it will be a little bit more labor initially but if if something were to happen this would be less labor than if and if your whole herd had gotten it so the first thing would be setting up away from setting up a space away from other horses making sure that it's easy to disinfect disinfectants work best on clean surfaces so if you guys have ever gone into a stall and you see that there's poop on the walls that poop has to be removed before you start cleaning and disinfecting so one of the rule of thumbs that that I have heard is clean before you disinfect so make sure you get all of the excess debris off any organic material like feces gets out of there and and keeping everything clean before before you start disinfecting make sure you're using a disinfectant that is horse safe and then following the label instructions for use you never want to mix any products together that aren't supposed to be mixed together because they can create toxic gases they can cause fires and become more toxic to people as you're cleaning so that's one thing to keep in mind as well so in the process is remove everything from that stall sweep out any debris remove that organic material wash the walls and floors with a regular detergent and then you apply the disinfectant as label the label instruction and do not rinse so here's a quick disinfectant guide in this this is some of your common ones the phenols and creosols work well in the presence of organic materials so if you do have an instance where you're not able to to get everything out of there say it's a stall with sand at the bottom instead of cement that's another issue chlorines and hypochlorates is essentially bleach those are what I would use on your brushes, buckets and any other materials that you can you can dump in and soak for a little bit when you're doing that I do like to air dry those just to get them to a place where it's real easy the other side of that is getting them out in the sunlight too sunlight is an awesome awesome benefit when you're looking to disinfect and dry and get rid of some of the things that fomites might carry fomites being those buckets, brushes, and feed pans betadine is one exception to that rule sunlight, that's why it's in a dark bottle sunlight and organic material actually inactivate it and then chlorhexane also known as novacin is might be something that you guys are pretty familiar with because you can also clean wounds with that but you can also use it as as something to put in a spray bottle and spray any surface as well to help disinfect and I know that's hard some of these materials that we do are a little bit harder to do like brushes I want to make sure to do brushes if you're especially traveling quite a bit I would say do those brushes at least at least twice a year if you're traveling quite a bit do not share any of your brushes obviously as Paige had mentioned but your your buckets, your feed pans as you're going places as you come home that's the number one thing get those bleached air dry them and then get them back into your trailer so that it's they're ready to go for the next season so as you're handling sick horses you want to either if they've been in your herd promptly remove the sick horse from other horses or if you're bringing them back make sure just to just to keep them out of your sick horse or your horse herd with sick horses you want separate buckets separate halters feed pans, grooming tools all of those need to be something that you have off to the side obviously separate housing somewhere where they cannot touch nose to nose or share any communal water sources or any hay sources so across the fence is not is not enough they almost have to be probably on the other side of the farm and you want to treat and care for the sick horse last so as you're going out you know a lot of a lot of people are worried they got to check on the sick horse go through your your normal chores first and do that sick horse last because the worst thing to happen would be for you to go and treat that sick horse first and then essentially spread it through your hands or your boots or anything else to the rest of your herd so anytime the vet comes out healthy horses first same with the farrier and any other family members you want to change your disinfect clothing of footwear in between so if you're done for the day and you do your sick horse last either change into clothes that you've been using for that sick horse clothes and boots that you've been using for that sick horse or after you're done make sure that you are washing those clothes and washing your boots off before the next day starts washing hands is also number one that's for us as well as horses make sure you get your hands washed too so additional habits to adopt like Paige had said new horses take a temperature every day learn how to do vital signs and then also if you're planning on taking your horse somewhere having a standard vital sign set up before you leave so that you know when they are stressed or when something's coming you can see that in their vital signs beforehand so real quick temperature on a horse is between 99 and 101 those are pretty normal areas the pulse you're going to see anywhere from 28 to 44 and actually the more fit your horse is the lower that's going to be and then your respirations are between 10 and 24 breaths per minute and then another good one that I like to check on the regular is you just pick up that lip to check their mucus membrane so their gums make sure they're nice and pink and healthy and moist you can push on their gums and pull away and then count how many seconds it'll take for that that spot that your finger indented into comes back to their normal color and that's another piece of the vital sign that you can add to that too so on this horse here I have some red lines these are areas that you can you can get to it just depends on where the best spot for your horse is to take a pulse the first one is is underneath that jaw bone kind of on the medial side medial meaning middle so the one the side of the jaw bone that is facing the inside of the the throat that's one spot to take it the next is their jugular vein right along that groove on the lower part of their neck and then the pastern on the front part of the sorry the back part of the front leg and then you can also check not all horses are easily done by this one but it's essentially the femoral artery on the inside of the leg the back leg so you want to learn how to take your vital science chart them regularly some horses are easier than others it just depends on what sites best for for that horse we don't want to share any needles and then treat ill horses last so that's kind of just those good habits to keep on the regular not just when you have a sick horse so these are some of the resources that we'd utilized and I know you mentioned that vital signs chart frequently and the actually the first source there has a chart that you can certainly take with you and use at events perfect looks like we have a question in the chat box Dr. Stucker are you still with us would you like to unmute yourself and address that question I am here Paige let me see so the question is is why do horses need poor vaccines every year whereas humans and dogs and cats aren't needed every year got a great question actually you know in truth if there was a way that we could detect whether an animal is carrying protective immunity or not we may not have to vaccinate horses every year one of the reasons that we do especially for things like eastern and western encephalitis and West Nile is that we want to heighten their immunity at a time when we're going to get a lot of mosquito pressure it we can't control mosquitoes very well at all even though we try and remember that those viruses actually the reservoirs in bird populations if we get actually vaccinate mosquitoes and or birds we'd probably have a better chance of maybe not having to vaccinate horses every year but because we don't and because the horse and humans are essentially dead-end hosts in other words we don't transmit it to anybody else we want to maintain that individual immunity just as high as we can so i mean it's up to people whether to decide they need it every year or not it really is it's just that these recommendations for vaccination programs probably take a conservative approach and we never know how well a horse vaccinate or immunizes on the day we vaccinated if we had a way to measure that that would give us a little more confidence perhaps that i don't need to vaccinate every year rabies the same you know it's possible you could go a couple years with rabies vaccines tetanus may be the same but we just don't know the answers to that that can give us some idea is my horse protected or not so sometimes the default is just buying a little insurance and it's relatively inexpensive in my mind and one of the things i just learned putting this together is that there's now eastern and western tetanus and rabies all in one vaccine i mean that's pretty remarkable and in order to have a vaccine that's labeled that way they have to make sure that when they give them all in combination that they're not impacting negatively the other parts of that vaccine so it's become more convenient ever rather than three different doses or four or two you can actually do the cores in just one vaccine that's one thing i guess i hadn't kept up with on the on the horse side so it's convenient you're buying a little insurance gives you confidence i think in the care of your horse that you're not missing something or putting that horse at risk thank you dr stucca there's any other questions please feel free to type them in the chat box or you could even unmute your microphone and ask them verbally if you wish up right now on the screen we have a poll in action so if you want to select your answer and we have one more question to ask and we'll wrap up our polling I did forget to add one more thing to have a vet box handy in your trailer in your barn or just in your house and with that I would highly suggest you can get thermometers for five bucks get a thermometer in each location and a stethoscope they're they're pretty easy to have and to work so get those ready to go one thing that's really nice is to have an alcohol swab ready after you're done using it on your horse and just swab those off and let them air dry and that will that will keep them clean for when you need to use them again so as page is finishing off the polls there just want to let you know that like I said earlier this is our last one for the spring but we are planning some winter series and so that was one of the questions that page had asked is the likelihood that you guys will join us for a winter series and so if you want to in the chat box we have a few ideas already floating around just between us here but if you have some thoughts and ideas on things you'd like to share we'd sure like you to put that in the chat box things that you would like to know during a winter series like this and so we're thinking the December time frame so if there are specific things in the winter you really wish you had more information on that would be a great for us to know so pop them in the chat box or send us an email of course you can always do that if you think of something later you can always let us know with that page are the polls good all right so the polls are good and I think there are no more questions I haven't seen any come in here so unless anyone else has a question or wants to put anything in the chat box as far as a topic I think we will wrap up the series okay thank you everyone for joining us today thank you so much for allowing me to be part of it thank you thanks guys yes thank you all
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Climatic characteristics of the 2010-2016 drought in the semiarid Northeast Brazil re... | RTCL.TV
### Keywords ### #drought #NortheastBrazil #rainfall #waterdeficit #ElNino #vulnerability #RTCLTV #shorts ### Article Attribution ### Title: Climatic characteristics of the 2010-2016 drought in the semiarid Northeast Brazil region Authors: JOSÉ A. MARENGO, LINCOLN M. ALVES, REGINA C.S ALVALA, ANA PAULA CUNHA, SHEILA BRITO ,and OSVALDO L.L. MORAES Publisher: Academia Brasileira de Ciências DOI: 10.1590/0001-3765201720170206 DOAJ URL: https://doaj.org/article/b36b142c6319464f8a46892e02b47ed0 Source URL: http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652017005019115&lng=en&tlng=en ### Image Attribution ### We used stable diffusion to programmatically generate the background images. Viewer discretion is advised. ### Channels ### YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@stemrtcltv Odysee Channel: https://odysee.com/@stem_rtcl_tv ### Video Timestamps ### 0:00:00 - Summary 0:00:34 - Title 0:00:40 - End
[ "El Nino", "Northeast Brazil", "RTCLTV", "drought", "rainfall", "shorts", "vulnerability", "water deficit" ]
2023-08-01T10:10:38
2024-04-23T23:56:26
41
3kkCBWzFqEI
This paper examines the climatic factors behind one of the worst droughts ever recorded in northeastern Brazil. It found that the drought began in the mid-to-late 1990s, with the extreme droughts of 1993 and 1998, followed by a series of dry years interrupted by relatively wet years in 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2011. These conditions were exacerbated by low rainfall in subsequent years, resulting in a serious water shortage that had devastating effects on the local economy and society. This article was authored by José Amarengo, Lincoln M. Alves, Regina C. Alvala, and others.
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RIMPAC | 4 Things you should know
Twenty-six nations, more than 40 ships and submarines, more than 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel are participating in RIMPAC from June 30 to Aug. 4, in and around the Hawaiian Islands and Southern California. The world's largest international maritime exercise, RIMPAC provides a unique training opportunity that helps participants foster and sustain the cooperative relationships that are critical to ensuring the safety of sea lanes and security on the world's oceans. RIMPAC 2016 is the 25th exercise in the series that began in 1971. (U.S. Marine Corps video by Cpl. Angel Serna/Released)
[ "Marines", "Marine Corps", "usmc", "united states marines", "united states marine corps", "marine corps", "military", "armed forces", "jarhead", "leatherneck", "devil dog", "first to fight", "the few", "the proud", "Marine (military)" ]
2016-07-07T13:44:41
2024-02-15T01:23:32
27
3KVroTmCncw
Thanks for watching!
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UCNh_kQgg0_z7cQ5ophpdgJA
UPU Deputy Director General statement on USA withdrawal
Statement of UPU Deputy Director General Pascal Clivaz on the decision by the Government of the United States of America to withdraw from the Universal Postal Union treaties Full statement: http://news.upu.int/no_cache/nd/statement-of-upu-deputy-director-general-pascal-clivaz-on-the-decision-by-the-government-of-the-united-states-of-america-to-withdraw-from-the-universal-postal-union-treaties/
null
2018-10-18T13:42:49
2024-04-18T18:07:24
36
3kIQC2sQ77c
The United States of America is among the founding members of the UPU and has over the years made a tremendous positive contribution to the Union. It is therefore regrettable that the US has taken this step. We, however, respect the decision because we believe it was taken after careful consideration and reflection.
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HHH has gotten rid of The Hell In A Cell PPV
Original Video: THANKS FOR KICKIN IT WITH ME. BE SURE TO SUBSCRIBE AND HIT THE LIKE BUTTON. ALSO TURN ON POST NOTIFICATIONS. FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/rossthechosenone/ FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER : https://twitter.com/RossIsClutch
[ "intheclutchent", "laughs", "jokes", "clutchsquad", "reactions", "intheclutch", "wwe", "clutch", "kickin it with ross", "HHH", "wrestling", "Hell in a Cell", "WWE PPV" ]
2022-10-28T16:40:00
2024-02-07T17:00:38
513
3Kyzao_GBPo
What's good, Josh your boros back at again with another video so apparently triple H has decided to do away with the hell in the cell event We will no longer be getting that as a yearly pay-per-view as well as some other Pay-per-view events as well. Um, I've been seeing reports on it So I definitely wanted to talk about it one of you guys mentioned that I should talk about this because Obviously, this has been something I've been wanting for a very long time And I know you guys have been wanting it as well We're gonna check out this article from the sports stir calm man Let's get right into this and see what the article has to say WWE hell in the cell event is no more Triple H has been making a lot of changes to the roster since he has a Since he was anointed head of creative in WWE it appears the next job on the games to-do list is Rearranging the company's premium live event schedule Elimination Chamber was confirmed to be coming back to North America earlier this week And it also seems like day one has been canceled possibly due to the NFL games It will potentially class with so WWE day one that's done. They got that out of here. So let's see if there's anything else that he's Trying to get rid of when it comes to these pay-per-view live events Hell in the cell is completely dead also on triple H premium live event cutlass is held in a cell That's according to Russell votes in a new report via give me a sport According to the report Russell votes a typically reliable wrestling source is of the belief WWE Hell in the Cell event is completely dead the news comes at around the same time PLE would typically take The PLE would typically take take place each year The event built around what might be WWE's most famous match began in 2009 And has taken place once a year every year since then including a few months ago In fact 2022 Hell in the Cell was one of the last PLE's to take place before Vince McMahon retired The show was headlined by Seth Rollins and Cody Rose as the latter battled through a painful looking torn peck to win the match Which was a very good enjoyable match The match will remain although this year and last year's Hell in the Cell events were held in June Every other one to come before it took place in October with the exception of 2018 when it went down in September Hence the expectation that the event might have to be back at some point this month Triple H and WWE has gone with extreme rules instead confirming that all events deemed After a particular match type will be scrapped under the new regime Just because the Hell in the Cell event appears to have bit the dust That doesn't mean the match it is modeled after will be retired Triple H has a long relationship with the Hell in the Cell So it's very unlikely he would be the one to get rid of it Having it potentially pop up at any time of the year rather than needing to save it for the show named after it Has to be considered a wise move if that's really is the plan moving forward though And I hope that is the plan moving forward Honestly, in my opinion man, this needed to happen a long time ago I am all for triple H getting rid of some of these Pay-per-view events to either maybe you know I guess you can say extend time between pay-per-view events or maybe come up with something new or Maybe even bring some pay-per-view events pay-per-view events back from from maybe the ruthless aggression here or maybe the Attitude era. I mean me personally I Missed it. I missed how some of the pay-per-views were themed or had some type of theme to it I mean personally, I like when it was just you know, if you guys remember how it used to be called backlash We knew backlash was just pretty much rematches from that year's WrestleMania Now is WrestleMania backlash. Is it a bad thing? No I just think it should just be called backlash and didn't have that WrestleMania moniker to it only because we already know what that pay-per-view is for I miss Armageddon if you guys remember Armageddon. I missed a great American bash Even though some of these pay-per-views they kind of revive an NXT I would like to see some of these on the main roster with these different type of themes Capital punishment. No, that's God awful. It should never be brought up ever again I just remembered that pay-per-view was a thing and it was awful But the fact that they finally got rid of hell in a cell as a pay-per-view event I am so happy. Thank you triple H because They have ruined for the most part for a long time what hell in a cell was supposed to be Hell in a cell was a feud ending match This match was between two people who just had this huge blood feud this huge grudge Nothing will contain them it can only be ended in a hell in a cell and then you move for it That's what this match was always supposed to be for now in the past few years there have been some good hell in a cell matches and One notice what I can remember is the edge versus Seth Rollins I was outside of the pay-per-view it called for a hell in a cell. I enjoyed it the one with Roman Reigns going against I want to say I'm not sure if it was I think it was Jay Uso at the time I want to say it was I think he was going against Jay and Jimmy was kind of injured at the time So that I enjoyed that that pay-per-view event like it had some weight to it You know even recently with Cody Rose going against Seth Rollins in the torn peck Even though in my opinion I didn't think he needed the hell in a cell But obviously Helen so was right around the corner and this work. This was good either way. They killed it. So I think Triple H doing this when now It'll be a situation where we'll get the we'll get a hell in a cell and it's gonna feel special because it's gonna Oh, this is gonna be a big one. This is not at the pay-per-view event This is gonna be like a like a one-off situation like a feud ending match And we you know, it's gonna be it's gonna bring more excitement in it We just saw it every single year once a year. So hopefully there he does You know do away with some of these pay-per-view events that really don't Don't need to happen or it should you know, maybe they should I guess you could say they shouldn't be a Yearly thing depending on the situation or whatnot. So yeah, I'm definitely looking forward to seeing what he has planned If he does bring some old-school pay-per-views back or like the theme of him if he brings them back Or if he comes up with something new so I'm looking forward to seeing what he does with the pay-per-view Schedule for next year and going for it. So comment down below Let me know how do you guys feel about Triple H getting rid of the hell in a cell Event and now we're just only gonna be getting Helen cell matches not the actual pay-per-view itself We'll actually get a match potentially. So it'll have that uniqueness to it like it used to have So let me know how y'all feel about that and also let me know if there's any other pay-per-views or Show premium live events as they call them now If there's any more of them that y'all think Triple H should do away with and what should he possibly bring back to the main roster So, you know, maybe we can get some different ones or some ones We haven't seen in a while, you know saying who remembers taboo Tuesday or who remembers the armageddon's of the world And or the great American bash like those pay-per-view events who remember those because I definitely did man But I appreciate our love support on the channel roll to honey K. Appreciate y'all keeping me see our next piece
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On digital transformation
What has the pandemic meant for digital higher education? This week the Future Trends Forum partnered with Campus Technology to host a panel of campus technology leaders. Together, they explored the digital transformation they've helping bring about. Our guests included: Marina Aminy, Dean of Online Education and Learning Resources, Saddleback College Michael Berman, Chief Information Officer, California State University Shawna Dark, Chief Academic Technology Officer & Executive Director, Research, Teaching, and Learning, University of California, Berkeley Jessica Phillips, Associate Director of Student Experience, Digital Flagship, The Ohio State University https://campustechnology.com/ \\\\\\ The Future Trends Forum is a weekly discussion event created and hosted by Bryan Alexander.  Since 2016 we have addressed the most powerful forces of change in academia. Each week, this video chat brings together practitioners in the field to share their most recent work and experience in education and technology. The intent of the Forum: to advance the discussion around the pressing issues at the crossroads of education and technology. http://forum.futureofeducation.us/ https://bryanalexander.org/
[ "FTTE", "digital transformation", "higher education", "universities" ]
2021-10-22T17:25:18
2024-02-05T06:38:56
3,542
3KlChfy-qWA
All right, well, we have the top of the hour. So let's begin. Let me welcome everybody. Welcome to the Future Trends Forum. I'm glad to see so many of you here today. We have a terrific panel. Before I introduce them, before I introduce the program, let me just introduce myself. I'm Brian Alexander. I'm the Forum's creator. I'm the host for the next hour. I'm your chief catherter for conversation. And I'm really delighted to welcome all of you here today. We have three people here today who are gonna be helping us think about the idea of digital transformation, how higher education institutions are changed in the process of grappling with the digital world. And we have three people from three different institutions, each with a different perspective. We have Marina Armey from Saddleback College. We have Jessica Phillips from the Ohio State University. We have Michael Berman, the CIO at California State University System. Now, one person I'd like to bring up right now is from Campus Technology, because we are doing this work together. We're trading some programs and we're partnering up to try to share our ideas and connect our audiences. So in order to do that, let me just bring up to the stage Reha Kelly, the presiding genius over the Campus Technology Enterprise. Reha, thank you for helping make this possible. Hi, thank you so much for having me. I'm super excited to be collaborating on this event. And actually some of the speakers we have today will be presenting at a virtual conference that Campus Technology is putting on in a couple of weeks. So I think it'll be great to start a conversation about digital transformation here and then continue it at our conference. So on November 3rd, the Campus Technology Leadership Summit will be focusing on all the ways that IT and higher ed has needed to innovate and flex and be agile through the pandemic and beyond. We have some great sessions, one on rethinking learning spaces. We're gonna be talking about making flexible work policies sustainable, this seizing the opportunity for digital transformation, particularly in student services. And also having Brian speak for us, which is really exciting as only he can do about how the plan for the future in the face of so much uncertainty. So I would love for all of you to join us in a couple of weeks, looking forward to the conversation today. Oh, sounds terrific. Thank you so much, Ray. Henry, if you wanna post a couple of links in the chat box, please go ahead. Oh, yes, I will. Great. Well, let me make room for our guests and bring them up one at a time right now. And let me make sure that everyone gets a chance to welcome all of them. So first, let me just bring up Marina Aminay. Marina, hello. Hi, good morning. Well, it's morning here in Orange County, California. I bet it is, I bet it is. How are you doing today? Wonderful, thank you. I'm joining you from Saddleback College here in South Orange County. Excellent, excellent. Marina, we have a tradition here in the forum, but we ask people to introduce themselves. We do it in a certain way. We ask you to talk about what you're gonna be doing in the next year. What are the big projects and the big ideas that are top of mind for you? I would say my biggest topic is the intersection of instruction and technology. That's kind of where I live as a dean of online education, helping faculty members who have now been transitioning to fully online come back to campus in some part, but then also reassess how it's been going while we've been fully online. For example, our STEM faculty who've been highly utilizing proctoring solutions. How's that working for them? Are there equity issues at play that those proctoring solutions have brought up? If so, how can we solve that through some pedagogical means and suggestions? So I'll be really looking closely at bringing people back, especially faculty, and examining some of the complexities and really problems that technology has posed and thinking about some creative solutions around it. Well, that sounds like you have a lot of work cut out for you. Excellent, excellent. Well, let me get your colleagues on stage so that we can all put our heads together and see what they want to add to our overall conversation. So hold on tight, Marina, and let's reach out across the middle of the United States and bring up Jessica Phillips. Hello, Jessica. Hello. So excited to be here. Good to see you here. And I should say good afternoon because I think it's one or two o'clock there. It is, it is. And it is a sunny day. However, if you'd asked me a half an hour ago, I would have said it was a rainy day. So welcome to Ohio. It's the Midwest, indeed. Jessica, you do so much there. You do so much at the Ohio State University. Tell us, what are you gonna be working on next for the next year? What are the big projects and ideas for you? Well, the first thing will be potty training my daughter. So I'm just gonna throw that out there. That's forefront of my mind recently. How old is she? She's 21 months. She's getting close here. Yeah, but beyond that and more work focused is we're doing some exciting work around Swift coding and app development. And so we have some courses that are public and we're starting to work with some higher ed institutions to share in some of that course access with some of their community partners and their students so that we can cross institutionally create some pathways for students to learn how to code if it's maybe not a part of their major or area of study. So I'm really excited about that collaboration. And we're also in the same vein looking at workforce development and micro credentials and thinking about how we can support a growing number of learners, a growing audience of learners all with different kinds of needs and expectations that they hope to gain from their learning. So there's several things that are happening. They're all really exciting. And I think our fantastic stepping stones as we go forward. Wow, that sounds terrific. Good luck. Just have to get out there. I'm a university, so I'm being really nice here. I'm being very, very kind. Brian. So now there's two of you, two thirds of the panel. Now let's go back out to California and bring up our third member of our panel today. Michael Berman, long time friend, CIO for the California State University System. Welcome, sir. Thank you, Brian, such pleasure to be with you. Good to see you. Good to see you. Well, first of all, I've got a remark. Beard is coming along, I approve. I keep mine a little trimmed, but it's never quite gonna match yours. But who could really? It suits you. It suits you very well. So you know the drill now, looking ahead, what's ahead for you for the next year? Well, one of the really fun things about my job and working with the Cal State System is we get to work on a lot of things all at once. But I'll just mention a couple, our C Success Program, which is our chancellor's initiative to assure that every student in the Cal State System has an excellent device to do their work on and a way to connect it to the campus is very exciting. And we've already distributed about 25,000 devices. We're moving into the telecommunication space. So we're gonna start distributing mobile hotspots to students in a very systemic way and working closely with a couple of telecom partners to do that. And we wanna make sure that every one of our 475,000 or so students has a way to get online to do their work. And so that there's no equity issue in terms of our students' ability to be successful. You can't learn online if you can't get online and we don't want any student to not be able to. And online learning is a component of every student's experience now. So whether they're fully online or they're primarily face-to-face, they're always gonna have online components to their learning and we wanna ensure that every student can be successful. So that's a very exciting, we started with eight of our 23 campuses and we're hoping to add more in January. I think we'll add another three or four and eventually it's gonna reach all of our campuses in quite sure. So that's called C Success and we're super excited about that. And I'll also mention, you know, great to see my colleague Marina here from Salabac, such an important partnership between the community colleges and the Cal States and California. We really depend on each other to promote student success. And I know we've got some very specific work to do over the next couple of years in terms of easing the transfer pathways between the community colleges and the CSUs. I'm super excited about that. My daughter just transferred from, she's in the process of transferring from a community college to a Cal State. And anyone who, any parent who goes through that can see lots of room for improvement. So we wanna make that to where it becomes just transparent and natural. And that for the students, the literally over a hundred thousand students who go through that pathway every year in California, we wanna make sure again that they don't need a parent in the education business with a PhD to guide them through the process. Because again, that creates huge equity gaps and we know we lose students along the way. We wanna make sure that that's viable for every student and that they can focus on their learning and not on how to play the game of getting from one campus to another. So looking forward to working with our community college partners on that transformation. That's terrific, that is so much. And I love the way Michael, you and Jessica both brought in your children. My own daughter several years ago did also transfer for community college to State University. So making that easier is a great thing. Friends, I just wanna crow a bit. In the first five minutes, we've covered teaching, technology, proctoring, ethics, course ethics, coding for general education, micro-predential, student hardware, digital advice, inter-campus collaboration, transfer credits, and the link between family and family. There's a lot going on with this group here. And so they are here. We're all here for your questions and your comments. Remember in the bottom of the screen, you can click the raised hand button. If you wanna join us on stage or you can type into the question mark, type in your question or comment. And before I can even finish saying that, we have a question coming up right now. So this is from Peg Sherwin. Let me bring you up on stage. Hello, Peg. Good morning, how are you? I guess it's afternoon, afternoon probably where everyone's at. So I haven't been to a Shindig in a long time, but I'm curious and I joined a little bit late. So if you already covered this, apologies. I'm just wondering about any hybrid work environment tips, things that people might be experiencing there. Great question. Why don't we all take it then? Marina, start us off. Yeah, we are increasingly leaning toward different forms of hybrid coursework to both satisfy student needs and then also give our college a little bit of agility because with the Delta variant, we just have no idea what's happening. We have to kind of create a bit of agility. And so we handled it a couple of different ways. Hybrid is not really monolithic, right? So it could be a hybrid online course in the sense that there is both asynchronous and synchronous content, or it could be a hybrid online and on-campus class in the sense that every other meeting is synchronous or asynchronous and then there's a physical meeting on campus. And then we also have courses that are simultaneous streaming in the classroom. So the faculty member is meeting with, let's say 25 students, but there's another 20 that's zooming in and the class is designed such that there's some interactivity. There's a couple of screens, they're able to hear each other, there's microphones and cameras placed in the classroom to allow for some interaction. I would say my biggest learning from incorporating a lot of these different methods has been training, training, training, allowing faculty to get into those classrooms, play with the technology, do some practice Zoom sessions is really critical. And then really setting up guidelines. You know, people don't know, how do you take attendance with a synchronous asynchronous hybrid course? How do you establish faculty student contact? What are some strategies for collaboration so that students feel engaged and they feel like they're part of a community? So that training and that support has been really critical. Defining the various elements our own faculty are confused about the difference between synchronous, asynchronous, high-flag, simultaneous streaming. So you can imagine a student, especially a second language learner, especially a first-in-college student, they're going to be very, very confused. So we've had student videos that we've created, there's tutorials, there's flowcharts, there's lots of support there but we can totally improve that area and constantly a challenge for us. Thank you. Wow, thank you, Marina, thank you. Jessica, do you want to pounce on that? I certainly do. So I think when I first heard your question, I was thinking of it in terms of my team of employees and how we're managing and how we're working through some of these things. And it is so reflective of what students are experiencing as well as it very much should be. But I think what's really difficult is that it's very hard to present flexibility, have experiences with flexibility and then pull that back. People want to continue to experience flexibility. Staff, instructors, students, once you taste that it's really hard to go back. And so I think on a workforce side of this, we're very much looking at what are the job descriptions that people have and what are the interactions that we really need to have in person with students and where do we have spaces that it makes sense to be able to work from wherever you're most comfortable working. And there is a little bit of a variety there. And it's a conversation with staff to find out what their comfort space is, what their comfort zone is as well. But I think in both instances of students and staff, when you have people all over the place or primarily interacting online, it becomes ever more critical to make sure that people know where to find resources because some of those water cooler conversations or on your way to the next class conversations where you might learn some of those resources, that interaction may be missing. And so that's been something that we have focused on pretty significantly is how we can make sure students have resources, know where they are, when they need them and have that sort of more curated for where we can predict their needs are at a certain time. And I'm happy to talk more about that later. Thank you. Why is it West, Jessica? Thank you. Michael, what have you learned from your approach at the CSU system? Well, not a lot to add to those excellent comments. I'll just say that thinking about the student perspective, we're in this time of really tremendous experimentation. We went in the Cal State, all of a sudden we had more online students than WGU in Southern New Hampshire put together. And with nowhere near the experience of the structures in place that those institutions add. And I think we acquitted ourselves well, but when I think about the students, the level of uncertainty, the rate of change is very high. And on the one hand, it's kind of exhilarating for some of us to see the number of experiments. And as Marina said, all the different modes of instructions that are possible. And we can tailor that to a particular course, a particular faculty member, but I think I worry about the students just being overwhelmed by the number of options and the number of different pathways. We're not really great at communicating with students and mass in general. And in this time of change, I think it's really tough. So I just hope that we continue in talking with some students, they've actually been very complimentary of the faculty and CSU in the level of flexibility and support they've gotten through the past year and a half. I hope as all of us continue to go through such challenging and tiring times that we continue to do the best we can to support those students. I think it's just, I really feel for what this generation is going through right now. Thank you. Thanks all three. Peg, does that help? All right. Well, thank you. Great answers. It's good to see you back again. Take care. Friends, if you're new to the Future Transform or you're new to this technology, that's how a video question works. In fact, let me make it even easier if you'd like to join us. Let me just set up a little teal-colored button. If you wanna join us on stage, just press that button and you're right up on stage before I can stop you. It's perfect. And now you get a sense of just how generous, thoughtful and differently experienced all three of our guests are. We have a couple of questions that have come in the Q&A box and we flash these up on the screen so people can take a run at them. And this comes from Leslie Harris. I was wondering how you can reply to the faculty member who asks about lockdown browsers or remote proctoring exams. Is there a way to get them to rethink their assessment practices instead? Thanks, Leslie. Good question. Who wants to try? We'll have to kick this one off as well. 100% yes. And I think the secret weapon at Saddleback College is we have some STEM faculty in particular who are the big users of the proctoring solutions who have become very passionate about authentic assessments and project-based learning. And they are at the forefront of this transformation that's happening at our college where they are helping their faculty and colleagues to kind of think about how do I assess differently? For example, instead of a math teacher saying what is the answer to this equation? We have a faculty member now saying this is the answer to this equation. Tell me why. Tell me how we got there. It's a little bit harder to plagiarize that reply than it is if it's just a number or some kind of objective response to that. Or how can you use peer review in a statistics class? We don't normally think about peer review outside of the humanities or the social sciences. So helping our faculty to rethink how they assess their students is really useful. And then also sharing with faculty the various mechanisms out there, and I'm sure you've got other sessions on this, but there are dozens and dozens and dozens of websites currently that will help your students figure out a way to come up with that answer. So if you make it meaningful, if you talk to your students about the importance of academic honesty, if you let them know that you're aware of these sites and then you offer them experiences in the class that are portable, that are meaningful, that are authentic, it's going to really greatly reduce the need for plagiarism deterrence and proctoring solutions that are incredibly invasive. Also helping faculty to better understand that equity notions related to using these proctoring software. So a student who has young children who run into the camera to trigger the plagiarism or the feeding mechanism in that solution. If they live in a home with other people, sometimes we have students in the bathroom taking a test because that's the only privacy they can find. If some students of color have reported that solutions like proctoria don't pick up on their skin color if they're darker tone. So when faculty become aware of these outrageous elements related to equity, it's often from the faculty that will hear what's next. And then you're really right for that conversation around authentic assessments and project-based learning. Thank you, Maria. That's fantastic. Thank you. What a great answer. Jessica, Michael, did you want to add more to that? I would absolutely second all of that. And I'll also just add quickly that I think that it really is about having an initial conversation. I think we found that you have to unpack a little bit what happened when proctoring tools were first introduced and what that conversation was. Because we've discovered, I think that some instructors actually think that they have to do that, that they're required through accrediting bodies or licensure to do that. And sometimes that is the case, but not always. And so it's a little bit of going back and understanding where did their beliefs about these tools and how they should be used emerge and what are the fears that are driving that. And then it absolutely then can help with that next phase of the conversation level. What are your goals and what should students be able to do and what are the different ways we can assess that? Well, it's a real rethinking going back and revisiting that. Thank you, Jessica. Michael, what would you add to this? I think those are great answers. I don't really have much to add. The only thing I'll say is that while we all value faculty agency and faculty autonomy, there's also a line in terms of equity and prejudice and disadvantage in some students that where I think at some point we have to draw lines. And so I think I'm very much aligned with what Marina and Jessica are saying and also what a lot of our faculty are saying is that there comes a point when some of these tools are just not acceptable in an academic environment regardless of the goal of trying to prevent plagiarism or cheating. Very good, hard line indeed. Leslie, that's a great question. Thank you so much. So again, if you're new to the Future Transform or if you haven't used the software before that's an example of one of those Q&A box questions. So if you'd like to ask one of those just look at the bottom of the screen along that white strip, you'll see that question mark button, press that type, hit send, we're good to go. We had a couple of questions that came up based on some of your earlier comments. I just want to make sure that we had a chance to revisit those. One of them was a comment about preferring asynchronous over synchronous. I think that's was Lisa and I just wanted to float that out there. Where have you come down after almost two years of the pandemic? What's the right balance between synchronous and asynchronous online instruction? I mean, should we do more of synchronous because it's more lively and richer or should we do more asynchronous because it's better for schedules and bandwidth? What do you think about that now? You want me to kick this one off first? You're unfair, do it. So at Saddleback, prior to the pandemic, we had a huge portfolio for online education. It was part of our brand. We had the second number of largest enrollments in the state amongst the 114 community colleges. So we really had a robust online existence which was almost all asynchronous. When we talked about online education before the pandemic, everyone thought it's asynchronous. All of our training was focused on asynchronous methodology. It was really seen as the most flexible, the most equitable, the most supportive. But we also did have heavy kind of buy-in from humanities, social sciences and we didn't have a lot going on in terms of CTE and STEM presence in that online portfolio. Post-pandemic, a lot of people who kind of in an emergency had to get online, they really didn't have the time or the tools to do so asynchronously. And so they opted for synchronous Zoom sessions with their students. And that was a little bit problematic at first in terms of just the technology. But once people got the hang of that, I became a believer that it can really be a useful form of online education even though it wasn't much of our portfolio before. It definitely is now. I would say now departments are increasingly looking to offer a variety of methods. If I have 20 sections of English 1A, we're gonna try to offer some synchronous, some asynchronous, some hybrid, some fully on campus because we've realized that students have their preferences. Some students really need that one-on-one contact with their faculty members, with their students. My son is currently a student here at the college as well. He prefers synchronous courses and he prefers on-campus sessions. He's not a big fan of asynchronous. He really misses interacting with his buddies and seeing people, even if it's synchronous and there's no contact between the students in the class, he and his friends have already started a Discord chat on the side and they're talking about the professor and they're talking about the content. So it creates this sense of community that he really misses out on asynchronous. So I would say I was not a fan of asynchronous before but I'm a believer and I think that a good variety is going to best serve the students moving forward. Best of them what's good for the students. I'm glad to hear that you have a child involved. I do, I've got a couple of them. This is great, this has become a family show. That's great. Thank you Marina. Jessica, Michael, did you want to move to the balance? I promise we weren't told we had to speak in order. But it works, it's fine. I think as I'll take this opportunity just to draw in data-driven decision-making and just ask a question. Wouldn't it be nice if as an instructor, I'm an instructor myself of a class of about 200 students online, wouldn't it be nice if at the beginning of that class I could see a map and I could see where in the world, literally my students live and in what time zones and could that help me if I had that information to make some decisions about how I designed my course and how I deliver it and can I make decisions about whether synchronous sessions are required or optional? And so having that kind of data ahead in front of you about your audience, your student audience and what their needs might be, maybe I can also see that they are a non-traditional student but a student who has a family or is a military student and maybe deployed student, there's so many things that could impact what the needs are of students and so being able to see that in a dashboard or with some data, nice data analytics ahead of a course could be really helpful in making those decisions because I think there are use cases for both synchronous and asynchronous and careful, thoughtful decisions in that are really important. Thank you, thank you, Jessica. Great points both. I would say that I think we also have to look not just at hybrid courses, so to speak or different modes of instruction but think about the student lifecycle and the different paths that different students go through and I think that for a very large percentage of the students that come into the Cal State and I suspect in the community colleges, a high percentage of them are not ready to jump right into a full diet of asynchronous courses. They simply don't have the experience or the temperament to do. It takes a certain kind of self-discipline that a lot of us, I certainly didn't have at 17. And the structure of going and sitting with your peers or perhaps as an alternative being in a synchronous online session may make a lot of sense. And then I think for other types of learning, other students, other points in their career, graduate studies, professional education, different life experiences, different types of abilities, different locations, different access to, there's just so many different variables. I saw my colleague, Tom, make the point that it could depend on the learning objectives but I think to me it depends even more on the life experiences of the people and where they are in their learning journey which we all know is a lifelong journey and what makes sense for that individual at that time. And I hope we can get to a kind of flexible schema. And I also think that the idea that every instructor is gonna offer every class in every mode is not realistic. It's just the burden on the instructor is substantial to do that. And where it makes sense and where we can do it and we're an instructor has the technology savvy and the intestinal fortitude to do that good on them. That's great they can do that. But I don't think that's gonna be realistic for every course. I think that we're gonna need some specialization and there are people who really love to teach asynchronous courses. There are people who love to teach face to face courses. And by the way, I'm really fascinated to see the people who thought they hated teaching online and now saying, let's all find things not so bad. There's a lot of those too. So let's do the best we can to match the student and the instructor and the topic to the mode that makes sense. And then from a technology perspective, I wanna do the best I can to provide all those in as efficient and a smooth way to everybody who's involved. Is my voice a little soft maybe? I don't know, some people said they had trouble hearing me. It may be that you're just sounding too mellow but I love a little bit of what can I say? You gotta do it. But matching the student, the instructor, the class, I mean, and the learning objectives and we're all on this path, life path, life path, right? And what we need at 17 and what we need at 27, we need 37 might be very, very different. You're 77, yeah. Thank you. 77, I'm hoping I'll still be learning then. Oh, I know you will. That's too far off so. You've got a lot to do but this is very rich. Thank you, thank you all. Now we have a video question coming in from one of your colleagues, actually from awesome friend of the program, George Station at Cal State Monterey Bay. Let me see. He's where? It's kinda near you. Hello, George. Hi there, can you hear me okay? Beautiful, great. Okay, and I've got one, if I may, one follow up on a previous topic on the proctoring environments and then one, which was my original question, but by way of follow up, I'm wondering if there is actually a conversation between the higher eds systems and the accrediting bodies, the certifying bodies and so on about this need for harsh proctoring environments. I, just by background and another life, I was a proctor at Monterey Peninsula College, one of our community colleges, physically going in for California State teacher certification exams and C-Best and all of those ETS stuff. And I know those rules and that being able to transfer that to the online environment seems just untenable. So I'm wondering if any of your systems are actually having those conversations with the accrediting bodies. Well, I'll go ahead and jump in and go first, just for the heck of it, because it's, since George has colleagues. George, I don't know the answer to that. Allison Rinn probably would be the person who would be the point person for the CSU on that topic at that level, but my personal opinion is given the current state of technology that if you need to have a proctored exam, the best thing to do is have people go to a physical location and do a proctored exam. If that's what you really need. And I think we would both agree that should be required as rarely as possible. But if you're gonna test people's ability to do something and you feel that the only way to certify it is to be certain who the person is and whether they did their own individual work without help. If that's rich, you really have to test, then I think you should go to a test center. That's my personal opinion. I think that's the fairest. Now I realized there might be some people have special issues with that and there would have to be accommodations made because of different abilities. But I think for 90%, that's the best solutions. I just don't think that, in my opinion, that the technology is even gonna... I don't think technology does what it claims, in my opinion. And we know that there's evidence that it does harm. So you have a technology that doesn't, in my opinion, doesn't do the good that it claims and does actual harm. Why would you want to use it? Stress, this is not a CSU stand. This is my personal opinion. But, and within the CSU, it's gonna be the faculty who decide these questions as it should be. So, but I think there's still a place just... This was a problem in COVID, right? Having a physical test center was difficult or impossible at certain times. I think we're beyond that. We know what it takes to make a space safe enough for most purposes, for most people. And I think we should just go back to having test centers if there really is a need to do that. Yeah, and I would just add, I think there's a lot of myths and legends associated around online education and it affecting accreditation and articulation between community colleges and CSUs, or you see that there's a lot of sort of myths and legends around that is kind of what I've experienced. So our accrediting agency is ACCJC. There is no mention of proctoring anywhere in the standards or anywhere in the review. We have used it before and after the pandemic and it's not really come up. It's kind of assumed that this is a discipline specific decision that's made within departments and faculty who are the experts of their fields. There may be, with that, there is a caveat. There may be some specific professional requirements. So for example, real estate has a proctored exam that they give off-site, but that's not related to the class. The class actually doesn't use proctoring, but if somebody wants a professional license as a real estate agent, they would go and get a proctor test. So there are some CTE related requirements, but there is no requirement one way or the other that I'm aware of. Salify College also, and this is a pretty common practice at least in California colleges, we do not specify on our transcripts if a course is online or on campus. So a receiving CSU or a UC or a four-year has no idea if that student has taken all of their classes online with proctoring or without proctoring or on campus. We don't specify that anywhere in the transcript. So if they came up with that information, I have no idea. They just found one of us and talked to us. That's interesting. George, what a great question. Did you wanna follow up with that? Yeah, well, my other one is actually my original question and Brian, you've experienced this before. And Michael, we've had a conversation before in the world. So, you know, I change topics. So the other one has to do with maybe getting back to the equity question of what we provide our students by way of access in terms of equipment, in terms of hardware, in terms of wireless, in terms of broadband and hotspots and all that goes with all of that. I think that pandemic has demonstrated that we're all kind of equivalent participants. It really flattened the hierarchy. So not just students, but the staff, faculty, administrators, everyone was kind of in the same boat for a while, and I think maybe even to a certain degree today. And so my concern is that we still don't accept possibly in the IT usage of the term user, we're still not all seen as the same, even though the hierarchy was clearly visibly flattened. And Cal State has that C-Success program. My campus CSUMB is not yet one of those campuses. I know Michael, I think you said there were eight and that's a student program, but there doesn't seem to be anything for faculty, staff and administrators that reflects the same need that I know exists among my peers and our other colleagues. And I'm wondering if any of your systems have programs that specifically address everybody else who is not a student, but still needs to be as connected as any student does in today's environment. So that's my other question. Thanks. Who wants to take a run at that one? I can take a stab at that to start. We've had it at Ohio State, a program for four years now, a digital flagship and it's focused, it is focused as a student success initiative, but our research as we prepared that, that initiative that tips to launch that clearly pointed to the importance of instructors having the same access to the technology, the platform and the software that the students were receiving. So we started out with a cohort model because our funding didn't extend to instructors, but we did have a little bit that we could play with for people who were initial champions of technology enhanced learning and were willing partners to innovate and try some things. And so they engaged in training and received the technology alongside the training. And that was really critical in the research that we found to is not just providing the technology, but also the course design support, the pedagogy support in using technology to teach. And so we over time have shifted to some models where now we offer more on demand resources and we work directly with departments to help bring technology to instructors, the same technology that students receive. And I think we're around maybe 600 or so instructors who have the same technology as students at this point. And all of the feedback on that has been, been very positive to your point, George, about the importance of that. And during COVID, that was certainly evident as people had to make that, that quick switch. So just a little bit about what we have done so far, sort of in that vein. Thank you. Thank you. I would just say, George, I'm sorry, go ahead, go ahead. George, I was gonna say, stay tuned. I saw Cal State LA just ordered 1,800 devices for instructors. So it went down 22 to go or? Yeah, so, you know, have your people call Cal State LA's people and ask them how that decision was made because I don't have, that's all I pretty much all I know, but, and then we also have to deal with the fact that there could be a tendency to, well, we'll get devices for all the part-time people, but the, I mean, the full-time people, but the part-time instructors will have to fend for themselves. And that's a whole other huge issue that George, you and I have talked about, but we, you know, our students don't divide their instructors up by whether they're full or part-time. Their teachers are their teachers and we need to make sure that every one of those teachers has the skills and the tools they need to be successful with their students or we're not, or we're gonna be letting our students down. Good sentiment, good sentiment. George? Yeah, I was just going to add that, I think in addition to faculty needing that access, which we've been fortunate to be able to do and giving laptops and loaners to our part-time and full-time faculty, there's always supply chain issues as well in the beginning, like try to find a laptop or Chromebook, it was rough, but I would also say classified staff need that support as well. So we have an amazing, amazing center. I'm so lucky to have it. It's called the Faculty Center at Saddleback and the entire focus of my three instructional technologists who are in that center is course design and instructional technology. They are there to work with faculty. So making sure they have the tools is really important too. And sometimes we forget about staff who are there to support. So for example, they need iPads so that they can see the Canvas view from the student and from the faculty side. And they need the laptop and they need an Apple because they need to see it, it changes a little bit. The Canvas app looks a little bit different depending on where you are. So I would say classified are on their management have to be on there as well. They need to know what's happening. When we get a student complaint about Canvas, deans need to know what that means, right? If a student is complaining that a faculty member hasn't been present in Canvas, that shouldn't just be a foreign language. Managers and deans are absolutely, I think, responsible for knowing it. So everybody needs a quality of access and I would really agree with the question about what about the rest of us? What about lecturers? What about staff? And we're really working on that. I know at Saddleback. Okay, great. Thanks to all of you for those perspectives. I think I really appreciate from each of you how you want to support the everyone else on campus, whoever the, you know, and off campus as, you know, magnified by the pandemic days. And I'm hoping that your messages get through to everyone else. And so that there are some system-wide solutions to that coming. Great, Brian, thank you so much. That really was fruitful and very helpful for me. And I can have that conversation back with our colleagues locally as well. My pleasure. Thank you. I'm glad to help the CSU system apparently. Friends, we have just about 11 minutes to go. And I want to make sure that everyone gets a chance to have their two cents. I'm really enjoying this immensely. Jessica, you were asking about a dashboard for faculty to find student geography and their technology preferences. I tweeted this out. Donald Clark in Brighton in the UK says he built a tool like this. So I just asked him if it's around or anything else. I'll let you know if he responds. And during this very session, he raised $65 million in Series A funding to create all the tech tools for itself. If anyone could do it, it would be done. Can I explore that a little bit more? So kind of what I understood from what Jessica described is giving faculty the ability to understand the location of their students. And then based on that, determine the right ingredients, right? So I want to do some synchronous and asynchronous. We have a lot of faculty here interested in doing that at Saddleback. And I have mixed feelings about that. So I would love to hear Jessica or anyone else. And the reason is that it kind of creates some barriers for students in planning the rest of their schedules. So for example, we had some faculty in the beginning that said, well, my class is going to be synchronous, but I want to have the ability to have an occasional synchronous meeting Tuesdays at 12. And I might have like three of these in a semester, but I want the ability to have that. But what that does in the schedule is it creates a hold on the student's schedule and they can't take any other classes during that prime time 12 to 130 time period. And so it became a barrier for us not to establish this in advance. And so our faculty were really understanding about that. And we've come to an agreement that if you're gonna reserve a spot, you better meet every time that week rolls around. Like you better meet every Tuesday at noon because that student's not meeting anywhere else and you're requiring it as part of your class. It's not a when I feel like it kind of item. And we put that publicly in the course schedule so that students are aware of it at the point of enrollment. But then again, it's limiting for the faculty member too. And that kind of spontaneous spontaneity that we want to encourage. So any thoughts around how to balance those to competing needs? Yeah, I would say that what we've seen is that while I shared a link to how we explain instructional modalities to students, instructors are just as confused at certain times of what those instructional modalities mean for them and their teaching. And so what was happening is that students were, they were in classes where the instructor, maybe the course was indicated as an in-person course scheduled at a certain time or maybe it wasn't indicated as online without any synchronous sessions. But then the instructor was making decisions during the course to shift this way or shift that way. Primarily during the pandemic. And I think that was largely because students were, maybe it often for the first time for instructors all over the world, that has not always been the case at Ohio State. I think at other institutions, that is maybe more common. That was a newer thing for our instructors to have students that were all over the place. So we have this data. We have a tool called EAB, I think it's from the student as collaborative. We've rebranded it, but that data is all there. But you have to look it up student by student. So what would be nice is if, because it's there, it's like you can almost touch it. Like can we just pull that data together? So like myself as a class of 200 students, I can see something that would be more helpful for me in making some of those instructional decisions. But to your point, I completely agree. It can, this definition of what these different instructional modalities mean and how they're indicated in the course scheduling system is really critical for students to be able to make good choices and the choices they need to make to create the schedule that they need for themselves. So it's a little bit of a parallel. We should be helping to define what these mean and we should be maybe providing, if we can more data for good decision-making. That's a great exchange. Thank you, Marina for pressing on that and Jessica for unfolding it a bit further. Thank you. We have more questions coming in. And this is one from Garrett Monroe at Hiram College. And he wanted to ask about, wondering if we can chat about devices in ALMS. Is anyone jumping ship from a particular platform? Which are checking boxes for students and faculty given emerging trends anticipating the future? Good question, Garrett. I can talk a little bit about all California colleges in California. We are community colleges in California. We are all 114 of us using Canvas as the LMS. And I would say there is very little likelihood that we will jump ship to another. This was part of a major initiative a few years ago to get all the colleges on the same LMS and the state footed the bill for it to make that happen. And it was a lot of work and it took about three years to get everybody there. But we're all there. Saddleback was kind of a reluctant mover. We had Blackboard, our faculty tended to like Blackboard. But now that we're there, it's actually opened a lot of cool doors. So now that we're all in Canvas, I don't know how much you all know about the CVC, the California Virtual Campus. It's an initiative that's statewide. They're wanting to create a one-click enrollment for students to take classes at each other's colleges without going through the application process. So this is a huge deal. A student at Bakersfield College now who wants to take an online English 1A but their college doesn't offer any sections or it's all full can now go on the course exchange and within a few clicks enroll in a class at Saddleback and take that class and it will help him or her finish their degree on time and transfer on time. So it's an enormous equity tool, I think the course exchange. It's only made available because we're all on Canvas as an LMS and inside of Canvas, we create trust relationships. So that student never leaves Bakersfield's instance of Canvas, they're on that server. And when they log in, they'll see their classes from Bakersfield and then they'll see Saddlebacks on that same login. So that trust relationship is there. It's a beautiful, fantastic, easy way for the student to have access to our entire statewide portfolio of 114 colleges and the LMS is really a big player and why that will happen for students more widely and why I don't see it's changing anytime soon. Thank you, Marina. That's a really good story. Jessica? Sorry. Go ahead. I was just gonna follow up on that and Marina knows a lot about this but the Cal States are now, I think about 17 or 18 out of the 23 either are currently using Canvas or in the process of moving to Canvas. And there is discussion and there's been some incentives provided from the state to encourage all the Cal States and all the UCs to move to a single platform. And those discussions are underway about what it would take to make that happen. So I think there's a good possibility it could happen. You know, I'll just mention I have a lot of really good friends and people I really admire who were really deep thinkers about pedagogy and learning who really pushed back and rebel against the traditional LMS. And I'm, you know, incredibly aligned with them in a lot of ways. But then when I talk to students and look at what students want, it's like they don't want a maze of opportunity. They want to be told here's what you need to learn. Here's what you need to do to learn it. Here's the resources you have. And as one student once said to me, you know, I'd rather be spending my time learning the subject matter than trying to figure out where my assignments are. And so there's a tension there. And I'm super supportive of experimentation and people are looking at, you know, and they're very aware of the limitations of a tool like Canvas. But at the same time, what Maureen is describing from a student point of view of a student being able to go to one portal and get access to the entire, eventually the entire online resources of the California Community College is amazing. So I don't have an answer for that. That's just an inherent contradiction. And I think that we've got to create a niche and a place for experimentation and innovation. We can't always live on what works today. But I think from a student viewpoint, having that commonality and also for a faculty. I mean, because Maureen's faculty are my faculty. There's probably hundreds of people who teach at Saddleback who also teach at San Marcos and at Fortin and at Long Beach. The same people, we hire the same instructors in so many cases. So again, asking them to go between different platforms is an unnecessary burden on them. It's the digital aspect of being a freeway flyer. Yep. And of course, now a Zoom flyer, right? You don't even necessarily have to be in the same part of the state or in the same state. That's true. You have to be in the same cafe. We have time for one question from our campus technology guru. I wanna make sure she gets this question in because this is a very, very important one that we just hinted at. Rae asks, I'm curious what student services outside the classroom, whether it's advising, mental health, have there been benefits to taking those online that will carry on into the future? Again, my apologies. We're right kind of at the end of the hour. So I'll make sure you guys each get a chance to attack that. What do you think? I'll flash it on the screen again so you can see it. I would love to jump in on this one. I can maybe start a little bit on this one. We created a student support hub where we consolidated all of these services into a single location and it was very, very useful. We started that work before the pandemic. So student, and we didn't really want it to be a bunch of websites. So it's not a link to a lot of other links. It's really a place with little boxes where students can go in and chat live with a counselor, chat with a tutor. So it's a place to consolidate actionable support for students. And I think it's been very popular and helpful but there's still lots of work in terms of getting students to that hub and I'll post a link as well to our hub so people can take a look. Thank you, Marina. Thank you. Jessica, you were just saying. Again, I mentioned we developed actually pre-pandemic alongside students and subject matter experts a wellness app at Ohio State that is very similar. It brings resources to students but it comes along with some recommendations from subject matter experts about when certain information is presented to students based on what we know about some student behavior. And that's very helpful to help with the white noise of so many resources, which is often more of the challenge than not having enough resources for students is that ability to curate that. And we also worked with various student groups to gather feedback and just one example quickly is international students shared with us that they're more likely to seek out resources that they can access on their own versus resources in a group setting or more professional resources. And so we were very careful to make sure as we crafted the wellness app that we provided a multitude of opportunities in there to reach things on your own on your time. Good thinking, good thinking. Good lessons learned here. Michael, did you have any to add to that? I'll just mention one that really was accelerated by COVID and we've seen some really positive success with when it's done in a really in an intelligent way. And that's the use of chatbots for certain types of student services. We've seen evidence that it's very well received by the students, not as a replacement for every type of face-to-face service. Don't let anyone tell you that AI chatbots are intelligent. It doesn't do with intelligence. There's simply another resource and another interface to get information. And the fact that some questions can be answered 24 hours a day by a chatbot is very useful to a student. So chatbots with real human beings behind them can be very effective for a lot of services. And we've seen a growth in that and some real positive reaction from students. Again, when it's done in a smart way and it's integrated with human backup and people making sure that students don't fall through the cracks. That's a great answer. Those are a great fantastic question and three really, really helpful answers. We are friends out of time and this has been such a rich session. I really hate to pause it, but I wanna make sure everyone gets a chance to go back to their lives. Just really quickly, what's the best way to keep up with all of you and your individual work? And I'll just take this left to right on my screen. Marina, how do we keep up with you? Email me, you can come to my LinkedIn page. You can check out Saddleback online and on our homepage we've got what's going on. I've also put in a link to our student support hub. Very nice, thank you. Jessica, how can we keep up with you? Yeah, certainly email, feel free to reach out. And I also, I am on the Twitter and so you can find me at Jess Phillips underscore OH. Yep. Anybody? Very good, excellent. And Michael, how about yourself? I put my Twitter handle in the chat and that's the easiest, quickest way to find me, but if somebody wants to reach out to me at the CSU for anything, I'm not hard to find. Glad to talk to anybody. Excellent, excellent. Well, friends, thank you. Thank you so much for a fantastic conversation. I really, I'd like to have you come back to follow this up, perhaps in the spring as things develop and as things change. I would love to hear your thoughts. In the meantime, good luck with your session at Campus Technology and really stay safe and we'll see you soon. Thank you, it was a pleasure. Thank you, Brian. Thank you, Jessica and Marina. It's great to get to talk with all of you. Yes, indeed. But don't go away yet. Let me just point out where things are headed for the next few weeks. And let me also thank Campus Technology for partnering on this. It's been a really, really pleasure to work together. Looking ahead to our sessions, we have sessions coming up on enrollment, on disability, on eco-media, on digitization, on libraries. If you'd like to go continue these conversations about everything about asynchronous for synchronous to student services and more, we can just use the hashtag FTTE or tweet at me, Brian Alexander or at Shindig events or hit up my blog at BrianAlexander.org. If you'd like to go back into the past and look at our previous sessions, including some of these wonderful speakers, just go to tinyworld.com slash FTF archive and remember to subscribe. In the meantime, thank you all for very, very wonderful questions. In the chat, we found a lot of learning, a lot of resources. This has been terrific. I hope to see you all at Campus Technology and I hope above all for you all to stay safe. We'll see you next time and see you online. Bye-bye.
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Tu, 11.22.22 ~ 2022 HIT PARADE BASKETBALL JASPY'S EXCLUSIVE DUAL CASE BREAK *RT* #5
* 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" ]
2022-11-23T05:33:37
2024-04-24T00:05:31
1,010
3KmybWDM8H0
What up everybody, I'm Joe for jaspyscasebreaks.com coming at you with 2022 hip parade basketball. Jaspys exclusive. It's a dual case break. There are 20 boxes, Ram team number five and a hit list promo. Chance to win a couple boxes if you go hit list. Nice little consolation prize there. Big thanks to this group for making it happen. Thanks to the people who bought their spots straight up. Congrats again to the winners of spots and the two mosaic cereal box fillers we did. All 30 basketball teams are in. Let's roll it, randomized names and teams six and a one seven times. One, two, three, four, five, six, and seventh and final time. Got a few Carl's all the way down to Aaron. Six and a one seven times for the teams. One, two, three, four, five, six, and seventh and final time after seven. We got the Jazz down to Mavs after seven. All right, Carl with the Jazz, Pistons and Wizards, Brian with the Knicks, Donald with the Nets, Carl with the Warriors, Dennis with the Heat, Anthony with the Nuggets, Carl with the Pelicans, Kevin with the Magic, Nick with the Thunder, Donald with the Pacers, Carl with the Sons, Donald with the Sixers, Nicholas S with the Rockets, Douglas with the Hornets, Donald with the Celtics, Carl with the Timberwolves, Nicholas with my Lakers and Donald with the Trailblazers, Ed with the Raptors, Nick Galvin with the Cavs, Mark with the Gris, Nick, Laspont-Mojo Clippers, Brian with the Hawks, Corey with the Spurs, Ed with the Kings, Donald with the Bucks, Mark with the Bulls, Aaron with the Dallas Mavericks. Let's alphabetize by a team if I could spit that word out. There you go. And we're gonna pause the video when we come back, we'll see if there's any trades, then the break. Stick around, we'll see you on the other side. All right, welcome back everybody. No deals were done, so this remains the same. Thanks everybody for getting in on it. Here's the final printout. And dual case break, we're doing two. Here's the first case right here, second case right back there. Good luck everybody. I don't think all of the, not all of these are graded, but I think most are autographed, at least autographed. I think you'll find one or two graded cards here and there. One of these boxes out of our inventory system. All right, and away we go. Thanks everyone for giving this a shot. Appreciate it. First one out of the gate is gonna be Bones Highland Rated Rookie Autograph. Denver Nuggets. That will be for Anthony. Next player is gonna be, nice, Rated Rookie Autograph on card auto, Davion Mitchell. Ed Sacramento Kings. Next is Hall Dominators Grant Hill. Pistons Edition. Five out of 10, nice. Detroit, Carl with the Pistons. Ooh, Clyde the Glide Drexler from Immaculate Basketball. Seven out of 49. Portland, Donald with the Trailblazers. I got for the Miami Heat, 69 out of 99. Freshman Fabrics, Jersey Nautto Tyler Hero. And when a hero comes along, Dennis with the Miami Heat. Lakers down by 10 to Phoenix. And 355 left, a decent amount of time left, but make some stops if they wanna get close. Speaking of the Lakers, Rising Stars Autograph from Spectra Basketball, Lonzo Ball. It's 39 out of 99. Nicholas with my Lakers, Nicholas S. How about some Rudy Gobert from NT Basketball? 59 out of 99. Carl with the Jazz. Some Hall Dominators, Dennis Rodman. To 49, that is 49 out of 49 for the Worm. And that goes to Doubles. That'll be for Mark. Ooh, and a graded card. What do we got here? PSA nine. Jonathan Kaminga, Playoff Ticket, Rookie Autograph, graded a nine from 2021 Contenders. 32 out of 99. Kings, that's gonna be, or Kings, Warriors, that's gonna be for Carl. Struggling a little bit, the Warriors, but I'm sure they'll figure it out. Patrick Beverly get ejected. All right, and we got Obi Toppin, Rookie, Jersey, and Autograph from Limited Basketball. Nice, who's got the New York Knicks? That's gonna be Brian Croft. But wait, there's more. We got another case. Good luck. Tyler, what's going on? How are ya? Rookie Ticket Autograph, Sadiq Bay. Pistons, Carl with Detroit. And we got some Kings, Tyrese Halliburton. 16 out of 199. With a piece of the basketball there, his Autograph, Kings edition. Going to Ed and Sacramento. Got a graded card. PSA nine. It's gonna be a Scotty Barnes. From 2021, Donneress. Donneress Choice, Scotty Barnes. Rated Rookie Auto, your reigning Rookie of the Year. Toronto, Ed with the Raptors. Donno, DNA. All right, next box is Fast Break Autograph. Julius Irving. Legend for the Sixers. Donald with Philadelphia. And nice Josh Giddy Rookie Autograph from Spectra Basketball. Aspiring Auto. For OKC, Nick Galvin. Thunder, 19 out of 99. Prince, how about some John Stockton? Old school jazz, going to Carl. Good luck, good luck, good luck. Nice stuff poppin' here. Hey, how about some Ray Allen? From Revolution Basketball. Donald with Milwaukee. 77 out of 100, Fractal Parallel. Three more to go. It's great significance Autograph, Dennis Rodman. Bulls, Mark with the Bulls. Two to go. Rookie Autograph, RJ Barrett. 75 out of 99 from Chronicles. That flux design. Brian Croft, New York Knicks. And last but not least is a graded card. PSA 10, it's Michael Porter Jr. From Donnery's Optic Basketball Green Parallel. That's pretty nice. Always good to get a PSA 10 in there as well. There you go, game. Another dual case break in the store. I was not keeping track of the hitless people, so let's do that now. This is for the hitless promo. All right, so Denver just hit. There you go, Anthony with that Michael Porter Jr. Bulls got a hit. Ray Allen, Bucks. John Stockton, Jazz. Josh Skiddy, OKC. Doctor, Sixers. Nice Scotty Barnes for Ed and the Raptors. Tyrese Halliburton, Sadiq Bay, Detroit. Got Obi Toppin, Knicks. John the Kaminga Warriors. RJ Barrett, Knicks, already got Knicks. Another Dennis Rodman, already got that. Rudy Gobert Jazz, got the Jazz. Lakers, Lonzo, Tyler Hiro for Dennis. Clyde the Glide for Portland. Another pistons at Grand Hill, that was pretty cool. Davion Mitchell Kings and Bones Highland for Denver. All right, now let's gather all these names. New dice, new list. Let's clear out those blank spots there. And let's randomize that list. Top two, we'll get those Donner's Optic basketball boxes, Asia edition after two for the hard way. One, two, three, and four. Congrats to Nick Stober and Aaron. Did not call your name. Both of you went hit list, but both of you have a sealed box going your way. Thanks for watching. Thanks for breaking with us. I'm Joe, and I'll see you next time for the next basketball break. Bye-bye.
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UCw4n7jezVHKzJJW7MykDu7Q
MacOS Terminal Command Guide: Finder, Desktop, Trackpad and More!
Ever wondered how to uncover those hidden terminal commands for your Mac? Dive into the goldmine that is MacOS-Defaults.com, a comprehensive guide filled with categorized commands for Finder, Desktop, Trackpad, Mission Control, and more! Visit MacOS Defaults Here: https://macos-defaults.com #macos #commands #mactips #mac #mactutorial #terminal #optimization #finder #macbook #apple #techtips #shorts
null
2023-10-26T19:00:50
2024-04-23T16:45:22
56
3KE1Ia42tww
How do you know what commands to use from the terminal those you know those defaults write commands that you use to change some of those settings that don't appear anywhere else? Somebody was asking like how do you find what those commands are? And Serab was like oh I use macOS-defaults.com. This website is like it's just got so many things and they are organized by category you've got ones for the finder ones for the desktop the trackpad mission control I like and then there's miscellaneous of course but just so many different things and you click on it and it'll tell you all these defaults write commands it's amazing I like so yeah I found out I was like oh wait a minute and then actually other listeners are like Dave Dave did you see this you got to include this on the show it's like yeah I agree
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UCWWg5HFC5z8pIGLZal8Jgpg
Main zehar peene pe majboor kyun hua | Unheard cry for help
अगर कोई मुझे एक मिनट सुन लेता तो मैं ...। आपकी अपनी जिंदगी भी एक मिनट में बदल सकती है, और आप किसी और की जिंदगी भी एक मिनट में बदल सकते हैं। I was going through a rough time and if I'd found a friend, a listener in that vulnerable moment, I wouldn't have taken that extreme step. Your own life can change in a minute; you can change someone's life in a minute as well. #robinsinghpf
[ "mental health", "mental health resources", "life story", "robin singh", "robin singh farm", "Robin Singh life story", "be a better listener relationships", "how to be a better friend", "how to help my friends", "how do I help my friend", "philosophy of life", "depression symptoms", "deal depression", "mental health awareness", "life", "happiness of life", "happiness", "family bonds", "friends", "robin singh peepal farm", "peepal farm story", "motivational video" ]
2020-07-28T07:28:54
2024-04-23T13:32:52
200
3K4NNY-f734
आज मैं आप से पने कुलिज फरस्टीर का एक वाक्किया शेर करना चाहूं बाद तो बडी नीजी है पर मैं आपको बाद मैं बतावूँँँँँ, मैं से सारवेजनिक कियू कर राए। मैं आपको बताया दा आमारे गर में बहुत जाडा कलेएश रहता था एक दिन गर में लगी है सर्से रहुठर होगया और मैं हैं इरादा बनाली एक भी आप मुझे जीना नहीं दुम मैं का गय बंभी आप माद्तिया करेंगे और मैं गर से नीचे उतर क्या टूटि मनजल पे गर अता दा था चार स्थीटी आंव दूर के नीचे गया तो गुच्सा बैसे हित शान्ध हो गया दुकान पे पूझाँ तो आप आप येख पेपझों लगा तो मुझे लगा गी आर बैगी से बात करनु ऐखजििसक � CHAHAF04ONHILF केतेःना है तिम यह जा ता की जो मेरे मासि श्करती है �亦िस तिस solutions को तोई सू nostalgic समज लेawl उन मुझे मरनेसे। और ॉग ले गेडिय00000000000000000000 N ॉपन तो ॉटॉटृगार त solemn तो भोखré एक था। में वो मउसना। � suburbs तुब इसे आप आप हैंकार कैली जिया जो भी आप मेरे पस कोई चारा था नहीं सुन्ने वाला मेरे पस कोई ता नहीं और गर में वापिस जाना चाता नहीं तो मैं दुकान वाले से पुचा कि बही आ मुझे थोड़ जेहर देदू तुब इसे आप आप हैंकार कैली जिया जो भी मेरे पस कोई चारा ता नहीं सुन्ने वाला मेरे पस कोई ता नहीं और गर में वापिस जाना चाता नहीं तो मैं दुकान वाले से पुचा कि बही आ मुझे थोड़ा जेहर देदू तुब बता दो तानी कि जेहर कैसा जिकता है कह अते होता है तो वर वाबबेगे बो उन की, भोरटर पख़ाडी मैं हेरान वाब बेगों कि आप ये ओर जो आज फ़स लो के लिये क्हेत नाशक बनाती नाशक बनाती तो बेगवन की बेदल में अगात ड़न मुझे समचन आहाय एक भी तो मैं करूँ कया तो मैं एई सोचा के थीके मैं इसे पी लेता हुँ इस के बाद मैं एक इस चए होतल मैं खाना खामगे अ फिर जागे वो में लिज़ी मग जन्गल लाई थागा आंगे बैद जाँँँँँंँँँ वाई मदग लिज़ में जंगली जान्वर मुझे खाजाईँगे, एंगेम सेट मैज तो मैंने बेगों शाकन तीएग एग मैंने दाख्सी लिएग और मैं मौरे होटल की तरा चला गया मौरे होटल दो बाँचा नहीं, रस्ते मैं बहुष हो गया टैक्सी वाला बिचाना और परेशान, उसने पुलिस कोईटिला दी पुलिस वालो ने में बिदाजी को बिलाया और जब दस दिन बाद मुझे होष आया, तो मैं आए यह नंगन जी अस्पिटल में जा, जब नहाँ पी मैं पैदाओ़। तो खेर, सभ लोग परेशान होए, मेरे भी हेट्च कापी ताम पी तक उसके बात ख़ाब रही और यह सब फोच चो है आवोट हो सकता दा अगर शाएद मुच्छे कोई एक मिनिट तो मिनिट बात कर लिएता तो बात मैंने ये सारवजनी किस निए गी कि देखी आजका लोग्दाून के विजा से बहुत लोग परेशान है तो क्लीनिकली दिप्रेस्ट भी नहीं है तो दिप्रेस्ट फील कर रहें तो अगर आपको कोई फोँन करता, आप जल्द भाजी में भी है तो किसी को एक तो मिनिट दे दीजी, आपको नहीं पता कोन, किस मनुस्तिती से फोँन कर रहा है शाएद किसी की जान बज्जाए
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UCeasbjVyx227l2ETO-xAssw
STEP 2 - 14 STEPS TO BECOME A BETTER HAIR CUTTER - STEP 2 - MOVING ONE SCISSOR BLADE
Sign up for my FREE Masterclass “Become a Better Haircutter in 7 Days” Here: https://www.freesaloneducation.com Shop Pro and Elite Scissors Here: https://freesaloneducation.com/collections/scissors Find out what Scissor is right for you. Take the quiz https://freesaloneducation.com/pages/find-the-right-scissor-for-you Purchase a TriRazor Here: https://freesaloneducation.com/collections/trirazor Sign up for my FREE Masterclass “Become a Better Haircutter in 7 Days” Here: https://www.freesaloneducation.com Shop Pro and Elite Scissors Here: https://freesaloneducation.com/collections/scissors Purchase My Favorite Combs Here: http://bit.ly/favoritecombs​
[ "gratitude", "education", "gratitude education", "salon", "salon gratitude", "matt beck", "matt", "beck", "thaddeus boland", "barrett stillitano", "drea boland", "brian haire", "hair", "hair cutting", "haircutter", "cut", "New Hope", "PA", "Bucks county", "philadelphia", "modern", "salon education", "academy", "color", "blonde", "red", "brown", "independent education", "tutorial", "how to", "how-to", "how", "foil", "free", "full cut videos", "full length", "trend", "dry cutting", "dry", "blow dry", "finger waves", "side bun", "bun", "prom hair", "wedding hair", "formal", "up-do" ]
2014-01-17T06:39:54
2024-02-14T18:46:15
214
3KgPalJpOZs
Hey guys, Matt Beck, three saloneducation.com, I'm here with tip number two and this tip is all about how to use the scissor. So I want to show you a little exercise that I like to do that helps me just move the one blade. That's the key thing that you've got to learn after you know what your comb is about. You know what your scissors are all about. You've got to know how to work this thing before you even touch hair. So let's take it out. What I like to do is just hold it in my hand nice and firm. Let go of my thumb so I keep the scissor steady. As soon as I can keep that scissor steady and I got the grip on there. So basically what I'm doing is pushing down with my pinky. That's what this thing's for. A lot of people don't know that. Push that down and push it up against my pointer finger. So that's going to keep it nice and steady. Then what I'm going to do is flip my hand over and I can add my thumb in and just move the one blade. So once I get that, this is a great exercise for you to do just sitting in front of the TV. Any where that you are. Stay away from the kids. But just work your scissor. Move that one thumb and work it. I honestly when I was in beauty school, I bought a huge pair of metal scissors that I would use and I would just sit on the couch because I didn't want to ruin my good scissors. So I would sit on the couch with these big metal scissors almost like I was doing a workout. But that's what builds up the muscle. It's a muscle memory that you got to build up in your hand. And then as soon as you have that, it's hard to even cut differently. So just work on moving that one blade and practice it in different ways. So there's going to be different situations on top of your hand like this. There's going to be a palm to palm and then cutting, point cutting. So all these different ways. So practice that, palm it. Get your comb in your hand. Work through here. So comb, cut, comb, cut. Get good at that. If you can't do this quickly, then you're not going to be able to cut hair quickly, efficiently. And it's not going to look like it flows together. So if you want to get great at hair cutting, you want to really work on these fine little details. This is what makes you great at hair cutting is practicing these little things. And then we need to understand it. So step by step, work through it. Practice all these different movements and you'll be good to go. We'll talk about point cutting and all of that in a different video. But just practice the movement of it and make sure that you're only moving that one blade as you cut hair. Thank you guys. I hope you enjoyed this tip. Subscribe to us on YouTube so you can follow each and every tip that we create. And we'll see you guys on the next video. Thanks.
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UC8JyMQzK9PddVZwIOpuozOw
Salvation lost because of demons #shorts
#shorts Demons took my salvation.
null
2023-01-10T17:40:00
2024-02-13T18:54:01
42
3kmMVa5o48U
There are people that say that Christians can have demons and that these demons can cause all sorts of problems in their lives, all sorts of manifestations that become sin, lying, lust, anger, envy, outward manifestations such as fits of wrath and fighting and things like that, even sexual issues and those are the problems of a demon. They also believe that you can lose your salvation. So the obvious conclusion that a demon can come into your life cause you to sin and then you lose your salvation. My question to those folks that believe that, does that make sense? Is it true that a demon can cause you to lose your salvation? Well, the obvious answer for us that read the Bible is no. But for them, please answer that question.
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झारखंड विधानसभा चुनाव, सीएए का विरोध जारी और अन्य ख़बरें
न्यूज़क्लिक के डेली राउंड अप में हम आपके लिए लेकर आए हैं देश और दुनिया की अहम ख़बरें। आज के एपिसोड में हम बात करेंगे झारखंड के चुनावी नतीजे, देश भर नागरिकता क़ानून का विरोध और अन्य ख़बरों के बारे में। अंतर्राष्ट्रीय ख़बरों में हमारी नज़र रहेगी अफ़ग़ानिस्तान के चुनाव और अन्य ख़बरों पर। #JharkhandElections #ProtestAgainstCAA #NRC #Jamia #Afghanistan
[ "Jharkhand Elections", "Assembly Elections", "JMM", "JVM", "AAJSU", "INC", "IND", "CPIM(ML)(L)", "Congress", "NRC", "Protests Against CAA", "CAA", "Amit Shah", "Modi 2.0", "Ministry of Home Affairs", "Modi Rally", "Concentration Camps", "Assam", "BJP", "RSS", "Inflation", "GDP", "5 Trillion Economy", "Elections 2019", "Indian Economy", "Economy Crisis", "Jamia", "UP Police", "Delhi Police", "Sadaf Zafar", "Police Arrests" ]
2019-12-23T13:36:54
2024-04-22T18:36:12
1,264
3KHKe7o384o
نیوسلک کے ڈیلی روانڈ اپ میں آپ کا سواجت ہے میرا نام ہے سپتیم سب سے پہلے نظر ڈالتے ہیں آج کی سورخیوں پر جھارکھن چناؤ میں کنگریز اور جھارکھن مکتی مورچہ گڈبندن کی سرکار بنی لگبک تیہ ہو چکی ہے CAA کے ویرود میں راجگھاڑ پر کنگریز کا اجدھرنا اور CAA ویرود میں اتر پردش کی خانون ویوصدہ پر اٹھ رہے ہیں گمبیر سوال اشرف گھنی دوسری بار چنے گا افغانستان کی راسترپتی اسرائل دوارہ فلسٹین میں کیے جا رہے یود اپرادوں کی جانچ کرے گا انٹرنیسٹر کرمینل کورٹ پہلی خبر ہے جھارکھن سے جھارکھن میں ہوا ویدان سبہ چناؤوں کے پر انام اب لگبک ساف ہو گئے ہیں پشلے پار سالوں سے ستہ پر قابلز بی جیپی اب ستہ سے بہار ہوتی نظر آ رہی ہے اور یہ اولٹ پھر اتنا بڑا ہے کہ نوچرنوں کی متگرنا تھی اس کے بعد بھاچپا کے ودروحی ومیدوار سریو رائے سے جمشد پور پورو سیٹ پر مکہ منتری رگو ارداز بھی پیچھے چل رہے ہیں پانچ پیتالیس تک کے رجانوں کی انسار کل کل کیاسی سیٹوں میں سے بھاچپا ستائی سیٹوں پر آگے ہے جھارکھن مکتی مورچہ جو ہے وہ انتیس سیٹوں پر آگے ہے کنگریس چودہ سیٹوں پر آگے ہے یعنی کنگریس اور جھارکھن مکتی مورچہ کے گتبندن کو بیالی سیٹے ملتی دکھ رہی ہیں جس کا مطلب صاف ہے کہ اس گنبدنر کی سرکار بنے گی اور ہیمن سورین جھارکھن کے نئے مکہ منتری ہوں گے جھارکھن چھوناو کے نتیجوں پر ہمارے ساتھی امید سنگ اور ورشت پترکار ارمیلیش نے بات چیت کی ہے آئیے سنتے ہیں کہ ان کا اس پر کیا کہنا ہے چھوناو میں جو مدد اصل تھے ان پر کتنی وٹنگ ہوئی یہ مجھے نہیں پتا ہے لیکن جو وہوٹ کٹنے کے لیے تو مطلب تھے مددے جس ایک بھرشتا چار کا مددہ تھا کسانوں کی بہت سائی سمجھے آئے تھے بھمی ادھگرھن کانون تھا بیروزگاری تھی آیوی آشانوں کی عدکار کا ماملہ تھا پتھل گڑی تھا بھوک سے موت تھی لنچنگ تھا یہ سارے مدد جو دکتے تھے ہمیں کہ یہ مدد ہیں یہاں پر یہاں پر یہاں پر سائی سمجھے آئے ہیں پر وہاں کے جو لوکل لوک تھے بھی کہتے تھے کہ ان مدنوں پر وٹ نہیں ملتا ہے اجدنہ جانتے ہیں لیکن یہ وٹ کٹنے کے لیے تو مطلب کمس کا مددہ تھے اگر یہ سارے مدنیں ہم جو لے ہیں تو یہ وٹ کٹنگیں بہت سارے مدد ہوتے ہیں چھوناو میں یہ بات بالکل صحیح انہوں نے کہا ہے انہوں نے گنایا اور جتنے مدے امیت نے گنایا ہے وہ سارے کے سارے جاہر کند میں واقعی بہت مہت پر مدے ہیں لیکن یہ جو مدے ہم گناتے ہیں یہ درسل ہمارے ویسلیشن میں ایک چیرنلیسٹ کے طور پہ آتے ہیں سوسل جو انلیسٹ ہیں پلٹیکر انلیسٹ ہیں ان کی بیاقہوں میں آتے ہیں لیکھوں میں کتابوں میں ٹیلیویزن چیرنو کی جو دیبیٹ سے اس میں آتے ہیں اور یہ بہت ضروری چیزیں ہے سمجھ کو سمجھ داری کا وکاست کرنے میں لوگوں کو جانکاری بڑھانے میں ایک طرح کا امپورمنٹ ہوتا ہے نولیسٹ کا لوگوں کو لیکن جو عام آدمی ہے وہ ان مدوں کی فہرشت لے کر اپنے گلے میں نہیں گھومتا کہ کس کو پسنٹ کرتے ہیں کس کو نہیں پسنٹ کرتے ہیں وہ اچانک جو ہے election میں کوئی چیز کلک کرتی ہے ہر election میں کوئی ایک ایسا مدہ آ جاتا ہے لوگوں کے سامنے 50 مدوں کی بیچ میں لگتا ہے اس کو جانا چاہیے اس کو آنا چاہیے یہ بڑا مہد کن ہوتا ہے جیادہ تر جو نرائد چناؤ ہوتے ہیں اس میں یہی ہوتا ہے آپ گن لیجے ساری election کو خاص کر پیچھلے بیس ورسوں کے election کو جتنے کسی election ہیں اس میں آپ گن لیجے کیا تاران ہے کہ لوگ اچانت جو ہے اپنا فیصلہ بلد دیتے ہیں بھارتی جنتہ پارٹی جیسی طاقتور پارٹی اتنی آگنائیس پیسے کے ماملے میں ویشو کی سب سے دھنی پارٹی سوئیم امیشاہ جی کہتے ہیں کہ وہ ویشو میں سب سے بڑی پارٹی ہیں تو جاہرہ پیسے میں بھی کافی ہوں گے کیونکہ جتنا پیسہ انہوں کے پاس دکھتا ہے میرے پاس کوئی ماثیمٹیکل حصاب نہیں ہے لیکن جو دکھتا ہے وہ بہت ہے ایک گیارہ ایک گیارہ ہیلیکپٹر ایک ایک کلاکے ایک ایک فیض میں گھوم رہے تھے ان کے جبکہ جو اپویشن تھا اس کے پاس ایک یا دو ہیلیکپٹر ہوتے تھے بڑی مشکل سے تو اتنے طاقتورنے تھا موڈی جی بھاشن کرتے تھے بڑی بڑی ریلیوں میں حالا کی اس بر سکرسیاں کھالی راتے تھے امیشاہ جی دبنگ پھلو اتنے پورفل آدمی گری من تو آخر اس بار ایک ہیمن سورن میں وہ کیا ایسی طاقت آ گئی کہ موڈی جیسا آدمی امیشاہ جیسا آدمی یہ نس پربھاوی ہو گئے ان کے پاس اتنی شمطہ نہیں تھی کہ اس اٹریکشن کو وہ کم کر سکیں تو مجھے ایسا لکھتا ہے وہ سب سے بڑی بات تھی گوبرننس اتنی خراب سرکار چلائی ہے رگبرت داس جی نے کہ لوگوں کو لگا کہ بھائی پانس سال آپ کو پورا بہمت ہو گیا تھا سیتیس آپ پائے تھے لیکن آپ نے جوڑ جار کر سب تو بہمت کرا گیا تھا آپ چاہتے تو بہت اچھا کام کر سکتے تھے آپ نے سارے گلت کام کیا آپ نے cnt ایک پر ایک بہتی واحیات فیصلہ کیا جنتہ کے دباو میں آپ اس کو اسٹرک کیا اس کو روکے آپ پتل گری ماملے میں دس ہزار لوگوں کو دال دینا جیل میں پہمال کی بات ہے اس کے علاوہ آپ کی ماملے اتھو پے تو یہ جو چیزیں تھی اور دوسرا ایگو اتنے گھمندی اتنی پوری شخصیت جو ہے لوگوں میں گئی کہ یہ بہت گھمندی آدمی ہے دیکھے بہت سادحان پریبار سے آئے بہتی obc بیگرونٹ کے ہیں لیکن وہ مہارجہ کی طرف ہیپ کرتے تھے تو یہ سب کارون مجھے لگتا ہے اور موڈی امیشہ کا کوئی پرباو عام طور پہ مداتوں پر نہیں پڑا دیش بھر میں ناگرکتہ سنشو دن قانون کا ورود لگاتار جاری ہے اسی سلسلے میں آج دلی کے راجگھاٹ پر کونگریس کے نیتہ دھرنے پر بیٹھا ہے کونگریس کے نیتہ انھیں ناگرکتہ قانون کی مخالفت کرتے ہوئے یہ مانکی ہے کہ اس قانون کو واپس لیا جائے آج دھرنے میں کونگریس کے بڑے نیتہ جیسے سنیا گاندی پریانکہ گاندی منموہن سنگ راہول گاندی سمے تین راجیوں کے مکہ منتری بھی شامل رہے تو پہر میں راہول گاندی منموہن سنگ اور سنیا گاندی نے سمیدان کی پرستانہ کو پڑھا اور موڈی سرکار کی نفرت کی راجنیتی پر بھی حملہ کیا آج کے از دھرنے پر بات کرنے کے لیے ہمارے ساتھ موجود ہمارے ساتھی روی کوشل روی آپ کا سواجت ہے آپ نے جو کونگریس کا دھرنہ تھا اس میں آپ گئے آپ نے کور کیا تو کیا چیزیں آپ کو دیکھنے کو ملی ہمارے درشوں کو بتائیں؟ دیکھے ساتھ ہم دو چیز میں جو کہوں تو جو ہم نے الگر راجیوں سے جو لوگ آئے تھے انتے بات کی لوگوں میں بے چینی ہے بے چینی کا اختر یہ ہے کہ اگر میں آپ کو پہلی چیز باتا ہوں ہم جھارکن کے ایک وقتی سے بلے اس نے کہا کہ بیا وہ کمری پر بات نہیں کیا اس نے لیکن انہوں نے بتا ہے کہ ہمارے ایہا پہ جو ہے ابھی استیتی ایسی ہو گئی ہے کہ ادھار سینٹرس پے رات کو دو بجے سے لائن لگنی سور ہو جاتی ہے اور نام تیک کرانے کے لیے بلے ہی وہ سینٹرس جو ہے اٹھ بجے کھلے یا نوبجے دس بجے جندہ بجے وہ کھلنا ہے اس طریقی کے استیتی ہے ہم نے دوسری مجھلہ سے بات کی انہوں نے کہا کہ ہم نے پہلے نوٹ بندی ہے وہ دیکھی کئی لوگ جو ہے اس طریقے سے پرسان ہوئے اب دو بارہ کوشش کیا ایہا کی جا رہے کہ ہمیں دو بارہ لائنوں میں کھلاک کیا جائے گا اور پھر جو ہمیں کاغل دکانے ہوں گے یہ پوری استیتی ہے دوسرا میرا یہ ایک چھوٹا سوال ہے کہ جو کنگریس بھی مخر ہو کر اس کے خلاف بول رہی ہے پہلے بھی بولتی رہی ہے تو ابھی جو اگر ہم راجنی تک طور پر بات کریں تو کیا کنگریس کو اس چیز کا کوئی فائدہ ملتا ہوا آپ کو نظر آ رہا ہے یہ ایک انٹرپسنگ جوال ہے اور جارگنٹ سے لوگ آئے تھے میں نے انہوں نے پوچھا کہ کیا آپ کو لگتا ہے کسی ایہا ہو رہنا ہوسی جو ہے اس نے کوئی جو ہے بھوم کا آج جو ریجلٹس آئے ہیں اس میں پلے کی ہو گئی انہوں نے کہا کہ سپلٹ طور پر جو ہے ایک تو جو ہے ٹریبلز کا ایک گسہ تھا ہی جو ہم نے دیکھا کہ جو ہے دس سجار لوگوں کو اوپر سیڈیشن کا پورا چار تھا اساری چیز تھی اس کے علاوہ اس کے علاوہ جو ہے لوگ یہ سافت طور پر کہہ رہے ہیں کہ سی ایہ اور نارسی کی وجہ سے جو ہے پورا جو کیوس فیلہ ہے اس کا جو ہے اثر پڑا ہے اور اثر جو ہے وہ کافی جو ہے کہوں کی ویاپک ہے تو یہ ایک مطلب کہیں کہ جو ہے اثر پڑا ہے لیکن ستم اس میں جو ساری چیز دیکھنے والی ہے اور جو مجھے لگتا ہے کہ ہمیں تھوڑا سا مجھنا چاہیے کنگرس نے ابھی بھی ان پیر کو لیکے اپنی ستتی جو ہے وہ سپاست نہیں کی ہے نیسٹل پوپلیشن رجسٹر کو لیکے وہ سپاست نہیں کی ہے کنگرس کے گارے کرتا کہہ رہے تھے کہ ستتی سپاست ہوگی کسی دنوں میں لیکن ابھی کنگرس کو بتانا ہوگا کہ جو ہے بنگال نے جو ہے ان پیر پے کام روک دیا ہے کیرل نے جو ہے افشلی روک دیا ہے جو کنگرس جن رجو میں کیا وہاں پر ان پیر جو ہے اس پے جو ہے کام روک روکے گا تو کہ جو ہے ایک ابریل سے جو ہے وہ پھر لگو کرنے جا رہے ہیں تو یہ ستی ہے شکریہ روی آپ کا شاہر جو نہیں گئی تو یہ تھے روی کوشل یہ بتا رہے تھے کہ کنگرس جو ہے اس کو اپنی ان پیر پر جو ہے اپنی ستتی صاف کرنی پڑے گی تاکہ لوگوں کو اس کے بارے میں چیزیں پتا چل پائیں آپ کو بتا دیں کہ سیئے ویروت کے چلتے دلی میں بھی اندولن جاری ہے ان ویروت پردرشنوں کے دولان پلس نے دیش بھر میں کئی ساماہجی کارکاریوں اور پردرشن کاریوں کو گرفتار کیا ہے حراست میں لیا ہے اسی سلسلے میں اسم میں بھی جو ویروت پردرشن لگاتار چل رہے ہیں اس میں اکھیل گوگوی جوکہ ایک ساماہجی کارکارتا ہے ڈی ایکٹیوست ہیں ان کو بھی حراست میں لیا گیا ہے اور آج ہی اسم بھوان پر جو دلی میں ہے اس کے خلاف لوگوں نے پردرشن کیا ہے اور مانکی کہ اکھیل گوگوی کو جل سے جل رہا کیا جائے اور اس کے بھی مانکی گئی کہ C A N R C N P R جو ہے اس پر جو چیزیں چل رہی ہیں ان کو واپس لیا جائے اور قانون کو ٹیک کیا جائے تو اسم بھوان پر ہوئے ان پردرشنوں میں بات کرنے کے لیے ہمارے ساتھ موجود ہیں سومدھا سومدھا آپ کا سواجت ہے تو جو اسم بھوان پر آج پردرشن ہوئے اس مرہ آپ گئی تو دو چیزیں ہے میں آپ سے پوچھوں گا ایک تو یہ کہ جو پردرشن کر رہے تھے لوگ ان کی مانگیں کہ ساماہجی کارکارتا ہے اکھیل گوگوی جیسے لوگوں کو رہا ہی کی مانگ اور دوسرا جو پلس کا جو روئیہ رہا ان دونوں پر آگر آپ بات کر سکے سب سے پہلے یہ سمجھنے کی ضرورت ہے کہ ناگرکتہ شنشوزن بل جو کہ اب ایکٹ پن چکا ہے اسام میں اس کی خلاف لگاتار پرٹیس چل رہے ہیں اسی قری میں کئی لوگوں کی وہاں پر گرفتاری ہوئی ہے جن میں ایک بڑا نام اکھیل گوگوی کا ہے اکھیل گوگوی وہاں کے آرٹی آئی ایکٹویسٹ ہے وہ کسانوں کے کافی بڑے لیڈر بھی ہے تو انہیں نیائے خیراصت میں بیس تاریق سے انہیں ایک حاؤ سرست میں رکھا گیا ہے جس کی خلاف ان کی ما بھی تین دنوں سے ہنگر سٹرائک پر ہے ایک کنٹنویسٹ اندولن ان کی رہائی کے لے چل رہا ہے انھوں نے اپنے ایک سٹیٹمنٹ جو جاری کیا انہوں نے یہ بھی کہا کہ انہیں وہاں پر ٹوٹشر کیا چاہا رہا ہے تو اس طرح کی دیٹیل جب سے بحار آئی ہیں تو دلی میں بھی اور دیش کیا نشہروں میں ان کی رہائی کے لے ایک بڑا پردرشن اور اندولن چل رہا ہے جہاں تک کی پولیس کا رویہ رہا تو سبے سے دلی میں دو بڑے پردرشن ہوئے جیسے کی اتر پردش بہن کے سامنے ایک پردرشن ہوئا جو کی up میں law and order کی سیٹویشن کے بارے میں تھا اور دوسرہ پردرشن تھا آسام بہن پر جو ہم نے پولیس کا رویہ دیکھا وہ ایک پٹن دکھا رہا ہے وہ پٹن یہ ہے کہ دھارہ ایک سو چوالس جو کی دلی میں کئی لاکو میں لگائی گئی ہے اس کا پولیس کیس طرح سے دوروپیوگ کر رہی ہے جن پردرشن کاریوں سے ہم ملے وہ اکیلے آئے تھے کچھ لوگ دو لوگ ایک ساتھ آئے تھے کئی لوگ صرف اکیلے وہاں پر کھڑے ہو کے شانتی پون پردرشن کرنے کی کوشش کر رہے تھے جب کی وہ نارے بھی نہیں لگا رہے تھے انہیں کافی force کے ساتھ اٹھایا گیا انہیں بسوں میں دالا گیا اور کچھ سمیطہ کن کے پاس یہ بھی جانکاری نہیں تھی کہ انہیں کھاں لے کے جایا جا رہا ہے کئی پردرشن کاری ایسے تھے جن پتا بھی نہیں تھا کہ دھارا ایک سو چاوالیس وہاں پر لاغو ہے جس کے تہے تو انہیں وہاں نہیں جانا چاہیے یا پھر ایسا کچھ کرنے سے ان کے لیے کیا کونسیکوانسز ہوں گے کئی لوگ جانتے بھی نہیں تھے اور جہاں تک پولیس کی روائے کی بات اپنے کی سب سے ضروری چیز ہے کہ ہم نے پولیس سے بھی جانچ کرنے کی کوشش کیا یا پھر دھارا ایک سو چاوالیس جو لگائی گئی ہے کیا ان کے پاس کچھ رٹن اوڈرز ہے یا انہوں نے لوگوں کو بتایا گئے کہ یہاں پر دھارا ایک سو چاوالیس لگی ہے اس لئے آپ یہاں نہیں آئے تو دونوں چیزوں پر پولیس کے پاس کوئی توس جواب نہیں تھا اور اشام بہن میں بہت ہی فوز کے ساتھ لوگوں کو لے جایا گیا اس کے بعد شام تک ہم نے دیکھا کہ کافی پردرشن کاری جو ہے ابھی تک مندر مارک پولیس تھانے میں ہے اور لیگل سپورٹ انہیں وہاں پر مل رہا ہے لیکن دھارا ایک سو چاوالیس کا کافی سٹر پر دوروپیوگ کیا گیا شکریہ اسمدہ ماسہ جوڑنے کے لیے تو یہ تھی اسمدہ ہمارے ساتھ جنہوں نے بتایا کہ دلی پولیس جو ہے وہ دھارا ایک سو چاوالیس کا دوروپیوگ کر رہی ہے دلی میں لوگوں کو گرفتار کرنے کے جو پرکریہ ہے اس میں اسم بہن پر ہوئے ان پردرشنوں کی ایک گراونڈ رپورٹ ہے نیوس کلکوان نے وہاں پر کور کیا ہے اس کو آئیے دیکھتے ہیں اس میں...! ناقریقتا قانون کو لیکر دیش بھر میں جاری ویڈیوٹ پردرشنوں کے دوران اتھر پردیش میں پولیス کی براشتہ اور اس کے ذلم کا علاگی چہرا نظر آرہا ہے اتھر پردیش میں جگہ جگہ پر ہوئی ہی ہندوبا ہوں اٹھر پردرشنوں کے دوران اٹھر پردرشنوں کے دوران پولیس کی بربرتہ اور اس کے ظلم کا لگی چہرہ نظر آ رہا ہے اٹھر پردرشن میں جگہ جگہ پر ہوئی ہنسا میں پولیس کی جوابی کاریوائی بہت سخت رہی ہے لہذا ان پردرشنوں کے دوران سولہ لوگوں کی موت ہو چکی ہے ایک رپورٹ کے مطابق سولہ میں سے چودہ لوگوں کی جان گولی لگنے سے گئی ہے یوپی پولیس دوارہ کی گئی ہنسا کی ویڈیو سارہ دیش دیکھ رہا ہے لیکن ویڈبنہ تو یہ ہے کہ بیجے پی اور یوپی پولیس دونوں ہی یہ کہہ رہے ہیں کہ پولیس نے گولی چلائی ہی نہیں یوپی پولیس دوارہ گرفتار کیئے گئے لوگوں میں لکھنو کی ساماجی کارکرتہ صدف جافر بھی شامل ہیں جنہیں لکھنو میں گرفتار کیا گیا ہے ان کی بہن نے بتایا ہے کہ صدف جافر کو پولیس نے بیرہمی سے پیٹا ہے اور ان سے خون بھی نکل رہا تھا جب وہ ان سے ملی تھی گولی لگنے سے ہوئی موتوں میں سبھی مرنے والوں کی عمر جو ہے وہ پیتیس سال ہے یا اس سے کم ہے اس کے علاوہ یوپی پولیس نے داوہ کیا ہے کہ مرنے والوں کی لاشے ان کے پریوار تک پہنچا دی گئی ہیں لیکن پریوار والوں کا کہنا یہ ہے کہ انھیں ابھی تک لاشے نہیں ملی ہیں اٹھر پردیش کے مکہ منتری پولیس والوں نے بیشرمی سے ایسے بیان دیئے ہیں جس میں پردرشن کاریوں کو سیدے طور پر دھمکایا گیا ہے ان پر ہوئی انسائیں ہو رہی ہیں وہ شاید اسی کا حاصل ہیں اب تک اٹھر پردیش پولیس نے اٹھ سو سے زیادہ پردرشن کاریوں کو گرفتار کیا ہے گرفتار کیے جا رہا ہے لوگوں کو مارا جا رہا ہے اس کے بھی سبوت سامنے ہیں حالی میں اخبار دا ہندو کے رپورٹر عمار راشد نے بیان دیا تھا کہ لکھنو پولیس نے انہیں حراست میں لیا تھا اور ان کی دار ہی نوچنے کی دھمکی دیتی اٹھر پردیش پولیس کی اس حنصہ کے بیچ پشچمی اٹھر پردیش کے نواسیوں میں بھی دیشت پھیلی ہوئی ہے پولیس لگاتار ان علاقوں میں مسلم گھروں میں گھس رہی ہے اور لوگوں کو مار رہی ہے مہلاوں کے ساتھ بتمیزی کر رہی ہے لوگوں کا کہنا ہے کہ اکیلے مظفر نگر میں 208 لوگوں کو گرفتار کیا جا چکا ہے اور اب پولیس انہیں چھوڑنے کے لئے لاکھوں روپے کی مانک کر رہی ہے اٹھر پردیش پولیس دوارہ کی جہرہی ہنسا لوگوں کی گرفتاری کے ویرود میں آج دلی میں اٹھر پردیش بہون پر لوگ جمع بھی ہوئے اور اس کے خلاف ویرور پردرشن بھی کیئے راشتیہ خبروں میں آج کے لیے اتنا ہی انتراشتیہ خبروں کے لیے ہمارے پاس پہلی خبرہ افغانستان سے جوڑی ہوئی اشرف غنی دوسری بار افغانستان کے راشترپتی چنے گئے ہیں آپ کو بتا دیں کہ افغانستان کے ورتمان راشترپتی اسی سال ستمبر 28 کو ہوئے چناؤوں سے دوارہ راشترپتی چنے گئے ہیں اور رویوار دسمبر 22 کو جو پراتھمک چناؤ کے نتیجے گھوشیت ہوئے ان کے انسار ان کو 50 پردیشت سے زیادہ مت ملے ہیں حالا کہ ابھی یہ انتیم پرینام نہیں ہیں غنی کے مقق پرتیدندی جو عبداللہ عبداللہ نے ان چناؤ نتیجوں کو چناؤ تی دینے کی گوشنہ کی ہے اس بارے میں ہمارے ساتھ بات کرنے کے لیے موجود ہیں پیپلس دسپیچ کے عبداللہ عبداللہ آپ کا سواجت ہے تو افغانستان میں یہ جو بھی ہوا ہے اور چناؤی پرکریابی جاری ہی ہے اور اس کو چناؤ تی دینے کی بھی بات ہو رہی ہے اس پر آپ پورا بتائیے کہ آپ کا کیا کہنا ہے جیسا کی کئی بار ہوا ہے کہ افغانستان میں چناؤ اورزنلی اپریل میں ہونے تھے اپریل میں نہیں ہو پایا کیونکی وہاں پہ تالیبان کو لے کر ایک یدہ چل رہا ہے تالیبان اور سرکار کے بیچ میں اور اس قارن سے استیتیس صاف نہیں تھی پھر بھی چناؤ اور اس کے باوجود بھی چناؤ کرانے کی پرکریاب سروع ہوئی فائنلی چناؤ ہوئے سپتیمبر میں اس چناؤ میں صرف بیس پرتیست لوگوں نے vote دالا یہ اب تک کہ جو پوست تالیبان چناؤ ہے اس میں سے سب سے کم پرتیست مدان ہے ابھی تک چناؤ میں 2004 میں جو پہلے پرسدنشل چناؤ ہوئے تھے اس کے بعد سے جو چناؤ ہے اور اس میں سب سے کم پرتیست لوگوں نے vote دالا اس کے باوجود بھی جو result آنے تھے اکتوبر میں آنے تھے اورزنلی لیکن وہ result آئے نہیں اکتوبر میں اور تین منے لگ گئے اور جو finally جب result یہ انٹرم result ہے اس کو a preliminary result کہا جاتا ہے وہاں کے چناؤ کانون کیا نصار انٹرم اس لے کیونکی اگر کسی پتی دوندی کو لگے کہ چناؤ میں گربڑی ہوئی ہے تو وہ اس کے خلاف کمپلین کر سکتے اس کو چیلنج کر سکتا ہے جس کا اپ نے جکر کیا کہ عبداللہ عبداللہ نے کہا ہے کہ یہ چناؤ میں دھاندلی ہوئی ہے اور اس دھاندلی کے خلاف اپیل کیا جائے گا تو جو اپیل ہوگا اپیلوں کے سنوائی ختم ہونے کے بعد ہی final result گھوزیت کیا جائے گا تو ہو سکتا ہے کہ کچھ پریورت انہجے سے 2014 کے چناؤ میں last جو چناؤ ہوتے جس میں اشرم گھانی پہلی بار چنے گئے تھے اس میں بھی عبداللہ عبداللہ مقپر تدوانی تھے انہوں نے کمپلین کیا کہ دھان لیا ہوئی ہے چناؤ میں اس کے بعد سے کمپرمائیس فرمولا دیولپٹ کیا گیا جس کے تحت عبداللہ عبداللہ کو چیف ایک نیا پوست کریٹ کیا گیا اس بھر بھی ایسا ہوگا کی نہیں کہنا مشکل ہے شکریہ عبداللہ ہم سے بات کرنے کے لیے تو یہ تھے عبداللہ جو پتارے تھے کہ افغانستان کے جو چناؤی جو محال اس کی جو اصلیت ہے وہ کیا ہے اگلی خبر ہمارے پاس فلسٹین کے بارے میں ہے ہیگ میں اس تد انٹرنیشنل کرمینل کورٹ یعنی آئیسی سی نے دسمبر بیس کو شکروار کو فلسٹین میں اسرائل دوارہ کیے جا رہے یود عبرادوں کی ہے فلسٹین کے غازہ ویست بینگ اور پوروی جیروسلیم انیس سو سر سٹ سے عزرائل کے قبضے میں ہیں عزرائل لگ بھگ روز ہی ان علاقوں میں رہنے والے عام فلسٹینیوں کے خلاف اللگ اللگ طرح کے عبرادوں کو انجان دیتا ہے آئیسیسی کی مکھ پروزیکیوٹر فیٹو بن سوڈا نے کہا ہے کہ فلسٹین میں عزرائل دوارہ کیے جا رہے یود عبرادوں جو اس کی جانچ ہے اس کی ساری پرسطیہ ان کے پاس ہے بینسوڈا کے انسار ویست بینگ غازہ اور پوروی جیروسلیم میں یود عبراد ہو رہے ہیں اور اس کو ماننے کا کوئی کارن نہیں ہے کہ جانچ سے نیائے نہیں استحپت ہو گا آپ کو بتا دیں کہ 2014 میں عزرائل دوارہ غازہ پے کیے حملے جس میں 221 فلسٹینیوں کی جان گئی تھی کے بعد آئیسیسی نے عزرائل کے خلاف یود عبرادوں کی پرابتمیق جانچ شروع کی تھی ان حملوں میں زیادتر فلسٹین کے عام ناگریکوں کی آج کے دلی روانڈ اپنے بس اتنا ہی باقی حبروں کے لیے آپ ہماری ویبسائٹ 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Biochar from Grapevine Pruning Residues as an Efficient Adsorbent of Polyphenolic Com... | RTCL.TV
### Keywords ### #adsorption #biomassvalorization #phytochemicals #polarity #pyrolysis #RTCLTV #shorts ### Article Attribution ### Title: Biochar from Grapevine Pruning Residues as an Efficient Adsorbent of Polyphenolic Compounds Authors: Melissa Prelac, Igor Palčić, Danko Cvitan, Dominik Anđelini, Maja Repajić, Josip Ćurko, Tvrtko Karlo Kovačević, Smiljana Goreta Ban, Zoran Užila, Dean Ban ,and Nikola Major Publisher: MDPI AG DOI: 10.3390/ma16134716 DOAJ URL: https://doaj.org/article/10b69f10cd95439bb58484f6ef9b586b Source URL: https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/16/13/4716 ### Image Attribution ### We used stable diffusion to programmatically generate the background images. Viewer discretion is advised. ### Channels ### YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@stemrtcltv Odysee Channel: https://odysee.com/@stem_rtcl_tv ### Video Timestamps ### 0:00:00 - Summary 0:00:21 - Title 0:00:28 - End
[ "RTCLTV", "adsorption", "biomass valorization", "phytochemicals", "polarity", "pyrolysis", "shorts" ]
2023-10-15T22:03:27
2024-04-23T23:55:35
29
3KkJJOjXGJA
Biochar, a type of charcoal made from agricultural waste, has been investigated as a way to reduce the environmental impact of grapevine pruning residue. It has been found to have high affinity for low-polar compounds such as caféic acid, galic acid, and olurapine, making it a promising material for recovering these compounds from grapevine pruning residue. This article was authored by Melissa Prilak, Igor Palsik, Danko Kvitten, and others.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KkJJOjXGJA", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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September 7th, Trade What You See With Larry Pesavento on TFNN- 2021
With over 150 years of combined trading experience, TFNN is the absolute authority in Technical Market Analysis. Join our hosts EVERY TRADING DAY from 9:00AM until 4:00PM ET for LIVE market updates, chart analysis, and trading advice. https://www.youtube.com/user/tfnncorp/live 9:06 The Morning Market Kickoff with Tommy O'Brien 10:06 The Tiger Technician's Hour with Basil Chapman 11:00 TD Ameritrade's Thinkorswim with Alex Coffey and Kevin Hincks 12:06 Trade What You See with Larry Pesavento 1:06 The Trader's Edge with Steve Rhodes 2:06 The Power Trading Hour with David White 3:06 The Tom O'Brien Show Want to learn more? All of our hosts detail their trade recommendations and observations on the market in their powerful newsletters. You can see all of our newsletters on our website at https://tfnn.com/collections/trading TFNN also offers several powerful trading programs and educational webinars which you can view on our website at https://tfnn.com/collections/services You can get Tom O'Brien's Book, The Art of Timing the Trade on Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/Timing-Ultimate-Trading-Mastery-System/dp/0976352915/ Have a hunch? Get powerful results with 2x and 3x Leveraged ETF's from Direxion. https://www.direxion.com/ Want to take your trading to the next level? Check out TD Ameritrade's powerful trading platform over at https://www.tdameritrade.com/ Like us on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/tfnn1/ Follow us on Twitter! https://www.twitter.com/tfnn/
[ "stock chart", "trading", "stock trading", "option trading", "tastytrade", "tom o'brien", "larry pesavento", "david white", "basil chapman", "steve rhodes", "gold report", "tfnn", "tom sosnoff", "patterns", "markets", "fibonacci", "options", "futures", "commodities", "forex", "gold", "silver", "oil", "investing", "puts", "calls", "earnings call", "vix", "momentum trading", "trading education", "trading stocks", "moving average", "day trading", "bonds", "notes", "interest rates", "dollar", "euro", "pound", "yen", "brexit", "earnings", "finance", "trading advice", "investment advice", "stocks" ]
2021-09-07T17:26:04
2024-02-07T17:38:41
3,050
3kthnEI7u3c
The following is a presentation of TFNN. Trade what you see with Larry Pezzavento all now toll free at 1-877-927-6648 or internationally at 727-873-7618. Now, Larry Pezzavento. Okay, looking good. Billy Ray feeling good. Well, we're hopefully going to have Joe DiNapoli on today. But it's iffy-diffy, so we'll have to wait and see how it's going to turn out. If not, we'll have you on later this week. We're going to take a look here at the German Dax and the FTSE. And as you can see here, that FTSE had a beautiful three drive to a top pattern up there. And it just topped right on the money. And then you'll notice that the German Dax had a little bit different, excuse me, different pattern. Had a rally back and then had a very vicious break. That's continued. So, you know, these patterns are a little different, but they do have a bearish overall tone. So that's the main thing. Folks, every Sunday, not well, in fact, every day I send out videos of what I think is going to happen. But on Sunday, I sent out a sets of four. I sent what I think is going to happen in the gold-silver stock indices, Treasury bonds, 4X, and in general overall, if I see something. Crude oil, of course, crude oil. Anyway, this week, the two most important ones coming in for Sunday night was the short on the crude oil, because it had such an absolute perfect pattern. It had nine days up right at the 61% retracement. And we recommended, you know, selling it if it opens just a little bit higher, which it did up around 69, dirty. We had a nice little rally there right at the 382, and then it broke really badly. But what we were also following here is to see if it was going to follow along with what we thought was going to happen with the AI program. And this is what we had for Sunday night. You'll see that it was showing a bearish bias, which it did happen. You can learn how to do those folks. If you attend the next day trading session that we're going to have sometime probably November, December, we're going to be talking more and more about that. Now, the other one that looked extremely interesting from the short side, of course, was the gold market, because I'll explain the gold market in just a second because of the fact that that was a really important one. I'll bring the charts up one at a time. But you'll notice here with the gold, this is where we were last night. And you'll see that we had a nice little ABCD rally up there around 1818. And then we broke the way down that we've dropped more than the harmonic number folks were down more than $34 in gold, which is a substantial amount. So that could be a situation where we could be looking at something really, really dangerous. The reason why, well, I'll cover one more, of course, and then we'll move on to the other one. The other one was the natural gas. It had very, very bullish overtone coming in. It said it was going to be sharply higher. And here again, just by looking at the market where it opened, you'll see that we had a beautiful three drive to a top pattern right at the 1.618 expansion up there at 477. And it's broken 20 handles to the downside. Those are just some of the things that we're looking at. And this will be the last one. And then we'll move on to other subjects. This is the NASDAQ folks over the last six weeks. And I want to point out one very important point that you can see here for the last seven days, we have been up here at 15,690. And that is a very, very important number. If you remember the chart that we got from our friend Jim Bartolioni, you'll notice here that hold on one second and get this up here so you can see it. The ABCD, this goes back to 1974 by the way, boys and girls. You'll see here that that number measures to 16,996. And the high has been 16,704. So it's within $100 of the actual high. We've been up there five times. So that's a very, very important number. Should we bust through and close above $119,000? Let's try it again, Larry. $15,720, that would tell us that the market is most probably going to go higher, but we'll have to wait and see it. Folks, we're seeing a lot of deflationary things happening in some of these markets that is very troubling. And we talked about this before. Let's take a look at our most important crop here in the United States, which is the corn. This is as of this morning, folks. Look how corn has broken down. I mean, it just doesn't look very bullish. And this is with the most bullish fundamentals we've had. And I know the fundamentals have changed a little bit, but the supply demand is still relatively tight. And the supply is still a little weak, but this is not acting right. Something's not happening. Now, one of the things, and this goes with gold and silver. I didn't show you the gold and silver because defy human nature. Do the work yourself. I try to give you folks as much as I can, but frankly, most people just don't want to do the work. But if you do the work yourself, you're going to be able to teach yourself how to do this stuff. And it's going to be really, really easy to do. But you've got to do a little bit of work. But just with a little common sense. Let's just take a little common sense here and see where we are here. Hold on here a second. Where are we? Shut the front door and raise your hand. Larry, I think I lost a chart. Are you kidding me? I am not going to be happy if I lose that chart. Ah, gone it. Not good. Not good. Not good. Not good. Anyway, if you'll go and look, what I'll do is when we come to the break, let's just do it right now. And then we'll just get it out of the way because it's that important from my perspective. And I think your perspective also. So just get it up. I want to show you why you got to be really careful, you know, being long gold in here. Let me show you the reason. Well, there's several reasons. I'm going to give you the big reason right now. This is the gold miners index that we're going to be looking at right here. Now remember, we got gold. We've got gold way up here. And then look where we are with that with this GDX, the gold miner index. And this is me and not only that, we got the stocks going straight up. And this certainly hasn't been, you know, very, very bullish. What we just had was a 10 day rally that equaled the exact 10 day rally that we had last week. That was another reason to think that, wow, maybe this is a reason why gold is not going to go up. But there's a bigger reason and we're going to start a little quiz today. Anybody that gets the quiz right and emails me why it's correct. All you have to do is read the newsletter. If you want to do that, that'll tell you the reasoning. But if you do that, you'll see that why gold and silver have a possibility of making a major top last Friday. We've already seen silver boys and girls. Let me give me a break. Even a third grader, and we talked about this on the show Friday, actually. You'll notice here when you look at this, look where silver went to, folks. We went right exactly to the 382. Now defy human nature and do the same with your work on gold and see why there's a possibility. This could be a very significant high. Now, if it turns around and silver gets above $25 an ounce, again, that changes the whole ballgame. But we'll wait and see. Yesterday is a new moon. It's also the first day of Rosh Hashanah. And then we go into eight days into Yom Kippur. That's a Hebrew cycle right out of the Bible. It's a new moon. Now in 1929, the new moon was on September the third. That's when Rosh Hashanah was in 1929. Here we are today. I'm not saying there's any correlation, but it happens to be a big lunar cycle. And there's an old thing in the Chicago Mercantile Exchange that they always banter around as you buy on Rosh Hashanah and sell on Yom Kippur. Yom Kippur is the high holy days. That's a day of atonement. That's the holiest day in the Hebrew religion. So that's always a very slow day in the market. But we're going to take a little break here. 877-927-6648. TFNN invites you to test Basil's proprietary Chapman Wave trading methodology with a monthly subscription to the opening call newsletter for only $149. Your subscription to the opening call comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee as well as daily market updates on key indexes, stocks, and commodities. Ride the wave! Sign up for the opening call risk-free today. What's separating you from the most successful men and women on Wall Street? That's right. Information. Having all the information gives us the perspective we need to place the right trades at the right time. 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For free, each host is an experienced trader and gives their take on the market while taking calls and questions live from around the world. From the moment the market opens until the closing bell sounds, Tiger TV has eight different shows with expert hosts to help you make the right moves with your money. Watch online at tfnn.com or on TFNN's YouTube channel and become the investor you were born to be, TFNN. Educating investors. Call now. Toll free at 1-877-927-6648 internationally at 727-873-7618. We're back folks and I'm afraid that we're not going to have Joe as our guest today but let's take a quick look here at the Bitcoin. Now what I've done here is I've posted the Bitcoin going back to April High where we had a three drive to a top pattern when it was making 64,000. Then you'll notice we dropped all the way down to the 382 retracement not quite to the 28,000 from there we rallied up and over the weekend we had the news of San Salvador beginning to take Bitcoin as a thing and they actually bought 400 Bitcoins. I don't know where they got the money for the 400 Bitcoins but it must be on margin. The thing that I'm trying to point out here, remember boys and girls I'm a old cowboy from Reformed Cowboy out of Terhode, Indiana so the things that I'm looking at are all technical based. There's not anything related to fundamentals that I'm looking at but if you'll see the three drive to a top pattern that was present back at 64,500 and you look to where we were coming in today you can see a very clear three drive to a top pattern coming in at that 1.618 level up around the 52,000 to 53,000 level. That should be a very, very important spot to look at. We've already broken down. I heard that the quote now was down about 12% that the market was trading below 50,000 so I'm not involved with this boys and girls I'm just giving you the technical skinny as I see it so let's remind ourselves of that. Very, very important. So that's what it looks like. The first support you would look at here would be a 382 off of the whole move so you go from 28,000 up to 53, 53 from 28 is 27 so 27 back would be 17,000 points that would take you into about 42,000 let me see 53,000 right around 32,000 so keep an eye on let's try it again let me 38,000 keep an eye on 38,000 in the Bitcoin as the first place of looking at for support. The chart that concerns me the most folks is why corn is breaking down so much. It may be that people are cancelling orders for the corn that they bought which is certainly possible but that's neither here nor there we got to do one thing at a time as we look at these markets. Remember folks these markets are totally different and the stock is totally different than the S&P the S&P is totally different than the Russell because of the way that it's indexed. Now one of our friends sent us a chart from across the pond here looking about copper it's an ETF and you'll notice here that we had this is ETF for copper copper miners is what it is you can see we had a beautiful three drive to a bottom bottom down here he was asking was that correct and the answer to that question is yes because if you look at the cycle low from the 21st of June up to where we were on the 22nd of July and where we were here on the 23rd of August that is a very symmetrical 22 or 24 day cycle and you notice we had a very very strong move which verifies that's what it was but if you'll go back and look at the low from January and this is where your homework comes in take the January low up to the April high and measure what the retracement is down there at 30 to 30 and you'll notice if you do your mathematics correctly you're going to see that that was a 78% retracement of the whole move to the downside why is 78% retracement important because it's a square root of 618 now let's remind ourselves folks that as we look at these numbers they are all related to numbers of sacred science this is the thing that we don't see when you're looking at the Elliott wave stuff they just give you the numbers and the ratios but they do not do the square roots of the numbers very often occasionally you'll see a 1.27 number very seldom even more seldom to see a 786 and it's just as important as the 618 because these numbers they change and vacillate because markets react totally differently but they would act differently to the numbers and that's the main thing that you want to keep in mind as you're looking at those things another thing that's very very important in fact folks as we're into the September-October period these are the two worst months for the stock market sure there've been months where they've had really good runs and this may be one of them we don't know but if you'll take a look at it you'll see that what we're watching here is a market that's getting ready to what I think is going to have it's not just going to be a correction folks it's going to be something more serious than that but I don't know where it is what boys and girls nobody else does either I'm looking for signs that's all I'm looking for I am very good at picking out what the signs are I don't know I can't read the minds of the people but when they're in there buying and selling that I can read and that's what I'm looking for is some sign to tell me that yes we're getting very very close but I haven't seen that sign yet and when that happens I'm certainly going to look at we see some signs as we look at the Nasdaq but that's just one market you're only looking at about 20 stocks with that Nasdaq 100 that's not very much at all so you can't do that when we come back for the break I want to talk about money flow and the velocity of money a little bit that's one thing I do understand and that's from the old days at the Chicago Merc until exchange where we used to follow money supply but the Federal Reserve System changed all the rules back in March of 2009 when Bernanke came out with quantitative easing and all the rules of the Fed remember the folks you have to remember that the Federal Reserve has nothing to do with the government they handle the money supply okay but they have nothing to do with the government they're on Pennsylvania Avenue and they got a big building that looks like it's a government building but believe me it's a private bank for private bankers and you're not invited so what you've got to do is try to figure out what they're doing and what they're doing is not good for the economy I think you're going to see some things that in the history books will come out and say oh my god why could they allow something like that to happen and the main thing is zero interest rates do you know folks I heard on the news on Bloomberg yesterday that there are 71 countries that have zero interest rates that people are still buying their bonds I mean I just don't understand that you're giving them money to lose money I mean I just don't understand that one I've seen a lot of crazy ones through the years even the dot com bubble and all the other stuff but negative interest rates has got to be the best thing I've ever heard I mean that's I know they wrap it around inflation and all the other stuff but don't make any differences little cowboy I didn't come in on a burrow I came in on a nice little Indian pony and I'll be doggone if they're going to convince me that interest rates are going to be negative here in the United States especially the way they're spending money like it's coming out of their woodwork and it has to come out of the woodwork because the money is just not available they have to create it from somewhere we're going to take a little break here folks 877-927-6648 you having fun trading the markets but having trouble finding like-minded individuals to discuss your trading and investment ideas with become 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live or not? Well, it was supposed to be Joe Donapoli today, folks but I knew there was going to be a slight problem because he wasn't able to answer the phone or the other thing and he hasn't been feeling well, so if there was anything wrong it was most probably related to that Nothing life-threatening, it's just that he's taking care of his health and he doesn't need to be spending time with us when he needs to be recuperating so that's really what we're paying attention to here today Alright, let's talk a little bit about something and I know a little bit about and that is the money supply Stuff used to follow this quite a bit back in the old days, let's get this up here This is the flow of money, folks Let's get this up here and you're going to be able to see this This is the velocity of money, folks You can see here from 2012 the velocity of money has been dropping and dropping and dropping and the reason for that is because the Fed has been pumping the Bajibis out of the money supply They just keep pushing money that's not moving This is the problem, you see, this is a lot of money out there but it's not moving In other words, when the Uber driver takes your money he usually goes to fill his car up with gas the gasoline guy goes to buy new dresses for his two twin daughters and stuff like that but that is just not happening The velocity of money is breaking down In the 1970s when I was super in inflation I was following what was it, guys in Amato, Switzerland Oh, sex, I was just talking to him Anyway, we were watching the velocity of money because of velocity we had a lot of goods being chased by a lot of dollars and that made inflation fewer goods being chased by a lot of dollars and that means that the inflation went crazy That was also related to the fact that we had $2 gallon in the 1970s and then it went to 10, 20, 30, 40 all the way up to 144 which I will never forget because that was the day that Goldman Sachs came out with their special report on crude oil that it was going to $200 apparel and be prepared and that was the high of the market and I should have kept that report and reminded myself to add it to the books with the expert speak, I keep this book by Victor Kovinsky and on my bookshelf here because it's a book of about 600 pages about all the things that experts have said that were wrong about and folks, I'm supposedly one of those pseudo-experts The difference is that I base mine on what I see on the charts and that means that when I'm wrong I can see that usually, sometimes not as much as I'd like to see it but that's what I'm trying to do is to follow what that is but if this velocity of money ever starts then you're going to start to see inflation but right now you're seeing signs of basically de-inflation folks disinflation, look at gold and silver look at the long-term weekly charts I posted a weekly chart of silver there's nothing bullish about that chart that's got three down this is a 135 pattern up to 2498 on Friday that's a big thing and the same thing with the gold that's nothing and when you look at this chart here this should scare people that are in the agricultural business, look what they're doing to the corn market, our largest corn crop we're ready to take out the lows that we made back in July at 509, now I'm going to be looking to be a buyer of corn in here somewhere because it's going to be a spot where the patterns line up and whether there's going to be a break in the supply demand situation or not but there's nothing there I tried last week in meal for just a little bit we took a small loss in that and that's the way it goes when you're a pattern recognition swing trader folks the only thing you have working for you is the pattern recognition that you're looking at that's one thing, how do you control the risk around that pattern we've talked about that many times it usually comes down to three or five hundred dollars and the most important thing all is are you able to take the trade by taking the responsibility for it now I had a whole bunch of trades that I posted on the video that I went out Sunday night being short gold and silver being short crude oil being short euro stock index few short Nasdaq with three drive to a top is short treasury bonds continue to go lower you know there were seven trades there now I can't do all seven trades for everybody so I had to pick it so the two that I picked of course were the euro and the crude oil because they were the easiest ones to see they literally had everything you could possibly ask for as looking for it for something that would think it would be pretty much spot on so that's why I bring those up is to be able to see what they do let me get this crude oil chart up because it's such a nice one that a third grader could see that there was some symmetry in this here's where we are here folks look there's your crude oil there's a daily chart you'll see the market came down rallied up nine days to the 78% level we went short there we covered it way down there at the bottom and then well not quite at the bottom but there's still substantial profit of more than six six handles and then look what we did another nine days up right on where we at we're right at the 61% retracement of the whole move down and so I think there's not any mystery here if you just count the number of days you can see it's nine days up nine days up and we've been we went from 69 30 today all the way into the low 67 so you know that was a that was two handles with virtually a risk of about you know 400 bucks so that that's what pattern recognition is all about I'm not trying to you know invent a new alarm clock or anything I'm just trying to put those things together now I have to save this for the end of the day but since Joe didn't show up I'm going to do it now I got a question from someone in the UK where you know firearms are you know totally bad I mean you just if you even look at a gun in a magazine they do have hunting rifles and stuff but anything else is you just it just can't have it the question that the gentleman has is to discuss some of the weird things that I've had in my life with guns and I'm going to bring one up here right now you I know you folks are that are young are not going to believe this but let me just give you a perfect example how crazy things can get we're talking 1963 now folks okay I've been out of college for a year and and the Vietnam war has just just beginning to go okay this is a rifle from World War two it's called the boys anti-tank rifle it's a boys rifle those shells that you're looking at folks are nine inches long okay and they weigh about a half a pound they I don't know what they cost now but this gun I bought this gun with 20 rounds of ammunition for $200 in 1963 why did I buy it I have I can't remember for the life of me I can't remember I remember two things about the gun we were I was still in tarot at the time I hadn't gotten out of my graduate school and so I was taking graduate classes but we took it out to the tarot dump where you know everybody would because there was a big hill there people would use their guns you know it was a target range and stuff so I took out the boys rifle it was with one of my buddies and we had just took two shells with us out of the 20 because they weighed so darn much I mean you had the gun itself weighs 30 pounds folks so it was a two man operation one man had to carry the ammo and so we put the two rounds in one at a time and you'll see it drops down into that and we we fired at an old car that was all rusted out had been there for a long time and man it made such a loud noise you couldn't believe it a boy would hit that car it just took it up in the air about 50 feet straight down and the sheriff was right behind us anyway didn't do anything to us but he wanted to fire the gun and he did so that's it I sold the gun for $250 Are you in the market for buying or selling real estate in the bay area 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first and then I can tell you I posted a chart here at Tesla folks here. We hit that 78% level and we went above it and backed off a little bit. And what we do this morning, we opened at the 740 level, which was the old high. We immediately rallied up $22. That's not much on the $700 stock, but we did clear that and it moved up substantially. So that's the main thing. When you see that, that tells you, hold on one second, I'm getting a little bit of a on your chart. Oh, I'm sorry about that. I see what happened. That's a function of, hold on one second, that's a function of technical difficulties on the PESAvento pattern. Let me get this out. All right, now I think you can see the Tesla. We had that pattern, but when it gaps up like that, I don't know what the news was. It probably a pretty substantial, I imagine, but you'll notice here that we we gapped up above those old highs right on the opening in rallied $22 backed off just a little bit. But that's an important number here in the Tesla because it cleared it with relatively ease and good volume. So you have to assume this thing is still going higher because it broke above that 78% level. That's what you've got to be aware of. When things like that happen and you're looking at something, you certainly got to pay very, very close attention to it. Now, one of the things I did do, because Mr. Jimmy wanted to see something in real life, well, I posted a chart of the NASDAQ and I said we should be topping here right about now at around the 1699 level. So far, we've been to 1693. We're going to see if we get to 1699 or not, but that's exactly ABCD. I know it's a two minute chart, but this is a short show. So we shortly time, so we've got to be able to use shorter term patterns to see these. They work pretty much on any pattern or anything you want to be watching, but I would be remiss if I didn't show you a couple of these intraday to give you an eye. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't, but nothing works 100% of the time. So that's the main thing you want to keep in mind. Let's take a quick look here at one of the stocks that we've been following for quite some time that is very, very strong today. And we hold on one second here. Oh, I've had a little bit of a problem. Just give me one second here, folks. We've got Apple really, really screaming today, which is good because we are now above that 1.618 expansion number at 156. We're at 156.85 right now. Let's get this up here so you'll be able to see that. And so we're going to have a pretty good idea of what's going to be looking at here. So that's it. Mr. Z is asking a question here. Let me see if we can handle his question. We're going to see the 1517, 1542 reshort. He's asking it was a new moon top. The new moon was at, that's today. So if there's a top today on the new moon, I don't know if it's going to or not. All I'm just looking at at these patterns. And that we just hit the ABCD number that I posted about 15 minutes ago. We just hit 1699 in the, it was 1675770. So Jimmy D, that's what I did in the future. Whether you'd like it or not, I don't know, but that's, that's what I would do. I sold it there and, you know, I don't have to risk very much. I'm risking about 10 points is $200. But that's a completed pattern. Exactly where I think it's going to go. And remember, ABCDs only work about 62% of the time, but 62% is better than any odds. You get it in Vegas or the horses. That's for sure. Let's keep in mind it's very, very important. All right. Now, another question that someone asked me is how do I determine risk control? Folks, risk control depends on two things. The volatility of the market that you're trading and then also the size of your account. If you got a small account, folks, you know what? You can't trade something. If you can't trade crude oil, you can't trade gold and stock indices. And we can trade bonds, of course, but you know, you have to get into the foreign currencies and things like that. We only have to risk a few hundred dollars. These others swing around a lot. Of course, they work great when they work, but when they don't work, it's not very much fun. And remember, you only take the winning trades. Warren Buffett's rule number one, don't lose money. Rule number two, don't break rule number one, but you have to trade. So there's going to be losses involved, but you've got to be able to figure out what the losses are as it relates to the amount of money that you have at risk. It's not how much money you make, it's how much money you don't lose. That's the whole key to what we're doing here. I would love to be long corn here, but for the life of me, I can't find a good spot to buy it at least till it takes out the 509 level. And then I've got a chance to say, okay, there was no selling down there. Then I've got a chance to be a farmer again. But until that happens, I'm just not going to do it. So we'll have to wait and see. Okay, that's what we're paying attention to here. So let's see what we've got. If you have any questions, it's 877-927-6648. But take your time, folks. The lines are so filled right now that you're not going to be able to get through for a few minutes. But if you can, give it a shot because there may be a line will pop up if 10 or 15 people cancer their incoming calls. So we'll be moving on it. Mr. Steve Rhodes calls me the jackal. It's more like the old, not even a bobcat. What is the darn things that we have here? The jackalope. We have a jackalope here. There's absolutely gorgeous here. These are rabbits, folks. They have ears like just giant ears. They're jackalopes here in the desert. And they're really quite amazing. And they are so strong. They can jump so high. You just can't believe it. Anyway, let's move on here to the next one. Marshall, I hope your weather is clearing up up there in Washington because I got an email from my friend Dennis up in Portland. And he told me that he and his wife went over to the beach because the smoke from some of this stuff was so bad that it was affecting her breathing. And so they had to go over to the ocean where the weather was better. And we'll see what's going on here. 877-927-6648. We're back to 1701 now in the anybody that had the order sitting there at 17, you would have been filled. So you put a stop at 157-10 and roll the dice and see what happens. And we will go from there. I will do my best to try to get Joe DiNapoleon this week if we can. And if we'll be able to see if that's one of my favorite Bruce Willis movies, folks, is the Jackal. And that's actually from a true story. So what was his name? Was it Carlos? Was it Carlos the Jackal? Yeah, it was Carlos the Jackal. Great, great, great film. Really, really like it. Okay. Yeah, well, that's the way it goes here. Jerry from Tennessee calling for radium and platinum. Boy, oh boy. Jerry, I don't know anything about radium. And I know very little about platinum. So other than platinum has had not very much of a rally. It's weaker of them. The harmonic number in gold is 32. 32 to 34 is what it usually is. So right now we've gone, we had a high of 36, 1836, and we're down that we got down to 93. So we dropped quite a bit more than $40. So it's close to it's close enough here with about you figure 30, 30, 35, 40 bucks. So that should be a bottom. I said that in the in the video that I sent out the first correction should be around that level just below 1800. And that's where we are. You want to watch this rally in gold? It's going to be an important one if we get it. 877-927-6648. Sharpening your skills as an investor is like getting better at playing a musical instrument. You have to practice sure, but you also need excellent instruction from experts. At TFNN, you'll get advice and guidance from the authority in technical market analysis. And it's not just dry tedious text either. TFNN airs live financial content streamed live on TFNN.com and TFNN's YouTube channel with Tiger TV. Live every market day from 8 30 a.m to 4 p.m. Eastern for free. Each host is an experienced trader and gives their take on the market while taking calls and questions live from around the world. From the moment the market opens until the closing bell sounds, Tiger TV has eight different shows with expert hosts to help you make the right moves with your money. Watch online at TFNN.com or on TFNN's YouTube channel and become the investor you were born to be, TFNN. Educating investors. Invites you to test Basil's proprietary Chapman Wave trading methodology with a monthly subscription to the opening call newsletter for only $149. Your subscription to the opening call comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee as well as daily market updates on key indexes, stocks and commodities. Ride the wave! Sign up for the opening call risk-free today. 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Some of these are just, and also Amazon, you know, blowing or going up considerably. Surprise. Stock market has not got a lot more given that, but the NASDAQ is leading. If you did that NASDAQ, you put your stop, you only risk $200, $710 points if it works fine, if it doesn't work. Folks, here's where the problem lies. Some day down in the future, okay, not today, but down in the future, there's going to be articles written about what happened in Afghanistan. Forget that red arrow. I put that in there. I got that by mistake. But anyway, you can see Afghanistan right in the middle there. That's why I wanted to show you why it's so very, very important that we had a huge air base that we don't have anymore. But the fact that we left all of those weapons there and we left American uniforms there, thousands of them, you know, $85 billion worth of material in the future. They're going to write military books about the biggest military blunder in the history of the United States was when they closed that air base. It's okay to close the air base, but you want to destroy everything on the air base. You don't want to leave this to your enemy. I mean, that's just, I mean, all you have to do is read the art of war one time, and you're going to realize that was a mistake. But that's my two cents worth. That's the end of the political rhetoric that I have for today. And in using the words of Senator Edward Dirksen from the state of Illinois way back in the sixties, be sure to vote early and vote often. All right, let's move on to the last thing we want to cover, and that's going to be our guest this week. I do not have anybody covered so far until we have Joe DiNapoleon. I'm hoping to have him on this week and be able to talk to him because he's fun. I've known him for a very, very long time, and we want to be able to remind that. Well, so we got an anniversary of 911 coming up, and we certainly want to remember that. That's a big one. Live every day in an attitude of gratitude and may God bless.
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2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 SPORT H.O. CUMMINS DIESEL AISIN 4K WALKAROUND 14365Z
This 2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 SPORT HIGH OUTPUT CUMMINS DIESEL AISIN TRANSMISSION IN DELMONICO RED PEARLCOAT FOR SALE IN FOND DU LAC OSHKOSH WISCONSIN 54935 is the vehicle we did walk around review of today. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE! https://www.youtube.com/summitauto?sub_confirmation=1 Thank you for checking out this video of this 2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 SPORT HIGH OUTPUT CUMMINS DIESEL AISIN TRANSMISSION IN DELMONICO RED PEARLCOAT 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.summitautocdjr.com/inventory/used-2019-ram-ram-3500-4x4-crew-cab-laramie-drw-crew-long-drw-laramie-6-7l-diesel-ho-aisin-nav-moon-new-tires-4wd-crew-cab-pickup-3c63rrjl9kg575901/ 920-921-0850 STOCK: 14365Z PRICE: $62,499 MILES: 39,059 MAKE: RAM MODEL: 3500 VIN: 3C63RRJL9KG575901 PHONE: 920-921-0850 WEBSITE: www.SUMMITAUTO.com & TRUCKSON41.com LOCATION: FOND DU LAC OSHKOSH WISCONSIN, 54937 TRUCKS ON 41 1 OWNER! CLEAN TITLE HISTORY! CLEAN CARFAX! NEW TIRES!* 6.7 Liter I6 Cummins High Output Turbo Diesel, 400 Horsepower, 1000 Torque* Full Four Door Crew Cab* Long Box 8 Foot Longbox* Dual Rear Wheel Dually DRW* Laramie Package* Level 2 Package* Sport Appearance Package* 6 Speed AISIN Automatic Heavy Duty Transmission* 4x4 Push Button Four Wheel Drive 4WD* Auto Air Level Rear Air Suspension* Adaptive Speed Control Cruise Control* Blind Spot Monitoring with Rear Cross-Path Detection* Forward Collision Warning System* Dual Power Air Conditioned Ventilated and Heated Seats* Black Ebony Leather Seats* Bucket Seats* Memory Driver's Seat* 2nd Row Heated Seats* BakFlip Hard Fold-up Tonneau Cover* Full Towing Package with Receiver Trailer Hitch, Wiring and Transmission Cooler Tow Package* 5th Wheel And Gooseneck Hitch Prep Package Fifth Wheel Goose Neck* 5th Wheel Hitch Fifth Wheel* 6 Upfitter Switches* Factory Brake Controller* Factory Exhaust Brake* Fold Out Tow Mirrors, Heat Power Mirrors* LED Side Lights* Power Fold in Power Mirrors with Built-in Directional Signals* Electronic Stability Control Traction Control ESC* 4.10 Gears* Brand New LT235/80 R17 Tires* Polished Aluminum Rims Premium Wheels* Four Wheel Disc Brakes* Aftermarket Painted Stepbars* Spray-in Bedliner* Bedrail Covers* Clearance Lights* LED Bed Lighting* LED Fog Lights* LED Headlights* LED Running Lights* LED Tail Lamps* Raise Assist Tailgate* Sonar with Front and Rear Bumper Sensors* Locking Tailgate* Chrome Trimmed Grill* Chrome Trimmed Mirrors* Fender Flares* AM / FM Radio Tuner* Sirius/XM Satellite Radio Capabilities Sirius / XM* CD Player* Uconnect (R) 8.4 AM/FM System 8.4 Inch Touchscreen with AM/FM* 7-Inch Multi-View Display* Harmon / Kardon Premium Audio Sound System Harmon/Kardon* U Connect Hands Free Bluetooth Hands-Free Phone System Blue Tooth* Android Auto Compatible* Apple Car Play Compatible* Auxiliary MP3 Jack Portable Audio Connection* Factory Subwoofer* USB C Jack* USB Jack Portable Audio Connection* Wireless Cell Phone Charge Pad* Enter-N-Go System Keyless Entry System* Keyless Entry with Factory Remote Start* Push Button Start* Power Sliding Rear Window Rear Window Defroster* 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* Dual Multi-Zone Climate Control* Power Adjustable Pedals* Weathertech All Weather Floormats* Loadfloor Boot Tray* Storage Compartment Under Rear Seats* Air Conditioning AC* Cruise Control* Power Locks* Power Windows* Tilt Steering Wheel* Automatic Headlights Autolamp* 115V / 400W AC Power Plug In Outlet* 5 Year / 100,000 Mile Remaining Powertrain Factory Warranty, Whichever Comes First* Velvet Red PearlcoatONE OWNER! CLEAN AUTOCHECK! Very very clean inside and out! This is one of the sharpest 2019 Ram 3500 crewcab longbox 1 ton diesel trucks 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,
[ "TRUCKS ON 41", "USED TRUCKS WISCONSIN", "USED TRUCKS FOND DU LAC", "54935", "54937", "SUMMIT AUTOMOTIVE", "TRUCK CENTER", "IN-DEPTH REVIEW", "IN DEPTH REVIEW", "2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 WALKAROUND", "2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 OVERVIEW", "2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 REVIEW", "2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 SPORT WALKAROUND", "2019 RAM 3500 LARAMIE LEVEL 2 SPORT OVERVIEW", "2019 RAM 3500 HIGH OUTPUT DIESEL" ]
2024-03-14T03:56:27
2024-04-19T02:48:58
775
3KbvLwxOXho
Hey, this is Brett and this 2019 Ram 3500 crew cab long box dual rear wheel. Laramie level two is stock number 14365Z. I am here at Summit Automotive in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. You're new and used heavy duty truck and Ram headquarters. This 2019 Ram 3500 has the 6.7 liter high output Cummins diesel engine. It's paired up with the Icing heavy duty six speed automatic transmission. For 2019, this engine put out 400 horsepower and 1000 foot pounds of torque. This truck has been fully safe and inspected by our service shop per the state of Wisconsin inspection process. It has a fresh oil and filter change on the fluid tab and checked and topped off. This truck has six brand new tires and is 100% ready to go. Very nice truck. I'm gonna go all the way around in this video inside underneath, start it up, take a look under the hood, show you all the options and give you the most accurate representation that I can of the vehicle. Delmonico red pearl coat is the color I shoot all my videos in 4K. If you like the videos, subscribe to the YouTube channel, 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 walker arms on YouTube and state current on our ever changing and vast heavy duty truck inventory. So you do not miss out on gems like this one by clicking those bell notifications. This one comes with the polished aluminum 17 inch wheels. They are in very nice condition and it has brand new CUMHOL Krugin LT23580R17 tires. Styers still have the knobs on them and we put those on in our safety inspection. So six brand new tires, frame and underbody is exceptionally clean on this truck. This is a one owner clean title history, clean car facts out of Idaho. Front fenders in fantastic condition. It does have a 3M rock guard on the fenders and the hood as well as the kind of plastic pieces here and the front bumper. You do get the LED headlamps, running lights and fog lights. I'm gonna turn all those on at the end of the video. Front bumper is in excellent condition. I didn't see any major dents or dings on there. Does have the engine block heating cord right there as well. Looks really good. Front bumper parking sensors. You get the chrome trimmed grill and the hood is in excellent condition as well. I didn't see any major dents or dings on there. Passengers side front fender. Absolutely perfect. And the passenger side front wheel, no major scuffs or scrapes on there. That one looks really good. Delmonico red pro coat. It's got some nice metal flake in it. See how good that looks. Haints in really nice condition as well and as you go down this side of this 2019 Ram 3500, take note of how clean that body is and once again how reflective and mirror-like that paint is. I take these HD videos so if you're far away or even if you're close by and you just cannot make the trip down but you're still interested in purchasing the vehicle, you can see the truck, hear the truck and have confidence in the vehicle that you're looking at before you even get here. So when you do get here, there's absolutely no surprises and you can make a smart and informed buying decision from wherever you're at. If this video helps you make that buying decision, let your salesmen know that you saw the video that it was helpful in that breadth-century. It comes with some really nice lumb wheel-to-wheel side steps. You get the 3M rock guard on the lower dually tub there. That's in nice shape. The back wheels are in fantastic condition. No scuffs or scrapes or corrosion and the back tires brand new as well still have those knobs on there. This one does have the rear airbag suspension. This is an auto-leveling system so you get a heavy load on there. It's gonna push up on this lever and it's gonna tell those airbags to pump up and framing underbodies in really nice condition but that's a really nice feature on this truck. Has all the remaining factory exhaust underbodies in really nice shape. More rockers and cab corners all look really good. Didn't see any corrosion on them and the dually tubs in pretty nice shape as well. I didn't see any major dents or dings. LED tail lamps coming around to the back of the vehicle. The rear bumpers in gray shape. Has the backup parking sensors, the full towing package which includes the receiver hitch four pin and seven pin wiring and that tailgate is in excellent condition as well. No major dents or dings on there. This one does come with a back flip fold up tonneau cover. That's in pretty nice shape. I didn't see any major dents or dings on there. Has the shock down assist. This one also comes with a set of weather tech floor mats inside the bed here. Has the fifth wheel and gooseneck prep package and it also comes with a ram 30,000 pound fifth wheel in it. Seven pin wiring back here as well as LED bed lights and the beds in really nice condition. That bed liner goes onto the tailgate, shuts nicely. Coming around to the driver's side just as clean as that passenger side. I did forget to mention that this is a sport package in addition to the Laramie level two. No major dents or dings on that Dewey tub. That looks really good and for full disclosure this back wheel is in excellent condition as well. Down the rest of this side of this truck, cab and doors are in really nice condition. But yeah, that sport package just gives you the painted front and rear bumpers. You get the heated fold up tow mirrors, blind spot, excuse me blind spot wiring built in directional signals and LED side lights. I'm gonna turn those on at the end of the video so you can see how bright those are. Enter and go system, just have to have the key fob in your pocket. Coming around to the back seats. No major rips or tears back here. They're in really nice condition. You get the latch child safety system for any child car seats you may have. Power sliding rear window with the built in rear defrost. You get these suede inserts on the seats as well as the gray piping on there. These seats fold up for extra storage. You get a load floor back here, which is really nice. Got muddy boots of tools, put them on there. You're not gonna get your seats dirty. Or if you got pets, put both sides down and they got a nice flat placed lay. You also have storage underneath those seats. And you get the factory floor mats back here. In floor storage in there. You get two USBs, two USB Cs and these back seats are heated on the outboard side and you get 115 volt, 400 watt plug-in. Side-current airbags on the front seats. And you get child safety locks on the back doors and the inside and bottoms of the doors. All look very good on this truck. Show you the VIN sticker here. No previously owned in Canada trucks here. And then the tire and loading information sticker is right there. Up front, the Laramy level two package gives you the black leather and suede. Bucket seats in the front, no rips, no tears on those seats. They are in fantastic condition. You get the Laramy stitched into the backrest and you get that gray piping on there. You can see the seats working nicely. You get lumbar on there as well. You get the Berber floor mats up here too. Auto headlamps, power pedals, power windows locks, some mirrors, suede inserts on the doors. Kind of this diamond plated looking trim on there. These mirrors do power fold in. I always like showing both sides so you know that both sides are working properly. And then what's really cool is you can control that outside blind spot mirror. They've made that power, which is not so cool for the driver's side, but for the passenger side, great feature. And you get the memory driver's seat right there. We'll hop inside, check out the miles, the radio and everything that this one has to offer on the interior. 39,223 miles on that seven inch LCD display. Digital spinometer compass, turbo pressure, your transmission temperature and your water temperature. You can change all those corners to read pretty much whatever you want. Instrument cluster is very nice and clean. Comes with the heated leather wrap steering wheel. This one does have adaptive cruise controls on it, as well as cruise controls, gear selector, Bluetooth and information center controls. And there's no rips or tears on the steering wheel. Just a little bit of wear on it, but for the most part in really nice shape. There's your shifter for that ice and heavy duty six speed automatic transmission. And then you get the 8.4 4C radio has the factory navigation system. There is highway 41. So that is working nicely. Always something you want to check on these radios. AM FM and Sirius XM radio capabilities. You have your climate controls here, including your dual climate controls. And then you have your heated and cooled seat and steering wheel buttons. And then you can check out your backup camera, which they've made those crystal clear on the new heavy duty Ram so that you can get hooked up to your boat camper trailer the first time, every time and you can zoom in on that receiver hitch or even better results. This one also has the Harman Kardon premium sound system right there. And you get all your different apps on here, including projection manager. You can project your cell phone to the screen via Android Auto or Apple CarPlay. We did a demo on an 8.4 with Android Auto. If you want to check that out, that's in the upper right hand part of the screen. Down here, your more tactile volume tune and climate controls, as well as the dual climate controls, heated and cooled seat buttons and heated steering wheel controls. Here's your push button four wheel drive, your factory exhaust break, six auxiliary upfit switches. This was your alternate trailer height. That's part of the rear air suspension where you can actually lower the truck for different height trailers. Toe hall mode, factory exhaust break, and you get the front and rear parking sensors right there. CD player, two USBs, two USB C's and an aux jack. You get your wireless Ram cell phone charger. And down there is 115 volt, 400 watt plug-in. Keyless entry with remote start and power drop down tailgate. You get two cup holders and coin slots right there on that sliding tray. Right there is your dual glove boxes, passenger side format and seat are in excellent condition, as well no rips or tears on there. Smells very clean inside this truck. You do get the speakers in the ceiling, part of that Harman Kardon premium sound system. There's also a subwoofer in back, power sunroof, map lights, assist and SOS buttons, power drop down tailgate button, power sliding rear window and sunroof controls auto dimming mirror. And then you get your home link buttons for your garage door security systems and lighting systems. Quite a bit of options on this truck. Let's start it up, take a look under the hood and we'll be all set to go. Starts right up, no check engine lights or anything like that. There are your LED side lights and I would personally like to thank you for checking out the video today. And hopefully from this HD video, you've been able to verify the quality condition options and of course, cleanliness of this truck all the way around inside. You can see all the lights are working nicely, cab lights up top working nicely as well. Under the hood, we have the 6.7 liter Cummins diesel engine and Jimbe's very clean runs, very smooth. Once again, this truck has been fully safety and inspected by our service shop as a fresh oil and filter change while the fluids have been checked and topped off. It has six brand new tires and this truck is 100% ready to go. There is the emission sticker. I would highly recommend this truck to make quality and condition standpoint. I think whoever is going to get this one is going to be very happy with it. Brand new tires, really nice condition, non-smoker, nicely optioned out. And to see more pictures of this truck or one of other 550 new and used cars, trucks, SUVs, minivans, Wranglers, halftones, three quarter tons, one tons, you name it, we've got to go to the website right there, summitauto.com. Full pictures and descriptions of every single vehicle all at summitauto.com. If you want to check out more HD videos, you can go to youtube.com slash summitauto. Click the bell notifications, get updates and videos I do each and every day as well as having access to one of the largest catalogs of vehicle and heavy-duty truck walk-arounds on YouTube and stay current on our ever-changing and vast inventory by clicking those bell notifications so you do not miss out on gems like this one. In fact, a second, you will see a link to subscribe to my YouTube channel in the upper left, a link to all the Ram 3500 truck videos I've ever done in the upper right, a link to this vehicle on our website in the lower left, and a link to one of our latest YouTube videos in the lower right. Click those checks out. We're super excited to help you with this Ultra Clean 2019 Ram 3500 Crew Cab Long Box Tool Rear Wheel Laramie Level 2 Sport Edition and Delmonico Red Pro Coat. Thank you so much for checking out the video. Remember to like, subscribe, and share on the YouTube channel. I really appreciate it. Thanks again, have a great day.
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TYPICAL DAY IN THE ICU!
NURSING RESOURCES: http://bit.ly/nrsng6 _ ~Social Sites~ ❥VLOG CHANNEL: http://bit.ly/1UyoEmT ❥Personal Instagram: https://instagram.com/ashleylorenaadkins/ ❥Nursing Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ashleyadkinsrn/ ❥Website: www.ashleyadkins.org ❥Snap Chat: ashleylh24 ❥Periscope: ashleylh24 ❥ETSY Shop: http://bit.ly/ashleyadkinsrn ❥Twitter: https://twitter.com/ashleylh24?lang=en ❥Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/ashleylh24/ _ The views and opinions expressed on this channel and/or in the videos on this channel are that of myself and not of any educational institution. In compliance with HIPAA and to ensure patient privacy, all patient identifiers in all videos have been deleted and/or altered. The views expressed on this channel and/or in the videos on this channel are personal opinions. The information I present is for general knowledge purposes only.
[ "Ashley Adkins", "RN", "Registered Nurse", "Nursing School", "NCLEX", "ADN", "BSN", "Student nurse", "LPN", "CNA", "Scrubs", "Stethoscope", "NRSNG.com", "Nursing.org" ]
2016-12-17T11:00:00
2024-02-05T16:34:29
218
3KWg1b3sTlE
Hi guys, so I want to walk you through my typical ICU routine kind of what I do To give you guys a little rundown because I got a lot of people that ask me like what do you do when you show up to the Hospital in the morning. What's your routine in the morning? What do you all those things? So I'm just gonna do a sit-down video kind of talk through my day and Yeah, so when I get to work I always go put my stuff in the locker put my lunch in the fridge and in the break room is our assignment sheet It shows who has each room. So I get my little report sheet that I carry with me I have a few in my locker and I will go to my room assignments And this is when I get report from the night shift nurse So once I get report what I do is I try to kind of quickly look through the chart a little bit Just see any labs anything pertinent that stands out that I really need to deal with and then I like to Go in and assess both of my patients or one of my patients depending on if I have one or two at this time so I Go in I do my assessment. I usually kind of clean up the room everyone organizes their rooms differently so I kind of organize my stuff and make sure I have my supplies in the room and my tubes are labeled and my Ivy lines are labeled and all of that fun stuff that makes me an OCD ICU nurse and If the patient needs to get turned early in the morning and they get their total max assist I usually will turn them and I get my big assessment done and I usually do one patient go back and chart and then do the other patient and go back and chart throughout the day Things can change things can be crazy things can be slow So every hour I do the eyes and nose, you know See how much outputs in the Foley with how much has gone in and Tuck you like that and then I do vital signs. It depends on the patient if they're on a cardiac drip I may do vital signs every five to 15 minutes If they're unstable every five minutes every three minutes if it's a patient who's maybe a Lower acuity maybe every 30 minutes maybe every hour But first I usually typically do my vital eye vital signs at minimum every 30 minutes depending on the patient They may need more or less I try to do skin care every two hours with repositioning and of course throughout the day I'm tight-fitting drips and looking at the ventilator and assessing the patient We have to do assessments every four hours in the ICU and with any change and these are full assessments Which I will be doing a another video coming up soon here on ICU like head-to-toe assessment throughout the day I may get patients who are downgraded to like a telemetry floor med search floor So when that happens, of course, we have to get a long stay other call report Turn to the patient down and I may get patients who are upgraded to the ICU or admissions from the ER So that kind of you know varies my day I typically try to take a lunch break somewhere around One to two-ish if I'm lucky throughout the day doctors are always coming in the room the specialist and assessing the patients There's really no time specific time that they come by it just random Um and the morning we do rounds with all the like core staff and people involved in the patient's care and Kind of get a basis of what the day is bringing and at 7 o'clock night shift nurses come on and I give report And then I ideally get home well leave by 7 30 no later sometimes earlier sometimes later If I have to stay in chart and catch up on things, but yeah, that's a typical day It's sounds a lot simpler on when I'm just talking about it But really things can be crazy or they can be like totally boring just depends. That's what the ICU brings Thank you guys for watching this video make sure you give it thumbs up and subscribe to my channel And I'll see you guys next time. Bye
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Samuel L. Jackson Interview Clip
While attending an NBA basketball game in New Orleans, actor Samuel L. Jackson takes a few minutes to explain what the U.S. Navy means to him. The U.S. Navy was in New Orleans to kickoff a three-year commemoration of The War of 1812. Video by: MC2 (SW) Jacob Sippel, NPASE East Det SE Released by Lt. j.g. Haraz N. Ghanbari
[ "Samuel", "Jackson", "Interview", "Clip" ]
2012-04-20T14:34:23
2024-02-05T09:03:18
50
3k7I8xkJZtU
Hi, I'm Samuel L. Jackson here down in New Orleans with a bunch of other sailors in the room for Navy Week. I want to thank you guys for what you do for keeping us safe and for keeping the seas passable for all of us. The Navy has always meant that we have a protective force surrounding the country, especially on the waters and our coasts and our very important passageways. You guys have always been the guys who kind of transported other guys who made sure everybody was able to get where they go and protected smaller ships and bigger ships and took planes out to take care of business for us. We appreciate all you do. I love you. I even love your uniforms.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3k7I8xkJZtU", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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Issues in National Security, Lecture 4: Lindsay Cohn and Jessica Blankshain
In the Issues in National Security Lecture Series, U.S. Naval War College faculty hold scholarly lectures for the benefit of spouses and other family members of our students and employees. Ten lectures will be offered from January through May 2019. For the Feb. 19 event, professors Lindsay Cohn and Jessica Blankshain spoke on civil-military relations.
null
2019-04-10T15:38:07
2024-02-05T06:22:08
4,507
3kkaP-i2owk
I'm Dave Pallatti, very excited to serve as your moderator and host this evening. I see some new faces in uniform in the audience from the Naval Academy Prep School, welcome. And for lots of the familiar faces that are here, it's great to have you. This is our fourth lecture in the Issues in National Security Lecture Series. We're delighted you could join us. This will run till 5.45. Both Dr. Kahn and Dr. Blankshane said they have plenty of time for questions at the end of their lecture. So if you could save your questions, we'll have at least 20, if not 30 minutes for you to talk back and forth with them. Tonight's topic is incredibly timely, which is why I think we have such a great turnout, is we are living arguably in one of the most interesting times in modern history in the United States from a perspective of civil military relations. And we are incredibly fortunate to have two leading voices in this field for you to talk with. Just to cover quickly, this is a four-attribution lecture. It's actually being recorded, just so everyone's aware. Therefore, feel free to share any of the discussions with everybody in your network. Encourage them to go to the Naval War College website and check this out if they didn't get to make it. And I will also say for both of our doctors, keep in mind that the views that they expressed this evening are their views, their personal views, and do not necessarily reflect those of the college, the Navy, or the Department of Defense. Now onto our speakers. It's my great pleasure to introduce Professor Lindsey Kahn and Jessica Blankshain, who are both from our National Security Affairs Department. As I said earlier, both are recognized scholars in this field who have a very interesting take on current state of affairs as well as historical. Lindsey came to the War College from the Council on Foreign Relations, where she worked as an International Affairs Fellow and an advisor to the Office of the Secretary of Defense. She specifically focused on issues pertaining to special operations and combating terrorism. Prior to that, she taught at the University of Northern Iowa in international relations, international security, U.S. foreign policy, and terrorism. She earned her Ph.D. from Duke University and political science. Jessica joined the War College from Harvard University, where she also earned her Ph.D. in political economy and government. Her research interests include civil military relations, bureaucratic politics, and organizational economics. As you will quickly see, they're both very popular with our students here, because they teach leading edge practice and theory in this field. And they both teach a couple of very interesting electives. Ladies and gentlemen, Dr. Kahn and Blankshain. Thank you, Dave, and thank you, everyone, for being here. We're excited to be here with you tonight for this fourth lecture. And as Dave said, so I'm Jess, that's Lindsey. People haven't heard time telling us apart, even when we don't accidentally dress alike, so we apologize for that. But we're both in the National Security Affairs Department, which for those of you who are trying to keep track of what the students are up to is the TSDM and NSDM courses that you may have heard about. And we also teach the civil military relations elective that just wrapped up last week. And we, again, as Dave sort of suggested, came to this subject from slightly different trajectories and backgrounds. And as you'll see, we focus on slightly different issues in our research, but really fundamentally are both interested in this question of how states organize and try to control violent force for political policy purposes. And what we wanted to do today is try to do a quick overview of this. And we are going to do our best to stop talking by 5.15 so that we leave enough time for you all to ask questions, which can be about anything that we've brought up during the talk or anything that we have not brought up during the talk, but that you're curious about. So if you've heard the term civil military relations before, it may be in the context of something like one of the issues suggested in these headlines. In the US, frequently we'll talk about civil military relations when we talk about the size or scope of the defense budget. When we're talking about sort of policy issues and military input into those policy issues, whether the presidents are listening to their generals, those sorts of questions, questions about the personal relationships between elected officials and military officers or those officials own military backgrounds or lack thereof. And of course, in an international context, we talk about all of these same issues and additionally have some others come up sometimes, things like coup attempts, successful or not. And the military's sort of ability to be a power player in politics and help hand control of the government to one party or faction or another. So what we are hoping to do today is clarify a bit what we mean by this idea of civil military relations as an academic discipline that we study. And focus on a couple issues in particular, one being how governments try to control their militaries. Another being a question of in the United States context, this question of a familiarity gap is the military too distant from the population and if so, should we be concerned about it? And then finally concluding with some discussion of this idea of trust in the military, which is another thing you may have heard about. The high levels of trust in the US military and what sort of national security and military policy consequences that might have. So we're going to try to do all of that by 5.15. So I will hand it over to Lindy to kick us off. Great, great that you could come, thanks for being here. So as Jess said, the first thing we're going to talk about is just a little clarity on what we mean by civil military relations. Because I think a lot of people either have never encountered this term or if they have, they tend to think that we're talking about how the military interacts with NGOs, for example. That's not what we're talking about. When we say civil military relations, what we're really talking about is this triangle of relationships amongst three groups in a society. And just as a little bit of sort of philosophical background, the problems of civil military relations arise when you have a society that has differentiated its labor to different groups. So if you have, say, a hunter-gatherer society where everybody does the work of the society when there is peace and when there is war, everybody drops their farming or hunting and gathering and picks up a spear and goes, you don't have civil military relations, because there is identity between those groups. By the same token, if you have a society that is ruled by, say, a warrior caste, like a shogunate or something like that, again, you do not have civil military relations because there is identity between the government and the military. But in most societies, even dictatorships in many cases, even non-democracies, but especially in democracies, you will have these three different groups. There is the population, the society in general, and they delegate the work of governments to a group of people who form the government, who are supposed to be... So in a democracy, it's delegated from the people, right? In non-democracies, they're just separate groups. But in either case, the government is supposed to do the running, right? And then there is this other delegated group, the people who fight, right? And as Jess pointed out, the thing that the question that motivates both of us is how do different societies think about and decide to organize and regulate and legitimize the use of violence for political ends, usually externally focused, but not always? So when you have a society that has this division of labor, then you get the problems that we are interested in, the problems of civil military relations. And what we have up here is just some examples of the kinds of things that each side would expect and demand from the other. So in this relationship, well, the most common relationship, the one that you would see in any society, regardless of what type of government it is, is this one between the government and the military, this control relationship. But that's not a one-way relationship. It's not just that the military has to obey. The government also has responsibilities in this relationship. And we've written them up here as responsible foreign policy, having a strategy, budgeting, right? The government has to do those things or else the military can't function. In return, the military owes the government professionalism, a sense of duty, their advice on policy matters, et cetera. Down at the bottom, you have the relationship between the population and the military. Now, the military is always going to be drawn from the population in some way, but it might be drawn from the population in terms of large-scale conscription, or it might be drawn from the population by a volunteer force. There are many different ways to do that, right? And so that relationship might differ depending on how the society has organized itself. But in all cases, you're going to hope that the population gives the military some respect, some support, but also exercises some oversight, doesn't just let them get away with whatever they want. And at the same time that the military gives the society some respect and some professionalism that the military does not look down, for example, on civilians who are not serving in uniform. And then finally, over on the other side, you have the relationship between the population and the government. And this one tends to get left out of these discussions, but we both think it's very important in that in a democracy, by the way, that side of the triangle drops out when you're talking about non-democracies, because there is no popular accountability in non-democracies. But in democracies, the population's job is to determine whether the government is using the military appropriately, right? Are they giving them the appropriate budget? Are they making good foreign policy, right? And if the population thinks the government is not doing these things, they are supposed to vote them out. And one of the really important implications of this is that it's the population's job to judge the government, not the military's job, right? And that's one of the norms of civil military relations that we might talk about. Okay, what I wanted to do first is just in a sort of overview, a comparative overview of that one relationship that happens in every country that government military side of things. What are the different ways that governments try to exercise controls over their military? And when we talk about government control of the military, what we're really saying is how does a group of people who are supposed to govern the society delegate all of the effective control of deadly force to a different group of people and then expect that group of people just to do what they tell them, right? You see what the problem might be, right? Is that if the group of people with a sort of monopoly on deadly force decide that they don't like what they're being told to do, they could just not do it. They could resist. They could coo. They could do any number of things that would not constitute government control of the military. So how do governments solve this problem? Every government uses a combination of these things, but many governments rely more heavily on one than another or on a couple. So I'm just going to give you some examples. One way of doing this is to make sure that the government and military officers have the same identity in some way, right? That they either come from the same class, right? You see Prince Charles in his military uniform, indicating an identity between the ruling class of the United Kingdom and the military officers. Over here you have Hafez and Bashar al-Assad, right? Ethnicity or religion, they are both Alawite Shiite. What they have done is stacked the Syrian military officer corps with Alawite Shiites. In other words, making sure that the interests of that group of people are close to their own interests so that they have very little reason to disagree with each other. More examples, parallel military structures, right? Like a palace guard. This is designed to deter one group from trying to resist because they're afraid that another group might then resist them with armed force as well. In other words, if there are two groups of armed people running around, it is less likely that either one of them would rebel. And I've got a couple of examples for you up here. Good old Saddam Hussein with his Republican guard at the top, right? An elite group of people who got much better budget share than the rest of the Iraqi army, who got much better equipment, right? So the Iraqi army was much bigger, but they were made up mostly of conscripts, made up, they had very, very poor equipment. And if they had wanted to coup, they would have had to face the elite Republican guard, right? And down here you have Iran and the Revolutionary Guard, right? The same kind of thing. An elite unit that could easily resist a large-scale uprising by the less privileged but larger group of soldiers. Another one that you will see in many cases is professionalism, right? The idea here is that if you inculcate officers with a sense of duty, with a sense of self-restraint, that it is morally right or normatively right for them to obey the government, then they will not rebel against the government, right? Here is Shinzo Abe doing a review of his offices. Japan is a very good example of a culture of self-restraint among officers. Another one is pervasive security or surveillance. You might be familiar with the idea of political officers or commissars in, say, the Soviet Red Army or in the Chinese Army. This is when you have a state secret police or intelligence service that keeps tabs on everyone such that everyone in the military is too afraid to express different opinions or to talk about rebellion or motivate any kind of anti-government activity. It's very effective, but it's also very detrimental to the sort of morale and effectiveness of your troops. And then finally, I don't have a picture up here for this one, because it's hard to get a good picture of this. Monetary incentives, right? You pay your military. There is a reason that any time a state is having a debt crisis, the military still get paid, right, because those are the last people you want angry about missing paychecks because they have the tanks, right? But also, there are many countries where the military, so think of countries like Pakistan where the tax base is perhaps not so good, where taxation does not provide enough to support the kind of military that the state thinks it needs. So what do they do? They allow the military to make their own money by participating in business, by owning business, by running businesses. China was also an example of this for quite some time until the Chinese Communist Party decided that it led to too much corruption and they tried to crack down on it. Okay, so hopefully you can think of your own countries or think of countries that you know about and you recognize some of these things. As I said, most countries use many of these. Some of you might be thinking here of the Federalist Papers from the United States history, right? Having the National Guard or the militia and the Federal Forces, if and when we had Federal Forces and the idea was that the power wouldn't be concentrated in any one place. So why does this matter? Why does it matter how a state does this? Well, some of these produce militaries that are not very good at doing what we all think of as military things, right? I'll bring the Iraqi army back up, right? The Iraqi army was very unlikely to coup for all kinds of the reasons that you saw up there. They were also not a very good army because they had been coup-proofed to the point where they were ineffective at just about everything, right? Another problem that you can get is that some modes are not appropriate for democratic societies. In other words, if you insist that all of your offices have to come from the same ethnic or religious or ideological background as your ruling class, that doesn't seem like a very democratic way of choosing offices, does it? It's also not meritocratic. It means that you are choosing offices on some basis other than them being good at their jobs, which is also a problem for the first reason. So this was an overview of sort of that one side of the triangle that every single country has to deal with. And it has implications for all kinds of other things as well. But we do wanna talk about the other sides of the triangle. So I'm gonna give this back to Jess and she's going to take up the US case and talk about the problem of the familiarity gap. Thank you. So yes, as Lindsay said, we also don't want to neglect the other sides of the triangle. So one thing that's interesting to look at in the US case and that you may hear in the media on occasion in a number of different articles, is anybody familiar with James Fallow's tragedy of the American military from the Atlantic in 2015 is one of a number of articles sort of in this vein making this argument about this familiarity gap. Which is the idea that going back to our triangle, that the distance between the population and the military has gotten too big. Particularly this is often made in the context of the sort of post Vietnam and of the draft era all volunteer military. The idea that the American military is now a separate, sometimes called warrior cast that is separate from society, that these two points of the triangle are very distant from each other and that this has implications not just for that side of the triangle, the relationship between those two, but also for the public's ability to hold the government accountable or its interest in holding the government accountable. Either that the public isn't informed enough about what the military is doing and how it works to be able to hold the government accountable for military policy or simply that they don't care. Because it doesn't matter to them. So to look into this question, we need to answer a couple sort of sub questions, right? The first being, is there this familiarity gap that people talk about? Is the military in the United States really that distant from society? Sort of in absolute terms, in historical terms, these kinds of questions. If it is, then does that matter for how people think about the military and military policy? Do people who have familiarity and connection to the military, either because they were in it themselves or because they know people who are or were in it, think differently about use of the military and some of these national security policy questions than people who don't have that familiarity? And then finally, is there anything we can do about it if the answer to those two are yes? Are there things that the government can do to change the level of familiarity that the citizens have with the military or not? So we'll start at the beginning. Usually this argument gets made in terms of the idea of the other 1%, as it's sometimes called. The idea that only 1% of the United States is bearing this responsibility of providing national defense. And one thing that's important to remember is to try to put this in historical context. Usually when people cite the statistic, they compare it to here. To essentially the World War II era when you can see on our little graph here that nearly 10% of the adult population was participating in military service, right? Majority of able-bodied males were serving. So we see this big spike in the military population. And when you make this comparison of today, which you can see we had to put two graphs together here, so I apologize, but today we have, we do in fact have a small percentage of society serving. And if you compare that to World War II, it looks very, very small. But it's important to keep in mind the broader context that if you look at this whole graph, World War II is the oddity, right? This is the sort of strange point in American history when we had this mass mobilization that saw such a huge part of the population in service. It's actually quite common in American history to have 1%, 2%, 3% of the population in military service even during times of significant conflict. And certainly, there are discussions to be had about what it means to have a military this size doing a lot more around the world. But historically speaking, it's not odd for only 1% of the United States population to be in the military. And it's also important to remember if we're concerned just about that number, the percent, right, we think it's too small potentially, assuming that we are not planning to do anything to decrease the size of the overall population, then our option to change that number is to either make the military bigger, right, which requires money, or to increase turnover in the military in some ways that the military is effectively producing veterans more quickly, right? So those are just important contexts to keep in mind when we're looking at this picture. Now, of course, the other question is it's possible that we have sort of a normal percentage of the population serving in the military, but that this percentage is somehow more isolated than they used to be. They used to be sort of more distributed through society, and now it's still 1%, but it's sort of segregated and only a small number of people actually know someone in the military. It's not easy to get data on this. We don't have a lot of it, but we have a little bit. So this is from a study done by the Pew Research Center, which is a quite reputable polling public opinion institution where this was from 2011, I believe, is this data, where they asked a representative sample of Americans whether they had new people in the military in various contexts. And we put this slide up because it's very surprising to a lot of people. These numbers are a lot higher than many people expect them to be, particularly this one. So they asked, do you have a close friend or family member who has served in Iraq or Afghanistan? And more than half of their sample said yes. The numbers not surprisingly go up a bit when you go to veteran from any era, right? And then when you go from immediate family member to the less restrictive any family member, which would include things like grandparents and its uncles, it goes up even further. So this suggests that the military might not be as isolated as some arguments suggest. Now, there is some evidence that this is, that this picture may change over time, right? So here we see the question about, do you have an immediate family member who has ever served broken out by age group? And you do see, which is probably fits most people's intuition, that among older Americans, they're much more likely to say they have an immediate family member who has served. Now, part of that is because they just logistically have more immediate family members who are of age that they could have served in the military. Your 18 to 29 year olds are unlikely to have children old enough to be able to serve in the military. But also, this is what we would expect, given this picture, right, that there was a time when there were just a lot more veterans. And you do also see, this is the other argument that you see a lot in the military becoming a family business. You do see that especially among younger people, those who have served in the military are more likely to have veteran family members than those who have not served in the military, right? We do see that in our data here. Again, this is probably not surprising. We see this in a number of different professions and occupations that they tend to sort of run in families in particular ways. The question is, do we find it particularly concerning when it comes to the military? Which is something we can have a discussion about in Q and A. So, okay, that's all fine and good. We get this picture that there is potentially some separation between the military and society, maybe not as big or drastic as some pictures suggest. Does it matter? Do the people who know someone in the military or were in the military have different attitudes about national security policy than people who don't or weren't? Again, this is from the same Pew study. They effectively find that, so, light green is people who don't have an immediate family member who served. Dark green is they do have an immediate family member who served. And you see some differences here on this side in some of these questions about sort of patriotism, questions about military service. Would you advise someone to join the military? They do find some differences. They don't, however, find differences over here in attitudes about Iraq and Afghanistan. And this one in particular is interesting because people love to cite this number that half of Americans who don't have a family member who served feel that the wars that didn't affect them as evidence of this gap, but they failed to note the other one that people who do have an immediate family member who served say the same thing. We do have some evidence both from this survey, so great, so this is friends and family, this is its veterans themselves post 9-11 veterans. We have some evidence from this and other academic studies which we can talk about later that veterans in some circumstances have slightly different attitudes about things like use of force and other military policy. Not that they are more hawkish. We don't have evidence that veterans, those with significant military experience are significantly more likely to want to go to war. We do have some evidence that if the government is going to go to war, they note that veterans are more likely to want to use overwhelming force to do so. And here you see some evidence that in this survey, at least, veterans were more likely to say that Iraq and Afghanistan were worth it than were non-veterans, which potentially gets into all sorts of complicated, psychological reasons having to do with motivated reasoning and wanting to feel like if you participated in something that was potentially costly to you that it was worth it. So this leads to this final question, getting back to the triangle and accountability of can the government do anything to change this familiarity level, right? Again, sometimes people point to the end of the draft, the introduction of the all-volunteer force as sort of the point of the separation, which implies that if we changed our policies, for example, went back to conscription, that we would see more familiarity or potentially the people sort of doing more to oversee the government in its use of force. There are a number of academic studies that look into this, which again, we can go into in detail in the Q&A if anybody's interested, but they look at questions like, is the public more or less likely to support conflict when there is conscription than when there is not conscription? If more people feel that they will be personally affected by a conflict, are they less likely to support it? If people think that conflict is likely to be costly in aggregate, right? Either financially or in terms of casualties, are they less supportive of that conflict? The answer is generally yes, but subject to the benefits of the conflict, so people are to some extent rational about this. And also, there's some evidence that people are less likely to support conflicts when they think that the system that the government is using to recruit manpower is unfair, which again, we can talk about later what unfair means in that context. Lindsay and I did a little bit of research on this to try to dig into this question, looking at the question of, basically we were motivated by this idea that during Vietnam, the draft was used, but mobilizing the garden reserves was seen as too costly to be used. It would involve too many people, make too many people sensitive to the cost of this conflict, particularly because of the types of people it was involving, so the garden reserve were not sent overseas for the most part, where today we see the reverse. The garden reserves have been used nearly constantly, while a draft is only brought up as this sort of political third rail. And so we wanted to know what would happen if we told people, essentially, that either there would be a draft, the garden reserve would be mobilized, only the active duty troops would be mobilized, how this affected their views about a hypothetical military engagement. And essentially what we found is that when we tell people there's going to be a draft, they're less supportive of this hypothetical conflict, when we tell them the garden reserves are gonna be mobilized, it doesn't really affect their willingness to support this conflict relative to a baseline of just the active duty force. And in particular, we find that this is perceived as costly by the public, both in terms of aggregate casualties and the likelihood that they will be personally affected, but this is not. People don't perceive this as being costly. And even more surprisingly, we find that we don't find a lot of evidence for this idea that people who feel that they will be personally affected by a conflict are less likely to support it. So that's what this is showing here, is that if the dot is over here, it means that perceiving that you're gonna pay a cost makes you less supportive. So in terms of overall casualties, if people think casualties are going to be high, they're less supportive of the conflict. This fits with a lot of the literature. But in terms of perceiving that they will pay a personal cost, that did not make people decrease their support for the conflict, which is confusing and interesting and something that we can come back to. The bottom line essentially from all of this is that this relationship between people's familiarity with the military, their policy preferences about use of the military, and the way that the military is drawn from society is significantly more complicated than we often think it is. So one final thing here on the US is this question of, we talked about a familiarity gap, but one of the other things that come out of this is this question of not just does the public know anyone in the military, but what do they think about the military in general? How much do they trust the military? Relative to other institutions in society and what does that mean for policy, not just in terms of use of force, but all sorts of policies about defense budgets and other national security and military policy? Right, so now we're getting to that third side of the triangle, the relationship between the public and the government with respect to the military. And as Jess said, one of the issues that in the United States has become really salient recently is this issue of how much the public trusts the military relative to other social institutions. What does that trust actually mean? What does it consist of? What does it mean to say I trust the military or I support the military? And what implications does that have for how well the public exercises oversight over the government? And so we've put up here, this is just a snapshot. We can tell you that trust in almost all institutions in almost all Western societies has been declining generally since the 1970s. So that's a broad trend, but in the United States as you can see trust in the military has actually trended up. There are only a few other professions and other institutions that have that trend. So for example, I think veterinarians, people trust veterinarians. They trust firefighters, but they do not trust, as you can see the church, they don't trust big business, they don't trust Congress, they don't trust policemen, they don't trust the Supreme Court anymore. So this is an issue that we frequently see in terms, couched in civil military relations terms, but we can also think of this as a real problem for just democratic governance in general, right? This decline in trust in institutions. And where the military aspect of this comes in is what happens when you have a society that doesn't trust anyone except the people who use force? We don't know what the answer to that is. We're a little worried that we're gonna find out at some point soon. This is just a bit more granularity like Lindsay was saying with some other professions and occupations. Right, yeah, so you can look at this while I'm talking. So one of the things that we have also begun to find, and this is a more recent trend, you are probably all aware of the growing partisan polarization of US American society. One of the things that we are finding is that that trust in the military statistic also differs by partisanship. So Democrats trust in the military tends to stay fairly steady. It's got a slight upward trend, but it's not a steep upward trend, but it stays fairly steady over time. Republicans trust in the military has a steep upward trend, but it tanks when the president is a Democrat. So this is an interesting and potentially troubling issue if you've got a significant divergence between parties in how much they trust the military, but considering that we still don't know what it means to trust the military, we're not super worried as yet. So what are some of the policy implications? The defense budget, this is one of the things Jess mentioned, right? Is the public able, is the public willing to exercise oversight over their members of Congress in terms of military budgeting? Does the public have any idea what kind of budget the military needs, how much is enough, et cetera, et cetera? We can talk a little bit about the national emergency, the declaration of national emergency and border wall funding. I think the salient civil military relations issue there is how interesting it is that the DOD is probably the only place that has enough money just sloshing around that the president can say, you know what, I think I'll take a bunch of that and use it for something else. And then finally, the government shutdowns. This most recent time, the Department of Defense was not directly affected because they had already had a funding bill passed, which is of course interesting. The one thing that Congress can manage to agree on is let's give the military money. And we're not implying that there's anything wrong with that. We're just implying that it's interesting that that's the only thing they can all agree on. In previous shutdowns however, that was not the case. There was not necessarily a DOD funding bill already in place. But then if you paid attention to the congressional debates, they frequently centered on we need to fix the shutdown because we have to make sure that the troops are taken care of. And again, neither of us is implying that the troops shouldn't be taken care of. What we do question is this assumption that only the troops matter and that nobody else should be taken care of, which is the implication when that's the only thing that the congressional debates focus on. So in a sense, we worry about the military being used as a sort of political prop, essentially, that it is a way to avoid debate on more difficult issues that they don't agree on. That if you just trot out the need to help the military, you can kind of paper over all of the things that they disagree on, which is a problem because in a democratic society, the way you're supposed to reach policy is by talking about what the policy should be and making hard choices and compromising and things like that. And we see this on a range of other issues too. I mean, everything from food stamps, right, when there are discussions about sort of food assistance, often we'll come back to how does it affect the troops, similarly even with some of back during, if you remember, some of Michelle Obama's efforts towards obesity or fighting childhood obesity, right? Again, this often- Against obesity, not towards it. Yes, not for obesity, but that this gets framed in terms of what about military readiness, right? That we should care about this because it means that children aren't able to join the military, right? That this whole range of policies that ostensibly have nothing to do with the military get funneled back to what does it mean for the troops? Right. Or even ones that do have something to do with the military but they also matter for other people and the debate always comes back to how does this matter for the military? And that's kind of where all the concern is put. So we just wanted to put up a couple more examples of how this trust issue might affect policy. So we said outward facing the troops in Syria. If you've seen General Votel was just quoted in what a CNN interview, which is a question in and of itself, like why did General Votel agree to do a CNN interview? That just doesn't seem like a really good idea. It's gone so well in the past for other commanders. Yeah. But he did, he agreed to do this interview and in the interview he said, I was not asked what my advice was on the Syria thing. I would not have given the president the advice to do what he's doing and I think it's a really bad idea. How is this gonna play in the public? You've got a fairly respected general who has no partisan past, certainly doesn't seem like a partisan and he's out there criticizing the president's policy saying that he wasn't consulted. This is one of those things where we wonder how that will affect both public opinion and trust in the military and feelings about the military. And then you've got internally facing policies like the integration of women into formerly closed combat specialties, whether or not transgender people can serve, but also a lot of other things like just BRAC, the base realignment and enclosure, which is still a thing after all of these years, the issue of whether we can close down missile silos in rural Midwestern states because we don't actually need them or anything but those members of Congress don't want those to leave their states because that means a lot of influence lost for them, right? So there are all kinds of ways in which the status of the military and the policy preferences of the military interact even if the military were really a completely non-political, completely non-partisan body of people who were fully professional and focused only on doing their jobs. Even if that were the case, it would still interact with domestic politics in ways that we think are interesting and important to look at. And so unless you have anything else to add, we will stop there. Actually on time for one. So we know we've thrown a lot at you on a range of different topics and we are happy to take any of your questions about these issues or any others that come to mind. Doctors, I have a question on making sure the military gets paid. Is this because Congress wants to be sure that we're safe and secure? Or is it because Congress wants to protect themselves from actually not doing a job that they're paid to do from the top on down? So it's more of a self-preservation of their political beliefs, more than interest in the country. Because right now, honestly, if I had a B-52 with 30 megatons, I would drop it on DC. That's how mad I am. Anyway, do you have a book on this? I'd love to read it. There are lots of books that we can recommend. I mean, I think the first answer is yes, they care about both, right? That we have reason to believe both that they legitimately, there are reasons, as Lindsay said at the beginning, in the control section to want to pay your military. That's generally a good idea, both for maintaining control of the military and for making sure that the military has the resources to do what it needs to protect you. At the same time, it seems very likely that elected officials are also concerned about the politics and the optics of what happens if you are seen to not support the troops and also understand that this is a leverage point, particularly across parties, right? To Lindsay's point, this is sort of the one thing that the parties can agree on, is that the troops should be paid, and therefore that's sort of an easy place to go to try to solve this problem instead of actually digging into some of the more actually divisive issues. Yeah, and just to, I agree with all of that, just to get at your sort of specific dig about are they trying to avoid doing their jobs? I mean, I think most public servants do want to do their jobs, but they have a whole list of things they want, and doing their jobs is just one of those things, and sometimes it gets eclipsed by the other things that they want. And in this particular case, I think a lot of the members of Congress, if they can manage to agree on a DOD funding and just do continuing resolutions for everything else, then they are to a certain extent avoiding doing what they need to do, which is making the hard choices that we talked about. But I think Jess is right. I think the funding the DOD is low-hanging fruit. It's the easiest thing for them all to agree on. It makes them look good. It pushes off problems to another day. And it means that the military has, at least the budget that it needs to do its things. Can you hear me? Yeah. At what point do you think our military might decide to take matters into their own hands where you kick your military off and they decide they want to be the government? Absolutely. And to me, again, from my ignorant viewpoint is that they're not getting the leadership from the president or Congress they need. This has got to be a real sore point with them. At what point does a commander, a theater commander say to the president, go away, let me do my job? This is a question that we talk about in U.S. civil military relations. And I think that that phrasing of it is more the one that we tend to focus on when we're looking at U.S. civil military relations. Generally speaking, we don't spend a lot of time concerned about an outright coup in the United States. If anybody reads The Onion, they did a piece a couple years ago about Marty Dempsey talking about how easy it would be for him to conduct a coup and in the United States, it's funny and it's in The Onion and it's satire because no one is really concerned that this is gonna happen. Where we do focus is on the ways that the military can influence policy short of something like a coup either through their sort of attempts to extract resources in the form of the budget, saying things like, well, we can't possibly follow the sequestration guidelines because that would just be inadvisable and unsafe and we can't do it so you have to give us more money whether it's pushing back on the president's policies either in the form of giving a public interview or leaking documents to the press that might let the public know what the internal deliberations were. Those sorts of more nuanced ways of influencing policy are usually what we are sort of looking for more in the US case. Yeah, we have other examples of that so most recently we have at least reporting and I don't know the truth of this or not but we have certainly reporting that Secretary Mattis was on the phone with the president and the president was saying we should just bomb a whole bunch of people in Syria and Secretary Mattis sort of nodded and said, aha, aha, and then hung up the phone and turned to an aide and said, we're not doing any of that. So, you know, we definitely, right? And this is a particularly interesting case, right? We didn't go into the whole because most of them are not there anymore issue of active and retired officers serving in senior administration positions but this is one where Mattis is really interesting because the way we would think about a purely civilian Secretary of Defense doing exactly that, basically ignoring the president's guidance, I think a lot of people would think about that differently than they think about someone that the president still called General Mattis doing the same thing and it all goes back to the slides Lizzie was showing about how the public's confidence in the military is so much higher than their trust in other parts of the government. So, I think just to wrap up, you point out the lack of leadership, the lack of trust from the military to the government. I think that's a really significant problem. I think governments, as in that triangle slide, the government has a responsibility to provide leadership. The government has a responsibility to make good policy. But as we also said, it's not the military's job to make that judgment. It's the people's job to make that judgment. And so, while I'm not an absolutist, I do think that there are exceptions. There are extreme circumstances under which you cannot expect moral agents to go ahead and do what they're being told if it's really, really horrible. But in general, I think we would hope that the military's response to poor leadership would be to try to help lead from below, right? And I don't mean lead from below by going and doing what they want, but to try to help the leadership develop better policy. And I mean, you can only do so much of that. It depends on how much they're willing to absorb in terms of advice. But I think we're already seeing some of the milder forms of what you're worried about, and that's not surprising. Other questions? Dave? Drs, thank you very much. Lieutenant Colonel Jackson Dome, Marine Corps, senior class. The question I had was, you had on the triangulation public government and the military. And certainly it can be argued that there is a mutual respect between the civilian, the public side, and the military side, because we're a voluntary force and we come from the public. So there's a level of trust there inherent to that origination of where the military derives from. But I can see there that there's transparency, there's oversight coming from both sides, primarily what you said was the population oversight on the government, on the extension of the military and how they use the military through policy. But with the lack of overt transparency coming from the government, I would think that that would be the decrease in trust from the population to the government. But what would you forecast as seeing that continual decrease in overt transparency from the government, then bleeding over to the trust going to the military directly because of the link from us to the government? That's a really good question. I would point out what we've got up here is the ideal, right? So our study is both descriptive in the sense that we want to know what these relationships actually look like, but also normative in that we want to think about how they should look. And so this is how they should look. This doesn't necessarily describe how they actually look right now. But to get to your point, so if the transparency from the government goes down, will that affect the population's support for and trust in the military? I think that to use the most quintessential academic answer there is, that depends. But I think that, I think you're kind of seeing why that depends. So my example of General Votel, right? In the United States, we currently have a military that feels quite comfortable talking to the press, which I think in many ways is a good thing, right? But it can have its downsides. But one of the things that that might do is maintain the trust relationship between the public and the military even while the government's transparency is going down. Because if the public has a direct link to the military through the press, then you still have that relationship. I think if what you see is both a lowering of government transparency and a government retraction of the military away from the press, for example, like if the government started putting restrictions on that, that might be good in some ways, right? Like I don't think either of us thinks General Votel made a good decision in talking to CNN about that stuff. But it might have the effect that you're worried about that that would reduce the sort of feeling of mutual understanding, mutual trust between the troops and the population. And I think the press plays a really interesting role here that is often neglected. One of the arguments that you'll hear frequently is this idea that sort of military officers have an obligation to go to the public to provide transparency when the government isn't doing it, where a number of civ mill scholars would argue that's not their job. It's not their job to hold the government accountable. It's the public's job to hold the government accountable. The question then, of course, is how does the public do that if they don't know what's going on? And in the idealistic answer is that in the US system, the Constitution has enshrined the role of the press as the actor that is supposed to ensure that the public can do that, right? That that's the press's role. Now, of course, frequently the press gets their information from leaks inside the government. But we also, back to this trust question, potentially have a significant problem in that respect. If you see the news media is down there, that the news media is trusted significantly less to act in the public interest than, say, the military. And so this gets back to the idea of trust in these various aspects of our democratic institutions potentially being out of whack in ways that create issues for these oversight relationships. And that also, as you might guess, has a partisan dimension to it, right? And that, again, there's nothing wrong with having parties. Most democratic societies have parties, and they serve a really important function. But when you start getting to the point where parties are so far apart that they cannot talk to each other, that they cannot sort of come to any mutual agreement or common ground, then you start having problems. And so as you see a partisan divide on trust in the military, trust in the news media, you might start having disconnects that are really hard to fix. Thank you. I saw that you had a lot of information about the familiarity gap between the public and the military, and I was wondering if there was anything similar between the military and the government. Ah, well. There happens to be a book. There is a book. We should make a slide with all the books. We should. There was a big study done on this back in the late 1990s, a big survey study done from which we have a fair amount of data. And then there was more recently a follow-up survey done in, I think the survey was done in 2014, and the book was published in 2016. Edited by Jim Mattis and Corey Shachie, called Warriors and Citizens or something like that, yeah. So there is survey data on this, and it turns out that, so one of the criticisms that you'll frequently hear is that, well, Congress doesn't do right by the military in whatever form, because none of their children have to serve. None of their children have to be in harm's way. It turns out that data-wise, members of the political elite are actually more likely to have a family member who has served, a close family member, a direct family member who has served in the military than not. The percentage of veterans in Congress is still significantly higher than the percentage of, oh, hey, look at that. I got you back. The percentage of veterans in Congress is still significantly higher than the percentage of veterans in the general population. It's disproportionately high. And as you might expect, also one thing that we really haven't talked about is the difference between the officer core and the enlisted core, right? Officers in this country tend to look an awful lot like the political elite, right? They tend to, well, they all have bachelor's degrees for one thing, so they tend to be among the sort of 33-ish percent of the US population, adult population, with a bachelor's degree. They are more likely to be white. They are more likely to be middle class or upper middle class, right? The enlisted ranks tend to be much more diverse, both politically and socioeconomically and all of that. But in terms of familiarity gap between sort of the military and the political leadership, it's actually smaller than the familiarity gap between the military and the general public. And just to that, there's one more point too that I glossed over in talking about the familiarity gap to begin with that's relevant both to the public military gap and a potential military government gap is that when we're looking at any of these gaps, there's a tendency to sort of assume that there's a causal relationship there, right? That the gap exists because something about being in the military or familiar with the military makes people different. The alternative, of course, is what we would call a selection argument, which is basically the idea that these people were already different, which is what led some of them to join the military and others to not join the military. And those would sort of manifest the same in data, right? You would see the same gaps, but would be caused by fundamentally different processes which might make us care about them for very different reasons. And unfortunately, because they look the same and a lot of the data, it's really hard to tell them apart. But we're starting to be able to do that and what we're finding is that on a lot of these dimensions, particularly some of the things we showed around things like patriotism and views about the military, the gap seems to be less of a civil military one than it is based on party and a few other demographic items that basically Republicans in the military on a number of these issues have the same views as Republicans outside the military. It's just that particularly within the officer corps, the balance has shifted more towards Republicans. So if you survey the officer corps as a whole, they look more like Republicans than like Democrats, even though individually, it doesn't seem like the military service is what's driving those views. Yeah, just to add to that a little bit, there is a good amount of evidence at this point that most of what we see manifesting as civil military differences are from selection effects, not socialization effects, right? Not change once you're in the military or change from familiarity with the military. So that's actually really important and has important implications for if we're worried about any of these gaps. That implies that what you really need to do is start being way less efficient with your recruiting. You need to start recruiting people who are more expensive and harder to recruit because they're different, right? If you worry about this gap. Now, we haven't necessarily established that any of these gaps are really that big of a deal, especially because a lot of them are not in fact civil military gaps, as Jess pointed out. A lot of these gaps don't come from the fact that if you're in the military, you start to think like this. A lot of these gaps come from other issues in society that are just manifesting because certain people are more likely to join the military than others. How do you feel the military offering large benefits like enlistment bonuses and free healthcare affect the public trust in the military? Ooh, I was not expecting that twist at the end of that question. You may have stumped our benefits expert momentarily. So this is what I study. I think that I honestly have never thought about the question of whether the fact that the military gets these benefits affects public trust in the military. I do think that we have a fair amount of that, so I'm gonna answer the question I wanted you to ask. I do think we have a fair amount of evidence, though, that the public is very satisfied with the idea that the military gets these benefits. The public thinks that it's absolutely right and appropriate for the military to get these benefits, which is the thing that would matter for trust. If the public thought that it would, there are two possibilities. Either one, the public didn't know. The public thought that you all got exactly the same things they got, and if they found out that you got better stuff, then they'd be really upset. I don't think there's any evidence that that's happening. The other possibility is if they did know and they really resented it, that would decrease public trust, I think, because they would feel like, hey, why are these people getting all of these things? I don't get any of these things. We don't see any evidence of that. What we do see is a public that thinks that the military ought to get healthcare. They ought to get retirement, right? They ought to get paid vacation. They ought to get all of these things because the job that they do is very difficult, very demanding, very risky in some cases, right? So in a roundabout way, I think what you see is that the public believes that these are merited benefits and bonuses and therefore they don't really have a problem and it doesn't affect the way they feel about the military. Do you wanna ask it again? What? What you didn't wanna ask. Good evening, Lieutenant Commander Garcia. I'm in the War College here with some of my classmates. My question is, to the extent that we likely agree that the military should be a microcosm of the greater society, how, you know, if we can agree to that, does that affect trust at all? You showed some good stats up there on the demographics of the trust in the military, but it didn't in my mind necessarily speak to, you know, why people, why those individual demographics, whether it be age specifically or any others that you have up there, why the military? Is it because of the job? It's not because we wear some uniform. What is it that, and if there's any research that you've done or anybody else has done, why is it that the military is higher? So are you asking, I'm sorry, are you asking what causes the public's high trust in the military? Yes, yeah. I probably could have done that in a way fewer words, but. But you also threw out like three different interesting questions that I also wanna answer, so. But the, I mean, the short answer to that, I think, is we wish we knew, and there are a number of people who are working on studies right now to try to figure that out. One particular question that's being asked is sort of what is the connection between confidence and perceptions of competence? Anybody who's in sort of like the management leadership type literature probably knows this idea, right, that if you trust someone, it's usually because you believe that they're competent and that they have good intentions, right? So those are kind of the two dimensions that you can look at. So one that we can look at is competence, which brings up sort of an interesting question of at a time when most of the conflicts that the military has been involved in have not been ones that are sort of clear decisive winds of a World War II or even Desert Storm style, right? You could predict that that would decrease confidence because the perceived competence is not there, right, to go get the job done. We don't see that happening, right? If you go back to this, this ends in 2011, right? But you see that it still stays pretty high even once we're, even on an upward trend since 2003, which is great. So there are some people who are looking at that. Again, here the question is, do you trust them to act in the public interest, which seems to be getting more of the intent question, right? Of do you believe that these individuals have kind of the public's best interest at heart? So it appears that the public does believe that. We don't really know why, and we particularly don't know why the public believes that of the military compared to a lot of other occupations that effectively serve the public in other ways. Yeah, I would, we don't know. We have lots of theories. One theory is that the public narrative about the military since Desert Storm, there was a concerted effort to change the narrative away from what it had been post Vietnam, right? So there was a concerted effort to change that narrative into, regardless of what the government's policy is, we're gonna support the troops, they don't have a choice, they signed up to serve the public and that's what they're doing and they're sacrificing a lot to do that. So this narrative of sacrifice, of public service, of heroics, of sort of nobility, I think that that has a lot to do with it, but we don't have evidence that that's what's driving it. And just quickly to the point about representation, we do, we have a million more slides that I could go through that I will not, because we don't have time, about the sort of, is the military representative? Because one of the other strains of this familiarity gap argument is the idea that since the draft, the military has become less representative of society in terms of what it looks like, and that's just not true. That is completely, flatly not true. If you compare the all volunteer force to the draft era military, in most respects, it is more representative of society. But there's an interesting question there, right, that the sort of, can we agree that that's what we want? And based on some of the things we've talked about already, you can sort of think of three reasons you could argue that as what we want. One goes back to Lindsay's control argument, right, which is the idea that if you have a military that looks like the society it represents, it should have the same interests as the society it represents, and therefore you don't have to worry about them going off and trying to do things that you don't want them to do. This is kind of some of the citizen soldier argument, right, that if the warriors are just like everyone else, then they won't have separate interests of their own. Another would be an effectiveness argument, right, which is the idea that if you are systematically excluding groups of people from the military, you are missing out on talent that exists in those groups, right, that could be a part of the military. And so those are both sort of instrumental arguments, right, of we want the military to look like society because it helps us achieve these other benefits. There's a third, which is more sort of a normative democratic argument, which is that we want the military to look like society because it just should, right, that that's something we value as a democratic society, that we're providing these opportunities to people that the military looks like society, it just is in itself good. Yeah, and the good news is that it does. The All Volunteer Force is surprisingly representative in all of the ways that you think that it's not, right, so one of the things that you'll frequently hear is that the South is overrepresented. This is true, but it's only by about 3%, which is not a big deal, and nobody should really care. And it's been that way for a very long time. And it's been that way for a long time. This is the other thing, is that a lot of the things that people argue now, they make it sound like this is a new, scary thing when actually it's just been like that all along and it's never changed. Another one that people worry about is socioeconomic status. Oh, geography, go back, we can do. Yep. Yeah, the map one. Yeah, there we go. This is a nice one. So if you think the South is overrepresented, it might be because of this type of map, so this is 2002, but it hasn't changed much. That's the thing, this doesn't change over time very much. This is absolute numbers of recruits, right? So if you think, oh, I know the South is represented, every fourth officer I've ever met is from Georgia, right? That's because of this, it's because of absolute numbers. But in terms of proportion of the youth population, in terms of proportionality, it's actually pretty good. In fact, the highest proportions of people are coming from these very rural, scarcely populated Midwestern states in many cases. The socioeconomic status one is also really interesting. Do we have that slide? Is that this one? Yes. So this is splitting the population into five equal groups, right? So 20% of the population. And you can see the richest quintile is a little bit underrepresented. And this is looking at enlisted specifically. Yeah, so this is enlisted, because as we said, the officers are going to be upper middle class. The poorest quintile, so if they were perfectly representative, they'd each be at 20%, right? And you see that they are not each at 20%, but it's really not that bad, right? So when we worry about, and the one that's most underrepresented, as you can see, is the poorest quintile. And this gets back to one of the things just mentioned, which is obesity and other health issues, but also education issues. But the poorest quintile of this country's population has a lot of health issues. And many times they cannot pass the test required to get into the military. Next? Yeah, go for it. So when it comes to why the military is trusted more than the government, how much that is because you think that when the military messes up, the government's blamed. And then how much of it all can also be because of the fact that if the people can't trust the government, they have to feel like they have to trust something. So they're afraid to not trust anything besides the military, so. Both good theories, thank you. We'll use those. We'll look into that. Yes, I mean the question of who gets blamed is a really interesting one too, that goes to sort of a lot of questions around expertise. The students who have been in some of our classes around intelligence, right, are probably familiar with the phrase, what, there are only policy successes and intelligence failures. So that's one where we see the opposite dynamic, right, that if something goes wrong, the intelligence, it gets blamed. If it goes well, then it was a good policy. So it's an interesting question, right, of why in the case of military policy, it often seems to go the other way, right? And if it goes well, it's because our great military had a great success, where if it goes poorly, for example, Vietnam, then it's because those civilians interfered and ruined things, right? So it's, yeah, it's a very good theory and we. Except that we blamed the civilians in Vietnam and the military still had a bad reputation. So, not quite sure. I like the idea, though. I think we should definitely look into this, who gets blamed for what thing. But it goes back to what Jess was saying about the competence argument. And frankly, we just don't see a lot of evidence that competence, that a belief in competence is why people trust the military. They certainly believe the military is competent, but it doesn't seem to have any connection to actual performance. And just really interestingly, one of the more recent ones of these that came out that I didn't have time to get into a slide was looking at confidence in things and with partisan dimensions. And the one that could compete with the military and was particularly trusted among Democrats was Amazon. So, yeah, Amazon. So, I mean, there are these questions of sort of, if people don't trust the government, who or what do they trust and why? And that's a particularly kind of interesting and weird one because it seems to be one where competence is a big part of it. I can ask them for anything and they'll give it to me right away. And that people have a lot of interaction with where sometimes the familiarity gap argument is people trust the military because they don't know anything about it. If they actually knew how the military worked, they wouldn't trust it so much. But it's sort of off there on a pedestal so they trust it. So, yeah, there are a lot of really interesting dynamics who untangle and sort of buried in some of these graphs about who is trusted by whom and why. So, we just want you to worry about it. We don't actually have any answers. So, please join me in thanking Drs. Blankshane and Khan. I'd also like to thank Anne from the Fleet and Family Support Center. And as you leave the auditorium this evening, if you'd like to come out this way and grab some of their fantastic materials and say hi to her, that would be great. They're our co-sponsor. Can't do this without them. Thank you, Anne. And thanks everybody for coming tonight. Safe travels home.
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Ukrainian army shot down another Mi-8 helicopter on Russian territory - all crew members were killed
#Kanal13​ #likekanal13​ #subscribekanal13 #warinukraine https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1 - SUBSCRIBE TO US! http://youtube.com/kanal13az/join - click here and support Kanal13 monthly for distributing more videos and independent journalism http://t.me/kanal13tv & https://bit.ly/37BVMqU https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1 https://bit.ly/2Rs6MB3 #lastminutenewsfromukraine #kanal13ukraine https://bit.ly/2V19Fdy Click here and just subscribe to Kanal13 - https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1 Kanalımıza bu linkə tıklamaqla dəstəyinizi göstərin: http://bit.ly/birmanat https://www.youtube.com/KANAL13AZ/join *ATTENTION: If you woul like to contact with US please, write to +49176 75077516 WhatsApp *DIQQƏT: Kanal13-də vətəndaş şikayətləri ilə bağlı yayılan videolar kanalın mövqeyini əks etdirmir, kanal bu ittihamların məzmununa görə məsuliyyət daşımır və hər hansı video materialda adı çəkilən və ya özünü qarşı tərəf kimi görən bütün hüquqi və fiziki şəxslərin mövqeyini də dərc etməyə hazırıq. Əlaqə üçün: +49176 75077516 WhatsApp **Diqqət! Diqqət! Sizdən hər hansı işlə bağlı Kanal13 adından pul istəyiblərsə təcili olaraq +49176 75077516 WhatsApp nömrəmizə yazaraq bildirin və polisə və prokurorluğa xəbər verin!!! Kanal13 olaraq Uca Millətimizə təmənnasız xidmət etməkdən qürur duyuruq!!! © Kanal13 TV istehsal etdiyi bütün video və audio məhsulları azad yayım hüququ altında yayır (free copyright and reuse allowed) və hər bir digər yayımçı Kanal13 tərəfindən istehsal edilmiş məhsulu məzmunu dəyişdirmədən, loqonu silmədən, Kanal13-ə istinad etməklə təkrar yaya bilər. Bu halda şirkətimizdən xüsusi icazə alınmasına ehtiyac yoxdur: Amma bir qeydə XÜSUSİ DİQQƏT YETİRİN: Kanal13-də yayımlanmış materialların digər YouTUbe kanallarında təkrar yayımına ancaq 48 SAATDAN SONRA İCAZƏ VERİLİR. Ümumiyyətlə isə, arzuediləndir ki, Kanal13-ə məxsus hər hansı video material youtube.com/kanal13az hesabına link verilməklə yayımlansın. Materialların qeyd edilən tələblər daxilində başqa youtube hesablarına, saytlara və ya sosial şəbəkələrə yüklənərək yayılması sərbəstdir. Qaydalar pozularsa şikayət edilə biləcəyinizi nəzərə alın! Xüsusi qeyd: Şərh bölməsində yazılan təhqir və söyüşlər silincək. Kanal13 olaraq hörmətli izləyicilərimizdən xahiş edirik ki, tənqid yazmağı təhqir yazmaqla qarışdırmasınlar və heç kimi aşağılayıcı ifadələrlə təhqir etməsinlər. ▌▌►Website: http://kanal13.tv/ http://www.facebook.com/tvkanal13 https://twitter.com/Kanal13Az https://www.instagram.com/kanal13.az Click & Subscribe to the main youtube Channel © KANAL13 [ Azərbaycanın ilk peşəkar internet televiziyası ] The First Internet TV of Azerbaijan Tags: Ukriane, Russia, Putin, Putler, Russian invasion of Ukraine, Zelenski, Kiev, Kyiv, Kadirov army, Kadirov, Kherson, Bucha, Kharkiv, Ukrainian pilots, vagners, Russian tanks, NATO, drones, Moscow, Kreml, war victims Ukraina,
[ "xeberler en son xeberler", "son xeber", "xəbərlər", "son xəbər", "aksiya", "mitinq", "kanal13", "kanal13 xeber", "tecili xeberler", "en son xeberler", "ən son xəbərlər", "son xəbərlər", "son xeberler", "günün son xəbərləri", "günün xəbərləri", "günün xeberleri", "etiraz aksiyası", "mitinq aksiya", "Ukriane", "Russia", "Putin", "Putler", "Russian invasion of Ukraine", "Zelenski", "Kiev", "Kyiv", "Kadirov army", "Kadirov", "Kherson", "Bucha", "Kharkiv", "Ukrainian pilots", "vagners", "Russian tanks", "NATO", "drones", "Moscow", "Kreml", "war victims Ukraina" ]
2023-05-13T20:30:09
2024-02-14T18:42:19
73
3Ke5EBTQD70
제를 ʻɛrzʰ řɜ-žɛ-x Made Double अर्ने ʻРЕΛΔ瑞 περιafa arest target
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Ke5EBTQD70", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCWnPjmqvljcafA0z2U1fwKQ
Rocky Mountain Ruby 2014 - Day 1 Lightning Talks
00:00:00 - Teen Hackathons by Anna Fowles-Winkler 00:04:06 - Speed Up Your Deatabase by Starr Horne 00:08:11 - Go Code Colorado by Jessica Goulding 00:10:38 - Documenting and Exploring your APIs by Tim Schmelmer 00:17:07 - Dashboard Dashing by Jon McCartie Help us caption & translate this video! http://amara.org/v/F0oo/
null
2014-10-20T15:30:03
2024-02-05T07:13:45
1,305
3KzWgt_hcOo
to talk to you briefly about some of the fun things I've been doing with teens in Lafayette. I'm the organizer for the Lafayette Tech Meetup. And last year we started running kids programming workshops. We call that program Lafayette. And I just wanted to talk to you about that today because we've had a lot of great support from this community. And then we've also found that using Ruby and Python have been a really great way to get kids into computing. So again, why teen hackathons? Well, it's fun. Our main goal is to get kids, to give kids that spark of interest in computing. We're not trying to replace something like DaVinci or G-School. It's really just to get to a community who maybe isn't always able to access computers. Our hackathons are held at the Lafayette Public Library. They're free. And you don't need to have a computer, although these days a lot of kids actually do. The teens come with their friends, or they make friends that night, and we have food. And then we also get a little physical with them, too. And I've got some pictures to show you that. So the two hackathons that we run this year, the first one was a Cypher scavenger hunt. The teens had to decode a couple of different texts. And then they had to do a scavenger hunt in the library along the way to then win. More recently we ran a games hackathon where we had the kids do a couple of different games. So like a guess my number game, roll the dice game. And then for the future, I personally would like to do a language analysis hackathon. So like sentiment analysis would be perfect there, a basic sentiment analysis. So we usually just use the Code Academy Labs website for the kids to use so we don't have to set up the environment. And it's actually really nice for that. We have them save their text in a text editor so then they don't lose their work. You can see some of the kids there. The teens will come and they form teams that night, and we find that that works really well. Usually they're paired or working in groups of three. And then we'll take breaks throughout the night and we'll play some really random games. This game called Evolution where I forget what you start off as but you kind of migrate up to like higher levels of existence. And then the big picture shows this game called Ninja which involved ninja chopping. Food's always a big part of our hackathons. The library has been great to sponsor that. And so we always have pizza and chips and other snacks and the kids really like that. We've been fortunate to get some nice swag from donors and the kids always love that. They love the t-shirts, the stickers. It's amazing. So they really appreciate that. And just to acknowledge the local sponsors and the people there who have helped us make this event possible, one final note before I leave. We had two teen girls who were programming in Ruby and when they were doing the Guess the Number game, one of the things they realized was they didn't have to ask their questions, their prompts in English. Their first language was Spanish. And one of the cool things that we saw was that they were so excited to then have their computer program writing silly things in Spanish. And so that was probably one of the highlights of our recent hackathon. So thank you. My name is Sara Horan. If you haven't done this yet, if you're in charge of any servers, go and upgrade Bash. Don't listen to my talk. There is this huge vulnerability about it and it's kind of like SQL injection, but for your shell. So that's fun. It's a little public service announcement. We're going to talk about how to make your database crazy fast, right? I'm with Honey Badger. We have a lot of data coming in, so we think a lot about the database a lot. And we kind of have trouble with this as Ruby is because computers are getting more and more awesome as time goes forward. And so we're able to use these cool abstractions, you know, like active record. But as our database load grows, we actually travel back in time. We have to deal with things that people dealt with 10 years ago, 15 years ago. And we're not really necessarily used to this. And so I'm going to go over a few of these items with you. The first thing is to make sure that your queries are fast. And for that you need to know explain. And I'm sure all you guys know about like explain, right? You put explain in front of a query in Postgres and you get an explanation of the query. But the good news is that you only need to know one thing about explain and that'll get you maybe 50% there. You need to know the rows line. This is telling you how many rows the database is going to have to look through in order to answer your question to run your query. And basically the number one rule is more rows, more problems. So I've got a little bit of homework for you. Go and run explain on count pagination queries, sorting queries for larger and smaller datasets. And you'll find that, well, basically these things don't really work that well in larger datasets. All right. So nobody wants to do that, right? This is a lot of hard work. This whole query optimization stuff, like can't I just like buy my way out of this whole? Yes you can. If you happen to be using a VPS and your database is slower than you would like, put it on a real computer. And that will probably solve your problem. And use lots of hard drives. This is a normal database server for us. You put the operating system, the logs, and the database on separate disks. The goal here is to just really optimize for disk IO. Also get a lot of RAM and tell your database how to use that RAM. This link here points to an article about PGTune, which is a great utility that inspects your database, I'm sorry, inspects your computer, and writes out a sensible configuration file to let you use all that cool RAM. Increase read-ahead. Linux has this cool feature called a read-ahead cache. It's set very low, but you can get a lot of performance by increasing that size. Increase your vacuuming rate. Make sure that your locks don't have locks on your locks. Use replicants for long and slow queries. You can actually have an identical second database, identical to your first database, and use that for all your expensive reporting. Use partitioning to split big tables into little tables, and then you can do things like delete old data or archive it. Move to an incremental backup system. And finally, come at me, bro. If you have any questions or anything, I'll give you a big hug, just like this little guy here, and we can talk about databases. If you're interested in learning more about this stuff, as you probably noticed, there are a lot of links in these slides. I'll be tweeting out a link to my slide deck and the place where you can get all these links in maybe an hour or two. All right, thanks. My name is Jessica Goulding. I didn't know I was doing this talk until about 30 minutes ago, so there are no slides. There's this website. And we'll talk about it in a minute. Show of hands. Anybody go to GoCode Colorado this past year? Anybody? One, two, one? All right, I'll take it. So GoCode Colorado is a hackathon, plus plus, is like what I would like to call it. It's an initiative put on by the Secretary of State and the Governor's Office. This is, we just did the first one last year and year two has just been announced. What I really like about it is it's an initiative that's taking data already from the Colorado Information Marketplace, that's based on Socrata's platform, and taking, they reached out to businesses and said, like, what are some of the problems you're having and how can we take the data we currently have and help you solve those? So we pulled a lot of business owners last fall, came up with about, I don't know, a hundred or so problems, brought it down to 25 and then down to five and announced them as far as under the challenges, and I'll show you later, or you can go there and check it out. And what we did then is had a hackathon that went on in five locations throughout Colorado, and they were given these five challenges to solve and make teams and create them using one of those data sets and the challenge. Those are the only things and also have fun. And from there they were two teams chosen from each location and they continued on and from there it was about, this is actually some of the team we'll talk about in a minute, and they had about eight to nine weeks to continue building on their idea and then pitch it to the Secretary of State and the governor at May, and we had three challenges or three winners that came out of it. And the great thing is this is not just, you know, throw all the code you can for a presentation for, you know, 24 hours, three hours or whichever, but then also actually solving problems for our businesses locally. So I thought we would talk about it and there are here the dates. You guys are interested. Check out gocodecorretto.gov and this is a business Colorado, which is the second place in this past one out of Durango. And that's it. All right. So yeah, this is a talk about using the swagger tool chain. So I'm Tim. I work at Living Social on a team that develops a lot of services. And Tony, my co-presenter who is in here, and I have been actually contributing to a gem called Swagger Yard. And what this mainly is, is something to really help you test and document and describe your RESTful APIs. So this talk is about giving you a conceptual overview of the tools to show off some of the cool things you can really do with this. So yeah, first question is why even, you know, why on earth would you document a RESTful API, right? It's just RESTful, right? Well, really RESTful doesn't say much, right? So you still haven't said what HTTP statuses you'll be using for success and error messages. Will you have 200s or 204 responses for posts and puts? What kind of 400 code range messages do you support? Where does, you know, do you have any load that goes into the body saying, explaining the errors? All these kind of things. Where does authorization and authentication go? Yeah, anyway, all of that, versioning most of all, where will that go? So all of that is not really anywhere when you're having a RESTful API. Also, we wanted to have a way for our clients to play around with our APIs. And from a client perspective, that's really cool that they can pretty much test it out before it's even there. And then Swagger actually comes with a tool chain that provides you with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to consume your API descriptions and then play around with it. It has a really, really spiffy UI that not only documents, but even, again, lets you make those calls. So Swagger can serve as a general cross-platform IDL and can actually be consumed by various languages, like there's Binding for Scala, Java, HTML5, and you can generate client gems in a build step, if you like. Or, I think Objective-C, Python, PHP, all of those are there. But don't panic, you don't really have to use the code generation. If you don't like it, a lot of people really feel bad about that. So coming to that, there's basically three parts to Swagger. Then first one is Swagger Yard. So what you see is you're actually documenting your controller actions by saying, hey, this is what it does, some general notes. And then generally, how you get there with get request. And then what the path goes and what the parameters are. And then you explain the parameters. And yeah, then it's basically just a gem that you're mounting inside your Rails application as an engine. And yeah, you go ahead and define things like a parameter, a response type, an error message, just fully describing what this stuff does. And it generates a JSON file specifying the API as an output, a sample of which will you be seeing now. And then after that, you can actually use, you can read this, and this is basically a specification of your API in JSON for all the various things like the path for your API endpoint for your operations. And this is the way that Swagger Yard spits it out. And that's actually the standard specification for Swagger, which is an open source project. And then again, you'll actually get to a UI Explorer, which is really the cool part here. You get to play around with it. You see all the documentation. You can actually talk to the service there. Well, demo time, this is actually a recycled demonstration. So what I'm just gonna be doing actually is just show you, oops. How this thing works out. Let me actually try and reload here. There we go. So as you can see, I have a local service that's running here. I can show and hide all the various operations that I have just documented. And let's say I just want the location for a user that's there. So here you can actually describe what is the model, what is the stuff that's being returned with all the various fields on your model. And then here are the bold stuff is what's required. And this stuff is kind of optional. So you're doing a client name is required and a person ID is required. You can go ahead and make a call. And there you go. You already have your results. And just to show you this is not just fakes. Just take anything in there. You'll actually get a 404 response. So this is some cool stuff. I think it's really useful for us internally. Final thoughts on this. We actually use this a lot to get feedback while we're designing. So we can actually just document our APIs, our control reactions without even implementing them and give this to our clients so that they can play around with it. This gives us really quick feedback and usability even before we're issuing this stuff. And then, yeah, we can adapt quickly and iterate quickly. You're designing first, right? So the next thing is we'd really like you to go play and contribute to this. So it's all open source. We actually unfortunately at Living Social went to forking this because we had a hard time getting pull requests served. But if you're going to our fork of that under Tony Patali's GitHub handle, then we promise we'll be better at pull requests. And, yeah, next steps for us is actually we want to have this in our Tech Hops website to be in one central place where we have this Swagger UI and then just have all our services documented this way. So we have one central place of going to do this. And another thing we're actually really wanting to do is, like, on-the-fly client creations. So not just have a build step, but some... have a Ruby gem that actually consumes the API and then automatically gives you, based on that API, an in-process automatic code generation that gives you a DSL to talk to your services. So that's it. And, yeah, I hope more people are going to be using this. Thanks. When we talk about dashboards real quickly, my name is John. I'm a Ruby developer at LifeChurch.tv. There's five of us here from Oklahoma City. So thanks for having us. Yeah, thank you for the whistle. We just real quickly... We're part of a really big church in Oklahoma City. We are actually on a really unique team internally that builds web applications for us as a church. And then we turn that around, create SaaS products for other churches for free. And so we get to work on a couple of really cool projects, one of which is the Bible app. Have you ever heard of it? It was about 20 minutes ago. It was about 154 million installs. So that's kind of a thing. So why dashboards? You're typically ever going to create a dashboard for one of two people, either this guy, who you're going to probably be doing acquisition numbers, retention numbers, probably things with dollar signs, or this guy, who we're going to talk about today, which is the majority of this room. So quickly talking about what we use for our dashboard at work is called dashing. It's a project out of Shopify that we really, really, really like. Super easy to install. There's a gem and you install it. Dashing, new, whatever you want. Bundle it. Dashing start is what you're going to be running. And really quickly out of the gate, you can start playing around with. They've got a bunch of really nice default CSS. You can drag and drop layouts and do all kinds of fun stuff. I don't like the Windows 8 colors. So we kind of did our own thing, which I'll show you in a second. But basically how this works is you're going to collect your data. So coming from the bottom up, collecting your data from a scheduler task, from whatever service that you want, whether it's external or even internal databases, pass it up into JavaScript or CoffeeScript, and then the HTML is really, really basic. You're basically just telling it where to display and what data bindings you have. So let me show you ours real quick. Unfortunately, it's scaled for TV and I got to chop it off here, but you can kind of get a good idea of it. So at the far left, we've got our code climate numbers currently, which I feel okay showing you because they're not that bad. There's no twos, so I'm good. And we have last week's numbers below that. Our products basically go. We've got four products that are going left to right with our kind of color coded there. Right next to that is kind of server statistic stuff. All that's pulling from New Relic, including sidekick numbers. When I loaded it, Uptime hadn't run yet from Pingdom. We've also got failed jobs. You can see that 24 up there. Matt, can you get on that real quick? Thanks, buddy. Next to that is OpenPRs from GitHub and then Trello is right next to that. We've also got ticket support up top and what's currently playing on our in-office RDO. So real quickly overview, we've got data coming in from all of these different services, and as soon as you get one set up, you can kind of get the handle of it. It's really easy to integrate whatever else you want into that dashboard. So before I wrap up, let me show you some really basic stuff. This is from Code Climate. I think I pulled out the API keys. I did. So basically just using HTTP Party, going out, grabbing their API, consuming it, basically creating this little data hash down here, and then that send event is what dashing is looking for. That's going to pass that off to the JavaScript, which is listening, and then we'll render that data. And then you've got a timer on the scheduler. I don't need to, probably even three minutes is a little aggressive. Our code doesn't change that much. A little bit more complicated would be RDO. That API sucks, but thankfully, after a couple of days, we figured it out. Time was spent. So calling in basically what songs playing and sending that out, and then finally New Relic, which is even crazier. Testing, clean code? No. We'll just go. Pulling all the kind of metrics out of RPM and all that kind of stuff out, and being able to see that is actually really helpful. Whenever you see zero milliseconds, it usually means something's bad. You can trigger stuff with the JavaScript in terms of flashing things red, doing whatever you need. We've got that on a big TV in our office. It's really handy for us in the mornings. So if you want to play around with it, dashing.io, if you've got questions, hit me up on the social services and such at Jay McCarty. Thank you so much.
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UC8DyQ6UyChGmJwA-NoUC0rA
C++ Snake Game
In this Video I show you how to write Snake in 130 lines of code using SDL2 as the graphics library. This is an awesome project for beginners learning how to code. This program was written in C++. Please leave any questions in the comment section, I will get to them when I'm able. #gamedev #programming #c
[ "Game", "Snake", "Programming", "C++" ]
2022-01-25T23:40:37
2024-02-05T08:11:35
1,518
3kw1-dOikMA
Okay, so in this section, we're going to begin by checking for user input. So we're going to just check if the user clicked down, up, left or right. So to do that, we're going to check if type is equal to SDL key down. And if that's the case, we're going to check which key in particular to the user press. Now what we have to do is we have to assign some value to a direction. So let's say if the user clicked left, we want to specify that the snake is moving to the left. If the user clicked right, we're specifying that the snake is moving to the right. And to do that, I think we are going to want to create a direction variable. So up here, I'm just going to implement a direction variable. And then I'm going to create an enum with the different directions. If the down key is pressed, what we're going to do is we're going to set the direction to be down. So we say the IR is equal to down. Then we are just going to check the other cases. Okay, good. So now what's going to happen is if the user clicks down, up, left or right, we are going to set the direction to the respective value of the enum. So next what we have to do is we actually have to move the head. So in which direction is the head of the snake going to move? Now to create the head, or to create the data structure for the head, I'm just going to use SdlRect because SdlRect has an x, y, width and height values. So that can work pretty fine for our purposes for now. So I'm going to declare a new SdlRect and this rect is going to be called head. And we're going to initialize it to be at position 500, 500. Now it's at position 500, 500 because the size of this window is 1,000, 1,000 as you can see up here. So we're going to create a new rectangle with the size 500, 500. And the size of this is going to be 10 by 10. Now this is actually fairly important so make sure that you have a 10 by 10 size for your rect because later on I'm going to do some stuff that is actually going to require you to have a 10 by 10 size. Okay, so now that we have a head, we are actually going to move this around the screen. So still down here, actually now outside of this, what we're going to do is we are going to, okay, so what we're going to do here is we are going to check in which direction we are moving. So we're going to do a switch statement and then we're going to switch on the direction. Now we're going to have a couple of cases. So the first case is if we are moving down, we are going to increase Y by 10. Okay, so now that we have basic movement implemented in this game. Whoops, I should have put this here. Okay, so now that we have this basic stuff in the game, what we're going to do is we actually are going to draw the body. And to draw the body, as you would know in STL, you first have to set the color that you want to draw with. Then you're going to just draw your structure. So in this case, we're going to draw like this. Okay, so now that we have that finished, what we're going to do is we're going to compile this and see what we get. Okay, as you can see, I have a square on the window, the square is moving around. When I click up down left or right, it moves in the direction that I specified. Okay, so now that we have the basics out of the way, let's actually begin writing our program. Now we're going to need a couple of libraries and I'm going to include three of them. I'm going to include Vector, we're going to include Algorithm and I'm going to include DQ. So I'm going to explain why we're going to need these later, but for now, just make sure you have them included. Okay, so what we need now is we need a container that's going to store our snake. So our snake, let's kind of think about it. What does a snake game entail? What is a snake game? So a snake game, let's say, let me just like draw it kind of crudely here. Okay, so let's say we have snake, right? And we have a little snake, let's just say this is a snake. So in snake what we do is we constantly remove something from the end and then add it to the front. So let's say at the end we remove one of these symbols and then in the front we add it here. So that's like a single instance of the snake moving forward. So let's say another instance is it moves forward again, right? And then occasionally it runs into an apple and then when it runs into an apple, what it's going to do is it's going to grow. So we just need to add another one and then leave this as it is. So to do this kind of thing, I think the best container to hold a data structure like that would be a DQ. The reason why DQ is really good for this is because a DQ you are able to push from the front, pop from the front, push from the end and pop from the end. So I think this is really good because doubly ended Q, it lets you delete from the front, delete from the end, it lets you add from the end and add from the front. And that's why we are going to make, that's why we're going to make the entire body of the snake. We're going to make this doubly ended Q container. So this container is going to be doubly ended Q for the snake body. And we're going to keep the head for now, but what we have to do here is we have to add the snake body container. And we're going to call this, I'm going to call this, I'm not sure what to call it. Just say STD and we're going to say DQ. And this DQ is going to be, it's going to be composed of STL rects. So we're going to have a bunch of STL rects and these rects are going to be called RQ, rect Q. I think that's a good idea. Let's just call this RQ. And I think we should also include, so the game world is also going to need apples. So because it's going to need apples, I think we should create a new container and this container is going to be used for apples. And I'm fresh out of ideas. So you can basically use anything you want. I'm just going to use Vector because I always use Vector for just the general containers. And this is also going to be an STL rect container. So we're going to contain STL rects in this one. Okay, so now that we have that, we actually want to populate the game world with a bunch of apples. And here we're going to just generate a whole bunch of apples at random positions on the screen. And yeah, so we're just going to make a whole bunch of apples here outside of the main loop. Make sure it's outside of the main loop. You don't want to keep adding apples to the screen every single iteration. And here we are going to decide how many apples do we want. So let's just keep it simple. We're going to have 100 apples at one time. And then we are going to increase i by 1. We don't really use this variable. So all we are doing here is just iterating 100 times. And for every time we iterate, we're going to add a new apple to the screen at a random position. And what I'm going to do here is I'm going to do a modulus 100 and then I'm going to multiply it by 10. I want every apple to be in a location that's divisible by 10 and I'm going to explain why a little bit later. Then we have to set the size of these apples and we're just going to set the size to be 10 and at the same as the head. So the head and the apples can be the same size. And I think that should be enough. So we drew all of our apples. Or should I say we added all the apples to the game world. So all the apples are now in the apples vector. So next what we want to do is we want to specify the size of our snake. So how big is our snake right now? And we specify the size like this. So it's going to be pretty simple. I should actually define it here. So the size of our snake is going to be, not SDD. So the size of our snake is going to be just called size. So int size is equal to one. So I'm going to say the size of the snake is one. And yeah, when you start the game your size is going to be one usually. Okay, so that's enough for the setup. So basically what we're doing for the setup is we're creating a DQ. We're creating an apples vector. And then we're creating a bunch of apples for the snake to move around and eat. Now what we have to do is we have to do some collision detection. So there are two stages for collision detection is one, we want to check the collision between apple and the snake. And another collision detection we want to do is we want to do the collision detection between the snake and itself. So is the snake, is the head of the snake touching its own body? And if it is, we're just going to set the size to one again. So kind of like indicating that you have to start over. And we're going to do our collision detection here. So we're going to say collision detection. And the first thing we're going to do is we are going to check the collision between the apple and the head of the snake. So actually, before I do that, let me see if I include it. Yeah, I include algorithms. So I'm going to use a couple of algorithms in this example. So what we're going to do is we're going to say STD for each. And then we are going to pass in a begin. We're going to pass in apples.begin. And what I'm doing here is I'm just going to specify the iterator. That's the beginning of the apple. And then the iterator, that's the end of the apples container. And then what we have to do here is we have to pass in a lambda expression. So this lambda expression is just going to, it's basically, what it's going to do is it's going to, how should I put it? It's going to do the collision detection. So it's going to check if the collision happened. And if it happened, we're going to do something. Okay, so what we're going to do here is we are going to check if the head is touching any of the apples. So what's going to happen is this E variable, it's going to be each of the apples on the screen. So it's going to go for each apple, or maybe I should just call this apples, or apple. That should be a little bit easier to understand. So what's going to happen is we're going to check the collision between the apple and the head of the snake. We're going to check every single apple against the snake. So let's do that. Okay, so here we are going to check the collision and we're going to say if head.x is equal to apple.x and then we are going to say and head.y is equal to apple.y. Okay, so what happens when the snake eats the apple? Well, what happens when the snake eats the apple is the apple gets removed from the scene and what we do is we increase the size of the snake. So because of that, we're going to say size plus equals 10. Don't forget we define size up here and the original size is one. So what happens is every time the snake eats an apple, we're going to increase its size by 10. You can adjust this however you want. And to remove the apple from the scene, we're not going to do anything fancy here. I'm just going to move it off the screen so that the snake can't see it. Okay, so I'm going to say apple.x is equal to negative 10 and apple.y is equal to negative 10. Okay, that's good. So here this is our collision. Collision detection with apple. Okay, next, we have to do our collision detection with itself. So did the snake touch itself? And if it touched itself, what do we do? How do we handle that? And here we're going to say... Okay, so here what we're going to do is we are going to do another four each, so STD or each. And then we're going to pass in the beginning and the end of our queue. And here we are going to pass in another lambo expression and this lambo expression is going to be specific for the body of the snake. Okay, now we're going to do head.x is equal to e.snakesegment.x and head.y is equal to snakesegment.y. Okay, so what do we do if the snake head touches the snake body? Well, I think the easiest thing to do here is just say, okay, so if the snake touches its own body, we're just going to set the size to one. So kind of like reset the snake. We're just going to reset the snake to its original state. And here what we're going to do is we are going to push... we're going to push the head because as you can see, every single iteration of this loop, every single iteration of the game loop, what we're doing is we're adding 10 to the head or like we're either adding 10 to the head or subtracting 10 from the head. And what we're going to do here is we're going to put the newest version of the head to the front of this queue. So to do that, we're just going to say rq.pushfront and then we're going to push the head. So we're going to push to the front of the snake a new head. And then to make sure that the snake is shrinking at the end, what we're going to do is we are going to pop the last item from this queue. So we're going to do it like this. So here what we're going to do is we're going to check if rq, the size of rq is exceeding the size that's specified by the game. So for example, let's see. So this size here in size, if this size is smaller than rq, then we have to remove items from the end of the snake until it gets to the size that's appropriate for the rules of the game. So for example, here we added a new head to this snake. So because we added a new head to the snake, we also have to pop the tail from the snake. And to do that, we're going to use a while loop because we can also set the size to 1 here. So for example, if the snake's size was 99, then it touched its own tail and its tail got set to 1. What we have to do is we have to remove all of the segments so that it goes from 99 to 1. And to do that, we're just going to do while rq.size is greater than size. So if the size of this q is larger than the size that's specified by the game, what we're going to do is we're going to say rq.pop back. So we're going to remove the last element from the snake until it complies with the size that we specify. So what's next? What's next is we're going to draw the body. So we're going to draw the body of the snake. So to draw the body, I'm just going to modify this here. So here all I'm doing is I'm drawing the head. But what we want to do now is we want to draw the whole body. And to draw the whole body, I'm just going to do another 4 each. So I'm going to say std or each. rq.begin. Then I'm going to say rq.end. And then we're going to do another lambda expression here. And this lambda expression, I don't think you need to trap anything here. So I'm just going to leave it as it is. Auto. And then we're going to say snake segment. Okay. So here what we're going to do is we are going to fill a rect for each snake's act. And the fill a rect is just the STL's way of drawing to the screen. So fill a rect, basically just draw a rectangle specified that you're going to pass in. So what we're going to do is we're going to pass in a renderer. Actually, I do need to trap something. I need the renderer. So we're going to say renderer. And then we are going to pass in the snake segment, which is an STL of rect, I believe. Okay. And we don't need this anymore. It's going to delete, actually. Okay. I think that's, I think that's, that's pretty much it. So this is about 130 lines of code. And let's see if it works. I hope this works. Okay. So g plus plus. And then we're going to specify the snake. Actually, I'm on STL2. I think the STD, C plus plus 20. I think I need that. Oh, snake. Oh, okay. Okay. We forgot to draw the apples. So let's go back in here. And we have to draw the apples because if you don't draw the apples, you're going to have a bad time. Okay. Okay. So to draw the apples, we're basically going to do the same thing, except this time, I think we should just set the color to be red because apples are red. Okay. Let's compile that again and let's run it. Okay. So as you can see, I'm grabbing the apples. Every time I collide with the apple, it disappears. And I grow by 10, by 10, not pixels, but 10 times 10 pixels. So, and if I collide with myself, I become, I just reset the game. I'll not reset the game, but I reset the size of the snake. There you go. That's a snake game.
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Effecting Change as a Young Lawmaker
Rep. Ichiyama was elected to office in 2010 soon after graduating from UH Richardson School of Law. While in high school, she served as the student member on the Hawaii State Board of Education, representing all of Hawaii's public school students. How did her student activism in politics and the community prepare her for a hands on role as a lawmaker? We will also discuss her current work on the Women's Legislative Caucus, including the status of sex assault evidence kits known as rape kits. Rep. Ichiyama is currently the Vice-Chair of the Consumer Protection & Commerce Committee. 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", "Hawaii Legislator", "State", "Representative", "Linda", "Ichiyama", "Capitol", "Young", "Leader", "Women's Legislative Caucus", "Sex Assault Evidence Kit", "Rape Kit" ]
2017-09-26T05:00:00
2024-02-05T08:10:35
1,816
3kxobgjfnxM
This is Think Tech Hawaii, Community Matters here. Aloha, this is Karim Anli on Think Tech Hawaii series, Making Leadership Work. And today my guest is Representative Linda Ichiyama, representing the House District 32. Linda was elected into office first in 2010 after graduating from the William S. Richardson School of Law and has been in office the last seven years. And so she's been around for a little bit of time. So welcome, Linda. Thank you, Carol. Thank you very much for having me on the show. Oh, we really appreciate having you and talking about young leadership in the legislature and how laws are reviewed and made to work and what your particular interests are. Thank you. So tell me a little bit about your background. I know you studied law. You were a lawyer. So did you have a practice law? I did. I actually ran for office straight out of law school. I was basically campaigning my last semester of law school, so that was a little rough. So while you're doing exams, you're also waving signs. Yes, walking door-to-door campaigning, asking people for their votes, so it was interesting time. And then I delayed taking the bar exam for a year so that I could focus on the election, the campaign. And I'm so glad that I did. I don't think I could have done both. Then I took the bar in 2011, and then I started practicing in 2012. So you were practicing while you were a legislator, a legislator, and what kind of law practice were you in? So I worked for a law firm called Porter McGuire, Kiakon, and Chao, and they focused mainly on condominium law, representing condominium associations, HOAs, but they also do more business litigation as well. So I represented a couple of partnerships and different types of business disputes. And are you still doing that? No, no. I actually had to take a step back. I'm a new mom, and so juggling both the legislative and a attorney career with a new baby was a little bit too much. I see. So our state legislature allows, it's not a full time legislature, right? So how many months a year does our legislature, is our legislature in session? We're in session from January through May, and then a lot of legislators have careers outside, and it was designed to be that way. The Constitutional Convention wanted us to be part-time legislators so that we could bring our outside expertise when we're dealing with policy issues. I see. And so as far as which you represent district 32, right? So tell us about your district. Well, let's see. My district composes Salt Lake, Aliamanu, Moanalua. So basically the area around Salt Lake Shopping Center, below Tripler Hospital, Moanalua Valley, part of Moanalua Gardens, all the way to Aliamanu. Is that the airport? No, it does not include the airport. My boundary is Salt Lake Boulevard at the bottom. But I do represent a lot of condos, so I was very fortunate in that aspect to have a familiarity with living in condos and some of those issues that arise between condo owners or renters. I'd say maybe a little less than half of my district is condos, and the rest is single-family homes. So two very different populations. Very, very transient and also home owners. Very stable, yes. So do you have a lot of military in your... We do because our district is surrounded by so many bases. We have Fort Shafter, we have Hickam, we have Pearl Harbor that are all close by. So we do have a lot of military that live in our district. And how about homelessness? Is homelessness an issue in your district? Fortunately, not as other parts of town. For example, like downtown Chinatown. We haven't been as affected, although we sometimes get people who are homeless in our area. Usually though, they don't stay very long and are referred to services. We have a really active community. We're very fortunate. They really want to take care of our area. And so they try to help people and make sure that they get to the right place that they need to get to. I know you actually grew up in that district, right? Yes, born and raised in Salt Lake. And you went to high school? In Salt Lake Elementary, in the middle of the High School. Yes, I'm very lucky. I used to serve on the Board of Education, as you know. And I understand you were once a student representative on the Board of Education. Yes, my senior year of high school, I was the student board member. So elected by roughly about 180,000 public school students. And then represented them on the board for a year. A great experience. Was that your first taste in politics? Yes. And I guess you could say I got bit by the bug. What were the big issues in those days? What year was that then? So that was 2002 to 2003. And the big issue was the local school boards and breaking up the State Board of Education. And whether or not we should have smaller local school boards like they do in the mainland. At that time, Governor Lingo was advocating for breaking up the school district. So by island? By island, by county. There are a lot of different scenarios. But I think the concern was is that you lose a lot of economies of scale and efficiency that we have by doing a statewide system. For example, recently when we've launched a statewide program or curriculum like Common Core, we're able to do it across the board. And so you have students who are in Hilo versus students who are in Kauai learning the same things. Right, right. So you were on the board of education and then you went to college, where did you go to college? I went to Georgetown. Georgetown and then you went to law school at UH and came back home for law school. So you got the bug from being on the board of education and into politics. Now how many women right now in the state legislature? Usually it's about 15 or 17. We've lost a few women, unfortunately, to the city council. This is in the House. In the House and the Senate. So Representative Kimberly Pine is now a councilwoman, so is Senator Carol Fugunaga. But it's great because we have those partnerships there. And so just recently the women's legislative caucus expanded to include county council members. So not just at the state level, but also at the county. Nice. Well, I want to talk a little bit more about that after the break. But as far as your district, tell us about, in particular, are there specific socioeconomic issues that affect your district that you've found yourself advocating for or that need more addressing that cut across the state? I think that my district is very typical of other urban districts in Honolulu. A lot of working class families, and they just want to make sure that they're able to take care of their kids, put food on the table, and maybe save a little money for retirement or to take a trip once a year. So a lot of the issues that I've been trying to work on is to help them, for example, with the renters' tax credit. A lot of the folks who live in the Conros are renters, so the rental income tax credit helps them pay less than their income taxes. We're also trying to look at ways that we can create more fairness in our income tax structure, so it's not as regressive, so that we can give our middle class families more of a break. And I think that has helped a lot of the families that live in Salt Lake and Honolulu. So what's the status right now of the renters' tax credit? What is it? Is it a percentage of... Of their... No. The way it works is they're able to apply some of the rent that they've paid and show that they're renter, and then they can deduct it off of their income. I see. Yeah. Right. And then the other tax benefits or tax initiatives that you've... These are state or... State, yes. Yeah. And be nice if you could affect federal legislation. That would be a dream come true, yeah. How about rail? Was there a stop that's going to be near Salt Lake? Originally, the rail was supposed to come through Salt Lake along Salt Lake Boulevard, but the route got shifted to the airport. So my district, I would say a little more than half voted for it when there was the Charter Amendment to support the establishment of Hart. And I think that having it move to the airport, although it would have been more convenient to have it in Salt Lake, probably for the better, you know, we don't have the noise and construction that we have to deal with, unfortunately, like our neighbors in IA and Pearl City are living through right now. So I think that was probably for the better, but they plan to have a lot of bus transportation and bike routes from Salt Lake to the rail station at the airport so people can use it. How did you... What was your particular position on recent budget issues relating to rail? So we've always asked for more transparency and accountability from the county and from Hart on rail. I think over the past years, a lot of people have been frustrated with the way the project's been handled and what we've seen is mismanagement of the funds and resources. So I supported the bill this past special session, which created more accountability and changed the payment mechanism for how rail will be funded. Prior to this, the city would receive the general excise surcharge directly from the state. Now we've changed it to a reimbursement system where the county actually has to show us their invoices, contracts, receipts, and then the state will verify those, make sure that there isn't being waste or mismanagement, and then reimburse the city for those funds. I see. So was that a difficult period of time dealing with the budget issues and what do you expect in the next few months in the next session? Well the deadline for the city to submit their revised plan to the federal transit administration was the middle of September, which they did. We're waiting for the FTE to come back and say that they've approved the plan and that they can then release the rest of the money from the federal government so the project can continue. I hope this is the last time the legislature has to take up this issue, although I'm not certain that it will be, but I'm hopeful that it will be. Which committee is that in transportation? So this past session it was referred to the committee on transportation and committee on finance. Right. And you are, I know you're vice chair of one committee. Chamber of protection and commerce. Yes. Okay. Ray, I think we have two slides I'd like to show our audience. And these, okay, now this, let me describe it for our podcast audience. This is a picture of, looks like representative Ikechiyama painting a wall. So tell us a little bit about what you're doing here. So this is at Muonalua Elementary School and it is a celebration of their anniversary and they did a huge mural on the administration building as well as a library building that shows the history of Muonalua from the beginning when it was a school in the late 1800s and all the way back to the history of the valley and the petroglyphs that we have in Muonalua Valley all the way to present day. Nice. And it's really a great project that the kids worked really hard on. Okay. And then our next slide. And this is a picture of representative Ikechiyama in a classroom it looks like and talking to a group of... This is, yes, our town hall meeting that we had with Senator Kim and representative Johansson who are there in the front row on the special session for rail. We wanted to get our constituents input before we're going into special session and hear their thoughts and concerns. And a lot of them like I shared with you earlier were frustrated with what they saw as mismanagement of the rail project. And so I think we listened to their concerns and tried to address them in the bill that we passed. Okay. Very good. And so let's talk a little bit more about your particular influences in getting to the point where you are now representing your district and juggling motherhood and legislative, important legislative work. Do you see this as a long-term career and influences in terms of family or social or school or role models? Well, I'm very fortunate that I represent the area that I grew up in. Like I said earlier, I was born and raised in Southlake and I'm the oldest of four kids. My mom's a single mom. And so I really feel like we were raised by the community and the schools and the people that live there. So this is my opportunity to give back. And so I'm just so grateful that I'm able to help the schools that I went to. For example, we're trying to work on building a performing arts center at Morelil High School. I know they're already very experienced and have a great reputation as... They've been to Carnegie Hall three times. My goodness. Yes. So it's a really great music program. But I would have to say that my mom has been my role model in a lot of ways, raising us on her own and teaching us really strong values of working hard and being generous and giving back. That's always been really important. And then politically, I mean, I've always looked up to a representative, Congresswoman Petsy Mink, and all of the things that she stood for in terms of equality and social justice. And then here at home, I think all of the women legislators that we have who have been fighting on so many fronts in many different issues, like Representative Marilyn Lee and Senator Suzanne Chen Oakland, who unfortunately no longer...and the legislature anymore, but they really did a lot of work for the families in Hawaii. All right. And what about our congressional delegation? Oh, yes, definitely. Congresswoman Gabbard. Yes. And Senator Hirono and Congresswoman Abusa. Right. Mm-hmm. Yeah. So how about any men role models? Have you...do you spend time, let's say, clerking or interning with any of our... Yes, I did, actually. And that was a really formative experience for me. I had the opportunity to work for a couple summers for Judge Gary Chang. And he's... Which court? Judge Chang. Circuit court. And tax court. So circuit court. Civil cases. Civil cases. Mm-hmm. Yes. And he has a reputation of being very tough, I would say. And funny. And funny. Isn't he funny? But not at the same time. I see. Yes. He's tough on the bench and funny off the bench. But he takes his work so seriously and I think is so thorough and well-prepared. It really was a role model for me as a young attorney of what I wanted to be and how I wanted to practice as a professional. It was a very high standard. Yeah. Okay, well, we're going to use this opportunity to take a short break and we'll be right back with my guest representative, Linda Ichiyama, from the 32nd District in Honolulu. We'll be right back. This is Think Tech Hawaii, raising public awareness. Ted Rawlsson here, folks. You're a host on Where the Drone Leads are, weekly show at noon on Thursdays here on Think Deck. We talk about drones, anything to do about drones, drones, remotely piloted aircraft, unmanned aircraft, whatever you want to call them, emerging into Hawaii's economy, educational framework and our public life. We talk about things associated with the use, the misuse, technology, engineering, legislation with local experts as well as people from across the country. Please join us noon on Thursdays and catch the latest on what's taking place in the world of drones that might affect you. Guys, don't forget to check me out right here at the Prince of Investing. I'm your host, Prince Dykes, each and every Tuesdays at 11 a.m. Hawaii time. I'm going to be right here. Stop by here from some of the best investment minds across the globe. And real estate, finances, stocks, hedge funds, managers, all that great stuff. Thank you. Welcome back. This is Carol Mann Lee on making leadership work at Think Tech Hawaii with my special guest today, Representative Linda Ichiyama from the House District 32 in Honolulu. So welcome back. Thank you. We were talking all about your interest in politics and working for your community. Specifically, however, I know that you've been very involved in the women's legislative caucus. So tell us a little bit about that. So the women's legislative caucus is a group of female elected officials. And we recently expanded to include county members. So not just the State House and Senate, but also county councils. And we try to advocate for women and girls on a variety of issues, whether it be education, health care, human services, all across the spectrum. And every year we work together with the Women's Coalition, which is a group of nonprofit organizations that work on women's issues. And then we come up with a caucus package. So we've been very successful. Thank you, Abdulls, that we work on throughout the legislative session anything from appropriating more funds to girls' court to help troubled girls or to address the opioid epidemic that we know is becoming a problem on the mainland and we hope to stop before it gets widespread in Hawaii. So a wide range of issues. So how successful has, I know it's been around for many, many years, women's caucus. How successful has it been in actually passing legislation? Well I would say in the past maybe three or four years we've been very successful. And I think that had to do with a lot more, well just to be frank, more women in roles in leadership. Recently we had Chairwoman Jill Tokuta in the Senate with the Ways and Means Committee and then Chairwoman Sylvia Luke in the House Finance Committee, Senator Ros Baker leading the Committee on Consumer Protection and Health in the Senate. And then, sorry, I represent the Chair of Health in the House. And I think that when we have women in roles of leadership, I think then women's issues become our issues and they are successful. Right. So the visibility of having the women there and makes a wider audience and therefore, so as far as the men legislators, how has women's caucus and their bills fit into the overall legislative agenda? I would say that there's something that all of our caucus members can be proud of. For example, one of the things we worked on was the sexual assault kit backlog. And I think as fathers, as brothers, as husbands, they all wanted to make sure that there are protections for victims of sexual assault and that there are going to be repercussions for the perpetrators. Right. So let's discuss the sexual assault, the sexual rape kit? Rape kit. All right. And before our audience, you can describe exactly what is a rape kit. Sure. So if you're a victim of sexual assault, and let's say you report to the police and you're on a wahoo, what will happen is they'll bring you to Kapiolani Hospital and the Sex Abuse Treatment Center will, has doctors on call that go through this, what they call a medical legal exam. And that's to make sure that you're safe, that you don't have any sexual transmitted infections, covers a wide range of services, and it's completely free. No one ever has to pay for the medical legal exam. And if you choose so, you can have what's called a sexual assault kit collected. And the sexual assault kit will look for DNA evidence or any type of evidence that could be used to prosecute the person who assaulted you. And it can be a very long process, several hours. It all depends upon the victim and what they choose to participate in its own voluntary, but the kit itself is also free. And then afterwards, the kit can be either held until the survivor is ready to file a police report or they can follow a police report right there. They can also receive counseling services and they're receiving services all the way through. So if the survivor- Who holds the rape kit? You said it can be held. Yes. So on a wahoo it would be held by the Sex Abuse Treatment Center. And so is that a government agency? No, it's not actually under Kapiolani Hospital, Hawaii Pacific Health. But they have the funds from the counties for the rape kits. And so they can hold the kit for you if you choose not to report right away for whatever reason they will hold it for you for as long as forever. Because technically there's no statute of limitations for criminal prosecutions for sexual assault for rape. So then when you're ready you can file a police report and the kit gets transferred. There's a whole chain of custody that's followed to HPD and the forensic lab. And then the lab will test the kit to see whether or not there's DNA evidence present. And then they can run those results in the federal database called CODIS and hopefully find a match. Right. Now I know there's been some controversy, right? How long have these rape kits been in use? That's roughly 1992. So it's been for a while. And so was there a backlog and that there was a backlog? Yes. So there was a number of kits that were untested and the reason was because the way law enforcement looked at testing of the kits because it was expensive and time-consuming process was whether or not the kit would be probative in that particular case. So let's say that you had two adults who both agreed that they had sex but one said it was consensual and one didn't. In that case the prosecutor or the detective may not have ordered the kit to be tested because they both agree that sex occurred. And so what happened though was that on the mainland they found that those kits, even if you know who the perpetrator is, they can lead to other hits in CODIS for unknown cases. And that's what really was the paradigm shift, is that we want to solve those cold cases because we know that a lot of perpetrators are serial offenders. Okay. We have two more slides relating to this. So Ray, can you put on the screen our slides, our images? So the first one, if you want to describe it, it's a group of people around our Governor Figue. Yes. So for the past few years we've been having a bill signing ceremony with the Governor. I believe this is from this past year. Yes, I think it is from this past year. And so he signed a number of bills into law that were from our women's caucus package. So there are nine women legislators surrounding Governor E.K. Yes. Signing a very important bill, very good. Congratulations. And the next slide. And this is a picture of you sitting at a hearing, it looks like, right? This is the Attorney General's office and we're doing a press conference for Malama Kako, which is under the Department of the Attorney General. The women's legislative caucus took on the issue of the backlog of rape kits and we mandated an inventory of the kits. We wanted to know how many were tested, how many were untested and what were their plans to test the kits and in what priority, right, which kits are you going to test first? The newest kits? Is it the ones where you have an unknown perpetrator or where the victim is young? Right, there's a lot of different factors. And so out of that project, we got the inventory and as a result as well, we also were able to apply for a federal grant of $2 million. And that federal grant helped us build the Malama Kako project, which is to help survivors. And the project is absolutely survivor-centered. We wanted to make sure that it was always a survivor's choice, whether or not they wanted to know the status of their kit. They can access the website on the Attorney General's office, the Malama Kako website, and they can find out, you know, why wasn't my kit tested, how do I find out the status of my kit. There's an email address that they can contact, put in as much information as possible, their name and if they have a police report number. And then they can track down your kit through the various police departments and then a detective will contact you to follow up on the status of your case. Great. Now is that the URL that we have? Yes. So let's see. I think we have the URL for the Malama Kako. And it'll be on the screen. It says visit ag.hawai.gov slash h-i-s-a-k-i for more information. Okay, this is very important to our audience to get more information about how to research and find out more about what's happened to their rape kits. Absolutely. And which is, you mentioned all sorts of data, but what exactly are the numbers? How many of these cases are outstanding and how many? Well, we brought the numbers down quite a bit and so there are a number of different factors that we looked at in terms of what kits to be tested and what priority. There were a little over a thousand kits that were not tested and the each county police department has been working on which kits will be tested and to be sent to the mainland for testing. So the legislature appropriated $500,000 for kits to be tested, 500 kits, and they've started sending them to the mainland. The Honolulu Police Department also received an assistance grant from the FBI for additional testing. So they're also sending their kits. So we're slowly, slowly working on the backlog. And did you get that $2 million grant? The Department of the Attorney General, yes, received the $2 million grant. So that's funding a sexual assault kit coordinator and he's the one who's basically responding to the emails. I see. Well, we just have a few minutes left and I know we want to talk about Title IX on the federal level and our new Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. And so tell us a little bit about that, what Title IX is and what changes have been made. Well, Title IX is basically a federal law that says that any educational institution that receives federal assistance must provide equal opportunity regardless of sex. And so a lot of people think Title IX is sports, right? If you have so many men's teams, you need to have so many women's teams, but it's much broader than that. It also includes pregnancy discrimination and it also includes victims of sexual assault or sexual harassment. If I'm too scared to go to school because my stalker is going to follow me from class to class and that bars me from education, then that is a Title IX issue. If I get assaulted on campus because it's not safe at night, that's a Title IX issue and the educational institution, the school, the university has an obligation under federal law to respond. And so what were the recent changes? So under the Obama administration, the Department of, Federal Department of Education, Office of Civil Rights really issued a lot of very strong language and guidance around Title IX and the responsibility of educational institutions to respond. And a lot of this also came about because of the national attention about campus rape on universities. Unfortunately, we know that roughly one out of every four or five women who are usually between the ages of 18 to 24 will be sexually assaulted while at a university or college. And so the Obama administration took a lot of forward steps to make sure that universities were responding and not trying to hide or cover up those statistics or cases. And what happened recently, unfortunately, is it looks like the new Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos, wants to change some of those guidance and rules that were implemented under President Obama. This just happened, right, last week? Just last week, at the end of last week, they issued not new regs. They said new regulations are coming, but basically they took back some of what the Obama administration had done and said, you know, we're going to go in a different direction. So it's causing a lot of concern for a lot of campuses. Yeah, because I think the headline was that the perpetrators, the alleged perpetrators, needed more protection, right, that the law seemed to be skewed to protect the victims, yeah. Yeah, and I think that whatever process you have in place needs to be fair. You have to give due process to both sides, absolutely. But I think you also need to recognize that for the victims, you know, this is something that we need to make sure is a safe process and a transparent process for them, which it hasn't been, unfortunately, in the past. Well, we almost finished with our interview, but I want you to take a few seconds just to look into Camera 4 and tell our audience, remind our audience a little bit about the Malama-Caco. Thank you. Thank you so much for having me. I just wanted to encourage anybody who wants to know the status of their kit to visit the Malama-Caco website to find out the status of their kit and ask any questions that you might have about your case. I think it's so important to know that there are people who care about you and who want to support you and are wanting to help you. Okay, on that note, thank you so much, Representative Linda Ichiyama, who is representing the House District 32 in our wonderful state of Hawaii. Thank you. This has been Carol Monli in Making Leadership Work, and we'll see you next time. Aloha.
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How to Answer ANY IELTS Reading Question
IELTS Reading questions are simple if you are aware of the 12 different types of questions that might come up, and you have a strategy for each of them. More help: IELTS Reading: https://www.ieltsadvantage.com/reading/?el=youtubedesc *** Join the IELTS Advantage community! Facebook: facebook.com/IELTSAdvantage Instagram: @ielts_advantage Website: www.ieltsadvantage.com?el=youtubedesc Email: chris@ieltsadvantage.com *** Any questions or feedback? Let us know in the comments below 👇 or email the team here: chris@ieltsadvantage.com We answer every email we get, and we’re always happy to help. #IELTS #IELTSReading 00:00 Introduction 01:22 Sentence Completion 04:13 Summary Completion 06:28 Multiple Choice 09:22 Short Answer 11:24 Labelling a Diagram 13:08 True/False/Not Given 18:08 Yes/No/Not Given 20:17 Matching Sentences 22:03 Matching Names 24:15 Matching Information 27:07 Table Completion 28:21 Matching Headings 31:34 Bonus Lesson
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2022-09-21T11:38:25
2024-04-18T18:32:13
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IELTS reading is actually quite simple, but what students find really frustrating is there's so many different types of reading question. So what I decided to do was put together a video that shows you the 12 main types of IELTS question. I'm gonna show you exactly what those questions look like, go over the key problems that students face and then help you solve all of those problems and simplify everything for you by giving you the same step-by-step strategies that have helped thousands of my students get a seven, eight, and even nine. In fact, these are the exact same strategies that helped me get a band nine when I did the test myself. But the thing was I was able to get a band nine in just 20 minutes because I understood exactly what questions were coming up and I had a strategy that ensured I found the answer to each question as quickly as possible. So that's exactly what I'm gonna do for you guys in this video. So without further ado, let's jump into it. So there are 12 different types of IELTS reading question. We're gonna go through each of the 12 types. First of all, I'm gonna show you exactly what the questions look like and then I'm gonna show you key problems that students face and a strategy for each type of question. So this is an example of a sentence completion question. So for sentence completion, you will have sentences. They will be incomplete and you need to complete them with a word or words from the text. So you would be looking at the text here and then you would be completing these sentences with words from the text. So for sentence completion questions, the two key problems are not reading the instructions, especially about the number of words and poor spelling. So not reading the instructions. This is just something that lots of students have a problem with and it's an easy fix. It is getting into the habit of really paying attention to the instructions, understanding what the instructions are saying and then following that information. And then poor spelling, this is because this is one of the types of questions that you are not picking like A, B, C or D. You actually have to take words from the text and write them out. So if one letter is wrong, the whole answer is wrong. So make sure that you are paying attention to spelling. So my advice for sentence completion is number one, read the instructions carefully as we've already said. Read incomplete sentence first. All right, so you're going to be given a list of incomplete sentences. Do not read the text first. Read the incomplete sentences first to understand them. Then again, don't look at the text. Predict the answers. What do you think the type of words, the type of content, what type of words, what content is probably going to come up? Even if your predictions are wrong, that doesn't matter because what you're doing is priming your brain to receive the correct information. It really does help. And often when you make a prediction, the exact thing that you predicted will come up or something very, very similar. Now at four sentence completion, there might be synonyms. So again, this is why we make predictions. Think of the different synonyms that might come up related to your predictions. But also you're going to next scan for the location of the correct answer. There's a principle I want you to learn first, which is where before what. So during the reading test, you're going to be looking for where the answer is first before you think about what is the correct answer. So you're scanning for the correct location first. Where in the text is it? And then you're only going to read the section carefully. Think about what the correct answer is and decide the correct answer, but be very careful with your spelling. Here we have an example of a summary completion question. So it will normally say complete the summary below. So here is the summary and there's some missing information here. And in this particular question, it says no more than two words. It might say no more than one word or one word only, but it will show you a summary and you have to complete that summary with words from the text. So for summary completion, very similar to sentence completion, not reading instructions. You will be told only write one word or two words. Pay attention to that. Spelling is also an issue for summary completion, but grammar is more of an issue here. This is because when we are predicting, we're going to be thinking about is this going to be a noun or verb or an adjective? So good grammar helps us with that, but it also helps us complete the summary in a way that makes sense. So I'll look at that in a little bit more detail in a second. So let's go through my advice here. Number one, read the instructions carefully. You're going to hear me saying that a lot here. Read the summary text first. It's imperative that you do this first. Don't look at the text. Don't look at the reading text. Look at the summary first, the question. Then predict, but also think, not only what content might be there, but what type of words might come up? Is it going to be a noun? Is it going to be a verb or is it going to be an adjective? If your grammar is strong, that will be very, very obvious and will help you find the correct answer. Then scan for location. Be aware of synodems. Remember where before what? Once you find the location, then you can read the section carefully. Check if the answer makes sense. So going back to grammar, if you are expecting an adjective and only an adjective will do, and you think the correct answer is a noun, that doesn't make any sense. So you need to go back, check it, and that will help you find the correct answer. And then decide on the correct answer, put it in, and that's you done. So these two are quite similar, so that's why we put them together. Here are some multiple choice questions. I'm sure you're familiar with multiple choice questions. Normally it will be a direct question like here, and then it will give you three or four different options. You have to choose the correct option. A completely different type of question are multiple choice questions. Now the key problems here is not really understanding the difference between the different options. So you will get A, B, C, D. There will be slight variations in meaning between these three or four options. You need to understand the difference between these in order to answer the question properly. So there needs to be a lot of focus on the difference between these on top of reading the text and understanding the text. So the first thing you're gonna do is read the questions, read the options carefully first and understand the difference between those. That's why we put carefully here. Then we're going to look at the text, but we're not going to read it in detail. What we're gonna do is we're gonna skim the text, we're gonna read it quite quickly with the intention of understanding the general meaning of the text. Then we're gonna go back and think about the difference in the different options. I've put this here twice because this is the most important thing and we want to be strategic and focus on the most important thing. Then we're going to take each question and we're going to locate the section of the text being aware of synonyms for that particular question. So if it's question 24, you're gonna look at question 24, look at the information in there, look at the text and decide, okay, this is where the correct answer is. I haven't decided the correct answer, but I know the location of the correct answer. Read that section carefully. So we've found the area, then we're gonna read that section carefully. This is going to save us a huge amount of time because we're not reading the whole text. There might be six or seven paragraphs. We're just focusing in on one of those paragraphs to answer that particular question. So it's being very strategic with thought, with intention and with time. If you are confused, think about not what is the correct answer, but which options are definitely wrong. So going back to our original thing here, let's say this one you know is definitely wrong and D is definitely wrong. That leaves you with two options, B or C. Then you can focus in on B and C and think what is the big difference between B and C? And then check the text again, oh, it is C. So finally read the question and make the final choice. Short answer questions are actually quite rare, but you should be aware of them. These are similar to comprehension questions that you would have got when you were in school, where they ask you a direct question and you have to answer the direct question. So short answer questions, these are normal straightforward comprehension questions. And the big problem here is that students will rush through the questions and not really think about what the question is asking them. So the big problem, not understanding the questions. It doesn't matter how good your reading skills are. If you don't focus in and understand the question, you'll never be able to answer it. And then not understanding a lot of words, phrases within the text. So if you don't understand the question and then you don't understand a lot of the words within the text, it's pretty much impossible for you to answer the questions. So how can we solve that? So read and understand the questions first. Don't get lost in the reading text. Read and just focus in on the questions, understand what they are asking you. Within the questions, underline any keywords. These are normally going to be nouns and noun phrases. People, places, objects, things, things like that, nouns. Think of synonyms for those nouns and that is going to help you scan for the location of the answer. Remember where, before what. Once we understand the location, we can read the section carefully. Read the question again because our big problem is not understanding the question. Decide answer and write it in. Now you might be thinking, I have given similar strategies for a few of these first four question types. Don't make the mistake a lot of students make which is, oh, they're all the same and I'll just approach them all the same and I'll skip the video and I won't really think about it. That is a huge mistake because very different questions are coming up now. Here's an example of a labeling a diagram question. Normally you will be given a diagram, sometimes a map, but most of the time a diagram and there will normally be arrows relating to different parts of the diagram. It is your job to complete these parts. So labeling a diagram. The first key problem is an inability to cope with the unfamiliar. Not every student, but a fair number of students will look at a diagram and think, I know nothing about this thing. So the example we gave you was something to do with ships. So we're like, I know nothing about ships. They're not testing your knowledge of ships. They're testing your ability to look at an unfamiliar diagram, understand it and relate it to the reading text. Why do they do this? Is it to be mean? No, it's because you will be doing this every day in your new country. You'll be looking at unfamiliar things and you will have to interpret those in English. All right, and also not reading the instructions. Often it will say, only use one word or two words or one word and a number or something like that. You need to pay attention to this. So of course, read instructions carefully. Look at diagram to understand the diagram and don't panic. Look at the continuing to look at the diagram, highlight any key words. Look at the spaces that you have to complete and predict the answer just like you were predicting before. Scan to find the location, read in detail and choose the correct answer and be careful with your spelling. Here's the dreaded true false not given very common question on the IELTS reading test. What it asks you to do is read these question statements and then say in relation to the text, are these statements true or are they false or are they not given? Okay, so there are lots of problems with true false not given. Number one, misinformation. This is the question that most students worry about. Therefore, this is the question that produces the most unbind of content online. Like there's pretty much zero videos on YouTube about short answer questions because most students are unaware of them. There are hundreds or maybe even thousands of videos on true false not given. Most of the teachers making these videos are not examiners, they're not highly qualified teachers. That means there's a huge amount of confusion and misinformation. Another big problem is not really understanding what not given mean. And that leads to people searching for not given and really they're searching for something that is not there. It's like searching for something that isn't there in a room. You are not going to find it. And if you spend a huge amount of time looking for something that is not there, then it jeopardizes, it affects, the other questions that are going to be asked. Because if you have less time to spend on these questions, you've not only messed up true false not given, but you've messed up the other questions as well. So what we're going to do is give you the confidence to look for not given and quickly establish, I can't find this, this is not given and put not given as your answer. Another big problem is a failure to understand what the whole sentence means. This is a problem because many teachers and YouTubers use a strategy that is what we would call a keyword strategy. Everything that they teach about IELTS reading is keywords, keywords, keywords. Now sometimes keywords are important, but most of the time they're not. It depends on the question being asked. So if you focus in on keywords, you will not understand what the question statements actually mean because you are focused on a tiny part of the question statement. Instead of looking at the entire sentence, look at the entire sentence, what does the entire sentence mean? Because if you are just focusing in on keywords, you won't understand the sentence, which means you will never be able to say if it's false or true or not given. And that brings us onto our last key problem, focus on keywords. Not only will it mean you don't understand the sentence, it will mean that you get lost in the text and you waste a lot of time. So what should you do instead? So for true, false, not given, read the whole statements first. Look at the statements, read them, don't focus in on keywords, think about what the whole statement means. Then looking at the statements, once you've understood them, think of synonym. What might be said in the text in a different way? So for example, if the question statement was talking about a pen, it might mention a writing instrument in the text. So if you're really focusing on pen, pen, pen, pen, pen, you will miss writing instrument or writing utensil or something crazy like that. And you'll never be able to move on to this part, which is match the statement with the correct part, the location of the text. Because the statement says pen, the text says writing utensil or something like that. If you are thinking about synonyms and you're open to seeing them, then you're gonna find them much quicker. So once you find the location, read the statement again. So go back to the statement. So you find your part of the text, you have your statement, and then read the text section carefully. So don't just find the part of the text and look at the statement and then immediately go like, oh, that's true or that's not given. Calm down, read the whole section carefully. And then you're gonna look at the statement and look at that part of the text and think, does the meaning match? If the meaning matches, this pen is purple, then it's true. If the text says this pen is yellow and the statement says this pen is purple, it's false. If the statement says this pen is purple and the text says nothing about the color or it talks about it is a very good pen or it is a very expensive pen, then we've no idea and it's don't know, so put not given. Keep it very, very simple. Similar to true, false, not given are yes, no, not given. Again, you have to look at the text and then look at the question statements and say whether the question statements are yes, no, or not given. The main difference is we're not talking about fact here, we're talking about the writer's opinion. So if the statement agrees with the views of the writer, contradicts the views of the writer, or there's no information for you to really judge what the writer thinks about these statements. So same, same, but different, yes, no, not given, true, false, not given. Keep problems, students get confused about the difference between true, false, not given and yes, no, not given. True, false, not given is about fact. This pen is purple, that is a fact. Yes, no, not given is about the writer's opinion. I believe purple pens are better than blue pens. That isn't a fact, that is just my opinion. So what you're doing is saying, yes, the text agrees with the writer's opinion, or no, the text doesn't agree with the writer's opinion. So that brings us on to our second problem, not understanding the writer's opinion. Because if you are just looking for facts and you haven't trained yourself to look for what the writer is saying or what the writer believes, then you're never going to be able to decide if it is yes, no, not given. Similarly to true, false, not given, too much time looking for something that's not there. And then finally, confusing writer's opinions with other people's opinions. So the text will give you the writer's opinions, but it might also give you other people's opinions. So it might say Chris believes this, but Jason believes this. And you get confused between those two. Or if the text is talking about pens and it's just Jason talking about pens and Chris doesn't mention it at all, then that would be not given because you don't know. So my advice, do it exactly the same as true, false, not given, but just focus in on the writer's opinion, not on fact. Matching sentences, this is another quite rare question, but you might get it and you should be aware of it. And it is sometimes called matching sentence endings. And what will happen is you will get the beginning of a sentence and then you'll be given a list of sentence endings and you have to match the beginning of the sentence with the end of the sentence. So matching sentences, this is quite a rare question, but you should be aware of it anyway. Key problem is using logic or grammar. So you'll be given the beginning of a sentence and what people do is they, instead of looking at the text, they will use their own logic. So before they even look at the text, they'll look at the sentence endings and think that's logical that those two go together. They're trying to find the answer without taking the time to actually look at the text or they think this is grammatically correct, so I'll just use that type of logic. Everything should be based on what it says in the text, not what you think logically or grammatically works. So my advice is to read the first part of the sentences first, read those and understand those, predict the endings before checking, then and only then read the endings and match the obvious ones. Are there any ones that are just, that has to be it and it will be extremely obvious if that's the case. Then eliminate obviously wrong endings and then match endings you think might match, so you might have one or two different options. Locate the part of the text where the correct answer is and then read that part carefully and choose the correct answer. Here we have a matching names question. As you can see, there's a list of names here and what it asks you to do is look at the text and then match the people's names here with the statements here. So people are more trusting, when affected by oxytocin, who said that. So matching names, key problems there are, writing names immediately without considering text in detail. So I find that this type of question comes more towards the end, not always, but it often comes towards the end because it's normally linked to like research findings, scientists, researchers, academics, things like that and people are stressed, they're running out of time, they're tired and they just see names and start to match them up without taking the time to actually read and consider the text. So how can we overcome those problems? Well, we scan for the names in the text and underline. So you'll be given different names, look at the name that you wanna focus on, scan the text and underline where that name comes up because that is gonna save us a lot of time and it is going to help us focus in on the area where the correct answer is. And focus on the names that are mentioned once first. So some of the names will be mentioned two, three, four times, some of the names will only be mentioned once. The ones that are mentioned once, try to find the answer to those first. So take those names that are only mentioned once and read their research in detail. So if they're only mentioned once, it will only be in a small part of the reading text. So you've located that already. Match with the question statements and then delete that statement. So the one that you have matched, delete that. That is just gonna make it much easier for you to differentiate between the different statements. And then move on. Is there another one with just one? Move on to that one next. If not, is there a name that is just mentioned in two times or two parts, then you can focus in on that and then just keep using that strategy until you match them all. Here is a matching information question. So which paragraph contains the following information? So you have to read the information and then match it to the appropriate paragraph in the text. Matching information to paragraphs, key problem here is you must consider the whole text. There's a huge amount of information to digest here. So the thing that we ask our students to do is do this question last. So if it is part one of the reading test and this question comes up first, skip it, finish the other questions within that part of the reading test and then go back. Because what you will be doing by doing the other questions, you will be familiarizing yourself with the text. You will understand the text more, which will make this question far easier because you will have less information to consume and to understand. So you're doing this one last. My advice, read the questions first and think of synonyms. Again, understand the questions, think of synonyms because this is going to help you later on. Skim the text first. You have a huge amount of information to consume. So it is a good idea, even if you're doing this question last, to read the whole text quickly to understand it. Then read the questions again and think about location. So you've read the questions, you understand them, you've skimmed the text and you're going to go back to the questions and some of the locations will already be very, very obvious to you and that will help you scan to find the location and if you find the location, underline it. Next, we're going to check the question statement again and mark correct if possible. Some of them will be easier than others. Some of them will be very, very obvious so you can save time just by thinking quite quickly about those and thinking, okay, that's the correct answer. But if you cannot find the correct answer quite quickly, this is one of the types of questions where students get lost and spend a huge amount of time on them and again, that's why we say do these last. So if you cannot find the correct information, move to a different paragraph quite quickly because often the answer will present itself in the next paragraph. Don't spend five minutes reading one paragraph going, it has to be here, it has to be here, it has to move on quite quickly. Have the confidence, just like the confidence to write not given, have the confidence to say it's not this paragraph, move on to the next one and the answer will probably present itself quite easily for you and then just follow that system again. Here's an example of table completion or flow chart completion. Table completion is more common on the academic paper, flow chart is very common on the general training paper but the principles are exactly the same. You have missing information here in the flow chart. You have a few different options here and you have to look at the options, read the text and then add the options in here to complete the flow chart or complete the table. Table completion, key problem here is not reading instructions. This is again one of these questions where it says one word or one word on a number, you need to really understand what those mean and follow them on test day. So my advice for these is read the instructions carefully, scan text to locate the correct paragraph, read that section carefully. Don't just skim it, read it carefully and then transfer the words exactly as they are to the gap and check spelling. Very, very common that students find the correct answer but spell it incorrectly. There's really no excuse for this because you're copying the exact letters but be very careful with these. Matching headings, this is a very common question and I think this is actually more challenging and more difficult for most students than true false not given but it's not if you follow the strategy that we're gonna teach you but they always look the same. They will give you a list of headings here and there are always more headings than there are paragraphs to make it more difficult and then it gives you a list of paragraphs and then you simply have to match the paragraphs with the list of headings by referring to the text of course. Finally, the most difficult question, matching headings. Key problem here is there's lots of information to process. Most of the time you're going to be reading the entire text to complete matching headings questions effectively. Another common problem is a lot of students just read like the first part of the first sentence on the last sentence or they focus in on keywords. That is the opposite of what you're trying to do. What you're trying to do with matching headings and what it's testing is can you understand the general meaning of the whole paragraph? Not keywords within the paragraph. Because there's so much information to process and you have to skim and understand the whole text basically a lot of people don't spend enough time focusing in on the different options, the question statements. You cannot find the correct answer if you don't understand the statements. So here's what I get my students to do. Do this question first. Why? Because it's going to make the other questions easier. Because you have to read the whole text, you may as well do this first. Instead of reading parts of the question, parts of the text of other questions, do this first as it's far more efficient and strategic. So you're not going to look at the question statements first. You're going to ignore the question statements entirely. What you're going to do first is read each paragraph with the intention of writing your own heading. So you're going to read the paragraph and write your own heading. This forces you to understand the meaning of the whole paragraph, which is what they're testing. Then and only then look at the headings. And what you will find is your titles, the titles that you came up with, often they will match exactly with the question statements. So focus on understanding the difference of meaning between the different headings and then match any obvious one. So if your title matches exactly what the question statement is or very, very close, then that's the answer. So let's say there are six questions and two of your titles match exactly. Okay, you've got two questions, right? That leaves four. Those four, okay, didn't match exactly. For those, you need to read the paragraph carefully, not just skimming it, really read it carefully and choose the correct option based on what the text is saying and the difference of meaning between the headings. Hope that you enjoyed that video. Now you know all the different types of questions and you know the different strategies for those questions but that's just the first step. The most powerful method for improving your reading is understanding your own personal weaknesses and then improving those weaknesses. That is the most powerful strategy that I know of to improve students to even abandon mine. If you want to know how to do that, just click this link and I've made a new video for you.
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2022 Topps Chrome Star Wars Galaxy Hobby 5 Box Break for Peter M
Live Group Breaks and Case Breaks! Check us out at http://www.laytonsportscards.com Our new Discord has launched! If you are a Youtube Member or Twitch Subscriber, connect your Youtube OR Twitch to your Discord account to gain access to all channels! If you DON'T, you will not be able to see all channels and chats. https://discord.gg/rwcWdxZQt5 Amazing Breaks at Great prices! One of the Biggest Breaking Operations in the World! BREAK SCHEDULE: https://laytonsportscards.com/pages/break-schedule PERSONAL BOX BREAKS: https://laytonsportscards.com/collections/personal-boxes RANDOM RESULTS (Found under "Quick Links" at bottom of our website! : https://laytonsportscards.com/blogs/results Follow Us: INSTAGRAM @LaytonSportsCards TWITTER @LaytonSports - https://twitter.com/LaytonSports FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/LaytonSportsCards YOUTUBE https://www.youtube.com/user/LaytonSportsCards TWITCH https://www.twitch.tv/laytonsportscards Multistreaming with https://restream.io/
[ "sportscards", "sports", "cards", "baseball", "autographs", "auto", "box", "break", "boxbreak", "casebreak", "case", "laytonsportscards", "cut auto", "one of one", "1 of 1", "panini", "football", "basketball", "case break", "box break", "sports collectibles", "live group break", "live case break", "live box break", "sick hit", "patch card", "jerseys", "memorabilia", "football cards", "basketball cards", "hockey cards", "baseball cards", "topps", "panini football", "panini basketball", "leaf trading cards", "logoman", "group break", "upper deck", "Hockey" ]
2023-02-11T01:47:15
2024-04-23T23:32:09
1,330
3K_SCMlIwG8
Everybody forced here. I'm ripping five boxes of 21 21 20 22 Star Wars chrome galaxy hobby For Peter M. Here we go Peter sketch super Red Maybe all of it. I don't know. I want to see something crazy for Peter right here. Thank you. Thank you Don and I love ripping this stuff Oh, yeah for sure Me talking and like actually putting cards isn't why like I'm decent at my job. It's it's everything over here That's the part I would stress about the most that's the only stressful part really it's just doing that fast Doing it correctly. Yeah, and in a timely fashion. Yeah, oh nice mojo bush disguise I could separate the cards here 24 50 decent start on the mojo bush disguise. So I I'll be your chat when um Kylo sketch variation me and Sam. We're doing this the Luke and Leia's outfits on Endor Sam kept saying bush Guys grandma talking refractor. I had to call him out. He's like, you know, that's the name of the car I know all these days and they was like, oh Our 2d2 on the concept are Gamorian guard base refractor Best Star Wars card you can pull probably a Vader super factor or something. Yeah, probably as far as like non-auto goes Out of this anyway, uh, snowtroopers invade Hawthor Fractor. It's one of my favorites right there. That's that that's top five for me Yes Like snowtroopers, dude, I guess like Battle of Hawth sweet. I mean you're not wrong Vintage Star Wars there grievous refractor Darth Vader murdered youngling relic refractor inside the meditation chamber Donnie was not expecting that Pretty good though Yeah, the Kurosawa from last year Star Wars Jedi Starfighter gameplay galaxy one of my favorite games of PlayStation 2 era refractor Leia organa Got a wave Bounty hunters 66 of 99 Solid parallels so far Shadows of the Empire gameplay galaxy Mason new purple. Yeah Tick Tick factor Vice sketch variation crosshand refractor stormtroopers survey the desert stormtrooper Super trooper Refractor a duel on the Death Star Atomic life on Tatooine 134 of 150 three three parallels is good I think crazy yet, but hey a bonus parallel is always nice vintage Vader. Sorry Concept art Vader. We could start here tusk generator at sundown refractor. Yeah, we'll take three numbered in the first box for sure That's a nice starting point Uh chief chirpa. I believe is that the vintage one there refractor oboe? Obi-Wan Kenobi refractor Hello there X-wing B-wing. No, just X-wing gameplay galaxy a wookiee in the wilderness refractor Saw no auto yet And here it is wrecker refractor And a bb-8 auto 32 of 150 on the blue parallel brian herring puppeteer for bb-8 It's a solid hit Pretty solid box for the first one here trudging refractor Is bb-8 top five droid Top five droid. All right guys top five droids. Let's hear them R2d2 is for sure top five droids. That's gotta be in everybody's top five Anybody put c3po in there you can get out. Yeah pretty much. Um, I have k2so k2 is which one Andor's buddy and rogue one. Oh bb uh b the red droid Is it bb or b? by gentillie's refractor fin golf droid best droid Golf droid is definitely like number two atomic attack on hoth 63 of 150 Chop, yeah chopper. I feel like the rebel series chopper for sure. Yeah chop. I've grown to actually really really like kind of obscure but 8d8 and uh Book of Boba Fett refractor weakway Sampled a super that last night right or two nights ago Rather keely there we go clint howard auto to 150 Clint howard was 8d8 like the service droid. He was a service droid voice by matt barry Love matt barry not the fantasy wall matt barry anakin skywalker refractor. Oh, yeah l3 was uh the droid um was lando droid Oh, okay solid droid for sure Loose skywalker assembles his lightsaber refractor IG 11 is a good one carl's on the right. Wait is 11 or 8d8 11 or 8d8 is the best one Yoda uh and loose skywalker refractor. I believe 11 wasn't uh mando says better than IG 88 Got a wave. Come on big wave big wave Oh nice The infamous boba fets 66 of 99 that's a cool one. I think like I want to add one more at the carl's top five and that would probably be mine Because I don't know how I feel about IG 11. He's cool and all but Refractor obi-wan kenobi and bogey omega refractor omega or mega republican mando gameplay galaxy Good game. Why'd you until he's refractor? I can't figure out two more droids without I'm really trying. I'm really like Just google like best droids. I mean x-wings information refractor R2 chopper bb8 k2 l3. I think bb is probably got to be in there. Hey, jordan's right Oh, what am I thinking? Um bounty hunters answer the empire's call refractor All right, we need so we need some uh, we need some spice in this box here. What's the droid from? There's spice in this one Superbombad racing gameplay galaxy boosh disguise refractor. I forget the name. I don't know I think bd bd 11 or something bd 12. I don't know I would definitely Card game of chance refractor That sounds right Although I'll I'll say that's any of them any of them you say right now refractor ben kenobi bd1 yep b1 a uh tick sketch variation refractor druth vader Luke Skywalker on end door refractor Boba Fett starship concept art didn't mean to intruder refractor All right, let's get back on track with another good box here What is our situation that c3 p.m. Does it mean no intruder? They intruded everything Just an intruder say uh mouse droid the top top It's the one that Chewbacca scares new hope solid dick solid dick That peccarine Fractor ala sakura our table terra vining Luke lea hawn concept art refractor lord vader radius is troops Lord vader and his stormtroopers. Sorry getting cards mixed up I hope it's sketch time. I'd love to get p to sketch Han Solo base refractor Atomic lea and her boosh disguise Or just leo organa. Sorry. That's the different one 12 of 150 Leia atomic is great There we go Boosh disguise one of the looks look quite a bit different I'd say we had the same card. Do you call the right room? Fractor archer g2 got a mayor muck muck shies purple auto 8 of 50 john rosengrant Mayor muck shies about like battle droids Star Wars star fighter gameplay galaxy refractor salacious be grumb massive droids Yeah, what about battle droids just like a b1 Refractor medical droid, what about medical droid? Wave lack of faith that's sick Five of 99 jersey number That is sick. We can make this one wave lack of faith Yeah, Pete That's going into mag and it's the first parallel of that card that I pulled Hunter Refractor Yoda on Dagobah Refractor there's Leia and her boosh disguise Um the shadow of the dark lord refractor not the most perfect edge on the left there unfortunately What's uh, what's the Darth Vader rookie card? Uh, probably the original one echo refractor and like the 77 set Greedo refractor Greedo refractor on the vintage star wars that wicket I don't know 38 of 99 that might be just wicked work, right? It's green concept art refractor po Raven's mascot po looks like a wicked Star Wars Jedi outcast gameplay galaxy refractor wedge end hilly's Excludingly battlefront Jedi knight's got to be my favorite gameplay Yeah creatures of the canteen a base refractor Such a great series refractor anakin or a dark turn for anakin skywalker Varyation and refractor aboard the bridge two more. I think we pulled uh aboard the bridge What is tops called the crack dice atomic and it looks pretty sick Anakin on the sketch boba fat ambush refractor The jedi and the princess refractor Yeah, that's the one Sam always like is there a boosh the size like it's just And you're a cure refractor the infamous boba fat would love to see a sketch here Wave refractor boba fat ambushed 16 of 99 solid solid sit super refractor Tordoza on the refractor and the auto is a klatu Corey D. Williams is klatu Billy D. Son Star Wars rebellion gameplay galaxy C3 po refractor green princess knisa 51 of 99 vintage star wars refractor battle at the dinoga actor up front here Wookiee war dance strange pack interesting Poe sketch variation refractor Han Solo and Chewbacca and the cockpit He walks under attack refractor Good, they should be under attack damn things refractor a boba fat battles a sarlacc How about at the battle sarlacc every day what those carabirons ever do to you? I don't know. I'm just messing around. I know refractor the dark lord and a new hope One of the nice probably one of the nicer cards right there. Yeah, that's pretty sick The boonzeeve classic refractor now this is pod racing try spinning. That's a good trick Refractor cross it. Yeah, what do you guys think do you think I'd be a rebel or part of the empire? try rebel Oh, look at that do back Extractor 10 of 10 San Trooper on a do back extractor Yeah, Pete We should get a train horn. Alrighty. All right. Do the train horn whenever we pull big cards Star Wars dark forces gameplay galaxy a galaxy within grasp What a galaxy isn't this galaxy said here Star Wars refractor. All right. All right. Let's pull the mace super fracture Let's do that right now Purple makes it be cool Very nice Top five do backs go. Oh, man. That's a tough one. Jordan. All right. Do you back number one? Do you back number two? Whoa, Donny's nailing it right now. Actually number three refractor entered Darth Vader. Yeah, this is the one right here Then probably do back five and seven super fractor sketch or both that'd be cool Refractor Qui-Gon Jinn. Hello Ren refractor. Come on. Come on refractor tuskens in their bantha Refractor the infamous or an enemy of the empire. I should say that's what that card is and the auto is bb8 Ryan herring puppeteer for bb8 Another one. Yeah, Star Wars bounty hunter gameplay galaxy refractor san trooper on a do back They could have used uh that that freeze frame with like Obi-Wan Qui-Gon and dark ball like Palpatine refractor when they all clash their lightsaber together that was cool Cool Refractor cop pants Wedge there like a faith refractor All right, come on. Where are we going to find the big hit here? Come on now refractor storm troopers assess their gear Carl do backs aren't a hawk That too. He's silly yeah A prism refractor Uh storm troopers swarm Darth Vader number 38 of 75. That's pretty nice right there too boba concept art Come on. Come on. Come on atomic ala sakura 46 or sorry harris annula 46 of 150 refractor princess leia organa refractor lando calrissian There's a hand hand solo. That's what he said. That's what he said hand solo Jedi night dark forces to gameplay galaxy refractor patrolling the cantina Jordan this is star worth animals Refractor is Han Solo or the smuggler Han Solo So Carl, I don't recall that refractor Bounty hunters answer the empire's call And refractor x-wings in formation All right, no sketch But still did pretty well. Thanks again, p. We'll get these out to you man
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11. Ceramics as Historical Agents: 1640-1670 - Caroline McCaffrey-Howarth
Lecture Eleven: Ceramics as Historical Agents: 1640-1670 by Caroline McCaffrey-Howarth Curator, 17th and 18th Century Ceramics and Glass, V&A, Visiting Research Fellow, University of Leeds. This recording took place at the Society's apartments in Burlington House, Piccadilly. The Society of Antiquaries has recorded this content, with permission of the speaker(s), and made it available on YouTube and through it's website at www.sal.org.uk.
[ "SAL", "Society of Antiquaries", "History", "Antiquarian", "Art History", "Art", "Archaeology", "SocAntiquaries" ]
2021-10-22T15:59:16
2024-02-05T06:08:41
1,539
3KwUr9pZ3bo
I'm sort of taking us into the 17th century. I hope that's okay. I realize we've been definitely kind of slowly drawing our way here eventually throughout the day. And I probably should say just to begin that this is very much a work in progress project. It's part of a larger postdoctoral project on political pots and thinking about ceramics and reading them as historical texts, working from 1600 to about 1850 or so. I'm really delighted to be in such a knowledgeable audience and looking forward to your feedback. Undoubtedly, the 17th century in England bore witness to a changing world with a rise in print culture, increasing literacy rates. And as people like Joan first and Sarah panel and others have discussed, a growing domestic consumer market amongst the middling classes and people of the lower gentry. This is all of course set very much against a changing political landscape the violent upheaval caused by the civil wars to the execution of Charles I in 1649 and the subsequent restoration of the monarchy in 1660. And of course, unnaturally, such events had a significant impact on material and visual culture and especially on the novel new industry of Delftware ceramics production in London. And that's really the subject of my discussion today. From pro-monarchists and treasonous dishes showing Charles first in his meal airs, men in Southwark in the early 1650s to demonstrate the longevity of domestic power to cups mass produced and consumed following the restoration of Charles II declaring political allegiance and loyalty. Kind of ceramics play this very key role in this wider dissemination of monarchial power structures at this time. Often based on print culture, these objects raised questions regarding the intermedial nature of ceramics production, representations of history and the performative nature of the political experience during this time. And such interchange between media as someone like Mark Hallett has rightly stated might be said to be one of the most defining characteristics of the 17th century across British art, architecture and design but ceramics have really been marginalized within this conversation up until this point. So this is sort of bringing them to the forefront of the historical conversation the historical landscape. So instead this paper is very much arguing that ceramics embody a particular currency as historical agents producing meaning and constructing narratives of monarchial political rhetoric. Imbued with agency, it asks what type of role these ceramics played within the visual material and haptic quotidian political experience. And quite often these objects were displayed proudly or perhaps we'll see covertly in interiors yet as objects of use and haptic engagement they also played crucial roles in the performative nature of loyalist toasts and households and taverns perhaps amongst friends or amongst larger gatherings. So this paper really unpacks high potters and consumer markets responded to unpredictable moments of sociopolitical change through such material culture. It argues for ceramics to be understood as historical agents shaping sociopolitical conversation burgeoning constructions of history and loyalist ideologies leaving a lasting historical and material legacy in the political consciousness of mid 17th century England. And I just couldn't resist putting up this particular image as one of our displays at the V&A in the British galleries and obviously the mug in the center of Charles and Diana was not created in the mid 17th century as sort of a curatorial play for the visitor the eager eyed visitor I suppose. But I think it does say something about this tradition of commemorative objects still happening today kind of becoming very ubiquitous and something we assume but actually really trying to interrogate how did the start and why and what did it actually mean at that point as well. So this kind of commemoration on pots very much survives. Most of the wares that I'm going to be showing are earthen wares so the type known as delft ware which is essentially decoration painted onto a white tin glaze and delft ware was really the first ceramic material I would argue that was used for propaganda purposes as well as commemorative purposes documenting both public opinions and private loyalties. And the majority of the ones I'm looking at today were most likely produced in London a couple produced in Bristol but London is really the main production for these objects at this point. And in London local clay was mixed with a clay which had a higher calcium carbonate content and that was coming and being brought into the angular and also from Carrick Fergus and the clay was essentially dissolved into sort of water filled tanks and you can see these here on the screen and it became this kind of soupy mixture not very appealing for Saturday afternoon but then it was essentially strained into a shallow drying tank so that would actually make the water evaporate. The clay was then trodden on and that would completely remove air bubbles and then it would have been thrown onto a wheel although sometimes molds were used and essentially we have a kind of unglazed biscuit vessel that was ready for decoration it was first dipped into a tin white glaze which was a sort of a mixture of tin oxide and lead oxide and it was decorated and after this it was then fired. The London Delftware industry then was really still very much in its infancy in the 1640s when war broke out between King and Parliament and of course as we know 1649 Charles I was executed and ruled without King is established in England. As a sort of shift with this royalist supporters were obliged very much to surrender their silver tablewares under threat of penalties and inspections that were being carried out and quite a lot of key players at this point and especially city livery companies were forced to dispose of their treasures and quite a lot of these were then replaced with wood but mostly with Delftware. So it's probable that something like this which is very, very early Delftware candlestick based directly on a silver example made in 1648 which was owned by the Fishmongers Company would have suffered the similar kind of fate of having been sold. They'd had silver so they're buying something else and adding their own arms to it at this point. So the success of the Delftware industry at this point really coincides with an overall growth and pottery use for various reasons and that sort of shifts towards these commemorative wares that we begin to see. As Delftware could be produced on a fairly large scale it was also easily painted and frequently painted kind of the painting that goes through it is likened to watercolor because you had to do it so, so quickly before it dried though quite a kind of ordered labor process going on. So it was really the perfect material for showcasing private and public loyalties. This charger which is dated 1653 is a really fascinating example of this kind of early commemorative wear and it shows a full length striking I think full length portrait of Charles I and his three male heirs. So Prince Charles, Prince James and Henry Duke of Gloucester and for supporters of the British monarchy the preservation and longevity of the dynasty was incredibly important. So this is met four years after his execution and of course the very year that the Commonwealth was met Lord Protector. So it very much as a piece demonstrates continuing sympathies during the Commonwealth period for the monarchy. And if you can just eager eyes of you spot the initials at the very top which has the date 1653 and then above it I had an A, T, E and those initials were probably of a newly married couple with royalist sympathies who are actually commissioning this piece to be met to kind of mark their coming together. And I think it's difficult in many ways not to think that owning such a dish in London in 1653 would not have been seen or potentially seen as a treasonous act possibly punishable with severe penalties. And I think that really confirms the loyalty of whoever is commissioning these pieces but it also brings up very interesting questions about the methods of production of design or how specific pieces like this were actually commissioned and then secretly produced and kind of how that was the kind of a process of having between Delftware maker to buyer essentially. And of course, one of the key events in the history of English Civil War was the story of Charles II as a prince in 1651 hiding in the Oak Tree. And in the British galleries of the V&A there exists this remarkable tingly of birth and where plaque dating from 1660 are there but depicting Charles II surrounded by the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland in the very branches of the gospel Oak Tree. Probably again, this is made in London and it's very much based on an engraving by Peter Stent and it's commemorating Charles and kind of one of the most key historical and political moments of the 17th century. And as we all know, Charles' escape from the parliamentary troops following the Battle of Worcester in 1651 was a story that he liked very much frequently to recount over the years from the writings of Samuel Pease to paintings and prints of the day reinforcing a political, textual and visual agenda whereby Charles II could become the people's king. At three o'clock in the morning of 4th September 1651 of course, a party of 60 royalist soldiers rode quietly up the gates of an old converted fiery the white ladies right on the border of Shopshire an area run by a farming family called the Pendrels of the Stark. We know that they kind of passed and noticed through miles and miles of countryside and among them of course was I think 2021 at this point, Charles I and at the white ladies, his coat and his britches apparently were removed. He was dressed in country clothes and kind of an old hat and kind of apparently had his long royal locks cut short and the king's account depicted sort of 30 years later to Samuel Pease records the decision and he says, Pease writes he told me that it would be very dangerous either to stay in the house or go into the wood there being a great wood hard by Bosqueville and he knew but one way hard to pass all the next day and that was to get up into a great oak in a pretty plain place where we could see round about us so they would certainly search all the wood for people that had made their escape. We got up into the great oak that had been locked some three or four years before and so it was grown out very bushy and thick not to be seen through and there we sat all the day and the next day the Pendrell brothers escort the king secretly away and we know of course that Charles II loved to tell this story and he commissioned a set of paintings to show the key moments of this adventure when he returns. I'm showing you one of these here in the 1660s and interestingly enough with all of these paintings Charles is not shown at the age in which he would have been when the events are taken place but he's shown at the age he is when he commissions them was quite an interesting visual trope happening here. So this is the third of the set of five scenes that he has created for this kind of traumatic escape following his defeat. As Scottish artist Roy and Katrina Murray has noted the stewards persistently promote a dynastic and domestic images to reinforce royal authority and I think something that's quite interesting I'm very interested in is with the materiality of ceramics is that a particular means through which to disseminate the this and this kind of particular form of image making to the public on a much larger scale? So what can we actually see in the tingly as earth and where a plaque? Well, we've got the head of Charles II surrounded by these primes and we've sort of flanked by two smaller trees and bearing the scroll with the words of the royal oak and painted in different colors of manganese and purple yellow and green and this sort of running scroll around the border and I guess adding another literal and figurative layer to the ceramic object is the fact that it's set into a wooden frame supposedly made from the at the bark of an oak tree which legend has it came directly from the royal oak tree itself. As someone like Susan Stewart would see it such materiality produces its meaning as a souvenir yet I would suggest that we can also read these types of objects as democratizing perhaps this experience and our interaction with political culture and historical records with such an object. The act of inserting this plaque into the bark suggests that it was worth preserving and we know that there was quite a well counted for tradition of taking wood from the tree as a souvenir a sort of tourist carving out pieces an act of claiming their stick in this metaphorical symbol of world British history and the cultural significance of such a piece demands further scrutiny and actually what's been quite interesting in researching for this talk I've just discovered another one of these in a private collection but it's been recorded I wasn't able to show you an image that's very, very excited by that. And I should say with this particular example because of the provenance of the piece a game which I sadly can't disclose it does there are, you know, there are shifts coming that it was inserted into the plaque in the 1660s whether it was that exact bark will we ever know it was a bark from a tree nearby on the land which do both graphically from where this piece comes from would suggest that it might be so it's quite, yeah, sort of watch the space like those. So to what extent does such a commemorative piece reinforce royal power and authority? Well, I think in many ways it certainly helped make someone like Charles the second people's king and it certainly helped record one of the best known stories of history from this period. And again, this idea of setting the plaque into the original tree of where this event supposedly take place is this kind of showing this object as a literal tangible example of history and I find that quite interesting. And once again, just like in the portraits and in the paintings, Charles is depicted in the ceramic as a sort of much older man again, quite interesting here. Of course, 1660 saw the restoration of Charles the second. Cromwell had died a couple of years before that and there was this desire to bring back or presumably a desire to, we think to decide to bring back more stability and order but not always necessarily the case with this decision but it very much is restoration was seen as a momentous occasion. Lots of ballads, popular royalist songs which sort of greeted and commemorated this event. Notably, Thomas Blout wrote and published several key histories from the Civil War including Boscobal, the history of his sacred majesties which was published in 1660. And we know that Edward Hyde, the first royal of Plarendon wrote the history of the rebellion which was written in the 1640s but actually wasn't published until much later. But despite this, of course, it's important to remember that according to people and David Cressy who's done a lot of work on this that in the 17th century, only about 30% of men and probably about 10% of women were literate. So still quite, you know, really relatively low numbers. The visual culture, material culture and oral news and things like ballads were incredibly important in terms of disseminating information to the masses. The increase in visual and material culture which commemorated Charles's restoration then was incredibly important too as it suggested an increasing demand for objects that could show political allegiance for the king. And it was really the Delftware factories that came to the front and sort of supply this rising consumer market. But of course we have to remember that these were highly decorative, brightly colored goods that could have been hung on the wall to decorate your home or put onto cabinets. But quite a few of them are colorful little mugs like this one painted with rather schematic portraits of Charles II. And I think these are really among the earliest commemorative British wares and they were really meant as much for display I think as for use. So here we see a bust of, here we see a bust portrait of Charles II under a sort of triumphal arch and sort of dull, you know, blues or gray yellow. I inscribed CRX with a sort of white interior in the background. And vessels like this are normally called coddle cups which refers to a medicinal drink known from medieval times onwards. And undoubtedly ceramics cups like these become very popular mediums for royal portraits. So we have cups and bottles and they were used widely not only in the domestic home, but also in taverns. And as such, their visual decoration really has the potential to reinforce the position of the crown by declaring the user's loyalty. And I think the key thing with something like this is that they would have been used. A person's haptic engagement with the object as they held it in their hands or poured from it or drank with it or perhaps even toasted with it meant that these objects took part in a sort of form of social performance. Users or owners had the opportunity to hold a piece of history in their hands and perhaps such images even started conversations or rather debates or arguments amongst friends. And it's likely that such objects played a key roles in establishing networks of gift exchange as well through material culture. So what was the level of production of these types of words? Like, well, such mugs we know normally were never included in inventories of Delft factories or London pottery. So there's a slight kind of issue in terms of getting theater of how many were created and produced but they must have formed a minute proportion of their significant proportion of their outputs. They would have been cheap to buy yet their decoration would have been sure that they were probably seldom used. So a huge number have really survived intact in greater numbers than we would expect. And I think that in further material and survival says a lot. It's also important to note with this one and one like this that such images were very fast shelf very quickly and it would have been quite a formulaic process of production as these images were repeated and repeated and repeated often with kind of varying detail as you might see. Of course, here we have a composition very similar to the dish I showed earlier but this time in the same sort of architectural space but this time we've got Charles II on this one here holding his scepter and globe standing between columns under an arch on a tachythor and they've got these lovely kind of tops with the canvas leaves. And that happens quite a lot. You get these delftware portraits of Charles II often in ceremonial robes probably derived from published images like this one I'm showing you and this is a particular line engraving by William Fairthorne from the early 1660s and it's not the National Portrait Gallery and it shares several similarities especially in terms of the design of the crown but the shape of the scepter and as well as the gold medallion around the neck as well. But what we have I think with the delft paste course seems obvious to say but it's worth saying is the introduction of color and I think that does really transform the design it brings kind of vibrancy to the story into the kind of historical moment as well. And similarly iconography from this printed etching which is now at the British Museum was kind of translated into a lot of delftware pieces. We've got an image of Charles this kind of being led to parliament wearing his crown and holding his orb and scepter and riding through a procession in London and if you just look closely enough you can see the sort of sign of the royal oak or the kind of tavern that he's passing by. I would always love that detail. And several prints exist of course which record Charles's coronation when he's possessing through the city of London but it's more likely this one is actually him riding to kind of a state opening of parliament he's already been crowned at this point. He's already wearing everything but several of these sort of key motifs and prints like this end up on existing ceramic pieces during the time. So I'm just going to show you very lastly the last couple of minutes just a couple of these. So we've got some jugs would have predominantly been used for gale but also perhaps for water. And so we've got the back of the jugs are two sort of panels enclosing in a ship with trees on one side and a sort of twisted rope. And on the other we've got a sort of central reserve of a sort of bull torso portrait of Charles II holding an aseptor in his right hand and orb in his left and just kind of blow up close so you can see that a bit closer. And of course the regalia, regalia med for Charles II coronation in 1661 forms the central part of the crown jewels today but they had been completely destroyed during the Commonwealth and so the king actually had to commission new pieces to be made when he returns and done by the royal goldsmith Robert Feiner. So you can see the sector which he's holding in this on the image of this jug representing of course the sovereign's kind of spiritual rule and you also have the sovereign's orb as a symbol of godly power on earth with cross above it. So once again it becomes clear that the desire to mark and celebrate a historic moment of the restoration of the monarch infiltrated into the market, Delftwares and encourage a large market of commemorative pieces. But here with this royal kind of all of his royal pieces together the image very much confirms Charles's right to rule his right to the throne, but we also have and hopefully you can see just the right hand side again some initials for SB which is most likely referencing again whoever commissioned this particular piece of the original owner of this piece determined to show their loyalty to the king and through such objects furthermore we're kind of emphasizing the monarchial image making of this time through the ceramic material medium. So in conclusion, during this period as we have seen there was a proliferation of decorative and useful ceramic wares that were made by several factories and most of which were in London producing gild dine images based on well-publicized historical moments produced very much quickly in years following the key historical events which they depicted they were also seeking to commemorate key moments in British history whilst also allowing the user to demonstrate their political and often monarchial allegiance. Often these ceramics used gave the opportunity to the users holding the mugs at a jug to actually kind of look at them up close and in their hands and bring these scaled on images closer to their eyes. So they invited a very different kind of political engagement and representation in comparison to textual forms of print in a historical moment when many were still not literate and they also acted as decorative colorful items in displays or writing up domestic interiors and taverns, et cetera. And through songs, toasts, or ballads many may have acted as key agents in a performative ritual of political sovereignty. Ceramics then as visual and material objects had the potential to play a key role in the broader understanding of domestic power during the 17th century in Britain. And how this was essentially disseminated through a broader range of social classes. And I think we only need to look at a handful of these pieces from this era to see the role that ceramic squares were playing in recording, making and commemorating history during this time. And today I think they allow us to imagine the past even just a bit more vividly. Thank you.
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Webcast: The Cup Win on Starbucks: Lessons Learned and Holding the Company Accountable
[ "forests", "trees", "environment" ]
2018-06-26T22:06:27
2024-04-18T18:03:15
3,360
3knGlgiErIw
I'm Ann, I'm from Stand Out Earth. You are in the right place for the webcast on Starbucks. And I'm going to take everybody through just a couple logistics things and then I will introduce our speakers and we'll get underway. All right, and if you will wave, as your name is called, Jim Ace is the senior campaigner and actions manager at Stand Out Earth. Jim has worked on a range of social justice and environmental issues with organizations including Rainforest Action Network, Greenpeace, The Rutgers Society, SEIU, and Alliance for Democracy. He joined Stand in May 2012 to challenge the logging industry's greenwash of forest destruction. And Jim, thank you so much for being part of this today. Shiloh Britt worked as a Starbucks barista for five years residing in 2017. That same year, she graduated from Western Washington University's Huxley School of the Environment with a BA in environmental studies. Shiloh has been an avid volunteer with Stand Out Earth and has participated in over three actions with the organization. Shiloh also works as an elder caregiver and welcome Shiloh and thank you for all your time. Getting ready for today. Emily DeFrisco is the director of communications for the Plastic Pollution Coalition, a global alliance of more than 700 member groups working to stop plastic from polluting our environment. She has 13 years of experience in communications for nonprofit organizations, creating viral social media campaigns, Orange Gate, and Open Your Eyes with Jeff Bridges for Plastic Pollution Coalition, and on Toxic Chemicals and Children's Health for Healthy Child, Healthy World, and Environmental Working Group. And Emily, thank you so much for being here today. And Emily has warned us that a child of hers may walk past the screen. This could happen. Just want everyone to be prepared for that. We're kind of hoping it happens. It's not. And don't worry if it does. Thank you all for your prep and your time and your work. And I am going to bring up some questions to start us off and give me just a moment to do that. All right, so the first question that I wanna ask is how did Stan decide to reboot the Starbucks campaign? Tell us in just a couple minutes about the impact and what was the timing and the reasoning behind rebooting it? So Stan started out as a coalition actually about 20 years ago of Greenpeace Rainforest Action that worked in NRDC and the orientation was around protecting forests. And that coalition became forest ethics and then eventually Stan. So what drew us to Starbucks was the paper cup. And Starbucks uses over four billion, would it be, four billion cups a year that's over 8,000 cups a minute? Most of them end up in the landfill because at least in part of the cups, 100% polyethylene lining, it's plastic lining, most folks aren't aware of it. I wasn't aware of it. And so that's really at least initially what drew us to this issue in this company. But as you so, and there may have been others but as you so provided a lot of leadership on the Starbucks company, working on the cup issue for many years. And of course the company itself was very, was paying a lot of attention to the cup going way back to the 80s. In 2006, the company developed a 10% post-consumer recycled fiber cup. And then in 2008, the company made some commitments around recyclability of the cup and reusable cups. And so, we saw those commitments and some of its movement on cups as promising. And so we relaunched the campaign or relaunched our campaign to really follow up on their commitments to hold them accountable for those commitments they had made previously. Terrific. And just a note too, to encourage any of our panelists to come in with comments or questions for each other, additional feedback as we go. All right, great. And tell us about the key elements of the new campaign so far. Did you start out by reaching out directly to Starbucks? If so, what happened? Yeah, I'll take that one as well. So we always of course contact, engage the company and make many efforts to engage the company before we launch a campaign. And that was certainly true with Starbucks. We sent a letter, we didn't get a response. So we gave them an opportunity and an invitation really to do the right thing. The other thing I'll just say in terms of what we had initially conceived the campaign as is really a story-based campaign, we wanted to tell a story with it. And so we came up with this, several of our smart staff members came up with this idea of the Super Mermaid. We didn't want to sort of both shame Starbucks consumers, their customers or the company really. It wasn't sort of a boycott kind of a frame. So we wanted to keep it positive but encouraging and inviting and propositional. So really inviting the company to do the right thing. So the idea of the Super Mermaid, this powerful female superhero who was going to fight back against this evil Starbucks cut monster became the sort of story of the campaign. And that followed, we put out a comic book which we'll show you, actually a professionally designed comic book. And we launched the campaign at Comic Con, Emerald City Comic Con, it's the Comic Con here in Seattle. And we really followed that through much of the campaign we sort of followed that story and used the story to raise awareness of the campaign. Great, and why don't we transition to talking a little, going into some of the details of the ground campaign and how about if we start with a little bit of that, with a little video from that Comic Con launch, yeah? Okay, are you guys seeing and hearing that? Not yet, okay. Okay, so just a little taste of that launch. And then- I'll just jump in, and that was some of the three elements of the launch. Also, earlier that morning, we had gone to the Starbucks headquarters with one of the super mermaids and went up to the eighth floor, the executive floor with the president and CEO is, and delivered a petition. We had also taken a group of activists and traveled around to almost 20 stores throughout downtown Seattle that day, handing out the comic book and making a scene at a number of stores, or actually about 18 stores we hit that morning. So it was a fun day. Terrific. And then let's talk a little bit about the ground campaign and why it was important and what some of the really important elements of that were. And I'm gonna try to bring up some more images. And I think Shiloh, I think you're gonna take us through that. Yes, so as we were saying, the ground campaign has been all about taking the super mermaid and going to the storyline of the super mermaid, it's against this evil cup monster. And this all started in 2016 at that comic con and since then we've just been rolling with that. We've gone as far as to create a giant cup monster that the super mermaid goes into battle with. And as the campaign has worn on, the cup monster has had two different remodels. Stan Parker especially has been wonderful with that. And it takes a whole team. It's not just some organizers. It's not just Jim working on it. It takes an entire behind the scenes crew to do all this. And we've done multiple different actions. Like Jim was saying, we've done multiple tours of stores as we call them, where we'll go in just as Paris does and go to different stores handing out literature and explaining what is going in, what is going on. One of the things that we've done recently has been going to the Starbucks shareholders meetings, the AGM. And the AGM last year, we got so inside the heads of the executives that one of the executives, I believe it was the VP, said that she had nightmares about this giant cup monster that at the time was made of cardboard. And then in since then some of the larger things that we have done is we did a five day vigil where we parked outside of their headquarters in downtown Seattle, it's what December. And we're just there for five days with our 8,000 cup wall, our 12 foot tall cup. And we'll have different organizations come and help us out. And we'll talk about that a little bit later, but especially the people of plant for the planet, 350 Seattle student organizations. Again, it's not just one of us, it takes us all. And most recently at the Starbucks shareholders meeting in 2018, we were there as well. Terrific. Anything else? Shiloh, is there anything you wanna point out about the images that are coming up here or anything that we're missing? Just holler if there's one that I should bring back up. Okay. The two young women there with the petition of liberty, that was at this year's AGM in March. And these are two young women from Canada. They posted a petition on the change.org platform and got hundreds of thousands of people signing their petition and they were instrumental in helping near the end here in March. They actually met with the CEO, the new CEO Kevin Johnson. And then of course we're involved in this petition delivery and that's what this photo is of. Awesome. And then let me pull up the comic too and show that. And Mrs. Emily, I'll just add too with the Cup Monster. It was such a cool visual to have that Cup Monster on the ground with us in Seattle at the annual shareholders meeting. And for all of us who were taking video and doing Facebook Live to be able to point at that Cup Monster and say this Cup Monster was made from 8,000 single use disposable Starbucks cups that are not recycled. This is the amount that Starbucks goes through every minute. That was a very powerful visual both on the ground, organizing in person and organizing online as well. Great. And let me ask a question too about this so that the Cup Monster is in the comic and then also there's this physical Cup Monster at the actions. Which came first? Is the comic first? And then you knew that, did you always know that you were gonna build a giant Cup Monster and what was entailed in that? Sorry, the comic came around in 2016 and we did not have a Cup Monster until the AGM of March, 2017. And for that first time, it took us taking over a donated space by Doug Colchin, which was awesome. And a group of college students, myself, Jim, our families, I wanna say it took us about three weeks of very late nights, early mornings and multiple things, events happened during that time that there's setbacks. But that was our first version of the Cup Monster and that Cup Monster ended up, he was made out of cardboard so he ended up disintegrating at our last action last year at the five day vigil. So it took us about three or four weeks again this February to create another much sturdier Cup Monster. But then as Emily was bringing up, you know that the power of these pieces, these visual pieces, in terms of the executive suite and also public support, the way the public is reacting. And do you have any other things that you wanna say about that? About maybe what it was like when, as employees are coming to the HQ or people who didn't know about the campaign were walking by down the sidewalk and then the Cup Monster is out there or the Wall of Cups is out there. Specifically with the Cup Monster grounds, as we named him, is a huge attention getter. People will walk by activists in the streets handing out pamphlets. It's very difficult to walk by a 10 plus foot Cup Monster and not at least to show some interest in that. If people didn't know, the media especially was really interested in these props that we had out. And it wasn't just the Cup Monster, we had people dressed as baristaes to counter them. And- What was really fun is to watch people figured out. So we took the, remember, we took the Cup Monster on a parade and we were going down the middle of the street that both curves line with people and people would look at it at a point and they sort of, there'd be this funny look on their face. They wouldn't understand. And then this aha moment would hit them. It was really fun to watch the sort of recognition and they would get it. Oh, right, they're talking about wasteful cups, single use cups. And so that was really fun. I'll also say as I think back, our initial theory was that we go to Starbucks stores but also places where Starbucks would care about their name being, are their brand being stained. So we went to Starbucks sponsored events, that sort of thing in Seattle. And not, we eventually sort of continued doing that but brawned it and obviously hit them at the headquarters as well. But really it was sort of about experimenting and trying to figure out sort of poking them in different places and seeing where they would react. And it turns out that the cup monster is where we got our reaction. So when we figured out that we actually had something that they really didn't like and they didn't want to see out in the world, that's when we knew that we had something that worked. Okay, great. And I'm gonna direct this next one at Emily kind of getting into the power of the online engagement. And I feel like there's really interesting interactions between the online and the offline too. So I'll invite everybody to come in about that. But let's bring Emily up next to talk about how you leveraged, how the campaign leveraged online engagement and anything that you wanna add about kind of the synergy between online and offline. Yeah, it was a wonderful synergy between the two. And we had 20 different organizations in our Starbucks coalition. We called it building off the great work that Stand and others have done with Starbucks. And we had two great hashtags, Break Free from Plastic, which is an umbrella movement that many of us are a part of. And also hashtag Starbucks Trash, which was just really compelling for people. We asked people to photograph Starbucks Trash in their neighborhood and share it on social media with that hashtag, which went over really well because who hasn't seen Starbucks Trash in their neighborhood? It's everywhere. Also just using the power of an online petition tool that was super easy to sign. You could sign it from wherever you live in the entire world. And that petition was delivered on the ground in Seattle. So we made it just really accessible for everyone, really easy to use. And the campaign really resonated with people. And I think one of the reasons that it really resonated with people is because many people don't know, like Jim mentioned that Starbucks straws, lids, cups are not recycled. The majority of them are ending up in the landfill or our oceans and waterways. Ocean plastic pollution and plastic pollution in general is this growing, growing topic of concern and a growing crisis really. So we were able to kind of use all of those things toward an advantage to build this really cool digital campaign in partnership with these other organizations. And what you're seeing here on your screen now, thank you Ann, is the main petition page which as you can see has over a million signatures was super easy to sign, super easy to share and really cool. So we were really happy that we got over a million signatures. Okay, great. And Emily, should I pull up that other graphic? Another thing that we used to kind of leverage the digital organizing is Thunderclap. So we used Thunderclap and had a bunch of different organizations in our coalition and even organizations outside of the coalition sign on to kind of release the same tweet at one time. And that Thunderclap as you can see from this photograph here, this image reached 6.4 million people which you're really happy with. And as you can see, you can see a green straw right there in the ocean. And if that doesn't make you feel like that's a problem, I don't know what will. I mean, that's just ready to be eaten by a poor little marine animal. So we were really happy that our Thunderclap reached so many people and that so many people kind of took up the call to sign the petition and put the pressure on Starbucks to change. Okay, great. So let's talk a little bit about how the coalition worked together. And how did the coalition come together and what makes it work well? So just starting off with who's in the coalition and how did the different organizations first approach each other? And this could be our only way to start. Just a tip my hat to Ross Hammond, former colleague who really helped I think sort of get the ball rolling and starting to talk to the plastics folks. And I think that started in the fall of last year and by January of 2018, we were in full swing plan. So that's my recollection. It all happened so fast. Emily, what was your thoughts? Yeah, that's absolutely right. I think Stan began the work and then these 20 different organizations kind of came together. We had weekly calls and we kind of aligned our messaging, break free from plastic again, helped with kind of our messaging alignment. And yeah, we worked really well together. And it was really cool because Starbucks has a long history of ignoring one tiny nonprofit organization, right? But they can't ignore the power of 20 working together with all of our networks and all of our communities standing up together and demanding change. So it was really, really powerful and a great way to put the pressure on them. Great, and what just happened during the campaign that has been surprising? And I should say, I have just a couple more questions and then we're gonna open it up and we are getting some via Facebook Live and some via the Zoom platform and please tuck your questions in there. We welcome them. So just a couple more from me and then we'll get to them from the audience. So what's been surprising in the kitchen and how have you leveraged it to benefit when possible? I'll start. One of them was something we couldn't have planned for and that was over in the UK, a show on BBC called War on Waste. Celebrity named Hugh, his last name is hyphenated and always escapes me, but he did a great show on paper cups and talked about Starbucks and that was huge and that led the UK Parliament to consider what they called what was dubbed a latte levier that is a fee on single use cups. And so that really had a significant effect certainly over in Europe and in particular the UK, but obviously companies over here in the US and including Starbucks were paying attention to that. So that was huge. Emily, do you wanna add anything to that? Yeah, I would say we really had a coordinated effort with many rungs of the ladder, if you will, with the digital, the online petition, beautiful social media posts created by Stand and Plastic Pollution Coalition and others, really shareable content, asks to turn out in person in Seattle on the ground and make your voice heard. And then another one of the groups in our organization Upstream, they worked very hard on this toolkit where anyone in the world could use these resources to print a letter, a dear manager letter and bring it to the Starbucks in their community and show up in their community and demand change. And I'm just looking for the numbers here. Those letters were delivered at over 40 Starbucks locations in 60 countries. No, six countries, six countries. So I think and that was all the day of the AGM. So it was a very really well coordinated effort that I think really put the pressure on Starbucks. You're muted, Anne. That's my favorite trick, or I forget to unmute myself. Let's talk about the win a little bit. What did Starbucks commit to? And I know we have some questions coming in about that too. What did Starbucks commit to? And when we hold them to this win, what will the impact be? And I think, we haven't heard from Shila for a little bit. Let's kick that off with Shila. So April 2017, right after their shareholders meeting AGM, they said that they were going to double the percentage of recycled fiber, double the percentage of reusable cups and double the number of communities that accepted cups for recycling. The day before the Starbucks AGM, this year, March 2018, 10, they just came out with a $10 million initiative to develop a recyclable and compostable cup. When they live up to this promise, this impact is going to be huge. It's going to be felt all around the world, not just here in the U.S., because Starbucks is the biggest coffee company and developing a new technology will be a game changer. Everyone will go where Starbucks has led them. Okay, great. And Shila, will you just run us through those, just run us through, because I know people are listening hard, just a couple, run back through what they committed to. This spring. Double the percentage of recyclable fiber, double the percentage of reusable cups, double the number of communities that accept cups for recycling. And they have created a $10 million initiative to develop a recyclable and compostable cup. Okay, terrific. And we'll come back to those in just a minute. What are some of the key lessons learned so far from this campaign? Am I going to lead off? Sure, I think we learned a lot. I think we had a lot of great success. And I think we learned that our voices are stronger together. We need to work together to achieve these big goals. And that was just so beautifully demonstrated with this campaign. So we're thrilled to have been able to partner with the 20 different organizations in order to accomplish this. And we're not done. I mean, we're still gonna be holding Starbucks to their promise and more in the coming weeks and months. Yeah, I would say a key lesson is flexibility or agility might be a better word for it. And that is being willing to shift messaging and strategy. And it's really almost theory of change, really, because shifting to the plastic pollution issue and really emphasizing the plastic piece was critical. So that was a really big piece. Frankly, the recyclable cups and post-consumer cycle content just wasn't landing. It just wasn't getting the traction that we needed it to. The only other thing I would just add in addition to that is just getting into the head of the employees was really key. We felt like by having a regular, persistent presence, both at their headquarters and stores and just that sort of regular drip was, I think, had an impact leading up to this sort of crescendo at the AGM. Terrific, and in terms of continuing to hold Starbucks feet to the fire, what about the commitments and these lessons learned? How is that shaping the campaign going forward and what are the next steps? Yeah, I think, oh, you can go ahead, Jim. I was just gonna say, we would love to see Starbucks completely get rid of their not-so-green straws as we call them. It's awesome that they've made this commitment to create this recyclable and compostable cup, which Jim will talk about is gonna be a challenge. But we also need to get rid of that other plastic that they serve all the time, every minute of every day. And we need them to increase their use of re-usables like they committed to do. We need them to actually really put some weight behind that because in the long-term, that's gonna be what's best for the environment. Yeah, that's right. And good news that they have committed in the UK to eliminate straws, the city of Vancouver just banned straws in Vancouver. That takes effect in 2019. So plastic straws, we're okay with straws. Sorry, plastic straws. So, I think plastic straws are on the way out. It's only a matter of time and there's some more pushing to do to get that done. And then of course, there's lots more plastic to get banned as well. Obviously reducing, we always start with reduction and re-usables. And so there's, I think there's a lot of work to be done there as well. And Stance Focus in particular will be focused on continued work in the sector, in the retail coffee and quick serve restaurant sector and really emphasizing in terms of the paper cup, a reduced plastic and universally recyclable cup. And that technology exists now. And so we're gonna continue to push forward on companies really starting to switching over to that technology, that product. So, yeah, more work to do and certainly keep an eye on Starbucks and making sure that they keep their promise. They have made promises before and so really holding them accountable for their commitments will be work that we'll all be doing together as well. Okay, terrific. So we're gonna transition to questions from the audience. And I have one from Facebook Live that I'll say in a moment, an anonymous one that I'll say in a moment to kind of kick us off. And while we do that, I'm gonna try, I think we have a moment here. I think we have enough time to do this and it's always fun to try to make it so we can see and hear the people who are not anonymous who submitted their question or comments, including Ross Hammond who was invoked just a little bit ago. I'm kind of hoping that Ross will make a video appearance here, that'd be fun. So the people who I will be trying to make visible are Kristen and Judy and Ross. And while I kind of load that up, I'm gonna tell you what our other questions are. So we have a Facebook Live question from Rohit. I hope I'm pronouncing your name right. About, was there a bring your own cup element to this campaign at Starbucks? So I'm gonna give you all that one. Was there a bring your own cup campaign and our anonymous question is wanting to hear more about the role of baristas or former baristas like Shiloh in the campaign and if store level workers played an important part. So bring your own cup, roll of store level workers and I'll let you all start on that while I load these folks up. I'll take the first one. Yeah, so we launched, with Stan launched its campaign. We had three demands. One is around the recycled content in the cup. Two is around the recyclable cup. And three, and really kind of where we need to start is reducing cup consumption. So by that, we mean people bringing in their own reusable cup. And so that is, and when the plastics coalition came together and the coalition came around together around Starbucks that was certainly a focus too and was included in the revised demand sets set as well. So yes, it definitely was on the demands and it was a part of the campaign and Starbucks addressed it by committing to double the number of beverages that are served in reusable cups. So we'll be holding them accountable to that. It's not where we'd like it to be. Their initial commitment was 25%. Back in 2008, they committed to serve 25% of their beverages in reusable cups by 2015. And then they've reduced their commitment down to 5% and they've never gotten above two. So there's lots of room to grow there but getting them moving in that direction is critical. So yes, and more work to do. Great. I can pick the second part of that. So baristas played a huge part, Starbucks baristas and baristas and other coffee shops because they helped propel this message. They told their customers and that was a huge risk for them. But most importantly, they were on this online platform. We had online petitions that they signed and we went through an organization which I don't know if I can mention, so I won't. And they realized there was a problem, stepped up to the challenge and then brought it to the attention of their managers of their district managers. So the company was well aware of it and that was a huge risk for them because especially at the time when I was there, the company was very much denying what was going on and saying this isn't a problem but they went out and took that risk despite what the company was saying and I commend them hugely for that. And more than anything, they were willing to talk and to listen to what we had to say despite what their employer had been telling them. So the Starbucks baristas and other baristas were a huge part of the service. Yeah, and I'll just add it was an invaluable resource having Shiloh and others kind of tell us what's really happening in Starbucks stores and the lack of recycling of even recyclable items was quite shocking and another great moment of the campaign was a film that I think a barista had taken of showing that in a Starbucks store that the recycling bin and the trash bin were actually the same bin. So that was a cool moment for all of our followers to say, wow, okay, there's some obfuscation here they're not being truthful. Terrific. All right, and I see some of our folks coming in to give their questions and comments. Ross, let's start with you. You are muted right now. And let me see if I can. Hi. Hey, great. You had a comment, Ross, and I'd love to have you share it and get a little dialogue going on that. And dad, nice to see you all. Nice to see you. This is definitely one of the funner campaigns I've worked on in a long time. So I just want to highlight, I think there were three other things that I might have mentioned. One, I think having the as you sell resolution on the official agenda, you know, I know there's lots of sort of debate about whether shareholder activism is really that useful and maybe you should just sell your shares. But I think in the case of Starbucks, the fact that there was this target, the resolution went in in the fall, I think around the end of September, it was approved or sort of Starbucks basically let it go in early January. So we knew that on the official agenda, there was going to be a discussion about recycling and reusability. And so the, even though the resolution itself really called for Starbucks basically do more study and see how it could meet its commitments. That was sort of like on the official agenda, we knew we had a placeholder. Secondly was the Denver Post article. We, Jim and particularly worked very along with the reporter there who really, you know, and again, it's not always you get these sort of ends, but when you, if you're persistent, you know, I believe the occasional, that you will eventually find that person, that reporter who's willing to both listen to you and then is curious enough to start doing their own digging. And so what we got about two weeks out was a front page Denver Post article, like the Starbucks cup that you think is gonna be recyclable is actually just going into the landfill. Again, it's sort of, you know, sometimes with campaigning, you just, you have to keep repeating the same thing over and over and over. And the Starbucks cups are not recyclable is like one of those basic foundational facts for the campaign, which I think at times we sort of forgot like, okay, we all know that, but like it's the saying, right? You say, keep saying something over and over and over. And when you're finally sick of hearing it, that's when it starts to sink in with people. So I think having that, that piece was really important in terms of pushing Starbucks in those last months like that, the impending dissent upon the shareholders meeting of all these protestors, the cup monster, the delivery of the letters, like we just sort of, we just have that date. That's also why shareholder meetings are great, are great sort of organizing places. And then just on the involvement of the baristas, yeah, it's as you so, it's a great online organization that works with workers in unorganized industries and basically allows employees to start their own petitions. And so the Starbucks recyclable cup petition got, you know, I think it got a couple of thousand baristas to sign it. So again, for the company to know that this isn't just, you know, environmentalists, these are actually their own employees who really care about this. And then I guess finally just, you know, we didn't have a lot of meetings with the staff. And when we did, they were, they were a little tense, but I do think that those meetings helped crystallize for some of those top people, the fact that we were not going to go away and they had to tell their bosses that something needed to be done because we weren't just going to drift away. So that's kind of what I have to contribute. Awesome, Russ. Anything that people want to riff on from that? Oh, and I see Tim Newman is actually on the call from coworker. Yeah, I'll just, I'm going to jump on that. Tim, thank you for joining us. Just a couple other quick acknowledgements. And I'll start with just as you so and just to make sure folks know that, so as you so wasn't a part of the coalition, as you so is doing their own thing and, you know, just right time, right place and glad that all lined up. So big thanks to as you so for its leadership and just to clarify, those are two sort of separate efforts. And of course, the Starbucks Coalition that came together and the groups around the country, the people around the world that took action. I'll just mention Kristen Walsh from Plant for the Planet and her family and the Plant for the Planet crew in Seattle were amazing. 350 Seattle, lots of folks from 350 Seattle participated in the actions for the last couple of years. Students for those players, Sailor C here in Bellingham and Doug Tolson of the Sailor C Marine Sanctuary provided space for us to build the props. Stan Parker, Debbie Cantrell, two activists here in Bellingham were put in many, many, many hours working on them. Gene Bergman, a friend in New York City that worked hard behind the scenes. Students for environmental awareness and environmental group at Rutgers University did a number of actions at Starbucks stores and around their campus. So Ross and Vanessa and many, many others, you know, it took a lot of us, a lot of heavy lifting from folks around the world to make this happen. So huge appreciation to you all for being a part of it. Great. Okay, we have a few more questions coming in. I wanna let Kristen, Azure and Theo jump in and we should be able to hear you now. Thanks for joining. So my question was, I heard in the news because it was like really big that Starbucks did commit $10 million to try to make a recyclable and compostable cup. But like, do we know if they have made any success with that or like still in the process or have they, do we know the progress on that? Hey boys, great to see you. Hi, Kristen. Yay. I am such a huge fan of your family. You're amazing. Anyway, hey guys. Yeah, so sorry, the short answer is what we understand is that Starbucks has written a check to a group called the closed-loop partners that work on sort of systems level thinking and trying to solve these problems and recycling is very complicated. And so closed-loop partners has some expertise in trying to figure out those systems and how to make them better. So we know that that step has occurred and that closed-loop partners is developing the criteria for what that cup would look like and they're gonna issue what's called a request for proposals and basically soliciting ideas from the private sector on what technology might work. And apparently they've gotten hundreds and hundreds of entrepreneurs, companies who have said, hey, we have the solution. So at least so far, there seems to be fairly significant interest and a lot of ideas out there on what might work. And so we are cautiously optimistic that out of this $10 million initiative that a new groundbreaking game-changing technology will come out of it. And that's what I'm excited about. Does that answer your question? Why we can't just give Starbucks the better cup that we were handing out to people saying, look, this already exists. And what kind of cup have them? Why can't they just use that? Sure. The technology that we were handing out is a technology that is reduced plastic and is universally recyclable. But what it is not is compostable. And so what Starbucks has committed to do, what they've promised to develop is a technology that is both recyclable and compostable, which doesn't exist in the world right now. So that would be great to have because consumers, most of us look at a paper cup and we're not gonna know whether it goes in the compost bin or the recycling bin. So having a technology that is not contamination, regardless of which bin it goes in, would be fantastic. The technology doesn't exist yet as far as we know. And so that's why we hope that, that's why we look forward to Starbucks delivering on that promise when they deliver it. In the meantime, there is existing technology on the market now that is both uses less plastic and is universally recyclable. And again, that exists now. And so that's why we're going to Starbucks competitors, other companies in the again, retail coffee and pizza restaurant sector and saying, hey, look, while we wait for Starbucks to develop this unicorn horn, here's something you can do right now. And so does that answer your question? Yeah. And I would just say too, I have kids that are a little bit younger than you guys and maybe you already do this, but we bring our own cups when we go places like Starbucks. And even though Starbucks doesn't advertise it, they do have a discount if you bring your own cup. And we need them to incentivize bringing your own cup so you can refuse single use plastic for the earth. So that's just a reminder to everyone listening, bring your own cup whenever you can and it will make a huge difference. So one last question. I know the grounds kind of got destroyed. We were there when grounds died. So now there's a cupzilla. I was just asking like, what is the action that cupzilla is gonna participate in? Is he like it is? What happens to cupzilla? Yeah, what happens to cupzilla? Cupzilla is in a garage in Bellingham right now waiting to come back out. So we should circle up and talk about what action we're gonna do with cupzilla. Cupzilla is at our disposal. All right, awesome. I wanna thank our first set of folks for your questions. And I'm gonna close down the webcam so the people who've already gotten asked questions I'm gonna bring in a couple more questions while I do that. One from Judy who has a question but didn't wanna come on screen. And Judy's question is, how does having a recyclable cup actually work as China stops accepting our recycling? So how is the global recycling crisis affecting all of this? Yeah, no great question. And certainly for West Coast cities, the shifts in the threat and trade war that Trump has instigated with China it has huge implications for cities along the West Coast especially. But that's why we're so focused on developing, getting companies to switch over to a cup that's universally recyclable. Now, we would definitely start with, look it's all about reusable and reduced consumption. So we have to start there. But to the extent that we're gonna have paper cups in the world, they should be recyclable. And so really the issue now is because of that 100% polyethylene plastic lining it makes the cups harder to recycle and therefore less valuable. The paper mills don't want them because they clog their filters. And so there's really no market for them. So the idea is we have to change the economics of recycling, make it more profitable and incentivize the private sector to invest and recycle what is otherwise a valuable commodity. So our theory of change is if we can change the cup lining how the cup is made, what it's lined with so that the cups is more valuable to recycle that will change the economics and change the system. And I would just add that, that's great points Jim. I think that we need to hold Starbucks even though they came out with this commitment and it's a big win, we need to hold them accountable like we've said before to actually increasing reusables because that will make the difference. We hold Starbucks to blame for our global to go culture. Nobody really expected that you get your coffee to go before Starbucks really pioneered that. So we hold them accountable for all the Starbucks trash and we need them to really in addition to everything else they're doing promote reusable cups in their stores. And I'd like to add to that. It's worth noting that Starbucks in the last couple months has come out with a reusable $3 iced venti cup where before they just had the $2 reusable hot cup now they have an iced one. So I'd like to think we had an impact on that decision. All right, we have three more questions. I think they're all anonymous and I'm gonna run them down and I'm also gonna bring up contact information for the campaign as our speakers answer. So one of them is to talk a little bit about what is involved in the implementation that is necessary. What's happening there in terms of monitoring what's happening with the Starbucks process and also the different commitments for different amounts of percentages that they're promising. And there's also a question, or maybe there are just two, was your campaign involved in the Starbucks experiment in charging for to-go cups in London? Is this something that you're going to push for them to do more? So were these folks, were you all involved in that work in London? And then also what are the implementation steps going forward? So yeah, so Starbucks volunteers. So around the time that the UK Parliament, a committee in the UK Parliament was considering the latte levy, that's when, and this is a pretty consistent pattern that we've seen, right? As soon as government starts to step up to take action, the companies involved and the sector involved will say, oh no, you don't have to pass legislation, we'll take care of it voluntarily. And that's exactly what happened in the UK. So when the UK Parliament was starting to talk about a latte levy, Starbucks said, oh, you don't have to pass a law, we'll voluntarily start charging for single use cups. And so that's what they've been doing. And the promising thing there is that they've seen a, I think it was a, I haven't looked at it in a minute, I think it was 150% increase in a number of reusable. So the takeaway there, the lesson is, and that's what we've been saying from the beginning, is it's really charging people a fee. I mean, giving people a reward for bringing their own cup is great. And a positive incentive is fantastic, but it's really a negative incentive that really helps motivate people like me, along with a customer prompt at the point of purchase. So what we understand is that it's a fee combined with asking people, what kind of cup would you like? Makes people really think twice and motivate them to bring their own mug. So that's the direction that we need to go in as far as that goes. And it seems to be moving in the right direction in the UK, but we have our work cut out for us here in the US. That's really, we need that to start happening here in the US in order, and Starbucks needs to do it in order to meet their goal, their new goal of 5%, they're gonna have to start doing that here in North America. And in China where they're growing by leaps and bounds. And anyone else wanna weigh in on that and who else would like to talk a little bit more about implementation? Emily, you wanna lead off on the plastic side? Pardon? Would you like to lead off on the plastic side and next steps there? Yeah, so next steps with plastics and Starbucks. Yeah, I mean, as we've mentioned, we're just gonna keep the pressure on. We need to see Starbucks really commit to reducing the amount of single use plastic they use. Our oceans are at a tipping point, which is some language that we used in the campaign a lot. If you've read any of the recent statistics on ocean plastic pollution or plastic pollution in general and our landfills and our waterways, it's just incredibly sobering. And each of us needs to do what we can do to limit our use of plastic, refuse single use plastic and also just demand better. So we're gonna be demanding that Starbucks, stop serving so much single use plastic. The straws are cleaned up on beaches and waterways. They are ingested by marine life. They're really incredibly harmful. And eventually, even if they're not ingested by marine life, they will break apart into toxic little particles called microplastics. So we will be in continued conversation with Starbucks, asking them to stop using so much single use plastic and polluting the planet. Yeah, and from the stand side, we launched our campaign with three demands and Starbucks has addressed all three of them with these commitments that don't go far enough. But so I think in terms of our work with, particularly with Starbucks, is to hold them accountable for those commitments, starting with reduction and including, we're looking forward to their doubling the amount of recycled fiber in their paper cups. And we're certainly looking forward to their initiative on the recyclable and compostable cup. So just continue to engage with the company and continue to build pressure to hold them accountable for their promises. Absolutely, and if you're listening to this webinar and you signed the petition and you showed up on the ground, you showed up at a Starbucks near you, thank you so much for joining us in this awesome campaign. And if you're listening and you're from Starbucks, you should be afraid. Right on. So just note on the screen, info if you've got a question for Jim or Shiloh, you can send it to Jimace at stand.earth and keep watching what's going on at the bettercup.earth website for Emily. Emily at plasticpollutioncollection.org and the website is plasticpollutioncollection.org. Stay involved. And I want to thank our presenters, Jim, Shiloh and Emily so much for your time today and all of your work on this. I also want to thank some folks behind the scenes, Trista, Hallie, Kirsten and Ginny for helping make all of this happen today. And everyone who requested the recording, you will get emails, the link to a copy of it. And we hope you'll share it with other people who are interested. And thanks again, everybody for joining us today. Thank you very much. Thanks for coming.
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Learning to Deal with Addictive Gambling
Thursday, September 7, 2023, marked the day that sports betting became legal in Kentucky. While fun for some, this can become an addictive problem for others. There are resources to help deal with a gambling addiction.
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2023-09-07T21:48:54
2024-04-23T03:37:38
84
3kMtweDI_w4
At Audiology Associates of Prestonsburg, you can live your life the way you want and find the freedom of better hearing with 40 years of being in the hearing care industry. You'll experience patient care that is specific to you with exceptional follow-up care that ensures your hearing and balance needs are being met. Audiology Associates at 1428 Northlake Drive in Prestonsburg. Thursday, September 7th marked the day that sports betting became legal in Kentucky. Mountaintop spoke with Michael Stone to learn about information and resources for those with problem or addicted gambling. 95 percent of people gamble without any problem. It's that other 5 percent who have to continue to seek the risk and the excitement of gambling that we are in business to try to assist in the help. Currently, help for those with problem or addicted gambling is limited, but there are resources currently available for those in need of help. These resources can also help to determine if you are at risk for problem gambling. It's going to be more ubiquitous and because of that we anticipate that the number of persons who surface with a gambling problem or addiction are going to increase. You can call 1-800-426-2537 or visit www.kygamblinghelp.org for more information or to determine if you are at risk for problem gambling. For Mountaintop News, I'm Kelsey Dean.
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I-DEA Branding Video ***
null
2017-07-01T03:02:16
2024-02-07T17:21:52
237
3k8dE5d4j1A
We have students that come into the program with little to no academic training. Some students have never touched a computer before in their life. They don't even know to turn it on. When I was in my country, I didn't get this opportunity to get a computer here. I can get that opportunity. Project IDEA began out of a collaboration with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The mission of the IDEA program is to engage students in technology in order to accelerate their learning so they can get the certificates and degrees needed to move into living wage jobs. I want to study medical nursing and helping people. The Project IDEA curriculum is unlike any ESL textbook that we have seen before. We have topics like cross-cultural communication, effective presentations, and environmental issues that aren't typical of an ESL textbook. The new curriculum and teaching, this flipped model, establishes a very important shift. Removing the focus of knowledge and power from the instructor and shift it to the student. So the dynamic has changed in the sense that students are now empowered. The flipped model of teaching allows students more independence. They have to manage their time to do their work and then they come to class and practice what they've learned. When I come here, I don't speak any English. My favorite part of Project IDEA curriculum is you can speak in class. You can write, you can listen, and you can go home and practice what you learn in class. So we're seeing self-actualization of learning and that's a huge marker for students to be able to take ownership of that learning process. Three months after I start the class, for the first time I can write a test in English. IDEA was a three-phase pilot. By the end of the pilot, we had 33 providers participating. By the end of the third year, about 11% of the students had learning gains that were above that of students in traditional ESL classes. And on standardized tests, students were 12% higher and the growth continues. The interesting dynamics in the model is that students are able to reinforce the curriculum by bringing in their own experiences. Last year, I was an ESL agent. I won, maybe, graduate Bellevue College. I get a certificate for the ESL agent in real estate. This one student, she would tell me, teacher, I have to go, I have to go. I'm looking for a job after class and I have to go to my friend's house because my friend helps me to look for jobs online. And then she helps me fill out the online applications. We had job skills and work readiness modules that teach students how to fill out online applications to create resumes online. Once she had those skills, she came to me at the end of class and she said, I don't have to ask my friend anymore. The other day I used the IDEA laptop to find myself a job and she gave me back the laptop and she started working. I made my resume in class and practiced the real interview after. I write my teacher. Oh, I get the job. For me, the IDEA program is the excellent program.
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Wye and Delta three phase configuration ( A brief overview)
The Wye and Delta three phase configuration each have their uses. This video gives a brief overview of the difference between the two and why it matters. 🤳an actually useful and fun way to practice trigonometry and vectors. You can get access to the actual pack here: https://app2ceo.thinkific.com/courses/trigonometry-and-vectors-work-pack 👉Join the Electric Academy and receive a free PDF of online resources for electricians: https://np378.infusionsoft.com/app/page/7c9b7cc65c1fb6c381bd8dc184fadbd5 🤜Here is how you can offer your support to all the work of the Electric academy: https://www.patreon.com/electricacademy For as little as $1 a month you can help keep all the resources free and awesome (Plus you get swag!). 🤳For access to the free online courses for electrical theory: https://app2ceo.thinkific.com/
[ "Wye", "Delta", "delta-wye transformer", "three phase power explained", "delta transformer", "three phase transformer", "delta wye transformers explained", "three phase", "3 phase tutorial", "three phase circuits", "delta wye threee phase", "delta wye three phase circuits", "three phase wye delta connection", "three phase delta vs wye", "three phase delta wye", "three phase transformer delta-wye connection", "delta wye threee phase circuits", "threee phase wye delta conection", "threee phase wye delta connection" ]
2017-09-08T00:49:52
2024-02-05T07:15:23
720
3ktxtDW6UAE
So here we go the Y versus Delta. So I've got my Y system here and one of the reasons why we can tell it's a Y is Funny enough. It looks like a Y. These are my that my Transformers are my windings you could call them and it looks like a Y over here they have the Delta system and It's the reason why they call it Delta is it's shaped like the Greek symbol Delta So I've not that's basically the only reason why you can understand why they call it Delta looked into it And that's what I came up with Y systems some advantages of the Y systems. I got some notes here first off you have three lines You have this line here line one line two line three. I should have named those one two or three or A, B and C. I Have these windings each winding is 120 degrees out of phase with the other winding. All right So they're 120 degrees difference and that's big now when we are dealing with these that tells us that we have two Different voltages available to us with a Y system. Okay, now I know a lot of you guys have got this theory down pat But again, this is just a broad overview. So don't sit there and go crazy if I get something a little off here Now we have the nice advantage of having the Y system is this neutral It allows us to have two different voltages because we can have our line to line voltage Just like we have and we have a center tapped single phase system We have a line to line voltage, but then we also have a line to neutral voltage Now if this is a single phase system, and this is 120 volts and this is 120 volts My line to line voltage would be 120 volts, right? That's fairly obvious However, because these are 120 degrees separated from each other, you can't just add these guys up You have to add them up vectorially not Arithmetic is what I tell my students. So I would have to take this guy and say, okay It's 120 volts at you could say negative 30 degrees plus 120 volts at 90 degrees to get your line to line voltage Which works out to be in this case if you have 120 and 120, it's 208 So you have 208 volts sound familiar. You have 208 volts. So some advantages of this Let me let me just actually move on to the next slide here Now when we're dealing with this you have your E line Which is line to line is equal to root 3 Times e phase that's a quick way working it out instead. I happen to do all that Trigonometry you can just use the root 3 which is 1.732 times that by the e phase which is 120 And that's where we get our 208 from now our current again just to say this 120 vectorally with 120 gives us 208 our current However, it's going to be in series with this and current in series doesn't change So our I line equals our I phase now this adds to let's talk about some advantages. I got my notes here Some advantages of why now you can have two voltages, which is nice You can bring three phase in and you could have single phase available to you. There's that you have your neutral point Which is generally grounded. I should have put a ground on here, but that's star point Sometimes it's called a star point is grounded It's good for unbalanced loads It requires less number of turns in the Delta's Tight because you have a lower voltage here You're using this voltage plus this voltage instead of having one winding having to carry all the line voltage And you have less insulation too because this voltage is going to be lower But you can still get the 208 safely out of that. So it's very very Useful that way and you see them a lot on the if you have a Delta Y system It's they they use this to get the two voltages out of it very common in buildings commercial and industrial You'll see that some of the disadvantages are if it's if you've got a Y connected motor you get less torque out of it And it's a little more expensive. So that's your Y connection Now this could be for distribution and you notice I've got that the coils here or you can have it set up as a load I could have had a resistor load here. You can have loads set up in Y as well Again, this is just a quick overview. I can go in on forever and ever about this now This is the Delta system the Delta system is a bit different than the Y in the fact that you don't if you notice line to line Here is just across a phase So your line and your phase voltage are the same voltage So this is a hundred and twenty volts your line to line is a hundred and twenty volts So there's that the difference is your currents because if you have your currents here You have your phase current coming up to this point and this phase current come up to this point And they meet at a node and then they go into the line That's where you have to use that route three because again We have to add them victorily because you can't just say this guy plus this guy equals your current You got this guy coming it at an angle this guy coming in hot at another angle. So you're going to get a different Current so if you look at this here your E line equals E phase, which is very true It's your current that changes now some of the advantages for a Delta system is the motor torque It's got high motor torque. You can handle it because it's got a higher current it can handle. It's more efficient The protection is generally fairly simple. They're set up for heavy-duty applications. They're great for transmissions You'll often see them set up as a Delta Y transformer When you are sending them across lines in for transmission They prefer to have the Delta configuration even though the current might be a little higher because you only require three wires Now there are you can't get you can get the high leg when you talk about the high leg Delta You can actually tap this and ground it and have two voltages. You'd actually have three voltages present again I'm not going to get into that. That'll be another voltage or another video for another day The disadvantage to this guy though is it has no neutral. So it's just line-to-line You can't get two voltages out of this generally you can like I said with that high leg one But we're not going to talk about that another downside to this is that ground faults are really difficult to detect Because you don't have that grounded point So they can be a bit of a nightmare to work on Anybody that's worked in the plant knows that you connect you have a ground fault detection system That just indicates which phase it's on then you got to go looking for it. I've done that I've worked I've spent days trying to track down ground faults in a plant that I worked out a styrofoam manufacturing plant back What else they're really they're really useful for distribution for that reason because you have three wires not four So you save some money on that So see if I've covered all my notes here Some motors just as a note they'll have these soft starters. So they're gonna start a motor They'll start it in Y and then they'll move it up to Delta because you've got a lower current in Y and a higher current in Delta So they they call them soft starts a Y Delta soft starter again Maybe I'll do a video on why Delta soft starters later on in this in the year here So that's just generally basically just a quick overview of what they do and what the systems are that again The difference generally is just the shape and the way they're set up the Y has got that neutral into it So it act makes it very useful. You can have two different voltages out of that It's generally going to be on the second area of your transformer. The primary will generally be a Delta Now I'm not saying there's not a wide Delta transformers It's just more common to see a Delta Y configuration of a transformer And I think that's about all I wanted to really touch on today Yeah, so hopefully you guys got something out of this. I'm just gonna get rid of this Guy right here. Let's just escape him and I'm gonna call the video up here So hopefully I'd help you guys. Hopefully I answered I can't remember. I think it was Anthony that asked the question Hopefully I know it was really not a ton of information Just kind of a light skim over of the difference between a Y and Delta If there's anything else you guys want, let me know If you're wanting me to do a more in-depth one on this like getting into the math and all that Let me know because I'll do plan on building one of this But if there is a demand for it, I will build a proper one like I do if you go to my YouTube channel I've built a ton of them on there So if you go to my YouTube channel You see the kind of work I've done before if you want something more in-depth on three-phase like behind the math and I hookups and all that I can do a whole three-phase series because that's what it would take This is just once again just a brief overview of that. Make sure you stop by the site check out www.TheElectricAcademy.com Make sure you sign up for the newsletter I send one out every Wednesday and it's just keeps you guys in the know what's going on with the Electric Academy With things that are coming up articles if I've got some blog entries that are doing well I usually post them on there as well. Hey, thanks Tim and Josh good to see you guys and Just keep the requests coming. I've been loving this. It's been so great I've been talking to tons of you guys through email and How do you check any kind of industrial motor? That's a great question one. There's another one that goes into the bank then So we'll have to talk about that Yeah, I'm gonna put that on my list right now before I forget just so you guys can see that I actually do write this stuff down. I have been having a blast interacting with you guys Keep the emails coming. Please keep the direct messages coming. Please. I Love talking to you guys. I love helping you out. I love I love doing all the research on this I've learned some stuff just on this one. I've worked a bit with the three-phase stuff, but I don't teach it a lot yet So it's good to kind of brush up on that. So please keep those comments. I really appreciate all the feedback Hopefully you guys are having a great day. I'm having a fantastic day getting ready to start coaching as my son's soccer team I talked to my co-coach. He's five years old So that should be interesting my 14 year old starts hockey tomorrow So it's gonna be very busy this fall, but that's why we're in it. We love it as parents Okay, have a great night guys. I will have probably another one of these I'll probably do another one on maybe a quick one tomorrow as well Maybe not set something so technical. Maybe just more of a rant. I got something lined up. You're gonna love it I know I did. All right. Hope you guys are working safe. And yes, I definitely will want make sure you join the Join the Facebook group at least or join the newsletter Just go to the Electric Academy comm and join that newsletter man And then you'll know when they're coming up I'll start scheduling these a little more and like, you know, what's happening and what I've got lined up So I think that'd be a little bit more interesting and useful to you guys You work for the government. I gotta go Just kidding Canadian or American I guess would be the question. I'm Canadian, but that doesn't mean I don't know about the American government So we'll see. Good luck to all you guys down in Florida. Holy man. That is quite some Storm you got coming your way. So please Stay safe and You guys who are out on the field stay safe Juan. I'll be in touch And make sure you hook up with me on facebook send me a message about more what you want to know And I'll go with that. All right guys. Have a great night. This has been fun and work safe
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ଗାଁ ଗାଁରେ ହେବ ଷ୍ଟାଡିୟମ : ଯୋଗୀ ଆଦିତ୍ୟନାଥ || Yogi Adityanath
ଗାଁ ଗାଁରେ ହେବ ଷ୍ଟାଡିୟମ। ଉତ୍ତରପ୍ରଦେଶର ବସ୍ତିରେ ସାଂସଦ ଖେଳ ମହାକୁମ୍ଭର ଶୁଭାରମ୍ଭ ଅବସରରେ ଏହା କହିଛନ୍ତି ଉତ୍ତରପ୍ରଦେଶ ମୁଖ୍ୟମନ୍ତ୍ରୀ ଯୋଗୀ ଆଦିତ୍ୟନାଥ। ଯୋଗୀ କହିଛନ୍ତି, ଖେଳକୁ ପ୍ରଧାନମନ୍ତ୍ରୀ ନରେନ୍ଦ୍ର ମୋଦି ପ୍ରୋତ୍ସାହିତ କରୁଛନ୍ତି। #ArgusNews #UttarPradesh #ChiefMinister #YogiAdityanath #khelmahakumbh #PMNarendraModi #Gamepromoting #NationalNews 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
[ "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", "Dharmendra Pradhan", "BJP News", "BJD News", "Political news", "odia film news", "Naveen patnaik", "Aparajita Sarnagi", "National News", "Game promoting", "PM Narendra Modi", "khel mahakumbh", "Yogi Adityanath", "Chief Minister", "UttarPradesh" ]
2023-12-21T06:19:07
2024-04-23T23:24:21
165
3KJvEnCI4oI
गां कार यह पर स्ताड्यम, उत्र्स प्यज्य़ वस्ति्रे साँन स स्द ख्ल माकुबर सुभार आम भबसच्रे यह कोई चन्ती उत्र्प्रदिष्मुख्यमाकुबर शूगी आदी तेनाड, अगर निये प्दामन्त्री मोदी जी के दीएगे सलापर, स्थान सान पर खेल महाकुम हो रहा है, और मुझे जान कर शकुषी है, कि एक लाक रिद्यार्तियो के और पचास हदार खिलाडियो के क्रम से प्रारम करते हुए आज सारे तीन लाक विज खिलाडी और लगबक सारे � विज जान लाक विज द्यार्ती इस महाकुम में सामिल हुए है, और का बहुत-बहुत अबिनन्दन बहुत-बहुत सवागा।
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KJvEnCI4oI", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCpJf6LGZ0a4n9Lj4aVt9spg
私たちが WordPress を使い続けられる理由
今年20周年を迎えた WordPress。 そして今、世界中全てのサイトの中で43%のサイトが WordPress で作られています。 なぜこんな風に長くみんなに愛されるプロダクトができているのでしょう? そこには色んな WordPress に関わる人たちの存在があります。 このセッションとパネルディスカッションでは、WordPress を使い続けることができる理由を、WordPress に関わるチームの紹介などとともに紐解いていきます。Presentation Slides » --- View this video and others on WordPress.TV: https://wordpress.tv/2023/11/07/why-are-we-able-to-continue-to-use-wordpress/
[ "2023", "Japan", "Location", "WordCampTV", "WordPress.tv" ]
2023-11-10T21:56:22
2024-02-05T08:00:24
4,550
3KI5ODnRCKc
はい、みなさんこんにちは。ありがとうございます。名古屋区に来ましょう。今日は私たちがバードプレスを使い続けられる理由ということでお話しさせていただきたいと思います。ちょっと自己紹介をさせてください。ヌカが純子と申します。ヌカが純子で検索すると、ヌカがカッコフクイとかフクイカッコヌカが純子で出てきたりします。フクイの方がおとのせいでヌカがが純子です。ここにも書いてるんですけど、9年前に沖島という人口が今160人ほどの島に移住しまして、それはずっと仕事で純子を使っていたんですけど、結婚して沖島に移住したらおととセットで紹介されることがあって、別性の漢字だと不思議なように島の人に思われることによって、新級兵器とかをしています。どちらも私のことです。仕事としてはフリーランスのウェブデザイナーをしています。そして個人の活動として、NPO法人オギ島図書館という図書館を立ち上げて、そこの館長をしています。そしてワードプレスではグローバルのコミュニティチームでプログラムサポーターを務めています。今年、2023年のコミュニティチームではリプスという名前の代表を務めさせていただいています。というわけで、良かったらTwitterとかFacebookとか見つけたらぜひ友達になってください。皆さんにお聞きしたいんですけれども、ワードプレスと聞いた時に何を思い浮かべますか?ほとんど人が基本的にワードプレスというのは、ウェブサイトを作るツールを思い浮かべると思います。実際ワードプレスというのはソフトウェアです。ワードプレス自体はソフトウェアなんですけれども、実はそれを支えている大きなコミュニティがありますということを今日はお話しさせていただこうと思っています。ワードプレスというこのワードプレスのドットオルグリ行った時の最初のページなんですけれども、ワードプレスはブログから高機能なサイトまで作ることができるオープンソースのソフトウェアです。というふうに書いてあります。オープンソースのソフトウェアです。うんって分かる人もいると思いますが、オープンソースってどういうことだろう?という人もいると思います。オープンソースってどういうこと?すいません、ちょっと難しそうな言葉が並んでいますが、自由な裁判分、ソースコード公開も含む自由な理由、派生物の自由な利用、特定人物集団に対する差別の禁止、使用分野に対する差別の禁止といった、割と自由に関して、強く決められているライセンスを選んでいるプロダクトということです。ワードプレスはGPLというオープンソースのライセンスを選んでいます。ライセンスの種類はオープンソースといっても、いろんな種類があって、ワードプレスはGPLです。このセッションにおけるコミュニティってどういうこと?コミュニティっていう意味が割とふんわりしているとか、大きいのでコミュニティってどういうこと?このセッションにおけるコミュニティっていうのは、メイクワードプレス上なので、ワードプレスを作ることに関わっている人たちと定義をさせていただいております。メイクワードプレスって何?っていうところだと思うんですけど、ワードプレスを作るということを言っているページがあります。さっき見たワードプレス.orgのところの中に入っていくと、このメイクワードプレスドメイン上もメイク.wordpress.orgというページがあります。ここの中にコミュニティっていうメニューを選ぶと出てくるんですけど、ここにいろんなチームがあります。メイク.wordpress.orgのどんなチームがあるの?っていうのをざっと書かせていただきました。コアってちょっとパッと聞いたら分かんないと思うかもしれないんですけど、ワードプレスそのもののソースコードをやっている人たちです。デザイン、モバイル、アクセシビリキー、ポリグローツ。ポリグローツは多言語化ですね。中に日本語に翻訳するっていうだけではなくて、英語から各言語に翻訳をしたり、翻訳だけではなくてその地域のことを考えてその地域で使えるようにするっていうことをやっているチーム。サポートドキュメンテーション、テーマ、プラグイン、コミュニティ、メタ。メタはwordpress.org自体、サイト自体を触っているチームです。トレーニング、テスト、TV、マーケティング、CLI、ホスティング、チュード、オープンバース、フォトス、パフォーマンス、サステナビリティ。サステナビリティ最近できたチームです。っていうふうに全部で22チームあります。なんか聞いただけでもちょっと英語なので読みにくい方もいらっしゃるかもしれないんですけど、このチーム何やってるかわかんないっていう方もいらっしゃるかもしれないです。私もこのチーム何やってるんだろうって詳しくはわからないチームもあったりします。でもなんかそれぞれ自分ができることっていうのに関わっていたりします。ちょっとじゃあメイクワードプレスに今皆さんがちょっと興味を持ってくれたんじゃないのかなっていうふうに思ってじゃあこのメイクワードプレスの味方っていうちょっとページ自体の味方のお話をします。今、オレンジで丸をつけているのがミーティングっていうページになります。ミーティングのページで何を寄っているかっていうとこれだけの各チームがミーティングを行ってるんですね。このミーティングって誰でも入れるんですよ。誰でも入っていいんです。基本的にはメイクワードプレスっていうスラックの中でミーティングすることを送ってたまにオンラインズームとかGoogle Hangoutとかを使ってミーティングすることもあります。ここに書いてあるのほぼほぼスラック上のミーティングのお話です。これが何時から何のチームがミーティングしてるかっていうページがあるので自分が興味のあるチームのミーティングになんか参加するのはもしかすると最初ハードル高いかもしれないんですけど覗いてみてどんなことを話しているんだろうっていうのがメイキングワードプレスっていうスラックに入ったら誰でも見ることができます。メイキングワードプレスの中には基本的に各チームに入るとこんな感じで全部共通言語として英語を使ってるんですけどケージ版みたいになってます。トピックが投稿されてそこに誰でも意見を書くことができます。ちょっとオレンジのところをつけているのは各チームのチームリプスがここに書いてあります。このパネルディスカッションは実は日本人の私が今年コミュニティチームのリプスをさせていただいてるんですけどもあとパネルディスカッションではたちまなさんがドキュメントチームのリプスをされていたりトレーニングのチームのリプスを弁算がされていたりとかするのでここに日本にいてもできることはたくさんあるし関わることができるという話をパネルディスカッションでです。皆さんにもお聞きして欲しいなと思っています。ここにファイブフォーザ・フィーチャというメニューもあります。これちょっと後で詳しくお話しします。レートしてコミュニティチームでどんなふうにページを見ていったらいいかというと大体各一番上入って一番上にそのチームが何をしているかということが書いてあります。コミュニティチームって何してるっていうとこのハンドブックって言われるのは日本語で言う取り扱い説明書ですね。何してるかというのが取り扱い説明書でたくさんあるんですけどコミュニティチームはコミュニティチームハンドブックコミュニティチームサポーターズ&マネージャーズハンドブック ミータポーガナイザーハンドブックワードキャンポーガナイザーハンドブックコントリュータイメントオーガナイザーハンドブックって全部読みませんすみません。ハンドブックがすごい多いチームです。それだけちょっとやってることが多いっていう感じでもあります。基本的にはこういうワードプレスコミュニティ全体をサポートする多様なボランディアグループです。ということで小さいものだと皆さんも聞いたことあるかもしれないあると信じているっていう感じで言うとワードプレスミートアップというものがあります。ワードプレスミートアップっていうものをサポートしたりしていて大きいもので言うとこういったワードキャンプのサポートをしていたりそれ以外そういった各ローカルのイベントだけではなくて大きなじゃあコミュニティチームでのディスカッションとかもしているチームになります。ちなみにじゃあ具体的にどういうことしているの?っていうところに踏み込んでみたんですけどもワードキャンプを開催するにはどうしたらいいかっていうとここの上の方が実行委員会がやることになります。今みんないるスタッフの中で今日開会式でリードオンガナイザー実行委員長が挨拶をしていましたがまずワードキャンプやりたいです。申し込みをします。そうするとその申し込み受けてこの人たち今までワードプレスでどういう活動をしてたかな?という審査が実はあります。その審査をしているがコミュニティチームです。ワードキャンプできますってなったら次予算のレビューがあります。予算はこういうふうにスポンサーを通ってこういうことに使います。こんな会場を借りますという予算のレビューをコミュニティチームがします。準備期間。今回6ヶ月のワードキャンプ東京があったんですけどもだいたい2週間に1回ぐらい実はメンターミーティングっていうのがあって問題起こってませんか?とか困ったこと起きてないですか?進捗どうですか?っていうまるでちょっと何だろう相談をずっとしていくということをしていきます。開催があった後にあと片付けと会計報告がスタッフの皆さん待ってるんですけどその時もレポートを書いていただいて確認するということをコミュニティチームがしています。このワードキャンプっていうものを行うためにも実行委員会もすごい頑張ってますしコミュニティチームも実は関わっています。そんなわけでワードキャンプやワードプレスミートアップのサポートワードキャンプやワードプレスミートアップのオンガナイザーという主催者ですね主催者の審査、免貸やトレーニングでコミュニティの全体の予算についてそれからさっきたくさんあったハンドブックを書くということをコミュニティチームはしています。メイクワードプレスでのコミュニティチームの画面なんですけどこういうふうに掲示板形式になっているのでいろんなトピックが上がっていったら誰でも書き込めますそこに対して意見を。なのでちょっとチームとして例えばワードキャンプのこういうルールってどうなんだろうみたいな疑問とかが上がったりどういうふうに決めますかみたいなことを上がったりすると誰でもいけよう言えますサイドマーにはいろんなところに簡単に飛べるようになっているのでどうなことしているかなっていうのも見ることができますコミュニティチームから一回戻ってワードプレス全体のコミュニティの話で言うといろんな取り組みをこのワードプレスっていうものを支えるためにしていますコントリビュート貢献って日本語で言うと貢献って言うとちょっと貢献って言うと重いかなっていう感じが割とコントリビュートって言い方をしているんですけどコントリビュートを見えるようにしようという取り組みで言うと皆さんワードプレス.orgにアカウントを作ることができます自分のプロフィールページを持てますそこにいろんな書き込みができますこれ私のページなんですけどそのページを見ていくと下にこのコントリビューションHISTORYっていうのがあってバッチって呼ばれるものがあります何かっていうと結構コントリビューションって正直お金にもならないしなんでそれをしているのかってすごい見えにくいものでもちゃんと見えるようにして評価していく楽しんでいくっていうときにこういったバッチをこの人何してますかっていうバッチがついて見えるようになっていますその下にはアクティビティっていうのがあってさっき言ったコミュニティチームのケージマンにコメントを書き込むだけでもアクティビティに出ますあとプラグインとかテーマを作ったとか写真今ワードプレスフォトスっていうのがあって誰でも使えるっていう仕組みをしてるんですけどそこに写真をあげたよとかこのアクティビティのところコメントを書くとかじゃなくてコアにそうそう送ったとかいろんなことがアクティビティとして出ますだからこの人が何日前にどれだけ作業したかっていうのがわかりますプロフィールバッチの種類が一応プロフィールバッチっていうページがあるのでどんなバッチがもらえるかっていうのを実際はわかります27個ありましたぜひ見てみて自分ができることってあるかなとかっていうのを見てもらえるといいかなと思いますさっきちょっと後で説明しますといったファイブフォーザーフューチャーという取り組みもありますファイブフォーザーフューチャーはどういうことかっていうと未来のために5%の時間だけワードプレスに貢献しようという取り組みです会社に努めてワードプレスを触られている方私とかは個人なんです個人でやってワードプレスを触ってる人間っていうのが英語で言うとプレッジって言うんですけど日本語に訳すとまたちょっと重くなっちゃって制約って言うんですがこの時間ワードプレスに貢献しますということを約束している日本の企業でもこれをやっている企業がありますMGNさん ウェブの相談所さんハムワークさんこれは会社の中で例えばコミュニティチームとかどんどんトレーニングチームとかいろんなチームに対して何時間 週何時間貢献しますということをやっていますこれが何で必要かというとみんな使う人ばっかりだと作る人いなくなっちゃうんですねなくなっていると困るじゃないですかだからみんなで一緒に作りながら使っていこうという取り組みですコミュニティサミットという取り組みもありますこれはワードプレスのいろんな人が集まっていろんなディスカッションをします今年ワードキャンプUSの前にコミュニティサミットがあってその前はワードキャンプEUのパリの時にコロナがあったのでちょっと間が開いたんですけどいろんな人たちが集まってディスカッションしますだいたい120人ぐらいそれは別に有名な人とかではなくて新しく入ってワードプレスに貢献している人もちろんずっとやっている人とかいろんな多様性を持った人が集まってワードプレスに何を求めるかどういうふうにコミュニティを良くしていくかというのを私今年行ったんですけど2日間ガッツリ話をするというすごい面白いげるのはすごく大変な回でしたこの時に話したトピックっていうのは外に言っちゃダメなんですね誰が言ったかと言えないんですけどどういうトピックが出てどういう話し合いが行われたか全部公開されています興味があったらどういう話し合いがされたのかぜひ見てくださいそこにもコメントをつけることができますできるだけ基本的にオープンにみんなの意見を聞きながら進めていこうです各チームに関わってみたいと思った時にどういうことができるかと言ったら日本語でできることをやってみるというのは良いかなと思います日本語のページにもワードプレゼントの参加貢献というページがありますワードスラックという日本語で貢献に関して情報交換ができるスラックがあります独自チャンネルでは毎週毎週ってすごいと思うんですけどもくもく本約会が開催されていますワードプレスミートアップに参加する各地域でイベントがあったらお友達ができたりするといろいろやる気も出たりするのでこういうことも一歩かなと思いますメイキングワードプレスラック先ほど紹介したこの定期ミーティングというのは予定が出ているのでそこに英語でも頑張って参加してみるというのができます私も英語が実は全然できないんですけど今は本当にいい時代になってディープエールとググルトランスレートがあったら割とどうにかなりますそれからソースネッコーケンやってみたいという人がいたらワードプレスの今昔はサブバージョンで管理をされてたんですけど今ギッドハブで管理されているのですごく見やすくなっていると思いますここも自由にプルリクエストを送ったりすることができます関わることのメリットって何なのさっきファイブフォーザーフューチャーで作る人いなくなったら困るじゃんという話もしたんですけどそれだけじゃなくて私は関わっていて楽しいと思っていますそして仲間が増える少しとメリットで言うと仕事につながることもあるそしてワードプレスというプロダクトに関わって未来を一緒に作っていくことができるというわけで私たちがワードプレスを使い続けられる理由というのはいろんなチームがあってたくさんの人たちが関わってワードプレスが進化し続けているからずっと皆さんがワードプレスを使い続けられていますというお話でした参考や資料のリンクも書いてあるのでぜひこの後スライド公開するので皆さんも良かったら見てくださいではパネルディスカッションに入りたいと思いますちょっとこの転換の間になんか皆さんにいろいろお聞きしたいなということがありましてなんかここにいる皆さんがワードプレスを使い始めて何年ぐらいなのかしらというのをぜひちょっと教習性で聞いてみてもいいですかワードプレスが今年20歳になりました20歳ですねえというわけでこのワードプレス20年の歴史の中で皆さんワードプレスを使い始めてどれぐらい使っていらっしゃいますでしょうかまず20年使ってる人なかなかいないかな15年以上使ってますという人いますかいないじゃあ10年から15年ぐらい私もここ結構いる嬉しいじゃあ5年から10年結構いるじゃあ2年から4年刻んでみた使い始めて1年ぐらいですありがとうございます嬉しいですねこういう風に新しいユーザー新しく使ってくれる人が増えているというのはすごい嬉しいなと思いますすみませんちょっとまだ皆さんにお聞きしたいんですけどみんなが話をする今私貢献ということでご紹介したんですけど今までにコントリビューションってこのセッションじゃなくて聞いたことあるよっていう方いらっしゃいますかありがとうございます興味を持って聞いてくださってるのありがとうございますドットオールングのアカウントを持っていて自分のプロフィール見たことあるよっていう人ありがとうございますじゃあコントリビュートしたことある人ちなみにイベントのスタッフもコントリビュートですありがとうございますというわけで皆さん今日聞いてくださってる皆さんはこんな雰囲気の方々ですというところでパネルディスカッションに入っていきたいと思います私たちなごやかに話ができたらいいかなと思っているのであまり緊張せずにできたらいいかなと思っていますというわけでちょっと自己紹介と一緒に皆さん何かはされている方たちというところで何をしている人たちかっていうのを教えていただけたら嬉しいなと思いますというわけでこっちから行きましょうか菅和さんから皆さんはじめまして菅和良と申します普段はワードプレスで仕事をしているというわけではなくてワードプレスの合言語のバックエンドランエンジニアとして働いております完全に趣味の時間を使ってワードプレスのコアのコントリビュートだったりとかCLI コマンドラインの方コントリビュートをしています最近はなかなかできなかったりとかっていうのもあるんですけれどもまたこういう場で皆さんからの何でしょうねパワーをもらってまた継続していければいいのかなと思っていますよろしくお願いしますペンと言いますこんな顔ですけど2歳から2本に住んでいるので日本人だと思ってください僕はオートマチックという会社に勤めていてフルタイムコントリビューターとして働いています先ほどファイブフォーダーフューチャーの説明で5%の時間をワードプレスに返そうという動きがあるんですけど僕の会社は従業員が多いので1人1人5%というのではなく5%の従業員をフルタイムでワードプレスにお返しするというスタンスを取っています僕はその1人としてなので勤務時間をワードプレスへの貢献に完全に使えるというちょっと特殊な状況にありますそういった中でトレーニングチームの代表ごとしはさせていただいていますワードプレス.orgというウェブサイトが一応ワードプレスプロジェクトの公式教育サイトになっていますでビデオを出したり学習教材を出したりしているんですけれどもコンテンツを作っているのがトレーニングチームで要するにコンテンツを作っている人たちがスムーズにコンテンツを作れるように事務とかを裏でやったげるリーダーをしているという感じですちょっと僕がどういう人か分かってもらえたかなと思いますよろしくお願いします聞こえますマイクもうちょっと近づけたほうがいい気がしますパッチリですはじめまして宮城五子と申します神奈川県の平塚市に住んでいます私は50歳の時今までその前は消費者関連のセンターの相談員とかそれに関する仕事をしていたんですけれども50歳になって勤め先のウェブの内生家にともなって私はウェブ担当になりましたその時にワードプレスを教えていただいてもうワードプレスが面白くて面白くてできることがその時できることが増えたと思いましてワードプレスのおかげで楽しい仕事をすることができました今は今年の3月にリタイヤをしたんですけれども今3年くらい前から私にもできることと思ってドキュメントやプラグインテーマの翻訳を今させていただいています立川さんの本をなさっている毎週金曜日の木々会に参加をさせてもらっていますよろしくお願いします立川さんと言いますこんにちは普段はIT系の会社に勤めているんですけれどもそこは全然ワードプレスとは関係ない会社で自分が趣味でワードプレスを使ってブログを書いていてそこのドキュメントがちょっとお手伝いを始めたきっかけで少しずつかかわるようになりました先ほどちょっと話がありましたけどグローバルのドキュメントチームというところに所属してまして普段そのワードプレスの中にはいっぱいドキュメントがあるんですけどその中では主にユーザーガイドですねそれとメインの本体のチームと一緒にやってるんですけどコードリファレンスの部分のところの担当をしてますそれとは別に日本人というか日本語がメインなんで日本の本役のところのリードじゃないですけど主にそこのレビューとかを日々やってます今日はよろしくお願いしますありがとうございます今タチバナさんはまさにいけてない本役がきっかけで活動を始められたっていうふうにおっしゃってくださったんです今もいけてないんですけどね今もあんまりよくいかないんですけど難しいですよねすごい本役難しいなと思いますぜひ皆さんにもワードプレス活動のきっかけを聞きしたいなと思うんですけどタチバナさんもしいけてなさとかを稼げたければ実際のいけてないなっていけてないっていう何回も言っちゃったところがきっかけでどういうふうにワードプレス活動に入られたんですか細かいですけどもともとその本役がまずずれてたっていうのがあったんですね本役のほうが本当は英語のほうは正しい情報があったんだけど本役が間に合ってなくて本当に古い情報が乗ってましたそれで間違って言ってたんですけども英語のほうを見たら正しかったんで本役やってる人が少ないっていうのが分かったのでそれでまず最初に入りましたそうしたら英語のほうもいけてるようで全然ちゃんとしてないっていうのが分かっておかしいなと思って言ってたら間違ってますとか足りてませんみたいな話は普通だったんでその時から少しずつやるようになってその時わりとデータベースのエンジニアでほうがすごい嘘だったんでここ全部書き換えて俺みたいな入ったばっかしの人が書き換えていいって聞いたら自由にやれと間違ってたら誰か直してくれるからとにかく好きにやれって言われたんでデータベースのほう全部書き換えてで、俺はすごいいいことをしたと思ったんですけど誰からもレスポンスがなくてなんかやってもやりがいがないなと思いましたけど事故間はあったんでそっからですねありがとうございますでもなんかそのやってもいいよっていうのはすごい最初の一歩の時って結構これやっちゃってもいいのかなとかって思うけど一回やってみるとわりと本当にやっても大丈夫な感じはありますよねどんなに間違っても直してもらえるし誰か見るの?それすごい本当にオープンソースのいいところだなとあの人が悪かったっていうそういうことは絶対ないんでそれ大丈夫ですね三宅さんの活動のきっかけは?私翻訳したかったんです翻訳したかったしたいっていうだけではできなくてあるワードプレスのミートアップの集まりで翻訳したいですって言いましたら周りの人がみんなでわーっと教えてくださったでもそれだけではやっぱり不十分でそれから少しずつ翻訳の集まりとかだちばなさんのもくもく会もそうですし翻訳のに特化した勉強会とかにも参加させていただいて少しずつできるようになりましたでも今の今でもやはり不十分なところがあって皆さんに教えていただきながらみんなが見るものなのであの質を落とさないように頑張っておりますえらいありがとうございます翻訳したかったっていうワードプレスの翻訳をしたかったっていうそうなんですしたかったんです自分が英語のままであったりこのほうらドキュメントもさせていただいてるんですけど自分で調べたいマニュアルが日本語になっているとすごくいいなと思ってそれで英語を日本語にアクするとやっぱりよくわかるので理解が進みますよりワードプレスを知ることができるようになると思いますですから皆さんにおすすめしたいんで是非ご一緒にいいですねありがとうございますペンさんもワードプレス活動のきっかけはそうですねちょっと皆さんと違うんですけれども12、3年前大学にいた頃に研究室のウェブサイトがウィキーを使っていて古くサイトそれが初めて出会ったんですねそれを使ってみてこれ好きだなと思って他に自分が携わっていた団体のサイトを片端から僕はワードプレスに変えていったんですよその中であるプラグインを使っていてサポートが必要になったのでサポートの連絡をしたら返事がすごくフレンドリーでびっくりしちゃったんですね何か定型区で返してくれるとかじゃなくて僕がプラグインを導入した願望とプラグインが提供しているものが違ってたことを僕を馬鹿にせずに教えてくれてすごくこの会社がいいなと思ってその後その会社に就職をして頑張って入ったんですよ今それがオートマチックだったんですけどそんな流れだったんですねなので全然コミュニティとかのことは全然知らなくてワードプレイスのカスタマーサポートとかやっていく中でワードプレイスというソフトの後ろには大きなコミュニティがあるということを徐々に知っていて去年からコミュニティに参加するようになったという流れですなので実はワードプレイス自体は10年以上前から知ってるんですけどコミュニティに入ったのは本当に最近のほやほやですほやほやこれから入れてますよねなんかラーンがどんどん充実してる皆さん見ていただいたらわかると思うんですけど今一なんですよ大丈夫かなこのセッション今一だって皆さん思うんですけどじゃあ何かしようと思ってできるんですワードプレイスは何か触っていて本役が今一とかあれが今一だから僕が迎えてくれて今の頑張って活動しているという感じですねありがとうでもそのなんか行けてないとか今一とかいうのが出てきたんですけど私はやっぱりそこで自分がやることができるっていうのはそこのちゃんとバッファがあるっていうのかなそれはすごいいいことなのではないかと思っていますいないからこそいつでもりょうさん皆さんが結構立派な心出しを持って貢献されているのでこれ言ってもいいのかなって言っていきましょう私の場合はひょんなことからフリーランスになるって決めたタイミングで自分の武器を作りたいなって思ったんですね例えばこれまでワードプレイスって利用する側だったんですけどそれからの人たちが受注をしてワードプレイスの案件をプロジェクトを作っていくっていうことは普通にあると思うんですけどその人たちとの差別化をしたいと思った時にワードプレイスのコアとか中身までソースコードまで熟知してますよっていう状態にしとけば他の製作会社さんと差別化できるんじゃないかなって思ったんですねそういう下心を分断に入れて私でしたね下心があっても大丈夫です皆さんでも確かに今ちょっと他のセッションでも結構そういう話的なことがあるかなと思うんですけどワードプレイスできますってどういうことなのみたいな話っていうのはあると思うんですねその中でソースコードまで熟知してますって言えるのはすごい大きな武器だと思いますなかなかワードプレイスからは彼らの仕事はお声かからないのでどうしてもスクラッチで組んじゃうっていう感じですねちょっと武器になりますってふだつけておいたほうがワードプレイスまあまあ知ってますみたいなちょっと控えめにアピールしてちょっとでもなんかすごいエンジニアとして強強っていう好きでやってることなんであのなんか好きでやってるって言えるのはいいですね宮家さんもその本役やりたかったんですって言ってくださったんですけど好きでやってますそう好きでやってますで何ですかね楽しそうに本当リビュートしてるとか自然にしてるとか言ってくださるのが本当に嬉しいですなんか一番嬉しいこれからも無理しないでやっていきたいと思いますちょっとその流れで自分がコントリビュートした中で一番自慢したいことっていうのを皆さんにお聞きしようと思います今ちょっと立千原さんがめっちゃ考えてる顔してるので間ぐらいから当てていこうかなと思ってベンさんからいいですか自慢するって自慢したいこと去年そのコミュニティに入ってある意味僕は何も知らなかったですワードプレイスっていうのは今年20年の歴史があって20年間そこで汗水流してきた方々がいていろんな決断の背後にはいろんな経緯があったと思うんですけど去年入った時私は全然何もそれを知らなくて今の現状だけ見て白心の神人としてそこにどうやって入ってこうと思ったんですねそれが良かったと思うんですよ結構そのコミュニティ成熟しすぎて新しい人が入りにくい中で私は入っていて特にトレーニングチームに関しては頑張ってdotorgのアカウントを作ってスラックを作ってトレーニングチームのスラックに入った次僕何すればいいのって特に悩んだんですねそれに関するヘルブが全くなかったのでトレーニングチームではオンボーディングというのを作ったんですつまりあなたがトレーニングチームのスラックチャンネルに登録すると自動メッセージがスラックで流れるんですけれどもこのリンクをクリックしてトレーニングチームのオンボーディングを30分から60分のオンボーディングなんですけどトレーニングチームはどういうチームでどこで活動していてあなたが一番最初の貢献できることを全部ステップごとに教えていきますというプログラムを作ったんですねさすがトレーニングそれももちろん一通りではなくて色んなスキルを持った方々が来られるのでちょっと診断テストみたいなのもあってやってそのオンボーディングを作らせていただきましたトレーニングチーム増えましたすごい人が増えてこの1年間でたぶん去年の春はミーティングにたぶん5、6人きてたのが今3、40人毎週来るようになったんですねで自慢していいです自慢していいです時間です今自慢する時間です先ほどコミュニティーサミットってちょっとだけ出たんですよ今年の夏にアメリカで開催された時に僕がそれに携わってたことを知らずに他のチームの方々がトレーニングチームのオンボーディングすごいねって私たちのチームでも同じことをやりたいって言ってくれたのがすごく嬉しかったです弁算すごいねと別に言ってほしくないんですよねそれを求めているわけじゃないんだけど自分の作ったそれにちゃんと価値を見てもらえて今までずっとワードプレイスに携わってた人たちも私たちのチームにそれ導入したい思ってもらえたそれが一番の自慢です素晴らしいでもやっぱり各チーム一生懸命自分のチームやればやるほど他のチームあまり見れなかったりするんですけどコミュニティサミントでチームリプスの話とかも出たじゃないですかトレーニングチームをまさに参考にしようと思ってトレーニングチームが今2年に1回チームリプスが変わって1人は残って次の人に引き継ぐみたいなのコミュニティチームって今まで毎年リプスが変わってしかも全員変わっちゃうのであまり引き継ぎがなかったんですよそしてトレーニングチームこうやってるらしいからこうしようよっていう提案をちょうどしましたあのサミットはそういう意味で重要ですよね他のチームの活動そうですねちょっと横当たりをどういうふうにしていくかっていうのは課題かなと思っていますじゃあちょっと自慢できることりょうさんハードル下げていきますねすごく小さな話をしますけど私が当時フリーランスになる前生社員で働いていた頃に会社でそれぞれ各分野で頑張った人っていうのを表彰するような会がありましてまだ生社員の時に初めてコアとCLIにコミットをしてその成果を社内で発表しましたその結果テクノロジー賞っていう賞があったんですけどそれをいただけたっていうところが小さな全然小さくないですよいうことがありました素晴らしいですね私そんなにやっぱり行動が欠けない人間なのでコアにコミットしましたっていうだけでもう自慢じゃないかって思うぐらいです内容によりきれいなんですけどそっちに言うとコミットにはなってしまうので私の最初のコアへのコミットがまさにそれでしたでもなんかそれをその時教えてくれた人に言われたのがでも誰かがやるとそれで良くなるからどんな小さいことでも胸を張っていいんだよっていうのを聞いたのにみんな小さいことでも大丈夫です私の時はたまたま会社がオープンソースっていうものに貢献をすること自体にすごく評価をしていて大切に考えていた会社だったので自分たちでもパッケージ作って公開したりだとかプログラム公開したり積極的にやっていた会社だったのでその辺の文化があったのが良かったのかなっていいですねかっこいいハードルそんなに下がってませんでした下がってないもんちょっと宮城さんに言ってもいいんですか今月の10月にコントリビューターハンドフックの翻訳が完成されて浜野さんが公開してくださったんですけどとっても我がままを言って私アワフィロスソフィーというのを役させてもらいましたアワフィロスソフィーアワフィロスソフィー私たちの哲学っていうの本当にすごく考えましたし英語を英語を多呼んですごく感動をしてそれを日本語にしたいと思ったんですそれをさせてもらってそれが嬉しかった嬉しかったというのと今のところドキドキしちゃう花見つくですけどそれがギッドハムが必要だったんですよねギッドハム触ったことないので立川さんにも教えて頂きスラックの中の人にも教えて頂きなんとメガネさんにも教えて頂きもうちょっと勉強しないといけないんですけど贅沢な人たちにすごい人たちに教えて頂けたというのと浜野さんのロジェクトにちょっとだけ参加をさせて頂けたというのがもうものすごく私嬉しくて自慢です素晴らしいぜひ読んで頂ければ読んでくださいコントリビューターハンドブック公開されていますアバフィロソフィーって難しくないですか本当にでもすごい悩んだので読んで頂けると嬉しいですぜひ皆さんそれを見て頂いたらここに翻訳した人がいますありがとうございます私が参加したわけですからだから一緒に皆さんやりたいですどうやりたいですもうなんかそのままこの名前が出ているたちばなさんも一番自慢できること自慢できる自慢したいことそうですね時々言ってくださいましたけど毎週金曜日の10時から11時の間にスラック上でもくもく本約会というのをやっていますそれでそれがちょっとさっき考えてた毎週金曜日やってるんですねもともとはそれを続けているのが自慢でそこに宮城さんとかも入ってくれてやってますよければお願いしますもともとの同期はコロナウイルは割と金曜日の夜とかって各会社さんがイベントやってたんですねビール飲んでイベントみたいなすごい羨ましくて私家庭の都合であんまり参加できなかったのであいつらいいなっていつも思ってたんですけどツイッターで自分でじゃあスラックで家でできるイベントをやろうと思ってそれでやったんですけどズームにすっちゃうと強制されてる感じがあるじゃないですか見られてる感じがあってそれがすごく嫌だったからテキストベースでサボっててもバレてるとりあえず金曜日の10時から11時の間はなんかしましょう私がやりたかったからやっててそこにおければ来てくださいっていう感じで今もやってるんで来てくださいそこで割とうまく自分もキャッチアップできるようになったんでグーテンベルクブロックエディターですねブロックエディターって割と頻繁に2週間2回か3週間2回くらいリリースされるんですけどその翻訳は多分ほぼ1日遅れくらいでいけるようになってると思うんでそれは金曜日にやるって決めたからちょうど良かったなそこが続けられてるのは自慢というか良かったなと思いますありがとうございます結構海外でも最初のコントリビュートってどうしたらいいとかどういうふうに人に進めたらいいみたいな話があってよくこのワードスラック日本語のスラックでは週に1回もくもく書いていてみんな翻訳する会を立ち上げてくれた人がいてやってるんだよって話をすると結構週に1回ってすごくないみたいな本当に感じでなんか頻度を何回も聞かれるんですよ私の英語がまずいのかもしれないんですけど月1日じゃなくて週1日って絶対やるわけじゃなくて例えば昨日もやってないんでちょっと前日祭みたいな感じで飲み会があったんであんまり無茶しなくて続けない範囲で頑張るって感じで宮城さんもおっしゃっておっしゃってましたけど無理をしないっていうのは割と大事かなって思いますそういう意味では次にお聞きしたいこととして仕事との両立どうしてるっていう話がもちろんそれが仕事ですっていう方とかやると思うんですけど仕事じゃなくても自分の生活の中でというふうにコントリビュートするっていうふうに考えているかどういうふうに時間をとっているかみたいなことってなんかこうしてますみたいなのってありますか両さんからそうですね 基本的にフリーランスになってからは業務委託という形で働いているので時間にとてもきっちりしているんですねなのでそこをの時間で無釈迫したときか無釈迫したとき最近コード書いてないなって本業の方で書いてないなと思ったときとかに書きたいって思ってしまうのでそのときにじゃあちょっと今の一周探してみるかっていう感じで見に行ったりはしてますねちょっと無釈迫したときって初めて聞きましたありません?無償にあるときって仕事のサイトを作るときと趣味のサイトを作るときと違うから仕事でサイトを作った後に趣味のサイトを作ったりとかしてますでもそうか仕事でサイトを作れなくなったときですねマネシメント業務になりましたとかというときに多分より作りたいメイクメイクワードプレス何でもいいんだけどワードプレスやってみようかなそういうマネジメントというかはいペンさんでも仕事?僕はどっちかというと私生活とのバランスを結構考えていてある意味週40時間やってるので自分のプライベートにワードプレスを持ち込まないようにしてますなのでプライベートには何か自分の自分の本当に身近な人たちとワードプレスじゃないコミュニティの方々とつながりワードプレスのコミュニティの方々とはその40時間の中でつながるというふうにしていますもくもく会話すごくいい企画だと思うんですけど僕自分の中心時間が10時なので参加できないんですけどそれにもそれでいいんだと思ってプライベートを守るためにちゃんとそこは切り分けるようにしてます私の参考にすごくなりますありがとうございます三宅さんいかがでしょうか私はもう定面対処をしてしまった自由なんですけどやり過ぎないように途切れないようにしたいと思っていますそれが長く続けられることかなと思っていて決まった時間明日の決まった時間にみんな集まってできるもくもく会というのは私はとても大事にしたいと思っていますとても大事です普段は途切れちゃうと忘れちゃうといけないので1日30分くらいはやろうかなとそれぐらいだ毎日ワードプレスを言いたいですからそれいい時間だなと思って自分で楽しんでやっています結構燃えつきないというのは本当大事かなと思っていてコミュニティチームのハンドブック取り扱い所にセルフケアみたいな項目があるんですよ自分のペースでやる?無理をしないというのは大事かなと思っていて弁さんのプライベートとの時間を切り分けるもそうだしミヤケさんの無理をしすぎないというのも本当聞いていてそうだなと思いました同時に両さんの無茶苦茶燃えつきているタイミングがあると思うんですよ1年2年休憩しよう触らないみたいな期間があってもうちょっとコントリビュートしてみようかなというタイミングがあったりとかならすと少しずつやってるという感じになるので全然休憩期間があってもいいのかな自分のさんどうですかやっぱり私もワードプレス以外の仕事やってるんですけど両さん近いかなと思います仕事だと何かやっても成果が出ないことがももありますけどコントリビューターとかだと1個翻訳すればもう1個OKというのがあるんで目に見える形でやった分だけ実際国万がも知れませんけども成果が出るんでそこは気分転換になりますよね計画が立てられるとも言えると思います俺はブロックエディター全部翻訳した今日は翻訳できた終わりっていうのが言えるんでそれぞれ面白いですね私は昨日か昨日か言われたのはジュンコさんはコントリビューターのあいまに仕事してるよねって言われたのでなんかそういう人もいますみたいなですね今コミュニティチームなので結構難しいなと思うのは時間がアジアの時間と世界の時間とタイムゾーンが結構違うのでコミュニティチームミーティングとかはアジアの時間もUSの時間も2つミーティングを行うようにしてたりとかはするんですけど色々見たいとか参加したいと思った時にどこまで自分で頑張るかみたいな感じることがあります時間に関してはワードベース刑事版みたいなサイトを先に見せていただいてスラックとか文字ベースでたくさんやっているのは時間を気にせず自分のタイミングで投稿できるようにっていうのが一応ベースにはあると思うんですね時々それでもどうしてもかわわせなきゃいけないことってあると思うんですけど私の場合は夜6時以降に電話が入ったら1時間かかったら次の日2時間仕事を早く切り上げるとかそうやってバランスを取ろうとしていますこの日頑張ったら次の日自分にちょっとご褒美みたいな感じで自分はやってますそうですねやっぱりなんかそういう風にバランスを取っていくなんかそうやって長く続ける工夫みたいなのをみんなしているように聞いてて思いましたちょっと次のトピックでコントリビュートの結果得たものっていうのをお聞きしたいんですけどもじゃあたちばなさんからお願いしてもいいですかそうですね今ここに座って話してますけどこれも含めて全部ワードプレスが作ってくれたものなので会社とかは関係ない話なんでそこが一番大きいですかねこの友達関係とかワードプレスとかも含めて全部作ってくれたものと思ってるんで本当にコントリビュートのおかげで結果が出せてるなと思います会社していますここにあります井上さんいかがでしょうか私もそうです今日登壇するよと言ったらワードキャンポで当日ボランティアを一緒にしたお友達が来て見に行ってやるって来てくださったり会社の方が見に来てくださったりそれで今日私が存知あげない方から井上さんって言ってもらったりそれもこういうことをさせて全然向かないのにこういうことをさせていただいてるおかげかなと思いますしこのフラグウィン役良かったよって言ってもらったことがあってそれはとっても嬉しかったです役に立ってますと言ってもらったことがあってそれは嬉しかったです得たものがとても多いですいいですね立場さんマイク使って話してくださいエネーブルメディアリプレイスいいフラグウィンですから2つ言うとしたら一番は人間関係ですねワードプレイスのコミュニティに関わっていなかったら知り得なかったような日本国内もそうですし世界規模でも出会えていてなんだろう自分がその前に見ていた世界本当に狭い世界だったんだなって思わされましたワードプレイスは本当に誰もが使えるソフトウェアでコミュニティも誰でも迎え入れてて世界って本当に広いんだなっていうのを教えられましたもう1つコミュニケーションスキルを見がかれているかなって思います先ほど事差があっても文字ベースでコミュニケーションを取るということはつまり今の私の1個の発言で12時間後に見る人にも意図とか全部伝えたいし誤解されてはいけないし特にリーダーをやらせていただいているとボランティアの方々の間でもう目事があった時にやっぱり自分もコミュニケーションスキルを見がかれて良かったなと思っていますありがとうりょうさんどうですか考えてたんですけどだいたい皆さんと最初のところは一緒で人とのつながりっていうところが一番良かったところからと思っていて割とウェルカム来るものはこばわない文化があるじゃないですかそこでとりあえず続きに進んでいける前に進んでいけるっていうのをすごく実感できているのでそういう人とのつながりっていうのはすごい財産かなと思っていますでもう一個は例えばその会社内においてワードプレイスを導入してみたいんだよねっていうような計画が上がった時にまず聞かれるようになったコントリビューションしてたよねみたいなこと言われてだいたい話がこっちに来るいいですねで最後は金一部ですかね得てる本当に得てる素晴らしいですじゃあぜひ今日アフターパーティーもあるので皆さんもぜひアフターパーティーもし参加するつもりなかったっていう人がいたら参加してはい私も本当にワードプレイスコミュニティにいなかったら私今年弁さんも行かれてたと思うんですけどワードキャンプEUギリシャに行ってワードキャンプUSでバシントンDCに行ってワードプレイスやってなかったらそのところに行くことないと思うんですねでお話しさこんなに英語できないのにお話しさせていただく機会をワードプレイスがすごい遠くに自分を運んでくれたなって思うし当時にやっぱりマネージメント能力っていうかこのすごい不得点多数の人たちの中で何かを決めていくっていうプロセスみたいなものはすごい自分で学びになっているなっていうふうに思いますよろしければもし皆さんの中で聞きたいなっていうことがあったらぜひ聞いて見たいと思うんですけど示していただいても大丈夫ですし皆さんにっていうことでも大丈夫ですし何かご質問ある方いらっしゃいませんでしょうかなんかすごいみんなが目を伏せる授業中みたいになったんですかお願いしますありがとうございますオープンソースのプロジェクトってワードプレス以外にもいろいろあると思うんですけどワードプレス以外のオープンソースにも関わっている方とかっていらっしゃいますかっていうのはちょっと興味あったのとあとはワードプレスの関わりっていうのがコアに関して以外プラグインでコントリーするとかそういうところとかっていうのをどんなことされているのかちょっと聞いてみたいです技術的なところでいくと基本的にはワードプレスに関して言うとコアとCLIがメインでやっていますあとプラグインも一つ作ったのでそれは公開されていますワードプレス以外のオープンソースっていうところでいくと会社員時代ですけど会社としてパッケージを公開していたPHPのフレームワークだったんですけどそれを公開したりとかをしていたのでそういう自分たちで作ったものを積極的に公開していく自由に使ってねってオープンソース化していく文化っていうのがあったので多種多様なPHPで作られているものっていうのはどんどんリリースしていましたありがとうございます大学教員やってたときはムードルを使っていたのでちょっとそこのコミュニティには関わってたんですけどワードプレス今むしろ自分の弱点だなと思っていますもっと他のコミュニティから学んだらいいなと思っていてランのプラトフォームそのウェブサイト今再構築している最中でいろんな他のそれこそオープンソースとかクローズの会社の製品の教育サイトも勉強させてもらっていますコミュニティには携わってないんですけど勉強はしていますそうですね私もオープンソースオープンデータの方の話とか私図書館やってるので図書館の方のオープンデータの話とかオープンストリートマップとかそういうところにはちょっと知ってるぐらいでコミュニティとしてやっぱり深く関わってるワードプレスだけだなって自分で思ってますありがとうございます他何かある方いらっしゃいますでしょうか特になさそうだったら私なんか皆さんにモチベーションのたもち方っていうのを聞いてシメに向かってもいいかなと思っているんですがじゃありょうさんからこういうふうに救民機関ありますからねモチベーションたもっててないんですけど救民して戻ってきたみたいなどういう機関みたいなのあるんですか定期的にやりたくなるですよねコミュニティのメンバーもいい人いっぱいいるんで戻ってきてもよくしてもらえるっていうのはすごく戻りやすいですよねしばらく離れてたから育えになっちゃったらよくあると思うんですけどそういうのが全然ないのでモチベーションのたもち方ですよねでもたもっててなくても大丈夫っていうのは一つの答えな気もしますなんだろうここでその育えになっちゃうとか戻ってこれない心配とかなくても休みたいときには休んだらいいんじゃないみたいなのもありがたい話ですね楽しかったそれこそ無理しすぎたことっていうのは何度か出てますけどそれは大事なのかなと思いますね自分ができると思っているものよりも少し低めのものを継続できるようにっていう感じですかね1日5時間頑張るっていうかそういうふうに決めずにもっと5分で終わるものでもいいからちょっとずつ継続していくみたいなそうですね対応する大きさを1個1個小さくしていくっていうのが継続することなのかなっていうふうには頭では思ってますなかなかできないですけど確かにでも対応する大きさをいくずつ小さくしていくそれで1個達成できたら達成できたっていう気持ちになるとかすごいいいなと思いましたありがとうございますいいですか何点かあるんですけど1つはワードプレイスプロジェクトとして英語だとかゆいところはかけるプロジェクトみたいな自分がかゆいと思ったところから書いて直していくことができるプロジェクトなんですね例えばトレーニングチームに入ってモーディングが良くないなと信じの迎え入れに耐性ができてないなと思ったから自分はそれを直そうと思ったしランのプラットフォームが今一だと思ってるからアーキテクチャの部分から今考え直そうみたいなこともできてるしある意味もしかしたらかゆいところがなくなっちゃったら僕は消えちゃうかもしれませんかゆいところがある限りはいるかなとあと2つ目にあげるとしたらこういうイベントに来るっていうのも1つモジベーションの持ち方かなと思ってなんか休館期があってもパートキャンプに行ってみようとかローカルのミートアップに行ってみようと思ったらなんか分からないけどもう一回やりたくなるその気持ちを持って帰っちゃうとかなんかそういう場に自分を持っていくっていうのも1つありなのかなって思いますありがとうございます宮城さんいいですかそういう私も本役だけやってたら開けちゃうかもしれないなって思いましたもう役自体は好きなものを役しているのでそれも好きなことをしているというのがこっちかもしれないなと思ったこととやっぱりバードキャンプで当日ボランティアをとっても好きでやらせてもらっていてそこで皆さんに出会うということも長続きすることかなって思っていますできれば長くしたいけどちょっと恥ずかしいかなと思うんですけどそんな感じですそうですねみんな本当に宮城さん本役もされていてワードキャンプの当日ボランティアも今日もずっと受け付けにいらっしゃいましたもんねすごい楽しくて本当に楽しくておすすめですみんなで受け付けやりましょうみんなで受け付けやりましょういいですねありがとうございます立場さんモチベーションとはちょっと違うと思いますけど最初の方の私のモチベーションはバッチがついたりうれしいとか皆さんさっきみんなバッチの話したのでプラグインとかテーマを1個でも文字列翻訳するとトランスレーションバッチとかつきますのでどんなにプリミティブな英語でテクニカルサポートって書いてあるのにカタカナでテクニカルサポートって全然オッケーなのただ1個重要なのはそういうサジェッションっていうかね、翻訳しましたそれが承認されないとバッチに続かなくて承認っていうのがいっぱい溜まっちゃってるんで私が溜めてるんですけどそれ、俺の先に承認してくれっていう人がいたら私にメンション飛ばしてくれればその場で承認しますので今日の夜でも承認しますそしたらバッチつきますのでバッチつけたいなと思う人はまず1個そうですねあとコアのさっきチラッと冗談で言ってましたけどコアの本体ですね本体のコメントが1個スペルが間違ってるっていうんでも本当にコアのバッチつくんですよそれで貰ってる人いっぱいいますので全然言ってきますけど全然恥ずかしくないですかすみません、そのいっぱいのうちの一人ですね言い方悪いですけど外国の方とか職に使えるんで職業に使いたいから本当にやるんですよ本当にスペルをスペルの良いが1個なんとかそういうので上げてきて正直中の人はやれやれと思ってると思うんですけどオッケーが出たらスペルにバッチつきますんでそれで終色俺はワードプレスのコアにバッチ乗けてるんだとだから食くれって感じなんですよね確かにスペルマッチが見つけるのもなかなか大変ですけどソースめっちゃ見ないといけないですよねいやピリオとか1個ないとかでも聞きますけど私は何年だったか2012年13年くらいになんかみんなでコアにコメントをつけようっていう時があってそのコメントをつけるっていうのが最初でしたなのでソースコードは書かずにコアにコミットしたっていう記憶ですちょっとちょっと良くないリュウかもしれませんけどそうやって使われてる人たちもいますんでそれはそれで手だと思いますんでそういう目的も悪くないと私は思ってこうやってコントリビュースの人を増やすきっかけ増やすバッチがついたらモチベーションが上がりますよね僕が初めてワードプレイスの翻訳を始めるという本体の文字列をこの人たちが訳してますみたいなリストが顔写真で出るんですよね見た方があると思うんですけどだからやっぱり高野さんという方が一番上にいるんですけどこの人たちいいなと思ってここに入りたいなと最初の時は思ってた途中の翻訳した文字列が本体の文字列が上がってくてもう嬉しいな最初はありましたよねすごく面接のネタにしようと思うとそれなり中身をしっかりしっかりとした上で何をやったかはバレるんであすまりすぐバレるんでウェブ製作会社に俺はコアができるというとどの一周なのか言われちゃうんでそこは注意した方がいいと思います騙せる会社というとはでもそういうところから楽しみとか見出して見るっていうのもいいかなと本当に思いますではここで今日の時間は終わりになるんですけどぜひ皆さん本当にさっきも言いましたが一緒に何かをお友達になるところからぜひ始めましょうということでぜひお話ししましょうありがとうございました皆さんにも拍手をお願いします
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M, 08.30.21 // 2020 PRIZM MULTI 1-PACK BREAK #119 *RT*
* 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
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2021-08-31T01:53:45
2024-04-24T00:06:44
249
3kBTtwThY14
Hi everyone, Joe for jaspyscasebreaks.com here with a 2020 prism football sell-o-pack break We're gonna do the break first and at the end of the break. We're gonna give away six spots in That stiff arm football mixer part of a big promo tonight check out the details on jaspyscasebreaks.com if you're watching live So first off big thanks everybody for taking the risk on this There are the teams right here all 32 are in let's do the break first Let's roll it randomized four and a six ten times for names and teams one two three and ten Four and a six ten times for the teams and ten All right. Here's the first half of the list right here Adam with the chargers and bangles in this pack Bennett with the Dolphins. So could there be some surprises in a little retail pack We've seen it happen before And there's the other half of the list Let's alphabetize by team and let's just print and rip green Joe Namath Nice little color match there Darian snobbins. All right. Nothing too crazy there. What about? About the red white and blue big rookie big rookie Big rookie big rookie big rookie Marlon Davidson I was hoping for a quarterback no offense to Marlon Davidson, but that's all right the whole point of this is Who is gonna win those mixer spots? Let's flip back here. Let's grab everybody's names again New dice new list And let's roll and randomize it five and a six eleven times top six after eleven. Good luck one Three and eleven and final time Apologies to Marlon David. I mean yes in stature. He's he's a big rookie Sorry Marlon, but we're kind of looking for for quarterbacks All right, so top six so from oh close, but no cigar mark that spot always sucks But big thanks everybody for taking the risk on this. I appreciate it Thank you So sad times for this group, but happier times much happy times. Oh Mark you're in that's good. I don't feel so bad anymore marks and marks happy happy times for Alan Adam Sean Sean and Bennett happy times for the top six Congrats. I'm Joe. I'll see you for the break Jasper's case breaks calm
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Applying the Workbook Lessons - ACIM Workbook - David Hoffmeister - A Course In Miracles Workbook
Practice and live the mystical teachings of Jesus assisted by online courses, online retreats, and an online Tribe of Christ community: https://the-christ.net  https://livingmiraclescenter.org If you enjoyed this session with David please subscribe, like, and share!!! All the world's a stage, an act, in which you play your part. But it is just a movie, not real. You give it all the meaning it has for you. You can apply these lessons to the symbols of the world and undo your ego beliefs: • I am never upset for the reason I think. • I am upset because I see something that's not there. (I hallucinate!) • I see only the past. (Not the present) • My mind is preoccupied with past thoughts. (I've been living in the past!) You are trying to maintain a false identity and compete with God. But God loves you so much he has given you an owner's manual for your mind with a curriculum, a step-by-step training program that will heal your mind. ACIM A Course In Miracles * If this video has been of value to you, please make a donation so we can continue offering these free teachings: https://livingmiraclescenter.nationbuilder.com/donate Online bookstore: http://store.livingmiraclescenter.org/ Movie Watcher’s Guide to Enlightenment: http://mwge.org/ Online Mystical Mind Training Program: http://mysticalmindtraining.org/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/ACIM.ACourseInMiracles 😍 . ————————————————————————————————————————— Follow David Hoffmeister on: Facebook ▶ https://www.facebook.com/ACIM.ACourseInMiracles Spreaker ▶ https://www.spreaker.com/user/davidhoffmeister Twitter ▶ https://twitter.com/ACIM_YouTube Pinterest ▶ https://www.pinterest.com/mysticspiritone Visit David's website ▶ https://davidhoffmeister.com/david-hoffmeister-the-message/metaphysics-of-a-course-in-miracles/ Read A Course In Miracles for free ▶ https://acim.biz/a-course-in-miracles-book-acim/ Discover the amazing Mystical Mind Training program ▶ https://awakening-mind.org/resources/a-course-in-miracles/ Search and Read A Course In Miracles for free ▶ https://acourseinmiraclesnow.com/ Listen to David read ACIM Text, WB Lesson 1, and his commentary ▶ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imiGL2YS2uo Watch ACIM WB Lesson 1 video with David's voice as background ▶ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSlwOZLlUGg #ACourseinMiracles #ACIM #Spirituality #Spiritual #Awakening #Enlightenment #DavidHoffmeister
[ "Terms of Endearment", "Debra Winger", "workbook", "lessons", "world", "reality", "practical", "application", "ACIM", "A Course in Miracles", "David Hoffmeister", "Living Miracles Monastery", "Messengers of Peace" ]
2011-08-20T17:45:55
2024-04-18T18:34:27
665
3KEymSwj_RA
So, I've always said it's a practical spirituality, it's not like there's anything that we need to do in form, but as we keep asking the questions and we go deeper into the spirit, we pray to the spirit to heal our mind, we pray to the spirit to show us a unified perception, we pray to show us the world the way it really is, not in distortions, and it's a very deep journey. And I know I had the same thing. When I was much younger I had a twisted ankle, I was taken to the hospital, I had wonderful symbols of helpers helping me out with that, putting a cast on my ankle. When I had a hernia operation, again, wonderful symbols of doctors and nurses in the compound, that's when this body was much, much younger, much earlier version of this body. But as I learned to tune into the spirit and I slowed with the spirit, the care and the attention for this body and the world has just decreased and decreased and decreased because the fulfillment of the spirit is everything. A tranquil, happy, open mind is what health is. So, when we start to look at things like the body, we've got a lot of learning to do because we've all been trained that bodies are sick, bodies are limited, bodies have symptoms. That's what we've been talking about in the course group, the whole idea of sick bodies versus well bodies. It's interesting conditioning for something that's actually neutral. It's going to be like going to see in terms of endearment and coming home all sad, crying on the couch and having your spouse come up and say, what's wrong? It's just all terms of endearment and I'm all sick of crying. Oh, why are you sad? No, everywhere died. Everywhere didn't die, she's still alive. No, she died. I watched her die. Jack Nicholson was there, sugar McLean. He's sad. He just cried all the way through the last part of the movie. Never went or died. No, she didn't die. If you could try to claim that Jack Nicholson is an actress, you know, Jack Nicholson is an actress. He's like, don't get caught up in believing that the movie's real. It's just a movie, just actress. Well, guess what this world is? It's an act. All the world's a stage and everyone was played apart. It's Shakespeare telling us about this act, you know, years ago, decades ago. And when we start to take the act seriously, we start to believe the characters are real characters and the conditions are real conditions and so forth. It's quite disturbing. We lose our peace very quickly when we give reality to images. When we give reality to shadows on the wall. Most people don't go to the movie theater and pay whatever. Eight, ten, twelve, sixteen, twenty dollars, whatever, in order to just sit there and go, just a movie, just a movie, just a movie, just a movie, just a movie. You know, nobody wants out sixteen dollars to sit there for two hours. It's a movie, it's a movie, it's a movie, it's a movie. The spirit in our mind, the Holy Spirit has a message for our mind. It's a movie. It's a movie, it's really a movie. And yet, we go there and we get all wrapped up with those images on that screen and those sounds that we're hearing through the body's ears. We get all twisted and contorted and if it's a seemingly scary movie, our hearts touch the palm. And if it's a happy, funny movie, we laugh and we laugh and we laugh. And it's a sad movie, we cry, lots of tears. And Jesus is like, hmm, hmm, hmm. Got it all wrong. His second lesson, he's got a workbook with 365 lessons, his second lesson out of 365, one for each day of the year, is I have given everything I see all the meaning it has for me. Who says it's a sad movie? My mind. Which is believing in the ego. Who says it's a happy movie? Who says it's a scary movie? I have given everything I see all the meaning it has for me. So your book, here's the master psychologist that's transcended all forms of dependency and lack. He is living in the abundance of Nirvana in the Kingdom of Heaven and he's saying lesson number one, nothing I see means anything. Ooh, what a nice one to start off with there. Go ahead and hit the home run on the first pitch. Gee, what's number two? I have given everything I see all the meaning it has for me. And it just goes on from there. It is a curriculum in undoing everything you think you think and everything you think you know. It sounds very Buddhist actually. Empty your mind of the contents of consciousness. It's like a Buddhist curriculum, but it's a curriculum in emptying the mind. Sometimes people have said to me, what do you do when you start to get upset? And how do you change your mind? Well, I went through the whole course of miracles workbook lessons multiple times, but actually some of the workbook lessons that I really liked to use is kind of like a little mechanism whenever I was stuck to get upset. They say, well, you really are stuck in ego. What did you do? And I said, I would use lessons five, six, seven, eight from Jesus' workbook, like a four combo, five, six, seven, eight. If you're going to hit the ego, hit them with five, six, seven, eight. Number five, I'm never upset for the reason I think. Ooh, talk about a showstopper. Then I'm upset because I see something that's not there. In psychology, we call that hallucination. That's what number six is. Oh, very good. I'm never upset, ever, ever upset for the reason I think. That's very humbling. I'm upset because I see something that's not there. Oh, that's good. You tell me I'm hallucinating. Thank you very much. And I'm upset. I see only the past as lesson number seven. I'm looking at the past. I'm just, all I'm doing is preceding the past. And the past is filled with the tactiles and judgments and grievances. If you've totally heard of Eckhart Tolle, you know, Eckhart Tolle the power of now, he's leading us into the present moment. He's not leading us into the past. He's leading it. Lesson number seven says, I see only the past. Then lesson number eight, my mind is preoccupied with past thoughts. So I'm living in the past. And I'm upset because I'm living in the past. And he goes on from there. My thoughts are from images I have made. I'm eating this. Thoughts are showing me I'm eating this world. I'm eating this world. And gender of fear. And the meaning of this world and gender of fear because I think I'm in competition with God. Oh my gosh. I woke up in the morning. I wasn't thinking that one. I wasn't thinking I'm in competition with God. Believe me when I woke up. I was not thinking that thought. But the mind training is saying, oh yeah, you have an unconscious belief system in which you are trying to compete with the creator and the source of everything. And you're trying to hold on to an identity and a world that God didn't create. And that's why you feel guilty. That's why you feel afraid. That's why you feel upset. That's why you feel distressed and uncomfortable. That's why you get annoyed and irritated is because underneath it all you're trying to maintain an identity that is real. Oh, that's pretty heavy. That's pretty fundamental. Let's talk about fundamental. But again, this is practical because if you had a being who will say that it's transcended time and space, it's transcended all the duality and it's just pure singular divine oneness, isn't it wonderful that that being loves you and cares for you so much it gives you a curriculum to work with, a textbook to learn truly what's going on in your mind. Thank you, God. Thank you for the owner's manual. I would have loved it earlier, but I'm happy. Okay, so the bottom is 53. Thank you for the owner's manual. That helps. If you've got a car that breaks down, isn't it good to have another's manual? You've got a mind that breaks down. Thank you for the owner's manual. And thank you for a curriculum that has a step-by-step mind training program that will lead me out of hell, not the burning fires of some internal hell, but out of perceptual hell, to a healed mind. Oh, a piece of mind. Thank you for that curriculum.
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Briefing on Brackenridge Park Master Plan
The San Antonio Neighborhoods and Livability Committee voted to jettison some controversial proposals from the Brackenridge Park draft master plan and sent city staff back to ask the people who use the park what they want. The committee, chaired by District 1 Councilman Roberto Treviño, voted unanimously Aug. 15 to recommend removing unpopular proposals such as a people moving system, reducing the number of parking spaces and closing certain roads.
[ "Rey Saldaña", "Roberto Treviño", "Brackenridge Park Draft Master Plan", "Brackenridge Park", "Cris Medina", "Alan Warrick" ]
2016-08-17T20:01:29
2024-02-05T17:38:11
4,924
3k-RVZZEQmg
So, if we could, Xavier, we could pause. I believe Ms. Mania Bader Sabal has a few words to say. I want to give her a chance to express herself here. You know, I want to thank her because she definitely brought this issue to us. And we feel after the six meetings, it's very important that we hear from Count Timber on Mania Bader Sabal on this matter. So Mania Bader Sabal. Liveability cannot be separated from neighborhoods. Lately, I have been struck with the predictions of an increase of population by one million by the year 2040. When one considers that it took 100 years between 1900 and the year 2000 to reach a million in San Antonio, it is apparent that the next million will be reached in only about four decades. With such accelerated growth and much of it coming from our own natural births within our existing population, it will take a very open, transparent and inclusive government to make it a smooth boat. We only have to see what is happening in other cities today where discontent and lack of trust simmers until it explodes. We never want this for our beloved city. We will always be inclusive. I think there are things that we can do now to make sure we do not exclude anyone. And a couple of them are these. In this morning's express, there was an opinion piece by Norel Boyu, the head of NELCAP, who wrote that we need a housing policy in San Antonio. Today, the city uses certain plans and regulatory documents, such as a UDC, regulations on the efforts that were heard to create development policy. The housing commission have made a few policy recommendations around incentives for affordable housing, zoning notices, and are working on some through the resident retention subcommittee. But all these amount to disjointed documents and regulations that have to be researched and cobbled together. There is no housing policy. That is needed for many reasons, but one is to level the playing field between the development community and the public. In your comprehensive plan voted on last week, you made amendments that will protect the Tier 1 neighborhoods thank you, Councilor Devino. This is proper because we are already being impacted by the effort to create more dense housing patterns. I live in one of these neighborhoods. However, as I understand it, these amendments only impact neighborhoods represented by official city sanctioned neighborhood associations. They do not mitigate impact on all the rest of the inner city in the east, west, and south sides that are vulnerable. They do not have registered neighborhood associations. That does not represent people who live in vulnerable parks. Another lesson from Rackenrich Park Planning is that as we read the plan, many of us felt that the exclusion of working class people who are users of the park was there. They have kept that park alive. As a friendly place for families for many years, most of these are Mexican-American families. This was also brought out in the hearings. Finally, in San Antonio, we enjoyed a very strong culture and a history that goes back thousands of years. The historic structures and sites that we still have and the commons that we all enjoy must be protected for everyone to enjoy. Loosing this legacy will make our city one that looks like any other city in the country. We must work hard to protect our uniqueness. That is how we represent everyone. Thank you very much. Thank you, Ms. Muneer-Lewis. I just want to say that we helped us to get a process that I think is very, very thoughtful and to your point. We want to make sure that it is inclusive and we look forward to the discussion today. Today's discussion is about how we manage a plant-based park that is the city's park. Thank you for all your help. With that, we'll begin the citizens to be heard. Ms. Ana Ramirez. Good evening. City Councilman, Stad, Mr. Kupia. Thank you for allowing us to speak. I didn't think that we were wanting to give them the opportunity, so I don't have a prepared speech. Nevertheless, okay, I am the Chair of the River Road Neighborhood Association. Breckenridge Park is our front lawn. In addition to that, we all grew up in Breckenridge Park. So we hold it very dear to all of us, particularly Hispanics. Now, I only went to for the meetings for the vetting of the Breckenridge Park master plan. I did it in the meeting at the Botanical Garden, as well as Lyons Field, as well as the Guadalupe Cultural Arts, and I forget the other name, Doris Griffin Center. What I heard was consistent throughout the first of all as far as citizens to be heard. The, essentially, it was all about how all of it spoke, including myself, or concern about exclusion, because the common denominator of this entire plan has been to exclude again in addressing the 1.1 million that we're expected to have. It seems as if this plan is not for our people that use the park on a regular basis. One wants to put lots of walking trails, thus eliminating lots of parking spaces and access to parking and the different areas throughout the park. By eliminating them, again, eliminate access. What I did hear also consistently in all of the meetings, including quite a few people from our neighborhood association, was the fact that it was, you know, totally eliminating everything that is dear to us. And insisting, and I noticed here in this plan that you have here, still including the taking away of all of the parking spaces and still insisting upon the grand lawn. Again, like Maria Beriussova indicated, this is south of Texas. In times of drought and all, we have a grand lawn and elimination of trees. This is totally against what we do, what we use. And again, having a parking garage, that I guess we would be then combining that would be already planned parking garage for the San Antonio Zoo. It both are one and the same. But this is going to be a pretty crowded parking lot. Then how can people take what we do today and on a regular basis include taking families, what partying with barbecue grills, because a little grills there are not sufficient. Partying with barbecue grills and and tarps and birthday cakes. And all of the things that are necessary to put on a picnic in the park. Thank you. Thank you, Ms. Nadez. I appreciate your comments. This is Gianna Vendon. So I just wanted to speak to the 1.1 million people who we always talk about, right? And many of these people are supposed to be to the millennial. I am millennial. And the definition of millennial is someone who is born between 1980 and 2000. Although the word millennial now has a different connotation to someone who is well-feeded. Someone who is poor at middle class who has a lot of free time who can live in excessive locks and who would want a master plan like this. And so I always get really frustrated when I see plans that the city has and creates for millennials because I wonder who are these millennials you are talking to. Because most of the people that I know from millennials that maybe you just fight it's because they do not have cars. Because they cannot afford them. Because they are in debt because of college. And so a lot of my friends and a lot of my fellow millennials who went to college still live with their parents. And so going to Procurent Park is still a family affair. And so anything that has to do with the plan has to be multi-generational. And that is what I see wrong with this plan is that it doesn't really take into consideration the ADA facility. It doesn't take into consideration multi-generation galleries. For example, my father is limited mobility because of the signal problem. And so he cannot walk that far if we have to park further away and then walk to a sitting area. And that is the reality for many families. In a few years I plan to have kids. So then I'm going to be ruining my limited mobility father with me and my kids and all our stuff. And we're going to have to go on some sort of train to get where we have to go. That's going to be a nightmare. So what I really want to say though is that I think the PR in general, not just for this time but for anything that the city does that the department does really has to do better at PR. Better outreach. Being a grassroots organization we flyer. We go out after work and we go out on our own time. We go out in the morning to Takadia. We go out at parks. A lot of people a lot of my friends Michael and I had to pass out fires for these things. They went out and they had they even made a day out of it. They went to Bracket Ridge and they had a little party and they just had enough fires but they're having a party. So I think we have to kind of keep that in mind. Just do better PR and do better outreach. Thank you. Thank you, Ms. Ms. Graciela Sanchez. Thank you council members for allowing us to speak daily. When you have these gatherings you all have your engagement and we don't get to speak so I really appreciate that. For me the most important thing in today's conversation is process. They're as a resident as you heard me say last Thursday somebody who's lived here whose family has lived here over 126 years. In the same two block radius of Veracruz, Santiago and between Navidad and Salinas we're people who are invested in San Antonio. We love San Antonio. San Antonio is ours and we have done so much work as a family but also myself as the director of the Esperanza to make San Antonio better especially for the people who have lived here historically. But over and over what we're seeing and each year more and more often is that it seems like decisions are being made behind closed doors between city staff and the interested parties who want to do something with the city. So, Hey Street Bridge was even on lawsuit and it's being appealed in the Fourth Court of Appeals. The community helped to save that bridge. The city was going to tear it down in the 1980s. The community started with Nettie Hinton collected signatures, had it saved raise over $3 million. And then all of a sudden almost out of nowhere guy wants to do business, negotiates with Lauren Houston, Patty Giovanni they've got one over a million dollars to build a restaurant to do all of this work for his benefit, not the community benefit. Center they have this what's happening with their what's happening with the Alameda Center Main Plaza becomes privatized and goes into a Main Plaza Conservancy. Hemisphere, we're reading by Hemisphere in 2011 because we're not going to be allowed to vote on hotels that get built. Now people are attacking you Mr. Deviniova, that was stuff that was happening then, but we're reading about it in the paper. We shouldn't be reading about these things in the paper, we should be part of the process. We're reading the overview of the 300 people who came to the meetings about this park, but it's 300 people and we're over a million folks when we collect signatures we're talking and knocking on doors saying how do you feel about history how do you feel about this, how do you thousands of people we're talking to face to face and they're telling us they're not happy and so I appreciate this Deviniova but slow down the process listen to the community Travis Park it's just everything is being privatized and it's our public monies and they are public spaces and the public, especially your working class community who has nothing else except maybe a car to drive to Bracken Ridge or a car to drive somewhere else or a bus to take, we need to have access to those, we cannot be charged and I already know that the William museum apparently is going to have that parking lot that they're going to start charging and it's in the budget and we just hear about things around the block so please slow this process down and thank you very much for your time thank you census George Cisneros thank you always nice to be here in front of our elected officials and city staff you all worked so hard to get to Bracken now we have three comments to make one is about time the second one is the symbolism of the direction and the last one is amenities for tenants the time I was worried about is a rush to action the park is not going there is no need you're not going to get 9.5 or 10 or an 8.3 if we rush this plan there is no need to hurry I think the smartest thing to do is you sometimes let the land go fallow and you'll get a better crop I would encourage staff to slow down the process a year maybe a term maybe two terms there is no rush to change Bracken Ridge Park unless the other things like the symbolism of direction is important front doors usually mean welcome come into my house welcome I want you into my world I'm wondering why the front door of Bracken Ridge Park Alamo Heights, Terrell Hills almost park instead of the people of San Antonio so directionality and symbolism of the front door of the park is very important right now you can say come to my front door don't worry about it there is no back door for the people of San Antonio because Broadway and the park entrances from that area entities for the tenants who don't pay city taxes on the Broadway reach if you look at the 37 apartment complexes built Build Your Brand Broadway, Jones Josephine Grayson, Pearl almost all of them got tax abatements so none of the tenants pay taxes through their rent because the landlords are not into taxes if you look at the 1220 loss for instance there's 307 units there and the way the city planned it out was $15,000 per unit over 10 years so we lose $4.6 million of tax money and revenues on just the 1220 loss alone the camp plan we lose $5,860,000 in 10 years with the abatements that landlord was given so we're making Broadway's part into a wellness fitness community amenity for people who do basic taxes and that's what really bothers me about this whole thing we open the front door to the north have no back door to the south and we give away the park as an amenity to all the kids who may be unacquainted if we have the right space to go down and move to Mumbai for all we know if it could happen on Friday this equity group has no commitment to San Antonio so all I'm saying is time we don't need to rush the park is not going anywhere thank you thank you Mr. Chair thank you Ms. Antonio Castaneda thank you all and thank you I hope for that knows the space the space with me can not be assisted okay he has to translate that okay thank you very much I'm just thanking council members for for the space which is after all public space is in line and so we're here today we need to talk precisely about public space and we didn't know we would have to listen to be heard so I actually am not prepared but I do want to make a couple comments and my concern about Reckon Ridge Park I'd like to talk about a little bit within the context of policies training San Antonio's growth and development which others have spoken to much more eloquently much more specifically so my comments are broad in general but it's a concern that I have had since I have moved to San Antonio almost 25 years ago and that is that policies I see policies being developed and action taken for attending to the growth and development of the city but they're being developed without it seems to me consideration for the economic realities of San Antonio and what I mean by that is that as we know San Antonio is among one of the cities one of the five cities that is most economically segregated now what does that mean and what does that mean when we think about policies for growth and development for me what that reality also means is that we exist in San Antonio within a context of historical and contemporary systemic inequality and so that's really what we're talking about in one form or another is that what we have seen with this process has in fact reflected that systemic inequality and that systemic inequality is based on race certainly on gender and sexuality but here we're talking more specifically about class and to some degree race because it is Mexican American families largely we use that part and so if we do the master plan as it is currently conceptualized then what we are doing is we are removing Mexican American families from public space and I'd like us to think about that and what that means when the highest percentage of the population of this city is that so thank you again for the ability to come speak to you in this public space and thank you for your work we need to understand that this is not easy and we have some sense of pressures that befall you but and we're not here to add to the pressure but we are here to raise our voices and to be listened to thanks thank you Mrs. Custon at this time I'd like to say a few words of the conservancy to come and say a few words this weekend we had an opportunity to take a tour with Maria Villarromas and my parks commissioner Jennifer Martinez and joining us was also a real power of the mayor's office I want to thank you for that conversation and I want to give you a chance to say a few words for spending part of your Sunday with us hello councilman staff yesterday was very exciting and today after our tour I was in the park looking at the section of the dam and yes thank you and we took pictures of some of our board and served tonight Joe Cowherd our president our vice president our secretary and we would like to thank you for looking forward in this process the Rackridge Park Conservancy is standing with you as a partner to expand the collaboration with the community with the staff with you to create a positive move forward I am not discouraged I think what has come about almost the rest of the additional public meetings is encouraging and exciting we know the community loves this park it is a park before the entire city it is for all districts not just one and so the conservancy recognizes that and I have taken it to heart as I have sat through all of the meetings there have been eight two before the last bit and we have listened carefully and so this should be a slow in the river process we work with you on we support the process going forward to identify the projects that we can all come together and support there are things that need to be done in the park and I did invite people to join me in the park for tours as I did with Councilor Moran I would like to invite you to meet us there it is different when you are standing looking at the needs that are required in the park there is maintenance and there are agreements that can be done and there is common ground and I respect your opinion and I think we need to leave in a very positive direction this can be considered similar but it is nothing at all in the plaza in terms of the depth of research that is beginning and will be done over a period of time I would like to suggest that we do that in this instance too and we are ready to partner with you thank you Mr. Bobbitt at this time I would also like to welcome Jennifer Martinez she serves as my parks commissioner and has done a great job of doing that in fact she attended four meetings and has provided incredible insight and a chance to give her perspective about this effort as she joined us yesterday as well for these four meetings thank you chairman see members of the community members of the city staff my perspective I attended about 75% of the sessions those that were at the garden center as the chairman mentioned my name is Jennifer Martinez and I am also a member of the corporate community in San Antonio and the downtown resident and an avid cyclist that enjoys a park movement I would say that in stepping back and looking at the comments that were provided during the meetings there are really three key categories that I would place those comments in and the first one is a sense of place so it is very clear that San Antonio loves this park in fact we heard multiple stories something back to the 1940s 1950s of families that had significant memories and milestones at this park what we heard is that sense of action is saying it's okay to haul us and it's okay to step back and work together we're all San Antonio regardless of our last names and regardless of our histories how do we work together in a country that's working apart right now and how do we take a chance to step back and say Brighton Ridge means something for all of San Antonio and so I would say our partners to the South Toyota they do a really great job of moving this into action in fact the Japanese call this Genchi Genbutsu which means go and see and so I would encourage our really great city staff members in our leadership to go and see what are the users doing today whether it's the elderly softball team that I have no idea about if you look at the park or the community volunteer who organizes open running nights or a couch to five k's or those that just simply want to be the ducks what are our users doing today and how do we do it in a way that's with high tech through surveys or through social media or ways that are low tech through knocking on doors and asking how do you use the park today what are opportunities that we have what do you want to see just like that single mom who said I really love your soft heart and I would love just to see some type of splash pad to happen to my kids and not have to be charged for it and so I encourage the committee to continue to think about how do we really integrate the park and I appreciate all the work that the city does and we are truly a unique city that is leading the floor from when it comes to working together thank you Mr. Matthews certainly the service is a great park's condition so before the presentation a couple of council members would like to say a few words thank you chair I just want to open up I've been looking forward to this presentation today because it comes on the heels of a renewed awakening that San Antonio often times has been shaped into sometimes more vigorously than others about the process of picking this on the head we have to be reminded sometimes that folks are going to buy into the ultimate product or outcome we need to buy into the process so I've been looking forward to today because it's going to give us an opportunity to very much hear a bit of the process of the input that wasn't captured to begin with and in a situation like this where we have a park like Brackenburg filled with so much tradition and legacy we really have to go as slow as we can and I think for this committee who will ultimately move something forward to a full council we should come to a consensus or decision about what we do recognizing the fact that we may have put the carpet for the worse on the process going out and coming up with ideas that haven't yet been filled with the color of those people to use on the park so I've heard a lot of great things from our speakers specifically I appreciate Gianna's nod to the multi-generational fingerprints that it is based on Brackenburg Park so any one of those fingerprints is rubbed off it gives the community a sense that things are changing and not necessarily to their benefit but attaching to that is great the fact that maybe the barbecue or the access the Easter picnics don't happen like they used to I think that's just part of the DNA of Brackenburg as the future plans for a new inclusion of the many of us but I was reminding briefly of what the process could be to come up with visions and dreams and we were very convinced that we did not have the community's buy-in we did not accomplish something but it was the end of the day we know that things are not going to be perfect but as long as folks feel like they're part of the process and we did that very early on before we even committed ourselves to the amount of money we were going for I think we need to get it right here on Brackenburg so as we leave today I think we should come up with a sense of whether it makes sense for us to refresh the process here to restart the process and make sure we're ready for the presentation Thank you Councilman I think we'll look forward to this discussion today Councilman Ward Thank you Chair and thank you all for coming out to the numerous meetings and the numerous times that I've seen in the community looking at the passion that was especially at the events recently that kind of leads to my dreams of people being passionate about all the items come up in San Antonio because I think we still need hundreds of more people to engage in this conversation to really make this a community effort but we've definitely made a step here to make things better for our city and I applaud you all for your passion in moving this process forward I also think that this was definitely needed and the fact that we're definitely having a committee at 6 o'clock in the evening shows that we're attempting to do our part to make things more accessible and we need your feedback to hear these things are working so we appreciate the feedback that's come through this process as we know that it has not only changed this process and the future of Brackenridge Park but future processes that we have so hopefully we learn from our earlier missteps and that we can focus on doing this on the front end as opposed to the back end or at least the perceived front end as opposed to the back end so I definitely think that we're heading in the right direction we're not there yet and there are definitely improvements that we can make in the process but also in our public facilities so that we can make them more engaging I appreciate George's remarks in regards to the front door I've had issues with some of the places in my district that are in the community but don't seem to be for the community and I don't want that for Brackenridge Park and I know you don't want it either so I think we can all work together to make this a more meaningful experience but also a more meaningful park for more sentimental use Thank you, Councilman Thank you Mr. Chairman I also look forward to making the night as well because I'm reminded of how important what Brackenridge Park means to all of us whether you're from San Antonio or not I think you recognize how beautiful that Brackenridge is and it's not lost upon me or this community how important it is for us to make sure that we get this process right but we can't do that without you all so I'm very encouraged to see so we can work from all across the city at night to ensure that we we get this process and make sure that we can look forward to the full council to make sure that we have this input and we recognize what Brackenridge means to all of us in San Antonio and throughout the community as well so thank you Thank you Councilman With that we can go ahead and begin the presentation Xavier I'd like to thank you for all your hard work so when this came up we met quite frequently and I want to thank your responsiveness and I want to thank the team as well for helping to host the six meetings citywide and we look forward to this presentation it really managed a lot of hard work and I want to reaffirm that we are listening and so Jerrucan Thank you Chair and Committee so we're providing a briefing on the input we received from the additional public meetings that were held in response to the draft master plan so just a quick update from the presentation that was provided to the neighborhoods and the mobility committee back in March 29 just a reminder we were going through a draft master plan process our design consultants our Rialto Studio is the lead with three other partners that are being in tandem with them on the draft master plan process so at that March 29 meeting some items were presented to the committee when that draft was provided both to the public and the mayor and council which talked about some of the issues that had been identified with those range really from everything from diminished environment to accessibility the amount of impervious covered parking and traffic and weight finding type of issues with the whole park so as part of the draft the committee or I'm sorry the consultants came up with five areas so as part of that draft it was presented by strategies were identified to address some of those issues those current issues with the park to restore natural park features and improve water quality sorry so thank you so again to address some of these issues my strategy which were outlined in the draft master plan the first one was restore natural park features and improve water quality the second one was to restore and preserve and articulate the park culture and historic features so that deals a lot with some of the first structures and features of the park the water work system that are in the park all those are history and speak to the growth of San Antonio and the development of San Antonio and are all located within the park increased park visibility and pedestrian access was really addressing how the park is viewed from the perimeter is there a common area is there a central theme of how you approach the park and then another, the last two were one was to recapture green space and blue and pervious covered parking and then the other one was to reduce vehicular traffic through the use of street closures and the transit system so that's what was in this five strategies so after we had our neighborhood livability meeting in March we held a public meeting in April of the San Antonio Potential Park Center and at that meeting the items were presented and there was definitely some conversation and some concerns about some of the areas, particularly around the parking and the closure of streets at that same time after that meeting Councilman Trevino was approached by members of the community that felt that that one meeting really didn't allow enough opportunity or would consider the historic park user so it didn't allow enough opportunity for the public at large and the public across San Antonio to really engage in the conversation of the draft master plan so at that point we came with a plan to conduct six additional meetings those were all advertised both in English and Spanish through the newspaper we had radio spots on everything from NPR to Spanish language media we did a dedicated website to put the draft master plan out on the internet to allow people to comment on it and we also advertised the six meetings along with some of the people in the community who went out and walked in the park, we did as well again we had staff that went out and gave flyers out people using the park so that we really felt we could try to broaden the depth of the engagement beyond the one meeting so we did have the six additional meetings we had a total of 363 undivided attendees there were some attendees who attended more than one meeting but at all the meetings there were 184 citizens spoke and we received over 103 common cards as well as the verbal communication that was provided the meetings vary everything from the largest meeting which is the lines field we had 103 attendees and then the next largest was at the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center we had 94 attendees the zip code reflects that where we had double digit attendees from the zip code there were five zip codes that these individuals came from so for example what you would expect around the park this park is surrounded by 780209 and 780212 we had 64 individuals from the 780209 and 40 from the 780212 and then it varies based on going a little bit further and a little bit west but again I think what this exemplifies is that the message did get out in particular I think two people that either lived near the park are also visiting the park from other areas of the city so out of that out of that those public meetings we had an exercise that allowed the public to respond to those different five strategies we talked about in general public support were around the strategies around the natural resources around the historical features of the park as well as increased park visibility and the connectivity to the neighborhoods those are the ones that really overwhelming me and we have attachments that were here and families that kind of give all the different percentages of the different components of those but those overwhelmingly had public support the areas that did not were dealing with the people over about reducing parking within the park closing roads within the park and I think that last one is I think the reduced impervious cover was supported so I'm not sure not that one but those were the main areas that there was not support for so what we are proposing is that we move forward with completing the exercises moving toward the finalization of the master plan but the areas the areas where there was not public support those areas not be included in the final master plan that would be presented to council so that master plan would not include any type of trans system of people mover it would not include any reduction of parking within the park and it would not include any road closures within the park we would though recommend that there be a section in the draft master plan or in the final master plan but we spoke to that there are issues around probably the vehicular traffic the pedestrian traffic and mobility that would need to ultimately be addressed but probably in a much more engaged fashion and just targeted on those subjects so that it's not about you know restoring the essay kids and talking about how do we maneuver with people and cars but that conversation only be about that if that conversation is ever to move forward again but in this plan we would recommend that those three areas not be included and available for any questions we had one more person signed up to speak I think it says here prevo prevo thank you for always a little bit of your doors and your ears to hear us and talk about any engagement any technical dialogues when it comes to community, community building and governance I really like to list some of the positivity that was spoken today with the fellow community folks and that we do want to engage in very very well intentional conversations about accountable governance and I know you all happen to be one of the ones that participate the most I'm not calling that the north side of the districts but I intentionally know that our district to represent a lot of communities of color and communities of working families the biggest issue for me is that on the work that I do in southwestern we talk about environmental racism and environmental justice we speak about the design of cities that are very particular to certain areas according to their zip codes according to their neighborhoods and according to their population directly someone next to me so for the consensus of San Antonio right now we're talking about the visibility of over a million and these numbers that we're talking about in the meetings are really insignificant I would like to compliment that some of the people that we that happen to attend to this meeting that happens to be according to the membership mobilization that we did as grassroots organizers and the fact that we push ourselves through phone calls conversations but also you know social media something that we are pretty well known for with Zou and as well as Bassa at the Joseph Center the biggest question for us is are these parking lots or parking garages going to be efficient and free and available for community folks that want to use the park also the housing issues we're talking about Broadway Street which is a highly new street to be living at and there's a lot of this place I know that because my sister tried to get a house to live there and to get a new job in San Antonio and she was discouraged and told that she could not afford to live around Broadway I do live in District 1 I know what it means to see the impact and the new developing that comes out of our district in our neighborhood but at the same time my house is one of the sales so that means I can't even live in there so we're talking about a park that is accessible and it's the bridge between and communities of color and working class families but it's also a bridge of understanding the development and privatization of San Antonio is happening in a really fast pace and we are not trying to even intervene or even stop it it's happening really really fast the pro worry is a threat to some of the folks I know this as a single person that lives on Verdel Street I have families and neighbors but I have neighbors or families that I can't even keep up with services but what's the time of this? of the time is up? oh shit ok thank you so much for your time and you and me and our apologies for Matt seeing you on the list we want to make sure everybody's heard Chair, if I can make one correction I'm sorry I'm supposed to the last item on the not public which was the impervious cover is correct I was thinking invasive species and habitat restoration but I got myself in view so that item again did not have all the support in the plan so I just wanted to clarify that thank you so before we continue questions I want to recognize that tomorrow of the San Antonio Zoo is here we also got a great tour of that zoo this weekend doing an incredible job in that zoo and I want to thank you for being here really are engaged not only this issue but community and city process and certainly appreciate all that you're doing would you like to say a few words? thank you thank you to the committee and to the city staff and to the community that's all been working on and to see all the passion and the city about Breford Park and all the attention that it's getting it's truly the park in San Antonio that you can say everybody uses so it's a very exciting time for us it's got really three layers to it there's this historic, incredible, historic layer where the estate is and the water works there's a recreational layer that we know families have been pulling up for generations it's very inspiring to see and then there's a natural layer to the park it's really a wonderful green space among our community so it's very important for people just a little bit of clarification on the garage but I know it's coming up a couple of times the zoo has been working independently on the garage since my arrival in December of 2014 right when I came on board my SA had run full of community and asked where's parking in San Antonio and where's Breford Park one hand down so we've been working on this it's an issue of the park accessibility traffic and parking are big issues today I walked just from the pan down to the front of the zoo and 52 negative signs coming in talking about our park directions 52 negative signs with no parking tow zones and things like that between the stadium and the zoo and then going the other way towards Cuba there's 20 signs so 72 signs in about half a mile stating no parking so it's not a very welcoming experience in the park and what we're trying to do with our parking garage is build a garage on a school district parking lot just adding another 600 spots and we want this garage to be free for the community to come down and use access to the zoo the park, the witty, the museum and all the great attractions that are down there so I just wanted to clarify one of those points with our friends independent it just happened to also land with the master plan to build the garage on the perimeter of the zoo on the park on non-park property so that's what we're doing and I'll be here afterwards and thank you for coming out following me to the zoo when you come and visit happy to have you and happy to be engaged thank you Mr. Mayor appreciate it so I think what's really neat about what's occurred over the summer is that top of mind has been Brackenridge Park in fact no offense to the other parks in our city but Brackenridge Park showed why it is an important park sitting wide it really was the park we were all talking about and my hope is that we can turn that into an incredible positive momentum for our city for this park you know you talked about some of the items that were some positive and huge things speak to some of those items so for example one of them was restore natural park features and improve water quality so because the San Juan River runs through the park there were a lot of opportunities to improve the way storm water runoff reaches the San Juan River to reduce the amount of pollutants that reach the river so in the master plan it talks about low impact design features which are really water cleansing type of features through vegetation and vital swells things that are natural not anything mechanical but purely a natural landscaping environment also the Catapa Pershing which is kind of somewhat is a moat to Breckinridge Park to Broadway it is a concrete ditch that serves as a restore water runoff and using and restoring that making that in that eco restoration having it look more natural very similar to the mission reach of the San Juan River where you're able to maybe have some bike and hike trails next to it but it again serves as a natural environment for birds for wildlife and not just basically a family drainage channel that separates the park from Breckinridge Mr. Colonel Breckinridge had essentially a water work so the Asakia systems and some of the water works tunneling systems are still present in the park the pump house the original pump house that where water was used to be channeled those are all still existing but in the park but are in disrepair over time need some work to either restore them or repurpose them into more maybe a fuse that is compatible with park users today and then the last one talked about the perimeter of the park really if you think about Breckinridge Park and they're really like signage and a common theme or look so that when you're in Breckinridge Park you really feel like you've arrived and you've come to the park so that receives some positive feedback and the idea of how do we approach the park and know that if you are there that you're not going the wrong way you're trying to get to the witty as opposed to the zoo and wayfinding and directional things adapt to the nature. Those are the three strategies that have overwhelming public support. In this question we'll go to Zia Gromis we've both got a tour of the park you guys will see some of the items here speak to some of the the availability of funds for deferred maintenance and what you saw regarding that capacity to address those issues. So what we one of the areas that we know that needs some maintenance is the retaining walls of Breckinridge Park and over the past couple of years we have been investing roughly about half a million dollars to make some of those repairs. The 2017 budget that the city manager will be sending to the council on Thursday is recommending a commitment of $500,000 to continue with those repairs. Also the Amida Flores Park is in need of some repairs as well. Some of the structures are historic and we need to preserve them. So we are including in the budget $300,000 dedicated to that park. So that's what we have in our operating budget within our general fund but we are aware that the need is well beyond those $800,000 that I mentioned. So one of the areas that we are looking at is the bond program and as Mike Christie presented some of the very early proposals for consideration of the council and the community is roughly about $7.5 million that could be utilized to make improvements to the park. So one of the areas that as Xavier mentioned and the community has noticed is some of the structural aspects of the park. The catalpa drainage ditch that needs to be repaired, the retaining walls and overall to make the park more attractive to also get rid of some of the invasive vegetation that we have in some of the areas of the park so we can feature some of the architectural aspects of the park in a much better functional way. So that is how we as staff are making those recommendations for council consideration to address some of those maintenance issues that are necessary to make to our park. And some of these items when we're talking that they're somewhat timely because they're being held by temporary temporary structures. Is that correct? That's correct. So when we started the program to address some of the river walls we only had a small section of failure or blowout. Since that time there have been two other large areas that have appeared one year away in the museum that's right next to the development improvements they've made and then this other piece down by member beach in another large section. So one of the challenges we're having to, it's not a challenge but the difference is as opposed to any other wall is that in a lot of these cases we end up creating a new re-fortified wall and the old historic mason work goes on top of that almost as a facade. So it's not as easy as ripping something out and putting something in new engineer. We actually have to deliberately and purposefully take apart what's there and we're able to salvage it and then build the engineer piece and then go back and put that old historic mason work back in so that again it keeps the integrity of the historic feature of the park. The park is on the national register of historic places there's all kind of state designations as well so it's very different from any other part too that we cannot just come in and make major changes to the park, the park itself and the integrity of it at least physically has to stay in time. That's really an important piece for a fortified history because of all the history I got to see some of this just yesterday in which there's pieces of this park, the historic park that are preserved by being covered up. Is that correct? Correct. So actually with one of those people really not knowing that much about historic features have in some way helped preserve some of them because they're either covered or people do not really visit those areas or frequent them very often but at the same time it doesn't bring awareness and the public will to see some of those improvements made. So some of the Ezekias, some of the walls have been covered, some of the soot or the fill that has occurred in parts of the river are somewhat holding up and protecting some of the historic areas and so that's another component that makes it a little challenging. We are making those improvements is not only with the actual wall itself but everything else is surrounded so it almost every inch of reference part is an archeological significant site and so anytime we do anything there we usually have UTSA opportunity to look at it the park itself is just rich in both pre-historic historic pre-colonial German settlers, I mean the history of San Antonio is in that part and so anything we do we have to do it very carefully. So let's go back to the items that were and we like that as as negative pieces, let's reaffirm what we don't want let's go to the items. So what we heard in the public comment and we saw across the board both in the exercise where people went to the board and were able to identify areas that they supported on support both the common cards I would say the number one thing that people were really against was the people who were the tram. The concept of having some type of system where you were required to be able to navigate within the park only through the utilization of this mechanism was not supported very strongly. The next really dealt with reducing parking and what that was again what we heard were people that felt the accessibility of being able to drive right into Grimeridge Park to drive very close to maybe your destination whether it's a specific picnic pad or place where you're used to picnicking or wherever that is and being able to have that parking readily available and so convenient was something that people did not want to give up. And the other was road closures and the concern there was again and I can relate to that because you know Breckridge Park is kind of a motor park in a certain way and so part of that was the ability of being able to drive through the park from one area to another to be able to not walk if you didn't want to and the ability to be able to as part of your enjoyment being able to experience you know as you're driving through the park the wonders of it and the nature of it so people were not in favor of closing any of the existing streets. And then the reduced and pervious cover really gets to the parking lots. So one of the things that the consultants looked at was how do we recapture some green space in the park? How do we get some of that back? But unless you're eliminating a building, the parking is covered or is existing and so the community through this process was not in favor of removing any of the parking or any of the structures that are there today. Let's talk about some of the comments. I think this really leads us to receive this report with some of the comments and others who with all kinds of comments give you a take on some of the more surprising comments about the park. I don't think they were just really surprising. I think everyone of these who especially from the park perspective we know how popular it is especially at Easter and the holidays that's something that the parks department embraces. You know we make, we go to extra efforts that during those holidays we provide facilities whether that's additional correlates, additional roll off trash containers, whether it's volunteers going out and handing out recycling bags for recycling of bottles and cans. That is something that we are very aware of and again we embrace and celebrate every year we get a media release that we put out about a week before Easter listing all the parks within the city assuming that you're able to camp in overnight. So that's something that we're very aware of. I think probably some of the things that were the most surprising really dealt with the ability to drive through the park. I think we do have some challenges of people who use the park as a cut through to get to other destinations that's not within the park to put it bluntly but I think there are other methods that consultants can look at that do not require the closure of park to maybe mitigate for some of that. So I think that was one of the ones that I was a little bit more surprised that across the board not closing any of the streets was what the Was it one of the comments about the golf course? Yes. So there was a conversation around the golf course which itself is historic and it was kind of one of these instead of reducing parking and adding a great lawn why not just recapture the golf course and open that up and then you wouldn't have to lose parking. That is a whole different subject and a whole policy discussion around that. It is part of the Municipal Golf Association. It is one of six courses. It is I would say the backbone of the system. Financially it helps support the other golf courses that we have in the community whether they be in District 8 or District 3 all the ones that we have through the system are supported mainly by Brevenridge and again it is historic so that was a little bit of a surprise but I think that kind of goes with the idea of the public looking at alternatives trying to participate and say we don't like this idea but the goal we are trying to reach is goal A we think there are other strategies to reach there and they all should be considered and we agree that that is a great exercise because we are going to look at something that needs to be looked at and look at all the strategies and all the strategies may not work just like some of these strategies didn't work but that doesn't mean they shouldn't be vetted and at least explain and explore I agree with you in reading some of these comments and there is quite a few one of the website comments that I found very intriguing the park has been a driving part since horse and buggy days I thought that was great talks speaks to history and how people feel very much connected to their park and what it means to be San Antonio and what it means to be a little different it also talks about involving the people who use the park I think these are all very worthy comments and really speak to the passion of our city and the passion for this park seeing that there is some items that are just non-starters I think we can safely say that we will not be pursuing those certainly I would like to talk about as been mentioned there is no need to rush my own parks commissioner said come see it because that's probably offers some opportunity to really further build on the trust that we need to earn with our community all too often we are doing a process that sometimes makes people feel left out and this park has been top of mind all summer long it's an opportunity to carry that momentum and I just want to say as chair of this community we are not going to do this process without the community that's a very important process as a state to involve the people who actually use the park with that you think there is an opportunity to slow this down a bit and reaffirm some of these positive items if we can go switch the slide over to the positive stuff if we take some of these things that are supported and then build on some of these comments and ideas where we are actually involving community input and doing it at the park so now it's no longer looking at the drawing and using red dots but rather finding a more innovative approach to community involvement community engagement at this park to truly master plan this to truly say this is what it feels like I can only imagine there's nobody in here that can argue with a kid who would actually tell you what it would be at a park so we've had this discussion and I see an incredible opportunity here to have a more engaged process with the community maybe an innovative approach to master planning speak to us about that is that something we could do and then maybe come back to Newark I think definitely what we saw is the draft was a draft it's always been a draft it's been finalized with it and I think through the work of the community and yourself we've been able to enlarge that conversation but that conversation today has been focused around those areas that were of the most concern so I think if we move forward and we have those areas off the table that allows us then now to concentrate on the areas where there is a consensus and where there is support and how do we even grow that further and how do we make sure that moving through these areas where there is general support that we are doing it the correct way and the way that it reflects what the general public is expecting to see at the end and I think that's critical because you know what we have right now our concepts and some renderings but as you all have said when you're actually out on the park it is a different environment you see symbols of historic structures and you get to hear the story about them and understand how they were used and how they're not being used today or potentially being used today that's a different type of engagement than through an exercise that was done today so there is something we could do where we actually do some on-site engagement you know for lack of a better word some type of charrette exercise but it's a little bit more interactive and more engaging with the park user on-site yes and I would say we would want to deploy whatever is available to us to help with that experience the idea is whether it's a mock up, a charrette utilizing some of the highest technologies down to zero technology, very low tech to help people understand what that experience might be I think that would be a worthy cause and it could certainly help innovate this process to truly include the community and the users of the park as part of what we're doing at this park Councilman if I may add I think one of the conversations that Xavier and I have is that we would like to take the opportunity all the comments that we got from the public that we should have done from the very beginning and that is to engage the community at the beginning of the process even before we brought the draft recommendation to the neighborhood center of the village so we are excited about this opportunity to take the input and the comments that we got from the community and as Xavier mentioned in your conversations as well to do an innovative approach to bring the community to the park and talk about those potential improvements that we can make to the Bracken Bridge park Thank you, I think everybody could get excited about that to really truly be an engagement piece and I think it will help sort of keep this park top of mind as we go into the fall Councilman Simion if you would Sure, I just want to add on top of that that Councilman and I have a few conversations about what is the next step here understanding that there were some mistakes made at the beginning of this process and so you need to understand whether we want to admit it or not the city has made mistakes around transparency and inclusion on this process but also other processes and what we are trying to say with this example is that we actually would not be here but for the community finding the issue without our help, found it on their own brought us to a point where we are questioning whether this actually is a thing of surprise in regard to the plans of Bracken Bridge and we need to learn something from this lesson we need to learn that oftentimes not just with Bracken Bridge but other things that we are taking out of the city of the projects that were too often putting forward a product that doesn't get included for the first part of that was the people that were using it that's why I think the strategy which is sort of a hybrid is taking it out to the community where we know there will be members and users in this case Bracken Bridge Park asking them about what they envision in this area as a park user today and doing that multiple times over but if there is any lesson I think is what you are getting to is that if we are missing out especially on a project like this on a community and they can easily criticize like they have on this one at the end of the day when saying look this is a draft plan it's almost half way big not fully big and we still get to fear about it and I think that's what we are trying to get a complete ride on so the only question I would ask if I can share this are we now making a statement of the fact that what is read what is we heard from community members that we do not want to see in the future of Bracken Bridge are we moving these off the table correct we would not move an item forward that would include these items that did not have the public support that would have been the normal process of a draft master plan to begin with I think the issue we had here is the public process that we did have a place because there was one that was not inclusive or robust enough and that's what we try to do when we correct that with the draft we take that draft master plan out and I think what we are going to see now is even when we look at zip codes how it still is very concentrated in the areas neighboring the park I think if we are really looking at park users and really engaging that component I think this next exercise of taking something out to the park and doing it in the park when people are there we will get some feedback from that I think that's something that has not traditionally been done and I think it's a good test for us to see what kind of engagement do we get what kind of information and to bring that back to the committee because we either will get some really good feedback or we may hear that people aren't engaged but we don't know at this point and I think that's the thing we can't answer that engagement because we are going to make it fun we are parks we are going to have fun so part of that is we are going to make it fun we are going to have other type of activities to it because this is the day I've always said through all the years I've presented to Merritt Council has been a park isn't any good no one wants to go to an empty park is not a park so that's just green space so the idea is we want to make sure we have something that's what the public wants to see and where we use well let's do it let's move forward because I know what is true is that everybody wants to see improvements made at Brackenridge Park there's some low hanging fruit some maintenance issues some historic upgrades that we need to make and we want to do those but let's get this right and let's go out and see it in a way that creates a new model for us thank you thank you Councilman thank you chair first of all I'm very glad to hear that and get input from park users because like I said earlier Brackenridge Park is standing for this park we want to make sure that we get it right because it's coming upon us so I'm glad that we're going to take a new approach to this and get it right for residents to have an expectation of what Brackenridge Park should be so we're going to move ahead as the evil does down at the park so we got a second stuff and glad to be a part of it thank you Councilman and I'm assuming this is an example do we have a council action on this can we have action on this yes the action that we would ask the committee to take today is to support and not receive public support from the drop master plan and they go back and begin the public process for those items that did receive public support so we can hear the community start that process and then bring that back to the neighborhoods end of ability committee with a recommendation that includes a public input I will make that motion and pay credit or credit to you I think this is actually okay alright we have a motion to move forward on the items that have been supported and to discuss items that have not been supported and also to begin a very innovative community engagement piece that I think we all look forward to and we're going to hold you to the fun part so with that all those in favor so thank you David thanks again to your staff on all your helpfulness thank you my hand for all your support thank you thank everybody in the community for all your support and the conservancy for being here tonight and I know there was a question slide at the end but we didn't quite get to the slide and I had some questions I don't know if anyone else did well so the questions basically are reported from the committee you're welcome to talk to us after we answer you offer a to be heard but you're welcome to come talk to us after this meeting well this was my first meeting I kind of missed all the other ones because I didn't hear about them until afterwards okay well again just know that we're reaffirming that the community engagement piece we look forward to talking to you again my name is thank you so much for all you've done I want to thank the design team tomorrow for being here again staff so with that we'll move on to item number two
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Joshua 5 | Brother Jared Pozarnsky
At the time this video was published, Verity Baptist Fresno was a satellite ministry of Verity Baptist Church in Sacramento, CA. As of August 22, 2021, Verity Baptist Fresno was ordained as its own, independent church - Hold Fast Baptist Church, under the leadership of Pastor Jared Pozarnsky - Hold Fast Baptist Church is an independent, fundamental, soul winning, separated, King James Bible believing Baptist church - and not ashamed to say so. Our mission is to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ, disciple believers with unfiltered Bible preaching, and build strong, lifelong friendships. We would love to get to know you personally at one of our services! Visit www.HoldFastBaptist.com for more information. #holdfastbaptist #ifb
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2021-06-25T04:54:44
2024-04-18T17:50:07
2,918
3kHY-oLiJCo
Amen. Joshua chapter 5. So we're finally across the Jordan River in Joshua chapter 5. I've preached on, it's a short chapter here, I've preached already on most of the, about the first half of this chapter. So the sermon tonight is going to focus heavily on the last part of Joshua chapter 5, but we can go ahead and just step through verse by verse, even at the beginning of Joshua chapter 5 in verse number 1. So they've crossed the Jordan, God parted the rivers and everybody walked through and then the priests came out and the rivers came back down. Of course they set up a monument of 12 stones in the midst, in the middle of the river and then they set up a monument of the 12 stones that each man of the tribes of Israel took out of the river and they set that up in Gilgoth. Now in Joshua chapter 5 in verse number 1 the Bible says now they're in the promised land and it came to pass on all the kings of the Amorites which are on the side of the Jordan westward and all the kings of the Canaanites which were by the sea heard that the Lord had dried up the waters of the Jordan before the children of Israel until we were passed over that their heart melted, melted neither was their spirit in them anymore because of the children of Israel. So basically what this is saying here that the westward people even beyond Jericho even all the way to the sea have now heard of this event and they are terrified of the children of Israel and we will get to the significance of that a little bit later but basically this is not something that has just gone unnoticed. Here the Israelites have come across the river and they're on their way to Jericho but everybody has heard of this at this point. Verse number 2 and the Lord said unto Joshua make these sharp knives and circumcise again the children of Israel the second time. Meaning this is what we've talked about last week that basically or the week before basically the children were not circumcised as their parents were as they came out of Egypt and this is when that happens. This is God setting apart his people God you know showing that separation of his people it's symbolic of that and then in the next few verses in Joshua made him sharp knives and circumcised the children of Israel at the hill of the foreskins and this is the cause why Joshua did circumcise all the people that came out of Egypt that were males all the men of war died in the wilderness by the way after they came out of Egypt so of course they're all dead the people that came out of Egypt now all the people that came out were circumcised but all the people that were born in the wilderness by the way as they came forth out of Egypt them they had not circumcised for the children of Israel walked 40 years in the wilderness to all the people that were men of war which came out of Egypt were consumed because they obeyed not the voice of the Lord this was with the spies that were afraid and had no faith in God. We've talked about this. And tell him the Lord swear that he would not show them the land which the Lord swear unto their fathers that he would give us a land that floweth with milk and honey. And their children who he raised up in their stead, them Joshua circumcised. So these are the children now, for they were uncircumcised and they had not circumcised them by the way in the wilderness, meaning verse number eight. And it came to pass when they had done circumcising all the people that they abode in their places in the camp till they were whole, till they were healed. And the Lord said unto Joshua, this day have I rolled away the reproach of Egypt from you where the name of the place is called Gilgal unto this day. And the children of Israel encamped in Gilgal and kept the Passover on the 14th day of the month that even in the plains of Jericho. So here they are on the side. They're right next to Jericho in this place called Gilgal. They've all been circumcised. Gilgal is actually kind of a, it holds a special place in the Bible. Just a couple of interesting things turned to 1 Samuel chapter 13. 1 Samuel chapter 13. This is where Saul actually, Saul was actually told to go to Gilgal by Samuel. Gilgal holds a special religious significance to the children of Israel. When Saul the first king of Israel was crowned king, Samuel told him to go to Gilgal and that's actually where Saul ended up losing the kingdom. So we saw last week that Saul actually, he didn't destroy the army that he was supposed to destroy. He kept the livestock and things like that. But Saul actually lost the kingdom before that. But the Bible says that in 1 Samuel chapter 13, that that's where Saul actually really first upset the Lord where the Lord said, you're not gonna be the king. Look at 1 Samuel chapter 13 and verse number eight. The Bible says, and he tarried seven days according to the set time that Samuel had appointed, but Samuel came not to Gilgal. So here they are, they're waiting at Gilgal for Samuel so he can come and do the sacrifice and the people were scattered from him. And Saul said, bring here a burnt offering to me and peace offerings. And he offered the burnt offering. So the priest didn't show up and Saul just took things into his own hands and he just did the sacrifice himself. And then Samuel said in verse 11, what has thou done when he showed up? Saul said, because I saw that the people were scattered from me and that thou cannot come within the days appointed and that the Philistines gathered themselves together at McMash. Therefore I said, the Philistines will come down upon me to Gilgal and I have not made supplication unto the Lord. I forced myself therefore and offered a burnt offering. Verse 13. And Samuel said to Saul, thou hast done foolishly. Thou hast not kept the commandment of the Lord, thy God, which he commanded thee. For now would the Lord have established thy kingdom upon Israel forever. But now thy kingdom shall not continue. And then he goes on to say that he's chosen a man after his own heart, which was David. So, I mean, Gilgal has some significance, that's all I'm saying here. And they actually, it ended up being a place where Saul ended up losing the kingdom of Israel as the first king. Turn and look at verse number 11 of Joshua chapter five. So they kept the Passover and then something significant happens when they keep the Passover as well. It says they did eat of the old corn of the land on the morrow after the Passover, unleavened cakes and parts corn in the self same day. Turn to Exodus chapter 13. So the significant thing here is, and if you're reading the Bible, you maybe have forgotten that at this point, God was still feeding them manna every single day. God was still providing for their daily sacrifice. God was still providing for their daily sustenance as he started doing in Exodus chapter 16. And this is the first time that they actually ate of the land that they were in. Look at Exodus 16 in verse 31. And the Bible says, And the house of Israel called the name thereof manna. And it was like coriander seed, white, and the taste of it was like wafers made with honey. So of course they were complaining that they were all going to die. It's like, what did you bring us out here just to die? And Moses said, This is the thing with the Lord command us. Fill an omer of it to be kept for your generations, your families, that they may see the bread whereeth I have fed you in the wilderness when I brought you forth from the land of Egypt. And Moses said, And Aaron take a pot and put an omer full of manna therein to lay it up before the Lord to be kept for your generations. As the Lord commanded Moses, so Aaron laid it up before the testimony to be kept. This is another monument, another memorial. And the children of Israel did eat manna 40 years until they came to the land inhabited, they did eat manna, until they came unto the borders of the land of Canaan. So this is the point right here where they stopped eating manna and they started eating of the fruit of the land. Look at verse number 12 of Joshua chapter 5. So now they're eating, God is not providing the manna, they're eating of the land, they're moving into the land. And the Bible says in verse 12, And the manna ceased on the mile after they had eaten of the old corn of the land. Neither had the children of Israel manna anymore, but they did eat of the fruit of the land of Canaan that year. So a lot of these things up to this point I've mentioned in Joshua chapter 4, you know, the circumcision, God separating his people, the memorials that they set up in Gilgal, the significance of Gilgal. God wanting his people. It was a symbol as people came into the land of all these heathen. Not only was there going to be battles, but there's danger that they would mix with the people of the land. And God is showing that he wants them to be separate. Now we get into a very significant event in Joshua chapter 5, which is going to be the main focus of the sermon this evening. Look at verse number 13. Now something happens, something significant happens to Joshua here. And look at what the Bible says in verse 13. And it came to pass when Joshua was by Jericho, that he lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold there stood a man over against him with his sword drawn in his hand, and Joshua went unto him and said unto him, art thou for us or for our adversaries? So here Joshua sees a man standing there with his sword and he says, are you with us or against us? Basically is what he says to this man. Verse 14, and he said, Nay, but as captain of the host of the Lord, am I now come? And Joshua fell on his face to the earth and did worship and said unto him, what saith my Lord unto his servant? So first of all, I'm not going to talk about this tonight, but did this guy really answer the question? He didn't really answer the question. You know, basically Joshua went up to this man and we're going to talk about for the next several minutes who this man was, and the Bible says that Joshua says, are you for us or for our adversaries? Are you for us or for our enemies? And he says, no. I'm the captain of the army of the Lord, basically is what he says. And I'm paraphrasing, but he says, I am the captain of the host, host meaning the army of the Lord, am I now come? So he basically says, you know, I mean, he says, listen, you don't understand. This is who I am. He doesn't say, I'm for you. He doesn't say, I'm against you. And Joshua fell on his face to the earth and did worship and said unto him, what saith my Lord unto his servant? So look at verse 15. And the captain of the Lord's host said unto Joshua, loose thy shoe from off thy foot for the place wherein thou standest is holy. And Joshua did so. So first of all, I want to look at who was this. And let me, before I get into this, I'm going to give you a case tonight for who this was. Now, one thing that I hope that you all understand about me and from the preaching over the last year and a half is I am very aware when the Bible says something and when it doesn't. And I am going to go and I'm going to show you a case for why I believe, why I believe who this is. But the Bible does not say, this is who this is. So that's very important that we realize that the Bible says specific things in specific places and sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes you kind of have to piece things together and I hope I can do that for you this evening. But let me just say that a lot of people have different opinions about this, what I'm about to tell you. But I think I'm pretty clear on it and I'm going to show you why. But first of all, let's look at who this was. Let's look at the case of who this man was standing in front of Joshua. First of all, turn to Exodus chapter 3. A similar event happened with Moses. A very similar event happened with Moses. If you know anything about God from reading the Bible, God likes to do things the same way again and again. You'll see God repeat patterns again and again in the Bible. It would make sense that something that happened with Moses would also happen with Joshua, the man that God chose to replace Moses. Moses wasn't chosen by the people. He was chosen by God to lead the people after Moses was gone. So something happens to Moses we're going to look at and it's a very similar event and I'll point out those similarities for you. Another reason, by the way, you need to have a King James Bible because these words in the Bible that happen are very specific and it's important that we don't change the words of the Bible or it could end up meaning something very different. Look at Exodus chapter 3 in verse number 1. Now Moses, this is before, this is Moses getting called by the burning bush if you remember that. Now Moses kept the flock of Jethro, his father-in-law, the priest of Midian and he led the flock to the backside of the desert and came to the mountain of God even to Horeb. So Moses had left. He wasn't in Egypt. He was just kind of living life with his father-in-law kind of being a shepherd, a goat herder or whatever. He kept her a sheep herder. And the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a flame out of fire out of the midst of a bush and he looked and behold the bush burned with fire and the bush was not consumed. So here he's seeing kind of a miracle. He sees this bush that's on fire but it's just a flame and it's not burning up the bush. He knows something significant has happened here and he says, and Moses said, I will now turn aside and see this great sight why the bush is not burned. He's like, I'm going to check this out a little bit further. And when the Lord saw that he turned aside to see God called unto him out of the midst of the bush. So God called unto him out of the midst of the bush and said, Moses, Moses. And he said, here I am. And he said, draw not nigh hither. Put off thy shoes from off thy feet for the place where on thou standeth is holy ground. Does that sound familiar? So basically the same thing that almost exactly the same thing that the man talking to Joshua said to Joshua was said to Moses by God himself. So God told Moses. He said, don't come any closer but take off your shoes because where you're standing is holy. And that's very similar to what the man standing in front of Joshua said to him. Moreover he said, I am the God of thy father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. And Moses hid his face for he was afraid to look upon God. So we see that God spoke out of the fire, out of the burning bush to Moses. And God, you know, turned to Exodus chapter 33. And Moses was afraid. Moses was afraid why? He was afraid because he knew this was God speaking to him and he was afraid to look at God. And it's interesting that God said, don't come any closer. You know, don't come any closer. And he was afraid to look at God because he knew that anybody that would look upon God would die. And look at Exodus chapter 33 in verse number 20. The same thing God says to Moses later on in his life. And he said, thou canst not see my face. This is God talking to Moses. For there shall no man see me and live. This is God the Father talking to Moses. And the Lord said, behold, there is a place by me and thou shalt stand upon a rock. And it shall come to pass while my glory passeth by that I will put thee in a cliff of the rock and I will cover thee with my hand while I pass by. And I will take away my hand and thou shall see my back parts, but my face shall not be seen. So this is God the Father talking to Moses saying, you can't look upon me or you'll die. Moses knew this back in Exodus chapter 3. This must have been something that was commonly known amongst people because Moses knew in Exodus chapter 3. He was worried about it then and he was right because God said, I'm going to walk by you and I'm going to allow you to see my back. He said. And he covered up Moses' face as he walked by and Moses saw the back of God but he couldn't see his face or he would die. So what do we know so far? We know that both the person in Exodus chapter 3 that talked to Moses out of the bush and the person that talked to Joshua in Joshua chapter 5 we know that they both said, take your shoes off because this is holy ground. And we know that the person that talked to Moses was God because the Bible tells us that that was God that spoke to him out of the fire, out of the burning bush. But we know that this could not be God the Father standing in front of Joshua. Why? Because no one can look at God the Father and live because you will die if you look at God the Father. So we know it wasn't God the Father. Look back at verse 14 of Joshua chapter 5. There's more evidence here. So this guy is God. I think we can come to that conclusion at this point that the pattern matches God. And he said in verse 14, he said, Nay, but as captain of the host of the Lord, am I now come? And Joshua fell on his face to the earth and did worship. So number one, there's more evidence that he is God because angels are not to be worshiped. And said unto him, what saith my Lord unto his servant? So first of all he called him Lord, capital L. But I mean just the fact that he did worship him and this man said I am captain of the host of the Lord. So we know that this guy is Deity. And we know that he's the captain of God's army and we know that he's not God the Father. Otherwise Joshua would be dead. But look, we'll talk about what he said here next week. But he just says I'm captain of the host of the Lord. So the question is, who is the captain of the host of the Lord? That's the question. Turn to Revelation chapter 19. Turn to Revelation chapter 19. Who is the captain of God's army? Is the question. His man is standing there. He is holding a sword. Joshua falls down to worship him. Falls down on his knees to worship him. And he says I'm captain of God's army. Look at Revelation chapter 19. And look at verse number 11. Revelation chapter 19 and verse number 11. This of course speaking about end times, the whole book of Revelation. And I saw heaven opened. And behold, a white horse. And he that sat upon him was called faithful and true. And in righteousness he doth judge and make war. You see that? He does what? He judges and he makes war. His eyes were as a flame of fire. And on his head were many crowns. And he had a name written that no man knew but he himself. And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood. And his name is called the word of God. Well we know who that is. And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean. And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword. That with it he should smite the nations and he shall rule them with a rod of iron and he treadeth the wine press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God. And he hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written King of Kings and Lord of Lords. Turn to Revelation chapter 17, just a couple of chapters back. So here we see this man, we know it's the word of God. We know who that is. But he's also called King of Kings and Lord of Lords. And he's the him that judges and makes war. Turn to Revelation 17, look at verse 14. Again, these shall make war with the Lamb and the Lamb shall overcome them for he is Lord of Lord and King of Kings. And they that are with him are called and chosen and faithful. Turn to 1 Timothy chapter 6. So we see that he is Lord of Lord, King of Kings. He's the Lamb, he's the word of God. 1 Timothy chapter 6, look at verse 15. 1 Timothy chapter 6 and verse number 15. And the Bible says which in his times he shall show who is the blessed and only potentate, the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords. Revelation chapter 1, verse number 14. Revelation chapter 1 and verse number 14. And again, speaking of Jesus Christ again in Revelation chapter 1 and verse number 14, the Bible says his head and his hairs were like wool and white as snow and his eyes were as a flame of fire. The same as in Revelation chapter 19. The point is that Jesus Christ is going to lead God's army in Revelation. This is who we are talking about here. His feet were like undefined brass as if they burned in a furnace and his voice as the sound of many waters. Now look at verse number 16 of Joshua chapter 5. Alright, verse 16 of Revelation chapter 1. And he had in his right hand seven stars and out of his mouth went a sharp two-edged sword. And his countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength. Joshua, I believe, it is pretty clear in the Bible was speaking to the Lord Jesus Christ. That is the captain of God's army. And that is who Joshua, this is an Old Testament with no appearance as there is others as well of Jesus Christ himself. Now look, why did God appear? Why did God appear to Joshua is the question. Well first of all, Joshua feared the Lord here. As soon as Joshua was standing in front of the Lord here he feared him. Everything that we see in Scripture about Jesus in his glorified state is a terrifying sight. Every single thing that you see about Jesus in Scripture in his glorified state after not in his state as a man on this earth is terrifying. So whatever this man looked like, and I'm not saying that this man, I don't know what he looked like, but whatever he looked like Joshua dropped to his knees. Whatever this man looked at. Look at Philippians chapter 2. And as a matter of fact just some more evidence here, some more evidence. Look at Philippians chapter 2. Philippians chapter 2. Here's some more evidence of who Joshua was talking to. Look at Philippians chapter 2 and look at verse number 5. The Bible says let this mind be in you which is also in Christ Jesus. Who being in the form of God thought it not robbery to be equal with God but made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant. This is Jesus Christ. This is the word becoming flesh. This was Jesus upon this earth and was made in the likeness of men. And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient unto death. Even the death of the cross wherefore God also mightily exalted him and given him a name which is above every name. That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow of all things in heaven, things in earth and things under the earth. So look, this is more evidence that this was Jesus Christ himself, is that Joshua, look was Joshua somebody that would be intimidated by, there's a reason we studied Joshua and the type of person he was. Do you think that this was just some big strong guy that Joshua would just be intimidated by some big strong guy with a sword? Joshua knew who this was and he hid his knees. And the Bible says in Philippians 2 that every knee shall bow to Jesus Christ. Look, even the most ardent atheist will bow to Jesus Christ. And look what the Bible says in verse number 10. It says every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in the earth. Every man on earth will bow to Jesus Christ. Every knee. Even the most, I mean look, even things under the earth, even the people in hell will bow to Jesus Christ. Look, every knee shall bow to Jesus Christ. Even the most radical scientist out there that you say that guy will never believe in Jesus. Even his knee will bow. Turn to Luke chapter 16. You say how is that possible? How could that happen? Turn to Luke chapter 16. I'll show you exactly how it's going to happen. Turn to Luke chapter 16. How in the world could even somebody who dies as an atheist goes to hell? How could they end up bowing before Jesus? Look at Luke chapter 16 in verse number 19. Look this idea, this person of Jesus that we see in the Bible is, I just want to get this across to you, every single time you read about Jesus in the Bible after he has left this earth is a very serious sight. He's leading an army. His eyes are flames of fire. His hair is white as wool. His vesture, his clothing is dipped in blood. I mean, that is a serious, serious situation. Now look, look at Luke chapter 16 in verse number 19. How in the world could every single knee bow? How could that be true in the Bible? Well, every word of the Bible is true. So I'll show you how that's going to happen. Here's verse 19. There was a certain rich man who was clothed in purple and fine linen and fared sumptuously every day. And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus which was laid at his gate full of sores. So we have a rich man and a poor man that is at the gate and he's sick and he's got sores. He's at the gate of this rich man. Verse 21. And desiring to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man's table moreover the dogs came and licked his sores. And it came to pass that the beggar died and was carried by the angels into Abraham's bosom. That's heaven. The rich man also died and was buried. And in hell he lift up his eyes being in torments and seeeth Abraham a far off and Lazarus in his bosom. So this rich man dies. This rich man in this story in the Bible of this rich man and this poor man this rich man dies and right away he wakes up in hell. Right away. He doesn't sleep for a year or a week or whatever or till the end of the world he right away lifts up his eyes and he's in torments in hell. And not only is he in hell but he's able to see heaven a far off. He's able to see heaven. Now guess who's in heaven? Guess who's in heaven? Jesus is in heaven. Okay now look. I don't know what you can see when you're in hell. I'm never going to know. But the point is this. Once you wake up no matter what you believed in this life if you didn't believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you die you are going to wake up in hell. You're going to wake up in hell. And wait at that moment you're going to know you were wrong. And then and then when the end times come and all the things in Revelation play out turn to Revelation chapter 20 and then we have the thousand year reign of Christ because Christ is going to rule and reign and we're going to rule and reign with him by the way on this earth. Revelation chapter 20 and look at verse number 11. After that happens you say after the end times after that thousand years happens this is what's going to take place. So think of somebody who died yesterday and wasn't saved and woke up in hell. They're going to be in hell all the way up to this point right here. Look at verse number 11. And I saw a great white throne and him that sat on it from whose face the earth and heaven fled away and there was found no place for them. And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works. Look, if you die unsaved if you die unsaved and you go to hell at some point you are going to be brought out of hell and you're going to be judged according to the works in your life. Look, I'm not going to be judged by my works. Thank God. If you're saved you're not going to be judged by your works. You're going to be rewarded by your works. And look if you have no works you're going to suffer loss but you're still saved. But you're going to be judged by your works. The Bible says in Revelation chapter 20. Look at verse number 13. And the sea gave up the dead which were in it and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them. This is the people coming out of hell. And they were judged every man according to their works. And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death and as soon as all those people are judged it's all thrown into the lake of fire. So look, imagine this picture. These people, these people have been in hell for a thousand years at least. If the millennial reign starts tomorrow which we know it's not going to these people will have been in hell at that point for a thousand years. Turn to John chapter 5. You say who's sitting on the throne? Turn to John chapter 5. Look at John chapter 5. They've been in hell for a thousand years and they get out. And now they're standing before the king, the ruler, the one who has the power to do whatever. And they know so. Look at John chapter 5 and verse number 22. For the father judges no man but have committed all judgment unto the son. Verse 27. Now verse 26. For as the father hath life in himself so hath he given to the son to hath life in himself and hath given him authority to execute judgment also because he is the son of man. So people will be brought out of hell momentarily to be judged by their works according to the books which is the Bible. They're not in the book of life. That book's not going to help them. They're going to be judged according to their works. Their works are going to be put up against the Bible itself against the law. They're going to stand before Jesus Christ and he's going to judge them. And you better believe after they've been in hell for a thousand years or more that they're going to bow down. They're going to be begging Jesus Christ. Every knee shall bow. Especially the ones that didn't believe them on this earth. Especially those knees. And look, here's the thing but at that point it will not matter. It doesn't say every knee shall bow and then everyone goes to heaven. It says every knee shall bow before Jesus just as Joshua did. So you say this is all very serious. I mean isn't this all very serious? I mean you say this is terrifying to think about this. We all know unsaved people. This is going to happen to them. It doesn't make me happy to say that. I mean I wish everybody would be saved. But I mean I'm glad I'm saved. I'm glad I'm covered in the blood of Christ. I mean this Jesus this judge of the universe is somebody you don't want to be on the wrong side of. But I want to tell you this evening as we look at who Jesus is and who was standing in front of Joshua that there's an agenda to change Jesus today. You think about this man that Joshua ran into. We know the kind of man that Joshua is. We see that Joshua falls on his face. But look, Joshua had a fear for the Lord. A genuine terrifying fear of God. Look, the men in the Bible the saved men in the Bible they were terrified of God. Turn to Psalm chapter 47. Turn to Psalm chapter 47. I mean you say, I think fear means respect. No, they were terrified of God. They were afraid of God. You should be afraid of God. You're like, but I'm saved. But you should fear the Lord. Saved men were terrified of God. In Psalm 47 verse 2 it says, for the Lord most high is terrible. He is a great king over all the earth. It doesn't mean terrible like bad. It means terrible like terrifying. That's what it means. It means terrifying. The Lord is terrifying. You want to be on the right side of the Lord. I mean that goes to why he didn't answer Joshua's question. Look, if you're on the right side of the Lord that's a great and wonderful thing. If you're not, it's terrible. Because the Lord is terrifying. But you know, here's the thing. This terrible fear of the Lord we see none of this today. Why is that? I mean, it didn't used to be like this. We see none of this today. Most of you in this room I think most all of you in this room are soul winners. Do you see fear of the Lord when you're out soul winning? Why are we not coming to the door of people's houses with a Bible in our hands saying would you like to know how to get to heaven and people not just dropping in front of us saying what must I do to be saved? Because this is a terrible situation that I'm in. But they don't because they have no fear of the Lord. But they should be asking that. They should be begging to know how to get out of this situation because they're on the wrong side of the Lord. The wrath of this terrible God is upon them. For some reason, lately I don't know between talking to the guys and talking to my kids and talking to my wife and my wife talking to the ladies of the church this idea of Sunday school has popped up like 17,000 times in the last five weeks. And you know what? Our children's church this idea has popped up and you know what? There is an agenda today, folks. There is an agenda to change Jesus. There is an agenda to cancel this fear of the Lord amongst the people. Amongst what people? All the people. Even the unsaved people of Jericho were afraid. They were afraid. Rahab said they just they faint because of you. They were afraid of the people and they were afraid of this God that it was with these people. They were terrified. They weren't saved. Look, Satan has an agenda today to take away this fear from the people and it's crept into churches. It's crept into churches. You know, we're like the only show in town that doesn't have Sunday school or children's church? It's kind of surprising for people to hear that. You know what I did? I actually looked up Sunday school lessons. I just looked up Sunday school lessons with Jesus. Look, I'll just what fear leads to salvation. Fear leads to salvation. It is a prerequisite. You can't take calculus until you know how to do algebra. You have to be really good at algebra before you can even start calculus. You have to take calculus one before you can take calculus two and two before three and three before four and all of this. Look, it's a prerequisite. You must be afraid of God before you can get saved. Every single saved person in this room had fear that they would go to hell. Had fear of the Lord. Now you asked me something. When you teach kids, and we talked about Jesus tonight, and you teach kids, kids, let's talk about Jesus. Go ahead and laugh because it's not Jesus. Kids, kids, let's talk about Jesus. I'm serious. These are like the first ones that popped up. You can do this all night long. Here's even a better one. Kids, remember when Jesus came into Jerusalem as a king and they were laying palm in front of him? I mean, are you kidding me? He's like sitting like side saddle, like a woman on a donkey that's like a third his size. I think it's making a joke of who Jesus is. I mean, what? I mean, do a bigger disservice to our children. I mean, just teach them Santa Claus. It's the same thing. Because that has nothing to do with who Jesus is. Nothing. It's turning the Bible into a cartoon. And they're like, they know what happens and everyone's like, I don't know why kids don't stay in church. It's because they realize they grow up and they're like, oh, remember when we used to go to that cartoon place and they taught us the cartoons. That's exactly what happens. I know people that that's happened to. That's why 80% of kids that grow up in the church don't end up staying in the church. Because they've been taught cartoon Jesus. You know what, when you grow up, you don't watch cartoons anymore. Even worldly kids. Turn to Proverbs chapter one. Fear leads to salvation. If you don't have it, you can't be saved. Turn to Proverbs chapter one. You say why? I'll show you why. Turn to Proverbs chapter one. Psalms and then the book of Proverbs. Psalms wait in the middle of your Bible and then the very next book over is Proverbs. Proverbs chapter one. Look at verse number seven. Verse number seven of Proverbs chapter one. The Bible says the fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge. But fools despise wisdom and destruction. So there's two things it says here. It says fear of the Lord is the beginning. Like knowledge can't start. There is no beginning to knowledge if you don't fear the Lord. You're not going to accept the gospel. You're not even going to start listening to the gospel unless you fear the Lord. I mean, why would you? It's not even logical. If you don't have any fear of the Lord, why would I have any interest in someone coming and talking to me about how to not be judged by this Lord and no fear in? It's logical. And then it says, look, if you don't have the fear of the Lord you're not going to want knowledge and by the way, fools despise wisdom and instruction. So if you don't have fear of the Lord, you're a fool. But here's the thing. This stuff, these cartoons what it is, it's brilliant. It's brilliant. It's a preemptive attack on the gospel is what it is. That's what Sunday school is. It's a preemptive attack on the gospel. What's dumbed down the Bible? What's made the Bible a joke? What's made the Bible a joke to kids so they grow up as an adult and they think back and look, they think back as adults on those lessons they were taught as children. I do that. You're looking at somebody who went to Sunday school. His whole life. And look, I was somebody who when I was a teenager was sitting there thinking like, it doesn't seem like this is a cartoon to me. I had a New King James Bible and I read that New King James Bible and I read those stories in that New King James Bible and even in that New King James Bible I sat there and I read those stories and I'm like it doesn't seem like this is a precious moments cartoon character right here. It seems more serious than what's happening. You know what I mean? How can you miss that if you're wanting to know what the truth is? Look, you will have no you will not fear the Lord. You will have no interest in wisdom and instruction and look and there you have no chance at salvation. There can be no salvation without the fear of the word. Turn to Proverbs chapter 14. Look, isn't that what we see today? Isn't that why we go to the door and these people we see these people with this attitude like you're not teaching me anything buddy. Don't we see that? Don't we see that especially people that go to churches? They say, no, no, no. I mean that is unsaved as somebody who's never been in a church before. More unsaved because they got all this pride and they sit there and they have this attitude you're not teaching me anything buddy. Look at Proverbs 14 verse 27. You say, I don't know. Are you really saying that you have to have the fear of the Lord to be saved? Yes. That's exactly what I'm saying. Look at Proverbs 14 27. The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life to depart from the snares of death. Proverbs 20 or Psalm 25 14. I'll just read it for you. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will show them his covenant. Look, the fear of the Lord is the fountain of life because it leads you to the gospel and look everyone who has gotten saved has believed the gospel had this and it's Satan's agenda to take it away from people before it gets to this point where somebody they want that fear of the Lord taken away it's a preemptive attack before we even get to the door. I mean it's smart, it's a smart game he's playing. Look, it's through Sunday school, it's through this liberal Christianity not only do they teach it in Sunday school, now they're teaching this joke Jesus to the adults too and the adults are like oh and then the sermons and the preaching it matches cartoon Jesus they're creating a fake God a cartoon God, that's what they're doing. It's why they also have false Gospels because I mean they don't need it anyway none of the people would believe it in the first place because you believe a cartoon God and you have no fear of the Lord you're not going to believe the gospel look it's sending people to hell it's very serious don't let people tell you oh why don't you have Sunday school sending people to hell that's why think of science just explaining away God all these people that spend their whole life just explaining away God you think there's fear of God there I mean what in the world you sit here and you listen to these scientists and you listen to these super smart people amongst us and I hear them talking I'm afraid for them I mean you hear them say things and I'm afraid for them if you don't believe in God why would you be insulting to God why would you be insulting to something you don't believe in but they're just insulting to God they're insulting to God's people look here's Stephen Hawking's final words he wrote a book that was published after his death by his family you want me to define irony for you I'll do it here in a second but look here's his final words via a book that was published after his death on this earth there is no God no one directs the universe that was the conclusion of celebrated physicist Stephen Hawking whose final book was published after his death and it was completed after his family and it presents answers to the questions that Hawking said he received most during his time on earth and his biggest one was there is no God no one directs the universe now the irony is that at the publishing of those words he believed in Jesus when that book was published Stephen Hawking believed in Jesus and he believed in Jesus he believes in Jesus now he's already changed his mind turn to Psalm chapter 147 he never even knew you know what he never even knew I mean I listen to videos of him giving speeches and lectures and I'm just shocked that people can listen to this he didn't even know how many stars were in the galaxy you say well who would know that well I mean he claimed to be so smart he estimated the stars in the galaxy were between 1 billion and 300 billion well you know what sign me up for that job well I can miss by 299 billion and people still worship me and come speak for them he had no clue how many stars were in the galaxy he had no clue about what created the galaxy all he had was stupid theories that I mean it shocks me that a 5 year old will listen to to be honest look at Psalm chapter 147 here's the God that maybe he should have listened to the God that he insulted so much because God seems to know look at Psalm 147 in verse number 4 it says he telleth the number of the stars the Bible says that God knows how many stars there are he was trying to Stephen Hawking was trying to estimate the number of stars in one galaxy in our galaxy there's nobody knows how many galaxies are out there they can't even tell you how many galaxies are out there that contain billions or whatever however many million stars but God knows it says he telleth the number of the stars and he calleth them all by their names he not only knows how many there are he named them all but there is no God no one directs the universe look every knee shall bow Joshua stood before Jesus Christ and he bowed his knee and he bowed down to Jesus and even the most ardent atheist even the most wicked reprobate will do the same at some point but look the devil has an agenda today the devil knows this and the devil wants, Satan wants as many people as possible to bow that knee at that great white throne he knows exactly what's going to happen he's trying to drag as many people as he can with him because he's going to the same place and he knows it every knee will bow, let's bow our heads and have a word of prayer
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kHY-oLiJCo", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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You Ready To Play Ball Cubs Cause The Brew Crew Is Ready To Play Ball
You Ready To Play Ball Cubs Cause The Brew Crew Is Ready To Play Ball #ReadyToPlayBall #PlayBall #BrewItUp
null
2021-08-11T12:53:07
2024-04-23T01:16:14
11
3KJXDuv_aOw
You ready to play ball Cubs? Cause the Brew Crews ready to play ball and we're ready to beat you. Go Brew Crew Go! Let's get the win against the Cubs. Go Brews!
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KJXDuv_aOw", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCzpUG6o53-cN3xOjQO3c29Q
JMU CS 101: Data Structures
Python lists, stacks, queues, tuples, and aggregates
null
2014-11-03T18:35:51
2024-02-05T08:19:47
867
3kWoxaoHA7c
Good morning and welcome to James Madison University in the beautiful fall time of year when the leaves are changing color and the sunrises are getting better. This week we're going to take a look at data structures. Now there's a few things that you should notice as you look through the material in this chapter and also do the exercises in the lab. One is that humans like to think of data organized in many different ways. We think of things like people lining up in a queue. We think of stacking up data in a pile. We think about trees and we think about other structures that you'll learn about in CS 240. But the computer only thinks about data in one way. You give me a memory address, I'll give you the value. So let's learn how to build abstract tools that make use of this computer's way of thinking about data so that we can actually support a human being's way of thinking about the data. A couple patterns you'll notice is that any data structure has two flavors. It can be a contiguous set of data or it can be a linked structure. The book also uses the term static and dynamic to describe these two concepts. I'd also like to introduce you to how Python models data using built-in structures like lists and tuples and what the difference are between those two data types. So without further ado, let's get started. Let's say I'd like to have a list of lucky numbers. 7, 3, 25, 1, and 15. Now as we discussed in class, the way to make a list in Python is using brackets and you can put any elements between the brackets separated by commas. Now today I'm running Python in a special environment that visualizes each line of code as I type it. So on the right I have a web browser that's using the modules that you can download from onlinepythontutor.com and on the left I have a Python terminal where I type my commands. Now here's this list. Notice the value of the variable lucky. The value of that variable is not a list but rather a pointer to a list somewhere else in memory. So as we'll talk about later this week, these object types have a level of indirection rather than being stored directly at the location of this variable. I'm storing a location of somewhere else in memory and then these values are all stored contiguously in those memory slots. Now speaking of memory slots, notice what happens when I print lucky sub 1. It's actually not the first item in the list but the second because the indexes start from 0 to 4. Likewise if I try to print the fifth item I'll get an error because 5 is out of this range of indices 0 through 4. Now you can change items in the list using assignment. So let's say I'm going to change the second value which is actually the third value to the message high. Now we'll see in the second or rather the third slot of the list the value high. You can also add elements to the list using the append method. So let me type lucky.append and I'll append. Let's just append the integer 99. Now when I run that I have to scroll over here to actually see that element off the edge given the small resolution of my video recording here. Now we talked about stacks today and in Python you can implement stacks using lists and you can use the append method to push items on the stack and the pop method to get an item off the top of the stack. So for example I could say the top item is lucky.pop. Now when I push enter you'll see top now has the value 99 stored in the memory location for top and that 99 is no longer in the list. In fact let me run that exact same command again. You'll see top is now 15, top is 1, top is high, top is 3. So the interesting thing is here you have a value that's stored directly in memory and here you have a pointer to something else stored in memory. Let me pop it one more time so you can see that I have this empty list. So that's actually kind of boring. Let me append some more things to this list. Let's append the num, let's see here. Now let's do numbers 1.5, oops I did top.append. You can't append anything to an integer. Let me say lucky instead. Lucky.append 1.5, lucky.append, negative 3, lucky.append. What's another good number? How about 101? And lucky.append 74. All right so there's some numbers. Let me show you some more things you can do with lists. I can sort them if I just call the sort function. Now watch what happens to these numbers when I push enter. You'll notice that I actually sorted the list in place. In other words I changed all the numbers in the same memory location where that list existed but now they're in numerical order. Now you can do the opposite of sorting if you say lucky.reverse. Now they're in reverse numerical order. So these are some of the things that you can do with lists. You can index them using brackets. So if I want the third item in the lucky list I say lucky bracket 2 bracket and the way we pronounce this is sub just like a subscript in mathematics. You can create new lists using assignments and you can use the append and the pop function to add and remove items from the end of a list if you want to treat it like a stack. Oh what if you want to treat it like a queue? That would be lucky.insert. Clear the screen so it's a little bit easier to follow what I'm doing now. So like I was saying if you want to use this as a queue you could use the insert function and the first argument you have to give is where do you want to insert it. So I want to insert at the front of the list I give it element zero and if I want to insert the value one two three when I push enter you'll see one two three is here at the front. Now in general you could insert these wherever you want like if I want to insert it item two four five six you'll notice here on the right item two is now four five six everything else in the list gets shifted over. So in summary if you'd like to use a list as a queue you always insert it zero let's give it the value five and if you want to get the item off the end you say lucky.pop. So in other words the pop function can be used to get an item off a stack or off a queue depending on the context of how you write your code but list is a generic structure that will implement either abstract concept. There's another data structure that you will encounter a lot if you continue to learn Python programming and that is called a tuple. So in this example I want to show you what how a list is different from a tuple and what tuples are useful for. Let me start out by making an employee structure and I'm going to use the list that we did before. Let's say that this employee's name is Alex and Alex is making seven dollars and eighty one cents per hour at this job and so what you'll see on the right is we have a list with these two elements in the list. Now a tuple is exactly the same as a list in terms of syntax but you use parentheses instead of brackets. Now watch what happens over here on the left as I change this to a tuple sorry meant to say the right. A tuple is displayed here for the data type and notice how this is drawn as a rectangle. It's closed on all four sides. So again let me change it back to a list. You'll see how the list is open and I change it back to a tuple and now it's closed. The basic idea is that lists are dynamic immutable. Now we learn about dynamic and static in the book. Dynamic means it can grow. Static means that it's a fixed size. It's not going to change shape. In addition in Python it takes it one step further. List you can change the elements tuples you cannot. Let me show you an example of that. If we want to change this employee's salary for example let me just pull this up. I can say let's see here the first element. If I print that out it's 781 but if I try to change this now to one let's say give them a raise 7, 8, 12 it's going to say sorry tuples do not support item assignment. Once you create a tuple of something you can't change it. Now I could just make a new tuple. I could say alex equals 899 for example and that's just fine. But tuples are immutable and we'll see here in a little bit why that's important. Let me go ahead and create a couple more example tuples like Barb. She's making $9.12 and we'll create a third employee Cody and he's making $7.25 which I guess is minimum wage. And so you'll notice we've got all three of these tuples sitting out here in memory and just like lists tuples are reference types so we have restoring the address of the tuple in the variable that refers to it. So for example if I say x equals m for 2 I basically have two variables that are pointing to the same item in memory. So that's why x sub 0 is the same as employee 2 sub 0 oops. So we've got Barb for x sub 0 and Barb for employee 2 sub 0. Now the interesting thing is when you start to combine these into lists let's say I want to create a company and a company is a list of all my employees and now what we have is this little bit of spaghetti on the right. Company is a list and so I have a pointer to where that list is stored in memory and each element in this list is a tuple which is already stored in memory somewhere else. So these arrows end up pointing to the same place in memory where those tuples exist. I could say print company sub 2 which should be employee 3 codey 725 is part of the output and because company is a list I could change this I could say company sub 2 equals company sub 1 and now what I have is two arrows pointing to the same place in the company. So if I were to print out the entire company I've got Alex Barb and Barb all part of that list. So notice how the syntax is nested here. We've got a bracket for the list and then each tuple in the list is in parentheses and you can compose lists and tuples or lists of lists to get different types of structures. In fact let's take a look at a two-dimensional array or a 2D list or some people call these a matrix in the next segment. So on page 348 it starts to talk about homogeneous arrays and how to look at a two-dimensional array in row major order. Let's do one of those real quick. Let's say I want to have a list of numbers and to make it two-dimensional I actually need a list of lists. So I'm going to start typing a list on that line and I'm going to type one row at a time now. Let's say I have 1, 2, 3 on that row and then I have 4, 5, 6 on that row and 7, 8 and 9. Now each one of these rows is a list and at the end of this list of lists, see I have an open bracket here I'm going to need to type one more bracket there and now look what I've done. When you look at this picture on the right this two-dimensional structure that looks like a tic-tac-toe grid or spreadsheet or something is actually a list of lists. So the first list is 1, 2, 3, the second list is 4, 5, 6 and the third list is 7, 8 and 9. This is using two levels of indirection. The address that's stored in nums which is my variable is a pointer to the first list and that list is actually a list of pointers to other lists and that's actually what we see here on the left. Each one of these lists has to be stored in a separate place of memory because of the way that this language is designed. Now if I actually want to print those things out using row major order let's say I go to the first row and I go to the second column. Now of course the first row is the second row in real life and the second column is the third value 6. So if I go ahead and print, sorry, if I want to print numbers at that row in that column that's what actually gives me the value 6. Now notice I'm using the brackets twice here. The first one is for the row and the second one is for the column. So that's how two-dimensional arrays work in Python and it doesn't have to deal with the address polynomial like in other languages. I'm using that term on page 350 because it just knows to go to this pointer and then go to the other pointer. When you go on to study data structures later in the curriculum you'll learn how to build these abstract tools and that's really the interesting part of data structures is learning how to implement classes that support all of these abstract operations that we've seen visualized today. I think you'll agree that pointers are the meat of all of this. Being able to use a pointer effectively is what allows us to abstract away the details of the machine array representation and be able to provide things like oh this is my left child and this is my right child when thinking about a tree. So hopefully you've learned a little bit today about data structures both theoretically and also practically how to use them in the Python language and also you've grown a little bit of appreciation for why pointers are so important in computing. With that hopefully you'll spend some time on PythonTutor and tomorrow's lab will even be more engaging. We'll see you then.
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Learning life lessons on horseback
At a camp called Lead Changes, a stable of horses and an inspiring horseman empower tweens and teens. Read more from Zoetis, Equine Division: https://wapo.st/3rvLNlk -- To learn more about WP Creative Group, visit: https://www.washingtonpost.com/creativegroup/archive/ View our Media Kit here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/solutions/ Follow us: Facebook: https://facebook.com/wpcreativegroup Twitter: https://twitter.com/wpcreativegroup Instagram: https://instagram.com/wpcreativegroup LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/wpcreativegroup
null
2023-09-29T14:20:11
2024-02-05T08:28:01
268
3kpSlBFo6eM
A really cool thing happens when you have a connection with your horse. You will breathe and sink and your horse can actually hear your heartbeat. Feeling is everything. A horse feels you, a horse reads you without saying a word. Hello, I'm Chris Cox and I'm a professional horseman and educator and the founder of Lead Changes. When I was 18 months old, my dad packed us up and moved to Australia and settled on an island. We didn't have any vehicles on the ranch, we had one tractor and that was it. So horses were a form of transportation, but also, you know, they were my friends. The relationships that I built those horses and the connection that changed my life. Now with Lead Changes, I want to give back. Lead Changes is a camp for youth from 1117. We bring them to the mountains of Wyoming and give them lots of lessons through the horse. They go clean pens, they feed their horses, they water their horses. Learning how to care for an animal, we teach them work ethic, respect, and team building with that process. People should be around the horses because they make you feel so special and they'll just make you feel like you. People in my school asked me, so what are you doing this summer? I'm like, I'm going out to my camp, do you want to come? I started riding and being around horses when I was two. Camp has helped me build myself confidence by riding because now I know what I'm doing. I know how to take care of a horse properly. Just in one year she was here last year, just the progression and the changes that I've seen, unbelievable. She's coming in smiling, coming in confident. And this year I matched her up with a horse that had more forward motion because she was riding better. Her personality was engaging. She's developed a connection to that mare and it's a perfect fit. Did you have a horse for the day? I have a picture of my dad in the honor horse when I was really little to come here knowing that he knows that I love horses and then being on a horse with him for the first time that made it real special. So I lost my dad when I was little. The first year I was here, Chris said that if we don't have a dad he could be our dad and I thought that was really cool because nobody's ever said that. You hold this rain and keep her nose this way. Phoenix was really looking for somebody to help her. I want to give back to children that haven't had the raising, the environment, the circumstances that I had. Horses fill that gap and they let the walls down on these young people and they allow you through the horse to connect to them. Horses give these children an understanding of confidence, leadership, and it empowers them. When you're riding you can just feel everything in their body and you can feel every single movement, every single breath and when you feel that you feel like you're connected in a way. Our relationship is built with the horse and the human. It's about two heartbeats coming together as one. Human and that horse are so in sync and so rhythmic. Freedom and the peace that I feel about the horse is second to none.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kpSlBFo6eM", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCWKlx05vtSnpdSa6q47H9ng
RAVENS VS VIKINGS WEEK 9 LIVE STREAM
RAVENS VS VIKINGS WEEK 9 LIVE STREAM TKIC Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/ingravenvids 🤔Thinking of other ways to support the channel❓ Here are a few: 💲PayPal: paypal.me/IngravenVids 💲Cash App: $Ingravenvids 💲Venmo: Ingravenvids 💻Business Email: ingravenvids@gmail.com 💻Questions From Subs Email: Teamkeepitclean@gmail.com 📬Want to send us something?: Ingravenvids PO Box 971236 Boca Raton,FL 33497-1236 🎙New TKIC Podcast episodes every Wednesday : https://www.youtube.com/c/TeamKeepItCleanPodcast/videos 📱Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook: @Ingravenvids #Ravens #Vikings #BALvsMIN
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2021-11-07T21:56:40
2024-02-07T17:11:35
13,339
3Kp1gQvQS20
Man, so YouTube team keep it clean. What's going on? It's engraving it with another video and we have it feel like it's been a super, super, super long time since we had one of these live streams during the game. It's been a super long time, man. I feel like the Ravens haven't played in forever. In fact, today, for me earlier today, not until like maybe 30 minutes, an hour ago, it ain't even feel like it was a game day, man. It really didn't. But no Harrison Smith is big. That's really big. We appreciate all y'all coming through. Appreciate all y'all stopping by to watch the game with us. This should be a real fun one. Vikings, I feel like they are sneaky good team, man. They are sneaky good team. And of course, Ravens got to be careful for Dalvin Cook. We know Brandon Williams is out today. Even though he hasn't been having his best season, Brandon Williams being out is still big for the run game because his numbers, like defensive tackles, especially a run stuff and defensive tackle, they're not going to get all these crazy numbers, anything like that. They're not going to have all these sexy stats and whatnot. So you don't really get to see what they do or how they impact the game based off of numbers. But just his presence, the presence alone that he takes on blockers, he takes on the offensive linemen and he just consumes them. Hopefully that's not missed too bad today and Dalvin Cook doesn't go off. But that is one player that I'm definitely worried about in this game. And then also the two receivers, Justin Jefferson and Adam Thielen. I tweeted it earlier today. I do think both Bateman and Hollywood are going to go off today. But also I think Justin Jefferson, I think he's going to get into the end zone at least once. I think we're going to be definitely seeing a gritty today. When I tweeted that earlier, somebody was like, oh, we're going to be seeing a gritty today. Well, I guess Hollywood going to be doing it. Well, that'd be nice. But I do think that Justin Jefferson, I think he's going to get his man. I don't think he goes over a hundred, but I think he's going to get his and end up getting, like I said, at least one touchdown. But here we go. First game in two weeks, Bateman and Hollywood, Bateman and Brown on the outside man. And Lamar, he said, you know what? I'm starting off this game, carrying a ball. He said, I'm trying to show y'all that my back is straight, that I'm feeling good. And let's go. But I appreciate y'all coming through me. Appreciate it. This is a, this is a very, this is a big game. And again, like every game for the Ravens this year, it's, it's like a big game because they all count so much. And they all just, especially with the AFC being so close with there being no teams that's really separating themselves. Every game just, it means that much more. And it weighs that much heavier in Ravens. They right there close to the top of the, of the conference. Who got the best record? Is it the Titans that got the best record? I think that boy Bateman, every catch that he got this year has gone for a first down every single one. But again, I do think he has his first hundred yard game. I think Hollywood, he has a hundred yard game too. Now that'd be nice if we could get like, obviously Andrew's too, but if we can get a hundred y'all Russia, or if we can just get like a consistent Russia, if they could actually, something that I talked about in the preview was that I hope that they would actually have a, have a consistent guy that they go to on the ground. But we'll see. We're going to see. They already took out Levy. I mean Devontae Freeman, they brought in Levy on bail. Who they motioned? Josh Oliver. Oh, oh, they went five wide with, with Ricard, with Oliver, with Bale. I don't, I don't, I didn't like that. I didn't like that. Appreciate that QC. Let's get a good healthy game with three and three all time. Oh, really? I ain't know that. I don't, I don't like, I didn't, I didn't like that, that call. It was, I, I hated that. I didn't like that at all. Bad throw by Lamar. I, I, man, I, I hated that play call just now. I don't like that at all. Um, because you, you come out in a run heavy formation, but then you send out, you go five wide, but it's, it's Levy on bail, Patrick Ricard, and Josh Oliver and, and, and okay, they go Lamar doing this thing. We know about you Lamar, but I, yeah, that, that, that play call bothered me, but it is what it is. Lamar just picked up, what he picked up like four, five yards. So now it's third down and kind of short. Now with the Vikings, they got a lot of guys out, a lot of key guys out, Michael Pierce out, uh, the Neil Hunter out for the year. I really thought Michael Pierce was playing this game too, but the Neil Hunter out for the year, Harrison Smith out. Um, see, they even got Harrison Smith in the graphic saying that he's playing, but he's not playing unless that's all the guys that are out. It can't be. So yeah, man, this, oh my gosh, Lamar, that's on you. That's on you. Oh, it's starting. You go for that. Go for that. Go for that. Y'all need to score. Y'all need to score. Go for that. They had Devin Duvenay in the backfield. I like that because we've been talking about that a little bit on here. It was a question from subscriber, like a month and change ago. Should the Ravens put Devin Duvenay at running back? And initially some people thought it was crazy. Like, no, why would they do this? Wow. But it could actually pay dividends, man. It really could. All right. We, we know you're throwing here. We know either they're going to throw a Lamar gun take off. We know that running back. Is that tight sound? Williams, we know they're not giving him the ball on the fourth and two. So that's out of the question. So who's the ball going to go to? Oh, gosh, terrible. What? Man. All right. See, uh-uh. I don't, what was that? Why would know? This play calling, man. This is the first time that with Greg Roman, I'm like, I'm very frustrated early on. The Ravens get, the Ravens get, did they get Okidok? I mean, did the Vikings get Okidok? Let's, let's see if this was a legitimate call. Greg Roman got saved on that drive, man. So he pitched it. What's the call? Oh, horse collar. Okay, it's horse collar. That's, I, I hate the call. I hate the call, but that's what they, that's a, that's a horse collar. I do not like the call. That, that Ravens, they, yeah, they're very fortunate for that one. Terrible play call by them though. Let's, let's tighten up the play calling, Greg. Let's tighten up the play calling. Let's, let's, let's simplify that a bit. We ain't, we, we're doing too much, man. They, it's too cute, man. Too cute. It's getting too cute. I, I'm not, that, that the ref saved the Ravens on that drive, on this drive by me. Too cute. So, no, man. Too cute. That's, that's a terrible call. Straight up. Terrible call. Yeah, yeah, that. Anyway, I mean, I, I ain't mad, but it's Ravens. It shouldn't have even come down to that, in my opinion. Okay, Devonte. There you go. Good stuff. Good stuff. You say, okay, Lamar, Viking struggle against mobile QBs. Okay, well, that's a good thing. That's a good thing. That's a really good thing. So, Lamar gotta tighten up. Hey, Paul, Paul, I don't know if you're watching, but I appreciate you, man. Thank you, man. Appreciate it, Paul. Just gonna have to have Lamar run the whole game. Hey, might as well, right? Might as well. Oh, that's the first down too. So, it's, it's first down. Cool. Me too. One of my boys sent me a message. He said that he said the penalty was a good penalty. I said, no, it wasn't. It really wasn't. It wasn't. All right. Oh boy. I see y'all, y'all done ruined it for me, but I guess let, let, let's see what's coming. Y'all telling me Mark Andrews getting ready to drop it. Okay. You know the games where he drops? He makes up for it. Oh my goodness. This is gonna be sad. Can we see the replay from a different angle? Good job by Kendricks, but was it just a worse job by Andrews? Lamar put it on the money. Lamar put it on the money. Oh. Oh, he put it on the money for you, man. That's oh gosh, man. That's frustrating, man. He put it on the money for you, man. He put it on the the money and he was, he was off with a, he was off with a pass that he threw earlier for Hollywood, but that's on the money, man. You, Mark Andrews gonna make up for it, but still, man. You, you, you, you gotta, you gotta catch those, man. You got to catch those, man. You got to catch those. Oh gosh, man. Third and seven. Third and seven. Third and seven. All right. What y'all about to do? They brought Bateman back out. They got Andrews out there. I'm sure Hollywood, okay. The Hollywood's out there duviné. All right. Let's see. All right. He motion Bateman to the left. So, okay. And he just motioned Devante Freeman out too. Oh gosh. Lamar sailed it. He sailed it. This, this has been like a terrible drive and yeah, they about to kick, they about to kick three here and hopefully the day he makes it, but terrible drive. Oh, that's why he sailed it a little bit because he was trying to get it over. Uh, is that Anthony ball? He was trying to get it over 55, but under Xavier Rhodes, but he just, he sailed it a little too much. So, I, I see what he was doing. I see what he was doing. Still, it was not, it, it, it was a bad throw. He sailed it a little too much. So, that's, that's on Lamar right there. Even though Lamar threw a touchdown earlier. Yeah, you right. I'll be three years better than the turnover, but still, um, they should have had, well, actually, they shouldn't have had nothing because that horse collar, that was not a good call at all. They shouldn't have had anything. I mean, the, the play call was bad enough that the, the, the option, the option play, I, I didn't like that play call at all and early I, y'all, y'all know I didn't like that five wide when it had LaVion, Bill go out and Patrick record like, what's the point in even going five wide? If you got LaVion, Bill, Patrick record and Josh, Oliver, and I ain't like that, man. All right, D'Shaun, yeah, they rusty, they rusty, they, they, they, they just got to, they got to bounce back, man. This is why a lot of people don't want them to get the number one seats. They don't want them to have that bio-heek and they don't want them to do this. Go, go, Messiah. The slow start again. Now, um, I will, I will take this slow start getting three over slow start pun even though they shouldn't have gotten anything on this drive because they didn't deserve anything, but they got it. It was a call that bounced to Raven's way, a bad horse collar call, but they, they got three. So they took advantage of that bad call and they should have got seven because again, Mark Andrew, Lamont put it on there for you. He put it there for you, but yeah, man. So it, it, it was, it was better than nothing. So it wasn't all bad, but it was pretty bad because it should have been nothing. But anyway, it is what it is. Shake off the rust fellas. Yes, let's go defense. Yes, Bateman was really open. Oh, he was. Oh man, I ain't even see mega tech. So y'all need to stop complaining. I think a lot of people get, a lot of people get it twisted like Mac attack, my guy Mac attack right here. He said, y'all need to stop complaining. A lot of people get it twisted when you're being honest about the team and they think it's complaining. It's not, there's a big difference. And I, I think you're failing to realize that there's a big difference between complaining and, and actually being honest about the team. That's honesty. This is not complaining. It, it, it, that they didn't deserve any points on that drive. They didn't, they, they got fortunate from a terrible penalty. They, they shouldn't have got that. Like, and think about it. If it was reversed, if it was the Vikings that got that call, we would have all been furious. Like, man, what's, what's that? What's that? So, yeah, no, it's, it's not complaining at all. It's just being real about the team and being real about the game. Yes, that's true, Abbey. Moab dropped the touchdown and Lamar, excuse me, he let that last one sail. So that was on both of them, both of them. They, they gonna make up for it now. They gonna, they gonna make up for it now. Knowing the refs, that's, he said, knowing the refs, that call gonna hurt us. Watch. Oh, you think the refs gonna do a make up, a make up call? What's up? Be more grip. What's going on, my friend? How you doing? Man, that was great. Cosy. I loved it. I loved it. I loved it. OMG, it's the game, bro. Shut up. I don't know if Lamont, I don't know if you're talking to me. I don't know if you're talking to somebody else. So, I'll give you a little break though so you can take some time to cool off. But I think that was directed at me. You know what? Let me just give you a permanent break so you ain't even got to worry about it. You have a good day, Lamont. Be easy, my friend. Been a long two weeks. Yes, great. If it has been, it has been. All right. Yeah, defense got to step up now, man. You missed the first drive of the game? It wasn't pretty. It wasn't pretty. But it's all good, man. It's all good, man. Hey, appreciate you, Daryl. Appreciate it. Are we good, Mary Kay? We're good, man. We're good. All right. It's not always complaining because we know it can be so much better. Yeah, that's it. All right. Here we go. Game back on for me. I know y'all done seen it already. Oh, is that Justin Jeff... Oh, my goodness. Okay. All right, that little LSU. Patrick Queen, Justin Jefferson. Little LSU connection. You know, they friends, you know, they like, oh man, we don't want to see no gritties though. I told you, we probably gonna see one though. But, longest Ravens wins, man. Longest Ravens end up being the ones that do the gritty in the end. All that matters. Wow, he only through two interceptions? Ooh, and 14 touchdowns. Oh, man, look at Kirk Cousins. And their record, you, by that record, you would never know. If I saw that, if I just saw his stat, he threw 14 touchdowns and only two interceptions, I would think they, okay, maybe like four and two. That's who I was scared of, that man right there, Dalvin Cook. He ran right through the middle. He said, oh, no Brandon Williams, no problem. We out. Dalvin Cook, right up the middle. Right up the middle. What's up, Al? Appreciate you, man. Oh, what a beautiful play design. Look at Justin Houston. They know what to do. Oh gosh, man. These Vikings, I tell you, they are a sneaky good team, man. Sneaky good. Oh, dolphins playing the Texans? Oh, man, what a game. Two one and seven teams battling each other. They might end up with a tie. They might end up with a tie. Oh, that pressure. It's a tackle. Come on, Deshaun. Oh, okay. He got him. He got him. That pressure almost got the Kirk Cousins? Almost. Almost. Almost. Almost. Dare Shaw. I heard that left tackle was doing really, really, really, really good. Tyler Conklin. So, some people told me about their tight end. They said, I don't know anything about Vikings tight end at all, but people been telling me he been doing real good. So, I don't know when we're going to see. Hopefully, he don't do good this game. Look at Anthony Avery. Oh, touch him. Touch him. Touch him. Oh, thank you. I'm glad Ravens actually made that tackle, man, because he wasn't down. That's Madison. Yeah, that's Madison. He wasn't down. That was scary. I was thinking he was about to get up and just break one. Oh, maybe he would have been down. Did he get a touch? I don't know if he got touch. Either way, okay, the challenger is hardball challenger. He must have challenged. That's a good challenge if he challenges that. If he saw somebody touch them or if his boys up in the booth, they said, hey, he got touched. Okay, he is challenged. It's not a bad challenge. Not a bad challenge. If he got touched because on that initial contact, I couldn't tell from the angle. So, right now, it's not looking like the worst. Let's see. Let's see. Let's see. They shown a replay now. I can't see from that angle still. I can't see. If nobody, if no Ravens, I mean, it's a good challenge. It's not a bad challenge. Game of inches, it is. He said, you do not need to challenge that. It's from the angle that I saw. It's not the worst challenge. It ain't a bad challenge. But I wish I could have saw a different angle. So, now it's all about the angles. This is what hardball was time. Hey, he trying to get them yards back, man. He trying to get them, what was it? Two extra yards after that guy getting two, three extra yards? So, hey, we're gonna see, man. Like I said, I can't tell from the angle that we saw. If we see the angle from the opposite, the other side, then that'll clear everything up. So, I didn't know. Now you gotta stop covering for that lapse in judgment. Oh, ain't nobody covering for nothing. Ain't nobody covering for nothing. Come on, you know, come on now. You've been around a long time, Nike. Come on now. You know that. I don't cover for nobody, man. But that's why I said we need to see the angle. We need to see it on the opposite side. Appreciate that, Jersey Mike. He said every yard counts, great challenge. See that? I just, I want to see it from that, the other side. That's the biggest thing. Let's see it from the other side. See if it's good, see if it's bad, see whatever. Devin is there. Raven's challenger who needs to be fired. Hey, y'all make sure we got 718 in here right now. Y'all leave a like on the video while Harbaugh is challenging the call. Let's click the thumbs up on the video real quick. So, we got 719 people. Oh, it's now 724. Let's try to get, let's try to get 34 likes. Shout out to Tyson Williams. Let's try to do it for Tyson, man. So, hopefully we get 34 likes and then he can get 34 carries this game. Because he's getting 34 carries and that means we're running away with it. So, let's do it for Tyson. Let's try to get at least 34 likes. But appreciate y'all. Okay, so y'all, okay, I guess the game is back on for y'all and by what y'all is saying, y'all are letting me know that things went pretty good with that. So, let's see. Let's see. Because it didn't come back on for me. It's still on commercial. It's still on commercial. So, let's see. One second. One second. Successful challenge. Look at that. All them people, oh man, it was a bad challenge. Stupid challenge. Dumb challenge. Bad challenge. Look at that. Everybody who said that, please, please show yourself. Show yourself. I don't care what happens on the next play. And by the way, by what y'all telling me, it's going to be bad. But show yourself, please. Everybody was saying, oh, it's a bad challenge. Stupid challenge. Dumb challenge. Y'all go somewhere with all that. Oh, here we go. Is that Justin Jefferson? Look at that. I knew I knew we were going to see a gritty. I knew we were going to see a gritty. I told y'all we were going to see a gritty. I hate being right about that stuff. I knew we were going to see one. I knew we were going to see one. I knew it. Knew it. Knew we were going to see one. At least one. Knew we were going to see what happened. Look at that. Look like it had some confusion. Oh, Marlon. Oh, Marlon. Oh, Chuck Clark. See, this is why we need a rangy safety. We need that rangy safety. Chuck Clark, you're cool, but we need that rangy safety who can make up for plays like that. This is why we need that rangy safety. This is why. This is why. This is the reason why right here. This is it. That's why. So anyway, that's that. Knew we were going to see that gritty today. Knew it. Knew it. Knew it. Knew it. Knew it. Knew it. Knew it. Knew it. He said what were they doing doing the buy? I don't know. I mean I mean they're working on tackling but they may have been they may have been so focused on tackling that they would like you know what we got to cover for. We just got to focus on tackling. Don't worry about the coverage. Terrible. We need a rangy safety, man. We really do need a rangy safety. Was it Humphrey or the safety's fault? Both look like both to me. Look like both. Humphrey played it terribly. He played it so bad and then Chuck Clark could not recover. He couldn't recover. So Marlon took a terrible turn. Chuck Clark terrible turn and all all while Justin Jefferson hitting with hitting with the gritty. Oh that's rough man. Hey oh man get out of here man. He said and I need a drink. Hey man unless you also receive us on the Ravens this season apparently. Apparently man. Apparently. Hey what's up Yolanda? She said you were right. We need Xavier. We should have given a first round pick if that's what it took. Yeah and now it's one of those things that we'll just never know. We'll never know. Hey Chris Hall appreciate that. That's why you are a great mod. I appreciate that man because I didn't catch that one. But that's why it is it was rough man. Bench Marlon. I don't know about all that part. That was on Clark. His first steps were forward. It was rough. I think it was on both of them. I think it was on both of them really but it was ugly. But anyway back to what Yolanda was saying. We need Xavier and we should have given the first round pick if that's what it took. Now I'm hoping. I'm hoping that the hold up with the whole Dolphins Xavier and Howard thing. I'm hoping what the what the issue was was that the Dolphins just didn't want to pay for the majority of his salary. I hope that was what the only hold up was. I hope the hold up wasn't the Ravens not being willing to give up a little bit more. I could see it being that because it's been that plenty of times. But I just I hope that that wasn't it. So yeah man. Anyway all right let's do it. Defund the defense. Where my guys LBHT at man. Shout out to my guys man. I'm just I'm just not feeling Wingskeen. It's horrible. See that's the thing man. It's not even horrible. And we don't know what the play called was there. Well I'm sure them them film guys will be able to look at it and be like all right this was the Ravens they were doing cover two cover three they were doing this and that on that play. But it just looked like terrible execution. Marlon Cot call slipping. Chuck Clark got caught slipping. Man it was just bad. Lance appreciate that. This franchise doesn't have the guts to trade their first round pick for a proven veteran that can help the team. They just that's not their thing man. That's not their thing. Like we were saying in the video earlier today. Them draft picks like Ravens they draft picks they you're not getting our draft picks. Our draft picks aren't going anywhere buddy. But let's see how these boys respond man. So now now it's all about the bounce back game. Lamar Jackson miss four passes already. Okay nice oh okay Andrews nice play good good catch. I know Mark Andrews gonna make up for that drop man. We know he gonna make up for that drop for sure. I got no doubt in my mind because that's what Mark Andrews usually does. He get the drop out of his system be like all right there you go got my drop out. And then here here show up man here do his thing. So I don't like the drop and it would have been nice to be up seven zero but they they they they'll be fine man. They'll be fine. They'll be fine. Let's see what these boys are about to do man. Appreciate all y'all being in here too in the stream man. Thank you for that. Come on dog Hollywood man. Okay who is that? Was that Tyson? Because that didn't look like Davante. Oh that was Levyon. Oh that's Levyon. Levyon. Tyson. Davante. I thought that said reporting Shannon Sharp but it said Shannon Spake. Pull me off. Off I got Browns playing the bingles. Hopefully that ends in a tie. Hopefully it ends in a tie. Oh yeah that bingles game messed uh messed Mark Andrews up. Wow he had a bye week and he's still in second place and receiving by tight ends. Ooh cow pits is three. Wow. Y'all know he had been balling a little bit but man. Okay. Oh Lamar. Oh one of these games where Lamar feeling like you gotta do it all already. All right here we go. Here we go. Third let's go man. Where Hollywood at? Where boy Hollywood at man? Where my dog Hollywood at man? All right here we go. Third and four. Come on y'all got opportunity here man. All right five wide. Davante up top. Lamar looking. Oh gosh he looking. Uh oh this can't be good. Oh Roshan! Roshan! Roshan! Roshan! That's a man right. That's not a rookie. That's a man. A bait man. That's his name anyway. Bait man. That's a man right there. That's not a rookie. That's a man. That's a man. That's a man. That's what I do in Madden and it works in Madden. Now Lamar's doing it in real life. Wow they just sent four and we got sacked. Awesome. Oh that's Sheldon Richardson. That's the one who went from the Vikings to the Browns and then he was like hold up man. Get me out of here. Back to the Vikings again. Oh he just dog been. Oh gosh he dog been powers. Dog them from start to finish on that. Oh yuck yuck wow. Second and 15 let's go. Boykin! Oh they must be running. They about to run to the left. Oh oh my gosh Lamar are we pressing already? I know he ain't pressing already. Lamar just like you know I gotta I gotta do it all myself man. Come on let's go look at my boy Boykin. Look at my boy Boykin. Oh Boykin out there two plays in the role. Let's go baby. Let's go baby. Boykin that sleeper man. Boykin that sleeper on 39 man. Boykin that sleeper man. Oh we got it got hit. It got hit. No where they go like that. It got hit. Got hit at the line man. Got hit. Let's see who hit it. I think 98. Oh 98 who he said pop pop. Good play by Vikings defense man. Oh almost a pick. Oh Lamar got a couple almost picks in this game. We don't oh they going for oh I love it okay. I love it. I love it. They playing like me and Madden. They playing like me and Madden. They gonna go for it. I don't even think they gonna just fake it. Oh never mind. I thought I thought they were gonna really go for it. I really did. I thought they were really gonna go for it. Please tell me y'all took the delay game. Okay perfect okay perfect. Boy I was I was thinking they were really gonna uh they were gonna go for it. Okay but if if they didn't have any plans on going for it I'm so glad that unlike they did two weeks so y'all remember in the Bengals game when they was doing all that that they just did just now and then at the last second they call a timeout like what why would you call a timeout if you're not gonna go for it anyway. If you're gonna get if you can rate that point why would you call a timeout. I'm grateful that they didn't do it there much much better much better much better oh boy again my boy boy let's go boy let's go baby my boy boy kid let's go what's up rave kingdom how you doing what's going on I mean it's been cleaving that level it's it's it's it's been rough it's just it's it's rough all around y'all it's rough all around Lamar is entering to do it himself more he he been there from the start of the game he been there from the start of the game so we're gonna see man why aren't they using Tyson more they've been stopped using Tyson that's that's old news man they don't care about that dude man they they've been stopped using him he is like a a backup backup now in their eyes they don't care about Tyson Williams he is like a reserves reserves like no they ain't they ain't worried about him at all man they ain't worried about him at all man so Olin needs to be a priority this draft yes draft the agency uh all of that Olin definitely needs to be a priority because it's it's been rough it's been very very rough tackle tackle tackle secondary d-line tackles in the 2022 draft some man some that that ain't nothing but a smoothie man the downfall of Lamar oh i forgot you a troll i forgot you i forgot you a troll i don't even know why i read that um we need to run the football yeah old line is terrible yeah i feel like the injuries are starting to show is no uh uh no no no injury excuses the editor even do that a lot of injuries now but no i don't think it's that they starting to show now they they've been showing but the offensive line has been terrible all inside linebackers are trash powers has said powers has no power uh no defendive logic he was just trolling like you was a couple weeks ago i remember you i remember but no he was just trolling about that um have you look at the running game if you haven't is if you haven't is trash not running backs in old line what you're gonna do might as well try to pass what's up pyro what's going on my friend see our cornerbacks are terrible i don't know about all that part but they they've been struggling anybody's he said anybody's still calling for old dale if you ain't taking old line i don't want to talk see that's the thing with old dale i wouldn't mind if they got old dale it'd be a rich get richer thing why would you not like i feel like with ravens fans they get so stuck in this mindset yes we know our offensive line is bad yes we know that our running backs have been bad it's been rough but ravens fans get so stuck in this mindset where all right if we need this then and even though we we what are we what are we gonna get on the offensive line what are we gonna get at running back right now what are the ravens gonna do at running back offensive line right now what are they gonna do let me know what they're gonna do if you don't have an answer then don't say nothing but why would they not be why wouldn't they why shouldn't they take a person to make to get rich at another spot ravens fans feel like if they poor at one spot even though they can't do nothing at that spot anymore then they shouldn't make themselves that much better at another spot i just i hate that mindset man i just i don't understand it i don't get in i don't agree with it at all do i think they gonna get old dale beckham junior no they probably not but if he clears waivers they got a shot but i just i don't i don't see it happening but oh okay i'm glad y'all tackled but for everybody that just shoots it down oh no they shouldn't do it no they shouldn't get old dale beckham why not why not i just i don't why not the cap hit is why i think that way what's the cap hit for old dale beckham junior if he clears waivers you don't even know the cap hit if he clears waivers if he doesn't clear waivers the cap hit will be 7.6 whatever ravens can't do that we know that but if he clears waivers they can come up with their own cap hit for old dale beckham junior if they wanted old dale beckham junior so it ain't about no cap hit uh-oh toss to the right oh yeah oh yeah oh yeah is anybody out there oh chuck clock one on one that's touchdown oh my oh my hungry say you know what i'm gonna oh gosh i thought it was touchdown this is pitiful man pitiful pitiful pitiful pitiful pitiful just terrible all kinds of terrible man boy just having a day man just having a day having a day beautiful run good job by them not giving up though because if they hold them to a field go on this drive it'll be huge it will be huge good job by them not giving up oh gary coup oh oh clint kubiak i was about to say gary kubiak they got their old defensive coordinator son they're like my daddy used to be your offensive coordinator whoo good job josh binds he read that one good man hmm we'll get back to the old dale stuff in a little bit let's see how this drive goes though wow this boy got 85 rushing yards in the first quarter first quarter got 85 rushing yards man l titty blade hmm it's like jesson jefferson he got a touchdown 50 yard bomb davin cook got that super long run he just got they even got feeling involved yet feeling they even got involved yet so these boys they got they got their playmakers going off already and feelin they even get involved yet it's only first quarter by the way so it's all good though again like i said if they can hold into a field goal here that will be so big that'll be so big huge that'll be all kinds of big oh i forgot man i forgot about tyus bowser wow i forgot all about him this year man i forgot all about tyus bowser wow all right here we go man just a big third down if y'all can get to stop right here that would be so big oh he's wide open ah yeah man appreciate everybody up in here watching with us ravens fans vikings fans nfl fans whatever you a fan of man he oh brandon stevens just reacted to that too late i was wondering what was going on but i did not saw the replay and i see that day in zone so now i understand why but he reacted to that so late he reacted to it really late i don't know anybody's uh it's just frustrating seeing this stuff sometimes all right you still got an opportunity to hold it to a field goal man you still got that opportunity okay three more plays just in case they go for it on fourth all right may are they gonna take it to the to the next quarter are they taking it to the next quarter let's let's take it to the next quarter give ravens a rest please give them a rest let's just take it to take it to the second quarter we don't need to see no more this for the rest of this quarter let's yeah we need a breather take it to the take it to the second quarter there we go okay they are they walking on the other side thank you thank you vikings for giving us a break thank you whoo thank you thank you thank you oh man that that was scary that was scary man because i i just we we did we do not did not need to see them um we did uh did they bench queen already oh this ain't got nothing nothing to do with queen this ain't got nothing to do with queen queen been just fine this game so far so what's up baby what's going on we can't develop a pass rush underwink where's ravens defense i've ever seen defense looking bad where's ray louis and airy that this defense makes you want to cry the queen get benched the other tagger from ohai oh my guy already he already in draft mode man they already in draft mode he already talking about the draft we just aren't very good way too many injuries i just don't know what's wrong with this defense ravens playing like they're still on it say ravens playing like they're still on it by a week it's looking like it right now man it really is this team giving me a heart attack every week i don't know they they didn't give you no reason to have a heart attack this week yet maybe you know not yet no ssg don't don't say nothing like that no don't say nothing like that come on man our man's scheme sucks well i mean another slow start yeah another one another one look at this team and tell me they tell me look at this team and tell me you see them getting too touched on let alone winning they are playing horrible to say the least defense can't get a stop oh line is paper thin these houston texas coaches oh that d-line good you thought my anthony weaver we're playing at home too that's the bad part illa well is it is that the worst part i mean yeah they had the crib and they they they they gonna wake up now and the good thing is only first quarter but i mean first quarter you gave up a lot you gave up some big stuff so you gotta you gotta tighten up you gotta tighten up brings that all back come on there the line giving no pressure and the more barely making connections we play better on the road still can't tackle the more gonna wake up watch yeah i agree i agree we're getting cooked by cook hopefully that first quarter is where all his yards come from hopefully cooks almost got a buck yeah almost man you said boo the players they deserve it start chris westerie you can't start somebody on i r all right here we go games back on for me i know it's been back on for y'all i appreciate y'all not ruining what happens next here we go and they give the delvin cook mr tackle okay then they make a tackle somebody missed them mr mr shoestring just buy a hair all right if y'all can hold them please if y'all can hold them please please hold them because that would do wonders if y'all can please hold them two more plays because you know they're gonna go for them four down if they don't get it here please just hold them please ravens defense please please oh they even brought jaylen fergusson his this is first game back i think this is first game active please oh please ravens please oh gosh this looks bad oh my gosh they stopped them all right hey no four down i feel like they're gonna go for it get hyped and whatever but be ready to come stay on the field okay oh they send it out of field goal unit okay good stuff oh my goodness josh binds man thank you josh man so they go they going for it or what what are they doing all right i was right they going for it okay here we go here we go please this is so big ravens please this is so big watch the play action please oh good job don't call passing the finish oh yeah okay that was a good call that was a good call that was a good call that was a good call that was a good call let's just be straight up all right now now i expect them to fully expect them to get a touchdown now you got davin cook you got this ravens defense you got four tries i fully expect them to get a touchdown yeah i think it will it will take a miracle to stop them three three opportunities man or three more opportunities that's a touchdown what that's a touchdown i know they about to get a touchdown but at least like make them earn it that ain't no touchdown that ain't no touch hey send them boys back man that ain't no touchdown they probably about to still get it there but that ain't no run that back man Kirk Cousins how you walking off the field you know come on back okay Patrick Queen you know too yeah sending boys right on back man sending boys right on back you see my yeah mic i know we know what's coming sending boys right on back out there man sending boys back out it's almost a formality at this point it's like you might well say a touchdown but sending boys back send them back out okay i almost thought they were letting it stand that's okay they fixed it oh they fixed it quick too they fixed it quick well thanks now they got it from the one hey right ravens defense if you could pull out a miracle i wouldn't be i won't be mad i ain't gonna be mad at all man i don't think any of us will be mad man i don't think any of us will be mad appreciate that dj he said i have y'all in my pick them please win well we have us in our own pickings and we're hoping that we please win too uh all right here we go i mean but you know they're running the ball down and cook again who who wouldn't run the ball down and cook again oh kirk oh boy kirk cousins got pushed to the a flag please go take your hands like this take offside you know a hardball i saw hardball and keep it clean on that one oh oh oh no i no i ain't with that crowd that's saying we lost it's it's it's a it's a 11 point game and ravens have come back down from being down bigger scores than this um but they got they they got to wake up offense you need to pick it up big time the defense certainly need to pick it up they need to pick it up large time um this this is this is this is this is bad this is a terrible start this is exactly what the ravens couldn't do this is what the ravens couldn't afford to do this what they they shouldn't do but this has been the ravens all season long he said might as well let them all play defense too this is what we talked about so much man this year ravens have been starting off all slow start all super slow so they they can't do that man they just got to pick it up man they got to pick it up they got to pick it up yeah i don't know why people saying the game is over it's literally the early in the second quarter and the ravens are down by 11 um game is not over the attention is about the turn to wink just like yes hey it's it's yeah it's there but um it's gonna be there even more you're right Mike you're a thousand percent right man yeah team needs to wake up for sure mm this is crazy this is crazy this is crazy we say it's over because we are watching the game oh this game is anybody saying it's over y'all know what y'all talking about man y'all know what y'all talking about anybody saying oh the game is over and there's not even me being just because i'm a fan of the ravens no that's me being realistic this game is not or if you saying that this game is over then you did not watch the chief's game then you did not watch the coach game if you're saying that this game is over you you you you definitely haven't been watching uh ravens play football uh this year you probably watched the bingles game if if you say it's over then you might have watched the bingles game and then you come to that conclusion then that's the only game that you watch okay understood but if you watch all the other games then that's crazy talk right now that's crazy talk right now terrible talking over only sitting corner what's up jake we're at the game is at m&t bank stadium it's m&t bank stadium they said move queen it's safe to get out of there man we just need to go on this drive and we right back in it it's true it's true what if our offense played deep y'all just be saying some stuff man you say what if our offense played defense too man well you turned in the street ball maybe the ravens might need that man do i watch hollywood on twitch yeah i played him on uh what was that friday yeah i played him on friday night in madden i had him in the first half i ain't gonna lie man but he got me then i oh man he got me i was so frustrated because there was a a play where i um i had it on fourth down and i was i was trying to throw to my tight end and i pressed the wrong button and accidentally threw it away i was i was so mad i'm like all right i do that but it's all good oh that's what they were talking about oh that's why they were upset okay i get i all right i get it now they the false start oh okay now i get it okay because i didn't understand the whole sequence why they kept showing hardball and the sideline so mad and i mean i know you're mad because your defense they've been trashed but um i didn't understand but now i get it every play every play can't can't every play cannot be that man every play can't just be luma running trying to make something happen take it off luma man take you gotta take it off luma man is that ten patrick oh looking like a raven look at ten patrick looking like a old raven good for him appreciate that kevin this has to be winks last year he never exposed the team offensive weakness and take away the team tendencies constantly putting on players in bad positions this year has been been pretty rough been pretty rough for wink um let's see though man we're gonna see oh good catch baby oh is that a first down or no because i'm about to say that might be his first catch where it's not a first down is that a first or no oh it is a first down okay go bateman yeah bateman that first down machine first down machine good stuff that boy bateman don't catch nothing but first oh hollywood and bateman coming off so we're running we're running for sure i see boykin oliver record and yeah we're running for sure oh with bail uh oh i'm a little worried man okay all right that wasn't bad you got like three three oh it's a flag it's a flag what's it going to be holding holding on alihandro via nuova can we see the replay please this game has been such a disappointment so far it's it's far from over but so far it's been very disappointing let's see oh he grabbed the jersey he literally grabbed him he grabbed him that's that's a call man he grabbed him he literally grabbed him all right okay hollywood's back bateman's back so so is a passing play i see josh oliver out there too okay they had to flip sides they had to change everything i guess everybody was lined up on the wrong side lamar might have saw something and change it or maybe i don't know let's see there we go five wide empty backfield so lamar gosh man oh man oh man oh man okay oh i don't know man oh they had a safety up top too okay i didn't see that safety yeah that's the thing about lamar he could be doing all that dancing in the backfield but if he don't cross the line of scrimmage and you as a defender come up you could end up leaving some oh gosh here we go this is bad oh gosh oh lamar in town brady he said he oh he's doing a little block okay hey give him all his money right now give him his money right now he out there within the block give him his money right now even though they should have been paid him like he been earning that money but it's so good yeah give him his money give him his money man give my guy his bread man all right third oh who's that who is that oh boy this has been a game so far man hmm Lamar with that at the end of that leave block man check him out now he about to take Patrick to call it job man keep freeman in this guy roman stealing the this ain't this ain't been his best game so far man i got a yeah this ain't been his best game so far man and it's like the the the execution has been bad too but a lot of the play calling so far just haven't been the biggest fan of it let's see this third and 17 though i bet i bet they call the screen here i bet they call the screen here ooh what happened to him let's see was it the Lamar block appreciate that the more blocks better than this they run zone we need to run all passes deep well eventually they're gonna take their shots eventually third and 17 though i think they're gonna call the screen i think they're gonna call the screen over child breathing getting helped off i remember when he became a free agent couple years ago where he got cut from washington football team i think i think that was it and i think he went to like the packers i forgot where he went but all right why he go to screen play third and 17 here we go what happened oh he had to change something i don't know what i don't know what happened i told i knew the screenplay coming i knew the screenplay coming i knew it was a screenplay coming i said it new was a screenplay coming knew it knew it knew it knew it knew it knew it knew it knew it man knew it knew it knew it knew it this embarrassing coming off of by it is man it is know it knew it knew it knew it knew it knew it knew that screenplay was coming man he said did we practice at all but then we just sleep well more gotta do everything we practice we practice this on our part did I just hear some booze I don't know I don't know let's check man let's let's let's check because uh oh yeah yeah you're right yep I was about to say because they they will let us know Jeff Zrebek just said it he said early smattering of booze in Baltimore as the Ravens pun again hmm oh he said hardball talking with Lamar in Hollywood right now hmm oh boy this has been ugly ugly ugly hmm this has been ugly terrible so far no Tyson Williams usage wow if they're not gonna using the right way he said man stupid culture seems like only Bateman active John hardball friends is not the answer hardball record after the buy it's like 10 and 10 and 3 10 and 4 no not 10 and 4 he ain't been around 14 seasons he's been around like 12 I think no it's been more than 12 I'm tripping yeah Flacco from 2008 to 2018 so yeah how long what happened what this is 13th year 14th year this hardball 13th or 14th year okay there you go liaison said okay 10 and 3 10 and 3 appreciate y'all appreciate y'all so 10 and 3 all right so that's that should have paid Jude on I mean we all knew Jude on wasn't getting paid and that's and in hindsight it's easy to say that but I mean we knew Jude on wasn't getting paid and we knew that oh game back on already all right here we go play action oh gosh what a great play what a great screen and oh that was a great screen Conklin this boy is six for six 78 yards touchdown need that spark man here comes delvin cook second in three there's gotta be delvin cook right yep oh they actually stopped them short so it's gonna be third and one third and one if y'all could get a stop I'm not expecting it on third and one not against this offense oh that that was Madison that wasn't even cook my fault even still oh Josh Bynes Josh Bynes showed up today if y'all could get a stop that would be so great if y'all could get to get a stop please please and I know it's asking a lot because the offense certainly ain't been helping at all just one stop please defense oh my goodness they did it oh they actually did it wow oh okay oh y'all mad now huh oh we should have made oh appreciate that said we should have made a trade for running back an offensive line apparently they trade that I mean apparently they tried to I was about to say apparently they trade to apparently they tried to good job by the team man good job by the team it wasn't just the shawna ellie there's a group of okay take a the shawna ellie don't play defensive line I mean you would you would think so you'd think he played linebacker how much he'd be blitzing around a lot of scrimmage but he doesn't he is a safety know a lot of us forget me but it's all good man they were holding miles boy all right dude that's oh that is that interference is that interference or no that's interference right oh did did even touch it should replay one more time please they didn't oh they didn't touch it I don't even think they touched it but still yeah they didn't touch it but ain't that ain't that uh fair catch interference well he ain't he ain't do fair catch though I don't think did he caught did he do fair catch oh man okay wow man what is going on man this is so ugly appreciate that LeBron said I thought we just messed up bro well what they did they still they they still run into each other well man this is oh man appreciate that sito the way they collided they look like cartoon characters embarrassing you know we got to get at least one one per year we got to get one of them little Ravens collisions once per year because last year I think it was Boykin and Willie Snead where they just ran into each other this year is uh Duvenay and Brandon Stephen they ran into each other and so they got it out of their system they got it out of their system so good thing that they got they still got the ball oh my goodness man this team is just wow like they like they going against each other appreciate that Dante it's like it's like they really going against each other like they going they they going against each other these teams are their own biggest opponent man it's crazy man he said how did that even happen oh boy yo can our offense finally do something make this game closer this is to drive what they do a defense got a big stop defense gave them that boost that momentum that energy they gave them that they're like all right your offense take it away take it away we did what we got to do now it's your turn so it's time man oh I mean hard I can't blame horse for being upset I'd be upset too I'd be upset too Ravens they gonna they gonna get it though man they gonna wake up now man they gonna wake up now finally but they gonna they gonna wake up now he said sign on there why they gotta be purple yeah they're looking better than purple right now man bingo getting blown up oh really offense looking bad defense looking bad now special teams what's going on we not keeping it clean you a thousand percent right man oh step on give them a gotta pick check him out man nice good for him all right here we go here we go all right the game about to come back on for some of y'all I'm still waiting so I can't look at the comments right now because I don't want anything ruined all right here we go 14-3 we starting from our own five yard line no oh never mind the 11 yard line okay all right here we go offense you you you gots two now you have to wow it's already set only seven minutes left in the second half I mean second quarter offense man come on I think Lamar hit his last five passes because he was like one for six earlier now he's six for 11 okay Devonta oh Eric Kendrick's got him by the hair of his chinny chin chin he barely got him good job let let him keep running let let him stay in the game like let him be the hot this why this what this what frustrates me about the Ravens so much sometimes man they did it last year didn't work last year now they doing they've been doing it this year too it hasn't been working they tried to get every single running back hot instead of just going with the hot hand they they try to get every single running back keep every single running back involved they did it last year with JK Dobbins Gus Edwards and uh what's his name um Mark Ingram and then when they stopped doing it last year oh JK Dobbins Gus Edwards they kept going off so then uh this year they they doing it with Levy on Bell Latavius Murray and oh is that people's Jones they say forget Odell Beckham Jr ain't worried about that dude but this year they did it with uh with Latavius Murray Levy on Bell Devonta they they try to get everybody involved in a running game and you gotta stop trying to just stop trying to keep everybody happy man do what's working man Devonta Freeman right now obviously got the hottest hand at all the running backs let him run the ball keep him running the ball man i just oh nice play fake oh they ain't trying to let hollywood go off was he oh it was a safety up top too he couldn't he couldn't throw that one yeah that's all the more he threw that one half of uh Devonta Freeman he used to tall levy on bell he said i'm used to that giant as a running bag and Latavius Murray he big too Devonta Freeman he low oh i'm seeing i'm seeing our receivers like just oh they they they just running into running into the defense and stuff levy on bell looking like a receiver with that 17 on and he told me all right 35 man offenses is showing signs of life they're showing signs of life so they they've been looking a little better on this drive even though it's been rough still they've been looking a little better here we go this is terrible this is terrible terrible terrible terrible hmm now they gotta ask defense to make another miraculous stop against this offense with this defense as that's asking a lot man it's asking a whole lot this is bad let me go this is bad this is bad Ravens overrated imagine losing to Minnesota yeah this is terrible man this is terrible we just don't call we just don't call any o-line protection slides at all this has been rough team got he said team got worse during the bad week oh he said put in g-roll and uh put in g-roll and uh and wink as offense and defensive lineman couldn't hurt couldn't hurt at this point really couldn't hurt at this point like why not they already on a team okay okay okay don't you don't need to spam don't need to spam don't need to spam we we get it we saw it the first time don't need to spam Lamar making steven they look correct how you want to say i expected so much more especially after the buy oh i think we all did we all certainly did we all right there with you uh we we did not expect this for them to come out looking like this like a little early struggle going okay cool whatever but like this oh hold on appreciate that beta he said i think i'll he said i think i'll be a browns fan for today it ain't that rough now um somebody said put huntley in as i said some of y'all just be on here talking man you're talking and not even saying that you really said put a huntley in come on now what what's huntley gonna do with this offensive line tell me i'm i'm quite curious to see that what's huntley gonna do with this line what's he gonna do y'all wow man y'all look crazy are we coming back though hey let's do it let's do it let's do it man these comments are funny so many of y'all don't know how football works you can't throw it under pressure uh and point five seconds from being sex yes blame Lamar for the offense lines mistakes hey it is what it is i say it is what it is ain't nothing man we're used to this man stop calling us fake fans for having two eyes it's like y'all stuck in gingers i don't know what that is i don't know what that is isn't there full back hookah blue oh the game's back on okay all right game game back on you know i kind of forgot about the game for a little bit man but it's here we go here we go all right let's go little blitz okay okay okay okay all right that's a good little first down little okay okay got some little pressure on Kirk Cousins through his little first incompletion Kirk Cousins nice nice nice wow that's his first incompletion in the in the second quarter late in the second quarter is that jelly yeah that was jelly look at jelly getting pressure good job jelly all right second and ten Marlon Humphrey like man these lsu boys be they've been dogged me man i gotta make up all right come on tackle that hold up hold up ravens hold up oh it's turning long it's turning long hold up now wow bills and jaguars six six go jaguars all right here we go third and eight third and eight defense please somebody any anybody i don't know oh they showing the dot fairway it's been a little minute somebody anybody third please please please oh i gotta turn up the volume a little bit please somebody please i can't turn it up too much i want to get in trouble please somebody please oh this is all kinds of bad what what happened on this play are they playing zone yeah they playing zone oh wide open that zone was just wide open wide open wide open zone wink said all right y'all y'all keep talking about me playing man i'm playing zone now good job who is that oh that's oh that's matabique good job matabique great tackle come on defense just get get a stop because y'all don't get ball after half get a stop here let the offense go down get a touchdown because they gotta take some deep shots with that that clock is ticking they gotta they gotta have to have some deep passes they got to and just get a stop here please because they needed badly like badly all kinds of bad and for them to put on this this display wow this is so ugly wrap up good job josh good job all right he's like he got out of bounds so now all right third down again third in not really long look at look at chuck chuck chuck clock to pass russia not the safety to pass russia chuck clock to pass russia he ain't no safety chuck clock is outside linebacker all right third and long here we go third and long not really long it's 36 so this is kind of long i guess but third down here we go again third down please y'all please y'all please we're begging you oh that was so no uh you know yeah you know what celebrate do you do your thing but good good okay the pressure got there a little better that was scary man that was very scary oh gosh good job good job huh good job i didn't even see who got pressure good job feel like i feel like we can't even be like super excited man like man this is just man all right man why why some of y'all gotta be so spammy man like it y'all know i ain't got no problem with nobody talking trash talk all the trash you want okay what team you a fan of talk all the trash you want to but don't be spammy don't be spammy i don't care if you say raven suck ravens defense terrible ravens this i don't care ravens this ravens that but don't be spammy don't be spammy like man anyway all right we need post cramps lemar yeah yeah if you need to go to the bathroom real quick do your thing oh yeah man so this is it's rough man it's rough it's it's been an unhealthy year to be a ravens man it's a great way to put it man that's a great way to put it i i i i i love that that's a great way to put it hmm so we need angry lemar i'm i'm sure he's pretty upset oh you picking up take out a hat okay that sounds good chinese for two okay now that's good that's good where's walkins walkins uh walkins is sammy with the hammy they held him out this game they held him out this game i guess they felt like he wasn't ready and i ain't mad at that i ain't mad at that if he wasn't ready all the way okay it's a long season don't rush him back not mad at that at all touchdown right here all right let's go man we need a whole new coaching staff five and two not bad though 2012 ravens had a rough time in the season two vikings three and four for a reason has yet to expose it i'm going to remain positive it's only an 11 point game hopefully after this it'll be a uh four point game hopefully hopefully my only the confidence booster that could help engraving you you displaying our exact emotions toward this gaming team bro i mean it's just been a frustrating game it's been a frustrating game it is what it is i mean i i understand the frustration trust me i do trust me i do we all do we all going through it together all right here we go oh they didn't oh yeah oh that was third down they got a still point all right here we go they haven't do anything back there do for me if you can give us a spark i mean we won't be mad we won't be mad at all they can get okay all right can we get a touch back please okay cool touch back all right cool thank you um vik angry on the donko i don't know he said they cast a spell on the ravens oh boy all right so we're starting off at a 20 i don't care about no Oklahoma and Baylor man who that that that bakel mayfield verse rg3 trying to think of some other people that came from bail in oklahoma lino calamari obviously hollywood andrew's powers yeah powers been powers where brally bozeman go i forgot where brally bozeman went all right here we go here we go two minute drill come on y'all gotta wake up my friends no game ain't over but you you can't you can't get him no touchdown here boy you cannot get a no touchdown here oh that pressure that pressure that pressure oh if that rook if he if 43 ain't get it then rikings had another guy that was getting ready to jump it too it's like lamar threw a double pick on that one because like i said if the first guy didn't get it the second guy he was getting ready to jump it oh my goodness what are this oh oh my god oh they tackled him oh it was look it was looking like he was why is josh binds the only guy playing it is it's like um on the hunt for he been stepping it up to the shine ellie a bit but is this is this meaningful for the worst first half of the year how'd all the coats well the coats i think we went into the we went into the what no we went down 10 3 against the coats it was 10 3 um wow well let's see what happens now second and 11 minute minute 37 left let's see man it's just crazy oh oh but you know raven's gonna make this one stressful it's gonna come right down to it man you know how they get down man you know how they get down let's go man you know how these boys get down man all right they faked it oh all right good job good job wow adam feeling i mean somebody got hurt i heard that whistle like somebody got hurt where they blow like a bunch of whistles oh anthony avert that was amazing coverage little stuff wow all right let's keep two safeties up top it's third and 11 keep two safeties up top please josh binds because i can count on josh binds to watch out for the screens josh binds screen man watch some screens man oh look at druski shout out to druski the boy made it man all right here we go it's third down raven's have to watch for the screenplay i mean current cousins if you see something he gonna he gonna take a shot but they gotta watch out for the screenplay man watch out for the running back hanging around in the backfield or like maybe like three four yards in front of the line of script like please watch watch for the back out of the backfield man that's the thing that i'm worried about the most man and just leave leave both them safeties up top man leave both them safeties up top man okay somebody is hurt i knew i heard that little whistle earlier oh boy who got hurt who was it oh oh is it him who was that is that that fullback oh no oh no the line is the lineman heard of the fullback hurt either way is bad okay it's the lineman hopefully he's straight man yeah hopefully he's good man where's oak buoy i feel like if the offensive line still been a big yikes put an oak buoy oh look the the vikings they got their cleveland we ain't got all cleveland though all right third and 11 please leave leave them safeties up top don't have them safeties blitzing leave them up top cause we need all the coverage that we could possibly get man okay i see the shon elliot he's starting to drop back chuck clock must be way back there unless they got chuck clock a defensive end again here we go here we go oh gosh i was scared because i ain't seen no raven but i also ain't seen no viking too oh they held onto a field goal thank goodness now they got time they got time to do something they do lamar you got your you got a bunch of pads a bunch of bad passes out the way we only had like two three of them but you got your pick out the way fine andrews he done got his drop out the way fine hollywood ain't done nothing yet well he didn't get one catch i think but y'all got all that stuff out the way man what if they missed this oh they're not gonna miss all right so that that's good considering the situation that's good that's good fly guy what's up man that's good man so i'm glad that um i'm glad that they held man i'm glad that they held them because that that was huge because if they gave up a touchdown right there that would have been nasty but they held them so that's that's big that's huge all right you got a minute and a half you got two timeouts you gotta make something happen let's do it oh okay keith williams just gave them all that pat on the back and the pat on the head like all right you got it man got the bad stuff out the system man got the bad stuff out the oh they showing all the bad throws that we were talking about all right cool man so he had four bad throws four and then the interception right yep four bad throws got them out they out so now it's time it's time six for 14 that is ugly but we didn't care about that long as ravens win that's all we care about but be nice to get into a groove now all right two minutes let's have her to receive us out there full back we don't need a full back going out wide we don't need a full back going out wide it's had bateman hollywood mark andrews la veon bell k cool we don't need a full back going out wide man it's just not the time nor the place man all right here we go man here we go in look in jackson we trust oh a nice little sign that they made here we go all right okay hollywood let's go let's go up up up up urgency urgency urgency there we go urgency look at tary phillis bumping into people all right here we go let's go let's go all right they only oh i thought they were playing with one safety up top man okay all right cool cool cool let's go let's keep it moving keep it moving keep it moving come on come on all right boys they lined up they sat oh gosh okay call timeout timeout call timeout oh vikings actually might need to use a timeout because they got somebody hurt yeah so that's on the vikings what they got somebody hurt she doesn't hurt oh well i guess raving raving must have called it right away okay that's fine make sense wow this is crazy all right come on i know ravens i know y'all got something i know y'all got something dragon defense they they've they've been playing these ravens good man they've been like lamar he not about to get no crazy run on us and these receivers they ain't catching nothing deep they've been they've been doing that thing so far man even without uh what's the name harrison harrison smith even without him they've been doing that thing all right here we go man let's go okay now we don't never get no free place we don't never get them plays where it's like oh offsides oh he got hit whoa man yeah i know it was short but what oh yeah lamar got popped he got popped is that ever seen griffin oh lamar threw it short that pressure something serious man that pressure something serious here we go who oh that's pro shei i'll be forgetting who number 11 is sometime that channel three you know pro shei be good for it man all right all right let's go come on yeah you call time out right here you called it all right cool man cool cool cool all right this is well it's just something man this is something man oh there goes that 50 yarder there go that 50 yarder oh Humphrey was mad at somebody oh oh oh oh even add a little extra to the griddy too okay curr cousins should have did the gritty too he should have done it too look at these boys smiling on the sideline having a good old time man you got the ravens got to make sure they don't send the vikings home smiling bro what why passing a ferris we got a passing a ferris call are we actually gonna get a pi call that would that would certainly be something let's see i love that they took that shot let's see the replay oh yeah okay that is passing a ferris it's actually a good call because he didn't have his head turned around either wow that was a good call that's passing a ferris and it was a legitimate passing a ferris call too it was actually a good call hey that was an exception too that was an exception by 27 but yeah that was a penalty that was a pass that was a legitimate call too because y'all know if it was not a good call for the ravens y'all know we would say it ravens take advantage oh vikings why you call time out man i was ready for these boys to run whatever the play they about to run who saved again another drive saved by a penalty but it was a legitimate penalty so that's fine yeah horse collar earlier that was that was no legitimate penalty but this passing a ferris this is oh what a game all right come on baby getting his first so hollywood getting his man what's one of them two one of them two because it's crazy because hollywood like five four what he five five five six i don't know five something but he's a red zone threat all right here we go divante see i wasn't thinking about no divante freeman vikings wasn't thinking about no divante freeman ravens would they knew that both me and the vikings weren't thinking about no divante freeman they throw the divante freeman who finally welcome back welcome back because i for sure thought it was either rachael bateman or hollywood and i think the vikings were thinking the same thing they were thinking the same thing great play ravens oh man they needed that they needed that they needed that uh that's what i'm talking about man that's what they need man i guess we abandoned the read option all together because the running backs are yeah they ain't they ain't been running an rpo and all they ain't been doing that this year i guess because that that connection with the running backs is just not there man it's not there so it's crazy man crazy crazy crazy oh is that mike joseki y'all saw that little madden play oh oh that was nasty man yes enonic you are a thousand percent right he said about time yes it it is about time let's watch with a they still they still got like nine second left and a half now all those it's over fans coming back you know how it is man you know how they be and and that you know what that's another thing too if um you know a lot of them just say it's over out of frustration but you know that they don't even believe themselves when they say that because think about this for all the people that's like oh it's over it's over it's over it's over you don't even believe that because you're still watching the game if you really felt like the game was over you would have turned it off and go play some madden or 2k or something like that you wouldn't still be watching the game if you oh it's over already i already know how this is gonna go it's over already so i'm tell you would have turned it off if you really felt like it was over you would have turned it off but the fact that you're still watching you know that it's not over so it is what it is but we're used to it already we already know how it goes man we already know how it goes man all right here we go here we go he said no after that coast game is definitely not over already man see this oh can't stand these vikings man he's so smart man i love that play call i love that i love that so much much respect to them good job raven for being on point i love that oh bowser got the 99 cleats on check bowser's out bowser got the 99 cleats on that's why his awareness was like that on that play he got the 99 overall cleats on i bounce i see man i see it that's crazy man they did they did try it they did try it man they tried it man they tried it man i ain't mad at them for trying it either not mad at them at all wow what a first half what a first half oh they getting ready to show another game oh never mind i thought they were showing look at my boy trace mix soly check them out appreciate that ypc he said what happened i missed the first half of the game did raven start off slow oh they they certainly did they started off worse and slow they started off negatively so yeah um appreciate that lance he said i've only ever turned off one game the jack the jazz game in london that game was pain man that game was painful it was painful from start to finish oh that was so ugly bateman don't need nothing he not consistent huh i don't even know what we're talking about man so i ain't even gonna try to get into that conversation i don't know what you're talking about man all right let's see what's going on with these other games around the league oh broncos up 16 oh and the cowboys is that press i think that press that came back today falcons in the saints you know these games even though like well these these are two teams that's uh it's been been a little on a little different streak but um they they always play each other close they always play each other close appreciate that go go he said i'm not impressed if this was tamper bay they probably would have scored 30 on us in the first half but it's the vikings that's a good point but at the same time it's not tamper bay so and the vikings didn't score 30 on us in the first half so gotta take it for what it is we could say it we could say it could have been something it could be something and it could be those things but that's not what it is uh promise myself to never doubt lamar if his coach come back baby it's going to be a monster lamar has been off monster hung out with this guy i'm done with you man so done with you man uh he said he must have hung out with kodak before the game he ain't out because that's his that's his friend that's that that's been his friend for his like whole life so was he off uh when he was in uh popping up when he went to high school and all that was he off then was he off at louisville was he off then because they were still friends was he off for the ravens like throughout his whole career as a ravens was he off then because they've been friends this whole time ain't nothing changed and they always hang out so like yeah that ain't really saying nothing um he said what happened raven score lamar been wonky no i mean offensive line lamar been off a little bit offensive line they've been off this i mean that's the regular though but it's been shaky it's been shaky but uh yeah man they they would even though remember now again football game of inches remember that was it the first drive of the second drive lamar threw a touchdown pass he threw a touchdown pass to mark andrews but mark andrews said well he threw a touchdown pass but mark andrews just didn't catch it you just didn't catch it so yeah i mean it's easy to forget that by the way the game has been going but yeah he did he threw a touchdown pass earlier but andrews just didn't catch it but it it is what it is man the halftime show be so corny yeah yeah man oof it should be a tight game it probably it probably is what it should be um it probably is what it should be but i'll be right back y'all don't go nowhere don't go nowhere oh man oof all right we're back we're back appreciate y'all that was a little patient i'm hungry man them ravers made me hungry ravens fans are hating for no reason it's just the the frustration of a of a fan you know a lot of fans be crazy they uh they a lot of people they don't know how to be um they don't know how to be uh uh what's the word uh they don't know how to temper their uh i don't know what's i don't even know how to explain it but it is what it is jersey change had to switch into the ray lewis exactly type so i will never turn back on the ravens does this play the game what you talking about halftime adjustments gotta turn up for sure for sure and and they um what they gotta do they have to uh first they gotta stop the vikings because remember vikings get the ball vikings get the ball back so they get the ball to start off now the ravens have been doing a better job stopping them recently but you gotta continue it no question we all just watching together yeah i appreciate that brian thank you man i don't know if you're in here but thank you it is sad right now but it could have been a lot worse when when they held them after that lamar pic oh that was big that was that was huge i'm i'm i'm glad that they uh that was that was huge that they held them there he said it's a tie game if mark andrew's catches that pass that was rough man hey man just wanted to say we appreciate you bro down single digits for as bad as played in the first half let's get it i appreciate that davenin am i am i saying your name right cuz i'll be seeing it i'll be saying it but i don't know if i'm saying it right or not you know i don't want to mess up your name man if it is it is it davenin i might just i'm gonna just start saying dav just to be safe okay it is that okay appreciate that man hmm are they playing flip they hold up they playing flag football right now look at that look at that fake odell beckham junior who that that dude that dude playing flag football he looked like odell beckham they're trying to tell us something eat money what's up man do i think bozeman switching position has part in the o-line being a little bad yes and no um as a center he's been doing good but he was good as a guard too so you make one position stronger but you let him get back in his natural position and you eliminate the bad snaps remember those i think he had one this year maybe though but you eliminate those bad snaps um because last year like it was it wasn't over 10 but it was certainly a good amount of them it was like four or five i think throughout the year but they were like significant it's like oh man um yes hey laffy whoa wow you why you know these by just looking at them like that yes it is obvious but you must go there a lot man you must go there a whole lot but yeah man um oh you said that too james yeah man raven's trying to let us know they like hey odell is on the way okay phasal phasal relax don't no need to spam it no need to spam no need to spam man if y'all are saying something you could just put you ain't got to you ain't got to keep putting it over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over you don't got to do that don't spam please just put it okay we'll all see it it's always somebody that sees it don't need to spam that's it man that bird trying to grow oh yeah the one i get where they got knocked off man i see i see oh this game he said this game got me a six pack deep so far oh he got you drinking like that man i'm eating wings man boneless swings from obvious do i stream when i play madden no not at all stopped at a long time ago because it just it it yeah i don't just i feel it's gonna be a superstar we're gonna see man jaden what's up man sammy not playing today he's not playing lamar missing a lot of wide open backs and receivers well i mean he threw four bad passes this game excuse me second half about to get started appreciate it nil i think that lamar lamar i cannot think that is that is so like that's so weird man i've been seeing those that's so that's so weird man second half madden 2005 was great yeah you know i i enjoy madden's though i i enjoy them all they do all got their problems but they also video games too there we go second half time now baby vikings get the ball what if we got a turnover right here what do we even got a turnover that'd be great that we're gonna see oh it's all good russ it's all good there we go see the good thing that ravens fans can hold their heads on right now is that most of vikings yards i guess that's just gonna have to make the comeback that much greater that that's gonna have to make the comeback that much greater devin duvenay i know you're jealous do the same thing devin duvenay because i know you're jealous hmm they got so much they got starters on special teams and they still ain't get it done they got starters on special teams i saw the shan elliott and anthony avert out there still couldn't get it done all right come come back just gonna have to be that much better that's it that's it man you need to make them work for it man exactly liason you didn't make them work for look at hardball hardball now you know how about real matter how about special teams coach now how about like they just show their face man now that that comeback gonna be something serious man it it does not feel like it at all but the ravens are only down 14 it does not feel like it at all it feel like they down like 28 something 28 to 3 something like that it doesn't feel like they only down 14 but they got a lot of work to do time to get it started man that's it oh hardball talking to that offense right now he like hey he said i know we ain't about to get no kick return for a touchdown it'd be nice and devin duvenay hey i know you like i said i know devin duvenay jealous show that jealousy and you get you one too say anything you can do i could do better come on duvenay look at pro shape pro shape looking like man i gotta get my jersey dirty all right here we go man raven just oh that's gonna be nice when they like i said when they come back and win this one it's it's gonna be a crazy game man and it's gonna be nice to look back and be like oh boy why they had to make it stressful like that though all right anything you can do i could do better devin duvenay okay never mind not this time not this time all right lemaw let's go offensive line like i will say put oak buoy out there man i know he don't know all the plays like that but just keep it simple say hey go block the guy front of you have the person have the right guard next to him um had to put tight to put tired philips at left guard put oak buoy at right tackle and just have them give him reminders of who to block oh they got eric thompson and ricard out there i say they probably running oh tyson williams back there what is a hot hand oh is that baby yeah baby what just happened did he try to one hand it or did it get tipped what happened i didn't see what happened on there man all right did it get hit did the ball get hit up lemaw put it on you baby who's that i'm confused man i don't know what happened i'm not sure what happened there very strange very peculiar play oh wow that's gonna be holding that's gonna be holding i saw it that's gotta be holding i literally saw a raven offensive line and grab somebody that's gonna be holding oh yep they just called it i saw that one that was so clear and i saw it live so yeah that that was the obvious holding call uh boy hmm it's like tyson williams he uh he he he he get his first little jump his first little burst and it's taking away like that see ravens need to act like they they need to put it in their minds like every drive is two minute drill we need to move every drive they ain't had one of them big plays yet they've been doing a lot of empty backfield a lot of empty backfield they've been looking for that big shot okay need something man need something 30 14 whoo 30 14 all right let's see what these boys got man see what these boys got two for seven on third down let's make it three for eight how about it y'all got a conversion in you i know you got something i know you got something y'all been saving but okay regard you know they want to go for it so bad you know they want to go for it you know they want to go for it look at mark andrew just stand on the field they you know they want to go for it it's fourth in two the game is going like this oh it oh it hit the guy's head good job record concentrating well the ball still got to him you know they want to go they about to go for it man they're going for it they're gonna have a ball keep the ball though you know they're going for it oh yeah they're going for it there it goes oh mike about to drop you know you know they ain't faking it this time oh gosh he got it thank you because i was some flag it's not holding what's it gonna be is it on a defense then because nobody was holding 15 yards what show the replay show us what happened i'm supposed to be like conduct show us what happened i want to see it all right here we go they must have they must have tried to hurt the vante freeman what a great play by the vante freeman avoiding uh kendricks all right he knocked him out knocked him out okay what that that's it that's what it was that's a terrible call that is a terrible call and y'all know that that's a terrible call man don't take it but that's a terrible call oh nice catch record record looking like andrew look oh record looking like andrew's right now hey whatever it takes whatever it takes if it's gonna be record let it be him man i thought the way he caught that i thought that was mark andrew's man whoo whoo that was i ain't no full back man check him out man y'all y'all saw that that boy patching record man come on that's a long face well that makes sense he a full back though oh the oh oh he's starting to feel it now he's starting to feel it now he's starting to feel it now the vante hey won't receive in one running i thought it was going to the vante too they got me with that one they got me with that one i'm like oh no i'm not keeping this oh come on andrew just sat back he said let me just sit back and enjoy the show let me just sit back and enjoy the show there you go uh ali handro just knocking somebody down that's what this offensive line need to do more knock people down man all right here we go hurry up y'all do do all right good job getting at least positive y'all it's because it's looking like it's gonna get ugly that that play was rushed that play was rushed because they got set up so late that play got rushed that was not that that looked bad man that looked rushed good like i said good job getting positive yards man i ain't the i ain't the biggest fan of the play call but it wasn't it wasn't the worst it wasn't the best play call but it wasn't the worst oh yeah that is a reception that's some little easy yards oh look at boykin look at boykin tyson are they okay now all right i thought when i saw tyson i said hold up and i saw a boykin on the right so i said oh they go they about to run a boykin side because they got boykin out there and they got tyson i said okay see this is what i talk about with the hot hand the vante freeman is hot let that man eat all right this this could be mark andrew's who's gonna be the only to be somebody you know you know they you know they throwing he ain't got a disguise nothing crazy come on oh he got it but it ain't no touch there they down at the one what a what a throw what a yeah lamar said stay there stay there have to even make that throw what a throw in what a catch all right you had the one i said i would give it to record come on y'all come on come on let's go let's go man project pat project pat came through big time man he came through big time big time big time man oh gosh what a good good stuff and see what what i was getting ready to say earlier before that touchdown drive which was great by the way um with the ravens one thing that they can hold their head on right now and i mean it's not well not that it's not saying much i mean that's what that's what it is right now but the uh the one thing that they can hold their heads on right now is when you think about all the vikings touchdowns they're three touchdowns the jesson jefferson kick return and the one that came from the davin cook huge run all of their touchdowns came from big plays every last one of them every touchdown came from a big play and ravens they you stopped to cut out the big stuff you'll be straight you cut out the big stuff you'll be straight man that's it cut out the big stuff don't need to apologize it's good ain't that serious man you ain't gotta apologize but you cut out the big stuff and you'll be straight man so we're gonna see because that yeah and they can get stops that's the thing appreciate all 1100 people in here right now too ravens defense showing that they can they can get stops they just gotta tackle well and they they they gotta fly to the ball and my god cam just said they gotta fly around but j y i see you man but they they they know their defense can make the stops because they've made a couple stops already but the third down plays that's important getting off the field man hi like they say who that mic all stopped love it fumbling coming okay i'm with it then pancake getting money he like hey this is the last year my deal he said y all when y'all drafted ben mason he said i felt some type of way and when pat project pat when he saw them pick ben mason he was like hold up i was undrafted ben mason plays full back i play full back i'm in the last year my deal i'm getting ready to be a free agent hold up something ain't adding up so this is the game for him this is the game for him i see hoody cams had a pick incoming somebody earlier said a fumble as long as my god champagne he said we need a turnover i'm with whatever ravens get the ball back i'm with it and especially if they get it from a turnover oh boy that oh you know like if they got it from a turnover yeah that would definitely be that that would be very ravenesque of them that would be very ravenesque of them kaleb williams is that the guy who everybody says is going to be the first overall pick is that him i think that's him i think that's who everybody's been talking about y'all know i don't keep up with college like that all right let's go oh and that was a fourth downplay too love it love it again all right the ravens the defense they've been giving up the big plays all right that's touch back let's go let's go let's go project pat feeling it right now he's like i'm walking in juice ha ha he's feeling it right now man all right let's go man i will put oh no he can't put him on defense right now after that drive he's too tired he like man i ain't did this much working this much catching and like the whole season here we go defense it's on you now it's on you now it's up oh let's go bowser let's go bowser okay now two more plays man two more plays man that's about hey they always say bowser good in coverage there they always say it you say bowser good in coverage he got them 99 cleats on he got the 99 cleats on here we go man come on bowser all right oh bowser in coverage again well tackle tackle tackle tackle what what's the what's the that's not on either one of the guys that tackled them what's the flag what's the flag let's go back them up 10 more yards back them up make make them gritty backwards let's go man oh they setting picks i ain't even see appreciate that larry exactly cut out the big stuff and we discipline we ain't in our own way yeah man oh oh you oh you blocked your boy patrick queen that was a little ls you think that's what that was i see you justin jefferson he's still you still a nice receiver though man he's still a nice receiver man still a beast all right here we go second and 20 i want to turn it up a little bit not too loud because i want to get in trouble but i gotta turn it up a little bit man just a little bit i gotta hear that crowd man oh oh what man it was so close now it's not don't don't hold your fist up patchy queen now it's third in two that thing that was looking like that was getting ready to be a really bad play for them come on man oh it was so close look at mike zimmer oh what you're trying to get them refs to call uh-oh you love set man they got all them yards back third and two josh binds you getting ready to make another play come on now come on now houston oh no oh that was scary that was scary that was scary that was scary hey hey hey hey hey come on now man oh okay clam clampington clam clampington shout out to anthony avid man get your money man because you know anthony avid getting ready to cash in this offseason from somebody somebody about to pay anything even a nice chunk of change he about to get a whole life upgrade from how much money he about to get on the open market as a cornerback in a passing league oh they ran a fake oh we didn't stop them these dudes oh these vikings man we took momentum and they took it back nice play what a play oh boy oh gosh oh and i ain't even mad at gino stone for that one that was a tough that was a tough assignment man that was tough who these bike these vikings came to play boy they came to play today man they came to play today all right i guess now we got another chance for turnover that everybody was looking for oh a little miscommunication oh false start all right back them up back them up it's a shame that the ravens got to be better reps than the refs it's a shame man ravens got to be better reps than the refs they sent out calling all these false thoughts and whatnot then the refs say it 10 minutes later come on this thing this thing crazy man these vikings why i ain't mad at them man pulling out everything they three and four why not why not is it about to be the late game the late game they probably call time out ah i know what they call time out ah they got it they got it they got it oh man this is something right here ain't it this is something right here fruit he said fruit punch please i wouldn't really count on a fruit punch play because he ain't been getting no fruit punches all year long i mean he got the one against uh i was about to say jesson jeffson he got the one last week i mean two weeks ago against jamae chase but he ain't been getting fruit punch this ain't been his season for that i mean it'd be nice it'd be nice but i just i don't see the fruit punch happening to me like i said it'd be cool though so yeah i mean you never know vikings desperate to two trick plays now look man vikings record is three and four they're in a division with the packers um the bears bears ain't yeah um but the the packers the bears the vikings and who's that last team in nfc north lions so lions uh bears but you got the packers packers and vikings so if you're three and four right now and rogers and then well jordan loving them getting ready to play the chiefs they are sitting at what six and one or seven and one i forgot what their record is but they getting ready to play the chiefs a lot of people are obviously assuming that with jordan love the but i mean the packers ain't gonna go off like that a lot of people assuming that they gonna lose later on today when they play the chiefs so as a viking you like what what do we have to lose we three and four right now we're trying to catch the packers and trying to stay afloat in the nfc when nfc got a lot of teams with a lot of good records they got the cardinals they got the bucks they got the rams they got the packers um who am i missing i'm missing somebody but you get the point so vikings like they ain't got nothing to lose so i can understand all the trick plays like they did the play right before halftime they did the fake punt like they they put in work man but they didn't again they ain't got nothing to lose so when you don't have anything to lose those are always the most dangerous teams to play the ones that have nothing to play for or not necessarily nothing to play for but nothing to lose because worst case scenario for them they dropped to three and five and it's like oh okay well still second in the division but well what's bears record i gotta look up bears record real quick let me see what bears record is real quick give me one second y'all but y'all get what i'm saying though you get what i'm saying so anyway the game's back on so bears record is not that important right now here we go third quarter six and a half minutes left um vikings up 24 17 it's first and 15 after the penalty after the fall start penalty then the vikings just call the time out so vikings they throw in the ball they're looking is that feeling oh josh binds again josh binds has been he made a nice tackle i think it's only like a five-year-old gain a second down there josh binds been everywhere today everywhere it's almost like i wish we could have like 11 josh binds playing right now and then we'd be locked a lockdown defense we would be all over everything we had 11 josh binds playing oh yeah we'd be good to go good to go all right so it's second down i think okay yeah second and ten all right second and ten oh come on come on to shon that's holding that's going to be holding that flag came before the shon even made that tackle great tackle by the shon ellie that's got to be holding though knew it said holding number 72 let's go because that flag oh that's on there cleveland he hit he trying to show out because the raven's been cleveland is out he's trying to be like oh i'm not only cleveland playing but that flag came out before the shon ellie had even made the tackle nice play and what a tackle to shon that was a nice tackle back him up though second and 20 last time it was second and 20 ravens literally gave up everything well they gave up 18 yards let's let's let's not do that again come on oh just a matter bk out there bk we've been waiting on you to make one of them plays man look at josh vines getting everybody lined up man josh vines oh vines vines look you look too slow for that one he said oh i can't keep up with this tight end just do a conglant too fast man josh vines probably he probably tired of doing everything on these all right third down man i gotta turn it up a little bit just a little bit it's third and 11 man it's third and 11 it's third and 11 vikings ain't been running the screenplays like that which has been surprised watch watch madison though you gotta watch madison come on defense please defense come on yep i told you i told you that the shon ellie and chuck law they're not safety they are outside linebaggers oh yeah yeah finally hey ain't no ain't no fake punks coming now uh-oh ties bows are hurting oh they brought that corner but oh they brought it oh they always bring a take a take a play i feel like take a play more out he played more pass rush than he played a slot corner they always and then take a on in blitz is way always bows are hurting all right ravens here we go you know they're gonna take that shot early you know that you know they're about to take that shot you know they're about to take that shot oh this way this way hollywood about to get involved hollywood abatement about to have a big play man one of them two hollywood abatement about to have a they they about to have a big play i'm gonna i guarantee it one of them two one of them two about to do something crazy man one of them two one of them oh that's a good question kevin because i have not seen him he said it's jimmy smith playing today i completely forgot about him i haven't seen 22 out there so hopefully he's okay but i haven't seen him at all been seeing a lot of brandon stevens though so i don't know man i don't know people were in the first quarter saying game over well i remember all of them i remember i remember i didn't forget remember but yeah now hollywood abatement about to have a big play one of them two maybe both but definitely one of them two i haven't seen him yeah i don't know what happened hollywood doesn't force it on his next drive i believe smith is situational well binds keeps talking before snaps and gets beat what you what oh you're trolling there man when he was talking he was communicating to the defense where they need to be binds is the mike linebacker so with him he's controlling the defense man he's the one getting everybody set up that's why he's talking because he got to tell everybody what to do he said this game got an overtime vibe oh gosh hey whatever it takes the longest Ravens win i don't care what kind of vibe it got long as they get it done man long as they got it done but yeah man i gotta stop looking at the chat before the game come back on i don't need y'all to ruin either hollywood abatement big plays man look at a little bit more the lock in since kirk scored the vikings has oh the vikings oh hasn't scored hey that's good man yeah because we yeah because uh yeah they got the big play to jesson jefferson on offense right uh they got the field goal but they got the uh kurt cousins got the qb sneak yeah and then they got the kick return yeah so again and it was all everything came from them getting big plays like they didn't when they had to grind it out on offense they didn't need to because they got the big plays when they had to grind it out though ravens got to stop that's all ravens just got to keep it up all right man i gotta turn it up a tiny bit hollywood abatement whichever one of y'all want whoever want whoever is gonna be number five or number 12 whichever whoever is gonna be all right 24 17 ravens down by a touchdown four and a half minutes left in the third and ravens offense got the ball giro giro do your thing oh look at look at that boy look at patrick card back there look at oh never mind i thought he was lined up next to the little mark in shotgun but they got oh gosh bro this this this levy on bell experiment it just it has been a big yikes it that needs to be davante freeman back there why are you trying to force for you levy on bell that needs to be davante freeman not bell freeman freeman let let freeman do his thing man the force feeding gots to stop it gots to stop man like that shouldn't be levy on bell back there man let's see what they got back there now if anybody you know they've been doing a lot of five why who is that oh they bringing him back scary now that boy that little more said i could play everything i play quarterback i could be offensive linemen i could be an offensive linemen sledge fullback cuz i block he said look at that it zyla zyla butt knocked the ball out little more said i'll be a fumble recoverer whoa oh zeitman been working on him glutes good job LeMond oh matter need to make that awareness go up put it at a 99 all right 32 32 tyson like look y'all y'all ain't been giving me to giving me the rock i know what i could do we know the Ravens fan know what tyson could do he just need to have a little boost of confidence let's see though oh no short short you know you know that you know they going for it you know they going for it just the vibe of the game you know they going for it you know they going for it you know they are oh man what a play by kindrex oh gosh what happened with vianueva all right here we go fourth and one oh under center oh they got yeah they got it they got it they got more than enough they got it though wow check that out a play where the ravens are under center we ain't seeing too many of those qb sneak good stuff all right let's go let's go let's go he boys ran a qb sneak and look at that LeMond was still up he was still up yeah he was still up because he hadn't gone down all right there you go that's who needs to be running davante davante needs to be the one that's running appreciate that uh ravens girl lots of flock going down to miami on thursday night team keep it clean meet up before the dolphins game yeah we're trying to see about the tailgating oh look at that oh that boy chub is nasty man that boy is a problem oh we played in browns in a little bit too yikes big yikes big yikes oh yeah it's gonna be a lot of people going to that Miami game but first you gotta get through this vikings game because these boys been stressful stressful all right andrew's got the first okay just hold on okay for a progress stop play stop okay i ain't forget about i ain't forget about bateman in all hollywood i ain't forget about them i ain't forget about him i ain't forget about him all right i see hollywood the hands on his hips might be getting a little tired there's bateman out there too i don't see 12 right now uh no i don't think he's out there all right here we go oh josh oliver oh that's what that looked like a running play oh oh you oh you got that speed back okay now lamar looking more swift than he was in the first half of the season all right fourth quarter oh he feeling that a little fourth quarter fourth quarter okay now okay now oh he got a hundred yards rushing good for him all right let's go man i gotta go pay the water bill real quick but hey fourth quarter man fourth quarter i'll be right back fourth quarter fourth quarter fourth quarter it's been a game right here man it's been a game right here fourth quarter y'all two picks in the fumble and joe burrow hmm here we go excuse me all right let me on bail got the first down cool cool here we go come on hey hollywood a bateman i ain't forget i ain't forget i ain't forget oh a little pitch oh fake okay okay you know what i do respect i love that rasha bait he knew that hit was coming whoo oh they tried to get hollywood to take that safety off because that would have been touched down man it almost worked i love that that bateman was he went for that man he knew he was about to get hit he knew he was about to get popped but he still went for it oh what a catch andrew's wow what a catch what a catch and what a throw i don't know how lamar throws those man like when he puts this like crazy this crazy zip on it it's so like weird man i don't know how he does that man let's see man all right patrick card out there see boykin out there see andrew's out there oh by the looks of the personnel it would look like they run into the left side and lamar got his hundred yards officially now he got his hundred yards he didn't have his hundred yards before he got him now though he got him now whoo okay still wait i mean they they try to get that big plate of bateman but it ain't work but i still know bateman on hollywood got something in him i know i know they do who's that oh that's tyson williams in the linebacker on tyson oh gosh what's new what's new oh man if he could have just uh it's crept through there i think he tried to at the last second but it's just so what a second in 15 oh man we don't need to see this crack we don't need to see the crack hmm this drive been over seven minutes long all right need to result in some touch touch then oh my goodness uh wow this offensive line is just a big yikes big yikes 1315 all right what they gonna do what they gonna do 1315 oh for four and 13 for 13 oh yikes here we go oh a screenplay ha ha hollywood hollywood holly holly say hollywood had a big play in them that was a pretty big play that's what they've been hoping for on all them screens that they that they throw on third and long it sucks that it takes them third and long to throw screenplays but we gotta work on that g-roll we gotta work on that that boy hollywood well he got his big play i guess bateman gonna be the one to get the touchdown then good stuff holly good stuff holly good stuff holly okay okay got like a yard like a yard i still don't think that was i don't still think that was a good play call 1315 but it worked so hey it worked that's the biggest thing man if it works because you want it to work all right second and nine 11 minutes left in the fourth quarter second and nine lamar with an empty backfield again it's been that way all game long pretty much bateman another first down every single catch goes for first everyone every ball that bateman catches goes for first down everyone wow we we got underneath passing game that's unheard of because that's not ravens ravens don't do the underneath stuff they go either deep or in the media but underneath no that's not them that's not them all right here we go come on come on davante okay okay okay cool cool nice dance lure that's a name right there dance lure come on all right what is going to be i see holly i see bait andrew just came out there everybody got they got their hands on the hips like they about to fly away all right andrew's walked like you know what i'm about to get me a touchdown right here he was just walking to the line of scrimmage like that all right here we go here we go you know how lamar been in the red zone throughout his career very decisive is that bateman oh who that go dude i know who that was in first i was waiting for confirmation i know who that was let's go dude let's go baby let's go lamar for that throw let's go come on baby what a throw and catch i he i thought he was throwing it to a tight end let's go dude that boy dude and he got everything in bounds to and got control of the ball let's go man let's go that's what i'm talking about baby that's what i'm talking about man hmm you old jt be careful with that ball now y'all hated the motto he's one of the few qbs who can mess up big and it's not over oh yeah you you remember all of them all of them people you remember y'all remember who y'all were and all these people in the comment section talking about oh the game games over games over games over games over scams over scams over games over games over y'all remember them and y'all know exactly who y'all are too talking about the game was over game over oh it's over oh it's over guys oh yeah we remember we remember all of y'all who was saying that every last one every last one oh yeah so yeah so like he got somebody did say that they was like oh man you uh he said he said he's gonna become a browns fan for the day because ravens were doing so bad try to tell them man try to tell these boys man try to tell them the game wasn't over i said it's gonna make it that much nicer when the ravens come back it's gonna make it that much nicer when they come back and win it's a beautiful thing man so it is what it is man yeah he said tell them don't switch up now man exactly the they said it was over so but it is what it is man it is what it is remember what Marcus Peter said in the AFC championship press conference i think we ain't done yet oh you mean the uh the NFC we all y'all we're all y'all saying Lamar don't need his money oh yeah you know you know what's crazy some people why i don't know why we gotta go through this every single week um but some people were actually saying to bench Lamar Jackson and put in Tyler Hunley now i love Tyler Hunley now but they're saying to bench Lamar Jackson and put in Tyler Hunley it's crazy talk it's crazy talk they really said to bench Lamar Jackson and put in Tyler Hunley and somebody even they they they said that's so nice that they even wrote it twice so they confirmed their feelings on that but it's it's crazy it's wild appreciate that boy said engraving like pepperage farm pepperage farm remembers oh yeah we remember for sure and you see what what's what's even worse my memory ain't even that good and i remember so that means that some of y'all were like adamant about it that the game was over but it is what it is so anyway we need to invest an old line in the draft oh yeah for sure offensive line whether free agency draft something because anything you get from Ronnie Stanley and Joanne James is a bonus it should be considered a bonus at this point because um Ronnie Stanley third surgery on his ankle Joanne James and hardball again hardball said he could play in December he said he's in November December one of them two but i didn't count on him this year but even next year he coming off ACL oh see they thought he was running out but he said no he ain't running out Raven's got that little moment you know imagine that moment that moment of meter it's it's it's on the Raven side right now oh this will be nice for a turnover turnover will be perfect right here perfect right here will be the turnover will be perfect perfect come on turnover will be literally perfect perfect come on whether pick six or sack strip bubble something that place would be rocking come on come on okay okay oh let's go oh that PQ that boy PQ let's go PQ that was him that shot that kept like that look at that boy playing with that confidence now he didn't miss the tag oh no he made the tag okay i thought he missed it i thought uh what's the name got the tag PQ got it now hey they okay give him that confidence back man get that boy PQ that I gotta turn it up there I gotta turn it up there man get that boy his confidence back because he been missing it come on y'all away this your way away this perfect for you perfect opportunity for you perfect opportunity for you oh that would have been a nice one let's go man come on there you go oh yeah my little froze oh let's go good stuff man oh binds binds binds binds binds is our best linebacker he wasn't even on the roster this year binds is our best linebacker third and 18 man come on y'all please please it's third and 18 there's no way third and 18 man it's no way that y'all please okay they drop put people's back oh away oh what tackle tackle let's go come on take take let's go there you go there you go thank you thank you finally ah finally there we go let's go man all right oh there we go come on man come on man go on man let's go man let's go dude oh nice camera angle I love this camera angle who oh okay out of bounds all right hey hey hey hey hey you could have thrown a flag for that one but he was already in the process all right there we go oh man that's what I'm talking about man that's what I'm talking about man hey all right tie game fourth quarter Ravens just got the ball back after that series of play Patrick Queen started at all PQ it like it's it's nice to see PQ looking like that yelling and screaming and with that confidence nice to see that from Patrick Queen uh and then Josh Bynes with tipping the ball to set that off and then that third down tackle by Tavon Young in the open field beautiful series loved it man exactly can exactly the score is 24 up it's 24 up yeah he flew through that hole for sure man PQ phew animated tackle man that's what I'm talking about man man this thing crazy man milk the clock in and Justin Tucker went that no no no no no get a touchdown get a touchdown however you get it if it's a short drive it's a long drive get a touchdown I don't want Ravens to be up by three get a touchdown touchdown points touchdown not a field goal touchdown that makes it harder for the Vikings man appreciate that Dimitri Ravens defense by week ended in the first or ended the end of the half ah yeah well actually that they really they hold team really the whole team and they woke up then they woke up Bears wave Rashad Perriman we got to go get them hey but that boy Bashar Bashar he would do his thing now I know he would do his thing now but he can't go back to the Ravens this he's got too much history with the Ravens he can't go back so but I'm gonna be rooting for him wherever he goes next you already know man you already know wherever Bashar goes next I'm gonna be rooting for him but yeah he can't go back to the Ravens all that history is is just way too much it's way too much so it's my guy though man shout out to Bashar Perriman man all right come on yeah we yeah we we know these Vikings games get a little crazy even the Vikings game with Brett Fawth remember the Vikings game with Brett Fawth with uh when Stephen House could kick the game winning kick that thing was crazy man they should have showed that game too all right here we go I gotta turn it down a little bit all right here we go okay I turn it right back up I ain't even turn it down all right here we go hollywood emotion okay faked it hollywood looking holly holly holly don't get mad don't throw my boy down like that 23 don't throw him down like that that boy holly check him out man ooh heavy feet hollywood and I love he ran back in bands he said give me that contact man he said give me that contact man get any drop this shoulder too he got thrown down now but first down drop that shoulder too man let's go holly somebody supposed to be emotion oh what y'all doing oh he dropped the shoulder too hey this drop this drop the shoulder series right here let's go freeman let's go man come on now hey let's go that's the longest drive since 2001 wow that's crazy all right let's go man hmm wow 2000 I just realized yeah that was over 20 years ago that was 21 years ago I just realized that I just realized that come on man let's go who that in the back is that bail even leave me on bail bail who that blocking oh that oh they're getting to run the ball now that offensive line could look better when you can run the ball that helps house your offensive line so much that helps out your old line so much when you could run the ball oh bail said give me that contact drop the shoulder oh good thing he ain't fumble because he's trying let's go man let's go oh Breelin is back I just realized that oh he's still hurting though he hurt he hurt come on yo come on come on oh these boys taking their time too and they running that ball look at lady on bail for eight yards let's go lady huh okay and that means that blocking is really good if they be on getting runs like that then that mean that blocking is going great but you know for lady on bail to run good that blocking gots to be perfect it's got to be perfect look at them look at them sticking with what's working look at them sticking with what's working I say run get a first down right here and then first down play action let's so let's see though let's see though what these boys getting ready to do let's see let's see okay they took my advice they ran and got the first down here and now I say on this play play action this this play play action you got the first down now that's why I say play action right here take a little shot take a little shot take a little shot come on take a little shot oh that boy Bateman okay that boy bail they got bail Bateman Brown Andrews Oliver Andrews and Oliver they messed up the bees oh to the one that's to the one that's to the one I wanted to celebrate touchdown too but I saw that's to the one that's to the one that's to the one that's to the one one to the one yep because that butt dropped his butt hit the ground before that ball did before the ball crossed yeah his butt stopped it all right who are you giving it to bail or Devonte Freeman one of them two oh they got bail back there they love lady on bail boy come on baby come on let's go come on baby back man let's go oh deep inside the closet deep inside the closet out deep inside the closet out man come on man we said it's gonna make the comeback that much sweeter for everybody that said it was over in the first quarter we said it's gonna make the comeback that much sweeter oh this is sweet they said it's gonna make it that much sweeter oh the game's over this this one's over chomp man this Ravens game is over let's go man come on I saw some people saying oh we're going five and three now with five and three man five and three come on man defense close it out man close it out everything is in front of them you know Raven I mean Vikings they have to get that ball down the field they got to move so defense got the opportunity right now man they got the opportunity man they got the opportunity let's go man appreciate that Mike sorry if I missed anybody super chat when I was watching the game I I ain't want nothing to get ruined man I can't have nothing ruined man I can't man I can't I can't I can't a way been big in these moments hey this is chance to be even bigger let's go man whoa this is great man every game this year has been a heart attack see it's crazy because this one this one for me it hasn't been it hasn't been it's been the game itself has been kind of crazy but for me it's been it hasn't been a stressful game it's been a more of an annoying game more of a disappointing game for a lot of parts in the beginning but it had this one hasn't really been stressful for me it's been exciting though hasn't really been stressful but anyway Josh said I'm happy to be wrong the body language changed I'm glad you're wrong too I'm happy that you're wrong I'm happy and I'm I appreciate you being willing to admit that too that's a man right there appreciate that mirage thank you thank you lj the comeback kid yes we got a hundred percent of momentum for sure love to tackle in the second half hopefully they can keep this intensity for the rest of the year yeah that's that that's gonna love right there but hopefully hopefully hopefully wow defense playing so good yeah they they are right now it's time to close it out man time to close it out man time to close it out and I loved on that drive they stuck with what was working they stuck with what was working they stuck with it they ain't try to get all pretty they ain't try to get all nope they stuck with what was working and that's what you gotta do don't fix what ain't broken man they stuck with what was working all right here we go man here we go 31 24 Ravens up by seven now hey it's still this Vikings team they sneaky good now and you know they they pulled out some stuff so Ravens still gotta be on point they still gotta be on point all right defense we want them early on to have to make that decision if they're gonna go for it on fourth down that's what we want man we want them early on to have to make that tough decision are they gonna go for it on fourth down make it tough for them man make it tough make it tough hmm come on all the all most of the game has been close Ravens need to get some separation then that's all that means all right let's go man all right dive and cook out wide so empty backfield front they just sending four oh tackle tackle tackle these boys they turn their heads before they okay I thought they just let them go they turn their heads in fear they look scared man they catch the ball they turn around a little scared let's go man and I like that they just sent four they ain't sitting on crazy now you know they ain't gonna keep it like that but they sent four uh yeah jelly was one of them surprised me but hey let's see josh binds again josh binds this dude if we had 11 josh binds man defense would be locked down josh binds again man man this guy is crazy third and three let's go bowser i'm trusting you against madison one on one oh where's that going he touched him right didn't really give up an extra 10 yards what oh oh he really did oh they oh he didn't touch him he didn't touch him come on Dashaun that's an extra 10 yards he just gave up okay he did touch him let's see okay yeah yeah he touched his knee okay he did touch him okay because I was I was pretty disappointed in Dashaun Elliott for that one of course we're giving up that play but more so for not even making a the tackle or the touch so okay cool cool cool so all right well not cool but all right here we go man I think the clock keeps going though the clock keeps going once they uh oh not a bk I think he's good though he's good oh it's the left ankle yeah oh yeah yeah yeah he's good he's good yeah okay yeah yeah he's good you got a little a little cramp all right Broderick Broderick this is this uh this will be a nice game now get a little incentive get is that Dashaun Elliott that too oh boy man Dashaun Elliott and we lost the Dashaun Elliott and Mada BK for at least a play all both on that one play man so we probably got Brandon Stevens out there oh they just said it okay oh they sending them to the to the locker room I think they sending Dashaun Elliott oh boy them safety's better be on point man safety play better be on point man Anthony April well they go they go just 100 yards they go down and cook 100 yards and that's gonna take us to the two-minute warning they go is they go just 100 yards oh wow oh never mind I was looking at the wrong stats oh boy this thing crazy boy Kirk do for interception yeah might as well get it out of system like might as well might as well this thing crazy boy this this thing crazy man whoo this thing crazy what a game Kirk do for interception I get a defensive pass because they've been playing well these past couple drives yeah they have been now it's time to finish man it's time to finish it's time to finish time to finish man close it out man and this is you're under two minutes so this is four down territory I mean this is game right here because I think I want to say the Vikings use the timeout earlier so they only have two timeouts but this is four down territory right here man this is four down territory right here so they they're going for it so you know like in the red zone it is a smaller space they got a smaller area to work with but um you you got to stop them you got you got to stop them and this this is big so it would like y'all say it will be very nice it will be very nice he said tinky winky it will be very nice if um if if Kirk Cousins threw his third interception of the season right now it would be a perfect time your perfect time for it wouldn't mind it at all at all let them score why why why should they do that why why should the Ravens let them score no that would be foolish that would be foolish they got to stop them from score oh man this thing crazy oh this thing's crazy all right here we go here we go here we go come on I don't care about this this dance thing what is this what does it show mass singer is that massing why they look like video games oh it is oh okay whoa that's kind of cool but I don't care about it oh it is mass singer okay all right yep all right I just I just want to see the game I don't care about none of that stuff oh package chiefs Cardin's 49 hopefully they don't well I mean we could just pull it up anyway let's say hopefully they don't put what's it called the Cardin's and 49ers on tv because I would much rather watch the Packers and the Chiefs see that boy Jordan love first patty but let's see all right here we go here we go here we go here we go here we go here we go two minutes left they got the ball on the what the 18 all right watch that's two oh good job Brandon Stevens good job Brandon Stevens rookie third round pick nice oh man oh they were playing zone yeah oh nice oh if he could have turned around and got that pick that's asking a lot though that was a good oh good great play great play man that was a great play play sheesh great play here we go all right come on come on yo oh they ran a ball wow okay oh oh okay all right third down man come on two more plays y'all two more plays two more plays man two more plays two more plays two more plays what are they showing the kicker for kicker ain't got nothing to do with nothing two more plays y'all two more come on two more plays let's go hop one more play one more play one more play one more play one more play and they put them on a tight end too go stop hop bounce back bounce back it's all about the bounce back man fourth down oh that the cameraman they're shaking too much you know them people in the t-bank going crazy come on man come on man i gotta turn it down anybody give me a copy okay they call time out oh they call time out man oh they call time out man oh and it's a second time out so this this is game this is game right here man this is a game right here this is it this is game right here man mm this is game right here oh man this is the game right here man oh man come on come on i don't even i want to see all these replays man they they cool whatever i I like what's been going on, but hey, let's go, man. Come on, come on, come on, come on, come on, come on. All right, this is it. Come on, come on, come on, come on, come on, y'all. Please, please Ravens, please Ravens, please Ravens. How does that happen? How do you give the, how? How does that happen? How does that happen? I know he was playing off, so he, gosh, hmm. Oh, fourth in there. All right, here we go again. Please, oh my goodness, it's asking a lot. It is asking a lot. Please, four more plays, man, four plays. Four plays, that's one. He down at the one, oh boy, oh boy. Oh boy. Okay, so they playing that game, like, okay. We probably getting ready to get over touch there. Man, come on. Oh, they seven and one. Well, ain't caught no seven and one too. Yeah, they didn't lose last week, did they? Cause they played the Packers two weeks ago, I think. Who they caught on? I don't even remember. I ain't even gonna get consumed in it, cause, come on, y'all. Wow, oh, come on. Oh, they brought Panamik. Fia, I ain't really seen him today. All right, come on, y'all. Come on, y'all. Oh, that's not PI? Is it, oh. They waited until now to get him involved. Well, hey, better late than never, right? Was it PI? Was it PI? Okay, here we go, we get to see the replay. Nice little move. Oh, that's a push off. That's a push off. That's a push off. Come on, now. That's a push off. That's a clear push off. That's a push off. Oh, boy, I guess that's the makeup call then. That's the makeup call for that bad horse collar that they called, that went against them earlier. That's the makeup call. All right, I guess it's even then. That was push off, though, for sure. Man, cause I thought Anthony Avery might've just been doing one of them little corner things. Cause you know them corners, they say push off everything, but it actually was a push off. All right, here we go. Minute and three left. And yeah, Thelon been super quiet. Oh yeah, that was push off for sure. Man, come on, man. All right, all friends, let's go. Now, Duvenay got a big kick return. That would be nice. That'd be nice. That you make it a little bit easier. Let's see, here we go. Here we go. My boy, you can tell Mark Slayer is getting paid by the NFL for that one, boy. You can tell they done bumped up his salary, too. He trying to get a raise. He said, we're here to watch a football game. Not here to watch official store flags. All right, here we go, man. Come on, what a game, man. What a game, what a game, what a game. Ravens just need to end it off the right way. Man, this thing could've been done already, but it's all good, it's all good. Come on. Come on, come on. All right, Duvenay, let's go. Oh, that place packed. Okay, all right, starting at the 25. After that touchback, here we go. Here we go. Oh, it's cold, too. So that ball might be a little harder. But it's a little chilly, man. It's a little chilly. It's a little chilly. All right, come on, here we go. Here we go. Minute, minute and three, two time outs. Here we go, Lamar. You done showed that you clutch before, man. You done showed it numerous times this season. It's just time to do it again. All right, you got sacked. Well, that's obviously not good. That's not good at all. Come on. Oh my goodness, that's Villanueva. Villanueva being getting abused, man. What happened on defense? What was it, defense of holding or something? What was the flag? What was the flag? Oh, holding, so far y'all opinion first down. I wish we could see the replay. Okay, they showing the replay now. Let's see if it was actually legitimate. One, two, three, four, five. Okay, I don't know about that one. Oh, Bateman, wow. It looked like he tried not to catch that. Come on, you gotta move. What? That's not a flag? All right, time out, time out. Like, who was that? Who was that? Could we see the replay on that again? Okay, here goes the replay. What a catch. Oh, man. Oh yeah, he's down. Like, come on, yeah, that's flag, man. That's like, okay, I understand how about being upset about that one. Ain't matter of chair at all, Hobbs. I get you. That's crazy. Come on, y'all. All right, all right. Man, that pressure, all day, man. Just like last week. I mean, what, two weeks ago? All day, man. Come on, ugh, boy. Come on, 26 seconds, man. Come on, come on. And they backed up too. Nice, nice, nice. Are you gonna tell, oh, they call time out. Okay, I get it. All right, okay, man. 33, no timeouts left, 22 seconds. No, what happened with Atlanta and New Orleans? All right, 33. Wouldn't even be surprised if they ran the ball right here. I wouldn't be surprised if they ran it, and then they went and go try to spike it. That would be very raven. Let me see. Oh, what's the, it's gonna be passing interference. It's gonna be passing interference, offensive passing interference on Mark Andrews. It's gonna be offensive P.I. on Mark Andrews. It's gonna be offensive P.I. Oh, hold on. Same thing, both 10-year-old penalties, man. That's not good. That's not good at all. Okay, hopefully he just had the win knocked out of him. Hopefully. But he looked like he was getting ready to get up. Okay, he got up. He got up, 13-13. Okay, he good, he good. So he just probably had the win knocked out of him. So that's that for him. Whoa, what Kirk Cousins looked like he was like a picture. He just sitting there like that. All right, yep, no timeouts. Here we go, here we go. What was that? All right, hurry up, hurry up, hurry up. I guess you gotta just throw it up. Oh, man. Oh, he's heated, man. Like that, I ain't, that, that, I didn't, that ending, man. I didn't, I didn't, I didn't, I didn't like that, that, that ending. Yeah. I don't know, you know. Anyway, let's go on Raven. Get a touchdown, man, so y'all can end it. You always go with tails. Well, it's his, all right, offense, let's do it, man. Let's do it, man. Let's do it, man. Let's do it, man. Ain't nobody waiting for cheeseburgers, man. Let's do it, man. Let's do it, man. I know, I know somebody earlier. Somebody earlier was saying this thing got overtime vibes. Vietnam is a liability. Can't argue with that. I mean, he had some good players, but he sure had some bad ones, too, man. Yeah, Mark Andrews good. He look like he's good, man. He look like he's good, man. Lamar needs to play like he did versus Colts. Yeah, man. Said, Al is a big yikes. Well, Bill's lost to the Jags. Hollywood 75, y'all touched him. You know, I would love that, man. That'd be great. Oh, Giants beat the Raiders. Jaguars beat the Bills. Check them out, man. Wow, check that out. Come on, we don't need to be added to the list. So Raven need to just go ahead and do that thing, man. Win it, win it, win it. Come on. I'm tired of seeing these commercials, man. I just want to get back to the game, man. Just want to get back to the game. That's it, man. Stay farm cool and all, man. I just want to get back to the game. He's Raven's a boy. They crazy. They crazy. And they keeps it crazy. They keeps it crazy. Chevy Equinox. All right, here we go. Here we go. Let's do it. Oh, this game was on Fox. They played somebody else on Fox a couple of weeks ago. I forgot who it was. Not the Broncos. It was, oh, I think the Lions. Maybe the Lions, I don't remember. All right, here we go. Now the Ravens can run the ball if they want to too. Here we go. Here we go. Overtime. Come on, y'all. Come on. Oh yeah, bingos got whooped. I forgot. So Ravens need this game even more. Nice play. I like that play. Let's give it to Hollywood in some space. Let him do what he do. Seven y'all pick up. Nice. Mark Andrews back out there. Nice to see. Just got a little shaking up earlier. Nice. Nice cut, Freeman. Good stuff. That was a nice cut. Come on. You got 50 yards rushing? Wow. Yeah. Wow. Stick with somebody? Stick with somebody? They still been kind of like sharing the wealth, but they shared it a little bit less. So they ain't getting none of the Tyson. They only gave the Levion Bill and Devonte and of course Lamar got his carries in. A lot of them. There you go. Let's go. Let's go. Well, three, four yards, I think. Something like that. Well, Jordan Love warming up. Check him out. Little QB1 for the day. It should be an interesting game. See how Jordan Love is with the, with the what's his name? With the Packs, with that number one offense. Why would they like number one Devchart offense? They're starting offense. Can't even think right now. This game be just messing you up in all kinds of ways. Oh, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Let's go. Let's go, man. Let's go, man. Oh, we fit that ball in there. What a throw, man. Oh, oh, Holly was trying to get that block. Oh, but he still had 29 too. Because Eric Thompson had 23. Yeah, that's Xavier Woods from the Cowboys. He had them. But yeah, what's the name made the players a good play by him? All right, just take what you can get. Good stuff. Good stuff. Good stuff. Good stuff. Good stuff. Oh, they bringing out Bateman. I saw Andrews come up. Yep, they go Bateman. They brought Bateman up. Come on. Oh, 79 offensive plays. That's a lot. Well, is it a lot? Well, compared to them, that's a lot. But they got some big plays. We ain't really getting no big plays like that. Now, defense, defense got us. And that's asking a whole lot. Defense got to get it stopped now. Defense got to get it stopped now. Defense got to get it stopped now, man. Man, defense got to get it stopped now, man. That is, mm. That's asking a whole, what happened? What happened? Oh, the late game. Oh, and they were just driving too. Oh, they call a timeout. Oh, they were just driving that ball, man. Moving. Effectively, efficiently, they were moving. Hmm. That was just a great play by Anthony Bar. That was just an amazing play by Anthony Bar. Amazing play. I don't even think it was, I mean, Lamar should have been a better throw but I think, yeah, Devontae Freeman. I know he was just saying Devontae Freeman should have engaged with him more. Please make it open field taggle. They said Devontae Freeman should have really went up to block him but I think Devontae Freeman was just staying back to pass, protect Lamar. So when you a pass protector, those, the defensive linemen outside linebacker, they come to you and then you engage with them but I feel like with Bar, he wasn't really, he was like in that sweet spot where it looks like he getting closer but at the same time, he's still farther away where you don't really necessarily engage with him. You still waiting on him to come in but two more plays, if y'all could please, please, please, please, oh, thank you so much. Thank you, Bowser. Thank you, 99 Bowser. One more play, please, y'all. One more play. I know the offense got y'all if y'all could just do this. One more play, man. Please, please. Oh gosh, please. Good job, Bowser. Come on, please, y'all. Make them punt that ball, man. Make them punt that ball, man. Make them punt that ball, man. Oh, make them punt, oh, they sending Chuck Clark. Oh, I thought, oh, man. I thought it was a receiver right there. I thought it was a receiver right there and it was looking like somebody's gonna be wide open. All right, Lamar, you know what you gotta do, man. Lamar about to make some crazy play because Lamar heat it right now. Oh, man, this dude boy. Now he's like, this ain't been a stressful game all until now, though, man. Oh, thank you, defense. Wow, thank you, defense. They gotta stop when they needed it the most. All right, let's go, come on. They got Marlon Humphrey on special teams. They got all them starters on special teams. All right, let's go, man. Let's go. What's the penalty? What's the penalty now? What's the penalty? Still waiting on it. Oh, Marlon Humphrey. So, when he put them on special teams, that's him trying to say, hey, I ain't supposed to be here. Boy, staying crazy. Appreciate all 1400 of y'all in here to be with us doing this just craziness. It's like Ravens, they don't know any other way. They either, either with Ravens, it's a really, really close game or it's just, it's wide open. And that's whether in favor or not in favor of them. They either do really, really close games of, it's just some, or the exact opposite, like polar. Oh boy, Hollywood. Hey, that's a hundred yards, ain't it? Ain't that a hundred? That's a hundred for them, ain't it? Hmm, they go bail. They go everything slow down with bail, man. Ooh, like I just, I feel like that should be Devonte getting them carries back there. I know we all got like 30 yards, y'all got like 30, 32 yards, maybe. But I just, I just feel like that should be Devonte back there getting that ball, man. So, but it's all good, man. Come on, y'all. Come on, come on. You know the more about to do something crazy, man. You already know, man. Tomlinson, let's go. Third and one, third and one, maybe even inches. But it's third down and right there. Watch, they probably going fake to bail and Lamar keep it for the first. I can see that. Okay, third and one. So yeah, I can see them do a little fake to the running back and Lamar keep it. Come on, man. Here we go. Oh, let me on bail. Okay, got the first. Okay, okay, okay. They just did it straight up. They ain't do no playing around. Okay, I respect it. All right. Let's see. Come on. Come on. Ah, boy. Come on. First and 10. First and 10. Let's see. Okay, got Devonte out there. Hollywood, Andrews. Look like a run. Smells like a run. So, oh, Devonte! Devonte! Devonte. That's what I say. Get somebody hot, man. Let her running back get hot. Stop trying to give it to everybody, man. Stop trying to keep everybody happy. Let her running back get hot, man. Let her running back get hot. If you let her running back get hot, you let somebody get into a rhythm, man. Stop force feeding. Stop force feeding. See this dude got 78 yards on 13 rushes. Stop force feeding. Stop force feeding. Let them get hot. What's the flag, man? They can't be holding. They can't. 12 in on the field. Ooh, let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Ooh, look at V. Nueva was hyped. He's like, errr. Come on. Come on. Come on, offense. Oh, number 90, I think? I don't know. I can't see what that is. Don't even matter though, man. All right, come on. Eight penalties for 107 yards. Ooh, that's a lot. Let the hot hand get hot. Another penalty? It can't be holding. That's too fast for holding. Def... He was holding that fast? That play was like two seconds long. Ain't no way he was holding that fast. Run that replay back, man. Run that replay back. Oh, okay, okay. Well, I guess he grabbed them pretty quickly. Pretty much tackle them. All right, no record, no Tomlinson. And so they're probably throwing the ball right here. Come on. Oh yeah, and they come out empty backfield. That'll do it. Holly, Holly, Holly say, give me that contact. Oh, another flag. Please be defensive holding. Please be defensive holding. Illegal formation. Some kind, you could be your biggest, your biggest own worst enemy. It's like they're trying to catch up the Ravens to Vikings penalties. When that graphic came across the screen a couple of minutes ago, said Vikings got 107 yards in penalties. They got the refs got them the message from Rod. He said, oh, hold up. Ravens gotta catch up at least a little bit. Do what you can. Oh man. Hey, he was down already gave himself up. Boy, Hollywood. Oh, they go that push off. Oh my goodness. This game is wild, man. It's crazy. Oh. No, no, Jackson. He said just kick the field goal at this point. No, man. Refs have the Vikings money line. Oh, boy. Man, this is crazy, man. This is crazy, man. Oh, yeah, they've been hitting a little bit late now, man. They have been Hollywood gave himself up and they still hit him. Oh, boy. Yeah, now it's stressful, Johnny. I agree, man. I agree. I agree. He said, let's go home, kick the field goal. Oh, boy. Crazy, man. Craziness. I agree, Ebony. I agree. I agree. He said, I love my Ravens, but I need a peacemaker. Oh, a pacemaker, you mean? Send him to the crib. Toggle for the win. 72, I'll talk about it in crazy long field goal. That Ravens roller coaster. Yes, gotta love it for sure. That's Raven football for you, boy. Yes, that's what they do. Let's see, man. Let's see, man. Oh, goodness, man, these boys are crazy. They are crazy, crazy. Here we go. We still gotta get some more yards, though. All right, here we go. Wow, under center. Check that out. Okay. I see what y'all are doing there. I respect it. You didn't, what? Why don't you say 35? That should be like third in like three, right? I just saw a graphic say 35. Like he ain't getting no yards. He got like two yards, right? Okay, let's go, man. Wow, what a game. What a game, what a game, what a game. Oh, there you go, 32. Okay, there it goes. Come on, come on. All right, it's 32. Minute 51 left. Here we go. Raven's about to run that ball with Levy on bail. To the 19. To the 19. Hey, come on, bail. That's what I'm talking about, baby. Well, Raven's about to call the timeout. That's what it's looking like. Looking like Raven's about to call the timeout. Man, boom. Wow, this thing crazy, man. What a game. What a game. What a game. What a game. The purple games, man. The purple game. Who's Adam? Adam Amon. Good for him though, being a commentator. I gotta look at who that is. Adam Amon. Adam Amon. Let's see who that is. American television and radio sportscaster. Oh, this the game right here. Okay. He joined Fox Sports to cover MLB. Then later NFL games beginning in the May, 2020 after having worked for ESPN since 2011. Oh, and he been calling games for the Bulls. Okay, check him out, man. Putting in that work. Good for him. Good for him. I ain't really got to hear them too much because we've been kind of doing our own little commentary, but shout out to Adam. Good stuff. Oh, they sending out JT? Is it time? Oh, they gotta call timeout first. Nick Moore, Sam Cook. And timeout. There we go. All right. Here we go. It's time. Yep. All right, JT. There's no such thing as a gimmie, but here we go, JT. Let's close it out, my friend. Let's close it out, my friend. Oh, oh boy. Come on, JT. Come on, JT. How long is this field goal? 36 yarder? Okay, come on. Come on, JT. And there ain't no such thing as a gimmie with field goals, man. We seen crazy stuff happen time and time again. Come on, but JT has been very, very clutched throughout his career. Let's go. Great game! Woo! That was for us. Woo! Oh boy! Wow. Wow. Wow. Let's go. Wow. Justin Tucker, the best kicker in the world. Not in the league in the world. Best kicker in the world. Let's go, man, because I did not. I did not because I saw the graphic earlier talking about, oh, the Giants beat the Raiders, the Jaguars beat the Bills. And I'm like, hold up, man. I ain't trying to become a part of that graphic too. So thank goodness the Ravens took care of business and that game is over. Woo! And guess what? It was a comeback victory, by the way, just in case. So now, y'all, come on down to Miami. Don't come with that. Well, if y'all, as long as y'all win, but come on down to Miami. Nice little home game for the Ravens up next from the crib. Woo! Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. Oh, yes, Travis, exactly. Exactly. But anyway, man, and this game helps because, yeah, the Bengals lost. So they dropped down again. The Bills lost. So they dropped down. The Titans played a Rams tonight. So we'll see how that goes. We're going to see. Yes, Mike, yes. That's a requirement, man. That's a requirement. Yeah, Florida Ravens, they coming home next week, man. Next week, they coming home, man. They coming home next week. So that should be, well, actually this week, technically, because today's Sunday and Sunday starts the week technically, but y'all already know what I mean, man. Woo! What a game. That was crazy. That was crazy. Raiders lost. Yeah, Raiders lost to the, they lost to somebody. I forgot, man. Oh, my goodness. Five and three, five, two, and one. Y'all not Ravens fans. Y'all just flagging. LeVion Bell putting in at work, man. Justin Tucker, greatest of all time. Shout out to him, man. And the thing, appreciate that. Look, Brian said Ravens are the comeback kids. Yes, sir. We have had one game we didn't all die. Oh, we have had one game we didn't all die and come back. No, no, no. Don't remember the Broncos, Broncos and Chargers. Broncos, Chargers, and Bingles. Those games, because those games were well decided in the fourth quarter, all three of those. So I would say three games that we didn't. Full medal Ravens say, good job, Ravens. Stressful, but how did Bills lose? Jaguar plays some defense, man. They play some defense. That was crazy, man. Tucker's a short fire hall of fame. Oh, yeah, that's old news. We already know that they got Miami next. It's going to be Florida Ravens versus Miami Dolphins next. So that should be a fun one. That should be a fun one. Let me see what the Dolphins did. I hope that I don't even know what I hope the Dolphins did today, man. Let me see what these Dolphins did, though, man. Let me see what they looking like. See what they looking like. Oh, man, what a game. What a game. Because Dolphins played the Texans today. Oh, Dolphins won. OK, so they feeling themselves a bit that. Hey, that's cool. That's good. That's good. That's good. That's good. That's good. Love it. Love it. Love it. No, Dolphins won. They won. They took care of business against them Texans, man. And they got another home game. Well, even though it's going to be home team versus home team next week. It's home team versus home team, man. Home team versus home team going to look bad for my home. If you lose to a backup quarterback, I wouldn't mind. I wouldn't mind. I wouldn't mind. What's up, Tracy? How you doing? Hopefully, yeah. Hopefully Sammy Watkins is back next week. Hopefully. Hopefully. He said we should have traded for Byron or Xavier and Howard. Oh, you should watch the video that we did earlier today. So I'm sure that one's going to be a little bit painful for you. A little bit painful. Yes, next week is going to be fun, man. Miami Dolphins versus Florida Ravens. And it's always going to be fun. It's going to look like a home game for the Ravens next week. It will. I guarantee that. It's going to look like a home game for the Ravens. There's going to be so much Ravens down here. Oh, it's going to be crazy, man. It's going to be crazy. It's going to be crazy, man. Yes, Tracy, I agree. I agree. Number one in the division. Oh, Tom, you going? Oh, man, it's going to be crazy. It's going to be so many people there. Thank goodness we're going into the Dolphins game with a win, man. With a win. You already know, solo. Yes, Micah. But yeah, man, we're going into there with a win, man. With a win. It's, oh, man, Miami turning purple. Yes, yes, yes, yes. Yes. Oh, goodness. We did it again. Another come from behind win for Action Jackson. Yes. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. The defense standout was, oh, standing OT was amazing. Yeah, it was a little scary, man. Marth through that interception, and Anthony Vaughn made a fire play. He made a fire play. But, man, M&T South. I like that, man. Squillers are in second place in the division. Right now, Ravens need to keep it going. Oh, they for sure got to keep it going. Man, I'm happy for Hollywood, man. I'm happy for him. He took care of me and mad on the other day. But this was the win that mattered more than that. This was the win that mattered more than that. So shout out to him, man. Shout out to him. Freeman should have attacked Barthole. OK, I feel you. I ain't mad at that. Maybe I misdiagnosed it when I was watching it live. I thought Freeman was fine. I thought maybe Barthole was doing more of a sort of contain kind of thing. Because I would have to watch it over again. But this was great, man. This was great. OK, if Freeman takes out Bale, I mean takes out Barthole, and Lamar gets that pass out. OK, OK. I feel you. I feel you. So I got you, man. So it's just crazy. It's just crazy. If Freeman attacks Barthole, I can't stay there, though. OK, yeah, I feel you. I feel you. Hmm, hmm, hmm. Woo. He said I had to come back and say, how about them Jags? But we won. That's all that matters. It's true. That's true. Southern Purple. Second pick wasn't on Lamar. Yeah, I mean, yeah, I guess so that does make sense when y'all break it down like that about the block. Was anybody worried once they got a field goal range? Oh, wow, oh, you're not in here trolling, Patriot. OK, I see you now. I see you now. You're not in here trolling. OK, now. It's something right there, man. You going to stream from the state? No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. No, that's too much work, man. Too much. That'd be something, though. That'd be something. The running game finally come into form. It's because you've got to stick with a hot hand, man. Stop giving it to everybody here. You go, here you go, here you go, no. Stick with a hot hand. Make a hot hand. But it's all good. Yes, Dre. Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. Yes, Gilbert. Hey, that's what I'm talking about, Gilbert. Let's go, man. Let me look at something real quick. Let me look at these numbers, man. Oh, that boy Hollywood had to show up, man. He said, hold up. Let me take over real quick, man. Let me take over one time, man. Mm, this is great, man. I'm happy. This was great. This was great. This was great. This was great. All right, y'all, I'm going to go ahead and stop this. And we'll be right back for the post game stream. Y'all know how it goes. And then we, y'all already know, we'll be back. We'll be right back for the post game stream. Y'all make sure y'all come through for that one, too. We're going to have some fun. Man, YouTube didn't keep it clean. You see my boy, he like, automated. Boy, that's my homie. Ain't that riding gravy? Riding gravy. Shout out to Graven.
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Beitrag zum Videowettbewerb «Brings auf den Punkt – mit Erklärvideos!» - 3. Platz
Im Herbst 2015 lancierte der Bereich Hochschuldidaktik & Lehrentwicklung des ZUW in Kooperation mit dem Vizerektorat Lehre einen Video-Wettbewerb für Studierende der Universität Bern. Der Titel lautete «Brings auf den Punkt – mit Erklärvideos». Die Studierenden wurden dazu aufgerufen, ein kurzes Erklärvideo zu produzieren, in dem sie ein grundlegendes Thema oder zentrales Konzept aus Ihrem Studium anschaulich und prägnant erklären. Der 3. Platz des Wettbewerbs ging an Luca Schmid vom Bereich Humanmedizin der Medizinischen Fakultät. Für den Inhalt des Videos ist der Teilnehmende verantwortlich.
[ "Erklärvideo", "Videowettbewerb", "ZUW", "Universität Berrn", "University of Bern" ]
2016-04-07T12:33:24
2024-02-05T07:46:39
259
3keKd1R1YVg
Herzlich Willkommen zu meinem Video über Fett. Fett ist ein wichtig Bestandteil in unserer Nahrung und wird eigentlich überall in unserem Körper verwendet. Chemisch gesehen sind fette Triazilglyceride, d.h. sie bestehen aus einem Molekülglycerin und drei Fettseurenketten, welche das ganze Molekülserwasser unlöslich machen, d.h. sie sind Hydrophob und mischen sich kaum bis gar nicht mit Wasser oder wasserähnlichen Substanzen sowie unseren Körperflüssigkeiten. Um diese Fette in unserem Körper aufnehmen zu können oder sie zu verwerten, müssen wir sie mit Hilfe von Lipasenspalten. Lipasen sind Enzyme, welche die Fette in ein Glycerin und drei Fettketten spalten können. Um die Fette in unserem Körper transportieren zu können, müssen wir sie in sogenannte Lipoproteine verpacken. Lipoproteine transportieren vor allem wasserunlösliche Substanzen in unserem Körper. Die Lipoproteine bestehen aus Apoproteinen und Lipiden mit Hydrophilen, also wasserliebenen Kopfgruppen. Dadurch werden sie wasserlöslich und ermöglichen so dem Transport von Fetten oder anderen wasserunlöslichen Substanzen im Blut. Damit wir die Fette in unserem Verdauungsprozess aufnehmen können, brauchen wir verschiedene Lipasen und Gallensäure. Die Gallensäure macht die Fetttropfen möglichst klein, damit diese Lipasenenzyme die Fette möglichst effizient spalten können. Nach der Spaltung gelangen sie durch die Zähmembranen und werden in Lipoproteine verpackt und weiter über die Lümpfe und dann übers Blut zu der Leber transportiert. Die Leber verteilt dann diese Fette wiederum im Körper und verpackt sie in andere Lipoproteine. 80, circa 80 Prozent des Fettes transportieren wir dann zum Muskel und Fettgewebe, vorwiegend als Energiespeicher, aber auch zur Synthese von weiteren biologisch wichtigen Substanzen. Ein Teil des Fettes bleibt aber auch bei der Leber und wird dort einerseits für den Energieverbrauch, aber andererseits auch als Speicherort für fettlösische Vitamine verwendet. Die Funktionen von den Fettsäuren sind sehr vielseitig. Sie werden einerseits gerne als Energiespeicher verwendet, dass sie sehr energiereich im Vergleich zu Zucker sind. Die Fettsäuren können aktiviert werden und dann über die Mitochondrienmembranen ins Mitochondrium transportiert werden, wo sie via Bettoxidation und oxidativer Phosphorilierung komplett abgebaut werden können. Des Weiteren werden auch die Membranlippide aus den Fettsäuren hergestellt. Membranlippide sind der Hauptbestandteil als all unsere Membranen im Körper als sogenannte Zellmembranen oder auch die Membranen der Zellkompartimente. Fettsäuren können auch weiter zu Kohlesterin verarbeitet werden. Kohlesterin spielt eine wichtige Rolle auch bei den Zellmembranen, da sie deren Stabilität reguliert. Kohlesterin kann zusätzlich auch weiter zu Galdensäure verarbeitet werden, welche seine wichtige Rolle bei der Aufnahme von Fetten im Verdauungsprozess spielt. Auch Kohlesterin-Hormone sowie Testosteron, Österogen, Cortisol und viele weitere werden durch Kohlesterin hergestellt. Zudem ist es auch möglich, Vitamin D aus Kohlesterin herzustellen. Dies ist jedoch nur begrenzt möglich, deshalb müssen wir auch Vitamin D über die Nahrung aufnehmen. Nun danke ich für die Aufmerksamkeit und hoffe ich konnte Ihnen einen groben Überblick über den Fettsstoffwechsel wieten.
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Sir Peter Parker Awards 2009 Finalist - Ms Alexandra Potter, Nintendo of Europe
Ms Alexandra Potter was a finalist in the 2009 Sir Peter Parker Awards for Spoken Business Japanese with a speech entitled 'The Fluidity of Language' You can find out more about the Language Centre at SOAS, University of London at http://www.soas.ac.uk/languagecentre/ You can find out more about the Sir Peter Parker awards for Spoken Business Japanese at http://www.soas.ac.uk/languagecentre/awards/sppa/
[ "SOAS", "University of London", "University", "japanese", "japanese language", "Japan (Country)", "Awards", "Spoken Japanese", "Business Japanese", "Language Centre", "SOAS Language Centre", "Sir Peter Parker", "JETRO" ]
2013-01-14T14:10:23
2024-02-05T06:13:35
605
3KIiQAut7FI
はじめまして、アレクサンドラポーターと申します 本日のスピーチタイトルは全然わかります言語の流動化です どうぞよろしくお願いします全然わかります おかしいですか 大丈夫ですか来日して初めて全然OKですと言われて これまで習ってきた日本語とは違っていて少しびっくりしましたこれについてまた後でお話しします それではまず自己紹介から始めたいと思います欧州ニンテンドでコーディネイターとして勤めております 日本語を勉強しようと思ったきっかけはある高校の先生の言葉でしたもつもと子どもの頃からたびたび家族と一緒に海外へ行く機会が多かったせいか 外国語が好きになった私は大学で珍しい言語を学べばとフランズ語の先生に言われて それでなんとなく日本語に決めました欧州言語と比べるとやはり日本語は難しいですか 今振り返ってみると日本語に決めて良かったと思いますなぜなら今やってる仕事で日本語を使うことが大好きだからですしかしここまでの道がそんなに順調ではありませんでしたのでこれから日本語を勉強して 日本の会社で働きたいと思ってるまた働いている皆様のために私の経験や意見について話したいと思います子どもの頃から外国語を好きだったと紹介しましたが 今は外国語だけではなく僕国語である英語にも興味をとても興味があります不思議なことにもともと英語にあまり興味を持ってなかったのですが外国語を勉強することとともに僕国語にも興味を持つようになりました今よく感じるのは数か国語が話せると自分の言いたいことがうまく伝えられるということです例えば日本語の頑張ってお約束としてもGood luckとかDo your bestなどにしかならないと思います全く同じ心情の入ってる言葉ではありませんなぜなら頑張るという動詞に歴史、文化、考え方などが入ってるからです同じように英語のFingers crossed約束も困るのではないかと思いますなぜかと言いますともつもつの機嫌がクリスト教に関係があるからです本日テーマにした全然わかりますというのは本当は正しい日本語ではありませんねでも最近の若者が全然を皇帝表現に使い始めそれがかなり通じるようになりました近代の英語もかなり変わってきました私がこういうことに興味を持つようになった理由はいくつかありますまず外国人として日本語を話すために乗り越えないといけないハードルがたくさんあるからです第一は日本語そのものの難しさですしかし努力さえすればある程度話するようになるものです第二はその話す言葉が通じるかどうかの問題です第一を乗り越えたら第二は自然に解ける問題だと思ってもおかしくないかもしれませんが実際にはそうではない時も多いです第三は日本人が日本語を話す外国人にびっくりして理解できないことです私は2004年から2006年までジェットプログラムの国際交流員として日本の山口県に住みました当時の日本語能力は普通に生活できるぐらいのレベルでしたがたびたび困った時もありました一番印象に残っているのは私が電話機を買いに行った時のことです近くにあるパートの電気製品コーナーに行って電話機を探してみましたが結局見えたらなかったので店員さんに聞いた方が早いと思いすみません電話を買いたいんですか言っていらっしゃいますかと聞いてみましたが店員さんの顔が真っ直ぐになって私の言ったことが何もわからなかったようでしたもう一度聞いてみた結果も同じでした通じていないかなと思い説明してみました携帯電話ではなくアパートに置くような電話が欲しいんですと言ってみましたがやはり通じませんでしたレジに人が並んできて恥ずかしくなった私はどうしようかと思いましたするともう一人の若い店員さんがやっと聞いてあ、電話機ですねとすぐ理解してくれました電話と電話機そんなに違いますかもしかして日本語を話す外国人の私にびっくりしたのかもしれませんイギリス人として持ったのはもし私が少し間違った英語を聞いたとしてもなんとなく意味がわかりますそれなのにどうして私の日本語がうまく通じなかったのかなといろいろ考えました考えてあげく英語は日本語と違って昔からいろんな人にいろんな国で話されてきた言語であるということですアメリカの英語つまり米語もありますしアフリカの国々でも英語の方言が使われたりしていますのでこれが正しい英語と言える英語がすいませんこれが正しい英語と言える英語がないのではないかと思います一方日本語は日本以外の国の僕語にはなっていないので正しい日本語と言える日本語はまだあると思います世界中で英語を僕語として話す人口ですが3億人を超えています第2言語として話す人口も4億人を超えていますやはりそれだけの数の人々が話すと言語の流動化は当たり前のことです英語は多様なので大体の意味が通じるということだけでも十分だと思いますもちろんビジネスなどの場合きっちんとした言葉を使うべきですが話している相手がイギリス人、フランス人インド人などかどうかは分かりませんので少しおかしな文を聞いたとしてもほとんどの人は気にしないと思います日本人の知り合いに聞いたら外国人が書いた少し変な日本語の文章を読んだ時意味が読み取れてもその少しおかしな日本語に違和感を感じましたみなさまはどうでしょう日本人はよく相手な反応を大切にする民族なので日系企業で働いている外国人を英語だけで働かせるのは珍しくないと思いますせっかく日本語を習ったのにそれを使えないことに落ち込む人は多いでしょうニンテンドはとても国際的で前向きな会社なので社員全員の良いところをサポートしてくれます私の場合せっかく日本語を習ったのだからということで日本語をもっと使ってほしいようです毎日いろんな国の人々との触れ合いがありますので少しくらいおかしの言葉に誰もびっくりしません私の夢は日本人も少しくらい間違った日本語にびっくりしなくなることですもちろんぜいっぱい努力して日本語を使いたいと思いますが残念ながら日本人のような日本語にはなるわけではないと思いますイギリス人の日系企業に対するイメージですが日本語が分かれないとうまくやっていけないのではということではないでしょうかイメージを変えるのには会社の柔軟性を見せることが必要だと思います日本語の分からない人は英語でいいし日本語の分かる人はどちらでも使えるということが一番効果的な方法だと思いますそうすると日本語を勉強して日系企業で働きたいと思う外国人が増え本日のサーピート・パーカーローズの目的でもあるビジネスにおける日本文化の総合理解が深まりイギリスと日本のビジネス関係がこれからますます強くなることでしょうもし今日皆様が会場を出た後アレクサンドロのスピーチには少し変な英語が出ましたが彼女の言いたいことが全然わかりましたと思ってくれたら満足です少しよくにずれてしまいましたが言いたいのは言語は時代の流れと共に変わるものなので皆自身を持って自分なりの言葉を使って楽しくいろんな人々と仕事をしましょうということです以上ご清聴ありがとうございました
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WHAT I EAT IN A DAY ON WW TO LOSE WEIGHT - TATER TOT CHICKEN POT PIE CASSEROLE - MOVING UPDATE 🏠
HAPPY WEDNESDAY! I am excited to share today's what I eat in a day on WW to lose weight! I have a GREAT dinner recipe for you, some new favorite products and of course the doggies! The dinner recipe is on my website: https://www.jennswwjourney.com Enjoy! XO In Today's Video: The Reserve: https://fromthereserve.com/pages/catalog-page/?utm_source=JENNWW50&discount=JENNWW50 Use the code JENNWW50 for 50% off!! They keep small batches to maintain everything fresh, these products come from different parts of the world - focusing on them to be qualitative and nutrient packed, the products are third party tested as well. They offer vegetarian and vegan friendly options as well, besides a wide variety of products: from powders, to blends, gummies, adaptogens and more! VacLife Cordless Handheld Vacuum Cleaner (VL189OR): VacLife website: https://www.vaclife.com Use the code JENN15% for 15% off! Garden of Life Fitbiotic: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00Y8MP4CK?ref=exp_jennswwjourney_dp_vv_d 🦋COLLAGEN FOR HER https://www.collagenforher.com/discount/jennswwjourney?aff=22 🍝NETRITION.COM- Fiber Gourmet Pasta!! https://www.netrition.com/cgi/goto.cgi?aid=4549 Proteinex Liquid Protein: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08MVFVF9P/ Libby Glasses: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00PQTXBV0/?ref=idea_lv_dp_ov_d 🥒IMPERFECT FOODS (a GREAT, inexpensive produce option!) http://imprfct.us/v/jenn_2071 $20 OFF YOUR 1ST BOX!!! Life Update Video: https://youtu.be/g__g9-hxbgg ____ 🍪 SNACKS & DESSERTS RECIPE E-BOOK (only $15!!) https://www.jennclaytonnutrition.com/product/snacks-dessert-recipe-e-book/12?cs=true&cst=custom 🍽️ DINNER RECIPE E-BOOK (only $15!!) https://www.jennclaytonnutrition.com/product/dinner-recipe-e-book/10?cs=true&cst=custom 🥐 BREAKFAST RECIPE E-BOOK (only $15!!) https://www.jennclaytonnutrition.com/product/breakfast-recipe-e-book/8?cs=true&cst=custom 🍱 LUNCH RECIPE E-BOOK (only $15!!) https://www.jennclaytonnutrition.com/product/lunchrecipes/9?cs=true&cst=custom 🍎 🥑NUTRITION COACHING 🍎 🥑 As a Certified Nutrition Coach, I look forward to helping you reach your health and weight loss goals! I offer several different variations of nutrition coaching. Visit my website to see what option(s) meets your needs. I look forward to working with you! https://www.jennclaytonnutrition.com 💄MY BEAUTY CHANNEL (Budget Beauty!) https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEHwtUmiPbl07WjtUObg8fw ✨THRYVE (Ombre) GUT HEALTH TEST http://tryombre.com/JennClayton $30 OFF!! 🎉NUTRITION CHANNEL!!! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBJNoQCWfgE-L766S7m22qQ ⭐MY WEBSITE!! https://jennswwjourney.com 🥳Join my Facebook Group Jenn's WW Tribe https://m.facebook.com/groups/637837546653831 💙Want a FREE month of WW??? https://www.weightwatchers.com/us/checkout/iaf/?iaftoken=AA9A9E1A00 ⚡VERB ENERGY BARS (delicious & only 3 points!) https://bit.ly/3uY0QDE 🥕THRIVE MARKET (BEST place for clean eating/healthy foods!!) http://www.anrdoezrs.net/click-9256523-13895805 25% off your first order AND a FREE gift!! 💙PEATOS https://glnk.io/zww4/jennswwjourney-10  JENNS.WWJOURNEY-10 for 10% off! 🤩 LAKANTO PRODUCTS (Monk Fruit, PB Powder, Chocolate & MORE!) https://bit.ly/3cRLTbg 15% off with the code- JENNSWWJOURNEY 🍴PRIMAL KITCHEN (My FAV clean products!!) https://bit.ly/3btbyoi 10% off code- jennswwjourney 💪ORGAIN (I LOVE their protein powders, shakes and bars!!) https://www.kqzyfj.com/click-9256523-13828912 🌱LIVWELL PLANT BASED PROTEIN (SO GOOD!!) https://www.livwellnutrition.com/#a_aid=jennswwjourney 10% OFF code – jennswwjourney10 🍫BUILT BARS: https://builtbar.com?baapp=JENNSWWJOURNEY 10% off ALL orders! Code is- jennswwjourney (+ FREE SHIPPING!) SAVE MY CODE AS IT’S REUSABLE FOREVER!!! 😊 🥯WESTERN BAGEL https://westernbagel.com 10% off ANY order code- jennswwjourney 🍬SMART SWEETS https://glnk.io/0xyp/jennswwjourney 10% off code ($30+) - JENNS.WWJOURNEY10 🍰SMART CAKES & SMART BUNS https://smartbakingco.com/ref/jennswwjourney 10% off ALL orders! 🥩BUTCHER BOX (GRASS FED MEAT!! http://fbuy.me/oWYp1 $30 off your 1st order!! 🧡DEVOTION NUTRITION!!! - 10% OFF!! http://devotionnutrition.com?aff=221 Use the code- jennswwjourney 😋HEALTHY EATING ON THE GO BARS- 12% OFF!! https://www.healthy-onthego.com Code- jennswwjourney 🌶DAKS SPICES!- 10% OFF & FREE SHIPPING!! https://daksspices.com/buy-daks Code- jennswwjourney 🛍AMAZON STORE- (All my favorite things!!) https://www.amazon.com/shop/jennswwjourney 💌HAPPY MAIL!!! Jenn Clayton PO Box 32 Colbert, WA 99005 Follow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jenns.wwjourney/ Follow me on TikTok: Budget_Beauty Business Inquiries: jennclayton@yahoo.com Copyright free music from Epidemic Sound & Soundcloud *Some links may be affiliate or referral links* #whatieatinaday #wwrecipes #wwfoods #wwwhatieatinaday #fulldayofeating #caloriedeficit #lowpointfoods #lowpointrecipes #ww #weightwatchers #wwpersonalpoints #jenn'swwjourney
[ "#myww", "#weightwatchers", "#ww", "#wwsmartpoint", "#wwjourney", "#wwlife", "#wwlifestyle", "#jennswwtribe", "#jennswwjourney", "#wellnessthatworks", "#wwconnect", "#weightloss", "#diet", "#healthyeating", "#teamgreen", "#teamblue", "#teampurple", "#purpleplan", "#blueplan", "#greenplan", "weightlosstips", "caloriedeficit", "wwrecipes", "lowcalorierecipes", "healthyrecipes", "howtoloseweight", "#whatieatinaday", "#wwwhatieatinaday", "#fulldayofeating", "#wwrecipes", "#movingupdate" ]
2022-03-02T16:45:00
2024-02-08T17:12:43
1,383
3K94MIs4kIk
Morning. Welcome to today's What I Eat in a Day. I actually just sat down in my office to send a quick email before I go and make some breakfast. I wanted to hop on, show my face, and welcome you to today's What I Eat in a Day. We have a busy day today. I have some new favorite products that I've been loving to share with you guys. We have to go show a couple of houses. We have to run a couple of errands. So I'll take you along with me. I have some great new foods and recipes that I want to share with you. And tonight's dinner recipe, you're not going to want to miss it. So if you're excited for another What I Eat in a Day, don't forget to give my video a big thumbs up. And subscribe if you're not and turn your bell on so you never miss a single video. I do a What I Eat in a Day every Wednesday. Don't forget to check out the description box. I'll link everything I share with you today. Nutrition coaching with personalized macros and calories and one on one coaching. Links and discounts to my favorite things and my Facebook group. Don't forget to come and join us there. It's free and it's a wealth of information. All of that will be down in the description box for you. I'm getting pretty hungry so let's go make some breakfast. For my breakfast this morning, I'm going to have a protein smoothie and I'm going to share with you some new supplements that I've recently discovered and that I have been loving. They are from the brand The Reserve. So I'm going to add a couple of those to my smoothie this morning and then I'll tell you about a couple more products that I'm really enjoying. So I did go ahead and add a little ice to my magic bullet cup. I'm then going to add one cup of Fairlife milk. That's going to give me lots and lots of protein which is what I'm after for breakfast. The first product I have been loving from The Reserve is their Beauty Balm. I've been putting this a lot into smoothies and protein shakes. You only need one teaspoon. It is a skin hair and nail supplement. It has maca, blueberry powder and collagen in it. It adds a really nice fruity flavor and kind of adds a little bit of creaminess to the smoothier protein shake as well. I've also been loving adding this organic Lion's Mane. This is a mushroom based superfood powder. This is an adaptogen and adaptogens are really really good for you. You cannot taste this at all in a smoothier protein shake. It does not change the texture. You can do one teaspoon or two. I've been doing one teaspoon and for my protein today I'm going to do the devotion angel food cake. I love this protein powder. It is my favorite one to bake with but it's also my favorite one to substitute vanilla because the angel food cake is a little bit sweeter, a little bit more creamy. So anytime a recipe or protein shake wants vanilla protein powder I always reach for my devotion angel food cake. I will link devotion down in the description box for you with a discount. If you love to bake like I do using protein powder devotion hands down is the best. And then lastly I'm going to go ahead and add in just a handful of spinach. This is going to get me some greens for today. And here is what we're looking like so far. We'll go ahead and get it blended up. All right. We are all blended up. It's actually a pretty mint green color. Let me go ahead and get this into a glass and we'll go over the points and calories. Look at how beautiful this is. These are my glasses that I purchased off of Amazon. I shared these in January favorites. I'll link them down below for you guys. They're just really pretty and they are perfect protein shake and smoothie glasses. I'll go ahead and put the points here on the screen for you as well as the calories on having my breakfast. I'll talk to you guys a little bit more about the reserve and a little more about the two supplements I've been using in my protein shakes and smoothies and a couple others that I'm loving. So good. The devotion makes it so sweet and creamy. You cannot taste the lion's mane. You cannot taste the beauty bomb. It just tastes like a really sweet vanilla protein shake and not to mention that you get in a lot of greens with that big handful of spinach. So I want to talk with you guys a little bit more about the reserve. I just recently found this company and they have a ton of different supplement options. As you saw, I did pick up the beauty bomb. I also picked up the lion's mane and I decided to try out a couple of their matcha's. So I have the regular matcha and then I have the vanilla matcha. What I love about the reserve is they are made in small batches so that they remain as fresh as possible. These products come from different parts of the world. They are quality controlled and nutrient packed. They are even third party tested to make sure that they are the highest quality. They also offer vegetarian and vegan options. They have a wide variety of products including powders, blends, gummies, adaptogens and more. I'm loving my four products. The matcha is really good. It's organic. It has really good matcha flavor without the bitterness that you can experience with some of the less expensive lower quality matcha's. I've been loving the beauty bomb. I wouldn't recommend putting it in coffee because it does add a little bit of a berry flavor. But like I said, it's great in smoothies, great in protein shakes. The lion's mane, you can really put that into anything. But again, my favorite way is to blend it into a smoother protein shake. And then I do really enjoy the spray hand sanitizer. It has such a good smell. It's kind of a minty smell. Not a huge alcohol smell like a lot of the other ones. It actually smells really, really good. These products are exceptional, exceptional quality. They were so kind to offer my friends, my subscribers 50% off using the code here on the screen. I will put the link down in the description box. All you have to do is click the link and it will automatically apply the 50% off. It's a great way to try out a few of the reserve products. And I truly am loving all of them. You know, I like adding supplements to my routine, because it makes me feel better and it gives me all the vitamins, minerals and nutrients that my body needs. So don't forget to use the link down in the description box for 50% off. Mommy has to go work. Do you guys need a treat? You need a treat, buddy? I have a feeling your brother is not gonna get out of bed. Sit. Good girl. There you go. Pumpkin, can you sit? Good boy, buddy. And Diesel, no way he's getting up for this. Diesel, do you want your treats? Mommy has to go. Here. There you go, bud. It's snowed again today. This is another reason why we're moving to Arizona. I don't know if you can see, but my own sign is in my own yard. I am off to go show some houses in the snowy cold weather. I have two houses to show and one more stop to make. Since we're moving, we actually cleaned out a lot of things. We've sold a lot of things on Facebook Marketplace and I'm meeting a girl who's buying one of my Doonie and Burke purses. My mom gave it to me and it's more my mom's style than my style. So I'm selling it and I'm meeting her at a coffee shop kind of on my way home from the house showings. So that'll be nice. We've been able to make enough money selling off things we won't need in Arizona. Like our riding lawnmowers, our snowblower, our fertilizer. We don't have grass. We don't need any of those lawn care type of things. We've been able to sell enough to pay for our entire move, which has been great because it is not cheap to move cross country. Not at all. I mean, thousands and thousands of dollars. So we've been able to make enough to pay all of that. So we're super grateful for that. I'll do my best to show you guys the houses keep you updated on whether or not my clients like the houses. It is currently at 10 30 in the morning. I have not eaten since breakfast, but I did bring a snack with me. So I'll flip you around, show you the snack. It may end up being my morning snack and lunch because I don't know when I'm going to get home today, but I'll show you what I brought along with a bottle of water and this will at least tide me over. So I brought that private selection snack board that I picked up in this last week's grocery haul. It has almonds, little chocolate wafers, cheese and meat. It has 14 grams of protein, 280 calories. And of course, I'll put the points here on the screen for you. I don't know if I'll just wait and eat a little snack or something when I get home before dinner. We'll just have to see how the day plays out. I wasn't able to film at the first house because the clients were already there. But this blue house is the one that we're going to be looking at next. They liked the first house. This one's in a nice area in another part of town, but nonetheless, a really nice area. So we'll see what they think. Alright, I am headed home. They actually liked the first house better. They had two others that they were going to do a drive by as we like to call it and check out the area in the house. So we may be looking at some more we may be writing an offer tonight. But if anything, I think they're going to be gravitating towards the first one. I did eat my whole little snack pack thing. So I'm doing pretty good. I may have another snack before dinner. I'll definitely let you know if I do, but I have a little bit of cleaning that I want to do. I actually got a new handheld vacuum. I'll show it to you guys. It's awesome. Like it's super awesome. So when I get home, I need to vacuum Palmer stairs and really I should vacuum out my car. Where's my welcome committee? I want to share with you guys this vacuum that I was telling you about. This is from the brand VAC life. And this is a rechargeable cordless vacuum. I'm really excited about this for my car for in the house. It has lots of attachments. I'll tell you guys a little bit more about it. I want to see how good this works. So I'm actually going to vacuum Palmer's little stairs that he uses to get into our bed because they just get full of hair and dirt. So let's test it out. No Palmer. You have to attack the vacuum. Oh my gosh, this works so good. Wow, it's picking up everything. Hey, hey, no no Palmer, leave it as alone, buddy. Look at how good those look. Hey, your stairs are all clean. Mr. Yes, they are. Wow, that worked really, really good. Can you see all the dirt in there? Look at all of that dog hair and dirt just from the stairs. Now I kind of want to try it out in my car. I'm going to put on the little attachment that we can use to get in the crevices and let's go try this in the car. Okay, no judgment on the car here but I want to use that attachment. I can't believe how fantastic this vacuum works. And this attachment fits really nicely in all those little crevices and I'm able to really get under my feet with it as well. Yeah, this is fantastic and get under all my pedals and even your feet. So here is the filter and has dog hair, dust and then look at how much I have in the bottom here. Super easy to clean. You just hit the button to remove the tank, pull out the filter and empty it out. So I want to tell you a little bit more about the VacLife cordless vacuum. I will list it down below the link. Any discounts, discount codes, links, everything will be down in the description box for you but I will tell you, spoiler alert, it's super, super affordable. It's cordless and portable. It is cord-free and hassle-free which gives you super convenience when it comes to cleaning whether it's your car, your house or in my case Palmer stairs. It deep cleans. It has a lot of suction power and a really long battery life. You can actually use it for two hours on a single charge. It comes with professional attachments with two different attachments to better meet your cleaning needs. There's the brush and then the one that I use to really get in between small areas and crevices like in my car. It also comes with an additional filter if you need to swap that out once it gets too dirty. It does have an LED light which I think is really cool and that's helpful for cleaning dark areas and corner cleaning. You can turn it on to light up the place that you're trying to clean making your work much easier and they do have customer service if you have any questions or concerns or need to exchange or return the product. It's about two and a half to three hours to charge the vacuum up which is not bad at all and that gives you at least 20 minutes of usage and as you saw it works really, really well. I mean it's sucked up everything in my car, everything on Palmer stairs and I really like this small attachment. I was able to get under the pedals in my car, under my seat, in the crevice in my seat so this attachment is one we'll get a ton of use out of. So really, really impressed with the back life handheld vacuum. Again I'll link it down below with all of the information and discounts for you but definitely grab one. It's a nice portable vacuum. So I just got home and filled up my water bottle and it reminded me to share this product with you guys. I bought this on Amazon. I've had it for a while now and I have really been liking this. This is the Protein X Hydralized Liquid Protein. It comes in a ton of different flavors. I have the watermelon. It has 18 grams of protein in 72 calories and that is in two tablespoons. So what I usually do in a 20 ounce water bottle is I put one tablespoon. So I'm getting nine grams of protein and it also flavors my water watermelon which is great because it makes me drink a little bit more water and it's a healthier water alternative at least sweetener wise, ingredient wise than those water enhancers. So I have been loving this. I'll make sure that I link it down below for you guys. You can pick any of the flavors. I have only tried the watermelon but it lasts forever. I've had it for several months and I put it in my water usually one to two times per day. So I wanted to share that with you guys. I'm also going to grab a quick snack before dinner. I'm going to have a bag of my quest protein chips. These are the Loaded Taco. I love these. This is the only quest chip I like and these are delicious. I bought these a couple weeks ago in my grocery haul and I haven't even had any yet. They have 19 grams of protein and four net carbs. So between the 19 grams in my chips and then the nine grams in my water I have about 28 grams of protein in my snack which is perfection. Moving update. A lot of you are asking to see kind of the process as we pack up and get ready to move. So we have sold a lot of things on Facebook marketplace, lots of furniture, lots of random things and we've just started packing. We're still waiting for the inspection on our new house in Arizona to be finalized and until that happens we're just a little leery and cautious about packing but we did end up selling the gray sectional that was in this living room. This is the furniture we're actually taking with us to our new house. We're also keeping our kitchen table and we've started really cleaning out some of the other rooms that we don't use that often. I've actually started cleaning my office. You can see that my eyeshadow pellets are already packed away. I've cleaned off the shelving. I've cleaned off some of the shelf other than what is seen in my videos. I've also mainly cleaned out the closet in my office. I'm just slowly but surely packing that up. The bed and table and lamp and everything we had in this room we sold as well. So we have a system here where we're packing up in one bag, a lot of clothes that we're keeping. We also have the items that we're selling, our suitcases, all of that that we're keeping. This big bag is full of pillows and then we have just a large garbage bag in here too and we've taken everything off of the walls. I've started taking everything off the walls in the spare bedroom too. I just haven't taken down the large picture. So my next step is to pack up all the small stuff, the more decorative stuff in this office. We also cleaned out this closet and started to organize it. We are keeping all the blankets for packing but we've cleaned out the whole bottom of this closet as well. So we're getting rid of everything that we aren't going to need in our new house including our riding lawnmowers, our snowblower, our generator, all the things that we use here that we won't be using there because we don't have any grass and like I mentioned that's really helping us pay for our move so it's been really good to get rid of that. Next up is my closet clean out so I'll take you guys along with me on that for sure and then of course once I move we'll do some shopping and I'll take you with me there. A lot of you in the comments of my life update video said that you would love to see more vlogs so I'm definitely planning on that. I'll incorporate some what I eat in a days with the vlogs. We'll buy some new clothes. I'll take you guys with me when we're shopping for home decor for our new house and all the things. So you'll get to see Arizona as we see Arizona and it was a renowned yes for me to vlog our trip down there. We are driving with our dogs. I'll give you guys a complete update on that probably in next week's what I eat in a day but I'll vlog the entire thing, show you how I stay on track, how I make good food choices and of course the states and cities that we pass through so you all wanted the vlog so you'll get the vlog. For dinner tonight we are having Tater Tot chicken pot pie casserole. We are pairing together some of my favorite foods chicken pot pie and tater tots so let me show you what's in our recipe. First you're going to need some frozen tater tots, a big bag or two small bags of frozen mixed vegetables, light butter, two cans or one large can of low-fat cream of chicken soup, a small onion. You can either use ground chicken like I am or you can use chicken tenders or chicken breast whatever you prefer. My ground chicken is from Imperfect Foods. Don't forget about Imperfect Foods. I'll link it down below with $20 worth of free groceries, no minimum order. Just take your $20 worth of groceries and run so I'll link that down below. You'll need some light shredded cheese and some milk. So to get started you're going to need quite a large pot because everything pretty much goes into this pot so I'm going to add one quarter cup of light butter, the diced up onion, both cans of cream of chicken soup, half of a cup of milk and for seasonings we'll need garlic powder. I didn't even pull those out in the beginning but you will need some garlic powder, salt and pepper. Give that a quick stir. We're going to cook this over medium heat until it is heated through. Also in a skillet I'm going to cook down my pound of ground chicken. You would also want to cook your chicken breast and shred that as well. Once it is warmed through go ahead and turn off the heat and we're going to add half of this large bag of vegetables about 16 ounces. We're also going to add in one and a half cups of light shredded cheese which is what is left in my bag. Give that another quick stir. I added the cooked ground chicken in with the rest of the pot pie mixture. Stirred that in really well. This looks delicious. I have a 9 by 13 baking dish here that I sprayed with non-stick cooking spray. I'm going to go ahead and add in the mixture. Spread that out nice and even in the bottom of the baking dish. Now we're going to top it with the entire bag of frozen tater tots. If you want to lower the points you can always add less tater tots to the top but honestly Troy is going to be the one eating the majority of this. I will probably skip the tater tots and just eat the filling so because it's mainly for him I'm going to really load it up with tater tots but you can only add about half the bag and you would still have a nice tater tot topped dish. It is going into the oven for 25 to 30 minutes until heated through and our tater tots are nice and crispy. Dinner is out of the oven. Let me just tell you how delicious this looks and how amazing this smells. Let me go ahead and get this plated up and I'll be back to share points and calories. So here is my dinner. Doesn't this look amazing? Chicken pot pie paired with tater tots. Yes please. I will go ahead and put points and calories serving size here on the screen for you but this is dinner. For dessert we're keeping it simple. I'm going to exceed my protein goal for today. I'm having one of the ratio strawberry yogurts. These are so good. 25 grams of protein. They're creamy. They're sweet. They are one of my very favorite yogurts and just a great way to get in lots and lots of protein so that is my dessert for tonight. So that's a wrap on today's What I Eat in a Day on WW. I hope you enjoyed coming along with me today sharing all of my really good foods, some new recipes and that dinner you need to make that dinner. It was absolutely delicious. You will find that recipe on my recipe website. It is linked down in the description box along with nutrition coaching. Don't forget to consider personalized macros and calories and one-on-one coaching. Links, discounts, information for everything I shared with you today and my Facebook group. Don't forget to come over and join us. We'd love to have you are all down in that description box. Happy Wednesday friends and I'll see you all in my next video. Bye.
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The Market was Sleepy Today | Stock Market Technical Analysis
This slow market is developing your ability to be a professional. Hold onto your money while the market is contracting and wait until it expands to be aggressive. Tonight, we discuss how the QQQs has been stalling and the whole channel is very tight. Breaking the 307 level could get the QQQs out of the middle of the channel. -- 💰 LEARN DAN’S PROVEN STRATEGY 💰 ► Unlock Dan's PS60 Process in this FREE 4 hour training video (not a sales video or webinar, just recorded training by Dan to help you win): https://ps60process.com ► Accelerate your success by trading live with Dan for 1 month (only $97 one-time payment, 100% satisfaction guarantee): https://ps60process.com/trade -- 🤔 WHY TRUST DAN? 🤔 Dan is a proud father of 2 and creator of the simple and highly effective PS60 Trading Process. He shares his 20+ years of trading experience every day with those who are eager to become successful traders. Dan has been in the trading world since 1998. He started his career at Generic Trading in NYC as one of the early members of the top prop trading desks led by his mentor and late friend – the great Mayer Offman. He ran his first office for Generic Trading in 2001. Through this experience, he realized the importance of risk management while running a group of traders. Generic was eventually sold to the Royal Bank of Canada. Years later, he led another trading group desk at Assent that was sold to Sunguard. Dan has traded through the Dot Com era, 9/11, and the mortgage bubble. He has traded along side some of the top prop traders during his career and made lifelong friendships. All the experience and screen time led him to start Access A Trader in 2010. Access A Trader focuses on Dan’s proven PS60 Process and daily education to help you find your edge, master your process, and own your future. -- 🎉 HEAR FROM OUR SUCCESSFUL TRADERS 🎉 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQi2IV3lW6ja8gGXK0S6U32l3d5CWnoxE -- 📈 ADDITIONAL WAYS TO LEARN FROM DAN 📉 Subscribe For New Videos https://www.youtube.com/accessatrader?sub_confirmation=1 Connect With Dan For Daily Market Insights Twitter: https://twitter.com/danshep55 Stocktwits: https://stocktwits.com/danshep55 Watch Dan's Recent Market Updates Nightly Analysis: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQi2IV3lW6jYWbLmHLojGpo0i-6oo9lGm Weekly Analysis: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQi2IV3lW6ja6st5FA6NNIg_4xfUA3i1J -- 💚 COMMUNITY SUPPORT 💚 Email support@accessatrader.com or visit: https://accessatrader.com/ Leave your questions in the comments below and we’ll be happy to answer them 👍 #Trading #AccessATrader #DanShapiro
[ "stocks", "stock market", "stock exchange", "dan shapiro", "access a trader", "day trading", "day trader", "ps60", "pivot", "goog", "google", "nvda", "amzn", "amazon", "aapl", "apple", "tsla", "tesla", "baba", "netflix", "nflx" ]
2023-03-27T22:03:14
2024-02-05T08:40:35
812
3kOiBjIqH48
Welcome to Access to Trader, the number one community for those who are committed to taking control of their trading in order to achieve success, profitability, and longevity. Thank you for joining us. Here's Dan Shapiro to help you find your edge, master your process, and own your future. Hey guys, good evening everybody. Welcome to another edition of the AccessToTrader.com Nightly Wrap-Up Show. Hope everybody is doing well. My apologies, there was no weekend video. I usually record the weekend video, either Saturdays or Sundays, but I figured I had nothing planned on Sunday. I didn't realize my sons, not only my sons, but both my kids, basketball, AU schedule was crazy. I had a whole tournament planned on Sunday, which I had no idea even existed, so I didn't have any unfortunately any time. But, never behold, here we are. So, I can honestly say, and before we get started guys, I want to welcome all the new viewers. Please like, share, subscribe, tell a friend, all that good stuff. Again, unbiased talk about what we believe is going to happen based on data. Based on that data, here's how we begin. I bet a lot of you guys probably share the same kind of day. If you trade pivots like me, or you trade the mid-cap market, if you trade, whatever your drug of choice is. I bet you, right? I pretty much bet you not knowing your process, not knowing your account size, anything. I'm almost positive to say you probably had a pretty slow day. Today was probably one of the slowest days I can remember, well definitely for 2023, but probably in a very, very long time. Literally, we had one pivot at the open, Tesla broke out of a little bit of a range, and that was it. That was it. You could have literally turned off your computer after the first half hour of the day. Market did absolutely nothing. When you look at the scoreboard, the Dow up 200 points, the Nasdaq down 55, not a huge disconnection, but still, nevertheless, you had over the weekend, Citizens Bank buying the assets of SVB. As you can imagine, banks are strong today, I guess, if you can call them strong. Going from Citibank, going from 52 to 42, and being up a dollar is like winning the shortest dwarf competition. I don't know if that's politically correct. I apologize to anybody in the audience, but that's kind of what it was. It's like a gambler losing $100,000 and running around naked pounding a chest up their $500 victory. That's kind of what we are right now. The banks, they rose, the S&P rose a little bit, the Dow rose a little bit, and that's about it. We are incredibly stuck into this challenge. From the good point of what we're seeing is, yes, I think the market is definitely stabilizing. You can see it. The more days that are going past the initial collapse after the first bank and then the second bank and the third bank, I don't know how many banks have already collapsed, but the point is the market is definitely stabilizing. How do you know it's stabilizing? We are shrinking in channels, and the last three days, all channels have been shrunk, especially on the Nasdaq 100, and if you look at the cues, they're trading in a deadly, deadly tight channel. If you traded today anything in the Nasdaq 100, you heard the word chop, you heard the word boring and sleepy. It was all that stuff. It really is all that stuff. I really think today was one of those days that no matter how you trade, unless you are a crazy hyper-micro scalper on the one-minute channels, I think today was a very, very lethargic, complacent day. The question is, what is the market waiting for? We're too far away from the next Fed meeting. There's nothing really imminent as far as political unrest, as far as I know. This COVID thing kind of left. You could make an argument it was never here. You guys, notice nobody's even talking about COVID. It's like it never even happened. No more commercials anymore. You don't need to do your 18th booster. Nothing has happened. But again, it's a whole different conversation. Again, that's how slow the day was. You start thinking of things that have nothing to do with the market. We have to, as traders, you could only do three things. You could sit there, complain, and all that crazy stuff that is going to mentally drain you. There's nothing you could do about it. You could pretend it's not happening, put on your blinders, and trade the market like everything's all good. You'll get chopped up. Your money will go away. Your brain cells will go away. Everything will go away. Or you could be an adult. There's something called sitting on your hands. And usually, when you hear people say, well, sit on your hands, they usually, that means they don't have a process enough to trade both sides of the market. You'll hear people start around as well. Cash is a position as the market is blatantly going lower as you can get some great value through the outside. But this is not one of those times. I think this is one of those situations that we kind of have to let the market do the legwork for us. And you can see here how tight this channel is on the queues every single time. And it's not like the queues are going, you know, raining from the whole channel and coming right back up. They're just stalling out. Look how tight this channel is here. It was basically a training from 309 to 307 literally here for the last five bars, and that's not a good thing. So technically speaking, what we need to happen is the queues need to lose this 307. You see this whole 307 channel that's been the low, they've been defending that 307 level for the last three days. That's the level that needs to breach. If the bears can get take control of the 307 level, then I think all these stocks that are sitting in this really aggressive, ugly contraction cycle, they will start getting pulled down. Now what was cool about this morning was we were sitting there and like, all we wanted was a directional bias. We didn't care which way. So the one thing that we did not want to see was the market closing in the middle of the range. I either wanted a really big aggressive market rally to the top of the range or a big aggressive nasty sell-off to the bottom of the range so we can get value on those ranges. And guess what? We closed right in between, right? 307 is here. We're basically 309. So look, is it possible we can get back down to this 307 level? Yeah, I'd like to see that because at this point, you know, when you sit on your hands once, you're responsible, right? That's a good thing. You sit on your hands twice. You're still responsible. You start getting antsy. The longer we stay in this distribution channel, eventually even the most professional, statue, patient trader eventually is going to snap and start hitting buttons, clicking the mouse. And unfortunately, that's never a good thing. You don't trade because the market's open. You trade because you have value. This is your chance to start developing that and letting go of that FOMO gene. The FOMO gene is a very, very powerful gene. It's in everybody's DNA. The faster you can get rid of it, the better. And although a day like this or the last couple of days might seem like, oh my God, this market's like not doing anything. God, go up, go down, do something, right? It's actually developing your ability to be a professional. And, you know, it's not going to show up on the scoreboard. It's not going to really, you know, make a dent in your profit and loss column. But the point is, the longer you can withhold without prostituting your money, the better you'll be, right? The better, more responsible, more fiscally responsible you'll be going forward in your career. And it's not going to mean much to you now, but it really is starting to put really good developing blocks in your subconscious when the market does expand. And I think the market will expand in the next couple of days. I think when the market really starts to expand, you'll really appreciate the days that the contraction is taking place. So you can actually sit there, watch the market not really do anything. And then when you get an expansion channel when stocks close at the top or the bottom of the range, that's when you can get super-duper aggressive for the next trading day. And that's exactly kind of what we start today. You know, if you look at a lot of charts tonight, you're going to see a lot of stocks sitting in the bottom of the ranges or at least getting to the bottom of the ranges. So it's very, very tough for me despite the market, again, putting in now one, two, three, four days in a row, right? See this four days in a row of higher lows on the Q's despite not doing anything. We're still putting in higher lows. So is it possible at any single day the market wakes back up? Absolutely. But for that to happen, we're going to have to start reclaiming back this 313 level. And if you look at the 60-minute view, that's where we got rejected. So, you know, we're right now four or five dollars away from the top of the channel, and we're about two dollars away from the bottom. So again, if you're playing the probability game, right, for four from the top and two from the bottom, well, let's see if at least the bottom channel can finally confirm. I don't know if it will, but again, if you go through your charts tonight, you'll start seeing a lot of names that potentially could be pretty good for tomorrow if the Q's do lose the bottom channel here at 307. And here's some names that I like, right? Look at NVIDIA. NVIDIA looks like it's starting to slowly roll over. Had a great run, right? Phenomenal run. I know a lot of you guys did great with this thing. It's been an absolute great trader. But now it's putting in the opposite, right? If the Q's are putting in four days in a row of higher lows, this thing is putting in four days in a row of lower highs. You see that? High, lower high, lower high, lower high. If this thing could just get below this whole channel here and lose the five-day moving average, I think NVIDIA could get pulled. You know, this would definitely be one of the first ones I'd be watching if we start losing that 307 level on the Q's. Look at Microsoft, right? Again, another one. Had a great run today, but you have to start looking for signs. Like, I think it was last night they got upgraded. The stock couldn't rally today. Again, if a leader cannot rally after an upgrade, it means it's getting tired. You see how it's just sitting here, right? You see how Microsoft was sitting here three days in a row defending on the five-day? Same thing with the video. If Microsoft starts losing the five-day, there will be a pull, right? There will be a pull as well. So if you go through the NASDAQ 100, you'll see a lot of names. Tesla was kind of odd today. Tesla got above Friday's channel. We had a nice opening range high. The stock started going higher. I was like, all right, the stock went up by $2.5 or so. I'm like, all right, this is a shot we get to 200. And all of a sudden today, the Q's stole out, start going down, and everything that went down went there. So it was very, very odd to see that. Now in a weird way, Tesla's closer to the bottom of the range here than it is to the top. So look, there's a lot of names that it's a very head-scratching type of market. And again, just to kind of reiterate the point, you have four days in a row of Q's putting in higher lows, but yet you have three, four days in a row of the leaders putting in lower highs. Something's got to give here, right? Something's got to give. And I believe in the next day or so, we will get that a little bit moment of clarity. The key is just to sit there and wait, right? Again, the market's not running away from you. There's no time limit. You don't need to put on 68 trades by 931 or your day is over. It's all about the long game, right? It's all about longevity. There's times in your career that you want to really step on the gas. You want to step on the gas when everything is closing either at the top or the bottom of the range, because that's going to give you the highest probability of the next day momentum. When stocks are in between and they still have to get to the bottom of the range or they still have to get to the top of the range, that's when you find yourself in that whole chop factor, the spin cycle. Unfortunately, if you don't know you're in this type of scenario, you're going to get chopped up again tomorrow. So the best thing that could possibly happen for us, I'm really, really hoping this does happen. At this juncture, I don't care which way we go. I really don't. We trade both sides of the market. It doesn't make a difference to me. But what we need to happen desperately is either the market gaps up above the range or the market starts gapping down below the range to kind of trigger a point of reference that the market could either confirm or defend again. But it's going to be very, very tough to have that massive, massive expansion day if these stocks don't get out of their channels. So the best bet tomorrow, I am watching technology, although again it's kind of a skewed little cycle which you really don't see a lot of queues putting in four days in a row of higher lows versus like a stock like NVIDIA putting in the same time four days in a row of lower highs. But again, welcome to the best reality show that's not on television. So let's just sit patient. Let's sit tight. We have the stocks we're watching tomorrow. NVIDIA, Tesla, Microsoft, all the names. If they could start confirming back to the bottom of the range and the queues can follow, then yes, maybe we'll finally start to see an expansion worth of good excessive trading. So guys, have a great night everybody. Again, this is what you signed up for folks. Every single day is not that guns blazing, let's go pedal to the metal, beast to the wall, right? You know, some days you got to be an adult. You have to sit and watch and sit and watch. And when the finally coast is clear and the data kind of correlates to what you're seeing technically, that's when you strike with extreme prejudice. Guys, have a great night everybody. God bless and I will see you all tomorrow. Take care.
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UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
Bakıda naməlum şəxs Türkiyə bayrağını qopararaq, yerə atıb
#Kanal13​ #VideonuBəyən​ #AbunəmizOl #Kanal13Televiziyasi https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1 - bu linkə vursanız bütün aksiyalara canlı baxa biləcəksiniz! http://youtube.com/kanal13az/join - bu linkə basıb Kanal13-ün sponsoru olun və xüsusi videolarımızı yalnız siz izləyin! http://t.me/kanal13tv & https://bit.ly/37BVMqU https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1 https://bit.ly/2Rs6MB3 #sondeqiqexeberleri #Kanal13abunəsiol https://bit.ly/2V19Fdy Baxın, bəyənin və HAQQIMIZI verin - bu linkə tıklayıb ABUNƏ OLUN - https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1 Kanalımıza bu linkə tıklamaqla dəstəyinizi göstərin: http://bit.ly/birmanat https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ/join *Diqqət: Kanal13-də vətəndaş şikayətləri ilə bağlı yayılan videolar kanalın mövqeyini əks etdirmir, kanal bu ittihamların məzmununa görə məsuliyyət daşımır və hər hansı video materialda adı çəkilən və ya özünü qarşı tərəf kimi görən bütün hüquqi və fiziki şəxslərin mövqeyini də dərc etməyə hazırıq. Əlaqə üçün: +49176 75077516 WhatsApp **Diqqət! Diqqət! Sizdən hər hansı işlə bağlı Kanal13 adından pul istəyiblərsə təcili olaraq 070 2090400 WhatsApp nömrəmizə yazaraq bildirin və polisə və prokurorluğa xəbər verin!!! Kanal13 olaraq Uca Millətimizə təmənnasız xidmət etməkdən qürur duyuruq!!! © Kanal13 TV istehsal etdiyi bütün video və audio məhsulları azad yayım hüququ altında yayır (free copyright and reuse allowed) və hər bir digər yayımçı Kanal13 tərəfindən istehsal edilmiş məhsulu məzmunu dəyişdirmədən, loqonu silmədən, Kanal13-ə istinad etməklə təkrar yaya bilər. Bu halda şirkətimizdən xüsusi icazə alınmasına ehtiyac yoxdur: Amma bir qeydə XÜSUSİ DİQQƏT YETİRİN: Kanal13-də yayımlanmış materialların digər YouTUbe kanallarında təkrar yayımına ancaq 48 SAATDAN SONRA İCAZƏ VERİLİR. Ümumiyyətlə isə, arzuediləndir ki, Kanal13-ə məxsus hər hansı video material youtube.com/kanal13az hesabına link verilməklə yayımlansın. Materialların qeyd edilən tələblər daxilində başqa youtube hesablarına, saytlara və ya sosial şəbəkələrə yüklənərək yayılması sərbəstdir. Qaydalar pozularsa şikayət edilə biləcəyinizi nəzərə alın! Xüsusi qeyd: Şərh bölməsində yazılan təhqir və söyüşlər silincək. Kanal13 olaraq hörmətli izləyicilərimizdən xahiş edirik ki, tənqid yazmağı təhqir yazmaqla qarışdırmasınlar və heç kimi aşağılayıcı ifadələrlə təhqir etməsinlər. ▌▌►Website: http://kanal13.tv/ http://www.facebook.com/tvkanal13 https://twitter.com/Kanal13Az https://plus.google.com/+Kanal13AZ/posts http://ok.ru/kanal13 https://vk.com/kanal13tv https://www.instagram.com/kanal13.az Click & Subscribe to the main youtube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ?sub_confirmation=1 Online Radio BakuFm: http://baku.fm/ Facebook Official Page: https://www.facebook.com/RadioBakuFM © KANAL13 [ Azərbaycanın ilk peşəkar internet televiziyası ] The First Internet TV of Azerbaijan
[ "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" ]
2022-01-29T16:14:47
2024-02-14T18:44:17
105
3KztsBIWTdE
Göründülər bucun sosial səbəkələrin Azərbaycan seqməntində yayılıb, kameralara düşən bu şəxs, iyaşa bəyiklərinin birinin qarşısında ucaldılmış Türk Yəcrüm Hürriyətinin bayrağını qəstən kəsərə kiri atıb və durmadan ərazidən uzaklaşıb. Hər kəs bilir ki, Türk Yəcrüm Hürriyəti bayrağı Azərbaycan resubilikasının vətəndaşları üçün üç rəngli bayraq qədər əziz və doğmadır. Bu bizim öz bayrağımızdır. İki üç dövlətinin bayraqları üçün, hər iki dövlətlərin vətəndaşları zaman zaman qan dökmüş və şəhid olmuşlar. Ümud edirik ki, Hüquq Muhafizə organları bu şəxsi tezliklə müəyyən edərək, qanun çərçibəsində haqq etdiyi cəzasını verəcəklər.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KztsBIWTdE", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCvymH6qvAgCpzuRkXIw1ywg
Jeff Regan, Investigator - Two Little Sisters
Jeff Regan, Investigator 1949-11-16 OTRR version 2007
[ "Old", "Time", "Radio", "1949" ]
2020-07-23T12:54:26
2024-04-23T14:14:26
1,786
3ke1uoz6xP8
My name is Regan. I work for Anthony J. Lyon International Detective Bureau. They call me the lion's eye Wednesday at 9 and CBS brings you Jeff Regan Investigator starring Frank Graham as Regan with Frank Nelson as Anthony J. Lyon So stand by for mystery suspense and adventure in tonight's story of the two little sisters When a six-foot 200 pound guy turns up with a knife in his back Maybe a short hundred pounds of cool green-eyed blonde did it and maybe she didn't Well this time there were two blondes sisters They looked alike, but they were about as much alike as a sheepdog and a cobra Goes to show you can't tell by the package Their names was a man ski Mary and Dolly's a man ski They worked for the everybody's happy pastime carnival shows It was old he happy pastime himself who was sitting in the lion's office when I got there about noon Come in. I'd like you to meet our new client proprietor of the everybody's happy pastime carnival shows No doubt you've heard of them Jeffrey sure sure. How are you? I Friend here is troubled with laryngeitis Jeffrey purely psychological purely psychological a result of worry profound worry. Isn't that right? Yes Yes, well Jeffrey what do we do now Jeffrey? I'm glad you asked that question to tell the truth I end the you fine opportunity for you to get out of the city while I sit here sweltering in this heat You Jeffrey get to the point Yes, well Jeffrey the fact is our friend here leaves on the two o'clock plane for Phoenix, Arizona Advance arrangements for the carnival sure yeah sure sure well in mean time the star performer of Everybody's happy pastime carnival shows a girl named a Now where's that piece of paper? I jotted it down. Oh, here. We are Dolly's a man ski the queen of the blades ice skater. Oh I got it. She's a knife thrower with the show Jeffrey best in a line. They say what's a trouble. That's just it That's just it someone's been threatening a man named ran ran It's upsetting her Jeffrey beginning to show in her work. That's what worries our client here. What's ran God on her? Well, I don't know Jeffrey our client doesn't know isn't that right, sir? Yes, no, but we'll retain to find out Exactly get rid of him get rid of him Jeffrey Like the lion said it was a chance to get out of the city I Drilled father time back out to his carnival. He had to pick up his stuff and then make the two o'clock plane at international airport The carnival was set up on a couple of vacant lots out on Sepulveda big sign Everybody's happy pastime carnival shows Tense trailers ferris wheel saw dust the usual stuff The old guy pointed out Dolly's a man skis trailer. That was on my own. I Didn't get far Guy in a 1922 tux three days whiskers and a turban like a second-hand bird's nest after me How do you do sir? The only legitimate thing about the Swami was his breath. That was 90 proof What's up to you? I am Swami. I'll cut you step this way, please into my tent I will consult the crystal the crystal ball tells me many things. Yeah, like what? Sit right here. Thanks The crystal ball tells me mr. Rekin that you've been hired to help dolly zamanski tells me who have been hired by Yes, by the owner of our little carnival. How much of that did he tell you? Yes, mr. Rekin. It was he who told me I saw you arrive together What do you know about Rand? Fred ran. Let me see Let me see the crystal ball is cloudy The sand of time runs through the glass mr. Rekin cut it out. What do you mean? You're a swami like Truman's a Republican. Yes. Yes true Hey, well have a drink mr. Rekin I see much more than this than in the crystal ball Say when when you are thanks I'm a forefinger man myself mr. Rekin been my ruin You said you had information. Yes, there are two sisters zamanski. Yes dolly and Mary who's Mary the younger sister She knew to the show a few months with us her sister get of the job Yes, dolly zamanski is our star performer naturally. She has influence. Okay What about ran I will consult the crystal ball. Look, I don't get paid by the hour What's Ram God on dolly zamanski? I don't know. No, I see letters forming in the crystal play it your way F Z I Can't see anymore now perhaps if you care Maybe the swami had something to sell but if I couldn't get it for free I could go back and buy it later It was only a little ways to dolly zamanski's trailer big expensive job Everything was wide open because of the heat so I walked in Nobody home ladies clothes lying around theatrical makeup grease pain stick Picture of some round-faced guy with a crew cut signed yours adoringly no name knives and daggers around And a frosty blonde with green eyes in the doorway watching me What are you doing here homework? It's clever. Who are you? That's what I ought to ask you. Oh, yes, you're dolly zamanski No, I'm her sister Mary zamanski. Yes I'm Jeff Regan international detective bureau That's it You joined the carnival about four months ago five months five months Been in show business before no, I Was a boy back home that him what photo on the dressing table? No, sister pine pine. He's in love with my sister fine Fine, don't I Harold pine jj pine son. Yeah, you know pine warehouses. They're all over Los Angeles. So your sister's gonna marry them. Why? Think so But maybe she isn't mr. Regan. I wasn't you give me what you know, but four days ago a guy turned up Rand Yes, your sister scary. No, no mr. Regan. That's just it. She's Strong-minded she left home when she was 15 go on Well, life can't have been easy for her. You know show business just tell it. Well She's Independent mr. Regan. I've tried to tell her what about Rand Mr.. You're not I can't tell you lady. I've got a job to do. What about Rand? I I don't know sister scared of him I she is or she isn't something else She told me she didn't know him She said he was trying to get fresh, but twice. I Shouldn't tell you this my feces. I help your sister All right There's a little street two blocks up Sepulveda twice. I walked by there this morning and two days ago There was a green sedan parked there both times and Fred ran and my sister were in it. They were Well, they seem to be arguing Mr.. Regan, that's all I know. Okay How do I find your sister she performs in the main tent, but she must be just about through she might be over there, okay? See you I Started for the main tent got about halfway up the midway when he passed me going down the midway and into the big shiny trailer Broad-shouldered six-foot guy with red hair and when he went into the zamansky sister's trailer. I knew he was ran I Started for the trailer. I thought I heard voices quarreling And then I knew something was wrong. That was Mary zamansky screaming I hadn't had my eye off the door of that trailer 60 seconds since I left nobody went in but ran nobody came out But I busted fast. I made the last hundred yards like Mel Patton on Dexadrine But what I saw when I got inside that trailer stopped me cold It was Mary zamansky and ran But it wasn't like I figured Mary was hanging on to the wall and staring down at the floor and sobbing and on the floor was ran With a knife in his back All right, give it to me give it to me fast What happened come on look you've got ten seconds before the whole carnival be in here. What happened? Tell me what happened Sergeant post police hands above your heads Dolly's a man ski no Your turn mister Maybe we can take our hands down your armed Yeah, what'll I get it hip shoulder? Okay, let him down Thanks Got a permit to carry this sure show it Regan private detective International Detective Bureau. Here's the file copy Look good Regan You kill this guy Okay, Regan Well, maybe you'll tell me who the guy was His name Check Regan what I heard maybe you knew Rand Regan. Nope. How'd you get in here so quick heard screams? Oh, what's the use of all this you both know what happened? No, what did mr.. Rand came in and He'd been bothering darling. Maybe he thought I was done. I we look a little bit alike And he came in and and go on It hung together like the Jap Navy She was sore at Rand because he'd been bothering her sister So when the big six-foot guy came into the trailer she grabbed him and stabbed him in the back Sure It could have happened like that But from the look that came on Sergeant post face. I could see he'd try to make it stick He looked like a hungry kid at a bakery window He was seeing lieutenant stripes Well half an hour later Mary went off for the ride downtown in the party wagon I Figured it was a funny thing Dolly's a man ski hadn't showed up. I decided to look for her. She wasn't around She'd finished her act a little bit before the wreck has started and looked like nobody had seen her since Then I saw a tent with some stars and crescent moons painted on the front and that reminded me of something a Phony swammy with information for sale He was inside All right, swami get busy on that crystal ball and dish up some answers like FZ The crystal is clear it's a murder rap now FC what? Rand yes, Fred Rand Mrs. Fred Zemansky Rand Dolly Zemansky was his wife. I have said something That gave me something to work on but halfway to my car. I remembered something else Something Mary Zemansky had said a green sedan parked twice in the same place Maybe it was parked there a third time It figured the owner wouldn't be driving it away. He was taking a free ride as a guest of the county to the morgue It was there green sedan on the little street two blocks up Sepulveda the door was unlike The registration on the steering post read Fred ran That figured The address was on a street called Delancey in San Francisco But maybe I wouldn't have to go that far There's a card down on the floorboards one of those commercial hotel cards Globe Hotel Main Street. I Stuck it in my pocket. That was when a guy said I'm gonna kill you Fred I hit the car door with my shoulder that knocked him back, but he came in again and tried for me. I blocked it That was when I got a good look at him He was the guy in the picture in the Zemansky sisters trailer Yours adoringly Harold Pine This is CBS and you're listening to the story of the two little sisters tonight's adventure with Jeff Regan investigator I'd like to stuck around had a little talk with Harold Pine Maybe knew some answers But one answer he didn't know was who killed Fred Rand When he made that college try on me and called me Rand it didn't take the FBI to figure he didn't even know Rand was dead But it looked like Pine was gonna be asleep a while so I went downtown the globe hotel Last stop on the line for the canned heat crowd brass platoons Row of cracked leather chairs along the front two or three old guys dying in them Nobody at the desk, so I picked up number 306 from the register and went up door wasn't locked Inside you could see why Nothing in the joint, but a brass bed Cardboard suitcase on a chair with a couple of neckties in it Fred Rand had been traveling wide, but there was something else in the suitcase stuck in the lining Item torn out of the weekly variety the show business sheet It said a couple of night throwers named Duncan and Dolly had checked out of Las Vegas For work at a spot called the Blue Dolphin Casino Los Angeles The date line was half torn off, but you could make out the 46 at the end There was a phone on the wall and I tried the Blue Dolphin Casino. There was nobody home too early for a night spot So I decided to let the lion work on that one Lion I've got something for you So we're off the job Go on It just seems Sure sure she did You can understand this this job we stick on They've got the wrong goose. I don't think she's stabbed a six-foot guy in the back I think somebody pitched the strike out in through the window Dolly Saminsky. Maybe I think that's what her sister thinks I think that's why she confessed Should we be with the world full of poor unfortunate waiting to be held cut it out That's the only good news I've had all day I Checked out a ranz hotel the same way I went in When I was crossing the street, I saw somebody coming up the other sidewalk My high school geometry told me that if I walked fast enough I could get opposite where my car was parked the same time she did Okay, come on Get in the car can't do this to me your dollies are masking. I'm doing it get in there and stay still. I don't like you dolly How do you know my name you look like your sister Mary? Who are you never mind? Well, are you taking a ride up Hill Street? There's a place to park above Temple. It's a nice view of the city jail jail That's right jail Man like I said there's a good view What's the pitch Regan? How'd you get back the Regan it's on the steering post you got good eyes Thanks, honey. I didn't say that way so you don't love me. What's the pitch? See that building down there the bars on the windows you said I had good eyes. You know who's in it No, it's the city jail. Do you know who's in it? No, it's your sister Mary Mary Why? She says she killed a guy named Fred ran Fred ran never heard of Fred Randa Then why are you going to the globe hotel? You never heard of that either Talk Williams Okay, I will You get the pine warehouses on the hook. It looks good, but there's just one thing wrong Fred ran You're married to him the guy turns up. Maybe he heard about Harold Pine He blackmailed you okay. He blackmails me so watch so you want to get rid of him You come back from your act this afternoon with the knives in your hands You get near the trailer the windows open you see Rand inside arguing with the sister That must have been an easy pitch for the star of the show your sister's locked up down there on a murder raptor cover you And you got nothing to say Okay, I got nothing on you not now But you'll talk later Get out I got business That gave me nothing so I went down to the jail to try to see Mary's a man ski again Took me an hour to find out I wasn't gonna get to him that I did find out one thing that cop had done his job. Well Mary had signed a written confession to the murder of Rand I Got in my car and buck traffic out to Ventura Boulevard I hit a gas station and checked the address of the Lou dolphin It was in Encino that meant it was near the carnival and I could pick it up later Everybody's happy pastime was doing peak business by the time I got there The midway was lit up like a sailor on shore leave But where I went it was dark Out and back it was a man ski sister's trailer Maybe I could pick up some proof that dolly's a man ski pitch that night that killed Rand I Tripped over a tent rope and bumped into something wait a minute. Who are you? I'm porky. Come on out in the light. Yes, sir You're pine. Yes, sir. I'm pine Parapine, but they call me porky porky pine I reckon you could say it's a sort of a joke porky pine It started when I was in college. Yeah My name's Regan private detective. Oh, I owe you an apology mr. Regan Mean it hit the car skip it. I thought you were Fred Ryan. Why were you gunning for him Fred Ryan? Calls a dolly dolly's a man ski You're gonna marry her aren't you? Oh, well, I what's on your mind? Well, um, well now that there's been a murder Go on. I think I better tell the truth. That's a good idea You asked me if I was going to marry dolly. Well, no mr. Regan Give me that again. I am married to her San Bernardino last Thursday You married dolly's a man ski in San Bernardino last Thursday. Yes My father JJ pine reckons mr. Regan because of the family money sure Sure, you'd want to keep it quiet because of the old man Figured he wouldn't want his boy married to a corny performer. You'd break it to him later So you sneak to San Bernardino and got tired Yes, sir, you couldn't have married dolly's a man ski. She was married to Fred Rand not for three years Huh, they was divorced mr. Regan. You know that well dolly had the decree how else we could we had got a marriage last? Did you see the divorce decree? Oh, yes, sir. When was it granted 1946 month? You remember? Yes, October day Mr. Regan, I don't see what day October 14th 1946 October 14th 1940s Okay, well mr. Regan. I don't understand ran showed up again, huh? Yes, sir So you decided to kill him he was molesting dolly sure Well, maybe I just beat him up. You're a kid pine. Maybe I am keeping bad company. I don't think so. Who do you think nice Fred Rand? I Don't rightly know What were you looking for and back of that trailer? Nothing, I Didn't think of anything. You know dolly sister Mary. I do you think she killed Fred Rand No, then who did I don't know Okay, pine You didn't anyway Well, maybe I was just pretending. I didn't know he was dead when I fought with you at his car. No porky You're not that smart Mr. Regan, I reckon that so Next stop was the blue dolphin casino the manager wasn't there. So I waited around Must have been almost midnight before he showed You're the manager I am you bought it in here your book acts used them You ever hear of Duncan and dolly night throes. Did they have a place? 1946 maybe October I could look it up. Okay over here files over here And plenty of cheesecake on the wall those pictures Acts that have played us. Yeah. Yeah autographed photos the Mandy boy Mandy is me. We're just scared so love dimples Davis Dimples you see what I mean Yeah, see what you mean October 1946 could be hey, hey wait a second last week of September 26 through the 29th last week of September 1946 Duncan and dolly. Let me see that when you're okay Dolly's a man ski and Harry Duncan King and Queen of the blades split week bookings September 26 to 29 1946 I'm thinking King and Queen of the blades Wait a second Behind his locker. Yeah photos all over the place. I'm just remembering we keep the leg on out where you can see it But this stuff you see it. Yeah like I'm remembering The Mandy sincerely King and Queen of the blades Duncan and dolly. Let me see that picture. Yeah You recognize me. Yeah, both of them Dolly and Duncan. Yeah, what it gets you it gets me my answer. I Made it fast back to the carnival the midway was closed But I could see a light on in one of the tents I could hear voices But when I walked in the light went off I told me where they were I Started slow All right Duncan, I'm coming The knife went past took some air that belonged to me and stuck in the tent pole He shoved the table at me and I shoved it back. He made a try for the tent door and that was when I got it Turn the lights on Dolly Harry Duncan the phony swami You should talk He okay, you'll come out of it He'd kill ran thought I'd take the fall You let your sister take the fall and kept your trap shut because you were scared of what he knew what blue dolphin casino End of September 1946. How do you know that when you were supposed to be in a vat a divorcing Rand You got to stay there six weeks, baby. You can't even leave for one day figure it out You're perjured in the Nevada courts. Your divorce is no good when you married Harold pine. You weren't a boss from Rand You don't get pine I'll take care of that your marriage to him is good like a three dollar bill Thanks, maybe I can do something for you sometime so the swami killed ran That's what I figured wrong if Mary didn't stick ran it had to be a tossed job Somebody had to toss that knife through the trailer window somebody professional. I figured you Till I saw that photo of Duncan and Dolly Why'd you do it because he hated ran he loved you. How'd you figure that guys fall in love with dames like you I? Don't know why We were a duo Duncan and Dolly We're gonna get married, but I I ditched him for ran that figures and look good a while Duncan on the bottle when I married ran pretty soon. He got too shaky for a knife Ended up like this the phony swarmy he said ran had beat his time with me said he'd kill ran if he got the chance Didn't think he had the news He's coming out of it Get out of here Yeah Yeah, I wouldn't want to talk to dunk So I'll read it get out of here That wrapped it up for me the police took it from there and after a few hours at headquarters I headed back to my apartment, but if I figured it was that easy to get rid of the lion I was in for a new set of figures The lion was there waiting hat in hand Jeffrey Jeffrey my boy. You've come back at last. I heard all about it I've been waiting for you Jeffrey sure candle in the window Jeffrey. Will you ever forgive me? Will you forget the unkind words? I've uttered the meaningless petty things. I've said. Oh, I rule the day I mistrusted you Jeffrey my boy. It was madness come off at Fatso But Jeffrey I mean it you were right all along Mary didn't kill that man Mary was an innocent girl caught in the tangled web of suspicion But you Jeffrey you defended her in her most trying moments a noble thing Jeffrey, but I'm fired fired Oh nonsense my boy nonsense. Haven't I apologized? It's just that I feel so sad about that poor child Mary and that pine fellow without the bride He had taken to his heart. What will they ever do Jeffrey? Save your sympathy lion. They'll get along. What? What do you mean by that? Well when I last saw them they were sobbing it out on each other's shoulders You mean it Jeffrey? They've discovered each other how charming how positively charming and with all those millions He has to millions of dollars stop drooling Fatso. There's nothing in it for you No Jeffrey. I suppose not but I can dream get her Jeff Regan investigator is written by William Frug and William Feifeel directed by Sterling Tracy and stars Frank Graham as Regan with Frank Nelson as Anthony J. Lyon Original music is by Dick around Jeff Regan investigator is heard each week at the same time over CBS Bob Stephenson speaking and inviting you to be with us again next Wednesday at 9 for more Suspense and mystery and adventure with Jeff Regan investigator, this is CBS the Columbia broadcasting system
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UCXONTfGmLC7ltFgLAlHs24g
UNSOLVED: Stuck in a Chimney for 7 Years (Joshua Maddux) | Missing Person Case | True Crime Stories
Hit that LIKE button! ► New? Subscribe! → http://bit.ly/ty_notts ► Support me on Patreon! → http://bit.ly/tnpatreon ► Join the channel for perks! → https://bit.ly/3V6gSF7 This true crime short from 2022 will give you chills. Missing persons cases like this are often unsolved years later. My name is Ty Notts and I'm a freelance cold case detective who investigates unsolved mysteries and unexplained crimes. Here on True Crime Stories, I cover true crime cases you've never heard of. I also post new true crime documentaries each week, so follow for more! Mysterious scary stories like this are sure to leave you baffled when you hear about what this scary person has done. Submit tips or unsolved cases to me in the comments or by email (tynottsyt@gmail.com)! #coldcase #truecrime #missing #missingpersons #crimestories #shorts
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2023-01-31T22:00:04
2024-02-05T07:27:34
60
3kgHlz-9eKY
This teenager was found lodged inside of a chimney for seven years, and investigators have no idea how he got there. Joshua Maddox lived in a town called Woodland Park, and as the name would suggest, there was plenty of woodland for Josh to hike through. But when Joshua didn't come home one evening or the next day, his family grew increasingly worried. Search parties combed through the woodland for any signs of Joshua, only to turn up empty-handed. His sister chose to believe that he'd joined a band and was now traveling the country. But less than a mile from Joshua's home was an old dilapidated wooden cabin surrounded by pine trees. In 2015, the owner, named Chuck, made a decision to tear down the cabin to make way for houses and was supervising the workers demolishing the house. As they tore down the chimney, a body fell out of it. The body belonged to Joshua, who had been stuck there for all this time. Many suspected that he'd been murdered, but police say that it was likely just an accident. We don't know for sure, and the case remains unsolved. Follow for more true crime stories and check out the full-length videos on my channel.
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TOURISM MATTERS | Episode 9: e-Tourism
TOURISM MATTERS e-Tourism Host Maria Criselda Gatchalian-Badilla Assistant Professor, UP Asian Institute of Tourism with Maria Clarissa delos Ama Sherry Anne Fallarme Tourism Matters, a program that explores issues about tourism and why tourism is an important part of our lives. This is brought to you by UPAIT and TVUP. TOURISM MATTERS TVUP | University of the Philippines' Internet TV Network TVUP (TVUP.ph) is an Internet television (webcast) network operated by the University of the Philippines which delivers free content for information and educational purposes. It will participate in generating open educational resources (OERs) to be made public by producing its own materials and collecting other content from existing sources. TVUP is a testament to the University of the Philippines’ character as the national university — a teaching, research, public service, and global/regional university — shared freely with all state universities and colleges, private and public higher training institutions, other training institutions, and the general public. Website | http://www.TVUP.ph/ YouTube | http://www.youtube.com/TVUPph Facebook | http://www.facebook.com/TVUP.ph Twitter | http://www.twitter.com/TVUPph
[ "tvup", "university of the philippines", "tourism matters", "e-tourism", "e tourism", "ait", "up-ait", "up asian institute of tourism", "asian institute of tourism", "tourism", "maria criselda gatchalian-badilla", "badilla", "maria clarissa deloa ama", "deloa ama", "sherry anne fallarme", "fallarme" ]
2019-10-23T06:20:56
2024-02-05T07:05:06
1,546
3KDqlQgQ64w
Welcome to another episode of Tourism Matters, brought to you by the UP Asian Institute of Tourism and TV UP. We aim to explore the many aspects of tourism and how it affects our lives. This episode, we'll look into the following aspects of technological advances as far as e-commerce, online travel agencies, and the use of Web 1.0 to Web 4.0 is concerned. The different sectors of the tourism industry now use softwares for booking, storing information, pricing, consumer monitoring among others. Hotels use software on guest preferences, monitoring, bookings, and pricing. Artificial intelligence and robots are used instead of human interaction and as an alternative to providing customer service. Attempts to use social media have been under rise too with various platforms such as Instagram and Facebook. In this episode, we will look at the technology and how it has reshaped consumer behavior using the online platform, which is now collectively known as e-Tourism. We have invited practitioners to shed light on how technology is used in tourism. We have invited UPB as tourism graduates, Maria Clarissa Clavo de las Amas, Director for Revenue Management and Marketing for Rucksacko Asia Hospitality, and also the Revenue and Marketing Consultant for several hospitality properties. We also have Sherri Ann Fayane, Senior Business Development Manager of Cloop.com, a booking platform offering quality travel and tourism products with a best-priced guarantee. I've been in the industry for 25 years, worked as a hotelier, but maybe I've spent seven of it in e-commerce companies. I've worked with Group 1 Philippines, I've worked with Agoda in 2008, I've worked with Direct Wid hotels, which is the number one provider of booking engines for hotels. I guess that's where I would be coming from. And coupled with my experience as a hotelier. Well, I'm quite lucky to be starting my career in the online industry. I started with an OTA right away after graduation as an Asian brand, which basically offers both B2C and B2B options of bookings for our consumers. And then right after asiatravel.com, I transferred to booking, which is a more international company. And then as of this day, I am with Cloop, which is basically an in-destination travel bookings platform. In terms of technology and e-commerce, I would say that Philippine will be at par with the availability of whatever technology is available in the industry. This is because most of the e-commerce companies now are multi-international multi-companies, meaning they're from abroad. But as to how frequently our market use it is, differs. But expertise and trust of the platforms is still growing. So in terms of technology, it is available as to whether we are using it, not as much as the rest of the world. So if we are to assess right now where we are here in the local marketplace in terms of use of technology and e-commerce and travel and tourism, I would say we are right where Southeast Asian market are today. At the change of all this, at the advancements of technology and ease of e-commerce, the consumer is at the center of all of this. In the tourism industry, the major advantages of using technology is seamless processes. When you have a technology in place, especially for hoteliers, where one information from the market flows directly into your process or small system of a hotel, it gives you efficiently, it gives you enough information to make the right decisions. It should help hotelier understand the market and respond to it as quickly as possible. But again, the disadvantages is that it requires a lot of investment on the end of the hotel years. So that is where one of the challenge is coming from. Another challenge is the hoteliers we have now are not as comfortable as mentioned before with using technology. And we haven't really taken the opportunity to understand the technology and its implication to our processes. We haven't had a formal sit-down with this e-commerce company to tell us what will work for us in detailed terms. Usually it's just, hi, hello, this is our platform, this is what it does. But not so much on what it can do. So hoteliers remain hesitant to fully use technology and the platforms that are available now in the industry. New Age Traveler right now basically wants three things when they go to a destination. So this is gain experience, gain value, and gain learning while they are experiencing the local culture. So in order to achieve all of these three, the common advantage that we see in using technology is that they can do all of this in the destination and in the very last minute while they are on the go. So case in point, if we are looking at booking a certain accommodation from 10 years ago, we will call a travel agency or we will call the destination itself and look for an unavailable accommodation that we can book on the preferred date of travel. It will take time for us to confirm Avis to a destination. Fast forward to five years ago, maybe now we can do our own booking of flights, our own booking of accommodations in the click of our fingers. If we are to do the same thing this year right there and here today, I will just have to get my mobile phone, I'll just have to get my smartphone. I will be able to book my flight, I will just get my credit card and I will be able to check what are the available activities that I will do in the destination. So as we can see, the consumer is very powerful. We all have these advantages from technology. Everything is at the tip of our fingers. It would, you know, given that I've worked with many online companies, this is an opportunity that we're missing out. The hoteliers are really missing out if we don't take time to understand and use them. Now looking from an industry practitioner from Cloak alone, advantages, yes, as a business entity, this is very advantage. The feedback loop is super fast. If you create a specific product for a certain market, for a certain brand, definitely you will get feedback right away from consumers. You can do A.B. testing, you can improve your product right away, you can slush us off or you can multiply it a lot more. Another advantage would be reaching out on smaller players in a destination. Let's say, for example, in the case of Batanes, where basically we have smaller players, tour operators. Internet is really intermittent. Maybe in terms of booking, it's a little bit advanced when we do in Facebook, social media. But Cloak comes in in the sense that we give the technology to suppliers to really check their bookings using a platform that is basically at the tip of their mobile phones as well. So in the past, maybe working with somebody as a supplier would entail them doing pen and paper bookings. But Cloak comes in in the sense that we give them the technology that they may work on more efficiently and sell their products on a wider, on a more global audience. But all of this also comes with disadvantages. Unfortunately, the internet has not crime-proofed itself yet as of today. So we still have cyber crimes. Basically, in Cloak, I can identify two major disadvantages that the company is facing, one of which would be fraud payments. There are instances when a customer will use another person's credit card to book a certain accommodation or a certain activity. That would be very stressful from the part of the business entity. It also affects customer experience. And eventually, since feedback is very fast as well, we get bad reviews. Another thing would be information theft, identity theft. So when the sensitive information are stolen, so it is really important as an online platform to have all these security checks in place to ensure that positive customer experience will still be valuable at the end of the day. Changes and innovations we are expecting in the near future. For example, in Japan, it says that robots are already in place, replacing customer service. We can also expect rooms that will cater based on your preferences. For example, if you're a returning guest, the hotel can store your preferences. And when you enter your room, it will be set on the temperature that you like. The lighting, I don't know how you would call it, level of lighting. So the capacity of e-commerce to store data, which will help customer service, is available already in some countries. So we are looking at this kind of technologies where although it is technology, when you say technology, it usually means less of personalization. But that concept of storing data based on your preferences is actually a personalization concept. If we look at the emerging innovations that we are expecting in the near future, again, I would go back to the statement that customer is the center of everything. So I would say motivations of travel will be a very big thing for consumers and suppliers alike to consider in the next years in the industry, one of which would be solo travel. Basically, traveling solo is not anymore a taboo right now. Anyone can go anywhere, pick off their bucket list, and just enjoy the time on their own. Another one would be the yearning of millennials, basically to engage in experiences that are sustainable. There is this call right now among every one of us to engage in more meaningful travels, experiencing the local culture, and not basically being just a tourist in a certain destination. We become locals ourselves. So this would entail suppliers to prove and offer products right there and then where this yearning will be really offered to our millennials. Another one would be on the side of Bleacher. It has been happening, I guess, in the past two years, but this will eventually continue so much as a lot of startups and internet and services companies are booming nowadays. So I myself, whenever I am in a destination for business travel, in my own time, if I can squeeze in some leisure activities, I would definitely do, or extend for two or three days just to experience the place after all the business engagements are done. The impact of this technological innovation to consumer, they will require higher efficiency. They expect more. They want to have the comfort of personalized service from people and the efficiency coming from technologies and its platforms. Other impacts may be quicker decision making of which platform to use, which product to buy, because all of this will be at the tip of their hand when they need information. They want to know something about an information or want to know something about the service of a hotel, service of a company. They can easily look for it and they can easily review it, especially now that even the, I mean, all kind of service are reviewed. And this is made possible because of technological advances that allows people to share at real time. In terms of IT solutions for tourism and travel, other than those motivations for travelers to go from one place to another, technological advancements are really soaring up high still and is expected to improve more on in the coming years. We have VR, virtual reality and augmented reality right now. It's very cheap from a supplier's perspective. Once, for example, you can already show your product to a certain or to a potential customer right there and there, just through VR. Ganwer the days when we would say that tourism as a product is something that you would experience once you are already in the destination. Somehow, technology has lessened the gap of managing the customer's expectations prior to your travel versus your travel itself on the destination. This has been made possible by technology nowadays. One more thing would be Internet of Things. You go to your airport, you go to your terminal. You don't need to bring your printed out boarding pass. You just have your smartphone. You have the QR code. You don't have to queue up the airline counter because you definitely, whenever you have the access or connection to the Internet, you can just confirm your flight time, select your seat plan, even add on your meals and flight meals in just a click of a finger. Another example of Internet of Things would be, yeah, smart hotels, small hotel room accommodations. I was in Jensen last month. I called the concierge. I wanted a cup of coffee. In just a matter of minutes, somebody knocked on my door. When I opened it, a robot was there with my coffee. So, yes, it is exciting how, at this age, these things are happening. What more can we imagine in the next 10, 15 years for travel? Maybe we can have this theme park, what do you say, a theme park, a global community wherein you are in the Philippines, but you can eventually experience what is it like, how cold it is in the Arctic, or how cold it is in Alaska, or the sunny Hawaii, something like that. So, technology has made the world a little bit smaller. And on a more positive thing, it has made travel more inclusive. So, gone were the days when traveling is a form of luxury. You dress up, you go to your airport, board your airline. Now, everyone can have the chance to experience another culture, hear another language, and taste another cuisine because traveling has been much cheaper. The advancements of having alternative payment options. So, travel is not just for those with credit cards. Now, you can have, for Philippines, we have G-Cash. You have Paymaya. You can do 7-11 payments for your flights. So, it has made traveling more inclusive. During my time, which is many years ago, we only had PMS, Property Management System, which is sometimes used only for reservation and sometimes for housekeeping. But for now, it is important that all sections of a technology is used for it to be efficient, for it to provide 100% return ROI. Each of its features had to be used. So, the emerging IT solutions is... No, I'm sorry, but for example, in my current company, we just partnered with Jubo. The Jubo is a PMS. It's a booking engine. It's a channel manager system. Reviews, rate tracker, all in one. So, it provides us the big picture. It also provides us the small picture for our operational concerns while keeping us trapped, keeping the market industry trends in track with external information that are coming from our booking engine, from our channel manager system. So, I think this is the solution that companies need to look at. The thing now is big data. That's what you call it, the information that you get from the market. And hoteliers are looking for ways on how to generate this big data on a budget to be cost efficient. You have to look for ways to have the IT solutions or IT processes that will allow you to make decisions as quickly as possible and provide a seamless service to your consumer. And if I will to say, if I were to say if e-commerce will replace traditional selling, I wouldn't use the word replace. Maybe it's more of enhance. E-commerce will enhance traditional selling. It's basically just a hybrid of both because at the end of the day, there will still be that target market that would look for a human touch in terms of experiencing, in planning, and purchasing the product. So, a while ago, my colleague said that this has been a topic since 2008 and now we are in 2018. So, yes, definitely. It's really not an issue of a new technology replacing the other, but it's really more of complementing what we have currently now. And at the end of everything, travel has become more accessible to anyone nowadays. As to whether e-commerce will replace traditional selling, they have been saying that since 2008. It's now 2019. And the travel agency personalized service remains to be a factor or an industry in tourism. So, as to that question, I don't think traditional selling will ever go out of fashion, as you would say it. But they need to, well, we need to reinvent how to do our selling so that we can utilize whatever technology is available at the moment to optimize our revenue opportunities. Thank you very much, Ms. Kherisa Delos-Ama and Ms. Sherry Anfaljarme, for enlightening us on e-tourism, its advantages and impacts to businesses. Technology and e-commerce are here to stay. With its personalization, ubiquity, instantaneity, low costs and interactivity, consumers are lured to purchase tourism products online. Companies that adapt to the trends in technology should be careful with its negative impacts. Businesses who can adapt and maximize its strengths and advantages will go a long way. Those who can't, don't and want may become irrelevant. Let us use technology as a complementary tool to maximize our travel experience.
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1 Box Of 2023 Cosmic Baseball For Will F
Live Group Breaks and Case Breaks! Check us out at http://www.laytonsportscards.com Our new Discord has launched! If you are a Youtube Member or Twitch Subscriber, connect your Youtube OR Twitch to your Discord account to gain access to all channels! If you DON'T, you will not be able to see all channels and chats. https://discord.gg/rwcWdxZQt5 Amazing Breaks at Great prices! One of the Biggest Breaking Operations in the World! BREAK SCHEDULE: https://laytonsportscards.com/pages/break-schedule PERSONAL BOX BREAKS: https://laytonsportscards.com/collections/personal-boxes RANDOM RESULTS (Found under "Quick Links" at bottom of our website! : https://laytonsportscards.com/blogs/results Follow Us: INSTAGRAM @LaytonSportsCards TWITTER @LaytonSports - https://twitter.com/LaytonSports FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/LaytonSportsCards YOUTUBE https://www.youtube.com/user/LaytonSportsCards TWITCH https://www.twitch.tv/laytonsportscards Multistreaming with https://restream.io/
[ "sportscards", "sports", "cards", "baseball", "autographs", "auto", "box", "break", "boxbreak", "casebreak", "case", "laytonsportscards", "cut auto", "one of one", "1 of 1", "panini", "football", "basketball", "case break", "box break", "sports collectibles", "live group break", "live case break", "live box break", "sick hit", "patch card", "jerseys", "memorabilia", "football cards", "basketball cards", "hockey cards", "baseball cards", "topps", "panini football", "panini basketball", "leaf trading cards", "logoman", "group break", "upper deck", "Hockey" ]
2024-01-05T05:44:00
2024-04-23T23:29:15
279
3KvciBLMLoM
What's going on everybody got Kyle and Shawn here with one box of 2023 tops chrome cosmic. That's gonna be a personal for will F Good luck. Mr. Will. Let's see. We got here 23 cosmic got space still guys. If anybody does want to get personal going I can definitely do that for you 20 foot fences with barbed wire jeez. I've never been to a never been to Ohio in general into Ohio Good luck here will meme said it was fake. There's a scope code. I sang a rookie No, we haven't pulled a tom Brady yet out of the the bowman you're talking about Yeah, we haven't pulled the auto yet at least we pulled a bunch of the color numbered stuff But we haven't pulled one of the autos yet Star clusters. That's a Josh young rookie How This stuff was fire. Yeah, I like it. I like it. There's a auto a nice one Kodai sang on the rookie auto There we go. Will nice one there ET insert out of Kodai Very nice Kodai sang of the Mets pitcher Suarez Ryan Nelson being in Toledo. Yeah, I don't think I'll ever be in Toledo I don't know pass Acunia CJ Abrams On if it was signed in person, it's uh, it's probably rare, but I don't know the I don't know the value or anything necessarily, but Brought into sign too many baseball cards, honestly, there's a launch into orbit Bobby Whit Freddie Freeman star clusters Lou Bob Hey, there we go. Will a nice Kodai got a we got a gold now got a gold too. It's gonna be a jazz chism Spencer's boy. I'm gonna 50 there on the Marlins Nice one there as well will on the jazz the 50 And there's gunner. It's the MLB the show cover athlete. There's a ball be Detmer's Tatees Jordan Groschens most of the time the autos are in blue Most of the time Depends though if you signed a baseball card, it's probably he signed it in person It wasn't from like a card company the actual auto itself. There's a rookie Yoshida Vinnie Pascatino So they can sign in anything really if it's an in-person auto like at a Stadium or meet him somewhere anything Detroit at 1 p.m. Yeah, that sounds like a sounds about right rowdy to less Tell me nobody goes to raise games, but not 1 p.m. Detroit games. I don't know. Yeah, I don't know Who's winning that battle? There's a launch into orbit Aaron judge Alejandro Kirk Garbo Cover for MLB the show next year. Ooh, maybe Corbin Carroll. I could see a Corbin Carroll cover You're kind of sick Mount Castle Fun like younger guy. There's a manual about this working for the Red Sox 2199 Manual about this. Ellie could definitely be the cover. Ellie could definitely be the cover Maybe show hey in the Dodgers Jersey. No, hey in the Dodgers Jersey Star clusters Christian Javier Joey's done already gotcha. Yeah, so he just did it. Aranola Dom Fletcher And last pack gonna be cool suit. Oh, yeah, I can see Corbin though, or maybe uh Corbin Maybe one of the maybe one of the Rangers since they won Star clusters on the back and Corey seager. All right there. Mr. Will that'll do it for your 2023 Seager could be a dope 2023 cosmic nice sit on the Kodai Senga auto there for you my man. We'll get that right out See you. Thank you. Well
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DIY Smartphone Controlled LED Lamp | DIY Projects
Learn how to make an LED Lamp from Scratch using power LED, evive- an Arduino embedded prototyping platform, HC-05 Bluetooth module to control the brightness or the state of Lamp using Smartphone over Bluetooth via Dabble, and some DIY-ing skills. Time to ditch the regular lamps and light up the LED lamp. Decorate your home, study table, and workstation with this LED lamp. Now you can control the brightness of the LED lamp or even ON/OFF the lamp even when you are far from the lamp. Click to make this Smartphone Controlled LED lamp: https://thestempedia.com/project/diy-dabble-controlled-led-lamp/ Music credit: Title: Keep On Going Artist: Joakim Karud Genre: Dance & Electronic Mood: Bright Download: https://goo.gl/BoK7u8 #DIY #LEDlamp
[ "diy lamp", "diy led lamp", "smartphone controlled led lamp", "led lamp", "how to make a lamp", "led desk", "led desk lamp", "diy table lamp", "diy led projects", "how to make led lamp", "how to make table lamp", "control lights with smartphone", "diy led desk lamp", "build led lamp", "diy led table lamp" ]
2019-01-01T11:25:03
2024-02-05T20:56:46
273
3knuWjek5lQ
You
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UCGUBZrH31AkJK-_JZxMLOKQ
★ Keemstar - #1 Growth tip - Entertainment!
Keemstar shares the #1 tip all YouTube gamers should know. Is this helpful? Tell us :-) See Keemstar #2 tip ➜ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esHE0T2YeJk&list=PLxLYo5_7D3SdNDe8YF0lsiXoyUkvA5Z5K Partner with That Juice ➜ http://thatjuice.com - Powered by Freedom! Join our staff! ➜ http://www.freedom.tm/staff Get more views! ➜ http://www.freedom.tm/grow - Grow with us. Become a network! ➜ http://www.freedom.tm/network Grow your brand as a network powered by Freedom! We are your Technology Partner and handle everything in the back-end so you can focus on recruiting, educating and promoting your partners. See our FAQ to learn more ➜ http://www.freedom.tm/faq Freedom! is an MCN directly with YouTube (not a subnetwork) and we are building this network together. Join us ➜ http://www.freedom.tm - Be free XSplit Get XSplit to make videos (like this one) and live stream ➜ http://www.playnow.tm/xsplit/356 Music Star Music catalog licensed by any.TV for commercial purposes for all Freedom! partners ➜ http://www.goto.tm/label/starmusic Epic Rock Instrumental by Farhan ➜ http://www.any.tv/music/farhan A New Beginning by Jedborg ➜ http://www.any.tv/music/jedborg Ending music from EMG licensed by any.TV, used with permission for commercial purposes ➜ https://soundcloud.com/epull/e-p-u-l-l-dreams-come-true Music from Zabermoul license by any.TV, used with permission for commercial purposes ➜ http://www.goto.tm/artist/zabermoul Discover any.TV! ➜ http://www.any.tv #FreedomFamily #FreedomFamily
[ "YouTube MCN", "how to get my channel noticed", "Partnership Network", "Freedom!", "Partnership", "YouTube Network", "George", "YouTube", "MCN", "#FreedomFamily", "YouTube Partnership", "Videobar", "Partner Your Channel", "freedom network", "The George Show", "network", "freedom", "Freedom! family", "Keemstar", "freedom!", "Gamers", "how to get my channel out there", "Gamer (Profession)", "YouTube Partnership Network", "Freedom! Network", "George Vanous", "Become a Network", "#1 tip" ]
2014-07-20T17:00:06
2024-02-07T17:36:01
117
3k9oKRKXGLo
What is up? Ladies and gentlemen, my name is Killer Keemstar. Some of you know who I am and some of you don't. I've been on YouTube for about five years. I've done many different things. I've built many different channels. A question I get from smaller YouTubers all the time is they ask me for advice. So I decided to make a series here on freedom, giving you some tips and tricks on how to grow your channel. Now because I come from gaming, I can only speak for gaming, but it might relate. So here's the number one thing. I'm giving you the most important thing first in this series. Now, you might walk away from this video saying, well, I knew that. Well, that's a no brainer. Everyone knows that, but we forget. And sometimes we don't focus our content around this idea. This first tip and trick is the center of your solar system. Everything in your brain, all the decisions on making your content, must focus around this son of an idea and that son of an idea is this. This is gaming entertainment. This is gaming entertainment. This is the entertainment biz. So when you wake up in the morning and you're thinking about what kind of content you want to do, you need to ask yourself, am I entertaining? Am I entertaining? And sometimes we forget. I know it seems obvious, but sometimes we forget. We forget that we're entertaining people and we think, oh, we just need to make videos. You don't need to just make videos. You need to entertain. And if you're entertaining, the people that are watching your videos will share your videos. Now, if you want more tips and tricks from the Killa Keemstar, put a like on this video and ask me any question in the comments and we will respond. I hope you enjoyed yourself here on tips and tricks on growing your secrets. If you really look at yourself, you will be speechless. What happened to being doctors and teachers? What happened to being your brother's keeper? Nowadays kids won't worry about...
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The Economics of Big Tech | Peter G. Klein
Recorded at the Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, on 21 July 2021. Download the slides from this lecture at Mises.org/MU21_PPT_21.
[ "Klein", "Big Tech", "Technology", "Austrian School", "economics", "Mises", "lecture" ]
2021-07-21T20:32:31
2024-02-05T06:16:09
2,984
3kMXVIo9C3Y
Good morning, everybody. This is going to be a fun and interesting talk, at least for me, on the tech sector. I'm mostly going to talk about the economic analysis of, where's my, oh yeah, sorry. I'm mostly going to talk about the economics of technology and technology markets and the so-called big tech firms in particular. I'll talk a little bit about the sort of political and social issues because they're so salient, so much in the news these days, especially in our circles. But you can't pick up the virtual newspaper these days without finding a ton of headlines about different aspects of what's going on with big tech. I didn't check how many hits you get if you just search big tech in quotes, but it's a very large number. I pulled up some headlines. These are all, except for the first one, these are all from the last two or three days. Whether it's a general concern that big tech firms are sort of the robber barons of today, you often see these comparisons with Carnegie and Rockefeller and the railroad operators and so forth. And the same arguments that we heard 100 years ago about the alleged monopolization problem associated with big industry, manufacturing, whatever. We hear those same arguments now in the context of big tech. Whether it's antitrust or regulation, regulatory policy, or whether it's social and cultural issues or politics, did is or public health, did Facebook swing the election for Trump in 2016 and are various issues about de-platforming and so forth, swaying things in a different direction today. Biden the other day in one of his increasingly frequent off-script moments said that Facebook is literally killing millions of people by spreading so-called misinformation about vaccines. So from the political left, from the political right, from the political center, and even from the libertarian community, there's a lot of interest, most of it negative, a lot of criticism of big tech. So what is it everybody is so angry and upset about? It could be that these firms are monopolists, so-called, and are exploiting their monopoly power. Of course, we talked about that yesterday. There are also claims that having so many large firms where each industry or sector is dominated by one or two large firms is somehow holding back innovation. Now you might think that's odd because aren't these firms very innovative themselves, but the claim is, and this is a claim, by the way, that goes back 20 years at least in discussions of Microsoft, is that once a firm gets big and it begins to dominate its sector, it can then sort of kill off threatening innovations from newer smaller firms. By buying them off, there's a literature on so-called killer acquisitions, which means when a big firm acquires a smaller potential rival in order to get rid of its technology to prevent that new technology from coming on to the market. Lots of concerns about privacy and whether our privacy is being adequately protected, whether it's an abuse of our rights to sell our digital information to advertisers and so forth. Of course, now we're seeing increasing discussions of, I should put it in scare quotes, so-called misinformation, right? That big tech companies, social media platforms in particular are allowing the unchecked spread of lies. I mean, that's something that never happened before technology, right? If you read the New York Times or watched CNN in the old days, there was no danger whatsoever that incorrect information would get out, but now apparently that's a big deal. And of course, now we hear that, you know, big tech threatens the very foundations of democracy itself. It's really not obvious what people, when they make these kind of claims, what they define as democracy, democracy has become what I call it sort of a floating signifier that just means good stuff. Or stuff that I think is good is democracy. And so I'm in favor of democracy, but big tech by allowing misinformation and so forth and helping the instigators of the so-called insurrection of January 6th organize themselves in their attempt to overthrow the US government that social media platforms and technology in general is enabling these very serious social and political ills. So it seems like everybody is really mad and frustrated and angry about something that somebody in big tech is doing. Yet at the same time, we love our stuff, right? We love our gadgets. We love our platforms. And I mean seriously, especially for the older folks in the room, I mean, do you remember what life was like before internet search, right? When you literally could not, oh, you know, I need to go to a pharmacy. Where's the nearest pharmacy in Auburn and what time do they close? Imagine a world in which that information is almost impossible to get. Or you've got to run to a pay phone, a phone booth and hope it has a phone book and you can thumb through the phone book and try to find a pharmacist. And then you make several calls, maybe you'll get through, maybe you won't. We have all these things in the Institute called books. And there's a big building even in the center of Auburn's campus that's filled with thousands of these books called a library. And it used to be that, not only did you have to go to the library to get information, but to find the books that had the information you needed, you had to use this, what they called the card catalog. And there was this big sort of filing system with these little tiny index cards arranged by subject. And you'd thumb through these index cards. I joked when I was a PhD student, I got an injury and for a while I had a brace on my hand because I was looking up information, some statistics from my dissertation that were in these old, these books, these reference manuals. And the books were really big and heavy and they were on a high shelf. And so I had to keep grabbing these volumes off the shelf and writing stuff down and then putting them back and getting the next volume. So of course I got some kind of repetitive stress injury and had to wear a brace. Now, how do you explain to the ladies at the bar? Yes, I've got a library injury, right? I mean, I had to make up a story about skiing in the Alps or whatever. But imagine no Google, no iPhone, no social media, no Amazon, no Microsoft, et cetera. I mean, we like those things. Somehow we have in our mind an imaginary world in which we get all the benefits we associated with technological innovation, but without these sort of social harms or political harms, whatever they would be. And I think that's a challenge and a puzzle for us. Now, the first thing to realize as we start to think through these issues is that there is a tremendous amount of heterogeneity within what we call big tech, right? So you hear, well, companies like Google, they're harming us, they're abusing us by tracking us and selling our information to advertisers. Even though if we think about it, we get a lot of cool stuff that they provide for free. We don't pay for anything that almost, unless you have some kind of premium version, you don't pay for all the great stuff you get on Google like Google search, but somehow they're screwing us over anyway by selling our information. Apple's totally different, right? I mean, Apple's business model is that you buy things, right? You buy iPhones and iMacs and other products that are priced at a premium, right? So companies like Google, they give you the stuff for free, but they make money by selling information about you to third parties. Apple makes money by producing high-end gadgets and software that people like to buy. Facebook is a little bit more like Google, right? You don't pay to use Facebook, but it makes money from selling ads. I mean, Amazon is kind of like a Walmart, right? I mean, it sells products and services and delivers them to you at a discount, right? You typically pay less than what you would pay at a mom and pop or a traditional retailer. Although as you may know, Amazon actually makes most of its money not from selling merchandise, but from its cloud hosting service, Amazon Web Services is where Amazon makes most of its money. And of course, Microsoft, I mean, back in the day, Microsoft was the big tech firm that everybody was worried about. Now Microsoft is barely mentioned in sort of antitrust and similar conversations, but Microsoft makes money by selling Microsoft windows and office and some hardware products and so forth. So my point is the business models that so-called big tech firms use are very different from each other. So there's no such thing as a big tech firm or a big tech business model that we can analyze as sort of representative of the whole class. There's lots and lots of different things that are going on within this category. Really what big tech means is a technology-based firm that is very big in sales volume or market share or market capitalization. But of course, there are many, many different types of firms within that category. You might include, you know, what about Tesla? Is Tesla big tech? I mean, it kind of is. It's obviously a technology-oriented product and depending on how you measure, right? Tesla has a very large share of the electric car market, the electric battery market, you know, but it's not a software company, right? So it's different from these other firms in that sense. Okay, I wanna sort of walk you through a series of issues related to the analysis of big tech and give you some Austrian insight into those issues. Some of the language that you hear, some of the key terms and concepts in these conversations, most of which I'll discuss in just a moment, are the idea of, you know, markets for information or rather markets for information goods. So how do we analyze a firm that sells you not cups of coffee or physical gadgets but sells you information? How do markets for information or information goods work? What are network effects, right? Network effects, that's the idea that the value of having some product or service depends not only, you know, the use value at Manger's terms, depends on the number of people who are also using it. The value of being in the network depends on the size of the network. That has some interesting implications for how market structure plays itself out. There, you've probably heard about so-called first mover advantages. In some technology markets, it helps to be the first into that industry. You can take advantage of these network effects and get, you know, and become very large before other firms jump in. That often leads to winner take all or winner take most markets where allegedly it's not feasible to have 20 different firms in the industry. The industry will converge on just one or maybe two and that might be a concern. You hear a lot about platforms and ecosystems, meaning that firms like Facebook, right? Firms are kind of, many of these tech firms, they provide a sort of a platform where other content providers can participate, right? So Google doesn't write news stories, but sorry, Facebook doesn't write news articles. It doesn't have reporters and, you know, editors and journalists on the pay, well, probably does on the payroll, but not officially working for Facebook. But a lot of people get their news from Facebook because, you know, the local newspaper or the New York Times or your friend posts articles that were developed by third parties, written by third parties on the platform. So platforms are means of sharing information and products that are produced by other parties, okay? You even hear the language of ecosystem, right? That's a term from biology, right? Referring to different complementary aspects, you know, in the forest or the swamp or whatever. Well, technology products and services are also often clustered in ecosystems as well. iOS is, you know, Apple has an ecosystem. Apple Hardware, iOS, the Apple App Store, third party developers that write apps and other software for Apple, that's all part of one ecosystem. And so maybe competition is not between firms, in many cases, but between ecosystems, right? In mobile you have the iOS ecosystem and the Android ecosystem, each of which contains hardware manufacturers and software manufacturers and so forth. You also hear a lot about so-called two-sided markets where the focal firm is dealing with downstream buyers and upstream suppliers that may have some interesting applications as well. And you've heard of terms like freemium as a business model, you know, where you give away the basic product for free but then you hope to get people hooked so that they'll wanna buy the premium product, you know, without ads or with extra features and then you make money, you give away your basic product for free but you make money selling the deluxe version of your product. Okay, let me talk about a few of these in more detail. Let's start with the notion of information goods. This is something that actually came up, I think, in the panel on Monday night, that it's very important to realize that, you know, from, if you think about Carl Manger's concept of an economic good, right, what is an economic good? There was one gentleman, I don't see you who asked a very interesting question in one of the panels about, you know, the marginal utility of truth or beauty or virtue, right? So from Manger's point of view, those are not economic goods because you can't buy and sell a unit of truth or buy and sell a unit of beauty. Right now you could buy a photo of me and you could say that's like buying a unit of beauty, right? But literally what you're buying is the photo, not some abstract thing. So, you know, Manger's concept of the good and then the notion of the marginal utility of that good and diminishing marginal utility and the production process by which entrepreneurs convert inputs into outputs, all of the stuff we've been talking about this week, it only applies to things that can be parceled out into discrete units and bought and sold, right? So information is not literally an economic good. Information per se is not an economic good. A book is a good, an economic good. Why do you buy a book? Well, I mean, you might buy it as a doorstopper, you might buy it as a paperweight, you might buy it as a weapon, you know, if you get like George Reisman's capitalism, you could really stop an intruder with a copy of that. But the main reason we buy books is because we want the information that is contained in the book. We wanna read it and we want to learn. So yeah, I mean, ultimately you're buying a book to get the knowledge or get the information, but you're not literally buying knowledge, you're buying a book, right? You can buy a video, you can hire a consultant, you can pay to go to college and get a college degree. Again, you know, if your grandmother asks you, you know, the abstract, why are you going to college? Why are you majoring in economics? Oh, and you know, you have some answer about all this wonderful knowledge that you'll get. I mean, that's true at one level, but the literal transaction is you or maybe your parents are paying the university in exchange for the right to come in to the campus and sit in the classroom and take exams and get grades and get a diploma, right? You're buying the experience of being in the classroom. So we don't literally buy and sell information, we buy and sell information goods and these information goods are just like other economic goods in that they, you know, they are evaluated on the margin based on their subjective value to the buyer, right? There's a downward sloping demand curve for information goods and so forth. The reason I point this out is because you often see in this literature, you know, the claim that, well, these kind of markets are totally different from other markets. Yeah, the market for shampoo, entrepreneurs are combining physical factors to produce shampoo and they're selling it to consumers on the market and the prices are determined by supply and demand, et cetera, et cetera. But you know, for a social media platform is totally different. It's not totally different, right? There are some peculiarities associated with the nature of that economic good or service, but it's the same thing. I mean, you're, you know, for some information services, you pay a subscription fee for the right to access the data or the right to, you know, think about Netflix, another big tech firm we could have used in our example, right? You pay a monthly subscription fee for the right to stream certain content. I mean, that's not really that different from buying toothpaste, right? You evaluate the benefit that you get from having the subscription against the monthly subscription fee. You decide whether to buy or not. If they increase the subscription price on the margin, the number of subscribers will fall, other things equal because the demand curve for Netflix subscriptions, just like the demand curve for toothpaste is downward sloping and so forth. And again, you know, we've been selling books, printed books since Gutenberg and scrolls of papyrus, you know, since time immemorial. A map is an information good, a paper map, you know, lectures. You think, well, Google search is totally different because what you're buying is like a search result. But again, we had pre-internet means of searching. They were just much more cumbersome like the library card catalog or, you know, telephone directory. You guys know what a phone book is, right? I mean, you can look through and find an address or a name, and you know, you could buy a phone book. I mean, the phone companies used to give them away, but in principle, you could buy and sell phone books and it wouldn't really be that different. Now, what's interesting, one of the things that's interesting about information goods is that they often involve a high upfront investment. So it costs a lot to make the thing in the first place, but then it doesn't cost very much to produce additional copies, right? Again, this is not an internet-specific phenomenon. Think about a book. I can tell you, as someone who has written multiple books, it has a lot of work to write the book, but then once the book is written, you know, I'm not even, you know, the publisher does it, to print one more copy is not that big of a deal, okay? So that may have some implication for the pricing strategy, right? I may choose to charge a sort of, choose to charge a different price. I might do one of these, you know, sort of two-part pricing where I, like I said, I give away the free version, but I charge for the premium version, or I put a preview on my website. You can download and read chapter one for free, and that'll get you so excited you'll wanna buy the other chapters and pay me money. It may be easier in these markets to charge different prices to different buyers, you know, so-called price discrimination, right? Price discrimination is difficult to pull off, you know, in the market for toothpaste at the grocery store, or at Walmart, because the Walmart doesn't know you when you walk into the store. They don't know what's the most you'd be willing to pay, right, but in principle, if I go on Amazon and I'm using my regular browser and I have loud cookies and I'm not using, you know, whatever kind of dark web browser most of you probably use. They know what I've already bought, and you know, maybe I actually get a different price than, you know, Jeff Dice gets when he goes onto the same website. So it may be easier for sellers to target prices and advertisement and so forth to specific users based on the information that they have, and to preview my next point, you often get increasing returns, meaning that there are advantages to being, you know, if Judge Napolitano, you know, he's already written his great book on natural law and so in one sense, that's a sunk cost for him, right? He's not gonna get those hours back. So let's say I wanna write a book on natural law, but he's already written one, so he can produce marginal copies and sell them for a dollar a piece. And it's like, well, I would have to sell a certain number of copies to justify the time it would take me to write one since I haven't already written one. So it's hard for me to compete head to head with him because he's already got the book, right? So there's an advantage to being the incumbent in a case like that and a potential drawback to being a new entrant. Again, other things equal and other things aren't always equal. Obviously, my book on natural law would be way better, right, just because I'm me. The presence of network effects, they used to call it network externalities, but a better term is network effects because they're not necessarily externalities. You might have heard of this in the context of the QWERTY typewriter keyboard. So I've never looked at the keyboard on your laptop or whatever and even on your phone. It's got this weird English language keyboards, have this weird layout, Q-W-E-R-T-U-Y. And in some other countries, you have slightly different arrangements, but it's like, why? I mean, why isn't it just A-B-C-D-E? And you may have studied this in a class or had one of your professors talk about it. There's a lot of different stories about why the QWERTY keyboard came to be the dominant one and there's some controversy about differences of interpretation. But the point is, once the QWERTY layout became established as the most common layout, it's very difficult to replace that with some other layout. Right, I mean, you could easily reprogram your laptop to use a non-QWERTY layout and some people do. There's something called Dvorak, which it's cult-like adherence claim is much better than QWERTY, but it's really not. But the point is, if you learn to type in school or you use some kind of software to learn how to type, once you know how to type using the QWERTY keyboard, you can borrow your friend's computer and type. You can use the computer in the library over here. You can buy a new computer. If everybody's using the same layout, then it's easy for you to move from one machine to another. If you only know how to type on some idiosyncratic layout, then you can't use the computer here at the Mises Institute. You can't borrow your friend's computer because it would have a different layout. So even if there were a tiny efficiency advantage in using some other keyboard layout, that would probably be outweighed by the nuisance of having to reprogram every device to conform. So once that particular layout gets established, it's very hard to dislodge it, to put it in the language of network effects. The value of using QWERTY, of knowing how to type on QWERTY, depends on how many other people in the world also use QWERTY. But I mean, if the whole world switched overnight to Dvorak, well, that'd be fine too. I mean, we'd have to retrain ourselves. But as long as the whole world's using the same standard, it doesn't really matter which one it is. So then, according to some of the critics of these markets, skeptics about the efficiency of these markets, they say, oh, well, small historical accidents can lead us to choose something that's really not that great. But then we're kind of stuck with it. So-called path dependence, right? Another famous example of this is the video cassette recorder, one of the old VHS tapes your parents, your grandparents had. When that technology was introduced, there were multiple competing formats. There was a smaller kind of a cassette called a Betamax cassette made by Sony that was allegedly much better from an engineering point of view. But yet the market sort of settled on VHS. And where that was the days, when you would rent videos at Blockbuster, you've seen that in old black and white movies, right? So you gotta have the same kind of machine that the tapes are made for, right? But the movie companies are only gonna make the tapes for the kind of machine that everybody has. It's kind of a chicken and egg. So it doesn't make sense to have multiple cassette sizes in the market because then it wouldn't be possible to use other people's cassettes and so forth. It's kind of like typing on another QWERTY keyboard. AC power over DC power is another example. The use of internal combustion engines, what we have in our cars, versus steam engines or electric engines that were available 100 years ago is allegedly another example of the market kind of arbitrarily choosing the wrong technology but then us being stuck with it because of network effects. And of course, social media is like that too, right? I mean, you don't wanna, I mean, so have you guys tried any of these new, people who are mad about being de-platformed? They have alternative platforms like GAB and Parler and I guess Telegram is sort of a platform too and there's the newest one is called, starts with a G. What is it, Gitter or Gittler or something like that? Is this sort of a Trump supporter type social media platform? Problem with these platforms is, there's no point in you being on it unless a bunch of your friends are on it or celebrities that you follow or whatever. So it's hard for new platforms to break in once another platform has been established. So is this bad? Does the presence of network effects, is that a source of market failure? Does it mean we need the government to step in and fix the problem somehow or have the government choose the optimal technology from day one to make sure we don't get stuck in some kind of a bad equilibrium? I think you can guess the answer to that, right? First of all, I mean, when a new technology is introduced we don't always know what is gonna turn out to be the best one. And so you have competition among different standards, different platforms, different technologies and typically one or more will win out in the competitive process. I mean, entrepreneurs don't know and certainly government bureaucrats don't know when a new technology is introduced which one is gonna be the best. And so we don't want bureaucrats forcing everybody to converge on one technology before we get a chance to sort of play this out in the market. And the political process itself is characterized by a lot more path dependence and inefficient decision making than anything that we would expect in technology markets. But it's also interesting to ask whether these phenomena really even exist the way they're described. Two economists, Stan Liebowitz and Steven Margolis have written a number of articles on these phenomena including an article debunking the standard textbook story of the QWERTY keyboard. They claim that QWERTY was actually good. People adopted QWERTY not arbitrarily but because at the time it actually worked better than some of the other layouts. You might know QWERTY is just back in the old days of manual typewriters, you know, like a piano where we had physical key little hammers that would type out the letter on a piece of paper. The idea was to space out the most frequently used letters in English to minimize the chance that you'd get a jam that the hammers would like get stuck to each other. So there was some rationale behind the layout. And Liebowitz and Margolis go through a number of examples of cases of network effects where the actual story is a little bit different from the one you get in the textbooks. Even on social media platforms, I like to show my students this infamous article published in 2007 in the left-wing Guardian. Will my space ever lose its monopoly? I mean, Facebook started at some point, right? Twitter got started at some point. What's the fastest growing social media platform these days? It's not Facebook, it's not Twitter, it's not Instagram, TikTok, right? So according to the theory of network externalities, nobody would ever use TikTok because Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram already dominated. So how could a new one possibly get started? Well, I mean, as you know, these platforms are not identical. They're used in slightly different ways. Maybe Snapchat is another example, right? So we know empirically that new social media platforms where network effects are all over the place, they do come onto the market and they often succeed quite well. Most interesting recent example is Zoom. I don't know about you. I think I had not ever used Zoom before March of 2020. And then within a few weeks, I was teaching my classes on Zoom. I was having all of my faculty meetings on Zoom. I was meeting with my research collaborators on Zoom. We were all using Zoom and Zoom, I don't have the exact, the numbers in front of me, Zoom grew from a very tiny installed base, a few hundred thousand users to hundreds of millions of users within the space of just a few weeks when the pandemic hit, okay? When everything was shut down and schools were closed and businesses were closed. And now Zoom is the dominant video conferencing platform. Of course, there are others. There's Webex, there's Microsoft Teams, there's Google Meet, there's a whole bunch of them. But Zoom because of ease of use and for other reasons quickly became this sort of dominant platform. And what was hilarious, unintentionally hilarious to me is you started to see articles saying, well, this proves that Zoom, this proves that markets with network effects cause, you know, create monopolies. And I'm like, wait, you just told me that a new entrant started at almost zero and quickly became the dominant platform because people liked it better than the other ones already on the market. But now you're saying Zoom can never be dislodged from its perch because of network effects. I mean, you see how this is a self-contradictory claim? The rapid rise of Zoom gives the lie to the concern that, oh my gosh, without regulation or antitrust, whatever, you can never have more than one firm in a particular market segment. No, they rise and fall all the time. As I mentioned before, some of these tech firms, not all of them, right? Some of them are not just producing a product or even any products at all. They're producing platforms on which other people can participate, create content, buy and sell goods and services and so forth. I mean, Google is a platform in the sense that what most people use Google for is search, right? And so you're not searching for something made by Google. You're searching for information on, you know, that's from the Mises Institute or from the New York Times or whatever. One concern that has been raised is that, particularly in antitrust conversations, is that platforms, you know, they can restrict who gets on the platform, right? So there was, actually I'll talk in just a minute about some antitrust cases that involve alleged restricted access. So Google, if it wanted, could say, we're gonna block Mises.org from appearing in our search results. Okay, so no matter how hard you search on Google, you will never find anything from the Mises Institute or, you know, the reason that Google became the dominant search engine is because of its, you know, top secret algorithm, right? For ordering search results in a way that the algorithm thinks will be useful to the users. That's the secret sauce that everybody tries to reverse engineer with SEO, optimization tools and so forth. That was what made Google overtake its rivals like Alta Vista and Yahoo Search back in the day. But of course, how do we know that the search results are really displayed in the order that, you know, based on quality or popularity, what if Google is trying to manipulate us? It's rigging the search results, or, you know, your timeline on Facebook or Twitter or whatever. How do we know that they're not rigging it in a certain way to brainwash us into getting certain sources of information or not? Well, of course, we don't know. We can't prevent that from happening. But as long as we have competition among platforms, right, if you feel that when you go on Twitter, you're not getting a good balanced view of the conversation in the world, you're getting the only of the stuff that Twitter wants you to see. Guess what you can do? Not use Twitter, okay? If you don't like the way Google displays search results, you can use DuckDuckGo or Bing or any of the other numerous search engines that are out there. So it's in the interest of a search engine provider to give information that is useful to its users, otherwise they'll choose to use a competing platform. Another concern that's been raised is that sometimes, sometimes the platforms themselves compete with the third parties that are on their platforms. Okay, so for example, if you type into your phone, you know, whether Auburn, Alabama, it's gonna look something like this, right? So notice the first actual search result is from the Weather Channel. But before you get that link that takes you to weatherchannel.com or weather.com, Google just tells you the forecast right away. And so the claim is, well, this is not fair, right? Google is offering its own versions of these different, you know, products made by firms trying to make a living and wanting their stuff to come up on Google and people aren't going to the, they're not clicking on the Weather Channel because Google just gives you the information right at the top. Or more recently, Google has introduced its own flight search capability. So if you type, you know, I wanna fly to Los Angeles, here's United Airlines is the first actual search result that comes up, but Google finds the flights for me and displays that information already. So the claim is Google is taking advantage of its status as the dominant platform to privilege links to its own products and services over those of competitors, right? I mean, one problem with this is remember that these products and services offered by Google are typically free to the user as well, okay? So Google is making money from Google Weather and Google Flights and Gmail and all these other services the same way it makes money from Google Search, namely by learning more about you that it can use to target, to sell information to advertisers who can target their ads to you. So that's kind of the whole point of the business model. But also, I mean, if we were to restrict platforms from, you know, having their own versions of products that are also sold on the platform, then we would also have to outlaw, you know, generic cereal, right? When you go to Walmart, you can buy Kellogg's brand Cornflakes or you can buy great value Cornflakes. That's what I do, right? That's the Walmart branded version of Cornflakes. Typically it turns out that the store brand is actually manufactured by Kellogg's or Post or whoever just with a different label, right? So are we prepared to say that if you are Kroger or Safeway or Walmart or any major grocery store or CVS or Walgreens, you are not allowed to sell a store branded product because that would be unfair competition with the national brand product. I haven't heard anyone make that argument, but you would have to be prepared to accept that if you want to ban digital services from offering their own products on their platforms. You see a similar issue come up in the case of ecosystems, right? So I mentioned, you know, in mobile telephony, we basically have two competing ecosystems. There's a handful of, obviously there are dumb phones and I think there are some old blackberries around and maybe old Symbian phones or something like that. But the vast majority are either iOS or Android, right? So the Apple mobile telephony ecosystem is Apple making the hardware, the iPhones, right? Apple making the iOS operating system, Apple running the app store, which has apps developed by third parties, right? Spotify or whatever. And then you have Apple Music itself, which in some sense competes with Spotify, right? The Android ecosystem is a little bit more open. It's a little bit different because Google doesn't make the hardware, it makes the pixel, but most of the Android phones are manufactured by Samsung or LG or some other manufacturer. But you've got the operating system, you've got the hardware, you've got a Google's version of the app store, the Play Store, and then you've got, for example, YouTube Music, which is a Google-owned music provider. So point number one is that, again, are Apple and Samsung competing? Yeah, they're competing for premium handsets. Apple and Google are competing for mobile operating systems and app stores, right? So the competition is multi-layered with if you should have sliced and diced the products and services being sold in different ways. But if you think of these two ecosystems competing against each other, for the consumer, your decision to buy an Apple product or an Android product, it's not just determined by the physical hardware of the phone, right? You're not buying the phone, you're buying access to that ecosystem, and you're comparing it with whether, do you prefer that to the other ecosystem, the competition among ecosystems. I believe it was 2019, Spotify filed an antitrust complaint in the EU against Apple claiming that, so the way the app, you probably know the way the app store works, if you develop an app for iOS and Apple admits it into the app store, the license agreement requires you to give 30% of any revenue you generate from the app, you have to kick that back to Apple. So Spotify argued that this was sort of an unfair tax on the Spotify app. So if you have an iPhone and you've got Spotify on it, when you buy a song from Spotify, if you buy an album for 10 bucks, $3 goes to Apple, but if you buy an album from Apple Music, Apple's getting 100% of that, right? So Apple could actually charge a lower price, it could charge seven bucks for the album on Apple Music and it would make the same amount of money, actually it could charge three bucks, right? It would make the same amount of money as if you have to pay $10 on Spotify. So the claim was Apple is sort of artificially privileging its own apps by this 30% tariff placed on third-party apps. And to my knowledge, the judge can correct me if I'm wrong, I think that case is still being heard, there hasn't been a decision yet in the EU, but you can see how the competition among ecosystems provides additional nuance and complexity in the way we think about how firms compete and who is competing, what's the unit of analysis, what is the firm? But again, none of our standard principles about that we talked about yesterday in the lecture on competition and monopoly would be any different in a case like this. Some of the institutional details are different. The specific business strategies may be different, but the general principles about what it means to compete, right as long as no firm has a special legal protection, it's competing just like the toothpaste makers are competing. Okay, yeah, so a two-sided market is like eBay, right? Where eBay is making money from buyers and also making money from sellers. This relates to a point that I made in yesterday's talk that even if the prices that eBay charges to consumers are very low, if you think, well, yeah, but this is a two-sided market, so eBay could still be making money by charging high fees to the people who are selling stuff on eBay. And it could still be behaving in an anti-competitive manner, even if we see low prices or free prices, zero prices on the consumer side. So this relates to the point that I made yesterday about the new sort of antitrust thinking not just at the well-being of consumers, but the well-being of suppliers as well. That's particularly relevant in the so-called two-sided markets. Of freemium, I just mentioned a little bit before, but really, someone asked a question in the panel yesterday about entrepreneurs using internal markets, sort of pseudo tournaments or competitions as a way of allocating resources inside the firm. And I answered, yeah, I mean, that may be a perfectly legitimate management technology, but it doesn't get around the calculation problem as identified by Mises. Same thing here, I mean, look, does the entrepreneur want, does the entrepreneur embrace a business model like Netflix where you make money from subscriptions or a model like Facebook's where you don't charge any subscription fee, but you make money from selling ads? You know, what sort of policy do you want to impose on data sharing? Are you gonna gather a bunch of consumer data and then sell it to advertisers, or are you gonna be like duck-duck-go and advertise the fact that you don't collect data as a selling point and hope that people will use your platform on that basis and maybe eventually you have to charge a subscription fee. I mean, these are all different strategies that entrepreneurs can experiment with on the market. And there's no reason Exante to prohibit one of those particular strategies or to subsidize a particular strategy. Let the market figure this out the way it does with anything else. Okay, so finally, you know, what about those sort of more normative issues? You know, should we regulate big tech firms, especially social media platforms, should they, should antitrust law be used to break them up? Well, we already talked about the standard monopoly arguments and the Austrian responses to them in yesterday's talk. So I don't need to go over those again, except to point out the, you sometimes hear the term natural monopoly to describe a case where we have these big upfront investments and it doesn't cost much to produce more copies once you've made the upfront investment leading to so-called natural monopoly where, you know, over any reasonable range of output, the dominant firm always has a decreasing marginal cost, sorry, decreasing average cost curve. So it's hard for newcomers to compete because the big firm is already way down on its average cost curve and it can sell, it can charge a low price and still cover its costs, whereas the newcomer can't. So people say, well, these tech platforms are natural monopolies. There can only be one firm in the market. Therefore there's not competition and the government needs to regulate. Well, obviously there is competition to become that firm and there's always competition around the margins from newcomers that are offering a slightly different version or offering some other advantages that the incumbents have not yet discovered or created. So we can easily dismiss those kinds of arguments for regulation as well as the arguments that say, well, the government should force Facebook or Twitter to be a neutral platform, you know, like an electric utility. So an electric utility, it's illegal for the Auburn electricity company to charge the Mises Institute a higher electricity price than, you know, the Marxism Institute down the street because the electric company is run by Marxists. So they say, well, social media platforms should not be allowed to throw off conservatives or libertarians or whatever. They should be regulated as public utilities. Again, the argument doesn't really even make any sense for electric companies, much less for social media platforms. You know, so-called misinformation, I mean, come on, give me a break. I've yet to hear an operationally meaningful or useful definition of misinformation that would justify some kind of restriction on it, whatever it is. Misinformation just means stuff you don't like. Finally, one argument that you hear sometimes among libertarians is that, yeah, yeah, yeah, this is all true, but these social media platforms, they're not really private companies. They work hand in hand with the state. You remember last week, a Biden's press secretary said, oh yeah, in the White House, we're constantly flagging Facebook posts that should be taken down and sending them to Mark Zuckerberg, demanding that he take them down. We don't know how many of them Facebook actually takes down, but that number is probably not zero. Okay, so you hear people say, well, but look, you know, these tech companies, they rely a lot on public funding. There's a famous book by European economist Mariana Mazzucato arguing that, you know, because government supported tech research in the 60s and 70s, the internet and anything that came out of the internet really belongs to the public. I don't find that argument very, very credible. You know, the fact that they're taking our data and stealing our data and selling it to people, is that a reason for regulation? Well, again, what is our data? Your data on Facebook is just the digital record of everything you've posted, liked, shared. It's not obvious that that's like property that you can own that someone else could steal from you, right? It's sort of third party observations of things that you did, just as if you were walking down the street and somebody saw you and then they told their friend, they saw you, that's not stealing your information, right? You know, de-platforming, if social media companies are de-platforming people because of their political views, I personally don't like that. I don't think that's good for society, but they are private platforms and the best thing that we can do is not use them or use platforms that have a different policy. This is where people say, yeah, yeah, yeah, but they're so closely connected to the state that they need to be treated as part of the state. I don't buy it. I mean, if you wanna treat a legally private company as part of the state, I'd go for like Goldman Sachs, right? Or Lockheed or Boeing before I would go for Facebook or Twitter. In the panel, we can talk a little bit about section 230 and whether or not these platforms have kind of some special legal protection, which you could argue that they do. But bottom line is these are private companies. They're legally private, they have private owners. Do they sometimes do what the state wants them to do? Sure, lots of companies also do that, but they're formally owned and they are substantively controlled by their shareholders or their owners like other private firms. And we should rely on vigorous market competition to discipline their behavior if we're unhappy with how they're acting in the public sphere. Thank you very much.
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FSTTCS2019 S003 UCLID5 Integrating Modeling, Verification, Synthesis and Learning
This video has been released by Studio IIT Bombay under Creative Commons license.
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2021-08-16T07:50:54
2024-03-04T14:15:59
5,284
3KsFVcFo5XU
Welcome back to the post coffee session. So the next two sessions, which is this session before lunch and the session after lunch, our invited speaker is Sanjit Seshia. He is, of course, a very well-known name in this area. He is a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at University of California Berkeley. His research interests are in formal methods, independable and secure computing, with a focus on cyber physical systems, computer security, machine learning, and robotics. He has made significant contributions to the areas of SMT, SMT-based verification, synthesis, and recently on applying formal methods for verifiable AI and ML. He is a co-author of a widely used textbook on embedded and cyber physical systems, has several awards to his name. I won't list out all of those. And he's also a fellow of the IEEE. So we're very glad to have Sanjit with us today. He's going to give two talks on two different but related topics. Thank you, Supatik. Thanks for the kind invitation to come. Always very nice to be back here at IIT Bombay, which is my alma mater, and also nice to be back at the SAT SMT winter school, which is now in the fourth year, I think. And I remember speaking at the very first edition, and it's very nice to see how this winter school has continued and grown. So as Supatik said, I'm going to be giving two talks. And both of these are going to be more, I would say, on the application side of SAT and SMT. And also, I made a rather conscious choice to give a bit more of a breadth overview rather than go deep into one thing. So I'll be talking more about applications and then giving you a bit of a broad overview. But I hope to highlight some of the, I guess, my personal opinions on where I think SAT, SMT, and especially extensions of what we have today, can really have a nice impact. OK, so the first talk, this one, is going to be on a system called Euclid 5, which we've been developing at Berkeley and now between Berkeley and IIT Kanpur for the last few years. And I'll explain the rationale for building this new modeling verification system in the talk. But it's really the crux of it is about integrating formal modeling along with techniques for algorithmic verification and algorithmic synthesis and also data-driven learning. And the system was created jointly with a number of people, particularly Pramod Subramanyan, who was a post-doc with me and now he's on the faculty at IIT Kanpur. OK, so I want to start by putting up a quote, one sentence from a classic paper in formal methods. Does anyone recognize this? What paper this is? The hint is it's the very first sentence of a very famous paper. Sorry? The very first one. No, not quite. What's that? Trinity Rosner. Trinity Rosner? No, although you're getting closer. It's a good guess, though. So you would think, right? It's something to do with synthesis. This is actually the first sentence of the Clark and Emerson model-checking paper. And the interesting thing is to read this paper, and we always think about model-checking as a technique for verification, not synthesis. But they were really after a kind of synthesis in that paper. So one of the messages of this talk is that verification and synthesis are very tightly integrated, really. And it's not just the connection going back to this particular paper, where you can think of it as starting out with the aim to do synthesis and then ending up with a very nice technique for verification, but it's also going the other way. And this, using verification for synthesis, this is a trend that has especially been very productive in the last 15 years. So I'm just going to give my personal view. I'm sure there are many other groups that have been working on this. But my personal view is based on the work that my collaborators and I have been doing in what is called program synthesis, widely. In particular, we had a large project called the XK Project in the US, and Kuldip was a student, a graduate of the project. And there, some of the techniques we used was to use verifiers as oracles to answer queries that you use for program synthesis. So one technique is quite widely used today, which is counter-example-guided inductive synthesis. The counterpart of counter-example-guided abstraction refinement, but for program synthesis. And there's another class of problems called syntax-guided synthesis that I will tell you more about, which is actually very close to what our first speaker talked about this morning, which is using a grammar and having the grammar guide the search for programs broadly defined. So that's a connection where verification is used and solvers are used for synthesis. So a few trends. So first of all, one of the things that has been happening the last 20 years is that as people try to apply formal methods in industry and in large problems, the first tumbling box is often specifications. Where do the specifications come from? Where do the properties come from? And it's not just the properties you want to verify. It is the properties that you need to verify the properties you want to verify, like all the auxiliary invariance and all of that stuff. And specification mining, which is learning specifications from data has been a big enabler. And I myself had experienced working with automotive companies. The second is inductive synthesis. So the word inductive here is used differently from mathematical induction. It's used in the sense of induction from examples, induction from data, learning from data. And so inductive synthesis is synthesis from example. This is also a very dominant paradigm in program synthesis today. And it's close to machine learning in a sense. But I'll later on my talk, I'll make a distinction from purely data-driven synthesis. And the third, of course, is data-driven design. And by this, I mean really the use of AI and ML, specifically machine learning components in other kinds of systems. So all three of these trends have really come together in the last two decades. And now, I think one thing that we're seeing now is we need to build formal systems. So things like model checkers, verifiers, things like that, with a view that you're going to have in some kind of inductive learning and synthesis integrated into these. And so in this talk, I'll try to give a flavor of some of the things that I think are interesting in this area and some application domains. But I actually wrote a paper about this almost eight years ago, was published at DAC, and then a journal version in the Proceedings of IEEE. So I encourage you to read this, because I don't have the time today to talk about all of this. So broadly speaking, there's three connections here. There's connections between synthesis verification and learning. And then, as I just mentioned, around 2016, we realized that there was really no formal tool that made all these connections that allowed you to use synthesis seamlessly to solve verification problems or was able to integrate machine learning into solving verification tasks and things like that. And so that's really why we sought to develop a new one, which is called Euclid-5. So I hope to give you a demo of Euclid-5 at the end, but it won't cover all the features and its open source. And I encourage you to look at it and try it out, and we would love to get feedback. So before I dive into the talk, I just wanted to state what are the assumptions I'm making about the audience here. So I try not to make too many assumptions. So really, I assume that you know what is SAT, what is SMT, and what is model checking. Maybe not the how of how these are solved, but the what. So SAT, you're given a Boolean formula over some number of propositions or variables, P1 to Pn. And you're asking, is there an assignment to the PIs, such that the formula evaluates to one or true? SMT, similar thing, but now you have a Boolean combination of predicates over some underlying combination of background theories. And now the question is, is there an assignment to the variables in those theories that causes the overall formula to evaluate to one? Model checking, there's a couple of different ways to define it. I would say today model checking is defined quite broadly as a collection of algorithmic methods that are all based on some kind of state space exploration to verify if a system satisfies a specification, a formal specification. But if you go back to the original clock definition, in, for example, the model checking textbook, there it's defined very specifically as it's a technique to check if a finite state system is a model of a specification that is given as a temporal logic formula. All right, so I'm assuming that you know what these are. And I will refer to a temporal logic formulas and things like that in both of my talks. And I'll try to, if you don't know temporal logic, that's OK. We can, I'll explain what the formulas are as we go. Good, so this is the outline for my talk. I'll first give you some motivation, especially of one of the problem domains that also drove us to create Euclid V. So it's not just the connections between synthesis verification and learning, but also we came across a new class of problems that we felt were not well served by existing tools. So I'll talk about that, which is the verification of trusted computing platforms. Then I'll talk about the use of synthesis, particularly syntax-guided synthesis, and a flavor of inductive synthesis I'll call formal inductive synthesis. Then I'll tell you about Euclid V, and I'll give you a demo of some of its features, and then we'll conclude. All right, so we'll start with this one. So this is the area of the general area of secure computing. And now that more and more computing is moving to the cloud, we all have this goal of, we want to have secure remote computation. What does that mean? So imagine that you're the client on the left, and you're using services that are in the cloud. So an Azure or AWS or something like that. And you have these sorts of objectives. So maybe you're using email that's hosted in the cloud, or you're using a file sharing service hosted in the cloud, and some of your data is secret. And so you want to have a guarantee that does my secret data remain secret, that nobody who is not authorized to touch the data should be able to see it. The second is maybe you're using programs running in the cloud. You're paying for them. So a good example, actually a good example for all three of these questions, at least in the US, is tax preparation software. So you're using tax software that is hosted in the cloud. Maybe you've paid for it. So you want to know, first of all, that the private data that you're using for computing taxes should remain secret. Secondly, you're paying for this program. So you want to make sure that it's running as it is specified to be. And thirdly, you want to know that the program that you're paying for is the one that executed in the cloud. So that particular program should be running. So the first question is a question about confidentiality. The second question is one about integrity. And the third question is a question of attestation. You want to know the program running in the cloud is the one that you want. So now that's the broad setup. Those are all the high level objectives. So what are the kinds of attacks are possible? So you're using your browser. So I'm using, in this case, a simple bank application. And to log into your bank account, you pass your username and password to the server. It sends back secret data. Imagine the property you're interested in is confidentiality. And so a very classic set of problems that people have looked at is network or protocol attacks. So there's somebody who can snoop on the network traffic. And you want to make sure that they can't see what's being transmitted. That is a secret. Another class also very well studied are software security problems. So you have vulnerabilities in the software that can be exploited. And you want to know that you want to make sure you have the absence of those vulnerabilities. More recently, there's been concern about vulnerabilities that are lower in the stack. So in the operating system or the virtual machine, we call these software infrastructure attacks. And then even more recently, there are concerns about hardware, so that there can be problems that are the attacks in the hardware, so either at the level of the micro architecture or even at the circuit level. So these are a very broad class of attacks. And I've shown them on the client side, but they can also happen on the server end. So one of the things that arose to help combat all of these attacks is the use of trusted hardware. The general idea being that software is very hard to fully formally verify and make sure that none of those attacks are possible. Let's try to push features that were traditionally implemented in the OS and the hypervisor into hardware. And particularly isolation between processes. And so this idea had been known for a while, but about seven years ago, Intel said, we are going to implement this in the next generation of our x86 processors. They call these SGX, Secure Guard Extensions. And then they made a bit splash about it. They started selling processors, implementing SGX. And that's when this really picked up steam. So the whole idea was that you can write an application in a way that you encode the security critical part in what is called an enclave. So an enclave is a region of memory, including both core and data. And the guarantee the hardware provides is that the enclave is completely isolated from the rest of the computing stack. So no process that is not authorized to read or write to the enclave can actually do that. This is guaranteed by the hardware. So in the case of Intel, they said, we have formally verified this. Trust us. Everything will be fine. But then there were groups that also said, well, we don't fully trust Intel because ideally we want to be able to see what is being verified. And so in particular, there was a group at MIT that built a processor called Sanctum based on the open RISC-5 ISA. So the general worldview with enclaves is that now you can partition your application into two parts, a relatively small part that goes in the enclave, and then a larger portion, which is the rest of the stuff. So imagine computing with a standard map reduce type of framework. And then you have a mapper program and a reducer program. And what you can do is you can make sure that a small chunk of that program, even if it's implemented over a big system like Hadoop, there's only a small part of it that is sitting inside the enclave, which will take encrypted key value pairs and then do the decryption inside the enclave and do the computation inside the enclave. So I'm not going to give a full tutorial here, but the general idea here is that now there's a combination of hardware and software that is giving this guarantee of isolation. But enclaves are software themselves. And if people program enclaves in the wrong way, they can be exploited. So that's a challenge. And so there's a verification problem here, which is you want to make sure that enclaves are written in the right way, that outputs are always encrypted. There are no site channels that lead secret. I'll say more about this later. And then ideally you want the guarantees at the level of machine code, so that you reduce your trusted computing base and you cut out the compiler. And furthermore, about a year and a half or maybe two years ago there was a big news that certain classes of processors, quite a wide set, can be exploited. In fact, features, very common features in micro architecture that have been implemented and taught for a few decades like speculative execution can be exploited. So we had the news of the Spectre and Meltdown bugs so this is at the level of hardware, you want to make sure that if you have a platform that claims to provide secure computing with enclaves, that it should be robust, this sort of attack. So that was a quick whirlwind tour of the topic. And so what we started looking at was how can we formally verify trusted enclave platforms to provide this guarantee of secure remote execution? So this is what I'm going to talk about in the next 10 or so minutes. So the idea here is that the user on the left has a program and some secret data that they want to compute on a remote server. And so everything in red on this slide is untrusted. So they are sending it over an untrusted channel and there are other programs and the operating system and the hypervisor, the software stack which is not trusted. The only thing that is trusted is the enclave itself and the enclave platform. And there is a way involving cryptography that the user can make sure that they can send the enclave over encrypted and make sure that it's set up in a way that they know that that's the program that's running on the platform. So let's ignore that part. The questions we want to answer here are I gave you some minutes ago. I gave you sort of informal language goals of secure remote execution. But if we want to do verification, we need to be able to formally verify it and formally specify those things. So the first question is what does it mean precisely? The second question is Intel has implemented a bunch of features and they claim secure remote execution. The RISC-5-based platform also implements a different set of features. But what is really required? What is the minimal set of platform features that is required to guarantee this? And then given these two things, how do you formally verify that a given platform implements secure remote execution? So that's the question that we really set out to answer. And the details are in this paper that is cited. So the first thing is I'll tell you about a formal definition of what secure remote execution is. I'll then show how you can decompose this into three kinds of properties. Then I'll talk about the formal model of this idealized Anklev platform, which I'll call the Trusted Abstract Platform, or TAP. And then I'll tell you about our initial attempt at verifying these models using SMT-based approaches. So by the way, stop and ask questions if anything is not clear. So I'll be at this point, what I'm going to do now is describe to you what we did. And then at the end of it, this is all a set of work that we did without using Euclid 5. But it was kind of the motivation for us to create that system, one of the motivations for us to create the system. So here's what the formal model looks like. So what you're seeing on this slide is think of the lifetime of application running on a platform. And so what happens here is each dot is a state, and each arrow is a transition. So this is a trace. And the idea here is, at some point, when an Anklev is created, we call that a launch. So the region of memory is created, initialized with code and data. And then when you start executing the Anklev, there's a part of your browser which is not trusted. So when it starts working on your secret data, it will then enter the Anklev. So everything in the box here is when the code from the Anklev is running. So there's an enter point and an exit point. And then when it exits, it yields a control back to the untrusted host application. And so if you look at the trace of the Anklev and other programs running on the system, it's going to look something like this, where there are subsequences of the trace that correspond to the Anklev execution. So we're going to take the concatenation of all these boxes, and that will be a trace of the Anklev. You look at the set of all possible valid traces of the Anklev, and that will be double bracket E. Then another important aspect of doing verification for security properties is you have to model the adversary. You have to create a formal model of the adversary. And so in our formal model, we assume a so-called privileged software adversary. So think about this as a program that can run at the highest privileged level in the software stack. So it's basically running with OS level privileges, kernel mode. And this can try to trample with the Anklev by executing any arbitrary operations that are available to it. And it can also observe anything that is written out on a channel that's observable for it. So the way we'll model this is using two functions, a so-called tamper function and an observation function. And you can just think of an observation function, for example, as taking the entire state of the platform and projecting it to the subset of that state that it can observe. Further, the adversary can run at any point. So now you can see that all of these red arrows correspond to the adversary operations. And we assume an interleaving model of execution where the adversary operations can be interleaved with the Anklev and other program operations. And so now this is our definition of secure remote execution. So we say that the remote platform securely executes the Anklev program if two things hold. The first is that now this Anklev program is running on this remote platform with other untrusted software. But we still want the set of Anklev traces to be preserved. So any execution trace of E, those boxes, the concatenation of those boxes, on an untrusted platform have to be equivalent to the set of traces that you would get running on a trusted platform where only the Anklev was running and no adversary. And the second thing is that we provide in certain observation function the things that the adversary can observe, the part of the state that the adversary can observe. And the knowledge has to be restricted to that. So that's the definition of secure remote execution. And this definition is a little abstract. It's basically saying that the semantics of the program has to be preserved as if there was no adversary. And further, the adversary knowledge is restricted to this observation function. But it's not so easy to verify as is. And so what we have is a so-called decomposition theorem which says that there are three properties that you can decompose that to, which are called measurement, integrity, and confidentiality. And if you have those three properties, that implies SRE. So these are the three properties. So the first one is measurement. And informally, it means that you're executing the right Anklev. The second is integrity, which means that your adversary can only influence the Anklev's execution or the Anklev's state through inputs that it can provide. So it can't really change what the Anklev does any other way. And the third is confidentiality, which says that the adversary knowledge is limited to the observation function. So this is still a little informal. Let me give you a little bit more precise definition of one of them. So the first thing I want to mention is that all three of these properties are what are called two safety properties. So in the set of properties of systems, there are things called trace properties. And trace property is one where if you're given a single trace of the system, you can tell whether or not it satisfies the property. But in the case of these kinds of properties, you can't tell with just a single trace. In general, you need some set of traces to tell whether or not the property is satisfied. And a common way to formalize confidentiality is using notions called non-interference-based formalizations of confidentiality, and this is one of those. And so the idea here is that this one is called observational determinism. The idea here is that there are two things. Imagine there are two entities executing on the platform. So there's the adversary, which is the red arrows, and the Anklev, which is the green arrows. And what we want is that the adversary's observations has to be a deterministic function of the adversary's own state and the public outputs that the Anklev generates and nothing else. So what the adversary can observe and compute can only be a deterministic function of its own state and what the Anklev outputs publicly. And so one way to look at that is imagine you have two traces where the adversary does the same thing. So all the actions here are the same, but the Anklev does something different. So here you have Anklev E, and there let's say we have a different Anklev E prime, but they both produce the same public outputs. So this ob's arrow, this ob's label here, that is indicating that as far as the outputs from E and E prime, they are the same. What it's doing internally, internal computation can be different. And so what we're saying here is that the adversary is identical, but the Anklev is possibly different, the adversary will continue to be identical. That is from the adversary's viewpoint, it cannot tell whether it's running on the platform with E or with E prime. That's what this property is. It's a very similar formalization for the other two. Yeah. So the question is, do we allow the adversary to use randomization? And in practice, the adversary can use randomization, and we just model it as a non-determinism in the adversary. But the point is the adversary for this will have to make the same non-deterministic choices. So you're saying, well, what happens if the adversary does different random things, right? In this particular case, what we want to do is make sure that the adversary's state is controlled for the internal choices that the adversary makes, right? So the viewpoint of this property, right? You're just saying that, assume the adversary does, makes all the same choices. If 90% times you are able to attack, so in that case, 90% of the random choices would be fine and 10%. Yeah, so what Kuldip is saying, making is a good point, which is about a lot of the cases. Something like this is in general too strong a property, because in the case, you may still have a case where the secret is, the notion of confidentiality is more quantitative, right? They're okay with some number of bits being revealed, but, right? And in this case, you would flag an error, even if one bit is being revealed. So for now, let's ignore that aspect when we're using a non-quantitative version of confidentiality, okay? If you wanted to use a quantitative notion of confidentiality, as you know, right? You'd have to, under the hood, instead of using SAT and SMT as we do, you'd have to use something like model counting, right? All right, good. So now, that's the flavor of property we are verifying, okay? So first of all, the takeaway message I wanted from that particular thing is that the flavor of property is not the standard type of safety or liveness property that you're verifying with something like model checking. It is these two safety properties, okay? So you need verifiers that can support that. The second is that you have, you want to be able to model the platform, right? And so, the key question is, if you have a secure computing platform like SGX or Sanctum, then what are the set of primitives it should support? Okay? And so, this is what we created. We created a formal specification for platforms like Intel's SGX that is independent of the, you know, specific instruction set architectures. It also includes multiple adversary models. And so, you can kind of compare multiple platforms, security guarantees using a common formalism, okay? So this is what the TAP model looks like. First of all, you have to model the abstract state of a CPU and associated memory and, you know, other data structures used for keeping track of enclave state. And then the idea is that the trusted platform is something that exposes a set of operations that the applications can invoke, okay? And we came up with a set of, you know, about 10 such operations, okay? So the first is you have to model, you have to keep track of what happens when you do memory operations, okay? Because when you do things like a load or store, right? From address and memory, it matters whether the address is in the enclave or not in the enclave, right? So it does something to the underlying enclave metadata and so forth. Okay, so that's, you have to model those things. And then you have to model also address translation because that's one of the ways in which these platforms track who is trying to access what region of memory and then they have appropriate safeguards to make sure that even if the OS is compromised, it can't like change the page table and change the mapping, right? So that they can read secret data. Then you have all these things that I talked about before, like create an enclave, destroy an enclave, enter, exit, pause an enclave and then resume it and so forth. And this is something where you can take a cryptographic hash of the enclave region, okay? So those are the set of operations that we found was enough to provide this guarantee of secure remote execution, okay? And so the TAP model then becomes something like the ISA. It becomes a contract between hardware and software. So for the hardware developers, if they prove that their hardware implementation refines the TAP, then they know that it satisfies secure remote execution. And for the software developers, they can develop their libraries to help people program with enclaves as long as they provide the set of operations that spans all the operations in the TAP, they know that they're compatible with all the underlying platforms, okay? And so we actually have a formal specification, our first formal specification of the TAP publicly available. And this was actually created using the Boogie program verifier from Microsoft Research, okay? So Boogie for those of you who don't know is a system for sequential program verification. So verifying the kinds of programs that our first speaker talked about in a language that the Boogie folks have devised, and they can use backend SMT-based approaches to basically check if the verification condition is satisfied or not, and the default is Z3, right? And so this model is in Boogie, and I'll have more to say about this in a bit. The other crucial aspect of the TAP is the adversary model. Okay, so it's very important to model what the adversary can do and cannot do. So we had three kinds of adversaries here. So the first adversary we'll call M, and the idea with adversary M is that, M stands for memory. So this adversary can basically invoke any operation in the Trusted Abstract Platform specification with arbitrary operands. And they can observe anything in the region of memory that's outside the enclave. So they can see all of the memory, except the part that's in the enclave, okay? MC is similar in terms of the tamper function, in terms of observation function, they can also observe the state of the cache. So this is getting into side channel attacks where typically there is some mechanism for the attacker to observe which regions of memory have been loaded into the cache. So you can observe certain cache lines. And in this case, we kind of abstract the mechanism away and just say the adversary can directly read the cache. And then MC and P is where the adversary can also observe the page table state, okay? All right, so the first thing is the question, if you have a formal model of the TAP, okay? And then you have the secure input execution properties which are these three hyper properties, the three two safety properties I talked about. And then we were able to prove using boogie that our TAP specification satisfies all these properties for the first adversary and also for the second and third, but with some riders. So for the second one, you need the cache sets to be partitioned, right? So the enclaves cache sets cannot collide with the cache sets of the non-onclave programs. And for the most powerful adversary, you also need that the enclaves page tables are private. Some mechanism has to be used so that the OS cannot read or write to those page tables. And using those, we were able to show that SGX, Intel's SGX version one is secure for the first adversary but not for the other two. And we were able to replicate attacks that at that time had already been known in the literature, but in a formal way. And we can show that sanctum, which is the MIT-based MIT risk five processor is secured for all these three because it actually does these two things. So this is what the high level structure of the proof looks like in boogie, okay? So here you have the property of secure input execution. We have a TAP model. We want to prove that it satisfies this. For that we have to be able to prove two safety properties and the way this is done is using something called self composition. So it's well known where if you have a two safety property, you can prove it as a safety property on a system where you make two copies of the program and you run them side by side. Okay, I'm gonna show you a demo of Euclid later where we'll do exactly this and you can see how this is done. And then we have a model of SGX in boogie and a model of sanctum in boogie and we prove refinement. And this refinement is done using a standard simulation-based proof using induction, right? So we basically are saying, well, if you're in the state of the platform which corresponds to a state of the TAP and then you make one step here, then the TAP can simulate that step, okay? So that's the kind of proof here. So what adversary would you do this? I mean, adversary is adversarial. Yeah, so these are the three adversaries that we, so all these proofs are for these three adversaries. So they were repeated for that first adversary, the second and the third. Okay, so this was used, done using boogie which is a fairly automated verifier, right? For some of you might have used it. But the effort was significant. The manual effort was significant, okay? And so overall, the number of lines of code in the non-white space, non-blank lines of code was about non-comment, was about 9,000. And if you download this model now and you run it, you will, it'll complete in a few minutes, right? So it's not that hard to complete the proof now but it took four person months to get the model to that point. And a lot of the hard work was actually what our first speaker talked about which is coming up with all these auxiliary invariants, right? And so it was really more like a, I wouldn't say automatic verification effort. It was really working with some kind of, I mean, a very highly automated proof assistant but still there was a lot of manual effort there. The other aspect of it that we realized was that it wasn't the right language to use, to model for this kind of platform because these platforms involve both hardware and software. There are changes to the hardware design in the hardware description language and there are changes in firmware and then there's changes to the software layers. And in order to do the proof, you need to model all of these, right? And so, Boogie is excellent for what it was designed for which was sequential program verification but this is not a sequential program. This is a concurrent system, right? But it's a concurrent system which has software components, right? So you would like to be able to have procedures and preconditions and post-conditions and all that good stuff, right? So if you look on the other side, if you look at hardware verification tools, right? And tools like new SMV and so on, they are excellent for hardware verification, modeling concurrent transition systems, but they are terrible at modeling and verifying sequential programs, okay? So you need to have something that has both of them. The second is actually the point that was made very well this morning which is you need a lot more automation in the verification process, right? So generation of inductive impedance as a big one but that's not the only thing. You also want to be able to do for concurrent verification assume guarantee contracts and then for verifying hyper properties which are the types of things that I talked about, you need ways of automating the verification of those things as well, okay? And then finally, we would like to take the whole verification to be incremental and compositional because that's the only way to scale, okay? So the next part of my talk will focus more on these two aspects, okay? Which is really the use of synthesis to try to automate it. Then I'll come back to Euclid 5 and I'll give you a demo and show you how we can combine both modeling sequential programs as well as concurrent systems in the same formal system, okay? So when we talk about verification, even so-called push button verification like model checking or program verification using, you know, whole style reasoning, there's a lot of things that have to be generated or synthesized, right? So inductive invariance clearly, right? But also abstractions, right? So in practice, you can say, well, I use this abstract domain and I was able to prove it but how did you come up with that abstract domain? That's a challenge. Auxiliary specifications, so if you're doing modular verification, you often have to have the pre-post pairs or function summaries. If you're proving refinement, you need to come up with a simulation relation. If you are doing assume guarantee reasoning, you need to come up with the environment assumptions, interpolates, ranking functions, various kinds of lemmas. In fact, even inside SMT solvers, there is synthesis going on, right? In generating lemmas and patterns for quantifying instantiation and so on. So there's a lot of synthesis happening inside SAT SMT and verification tools, right? And so really the effort that we and many others have been trying to do is how can you automate that, right? So it's going back to this picture and what is, I think maybe I'm underlying the point but it's really, what is crucial to this is coming up with the right model. The right formal model is really crucial to be able to automate all of this. Okay, so now I'll give you an example. So this is actually an example that I think a version of it came up in the first talk this morning, right? So now, but I'm gonna model things differently. I'm gonna model as transition systems, okay? So a transition system has state variables. In this case, there are x and y which are integer variables, okay? And the initial state is x is one, y is one. The transition relation is that x is updated to x plus y and y is updated to y plus x which is the same as x plus y and that's a simultaneous update. So x and y are updated together. The property you want to prove is that always or globally, y is at least one, okay? And the way you do it by induction is you would prove the base case. Well, that checks out but then you'll prove the inductive step. So you'll say if y is greater than equal to one and x and y change like this then y remains greater than equal to one, right? And if you do the proof by, try to do this, encode this to your favorite SMP solver, it'll fail because you didn't have enough restrictions on what x is, right? And so what you need to do now is find the strengthening. So this is a synthesis problem. Find the phi such that this holds, okay? And so that's one of the fives that works, okay? So again, this was made very nicely from the first talk today that safety verification is can be reduced to inductive synthesis. In fact, the general idea is that a lot of verification tasks can be reduced to synthesis, not just invariance. So the reduction that you see here is you have a transition system with the initial state and transition relation, you have a safety property. The verification problem is does the model satisfy the temporal logic property. The synthesis problem that it transforms to is can you synthesize a strengthening of the little phi such that the base case holds in the inductive step holds, right? Okay, but you can also do another synthesis problem which is say, well, I wanna do abstraction. So synthesize an abstraction function that maps the set of states to a set of abstract states, okay, such that the abstract model satisfies the property if and only if the true model satisfies the property. And in fact, if you look at counter example, guided abstraction refinement, it is basically a way of synthesizing the abstraction or the abstract model in an iterative fashion, okay? So the point is that big long list that I had in the earlier slide of all the artifacts that are synthesized in verification, you can actually formulate the synthesis of all of those in a similar fashion and then use some form of synthesis to generate it, right? So the particular flavor that I'll tell you a little bit more about is of synthesis is called syntax guided synthesis, okay? So this is a problem that some of us in the XK project created that just tries to capture what people were already doing, right? So the TCS group we saw we heard you have a grammar and then you use the grammar, you search to the grammar of candidate invariants and then you check whether those are really true invariants, right? In program synthesis, what people were doing was searching through a set of possible template programs and then checking if they satisfy the specification, right? So syntax guided synthesis or SIGAS is a problem that is designed to capture this sort of thing, right? So what you do here is you first fix a background theory or combination of theories. You fix the thing you want to synthesize. So we'll think of it as a function here, okay? And we think for this talk, I'll just think of one function but in general you can have multiple functions to be synthesized. And then the SIGAS problem is the following. You're given a specification phi which you think about as an SMT formula which is in the combination of EUF uninterpreted functions and the theory T, okay? And then you're given a grammar, a context free grammar which produces expressions that you will use as substitutions for phi. You'll try to synthesize an implementation for phi, okay? So the SIGAS problem is the following. You're given phi, you're given T and phi contains F and you're given the grammar or the language of the grammar E. And you want to generate a little E in capital E such that if you replace F by E in phi, the resulting formula is valid in the underlying theories. So the correctness specification phi is your SMT formula and it contains a function F which is treated as uninterpreted. You want to replace that with an implementation where the implementation is drawn from the language of a grammar and you want the resulting formula to be valid. So let's look at an example, okay? So let's say the underlying theory T is linear integer arithmetic, quantifier free theory and F is a function, it's a binary function. It takes two arguments X and Y, returns an integer. Here's your specification. So in this case, you say X is less than F of X, Y and Y is less than F of X, Y and then F of X is equal to X or Y, right? So what's the function here? X, max, okay? So max of X and Y. Now let's say this is our grammar. So grammar is the set of all linear expressions. So you can either have X, Y, a constant, integer constant and you can create a linear combination. And if you run, if you try to synthesize something, you will find that there is no solution, right? There is no expression from this grammar which if you can plug it in, it'll make this formula valid, okay? And the key here is that to synthesize max, you need to be able to compare, right? X and Y. And so a natural way to fix this is you then introduce the if-then-else, a conditional construct and then you can get a solution out, right? So this is an example of Sygus. So the Euclid-5 solver that I'm gonna show you now, it uses Sygus to generate things like invariance. So what it'll do is it'll take a candidate problem, it'll compile that into one or more Sygus instances and it will solve them to generate invariance or other things, okay? So how it solves Sygus is a different point, okay? But the idea is it reduces problems to a sequence of Sygus problems, okay? So let me now touch upon very briefly what it takes to solve Sygus problems, okay? So one thing that you might say is solving Sygus the same as solving SMT with quantifier elimination. And the answer is, well, it depends on your definition of SMT, but certainly if you have quantifiers only over first order variables, then you can't really do Sygus using quantified SMT. Sometimes you can reduce it depending on the grammar. So for instance, if your grammar is all linear expressions, then you can do the standard thing where you introduce parameters A, B and C and then you turn this into a quantifier over the coefficients, right? But even if it's not quantified SMT, there are ways in which quantified SMT problems are solved that can be reused for Sygus. In fact, the CBC4 SMT solver was turned into a Sygus solver precisely doing this, right? They just reuse the techniques, the heuristics they were using for things like quantifying instantiation. In general though, and this is an important thing, Sygus problems are undecidable for even very simple theories that are decidable for SMT unless the grammar is suitably restricted. So the source of undecidability in Sygus often comes from the grammar, right? So if you don't, if you bound the length of expressions, then everything becomes decidable. But if you don't, you just specify a grammar, then very quickly things become undecidable. We had a paper on this four years ago if you're interested. Okay, so how is Sygus solved? So this is the connection now to learning, right? So the way Sygus is typically solved is using a class of learning that I call oracle-guided learning. And in particular, what I'll show now is counter-example-guided learning. So the idea here is you have really what is a learning algorithm. So this is inductive synthesis. It's learning from, synthesizing from examples. It doesn't know anything about the specification, okay? So it gets a set of examples and it has the grammar and it synthesizes an expression that satisfies all the specification on the examples, right? So it's consistent with the examples. You pass that candidate to a verification oracle and that oracle has access to the specification. So it checks, is the candidate expression, does it satisfy the spec? And if it does, then you are done. That's where you have success. If it doesn't, you produce a counter-example. And this counter-example is added back into the data set and then you rerun your learning algorithm. So really, this is the common way in which all cyber solvers work, including the one in CVC, right? Internally, they have a counter-example-guided learning algorithm, okay? So as an example, if you take the specification for max that I showed you earlier and you take your grammar to be things that include the if-then-else operator, then the way this will work is you start with no examples and then you can come up with any expression from the grammar, say x. And then the verification oracle will say, well, this doesn't work because if x is zero and y is one, then the max is gonna be one, this is gonna be zero. So that becomes your first example. Now the learning algorithm has to produce something that will work for zero, one. So let's say it produces y. Now the oracle will say, well, that doesn't work for x equal to one, y equal to zero. You add that back into the set and you'll build up a set of examples and at some point it comes up with the right expression, okay? So all Seiger solvers today use this basic approach and where they differ is inside this box, okay? For the most part, okay? So this approach, by the way, is called counter-example-guided inductive synthesis, often goes by the acronym sieges, something that we came up with in 2006, but there are lots of very nice extensions of sieges for solving Seiges. One of the first ones was actually using an enumerative approach, very simple enumerative approach. Another one was using a SAT-based approach. Basically you take your grabber and you encode your productions using Boolean variables to indicate which productions are being used and then you solve the SAT problem and you extract the solution from that. A third one is using stochastic approaches based on work from Alex Aiken's group on super optimization and this is actually the state of the art as of 2013. So we are already six years later, there are lots and lots of alternative approaches, including approaches that actually use machine learning algorithms in the learning box. So people have experimented with neural networks and decision trees and so on. Okay, but this is only one way to solve these synthesis problems. Okay, so using counter example guided synthesis. So more broadly, this class of synthesis is what we characterize as formal inductive synthesis. So a few years ago, we wrote this paper where we said that a lot of these uses of synthesis and verification are very different from the kinds of synthesis from examples that people are using elsewhere in programming by demonstration and so on. And the key point is that you're trying to synthesis from examples while also trying to satisfy a formal specification. Okay, so really the paradigm is something like this. You have an oracle that knows the formal specification and you have a learner and there is an interface through which the learner and the oracle communicate. So through queries. And the most common one is what I showed you, which is the query is the candidate expression correct. Right, that's the counter example query. But there are a lot more types of queries and that's what we have in this talk about in this paper. Okay, so generally the generalized version of this is that you're given a class of artifacts. Think of that as specified by a grammar if you want. You're given a formal specification. Then you're given a domain of examples from which you can draw and you're given this thing called the oracle interface. The oracle interface is all the questions that the learner can ask the oracle. And the formal inductance in this problem is that you want a learning algorithm that has to adhere to that interface and using that interface it has to find a candidate specification. But the point here is that you can have queries that are a lot richer and different types of queries than just counter example queries. So I'll just make two points here. One is that you can, it's been shown that you can use this sort of oracle guided synthesis to generate formal models from implementations. So imagine that you have a large body of code that is either in something like C or maybe in the hardware level like Verilog or VHDL and it's impossible, just won't scale to be able to verify some property directly on that. However, what I'd like to create is an abstraction of that, a small more compact model. I'd like to synthesize that abstraction from the implementation. How do I do that? And it's been shown that you can use not counter example guided synthesis but a different oracle guided synthesis to generate this. The second thing is this, those of you who may know the literature on query based learning. So Angluens algorithm for learning DFA's and things like that would see a similarity between this picture and what they do there. But the key point of difference between this and that is that in things like Angluens algorithm, the oracle is fixed and you cannot change it. And here you can actually design both sides of this. All right, so much for the detour over for synthesis. So now what I'd like to do is talk a little bit about Euclid 5 and give you a brief demo. So just to recap, when we did this verification of trusted platforms, what we realized was two things primarily. One was we needed a better modeling language for both hardware and software and something which includes both of them. And secondly, you want more automation which we're trying to achieve through synthesis. Okay, and so that's what led to Euclid 5. Some background, so Euclid 5 is an evolution of an earlier system that we created called Euclid. So Euclid was actually one of the first SMT solvers and SMT based verifiers. And it was based on something we call term level modeling. So the idea here is really, if you're familiar with hardware model checking, for instance, that is typically your modeling systems using either Booleans or bit vectors. And here you're trying to model using a combination of theories that is available with SMT. And you can do things like modern model checking and K induction and checking simulation and so forth. Okay, and so the Euclid system is something that we used and maintained on many projects until 2014, at which point we started working on this new domain and I found that this old system was not really a good match because it was created for modeling hardware-like systems, okay, hardware model checking. And for here you have to have something that models software. So what I'd like to share with you is where the new Euclid 5 sits in the space or at least aspirationally. And I want to make a comparison with different types of tools. So I just picked a few examples that you may know. So ABC is a model checker from Berkeley, from a Bob Braden's group for hardware model checking, one of the best hardware model checkers from academia today. New XMV is an evolution of the new SMV model checker which uses SMT. Boogie is the one that I told you about earlier. Coq, of course many of you will know it's an interactive theorem proof assistant. Euclid is the old version of Euclid and Euclid 5 is the one that we've just created. And what we wanted was really a combination of all of these which is why the last column is green. So green means we want something that can handle all of these things. So first of all we want, in order to model or do verification of these kinds of trusted platforms, you need something that doesn't just model things at the bit level or bit vector level, okay? So you want more abstraction, you want a high degree of automation, you want multiple types of verification. So not just doing sequential program verification or model checking linear temporal logic properties, you want really a combination of these. You want modularity, we want importantly both the ability to do sequential software updates as well as concurrent updates like you have in hardware. And then you want support for generating counter examples that is really useful. This is as many industry folks will attest, generating counter examples is really a really important aspect of a verification tool, right? And so without going into the details, what we found is that there are tools like Boogie for instance that is excellent on the things that it was designed for but really poor on some of the other aspects, right? And so what we found was there was no tool out there that could do all of it. And that's what we are trying to build here. So Euclid 5 is a verifier that is, would be very similar to the kinds of verifiers that you might have used before. So you start with a model and then it goes through a front end phase, type checking and instantiation and composition and so forth. It goes through a back end phase and then it invokes a back end SMT solvers as well as SIGAS solvers, okay? And then you have all the types that you would have in using SMT. And here's the high level structure of a Euclid module before I go into the demo. So one important aspect of Euclid is that it has both support for modeling concurrent systems as well as sequential software, right? So the concurrent systems, you can think of those as a composition of modules, okay? So the unit there is a module and a module will contain a number of things. So you can define your own types, you define state variables, inputs, outputs. You can define the initial set of states and the transition relation. You can define a whole bunch of properties. But then you can also define procedures. So procedures are the things that you would have in a boogie, a language like boogie, right? You'd have a procedure with precondition, post-condition, assumes, asserts, things like that. And then at the end, we have what is called a control block which is where you write a little proof script except that you're not really doing it interactively. This is just giving a set of commands to the tool, okay? So what can you do? We can verify everything that boogie can do, Euclid 5 can do, right? So all the standard sequential program verification, we can also verify invariance and linear temporal logic properties using bounded model checking and K induction, okay? We can also verify a simulation or refinement checking. So you will have one transition system and another one and you want to check that one simulates the other. And then we can also check two safety hyper properties like I talked about. We use syntax-guided synthesis to automate as much as we can. And what we've realized along the way is that the current cycle solvers are great but they really are woefully behind what we need in practice. And then, yeah, this is with respect to the original Euclid, it subsumes everything that it could do, okay? So let me start giving you an actual demo of what it looks like. And then if there is time, I'll tell you a little bit about what we did for verifying absence of specter meltdown vulnerabilities, okay? So first let me show you some code. So this is an example of a very simple Euclid model. It's actually a simplified version, highly simplified version of the kind of problem that we have in verifying enclave, whether an enclave platform satisfies the desired properties. Okay, so in this case, what I'm showing you is in Euclid, of course, you can have a hierarchical structure with files and so on, but here we have everything in one file. So this first module here is something where we define all the types that we're going to use elsewhere. So the point I want to make here is you can define your own types, you can define words, you can define abstract data types like the address that you see up there on line six, then you can define memory types, so line 17 you'll see, you can define a memory as a function from addresses to data words, you can define axioms, these are uninterpreted functions, and you can define an axiom over the uninterpreted function. So those of you who are users of boogie, all of this stuff will be quite familiar to you because those are the kinds of things that you can do in a better file like boogie. Then the next thing we have is a model of a very simple CPU. So I'll come back to this at the end. What I want to show you is the top level module. So this is the main module. So what we are doing here is there's a CPU module that I'll show you later, and what we are doing is we're trying to prove two safety property. And while Euclid has support for proving this directly without me doing an explicit self-composition, I wanted to show you how you do a self-composition. So here I create two instances of the CPU module, but I initialize them with different instruction memories. So the kinds of property that I'm proving is I have a CPU which is this very simple, simplified trusted platform, and there's going to be a region of memory that is the enclave region, okay? So let me go to the specification here. So look at this specification invariant, okay? So what this says is the CPU memory in isolated mode, think of that as like an enclave mode, has to be identical no matter what the adversary does, okay? The adversary cannot touch it. So now what you have is you have two CPUs where the adversary can do different things because the instruction memory is different. So the adversary you can have can do different things, but what happens is that as long as your addresses are in the isolated range, which is this is what this uninterpreted function does, it says that address A, if address A is between the low range and the high range, then the data memory in CPU one has to be the same as the data memory in CPU two. The contents at that address have to be identical, okay? So what these two properties are saying, they're invariance in the sense of globally being true. It's saying that even if the adversary does different things, the contents of those memories can't change, okay? And then so what we're really doing here is taking these two copies of the CPU, okay? And they're putting them together, they're composing them synchronously. And then we are checking does this model satisfy a property of the form globally P, okay? So it boils down to a standard safety property check. And now to do this, we're going to do this by induction. So there's nothing new there, but in terms of syntax, you define the initial state and you'll see here the initial state is defined, this is a bunch of assumes. So everything is symbolic using uninterpreted functions and those types of underlying theories, but using symbolic constants. And here all we are saying is we're gonna assume that CPU one and CPU two have the same sort of protected ranges of memory and the initial state satisfies the invariant that we wanna prove. And then down here, look at this, this is the next block. So the next block is the transition relation. So we see the next block of the overall system is obtained by stepping both CPU one and CPU two synchronously, that's what this says. So it's a next of CPU one says, CPU one makes a step, CPU two makes a step and ignore the semicolon, it really means it happens synchronously. And then there's some, this is an auxiliary assumption that is needed to make the proof go through, okay? And then if I go down to the control block, what this says is use induction. In fact, by default, this is one step induction. If you give it an argument, you can say you can use K as an argument and do K induction. So this says create the verification object, V. This one invokes the SMT solver, this will print the results and then you can print the counter example and you can project the counter example on a subset of variables. So you can say, I don't wanna see the counter example on everything, just give it to me on a small subset of the state and you can make it, you can have expressions there. Okay, and then the other thing that you see up here is there's a lot of other invariants, right? So everything up here from 207 down to 21, right? And these are all auxiliary invariants. So we had to come up with these in order to make the proof of those two go through, okay? So these are the things that we wanna be able to synthesize eventually, okay? So that's the top level module and now if I go to the CPU module, okay? So the CPU module, it's a standard CPU and I won't kind of go through the details of it but I'll just point out the main things. You define your own types, the input to the CPU module is the instruction memory. It has state variables, okay? It has these symbolic constants. So everything that's a function is an uninterpreted function, right? So you can do all the kinds of things that you can do in a system like Boogie and then what it does here is I've defined this procedure which executes an instruction. So this takes as input an instruction, which is a word. It takes the PC and it returns as a return value, the next value of the PC and it modifies all these state variables, right? So this would look to you similar to what we'd seen in standard program, sequential program verification and the reason for this is that it's often very convenient to describe properties even of hardware as a program that does a bunch of updates, right? So this just will model what happens in one round of the CPU, one step. And what you'll see is that you can use constructs, you know, so you can have loops and conditionals and all of that stuff, loop and variance if you need asserts and then you can do havoc in order to give a completely arbitrary value to some state variable. But then that procedure is inside the module and the module has an initial state and the next state, right? And inside the next block here we are calling the exec instruction function, okay? So you can basically combine these ways of modeling concurrent transition systems with initial and next, the transition relation and also the sequential programs, okay? So the way you'd run this is that's the file that I just showed you, right? And so this is all implemented in Scala and so ideally the way I would run this is I would initialize the JVM and so on first and then I would run everything. So what I'm not really gonna do that on this laptop. So each time I run Euclid it actually does all the initialization first. So this is what you see as the latency but this will, this tries to verify all those invariants and it passes, okay? So not super interesting. If I actually change something you'll see counter examples. What I wanna show you is synthesis. So I'll just go quickly to that as we're running short of time, okay? And this I've deliberately given you an example that is very simple to the example that the first speaker used, okay? And which is on my slide as well, right? So this is the case where you have a transition system with X and Y and then you update them and the invariant you wanna prove is that Y is greater than equal to zero, right? So if I just use standard induction and run it, right? So it's just gonna try to prove it by induction and it'll come back saying I can't prove it. It produces the standard counter example to induction, right? So it says X can be negative, right? And so we know that can't happen and so instead what you can tell Euclid is synthesize the invariant for me and then say and do it using the theory of linear and the charismatic. Now note I'm not getting a grammar here and so what it's gonna do is it's as the grammar it's going to use this default grammar for LIA, right? And so then in this case I also have to invoke a certain cycle solver. So I'm gonna use CBC4 because that's the one I have installed in my laptop here and then I reran that. And now what this does is, so just for you to show you, it prints the Seiger's problem that it generates internally, right? And that's what it looks like the format. But you can ignore that, just look at this line here. So it says successfully synthesize an invariant and here's the strengthened invariant, okay? So now let me show you another example just to have a little bit of diversity here. So this is an example which is also doing the same thing but everything is bit vectors, right? And so all you can do is just synthesize an invariant using bit vectors, okay? And here's an against another very simple example where X and Y start out being zero and then they're updated to X on each round, okay? And the invariant is that Y is always zero but to prove that Y is always zero you need to know that X is also zero, right? And then you can basically invoke it in the same way, right? And it'll come back with invariant. So nothing, you know, out of the way happening here it's basically invoking a Seiger's solver and it generates an invariant there, right? We can also do synthesize invariants with arrays and also do things that are not invariants alone but I don't have time to show you all that, okay? So one last thing I'd like to show you is LTL. So this is another trivial example of a little transition system where you have two input variables to this module A and B and then this flag in it and if it starts out being false and it's true from the first cycle, right? And so here what we can do is we can specify an LTL property, right? So you have two properties here. This one says it's always true that once you're in it the sum is A plus B, which is true and this one leaves out the antecedent. So you know it's not gonna be satisfied, okay? And then we can run modern model checking for LTL you can also do K induction, okay? So I won't run that but basically you have the capability of doing all these types of verification, okay? So one thing I wanna mention quickly is that we redid the Trusted Abstract Platform Proof in Euclid 5 and it's hard to make a comparison because we have the experience of having done the proof in boogie, right? So it's not a completely fair comparison. However, in terms of the model size, it's less than half the size of the boogie model. One of the big reasons is that boogie has no support for hyper properties. So hyper properties you have to duplicate everything and in Euclid you can just do it automatically. The other thing is that we can automate some of the aspects that were manual and boogie and it's about a similar amount of time to verify. So one last thing I wanna mention is been applying this to other problems in security. The first one is verifying absence of these Spectre Meltdown style attacks. The second is verifying a completely open source alternative to SGX that has been developed at Berkeley called the Keystone Platform. And so the idea here is that there were these attacks that were demonstrated that took advantage of these micro architectural features like speculative execution and branch prediction and so on. And people came up with mitigations, both software and hardware level mitigations. And so these mitigations are hard to reason about. It's hard for someone to know if it has actually solved the problem. So for instance, Microsoft came up with a compiler extension, but they didn't have any formal reasoning for why that compiler extension is actually now going to prevent these attacks. And in fact, it wasn't. You could find attacks against it as well. So what we wanted to do was formulate a very general property that captures this whole class of attacks, not just the specific Spectre variants that were demonstrated on the Meltdown variants, but the whole category. And then formulate an attacker model and produce a way to do automatic verification of these. So the general problem statement is you're given a model of the platform, which is speculative, a model of what the adversary can do, like observe the cache. And a program, maybe in C, you wanna determine if the program is vulnerable to a transient execution attack. So in particular, this is one of the examples that was shown to be vulnerable to Spectre variant one. And then you can just put in a memory fence here and then the problem goes away. So I'll skip the details of this property we formulated, but the key point I wanna make here is it's a four safety property. So it's a hyper property over four different traces, but I'll skip it because we don't have time. And so now using Euclid five, what we can do is we can take a program in C. We run it through the CMU's binary analysis platform tool and it generates, so basically we compile that C down to a binary that that step is not mentioned here. We take the binary and then we decompile it into this intermediate format. Then we pass this to our translator that encodes that into a Euclid model. So it really does verification of the level of the binary. It also takes in formal models of our platform and the attacker also a Euclid five. And then it can either check whether it satisfies the speculation property, which is a four way safety property, or that it's, it violates it and then it produces a counter-example. And a counter-example is a sequence of operations that the attacker can do to access the secret. Okay. And so in particular, in this work, there's this well-known researcher, Paul Kocher, who has done work on a lot of work on side channel attacks. And when Spectre and Meltdown came out, he published a list of 15 programs that are vulnerable to these attacks, okay? So he gave all these examples and then he proposed mitigations. And so we could use bounded model checking in Euclid five to find the vulnerabilities. And then we could use induction to prove that the fixed versions are indeed secure, okay? And all of this could be done in a few seconds. So there's ways already that we have available to go from binaries to these programs are very small. So they're basically in the C code is of the order of five, 10 lines of C code. But think of these as the basic tests that they provided to show that if you run this, I mean, you can, this is vulnerable to some variant of Spectre, right? And if you fix it, then it's no longer vulnerable. So these are actually very, very, very small programs, okay? So which reflects in the runtime numbers. And as we scale things up, it's going to be a lot harder to verify them, okay? So anyway, so we have these parts to go from X86 binaries and also risk five binaries to Euclid five models. And we also have ways to go from hardware description languages into Euclid five models. All right, so to conclude, I started out talking about this confluence of trends, right? Between verification synthesis and learning. And also the fact that systems are, there's often, we are seeing this more today that there's a lot more heterogeneous systems, meaning that nothing is purely software or hardware. A lot of companies are doing more vertical integration so that they can extract better performance or you have the security guarantees. And so we need formal tools to be able to address and leverage these trends. And Euclid five is our attempt at trying to do this, okay? It's like I mentioned before, it's open source publicly available and we are very interested in growing the community. So if you're interested in using it or even contributing to it and developing it or maybe if you have an idea for synthesis or SAT or SMT, that you think we can benefit from, let us know and we'll integrate that in. So come talk to me if you're interested and thank you for your attention. And here's a few papers in case you want to follow up further. So for when you encode this into Saigas, so is the grammar useful for the solver so that it can solve it faster or do you also have constraints that you would really want the functions of the particular form of the grammar? Good question. So the, I would say both, right? So for a lot of the use cases so far, we have been using the Saigas invariant format which does not really put any constraints on the grammar except that they have to allow admit expressions from some underlying theory. So far the only theories are bit vectors and linear integer arithmetic which severely restricts the practical application of this. Then we have our, if you want to verify something like the sanctum, these kind of examples that I showed you, what you need is you need bit vectors, arrays, that combination of those two and quantifiers often. And right now almost no Saigas solvers do a good job of supporting this combination. So for this particular case, what we have to do is supply a grammar, okay? So what we have to do is not synthesize full invariance but we synthesize chunks of invariance that fall in the combinations that solvers can support. Solvers can support, right? And so that's what, that's our current approach, right? And then the question becomes where does, how do you come up with a good grammar, right? So there's all the techniques that we heard this morning that one can use. In our case, there's certain classes of properties we're looking at where the grammar naturally suggests itself, okay, just from the domain. And so basically we have good heuristics for coming up with the grammar. This is a bit tangential, but you mentioned that MC, MCP scale of measuring how much isolation there is. That's really interesting because usually when people talk about isolation in a more general sense, you know, VM containers, it's mostly based on intuition, like VMs are more isolated than containers but we don't really have a scale to like quantify that. Are you familiar with any work or have you tried to expand that on more general idea? Like if we can create a scale which sort of gives a global quantification of that, are you familiar with any work or have you worked on that? Right, okay, good question. So the, I guess the question is really, is there work on like characterizing or formalizing a range of adversary models, right? And then you can compare and contrast or at least given a certain, doesn't even have to be a trusted platform, right? Some program or system that you want to have, want to prove secure, you can try to show what combination of adversary models it is secured against. Like more secure, less secure. Or you could sort of curve it against a performance overhead or something like that. So I would say there's nothing really out there that is formal, right? Especially with respect to things like the hardware level attacks that I talked about, right? You can think about every, in the micro architecture, every feature that, every resource that is shared can become a possible side channel, right? So for instance, something like the branch target buffer. That can be one resource that is shared, which goes outside the MCP, right? So basically you can take almost everything that in which multiple programs with different, which, you know, with different levels of privilege or different security levels, like, you know, enclave versus non-enclave, right? Can all use the same resource. And then you can think of an adversary who can access that resource somehow, right? And that becomes another side channel. And we haven't done it yet. So I think it'll be interesting to characterize that and then see, you know, given a solution which subset of attacks is resilient against. Is there a reverse implication of the decomposition theorem as well? I mean, does secure remote execution require confidentiality, integrity and measurement? Yeah, so that's a good question. So the short answer there is that there is a reverse implication for two of them, but for attestation, we rely on some of these cryptographic primitives, right? And so maybe there's alternative ways that you can implement it that will also give you attestation without satisfying the measurement property, but that's something that is outside the scope of what we make some assumptions about how that is being done. But yes, what do you know that? It should go the other way too. Okay, thank you.
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🛒🛒Kroger Grocery Haul | March 2021 | NEW Grocery Items! 🛒🛒
About Me: I'm married to the love of my life and we recently welcomed our first baby. Every day is an adventure in life AND food! I’m always on the hunt for good BBQ and a great bargain. I enjoy cooking, baking, trying new recipes, taste tests, and meal planning. I also enjoy grocery shopping and trying out new products, so you’ll see a lot of grocery hauls. Tune in for new videos every Tuesday and Thursday (with occasional bonus videos on Monday)! Tuesday= What’s for Dinner? Thursday= Recipes, Taste Tests, or Grocery Hauls Find us on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/FoodamentaryAdventuresInFood/ We’re now on Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/FoodamentaryAdventuresInFood/ For business inquiries or collaborations: alwaysthesmiths@gmail.com #kroger #groceryhaul #krogerhaul
[ "kroger", "kroger haul", "grocery haul", "grocery shopping", "groceries", "shopping", "fill in haul", "grocery store" ]
2021-03-15T09:00:00
2024-02-08T17:12:22
281
3kyCsSnGERo
Hey guys, welcome back to our channel. My name is Andrea with Food and Mentory Adventures in Food and I am here today with a quick fill-in haul from Kroger. I spent $69 and some change, so let me jump right in. So we needed some distilled water and distilled water is really still hard to find ever since we have the snowstorms here. So I grabbed one distilled water, also needed some milk for Harrison. Howard has been hinting that he wants some grilled hamburgers, so I grabbed some buns. I went ahead and grabbed this ginger dressing. I used to buy it all the time, years ago, then I stopped buying it, but I really like it. It's in the refrigerated section and it's good. It's an Asian salad dressing and it was I think it was $5.99. Harrison really likes smoothies and things like that. Harrison is my one-year-old and he loves smoothies, so I grabbed him one of these. Let's see here. I'm trying to eat a little bit healthier, so I grabbed an Asian chopped salad kit that I can have since I stay home full time with Harrison. I can have this for lunch and then I also grabbed this tempura shrimp. I've really gotten into this lately and wanted to give the Kroger brand a try. Let me jump back over here. I got some shredded iceberg lettuce. I think I might make tacos coming up soon and then I also figured that we can use this for our burgers as well. And I have never seen broccoli or baby broccoli at Kroger before. I said it was a new item, so I grabbed it. It was pretty inexpensive. It was $2.99 for this 10-ounce bag, so I grabbed that. We do love broccolini. I grabbed this sweet kale chopped kit for Howard since he is working from home right now. And then I saw a couple of new candies. So this Kit Kat Lemon Crisp. I've never seen that before. Howard and I really like women's stuff. And then this is also a new one, Key Lime Pie M&Ms. So decided to try that one. Coming back over here, Harrison loves yogurt, so I got him these Danimal Pouches. And then I also got him a little cup with a straw. I wanted some pork sausages for breakfast. And then I grabbed some avocado for Howard. I think there's green in here. And he pretty much eats them with anything and everything. I grabbed these Locked House Cookies for myself. So I really like these, but Howard doesn't care for them. And I don't need a big box of the, you know, like the 12 that come in a package. So these are perfect. You get two for $1. So I love these things. Got that. And then I grabbed our favorite Keri Gold. Keri Gold Savory Cheddar. This is so good. And it's worth paying for. It's worth the price. I think it was like, I don't remember, honestly, but it's definitely more pricier than the other cheese, but it is so good. I grabbed a tomato because Howard likes tomatoes on his burgers. And then I grabbed some Cream Cheese. These were on sale for $1.49 each with a digital coupon. I got the chicken to go with our salad kits. I just figured that would add some more bulk and protein to it. So I got that. And then the last thing I picked up were these Chabani Yogurt. That's new flavors that I have not seen before. So they have Rocky Road, Key Lime Crumble, Peanut Butter Cup, and Peanut Butter Dream. So anyway, that's all that I picked up. Just a small quick fill-in haul. I hope you guys enjoyed it. If you did, please make sure to give us a thumbs up. And if you have not subscribed to our channel, I certainly hope you'll do so. Thanks so much for watching and we'll see you guys next time.
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Matt Blake interview at the Gerrit Cole press conference
Matt Blake interview at the Gerrit Cole press conference. 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", "nba", "basketball", "new york yankees", "brookyln nets", "nycfc", "video", "viral", "highlight", "play", "home run", "grand slam", "interview", "fun", "funny", "highlights", "ejection", "brawl", "fight", "giancarlo stanton", "aaron judge", "brett gardner", "gleyber torres", "dj lemahieu", "didi gregorius", "gary sanchez", "masahiro tanaka", "luis severino", "adam ottavino", "aroldis chapman", "derek jeter", "babe ruth", "kevin durant", "kyrie irving", "deandre jordan", "matt blake", "gerrit cole" ]
2019-12-18T17:11:41
2024-02-07T17:09:26
290
3kGDM_Vku7w
As we are with Matt Blake and Matt I'll tell you what you haven't even coached the game yet and you became a much better pitching coach No doubt about that. That was something that catch reiterated about taking advantage of my experience to give me some better tools So I appreciate for that. What was the process like in getting hired as the pitching coach? So obviously they you know with being with another club They had to call over and ask for permission and so it was you know Having a chance to sit down and talk to Chris Antonetti with the Indians about the opportunity and you know Obviously coming over here to learn more about the Yankees because I was in a you know nice situation with Cleveland But obviously this is you know a shiny object as far as you know one of the pinnacle positions in the game So just learning more about the vision they had for the organization and maybe what they were looking for in their next Pitching coach obviously being a you know non-traditional higher So it's kind of get a sense of like is this gonna work is it gonna work with Booney And I think that was one of the things that really click between him and I is just the vision We had for the type of culture we're trying to create I mean now Matt you were front and center in that four and a half hour presentation in Garrett Cole's home Take me in that room. What was your part of it? What did you talk to him about? I think it was just trying to help him understand where I might be coming from if you know This is gonna be you know 79-year partnership that he was gonna have access to the tools that he needed and the information that he needed to help Kind of just facilitate his process is his work on a daily basis And you know obviously he's in the prime of his career, but over the course of this contract There's gonna be time that we need to continue to keep him who he is So I think giving him comfort that we were gonna be on the same page about the things we value and kind of partner on Aaron Boone just said Garrett Cole obviously has been great throughout the course of his career But he thinks there might even be another level. Do you think there's another level for Garrett Cole? Yeah, I think you like to believe so obviously he's been at the you know The peak of his talent right now and you think there's another level we can get to is you know Want to spend some time and learn like what it is that he's currently doing and kind of help him understand like where some Efficiencies or inefficiencies might lie within that process, but I think the other thing to be mindful of is you don't have to do too Much with him It's more just keep him who he is and then you know our environment Hopefully that takes him to that next level now the pitching coach obviously is not the painting You're more the guy who puts the frame around it But is there a lot of stress to you now because you're being asked to put a frame around the Mona Lisa? Yeah, I think it could be you know if you let it get to you I think that's part of the deal you signed up for by coming out with Yankees There's always gonna be pressure and expectations to be you know one of the elite clubs around the league So I think like Garrett said it's a privilege to be in this position to be able to work with a player of his caliber And I think you know just that the conversations will be willing to have between him and I to make sure that he's Comfortable with the the work that we're doing and then I can give him feedback on his process I think it is gonna be a great partnership in that way What stood out to you about Cole when you were in that meeting with him You know it was an opportunity to kind of pick his brain a little bit on what he's learned about himself over the last You know maybe five or six years in particular the last two as he came over to Houston and I think just the his understanding of himself and what makes him successful was really impressive Sometimes guys are just good because they have talent He is obviously you know taking that to another level and learned a lot about himself and what makes him good So I think that combination is really important Take me inside your process because we need to know about Matt Blake as well You've never done this as a major league pitching coach Are you more a guy who deals with the mechanics or the mind or is a little bit of both? I'd say I'm probably a generalist in that sense I kind of get painted as an analytics guy Which is you know fair because I've embraced that in Cleveland But I think my background was more of a technician in the mechanics and learning about the body and then my background's in Psychology so I think I try and take all the pieces and just figure out You know where is our greatest window of adaptation with each player? Is it on his mindset? Is it on his delivery? Is it in his work? Is it in his analytical? Understanding so you know wherever that piece might lie with the pitcher we try and tap into that I'm interested though with the psychology aspect of it Do you believe that most mistakes made on a baseball field or mechanical or mental? I think there's probably a mind-body connection to some extent like if your mind is not in the right place to focus on the task at hand It becomes a mechanical issue, but there are also things that you are just physically unable to do So we need to work around those things So I think understand the combination of the the mind and the body and how the interplay works is Obviously really important. When do you start reaching out to guys? When do you get going here? Yep, so right after I signed on I started reaching out to a lot of the 40-man guys to at least open up the lines of communication and Get an understanding of where they're at and what they're thinking and you at least give them the opportunity to express anything They have on their mind and I'll first start to visit a lot of them right after the first of the year All right, Matt So if you ever get boring and you want to practice the psychological stuff, I'm the one believe me I'm the one. I'm very Chris. Yeah, I appreciate it guys. Thank you. All right. That's the
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United Nations Day
Today, October 24th, UN Day marks the anniversary of the entry into force in 1945 of the UN Charter. With the ratification of a founding document by the majority of its signatories, including the five permanent members of the Security Council, the United Nations officially came into being. This video was produced by: Alexandra Sutoiu. Responsibility for the accuracy of the content provided resides solely with the authors. This video was created in the context of the UNSSC and simpleshow foundation Volunteer Initiative: https://simpleshow-foundation.org/volunteer/
[ "simpleshow foundation", "simpleshow", "explainer video", "unitednations", "unitednationsday", "2030Agenda", "UNday", "anniversary", "24thOctober", "sustainabledevelopmentgoals", "sdg" ]
2018-10-23T09:46:35
2024-02-05T07:20:19
155
3koQHJS8rlo
United Nations Day UN Day marks the anniversary of the entry into force in 1945 of the UN Charter. With the ratification of this founding document by the majority of its signatories, including the five permanent members of the Security Council, the United Nations officially came into being. 24 October has been celebrated as United Nations Day since 1948. In 1971, the United Nations General Assembly recommended that the day be observed by member states as a public holiday. The ideas around the United Nations were developed in the last years of World War II, particularly during the UN Conference on International Organization in San Francisco, the United States, beginning on April 25, 1945. The UN was officially created when a UN Charter was ratified on October 24 that year. There were also calls for United Nations Day to be an international public holiday to bring attention to the work, role and achievements of the UN and its family of specialized agencies. These have been spectacular, particularly in the fields of human rights, support in areas of famine, eradication of disease, promotion of health and settlement of refugees. The work of the United Nations touches every corner of the globe and focuses on a broad range of fundamental issues, like sustainable development, protection of the environment and refugees, disaster relief and mitigation, counter-terrorism, as well as disarmament and non-proliferation. In September 2015, world leaders gathered at the United Nations Headquarters in New York and unanimously adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, a new universal standard for development that will ensure no one is left behind. The UN emblem consists of a projection of the globe centered on the North Pole, the projection is surrounded by images of olive branches, representing peace. Happy United Nations Day.
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UCyamQ5SXtQmN3IDJY3EXA2Q
Expanding Artisanal Meat Production in Appalachia Ohio with Leslie Schaller
With support from SARE, Leslie Schaller with ACEnet is working to expand artisanal meat production in Appalachia Ohio. This video is Schaller's SARE Farmers Forum presentation from the 2021 OEFFA Conference. Learn about this SARE project here: https://projects.sare.org/sare_project/onc20-079/
[ "Sustainable agriculture", "sustainable ag", "agriculture education", "agricultural education", "SARE", "NCR-SARE", "NCRSARE", "OH", "OHio", "Meat", "Butcher", "Processing", "Artisinal", "ACEnet", "Leslie Schaller", "charcuterie", "butchering", "livestock", "poultry", "animal" ]
2021-05-27T20:30:27
2024-03-04T14:54:13
3,614
3k20iwNfLl8
And now please welcome Leslie Shaller. Well, thanks so much, Kate and Madison for helping me get through this virtual workshop. As Kate said, I'm Leslie Shaller and I'm with the Appalachian Center for Economic Networks. If you're not familiar with ASNET, we're headquartered in Athens County, but we work throughout the 32 counties of Appalachia, Ohio, and also do a lot of work throughout Central Appalachia. So I am an old hand. I was thinking how many times I've attended the OFA conference. I would say it's probably maybe been close to 35 or 36 times. And obviously, this is my first virtual conference. So in terms of what we're going to spend time on today, for those of you who might be familiar with ASNET, we do work very much within the food and farm economy in Southeastern Ohio. I have been, again, as I mentioned, a longtime OFA member, former board member. And ASNET has always had, really, since the late 80s, early 90s, this longstanding partnership with OFA. So I am delighted to be here. So let's talk a little bit about this conference workshop. The session overview, Expanding Appalachia, Ohio's artisanal meat production, is really going to focus on about four different topic areas. We were very fortunate in 2020 to receive funding from North Central's chair, Sarah. And we're really going to do a shout out in terms of some of those project objectives and really highlights from the project as it's materialized, even in this time of COVID. We'll talk a little bit about what I like to refer to as the ASNET infomercial. So you'll get a bit of an overview of ASNET's meat processing facility up in our Nelsonville Food and Farm Enterprise Center. And then because I think it's really always there now over this last 11 and a half months, you know, really talking about some of the pandemic pivots within the meat sector in Appalachia, Ohio, and really some of the challenges and opportunities I've seen over the last year, not just here in southeastern Ohio, but really throughout Central Appalachia and certainly even nationally. So I hope this will be informative. What I'm hoping is that if you feel comfortable using the chat box, you know, we're all Zoombees now at this stage in our lives. So if you're feeling like you're ready to share, as Kate said, we sort of have a protocol in terms of how we'll do Q&A today. But it would be great to have a sense of who's in the room. I see some friends and familiar faces, but I would love to have you introduce yourself. So your name, whatever hats you're wearing, if you do operate a farm or a food business, having that name would be great. The session is really going to first cover some of our processing and marketing priorities, especially highlighting the funding that we received from the SAR grant. And then I'm going to, as I really sort of rate some of the challenges we've had, really implementing those objectives and priorities, I'm going to talk about some of the COVID-19 impacts. And I'm always looking through the silver lining here. So I think in the meat sector, we've had some pandemic positives. That is a good thing. And I'm hoping some of these trends, some of these changes will continue on into the future, whatever that new normal looks like. Hopefully by 4.30, if we have some time for engagement, we'll be able to unmute folks and I can field some of your questions. Or just if you have feedback that you would like to share, we'll have that opportunity. And then as we finish up the session, we'll talk a little bit more about some of our capabilities within our Food and Farm Enterprise Center, how we work with the Ohio Department of Agriculture's meat division, especially with our inspector on site. And then some of the training and technical assistance support that our staff at ACENet provides. We'll wrap up with some next steps and resources, ways to suggest how you might want to connect with ACENet if this is an area of interest for you. So we'll try and stay on time. I know Kate will help facilitate as we go through this session. And I suspect that we may have maybe some other people joining us. So we'll welcome them along the way. And again, a good shout out to Madison for helping us with any technical issues. So if you are noticing, you know, maybe some problems that we might need to troubleshoot, please again feel free to use the chat box. So in 2020, ACENet received $39,407 from North Central SARE. And really, we started out with three project objectives for that budget. One was to help our farm partners and ACENet staff, especially our experienced staff working in the meat sector, to increase locally sourced artisanal processing. And to really provide hands-on training because we want to see increased poundage. We want to see more product variety. And we definitely want to see a sales increase for our regional livestock farmers utilizing our meat processing facility, or in many ways tapping into some of the marketing and value chain support that ACENet staff also provides. One of our objectives was to promote workshops and on-farm tours that encouraged more livestock producers to follow sustainable ag practices and hopefully to create a stronger supply chain. Hoping that many of our operators within the region would start to look at some of the services, some of the processing opportunities that our facility provides to increase the rate of production for local meat products. We know that customer demand continues to grow, but there's sometimes a lot of hiccups within that local food value chain. So expanding the value chain coordination with marketing, making sure that our warehousing really created more capacity for storage and distribution assistance. And then we've also helped with quite a bit of financial counseling to help prepare and link livestock farmers who are maybe transitioning from direct markets to more wholesale channels. Initially, we hope to really focus over the period of this project on food service and institutional channels. And when we talk about some of the pandemic challenges, we'll see that we've had to make some pivots there as well. So that's what we hope to cover. So how have we utilized the funding? Well, thank you, thank you, thank you, Sarah. This has been a great project for us, not just in our ability to utilize some of the budget to purchase more processing equipment, to get our meat room a little more set up and to really create more capacity for storage in both our walk-in cooler and our walk-in freezer at AceNet. The other thing that I would reflect upon over this last year has been really this funding oftentimes has allowed us to leverage other investment. So that's been another, I would say, sort of a side effect, a positive side effect of the SAIR investment. So we're always appreciative of being able to leverage any investment, especially as it builds capacity within our food and farm enterprise center. It also has helped to support our two staff members, Adam Cote and Chris Cooke, to really do one-to-one training in our meat room. Many of our new producers have participated in what AceNet commonly refers to our intake process. If you visit our website, www.acenetworks.org, you can see a whole variety of ways that you can connect with our staff. We've tried to host some workshops since COVID that have been primarily virtual, and we have not been able to implement some of the farm tours that we hope to do this past summer and fall in 2020. I'm still hoping with some of our other grant programs, especially maybe as the vaccine becomes more available to everyone in our community, that we might be able to hold more in-person events. But right now, a lot of our work has been either doing meetups or workshops on Zoom or go to webinar, and we've also experimented. I won't say they are high quality videos, but we are adapting and learning how to do video tours of our facilities as well. The other thing I really want to be thankful for and acknowledge is what a great partnership we have with our Ohio Department of Agriculture meat inspectors. Getting products ready for wholesale channels can be pretty daunting. And I think the role that AceNet plays, especially with our incredibly committed staff, Adam and Chris, really allows livestock farmers the support that they need to walk through the process. I think it would be really hard to navigate on your own, and having this type of funding that really allows us to invest in that one-to-one technical assistance is really helping both our farmers, our livestock operators, even maybe working with some of our local artisanal butchers to reach new markets, markets that they would never have had the opportunity to reach in the past. So I always like to really showcase and hopefully this will maybe prepare you as a little visual appetizer for your dinner that's coming up. But we just have amazing livestock producers and artisanal butchers making products that they were never able to make in the past before we had our facility implemented. Again, the bricks and mortar, whether it's the Food Venture Center in Athens or our Food and Farm Enterprise Center in Nelsonville, it's really important to have these facilities available for farmers to do all sorts of value-added processing, but it just doesn't work with the whole sort of wraparound services. So these are products that typically many of our legacy processors within the region wouldn't likely have the capacity to create. So this was, I would say, a challenge that we've heard over the last 10 years or longer from many of our livestock producers. They had great feedback from their customers, often listening to the comments from their customers at a farmer's market or maybe if they were doing any kind of direct sales through a CSA. And they were disappointed that they couldn't always create the types of, the types of, I would say, recipes and products that really are on trend. Many of our livestock producers are following sustainable agriculture practices. They wanted to make sure that that story was part of their marketing messaging. So a couple of posts here. Again, we've always used our very social platforms to the best of our ability, but I think we've become even more reliant on them over this last year with the pandemic. It's not as easy to have people in our facilities, although we have been validated by our City County Health Departments as essential services. So over all this time, ASNET, both our Athens and our Nelsonville campuses, have kept running. But that said, we've had to take a lot of precautions and institute many new procedures and protocols. One of the advantages, I think, for our livestock producers using our meat room, is it was always a dedicated processing space. So usually only one user is typically in that space at a time. Generally, they're scheduling a complete day or two thirds or even 50% of a day in our room. So that enabled us to not have too much of a break in people's ability to use that space. So that's been a great thing. So let's talk about some of the successes. When we first applied for this funding, we were seeing a lot of demand from some of our institutional buyers, our Farm to School initiatives, especially those in Athens County. We also have great relationships with some of our Farm to College institutional buyers, Hawking College in Nelsonville and Ohio University in the city of Athens. So our expectation was that we were going to use SARA funding to really explore and prototype more product lines that could go into educational institutions, buying pipeline, and also looking at some of the ways our local health care institutions maybe could source more local meat products. So obviously a few hiccups there. The facility equipment and our capacity to refrigerate and freeze more product lines have definitely, I would say, positioned us at some point to increase the institutional buying relationships. But to a large degree, we've been more dependent in terms of food service wholesale from our restaurants, our breweries, our wineries that have remained open. So many of them were dedicated, I would say, market partners sourcing lots of local ingredients. But I think as more of our producers have experimented with product development, really create a stronger dialogue between those market partners and having some of the new equipment in place has allowed us to at least shore up some of the restaurant food service opportunities. The great thing about ACENet in our Food Ventures Center, we have a lot of caterers, food truck operators who are tenants. Many of them have also pivoted and are doing more prepared meal products. So there's been good synergy now, I think, in terms of their purchasing and really increasing their purchasing of local meat ingredients. We also have an incredibly innovative entrepreneur and that's Becky Clark of Pork and Pickles. And she's really been able to expand her business. She was on a pretty amazing growth trajectory, even pre-COVID. But now she's experimented and has tried some new things. Again, I think being part of this larger network, working in shared use facilities, she's really seen some new opportunities and we'll talk about those in a minute. So as I mentioned, this project wasn't free of obstacles. The food service purchasing from schools definitely has not materialized to the hopes and aspirations we had when we actually prepared the scope of work. And then I think, and this is a longstanding problem, but it's been maybe even a little more challenging with COVID. There's still a lot of hiccups and a lot of obstacles in terms of the pipeline from our local regional slaughter facilities. So even though people are bringing whole carcasses into our meat processing facility, if there's any sort of discombobulation within that pipeline, within our slaughter facilities, it still creates some obstacles. So again, a great shout out here. It's Facebook posts from Pork and Pickles. They've had an amazing relationship over this last year with one of our expanding craft breweries, Little Fish Brewing Company. In fact, they're getting ready to expand and open a second location in the Dayton area. So we see if anything, the demand for local meat, as many of our breweries and wineries have taken off as real positive. So just a bunch of photographs here. Again, I just always want to acknowledge that ACENet does this in partnership with our entrepreneurs. Obviously, we're learning from them on a daily basis in terms of what their needs are. But I think, as I've always mentioned in all my presentations, when people are affiliated with ACENet, they're part of a larger network. So it's a community of farmers and market partners and processors all working together in really a win-win kind of local food value chain. If you ever take a look at Ohio Magazine, again, Becky Clark just got a big shout out. Some great earned media. I think this was, I can't remember if it's the December. I think it's maybe the January issue of Ohio Magazine. So any kind of shout out about local meat production we see as a big win. And then, although we've been disappointed to not get the traction we wanted to with our local schools, the fact that there's been so many shutdowns, even the higher ed institutions have been hosting more virtual classes than having students back on campus. Although the spring semester now, OU has welcomed some students back. Some of our local food heroes, John Gutenkantz of Avalanche Pizza, a longstanding relationship working with livestock producers. If you've ever had an Avalanche Pizza, you're probably sampling all sorts of local meat products from pork to beef to poultry. So John took that experience, those connections with our livestock producers and processors, and then really turned it into meeting the food security needs within our communities. With schools shut down, it meant a lot of kids weren't getting fed. So Avalanche has worked with a whole variety of partners. They've created all sorts of packaged lunches, box lunches, and they've been distributing them throughout the county, probably to about 30 different locations and partners. So in some ways, not as we expected it to happen, we do have kids now eating a lot more local meat because of some of these partnerships with these incredibly generous restaurant and food truck partners who are helping increase food security throughout Athens County. So a surprise, but I'm hoping now as we build this community of younger eaters turned on to the wonderful taste of local meat, I'm hoping if anything that will encourage more of our food service partners, both in our restaurants and our educational and health institutions, to say, yeah, we can get more local meat circulated in our communities. So yeah, lots of pictures here of products that are being made in our meat room. And then one of the other pandemic positives, a lot of this has been, I would say, spurred by national media attention, but many of our independent grocers and more specialty retail stores have also increased sourcing. The by-local commitment, especially in Athens County, has always been important. And I think we're innovators at all levels with our 30-mile meal brand program. But I really feel like since COVID that that attention to local, that commitment to sourcing from our farm neighbors has been reignited. So whether it's Keller Market House up in Lancaster or two independent grocers in the Athens area, Siemens Cardinal Market or Kindred Market, they're all doing an excellent job of showcasing local meat products. So just some pictures there. Again, I always sing the praise of Becky Clark of Bork and Pickles. One of the things that she saw early on was that many of her livestock farmers that she works with had some losses or some decreases in sales. Maybe some increases at farmers markets if they sold there. But we needed to come up with some new ways to really get local meat out directly to customers. So she has created and she's just an extraordinary marketer. Really check out the Facebook page of Bork and Pickles. These are just some snapshots of some of the things that she's doing. She also started yet another new business called Totes Local. And although it features many products from local producers, many of them tenants and clients of Aisnet, she's created this opportunity that didn't exist for many of her fellow meat processors. So whether it's primatera farms, poultry products, some of the other cheese and dairy products from Snowville Creamery, it's obviously allowed her to sell more of our her artisanally butchered or processed meat product lines. But it's also lifted all boats, so to speak. And it's given more customers the ability to buy local, especially local meat if they weren't purchasing it. Or some of these producers didn't have stuff on the shelves of our grocery stores. So let's talk a little bit about who's in the room. I'm going to probably segue in this next section of the session into more information about our meat processing capabilities at Aisnet and how to get in touch with us. But I'm really interested to hear from who's attending this session and why you're here. Who are you and what resources do you need? And are any of you currently selling some meat products at this point in time? So you're more than welcome to put that in the chat and I can read it off. Or if anybody would like to raise their hand, I can call on you and then you'll unmute yourself and talk freely. Rachel, why are you here? Yeah, so I'm the Begin Farming Program Coordinator at OFA, so I'm interested in connecting beginning farmers to resources like Aisnet. And I also am working with Aisnet on a LFPP, a local food promotion program, assessing and planning for processing infrastructure that might be needed by livestock, pastured livestock growers. Specifically, we're trying to evaluate whether a mobile meat processing unit would help the central Appalachian region. So if you are interested in that project, I'll put a link in the chat to join us. We're listening, we're holding listening sessions and planning for consumers, producers and folks who work in the infrastructure arena so that we can understand whether mobile meat processing or perhaps collaborative cold storage or something like that can help ease that bottleneck that Leslie mentioned about livestock producers having enough access to processing capacity to even get their products to Aisnet and do value-added production. Thank you, Rachel. So it seems like so long ago, but during the Strickland administration, I served on the Statewide Ohio Food Policy Council. And back at that point in time, we were looking at how do we increase and really meet the challenge of some of the legacy slaughter facilities processors that we have in the region. So looking at, especially with, I would say, this growing trend of customers wanting more locally and sustainably sourced meat product lines, the local food promotion program grant that Rachel and Angela Blatt and Paul Dorrance from Pasture Providence, we're all partners on this with Aisnet as the lead. They're really doing the hard work. I will give a shout out to those consultants. We're trying to figure out, is this another possible solution to some of these challenges? We're excited to see some new processing facility management coming online, especially in southeastern Ohio. But even with our meat processing room, we're still stymied sometimes because we don't have enough availability, a steady pipeline of whole carcasses that our livestock operators or our artisanal butchers can process. And Denise in the chat did say she dabbles in grass-fed beef direct sales via in-laws and access to butchering is a challenge in Guernsey County as well and would love more access to processing. Great, well, thank you, Denise. We would love to have you check out our facility at some point. So feel free to get in contact with us or go to our website. I'm gonna talk about some of our videos here in a minute. And it looks like Charlie has his hand raised. Charlie, you can go ahead and talk. Okay, can you hear me okay? Yeah. We can hear you great, Charlie. Okay, this is Charlie Esselgrove and I'm from Ross County. And my main reason for being here is as much curiosity as anything, I am a farmer, a long-time farmer. We raise organic grain, livestock and dairy. And I'm mainly interested just to kind of see what the landscape looks like. I've got several young people and operating in the area here that are starting up farms and are in the early stages of their farming career and they're looking at direct marketing meat. And they're doing very well, especially this past year. I mean, everybody I talked to is can't keep up with demand, but they're running into that old issue of slaughtering facilities. They can't get slots. And I just wondered what the landscape was looking like around the rest of Ohio as much as anything. I will say that I don't know if this is a direct result of the pandemic, but we do have two new slaughter facilities being built in our area right now with a third in the planning stage. Now, the two that are built, one is operating and the other one is soon to be operational. They're going to be custom cut only. So nobody would be able to retail through there. But they're gonna take a lot of pressure off of the facilities that are here that you can retail from. And then the third one that is being planned he's talking like he says if these other people are going to just have custom cuts that I'm gonna go the whole way and get completely inspected. So we could sell meat or get meat processed there and ship it wherever we want to. So that remains to be seen whether that's gonna happen. But it's interesting that there are some businesses starting up. And just as a side note, I don't know if this is significant or not, all three of these facilities, these are members of the playing community that's growing by leaps and bounds around us here. So that's just what's going on in South Central Ohio and just kind of wonder what was going on around the rest of the state. Well, Charley, it would be great if you would share some of that contact information with us, both ASNED and I'm sure OFA as well. Rachel and Angela and Paul as we work on this local food promotion program grant too because we're doing a variety of different focus groups having that information available would also be important. Okay, I will do that. Okay, thanks a bunch. Kate, anyone else? I don't think so. I think we're ready to move on if you are. Okay, we're kind of right on my amazing timed agenda. This is like maybe a first for me. I usually tend to talk too much. So let's talk about where we are. So ASNED is headquartered in Athens County and our two facilities, the Food Ventures Center which opened in 1996 is in the city of Athens and our Nelsonville facility, the Food and Farm Enterprise Center is really part of a larger mixed use business incubator facility. It's in a building that's about 95,000 square feet and about 20,000 of that building is now dedicated for food processing. So a lot of our Food Ventures Center constraints, we really grew out of that facility probably over 10 years ago, our packaging, our labeling, our larger dry storage warehousing, our aggregation for produce, grading and packing, all of that typically is up in our Nelsonville facility. So in 2017, 2018, we raised money from USDA, from the Appalachian Regional Commission from a variety of other philanthropy funders like the Osteopathic Heritage Foundation of Nelsonville. And we created two separate dedicated processing rooms and one of them is the meat processing room. We also have a veg prep room, although I think that's evolving as we speak, we're even getting some additional funding to do some botanical CBD production in that space. So a lot of medicinal botanicals and CBD is another trend that we're seeing. Currently our meat production room can only operate Monday through Fridays because we have to have our inspector on site. And we've seen a little bit of a drop maybe in production since COVID, although I would say we're still usually having folks in there three to four days a week, there's probably 14 to 18 days a month that are scheduled. But ideally we could be open five days a week. There's sometimes opportunity depending on people's process flow, there has to plan what they're doing on any given day where folks don't need a whole eight hour shift. So it is compatible with good scheduling and good transition clean out protocols for even two producers to use the meat processing room in one day. That said, it's still limited. So we are not the be all end all in terms of the growth that we believe is going to occur within this meat sector over time. But it's a great starting point. And I think when we looked at the opportunity for ACENet to go down this road, we were hoping that this would maybe encourage more entrepreneurs to either maybe if they were inheriting a family business of a processing facility to do some additional investment and upgrades or as Charlie was just telling us the opportunity for more facilities to really open up. I think it's the supply pipeline that we still have to figure out. So if mobile processing is one component of creating this value chain, this local food value chain, that is obviously something that we're exploring as well. So over the past two years, I really always like to acknowledge our funders because we can't do this without them. We've secured a USDA beginning with farmers and ranchers grant. That was again due to finish up at the end of 2021. I think we're gonna probably have to do a little bit of an extension on that timeline. It also included farm tours and its scope of work. So I really don't wanna give up that opportunity to get more folks to learn from one another as peers and really we find so much power in all sorts of not just our facility tours, but our agricultural tours as well, the bread and butter, what OFA has done so well all these decades. We feel it's pretty important to stay committed to that. We also have another current USDA rural business development grant, lots of acronyms here, RBDG, which is allowing us to buy some additional equipment. So we're adding another walk-in. We're purchasing another blast freezer, which is really important for a lot of these meat products because a lot of our limitations in terms of our walk-in storage can be a challenge as well depending on how long things need to be stored. So more investment on the horizon, that's exciting to see. Again, shout out to our Department of Ag folks. We have been able to, now that we've been up and running for a couple of years, work with our inspectors to allow some of our producers to sell across state lines. If you want more details about that, I'm the grant writer here. I'm the rain maker, but Adam and Chris on our staff can really talk about some of the changes and some of the opportunities on our horizon there. I always encourage people to visit acenetworks.org. You can go to our staff page. Adam is really the coordinator of all our food and farm enterprise activities in both of our facilities. Chris has been with us just a little over a year now, but he's been pretty much headquartered in our Nelsonville facility. He works very closely with our meat inspector on a day-to-day basis. So their certifications can really help anyone walk through this process. So if you're a livestock producer and you're thinking about doing some value-added processing maybe that you couldn't accomplish with your current processor, I would certainly encourage you to get in touch with Adam and Chris and look at some of the opportunities. We have found because acenets marketing staff work so closely with buyers at all levels from restaurants to retailers to institutional buyers. We wanna see these wholesale channels grow. I think we've learned again over this last year that if anything, the values of sourcing local hopefully are going to stay with us. And I think there's a much deeper appreciation now from customers whether they're buying direct at a farmer's market or looking for local meats in the meat case of our community markets. So our staff really skilled in developing hazard plans, hazard analysis, critical control point plans. I just have a couple of what I consider rather daunting slides here in terms of you know, some of the challenges we've seen as folks are trying to figure out their labels, you know, how do they meet all the regulatory compliance but still accomplish what they need to do in terms of labeling their product. So two of the photographs here, a couple of different product lines from Farmer and the Ridge. Again, their home is Jackson County and Pork and Pickles, Athens County. You know, you can see that they have to have the regulatory meat inspection environment sticker sort of where they're processing from in the ASNET facility. But they're also putting multiple labels on. So we help people oftentimes develop their logos so that they can have stickers that really identify that these are items that are locally produced. Becky, I think Clark again of Pork and Pickles, you know, with her chef background, she's also very interested in developing marketing materials and even additional labels for some of her products to help guide consumers how to best prepare their products as well, her products as well. So, you know, just some of the challenges here, it's not as quick as perhaps another food entrepreneur coming into one of our facilities. It's a slightly longer process to go from product idea to product that's ready for wholesale markets. But our staff, again, working very closely with our inspectors can guide anyone through these processes. So whether it's labels, you know, whether it's HACCP, all of this we really look at in terms of marketability as well. We definitely want everyone to be in compliance, but we also wanna make sure that any product that's being produced in one of our facilities also has viability in terms of sales, that it's something a buyer wants, whether that's a direct consumer at a farmer's market or an institutional buyer at a healthcare facility. So I would encourage you to reach out to our staff. If you go again, shameless promotion here, acenetworks.org, we have lots of videos, tours of our facilities, videos of many of our producers at work within the meat room. So, you know, if you're just really hungering for that video of sausage being made, if you can see that by going to acenetworks.org, searching our video page and really looking at what people are doing within our facility. As many people mentioned during our feedback session here just a minute or two ago, demand is growing and we've gotta figure out how to get more local and regional meat products, especially sustainably raised meat products into the hands of local customers. So now is the time, we really appreciate both the funding support that we've received from North Central Snare and also, as I said earlier, you know, I miss not being in person at an OFA conference after all these decades, you know, it was always like going to the well for me, seeing my peeps hanging out, learning stuff. So it's a little more challenging now, whether this is an OFA session online or maybe you coming to our website, following us on Facebook, looking at our YouTube videos. We know that it's not optimum, we'd rather be seeing you in person. But again, we're open, our staff is flexible, if you would like to come for a tour, we are doing small group tours. So that's always something that can be on your horizon as well. If there's folks in your county or in your subregion who want to learn more and really have more of a hands-on experience, getting to know what ACENet has to offer, we're available and we're ready to help, that's what we're here for. So again, the local food promotion program grant, if you're interested in learning more about that, that work plan hopefully is going to finish up within 12 to 16 month timeframe. We started late last fall on that project and should have a feasibility study completed. So that will be shared. And then just as OFA has done a lot of work around assisting beginning farmers, our beginning farmers and ranchers grant, as I mentioned earlier, probably will at some point, I'm hoping by summer or even this fall be able to schedule more farm tours with some of our regional innovators here in Southeastern Ohio and also host some on-site workshops within our Nelsonville Food and Farm Enterprise Center so people can really see folks at work within our meat room. So just a little more shout out in terms of how to get hold of ACENet, we do put out a monthly e-newsletter so you can always go to our website and sign up for that. We probably post the most on our Facebook page, but you can follow us. We do occasionally tweet, not very often anymore these days, but I would definitely encourage you to reach out to Adam, to Chris. If you have questions for me, I can always be found at Leslie S at acenetworks.org or you can go to our website and find any of our staff members' email information. So Kate, I'm gonna open it up again. We're doing great on time. We've got maybe eight minutes left. So I would love to hear some feedback. Has this been informative? What else would you like to know from ACENet? Charlie, do you have a question or is your hand still up from before? I think it's still up from before. I'm sorry. Oh, no worries, I just wanted to make sure. So what's your feedback though, Charlie, as long as you're not muted at the moment? Has this been of interest to you or? Yes, it has. One, I did not know that you had facilities to further process if someone wanted to go that route. So that was news to me. I think that'd be very beneficial. We're probably not in striking distance of our people here being able to use that just because there's really not a good easy way to get from here to Athens and it's been that way for a long time. So, but it's interesting to know what's out there and I will pass the news along to the young growers up here in case that's something they would want to consider. I'm not sure they realize that ACENet is available to do this sort of thing. So, yeah, I got that much out of it that the information about what is going on, it's nice to hear that Paul and Rachel and some others are working on some issues. Do I understand trying to get more slaughter facilities going or a traveling? Is that what Apatoir? Is that what I understand is going on there? Yep, trying to lay the foundation so that we might be able to pilot that. Yeah, that would be great. I know that it's a tough thing to do from what I've talked to people in other regions of the world that has done this, but it would be good. I remember, here I'm dating myself, but probably 25 years ago, I think Leslie made some mention of that, that there was talk about doing that back when Strickland was in. And I think there were some pretty good designs and a lot of enthusiasm for it. But if I remember right, the head of the Department of Agriculture at that time, put his foot down and basically says not on my watch, if I remember correctly. And so that was the end of that. But I remember at the time that I always have thought there could be a tremendous amount of poultry raised in Southeast Ohio, in Southern Ohio, if there was slaughter facilities available. And I think we're kind of missing the boat on that by not having a poultry facility especially. We're getting more for the larger animals, but poultry is a real problem for people. So I think a focus on that would be really good. So as the old timer, Charlie, as someone who's been doing this for a long, long time, there's always a cat at some point in the Zoom call. I feel like there is a shift happening. We're really impressed with our meat inspectors now. And it was discouraging as we transitioned from the Strickland administration and the statewide food policy council was disbanded. But a lot of that interest and the aspiration for some of these innovations continues on. So whether it's been other advocates throughout the subregions, keeping policy moving forward, whether it's the exponential growth that we've seen in the farmer's market sector throughout the state of Ohio, I think there's more, I hope, maybe I'm delusional. I think there's more open-mindedness now because even inspectors see how much demand is growing. So I'm hoping we're orientating ourselves a little more to problem-solving instead of the hard no, because we see best practices in other rural places across the U.S. And it's just as a larger network of stakeholders, it's getting us all comfortable with some of these ideas. And that's where the investment in some of this feasibility analysis is important. You know, I kind of get the same feeling, Leslie, that there does seem to be a shift in the wind a little bit. And I think a lot of that has to do with the newer generation coming up. You know, we've aged out a lot of the old inspectors and people that basically early in their career, they saw a lot of these processing facilities shutting down and in their mind, I think that was a, to a certain degree, they felt that that was progress, getting all these little people out of the way. And I think the young people now are starting to realize what we lost with that. There's nothing I can really put my finger on one thing, but it just seems different, difference to me. So it's really gratifying to see. Yeah, I mean, and I always say that Athens County, you know, Southeastern Ohio, I mean, we've had such an active OFA chapter all these decades that I always say we're kind of an innovation hub down here. I'm gonna not be too modest. So there's a lot of... I would agree with that. Yeah, there's a lot of younger folks who are taking the lead now. And when I say younger, people in their 40s and 30s, you know, unlike old timers like me in their late 60s. So I'm really glad that I think we're demonstrating that there's market demand and there's new entrepreneurs at all levels who wanna take up this mantle and get stuff moving. Anyone younger than us, Leslie, is a young person. Oh, that makes me feel good. But I never feel old, that's the problem. I don't know if you... I saw that Denise had you, I waited for a second. Did you have a question? I was just gonna make a comment. From listening to folks and from myself and my family, like we know that getting an animal slaughtered is a problem area. And I guarantee the feedback through the initiative you guys are working on is gonna say, yes, we need mobile processing and we need more access. But I'm curious how feedback is being sought from the folks who are interested in purchasing. So I know the little bit I've gotten to dabble in direct sales with grass-fed beef is the buyer wants more and I don't have it. Fast enough becomes an issue. So I think in the whole story, as we put together the story, hearing from the consumers is gonna be just as important to show that the demand is phenomenal too. And that's part of the scope of work. So Rachel, you might wanna answer that question. Yeah, so we're really trying to address this from three prongs. I'm looking at the consumer end and that includes also the small retailers and talking to those folks who engage with customers. And then Angela is looking at the infrastructure component, which is regulatory and what are the actual options that are out there in other places. And Paul is kind of coordinating the response and contributions of producers. And we also are trying to be very intentional about not duplicating work that's already been done. So the state of Ohio, in the state of Ohio through extension and other projects has actually done several feasibility studies and issued reports about both mobile processing and the lack of processing in general and even proposed solutions. We really want to work with ACE NET's business planning services to describe the next step because you're right, like we're not, I don't think we're going to hear other than from regulators that it's a bad idea or that we like don't need to work on processing or increase capacity. Like that's just a given. It's about defining what the next step is and for us aligning those networks of producers, consumers and possible processors and to create the momentum to build a business that would work, that, you know, because we kind of all know that something needs to be there. Yeah, so I would love to continue this conversation about that project with you, Denise and others in the future for sure. Yeah, please reach out to us. Yeah, thank you for adding more to the scope of the project, their information about the scope of the project and Leslie, as much as I've talked about like my personal connections, I am the Southeast Ohio educator for central states. So you and I are going to get more excited about that. Yeah, another, you know, incredible hope that I have. It's more capacity there. Okay, well, I've kept you past time now but I really appreciate your comments and your participation. And please, please, please follow us on Facebook because we'll have more information on these additional trainings, workshops, focus groups. And then we always have updates on, you know, all the equipment and building renovations that we do. Thank you so much, Leslie. This is a great day. Thank you. Thank you.
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DPSI - Midyear Workshop - Sara Watson
Berkman Fellow Sara Watson gives the Digital Public Solving Initiative participants a lightening talk at the Midyear workshop.
null
2014-06-18T18:52:13
2024-02-05T08:06:16
358
3KvZmppzQ9k
So today I'm talking briefly about the metaphors we use when we talk about data, and some of this is coming out of my research from the last year at the Oxford Internet Institute. So when we do Google image search for data, we see that data is really taking literally here. It's all ones and zeros. It's cool electric blue that evokes the computer that the data is related to, but it's still really intangible. So we have to use physical metaphors to make this understandable, embodied, tangible, legible. And to do that, we use metaphors. We are borrowing from Lackoff and Johnson's concept of the way we talk about metaphors in our language and that govern our thoughts. And so all of these sentences here illustrate how we metaphorically think of time as money. We equate time with money. But it also illustrates how that analogy enters into our thought and filters into our language and frames the way we see the world even if we're not kind of conscious of that relationship. So I wanted to look at how the tech industry talks about the metaphors we use to talk about data. So when we describe data as the new oil, it suggests that there's great value in the natural resource to be mined and refined, but it also suggests that it has to be handled by experts and by large-scale industrial processes. When we talk about data as an exhaust, we're talking about it as a byproduct of our digital transactions, but it's also suggestive that it's wasteful and pollutive and it might not be interesting. When we talk about data as a deluge, we talk about it in liquid fluid terms, but we're also talking about its overwhelming scale in disastrous terms, something that we can't control the flow of. When we talk about data as a shadow, we talk about the fact that it's attached to us that might be tied to us, gives an indication of the shape of who we are, but it's incomplete and possibly not necessarily representative. So these metaphors all get at the intangibility and obscurity of data, but they're really impersonal and dehumanizing, and they don't address the individuals to which the data refers. So I wanted to look at more personal, human-centered ways of relating to data, and so to do that, I looked at the quantified self-community, who are using apps and wearable sensors to create data about themselves and their bodies and to understand their lives. In some ways they're an early adopter group, but some of these tools are becoming much more commonplace in the consumer world, but their concerns and challenges reveal some of the pressure points that we all might start to be concerned with as more of our data and more of our lives turn into data. So I looked at how the quantified self-community talks about data and their personal relationship to it. So in the quantified self-community, when we talk about data as a mirror, we suggest that it's something to reflect on. It shows us, it is a tool for reflecting on ourselves and how others in the world see us, but it still might be a distorted view. When we talk about data as a self-portrait, we're talking about the artistic, interpretive, creative potential of data and constructing a sense of self, but it still might be granular and bitty and not yet photorealistic. When we talk about managing what we measure with data, we're introducing a very mechanistic objective view of the self inspired by Taylorism and scientific management. And when we talk about data as a practice, we might think of self-tracking as being associated with navel-dazing and narcissistic tendencies, but in talking about it as a practice, we're also getting at the fact that using data as a mode of introspection or practice towards self-knowledge. So why does it matter how we talk about data? The introduction of new technologies into our everyday lives, we need ways of familiarizing ourselves with those technologies, and metaphors have always helped with that. So when the television entered the living room in the 1950s, we framed the cathode ray tube with wood, literally domesticating it as furniture in our homes. And we see this when we use visual metaphors in the physical world that bring the physical into the digital to familiarize ourselves when we have new computers in our pockets. We call this skeuomorphism in design, and these visual metaphors teach us how to use technology by relating it to old technologies that we're familiar with, but they begin to also fall away as the technology becomes more familiar. So remember, maybe some of you students don't remember, but remember when we talked about the internet as an information superhighway? We wanted to talk about ideas spreading through space and time, and the highway system was our best analogy to understand that kind of interconnectedness and scale. So my provocation to all the digital problem solvers in the room is to be conscious of the ways that these metaphors influence how we approach our problems. To take a second look at the way it frames, the way we think about technology, is the way we use them, the way we design them, and the way we flip them.
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Death With Dignity - Venturing Down the Path
Marsha Joyner revisits a special edition of Navigating the Journey with John Radcliffe. John Radcliffe is a pillar of the Hawaii community with terminal cancer. He joined Marsha Rose Joyner on Navigating the Journey to discuss his diagnosis of incurable colon cancer that has metastasized to his liver. He is currently undergoing his 44rd round of chemotherapy. He has been to the emergency room 15 times and had three extended hospital stays. John is venturing down a path along the journey that we have not had the privilege to discover. 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", "death", "Navigating the Journey", "Law suite against the State of Hawaii", "terminal cancer", "John Radcliffe", "medical aid in dying", "civil rights", "LGBT", "human rights", "death with dignity", "compassion & choices", "medicare", "healthcare", "health insurance", "colon cancer", "Marsha Joyner", "lobbying", "death and dying", "quality of life", "end-of-life", "terminal illness", "dying", "cancer" ]
2017-03-16T03:56:30
2024-02-05T08:10:45
1,714
3KrdLtjCO0w
Your host for Navigating the Journey. Navigating the Journey is dedicated to exploring the options and choices for end-of-life care and to assist people to talk about their wishes. It's time to transform our culture so we shift from not talking about dying to talking about it. It's time to share the way we want to live at the end of our lives and it's time to communicate about the kind of care we want and don't want for ourselves. Today is exactly what we're going to do. We're going to revisit with John Ratcliffe. John will talk about his wishes for the end of life. Ratcliffe is on a journey that most of us can only imagine. This is one of the most powerful journeys one can envision. Marcia, thank you very much. It's a pleasure to be here this morning. I am so happy to have you. For anybody that doesn't know, I can't imagine that anybody in Hawaii that doesn't know John. He has been here since when, 40 years now? Well yeah, I came here in 1975 to run the State Teachers Union and I did that for 13 years and following that ran for Congress in 1988. I lost, which was a very good thing for me. It really helped me a lot in life and then I settled in and started operating the University of Hawaii Professional Assembly. J. N. Musto and I pretty much ran that organization for 17 years and he for 30, you know, and then I retired from that and I've been a lobbyist for since around 1990 or so. So I do a lot of lobbying and I've been at the legislature now for your right 41 years. Yes. Have I known you that long? I guess it hasn't been like that. We've known each other a long time. We were doing civil rights stuff together back before when we were trying to get a Martin Luther King Day here. Yes. When it was very tough to get people to come out. It was. And we also did a lot of stuff for gay rights and stuff when it was not very popular. Are we always on that side? Well we're, yes, we are. Marcia and I are both card-carrying Democrats and liberals. So that's just the way that is. Yes. Well, but we want to talk about you today because you are venturing down a journey, a path that most of us have seen, have had family members, but we don't get to talk about it. Now the paper said that you actually had your chemo treatment while you were the guest at the legislative opening of the legislature. So how does that work? Well it is something I, it was hard to see it. I mean you could see it on me if you looked but I didn't make a big big deal of it. What happens is that when I have chemo it's three days of chemo, not just a minute. So I go down on a given day, in this case a Tuesday, and I put about five hours in when they infuse me with these chemicals. And then they take the infusion stuff off and they plug me into a machine that meters chemo into me every 90 seconds for two days. So that's what I was doing on the floor. I'm sitting there with a bag here that meters chemo directly into my system and then the next day I get it removed and then I get sick for a few days. And then about today, after all that goes through, that was last week. Now by today I'm pretty good. I'm tired but I'm pretty good. You look great. I'm pretty good. It's a lot of chemo. I don't know how much more I'll be able to take but I'm right now it's working. But there's no there's there's with with with cancer. There's a reason that it's called the emperor of diseases because it has a thousand a million ways to transform itself to move itself around in your body and do things to you. So you have to be constantly watching for things. I mean, it might be fingernails, it might be swords, it might be, you know, eruptions, it might skin eruptions, it might be terrible pain in your gut. It might be it might be anything. It could you could go, you know, have half blind and stuff. And various and sundry things happen to you when you have chemo because there are side effects and and they're not very they're not very pleasant. The question about life here and the thing that that we all should be thinking about is what's the quality of it? How long can you stand it? I've argued that what I've gone through and what I know that others have gone through who have suffered and suffered much worse than than even I have been suffering and painful terrible terrible things. Where was I going with that? I can't remember going with that because it's it gets me in a in a head but but you know I realized that that that that that happens and people don't talk about that the quality of life that's left to you at the end right are you gonna lay there in bed exhausted and in pain and suffering or not? Can you get better? How long can you stay better? That sort of thing. You know I get out and walk as much as I can. I exercise as much as I can. I think people can see that I'm making an effort. I do not want to die but I'm dying. So I'm not a fool. I think we have to understand what the thing is and deal with it and I'm dealing with it. It's unfortunate in life that not a lot of people want to confront this I guess ugly fact. Yes. I am willing to do it and I've always been willing to be the guy if I have to to do it so well there you go. I'm a cancer survivor and I know that pit of your stomach when when the doctor says this is what it is and it's really a difficult mentally as well as physically mentally to deal with this is what's going on and so I'm really honored to have you to talk about it your willingness to talk about it and you are as always which is in your DNA to lobby for the ability to have medical aid in dying. Yes. So let's talk about what is medical aid in dying. Right. What it is is a legal prescription that will allow a patient to personally take that medicine not being given to it but have to take it themselves. The doctor that does it you do it if you feel you need it when you feel you need it with your family around you and so forth. That's what that's about so that the doctor doesn't go to jail for doing that. Okay. What do you mean go to jail. Well right now it's not legal for doctors to prescribe medicine which will end a person's life. It's just not legal in the state of of Hawaii. It's legal in six other states not legal here. It's being it's in approximately 20 more legislatures this year as an addition to our own. So that's almost half the states in the union are involved in this and it's it's something which is moving nationwide because as in some other issues that have occurred socially this is one in which the minds of America have changed over the years. For example we've done a poll here in Hawaii just recently which indicated that 80% of the people of Hawaii would like to have this. 20% have problems with it. Only about 12% of people in Hawaii are adamantly opposed to having this option. Now I guess my how it is how is it okay for a doctor to turn off the ventilator in the hospital. How is it okay for the doctor to prescribe morphine give her as much as she needs. How is it that they can do terminally sedation and that's okay. But to write a prescription for a person to take it themselves is not okay. I think we have a situation in which medicine has become better over the years to such a degree that we can be kept alive indefinitely for a very very long time anyway with nothing else going on than artificial stuff keeping you going that we can do. But we still have a prejudice against allowing people to control their own lives at the end. That is just a prejudice that is in the medical field. I understand it. It comes with the Hippocratic Oath, do no harm. But you know a little common sense would be useful with the do no harm part. And I think doctors have it most of the doctors that I talked to support this option. None of them that I know of except for Chuck and a few others are willing to come out and talk about it. Chuck is your doctor? Yes. He's the other guy on the suit with me. Okay so let's talk about you just said suit you are suing. Yeah we're also suing in court to determine what the law is. We have had two attorneys general in the state of Hawaii the last one David Louie and the current one Doug Chen who have indicated that this current status of the law does not allow doctors to proceed with with providing that medication and be assured that they were not going to be prosecuted. So we are going to the courts to say is that the way you see the law the attorney general opines this you be the judge so you say. So but I saw Mr. Louie say well he did backtrack and he said well if there are enough safeguards then he felt it would be okay. Sure and there are plenty of safeguards this is a very specific legislation. The legislation you have to be of sound mind you have to have less than six months to live that and have to be two doctors that have to say that. You've got to have you know two doctors willing to say that they're go ahead with this. There's all sorts of safeguards in it. It would be pretty much like the Oregon law which has worked now perfectly perfectly for 20 years. Good well we're going to take a break and then when we come back let's talk about the law what's in the law or what the safeguards are. Okay we'll be right back. Thank you. Hi I'm Tim Appichella I'm the host for Moving Hawaii Forward and the show is dedicated to transportation and traffic issues in Oahu. We are all frustrated by sitting in our cars in bumper to bumper traffic and this show is dedicated to talking to with folks that not only we can define the problem but we hopefully can come to the table with some solutions. So I invite you to join me every Tuesday at 12 noon and let's move Hawaii forward. Hi I'm Donna Blanchard I'm the host of Center Stage which is on Wednesdays at 2 o'clock here on ThinkTech. On Center Stage I talk with artists about not only what they do and how they do it but the meat of the conversation for me is why they do it why we go through this a lot of us are not making our livings doing this and a lot of us would do this with our last dying breath if we had to that choice and that's what I love to talk to people about. I hope you enjoy watching it and I hope you get inspired because there's an artist inside you too. Join us on Center Stage at 2 o'clock on Wednesdays. Bye. Aloha and we're back with a dear dear friend that I will preface his name by saying survivor. Thank you. John has been a survivor of polio. Yes TB polio virtually every other childhood disease known to man but survived most of it. The worst of those was the polio. I had polio when I was eight and was paralyzed for about three months fully recovered from that and that was wonderful. That was that was the most difficult childhood thing but it did help me become a terrific reader. So that's good. Yeah. So that's why I'm called him survivor and he's going to survive this also. Oh yeah. I mean now in terms of what you mean by survival is my body going to survive this. No. What's going to happen is that my body is already gone. I mean I was given six months to live two years almost three years ago. I've been working very hard on staying alive but trend lines don't go that way. The question is in people seriously say this to me. Well what about a miracle. Yeah I'm I'm happy. I'm open for a miracle. I'm I'm up for that. I would like a miracle. Well let's have a miracle. Okay. It happens that'd be great. But in the meantime in the meantime I think I've got to take action to because I know it's coming. Well we all we all do. I've been there. Yeah. I mean I've been there. We all and there isn't an end to it. We all is one of these days it's going to be the end. So you know folks and it's not that everybody dies and that's not the important thing. The important thing is what did you do when you were alive. Did you do the best you could when you were alive for the most people that you could you know. Were you helpful. Were you a good neighbor. That's the kind of thing that makes a difference. So let's talk about the bill. Sure. That is before the legislature and if us well and simply put what can we do. Thank you for asking that question because Marcia and I are both smiling at that because this is an organizing question. If you believe that you have a right to determine under certain circumstances your own method of death because of pain and suffering and things that cannot be otherwise prevented if you believe in that then you got to organize and you got to get down to the legislature and you got to make a scene because they are going to do and nothing nothing unless there's some reaction from the people they don't care about the fact that 80 to 88% of people in Hawaii want it that Catholics and other Christians are now supported. It's troublesome to have to take up these tough social issues. So unless people say take it up they're not going to take it up. They're going to fool around. So I urge every single person out there watching this if you know a legislator call a legislator call a legislator talk to a legislator every single one of them you know find out how they stand on this and if they're against it move them toward it if they're for it thank them and get their vote. Just to let you know that when you know this only in Hawaii or all of the legislators all the city council people all of the ohaha trustees their phone numbers are listed their doors are not locked go call be there if you feel this is something that you can benefit now you know we that it's the he doesn't want to go but it's the cancer that's that's taking him away from us and so we need to not only support John but hundreds of other people in the same condition. I watched my mother she had emphysema and you know you can't breathe and every breath she labored for a year and having to watch her because we had her at home with hospice it tore me up just. Marcia I gotta tell you again folks that are watching this because I'm in the situation now people call me all the time and it's the damnedest thing people are calling me for things that happened in their families 25 years ago that they feel guilty about today that dick I people have called me that are crying themselves to sleep at night now what they did or didn't do didn't do 25 years ago and still with them you know that's not right no I mean that's not fair for people and it's just time folks you and you know I I say I say to the people ask ask your own moms and dads out there how they feel about it and talk to them the title of the bill is relating to aid in dying and it's a HB house bill number 201 right there is a Senate bill there will be Senate bill because a companion bill coming out of the Senate I can't remember the number off hand but it's should it's out now I think it's a lot today's the last day for introduction I think it's out today yes a senator in oh yeah senator noise got Lorraine annoying Lorraine's got a house or Senate bill five something but I'm not sure and yeah so but we do need your support we do need you to call to right to visit do whatever you need to do now there's also this is easy we need this this is not just really not about me okay I'm over with in that sense this is about other people the reason I decided to do it because I knew I knew that other people needed to have this done and as I sit with chemo patients all the time you know it's it's rough just getting up and walking around for most chemo patients so they can't do this and then they weren't gonna do it anyway I mean wasn't their thing it's you know I'm the kind of guy that stands on the street corner and says the people look at this I did it when yeah the civil rights movement I did it for the Vietnam War I've done it for teachers I've done it for university professors I've done it for all my clients be fair you know and that's what this is about well me trying to help others get a fair shot I think that just seeing you willing to talk about it willing to be vulnerable willing to put yourself out there so that the rest of us can say yeah here's somebody that's really knows what they're talking about it's not somebody that says well if right no this is real your your listeners might be interested your watchers might be interested to know that I also spent 10 years on the employee union health fund trust board some of that time is the chair of the of that that's the largest public sector health trust in the state of Hawaii and so I know a good deal about how health insurance works and and and what it's about this is extremely costly for the state as well I thank God that I have Medicare and and I'm able to you know to get through this because I'm also have insurance if I didn't have insurance this wouldn't be an issue because it's costing to keeping me alive is costing thousands of dollars a week yes nationwide statistics say that Medicare spends more on people at the end of their lives and all of their lives and it's estimated that one day in the hospital with what you're doing is a $10,000 a day oh yeah and I've been in lots of days yes so I've been in lots of days so I've yeah now now let's let's separate this we don't want you to think that oh it's costing so much money so we're going to get rid of grandma no no no no let's do not confuse the issues go back and look at the legislation very clear yeah so this isn't something that somebody does to somebody yeah so let's let's let's clean that up don't don't think for a moment that you often hear that I know yeah well we couldn't do that you know because yeah so no trust my own siblings but seriously grandma's estate is gone by the time you get through this the medical cost we're not talking about grandma so we're not so we're not doing that okay so don't go there don't even think about that this is your choice that you get to do for yourself and nobody else gets to make that choice nobody else gets to make that decision so right don't let anybody scare you and say oh we're gonna do this no this is your choice and it is about your choice it is about each one of us we get to choose who we're gonna marry we get to choose who we go to school with when we go this place when we go on vacation we get to choose so we should be allowed to choose when the illness has taken the quality of life away from you when there is no choice when there's nothing else that medical can do for you you need to be able to make that choice so without this without this choice my end my choice is is going to be what the what what I'm left with which is starvation well don't do it yet we need you for a while so listen please self-starter thank you so much for spending this time with me and we look forward to seeing you again next Wednesday at the same time and same place hello should join her inviting you to join us as we navigate the journey the journey to the end of life the journey of looking at our possibilities of choices and options and this is a conversation we want you to join us in this conversation as we visit with people of different traditions different religions and different cultures and see what they do toward the end of life it is a wonderful time to enjoy to talk about things that we don't usually talk about and that we should talk about before the intensive care as well as the elephant in the room the elephant in the room is healthcare and we really need to look at that as we approach the end of life so join us as we navigate the journey aloha
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Naval Medical Center San Diego Celebrates Grand Opening of New Branch Health Clininc
All Hands Update May 29, 2013 #3 Naval Medical Center San Diego Celebrates Grand Opening of New Branch Health Clinic
[ "all hands update", "navy", "united states navy", "us navy", "military", "sailors", "united states", "america", "usa", "usn", "naval medical center san diego", "san diego", "california", "branch health clinic", "rancho bernardo", "pyoung yi", "joseph aquilina", "elizabeth engelman", "laboratory", "pharmacy", "mammography", "immunizations", "well visits", "pod mentality", "team setting", "grand opening", "navy medicine", "naval medicine", "medical homeport" ]
2013-05-29T15:43:38
2024-02-05T09:03:03
60
3klDh_tYSl4
Naval Medical Center San Diego celebrate the grand opening of Naval Branch Health Clinic Rancho Bernardo during the ribbon-cutting ceremony May 16th. We are blown away by how great the clinic looks. I mean this is state-of-the-art care that we're providing here. Everything from our laboratory services, pharmacy services, we built this clinic to have a pod mentality. Well we have our medical home port which brings primary care in a team setting to this clinic. We'll have pharmacy, lab, we'll have mammography in about a year and so that we can provide those services as well as immunizations and well visits. From Naval Medical Center San Diego, I'm Seaman Payong Yee.
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Road To Glory Everton V Liverpool | EP 7
Road To Glory Everton V Liverpool | EP 7 BECOME A PATRON TO UNLOCK EXCLUSIVE VIDEOS https://www.patreon.com/ToffeeTVEFC TOFFEE TV T-SHIRTS: http://toffeetvefc.com/index.php/shop/ Don’t forget to subscribe to Toffee TV, The Everton FC Fan Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/toffeetvefc You Can Find us HERE: Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ToffeeTVEFC Like us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/ToffeeTVEFC Check out our website: https://ToffeeTVEFC.com #EVERTON #PREMIERLEAGUE #CENKTOSUN Presenters : Peter McPartland & Barry Cass Video Editing : Jake McGibbon Graphics By @JoeDoesDesigns
[ "EVERTON", "Wayne Rooney", "Richarlison", "CENK TOSUN", "EFC", "EFCTV", "Marco Silva", "JORDAN PICKFORD", "YERRY MINA", "ANDRE GOMES", "Premier League", "Football", "Soccer", "Toffee TV Fan Channel", "Football (Interest)", "ademola Lookman", "Idrissa Gueye", "Gylfi Sigurdsson", "Tom Davies", "goodison park", "leighton baines", "seamus coleman", "bill kenwright", "liverpool", "LUCAS DIGNE", "james mccarthy", "z cars", "gwladys street", "duncan ferguson", "tony bellew", "Farhad Moshiri", "Everton TV", "THEO WALCOTT", "MARCEL BRANDS" ]
2018-11-23T19:27:58
2024-02-05T06:14:54
1,045
3kA5q6ALUWg
We're going to absolutely smash him. Brilliant. I'd be honest, pay for going on at this point. There's nothing new to be learned about us from this game. Enjoy match today, Reds. That's all I'll say. It does not need to! We'll have to give some kicks up the ass, basically, you know. I'm not happy with the performance second half. We let them control the game. Big changes might be ahead. What?! Oh my God! Every game! Let's go on track. Never. Told you where it was going. 11 shots today against Spares. A nice score, a fluky penalty that should never have been given. When we lay out to score, someone is getting a hiding off us. A hiding. And when refs lay out to ref, we might get some decisions and win a game off football. So lads, three defeats on the bounce. United next. What are your thoughts? Being a tough week, we've put the lads through the paces, but it's time to turn up. There's going to be some changes. Do you know what they've got to do? And you know what? I know there's pressure on us, but there's pressure on Merino as well. And we've just got to crank her up. I think we can win this game. The last couple of games we've been very unlucky. And we've just got to lay out to score. If we lay out to score, we'll win some games. I think if we score more goals than them, we'll win the game. But I think that might be the way to do it. Way forward. Stop them scoring and see if we can score. And if we can score and we can stop them scoring. I think we'll win the game. It's all about being. Everybody. Move your feet and be united. There's been a lot of criticism. Everywhere basically I've used to. What do you think of that? I mean, I don't agree with that simply because no one cares about us. We're not top six. So I doubt that will be everywhere. What are we everywhere? No, I disagree. I don't get to be everywhere. The person who gives us more criticism or seems to give us more criticism is you. You seem to have this agenda against us. Every press call. I mean, Brian, why is he still allowed in? He brought a pen and paper. Well, that's fair enough, Brian. But it's just not acceptable. But he's still coming to these things. We, at the end of the day, we don't care what people are saying. We're here to do a job. We're only bothered about the supporters of this football club. Nobody is hating more than me and him at this moment. The supporters fucking hate us. Yeah. And other people who are injured. But, you know, people obviously were sick of what we heard more than us. But in terms of football, nobody is hating more than we are about these results lately. And the players now, the players have been told it's time to put up all shut up. And if these lads can't do it, then there's very little we can do about that because the transfer window doesn't open for another, you know, six to eight weeks. So there's very little we can do about that. And they're all on very long contracts. And the millionaires, and they hold more problem power than we actually do because we're on very small contracts. But problem at all. That all said and done. Yeah. You know, Marcel will be with them. Yeah. Leave it to it. Leave it to it. Leave it to it. It's not our job. It's our job to pick the teams that go out and win the game. And listen, we've not been doing it. We haven't been doing it. I know we haven't been doing it. I know. But this time, we're doing it. We're going to win. We're going to go to United. And we are going to try. Try, Brich. Doesn't know what hit them. Try it later. And keep that blade out of here in the future. Come on. Old Trafford. It is. Yeah. Old Trafford. Yeah. Big game. Big game. Just got to do it, mate. Just do it. Doesn't get any big. Come on. Later. Got to take our chances when we get them and give nothing stupid away. Play the football. Be patient. Come on. Oh. I know what you're talking about. I know what you're trying to do last time. Yes, because it goes straight out. I hate them as well. I hate them. OK. I'll get there. I'll get there. You will. Go on. Keep going. Go on. Go on. Go on. Go on. Wait. Wait. And then in, lor. Come on. Make the shave. Come on. Yes, mate. Come on. Can you get him to get the one? Can he? Can he? He's up. Can I get him? No. No. That's you. Come on. No. Yeah. What's going on there? OK. Come on. It's all right. It's all right. It's all right. It's all right. What did he do? Come on. Goll. Make your prizes. Oh. Brilliant. Oh. It's all right you. Go on. Time. Use it well on what you want. Oh my god. Go on. YouTube. Yeah! Patient. Composure. Deserve that. Yes. Deserve this. Patience. Patience. Yes. Lovely football. easier than I can't see you, staying on site. Yes, staying on site. That's what I'm gonna say. Staying on site. Staying on site. It's about time you had a little rubber digreave in the officials. I've been rubbing my green and that done the trick. Right, patience. C'mon. It's been shaped for ten minutes. Keep the shape. Keep the shape, let's get the football going at the back. Okay, big win, Jerry. Big win. No dreams. I don't know if he wants it. Okay. Mae'n cael ei hynny. Gilfee'n hynny! Be gwein, Be gwein, Andre. Nog dde. Mae'n cael rhaid. Mae'n cael rhaid! All right, all right. Broke it up, it doesn't matter. Broke it up. It's full on knob them shelf off. It's popping in it. That's it. And I've gone? You have? It's you. Pass it to yourself again. You know you can't pass it to yourself. You just can't. Right with it. It's gone, man. That's better than that. What we have to be playing. We are popping it off like popcorn. No! And again, I'm here, I'm here. Football, lo! Better football. Blaine and just about. Oh, you doubters. Douters. At the end. You just doubt who you can play football. You might be right about them. You can't get any results. I'll pass it again. All right, good off. Thorily deservedly that I've tried. Pickers there. It's been good, hasn't it? It's not happy. 63% of the ball dominated. Control traffic and dominated so far. Well, let's do it for this half. Come on. Let's do it for this half. Come on. Just pass the ball. I was looking for that. No, forget it. Cos I just thought you'd be in. Tell us what we're doing. Whoever it is, just get rid of it. Get rid of it. Get the shots. Get him off this field of play. Is he getting booked? No, he's shit. It's a red for me, that. She looks. She's a stretcher. It's not a good track. It's a render. Wait, wait, where is she? You have to go off, come off. You know that, don't you? You shouldn't treat me. You shouldn't treat me. You shouldn't treat me. So we've got no target man. Let's just think. We need to get down. We need to get down. We need to get down. We need to get down. We need to get down. Think about this. It's done man. It's play football again. It's something you just haven't done in this. In second half of the tour we haven't passed up all once. Oh, she saved that. How has he saved that? That was brilliant football. How has he saved that? Oh. Come on, come on. You can do this. Definitely. Come on. It's just not sitting for us. I prefer it. Jesus Christ. Oh my word. It's so f***ing awesome. And then break where the hole is. And that, this game, s***. This game. Look at that. And he's on the floor. This game, s***. Unbelievable. The easiest 45 we've ever had. It's so easy. Where's the advantage, you f***ing clown. I can't believe it. I can't take this seriously if we're not going to get fouls like that. Just can't. Full on FIFA. I still can't believe it. Second goal is just ridiculous. Foul. Come on. Come on. Get the ball. You've got to get it full. I know, I know. Go on. Just put pressure on him. 2-2 are absolutely gutted. 88 minute equaliser and I'm gutted. Any other time it would be a good result. Where's Pett? Pett's staying up the way. We just do this one at a time at the moment. Obviously we're going to get a ban for this. So we need one of us to be able to look after the team while the other one is saving the ban. And the fact that inevitably we're going to get the minute you start questioning these balloons who are running football and these fellas. This is the premier league. This is the premier league. Where's VAR? Why is VAR on? How on earth? How on this planet has that second goal being allowed here? We know we're at a big club. The big four. It's disgusting. We've come here to Old Trafford today. We have given them. Give them a footballing lesson. Lesson. We have given them. They turned up with the little homework books and we give them the lesson. And then the referee has decided to just because it's united. In here. At Old Trafford he's decided the outcome of that game. Absolutely disgusting decision. Something's got to be done. You're talking about schud o mor. The bloody chief executive of this. Getting a five million pay off. To go. A thank you. No wonder the clubs you're thinking about giving them a thank you. Absolutely disgusting. I don't care whether I'm going to get five, two packets of ginger nuts or not. I don't give a shit. I am disgusted with what I have just witnessed from the officials there. Some people will say you should have done more before. The decision was given. That might be right. The first half. Which should have been three in the loop. And we've gone to sleep and let them back in the game with the equaliser. But the second goal. The hay has pulled off a well day at one month. The second goal has put us on the back foot when we were in the ascendancy. It's disgusting. I'm sorry. It's absolutely disgusting. And if it had been the other way. There wouldn't have been any question about it. If there had been a free question. If there had been a free question. If there had been any question about it. If there had been a free question. You all know that. You're all sat here. And you are all part of the problem. I disagree. You can disagree all you want. You're going to disagree and you're not going to say. Oh yeah. I'm part of the problem. Are you? You're not. But you're all here and you know that you're part of the problem. It's the right decision.
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Podcast: Alzheimer’s Disease and How Not to Get It
You are not powerless in the face of this staggeringly common disease. This episode features audio from: https://nutritionfacts.org/video/pesticides-ddt-and-alzheimers-disease/ https://nutritionfacts.org/video/how-to-prevent-alzheimers-with-diet/ https://nutritionfacts.org/video/Reducing-Glycotoxin-Intake-to-Prevent-Alzheimers/ Visit the video pages for all sources and doctor's notes related to this podcast. New subscribers to our e-newsletter always receive a free gift. Get yours here: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe/. https://NutritionFacts.org • Subscribe: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe • Donate: https://nutritionfacts.org/donate • Podcast : https://nutritionfacts.org/audio • Facebook: www.facebook.com/NutritionFacts.org • Twitter: www.twitter.com/nutrition_facts • Instagram: www.instagram.com/nutrition_facts_org • Books: https://nutritionfacts.org/books • Shop: https://drgreger.org
null
2022-09-08T11:59:46
2024-02-05T06:37:51
782
3k2PtZMSVA8
I'm often asked what my opinion about a diet or disease is. Who cares what my or anyone else's opinion is? All we should care about is what the science says. What does the best available balance of evidence publish to the peer-reviewed medical literature have to say right now? Welcome to the Nutrition Facts Podcast. I'm your host, Dr. Michael Greger. I know so many people who have been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, the most common cause of dementia. I bet you do too. In fact, more than 6 million people in the U.S. have it. So how do we avoid becoming one of those statistics? That's a main thrust of my forthcoming book, Hound Not to Age, but in the meanwhile here's a discussion of some little-known risk factors in this, our 300th podcast episode. In our first story, we explore the effect of pesticides on Alzheimer's disease. Although there's a growing list of Alzheimer's disease susceptibility genes, even if you put them all together, they count for less than half of all Alzheimer's cases. The single most compelling piece of data on the potential control we have over the disease is the fact that if you have identical twins with the exact same genes, even if one gets Alzheimer's, the other usually does not. So we have to think about all the other contributing factors beyond just genetics. In my video on pesticides and cancer, I talked about this study. There's a list of chlorinated pesticides, including DDE, a metabolite of DDT, that are classified by the EPA as probable human carcinogens. But in the study, blood levels of DDE and others were associated not with increased cancer mortality, but increased risk of other cause mortality. This led researchers to speculate it may be due to an associated increased risk of diabetes or dementia. I've talked previously about the diabetes link. What about dementia? Elevated serum pesticide levels and risk for Alzheimer's disease. A research team at Rutgers found significantly higher blood levels of DDE and Alzheimer's disease patients compared to controls. And autopsy studies show blood levels are a good proxy for brain levels. Those with the highest levels were at about four times the odds of being demented with Alzheimer's. And in a Petrie, this DDE increases amyloid precursor protein levels in human brain cells, providing a potential mechanism. Put all these studies together, and there does indeed seem to be a link consistent with data showing about a doubling of risk for developing dementia among those acutely pesticide poison. Among U.S. elders, DDT and its breakdown product DDE are also associated with increased risk of cognitive decline in general. DDT was extensively used in the United States from the 1940s to the 60s. At its peak, we were churning out 180 million pounds a year. And it's still in our bodies to this day, contaminating the bloodstreams of more than 90% of Americans. In DDE, the pesticide link to quadrupling the odds of Alzheimer's were at the highest levels. It's still in our bodies because it's still in the food supply. In my last video on the topic, I noted that the levels of DDT, DDE, and other banned pesticides and pollutants were much lower in the breast milk from a vegetarian mother compared to breast milk of a non-vegetarian sister. And the largest difference was noted for DDE, which was four times lower in the vegetarian sister. These toxins build up the food chain, so it makes sense that the most contaminated foods are meat, fish, and dairy products, 5 to 10 times higher levels in meat, eggs, fish, and dairy than what we find in plant foods. And unfortunately, cooking doesn't destroy pollutants like DDE. In fact, it may make them even more concentrated. And this is for a pesticide that may increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease as much as if you carried the so-called Alzheimer's gene, ApoE4. In our next story, we look at the role of meat on Alzheimer's disease. What is behind the dramatic increase in dementia in Japan over recent decades? Maybe it's rising obesity rates, or the increases in cholesterol, saturated fat in the iron, from increases in animal products in meat. Overall calories just went up about 10% in Japan, whereas animal fat and meat consumption rose 500%, about 10 times the rise in sugary junk. Now, during this time span, rice consumption went down, but the thinking is that rather than white rice somehow being protective, maybe they were just eating something worse instead. It's like when you find fish consumption is correlated with less disease. You wonder if it's because they're eating that rather than some worse meat. If you look across multiple countries, you see a similar pattern, with the most important dietary link to Alzheimer's appearing to be meat consumption with eggs and high-fat dairy also maybe contributing. There appears to be a really tight correlation between Alzheimer's and per capita meat supply. And then studies within countries uncover similar findings with Alzheimer's and cognitive decline associated with meaty, sweetie, fatty diets, whereas most plant foods were associated with risk reduction. This could be for a variety of reasons. Several products tend to have more copper, mercury, lead, cadmium, nofolate, butt-containing, saturated fat, and cholesterol, and pro-inflammatory advanced glycation end products. So many mechanisms that dietary modification may be our best bet for reducing risk of Alzheimer's disease. But how do we know its cause and effect? The evidence that meat consumption is causally linked to Alzheimer's disease? Well, there's the strength of the association, the consistency across different types of studies, the fact that the dietary changes preceded the risk of dementia, the dose response, more meat linked to more risk, a bunch of plausible mechanisms. We know meat is a risk factor for other chronic diseases, but there's never been a randomized controlled trial to put it to the test. When you read reviews of the damaging effects of high-fat diets to the brain and cognition, a number of factors are proposed to account for the high-fat diet-induced damage to the brain, oxidative stress, insulin resistance, inflammation, changes to blood vessels of the integrity of the blood-brain barrier. But these are based mostly on studies of rodents. Yes, high-fat diets can cause energy dysfunction in the brain, based on fancy MRI techniques. With CT scans, you can follow this intracranial artery stenosis, this brain artery clogging over time, and follow the progression from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer's disease. Those who only had low-grade stenosis were pretty stable over time, in terms of their cognitive function and ability to dress themselves in other activities of daily living, whereas those with more clogging started slipping over the years, and those who started out with the most brain atherosclerosis rapidly went downhill, and twice as likely to progress to full-blown Alzheimer's. Chronic consumption of standard Western diets enriched in saturated fat and cholesterol may compromise our cerebrovascular integrity, compromise the blood vessels in our brain. So, of course, drugs are recommended. Pharmacological modulation of diet-induced dysfunction, but why not just try to eat healthier in the first place? Finally today, we look at reducing glyco toxin intake to ward off Alzheimer's. Each of us has about 6 billion miles of DNA. How does our body keep it from getting all tangled up? There are special proteins called histones, which act like spools with DNA as the thread. Enzymes called sirtuins wrap the DNA around the histone spools, and in doing so, silence whatever genes were in that stretch of DNA, hence their name sirtuins, which stands for Silencing Information Regulator. Although they were discovered only about a decade ago, the study of sirtuins has become one of the most promising areas of biomedicine, since they appear to be involved in promoting healthy aging and longevity. Suppression of this key host defense is considered a central feature of Alzheimer's disease. Autopsies of Alzheimer's victims reveal that loss of sirtuin enzyme activities closely associated with the accumulation of plaques and tangles in the brain that's characteristic of Alzheimer's disease. Sirtuins appear to activate pathways that steer the brain away from the formation of plaque and tangled proteins. Because a decrease in sirtuin activity can clearly have deleterious effects on nerve health, they're trying to come up with drugs to increase sirtuin activity, but why not just prevent its suppression in the first place? Glycotoxins in food suppress sirtuin activity. These so-called advanced glycation end products are AGEs. Our modern diet includes excessive AGEs, which can be neurotoxic. High levels in the blood may predict cognitive decline over time. If you measure the urine levels of glycotoxins flowing through the bodies of older adults, those with the highest levels went on to suffer the greatest cognitive decline over the subsequent nine years. As we age, our brain literally shrinks. In our 60s and 70s, we lose an average of 5 cubic centimeters of total brain tissue volume every year, but some lose more than others. Brain atrophy may be reduced in very healthy individuals, and a few people don't lose any brain at all. Normally we lose about 2% of brain volume every year, but that's just the average, although the average brain loss for folks in their 70s and 80s was 2.1%. Some lost more, some lost less, and some men and women lost none at all over a period of four years. Researchers in Australia provided the first evidence linking AGEs with this kind of cerebral brain loss. So, limiting one's consumption of these compounds may end up having significant public health benefits. Because search-win deficiency is both preventable and reversible by dietary AGE reduction, a therapeutic strategy that includes eating less AGEs may offer new strategy to combat the epidemic of Alzheimer's. Some of these glycotoxins are produced internally, particularly in diabetics, but anyone can get them from smoking and eating, particularly foods high in fat and protein. In a previous video, I listed the 15 foods most contaminated with glycotoxins, mostly chicken, but also pork, beef, and fish, which may help explain why those that eat the most meat may have tripled the risk of getting dementia compared to longtime vegetarians. We would love it if you could share with us your stories about reinventing your health through evidence-based nutrition. Go to nutritionfacts.org slash testimonials. We may share it on our social media to help inspire others. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, or studies mentioned here, please go to the Nutrition Facts Podcast landing page. There you'll find all the detailed information you need, plus links to all the sources we cite for each of these topics. For a timely text on the pathogens that cause pandemics, you can order the e-book, audiobook, or hard copy of my last book, How to Survive a Pandemic. For recipes, check out my second to last book, My How Not to Diet Cookbook. It's beautifully designed, with more than 100 recipes for delicious and nutritious meals. And all the proceeds I receive from the sales of all my books goes to charity. NutritionFacts.org is a non-profit science-based public service where you can sign up for free daily updates on the latest in nutrition research via bite-sized videos and articles. Everything on the website is free. There's no ads, no corporate sponsorship. It's strictly non-commercial. I'm not selling anything. I just put up as a public service as a labor of love as a tribute to my grandmother, whose own life was saved with evidence-based nutrition.
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Lucy Bernholz, Stanford University | Stanford Women in Data Science (WiDS) Conference 2020
Lucy Bernholz, Senior Research Scholar, Stanford University | @p2173 sits down with Sonia Tagare for WiDS 2020 at Stanford University. #WiDS2020 #WomenInTech #theCUBE https://siliconangle.com/2020/03/04/diverse-teams-help-build-less-biased-algorithms-says-stanford-research-scholar-wids2020/ Diverse teams help build less biased algorithms, says Stanford researcher As powerful as the benefits of artificial intelligence are, using biased data and defective AI models can cause a lot of damage. To address that growing issue, human values must be integrated into the entire data science process, according to Lucy Bernholz (pictured), senior research scholar and director of the Digital Civil Society Lab at Stanford University. “[Values] shouldn’t be a separate topic of discussion,” she said. “We need this conversation about what we’re trying to build for, who we’re trying to protect, how we’re trying to recognize individual human agency, and that has to be built in throughout data science.” Bernholz spoke with Sonia Tagare, host of theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media’s mobile livestreaming studio, during the Women in Data Science conference in Stanford, California. They discussed the importance of values in data science, why it is necessary to have a diverse team to build and analyze algorithms, and the work being done by the Digital Civil Society Laboratory. Breaking the bias cycle All data is biased because it is people who collect it, according to Bernholz. “And we’re building the biases into the data science and then exporting those tools into bias systems,” she highlighted. “And guess what? Problems are getting worse. So, let’s stop doing that.” When creating algorithms and analyzing them, data scientists need to make sure that they are considering all the different types of people in the data set and understanding those people in context, Bernholz explained. “We know perfectly well that women of color face a different environment than white men; they don’t walk through the world in the same way,” she explained. “And it’s ridiculous to assume that your shopping algorithm isn’t going to affect that difference that they experience in the real world.” It is also necessary to have different profiles of people involved in the creation of the algorithms, as well as in the management of the companies, who can make decisions about whether and how to use them, she added. “We need a different set of teaching mechanisms where people are actually trained to consider from the beginning what’s the intended positive, what’s the intended negative, and what is some likely negatives, and then decide how far they go down that path,” Bernholz concluded. Here’s the complete video interview, part of SiliconANGLE’s and theCUBE’s coverage of the Women in Data Science conference:
[ "SiliconANGLE Media Inc", "SiliconANGLE", "SiliconANGLE Inc", "theCUBE", "Wikibon", "John Furrier", "Dave Vellante" ]
2020-03-03T00:33:15
2024-02-05T08:42:47
650
3KGCovUNHHs
Live from Stanford University, it's theCUBE. Covering Stanford Women in Data Science 2020. Brought to you by SiliconANGLE Media. Hi, and welcome to theCUBE. I'm your host, Sonia Tagare, and we're live at Stanford University, covering the fifth annual WID's Women in Data Science Conference. Joining us today is Lucy Bernholz, who is the Senior Research Scholar at Stanford University. Lucy, welcome to theCUBE. Thanks, thanks for having me. So you've led the Digital Civil Society Lab at Stanford for the past 11 years. So tell us more about that. Sure, so the Digital Civil Society Lab actually exists because we don't think Digital Civil Society exists. So let me back, take that apart for you. Civil society is that weird third space outside of markets and outside of government. So it's where we associate together. It's where we as people get together and do things that help other people. Could be the nonprofit sector, it might be political action, it might be the eight of us just getting together and cleaning up a park or protesting something we don't like. So that's civil society. What's happened over the last 30 years really is that everything we use to do that work has become dependent on digital systems. And those digital systems, so I'm here, I'm talking gadgets from our phones to the infrastructure over which data is exchanged. That entire digital system is built by companies and surveilled by governments. So where do we as people get to go digitally where we could have a private conversation to say, hey, let's go meet downtown and protest X and Y or let's get together and create an alternative educational opportunity because we feel our kids are being overlooked or whatever they have. All of that information that could exchange, all of that associating that we might do in the digital world, it's all being watched. It's all being captured and that's a problem because both history and political science, history and democracy theory show us that when there's no space for people to get together voluntarily, take collective action and do that kind of thinking and planning and communicating just between the people they want involved in that, when that space no longer exists democracies fall. So the lab exists to try to recreate that space. And in order to do that, we have to, first of all, recognize that it's being closed in. Secondly, we have to make real technological process. We need a whole set of different kind of digital devices and norms. We need different kinds of organizations and we need different laws. So that's what the lab does. And how does ethics play into that? It's all about ethics and it's a word I try to avoid actually because especially in the tech industry I'll be completely blunt here. It is, it's an empty term. It means nothing. The companies are using it to avoid being regulated. People are talking to talk about ethics but they don't want to talk about values. But you can't do that. Ethics is a code of practice built on a set of articulated values. And if you don't want to talk about values you're not really having a conversation about ethics. You're not having a conversation about the choices you're going to make in a difficult situation. You're not having a conversation over whether one life is worth 5,000 lives or if everybody's lives are equal or if you should shift the playing field to account for the millennia of systemic and structural biases that have been built into our system. There's no conversation about ethics if you're not talking about that thing. Those things, as long as we're just talking about ethics we're not talking about anything. And you were actually on the ethics panel just now. So tell us a little bit about what you guys talked about and what were some highlights. So I think one of the key things about the ethics panel here at Woods this morning was that first of all it started the day which is a good sign. If it shouldn't be a separate topic of discussion we need this conversation about values about what we're trying to build for who we're trying to protect how we're trying to recognize individual human agency that has to be built in throughout data science. So it's a good start to have a panel about at the beginning of the conference but I'm hopeful that the rest of the conversation will not leave it behind. We talked about the fact that just as civil society is now dependent on these digital systems that it doesn't control data scientists are building data sets and algorithmic forms of analysis that are both of those two things are just encoded sets of values. And if you try to have a conversation about that at just the math level you're going to miss the social level. You're going to miss the fact that that's humanity you're talking about. So it needs to really be integrated throughout the process. Talking about the values of what you're manipulating and the values of the world that you're releasing these tools into. And what are some key issues today regarding ethics and data science and what are some solutions? So I mean this is the Women in Data Science Conference. It happens because five years ago or whenever it was the organizers realized say women are really underrepresented in data science and maybe we should do something about that. That's true across the board. It's great to see hundreds of women here and around the world participating in the live stream. But as women we need to make sure that as you're thinking about again the data and the algorithm, the data and the analysis that we're thinking about all of the people all of the different kinds of people all of the different kinds of languages all of the different abilities all of the different races, languages, ages you name it that are represented in that data set and understand those people in context in your data set. They may look like they're just two different points of data but in the world at large we know perfectly well that women of color face a different environment than white men, right? They don't walk through the world in the same way and it's ridiculous to assume that your shopping algorithm isn't going to affect that difference that they experience in the real world that isn't going to affect that in some way. It's fantasy to imagine that it's not going to work that way. So we need different kinds of people involved in creating the algorithms different kinds of people in power in the companies who can say we shouldn't build that, we shouldn't use it we need a different set of teaching mechanisms where people are actually trained to consider from the beginning what's the intended positive what's the intended negative and what is some likely negatives and then decide how far they go down that path. Right, and we actually had on Dr. Ruhman Chowdhury from Accenture and she's really big in data ethics and she brought up the idea that just because we can doesn't mean that we should. So can you elaborate more on that? Yeah, well it just because we can analyze massive data sets and possibly make some kind of mathematical model that based on a set of value statements might say this person's more likely to get this disease or this person's more likely to excel in school in this dynamic or this person's more likely to commit a crime. Those are human experiences and while analyzing large data sets that in the best scenario might actually take into account the societal creation that those actual people are living in trying to extract that kind of analysis from that social setting first of all is absurd. Second of all it's going to accelerate the existing systemic problems. So you've got to use that kind of calculation over just because we could maybe do some things faster or with larger numbers are the externalities that are going to be caused by doing it that way. The actual harm to living human beings should those just be ignored just so you can meet your shipping deadline? Because if we expanded our time horizon a little bit if you expand your time horizon and look at some of the big companies out there now they're now facing those externalities and they're doing everything they possibly can to pretend that they didn't create them and that loop needs to be shortened so that you can actually sit down some way through the process before you release some of these things and say in the short term it might look like we'd make X profit but spread out that time horizon two X and you face an election in the world's largest longest lasting stable democracy that people are losing faith in. Is that the right price to pay for a single company to meet its quarterly profit goals? I don't think so. So we need to reconnect those externalities back to the processes and the organizations that are causing those larger problems. Because essentially having externalities just means that your data is biased. Data are biased. Data about people are biased because people collect the data. There's this idea that there's some magic de-bias data set is science fiction. It doesn't exist. It certainly doesn't exist for more than two purposes if we could, and I don't think we can de-bias a data set to then create an algorithm to do A that same data set is not gonna be de-biased for creating algorithm B. Humans are biased. Let's get past this idea that we can strip that bias out of human created tools. What we're doing is we're embedding them in systems that accelerate them and expand them. They make them worse. They make them worse. So I'd spend a whole lot of time figuring out how to improve the systems and structures that we've already encoded with those biases and using that then to try to inform the data science. We're going about, in my opinion, we're going about this backwards. We're building the biases into the data science and then exporting those tools into biased systems. And guess what? Problems are getting worse. So let's stop doing that. Thank you so much for your insight, Lucy. Thank you for being on theCUBE. Oh, thanks for having me. I'm Sonia Tigari. Thanks for watching theCUBE. Stay tuned for more.
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TITANS GIVE JADEVEON CLOWNEY ONE YEAR DEAL WORTH $15 MILLION
TITANS GIVE JADEVEON CLOWNEY ONE YEAR DEAL WORTH $15 MILLION 🤔Thinking of ways to support the channel❓Thanks a lot‼️🥰 Here are a few ways to help: 💲PayPal: paypal.me/IngravenVids 💲Cash App: $Ingravenvids 💲Venmo: Ingravenvids 👕Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/team-keepitclean-merch Use Code "TKIC" for FREE shipping OR Code "INGRAVEN" for $10 OFF 💻Business Email: ingravenvids@gmail.com 💻Questions From Subs Email: Teamkeepitclean@gmail.com 📦Want to send us something?: Ingravenvids PO Box 971236 Boca Raton,FL 33497-1236 🎧🎮Follow on Twitch: http://www.Twitch.tv/Teamkeepitclean 📱Wanna connect via social media? : Just look up "IngravenVids" on Twitter, IG, and FB! 😷Get your personalized facemasks here: http://www.mysecretdwelling.com/ 🦺Get your customized jersey from SnapMade here: https://www.snapmade.com/semi-baseball?utm_source=y&utm_medium=i&utm_campaign=g #Titans #JadeveonClowney #NFL
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2020-09-06T14:01:14
2024-02-07T17:11:45
905
3KfqlhVW6lI
it's over it's done and yes it is official the Titans they won this what's been an ongoing sort of war between so many different teams for Jadavia and Clowney there were quite a few different teams that wanted his services they wanted him to come to their team and some teams were seriously interested somewhere not but it's finally over officially and the Titans they get in Jadavia and Clowney now a lot of questions were coming out about what the deal is how much is the contract worth what is it gonna be how long is it gonna be and it is a one-year deal worth up to 15 million dollars a one-year deal worth up to 15 million dollars so even this late in the free agency he still gets a good good money and it was reported we don't know how true it was but by the way that everything has went this offseason with him it seems like it is true but it was reported that he wanted a he wanted to be paid 20 mil per year then it was reported that he wanted 18 mil per year then it was reported that he wanted 17 mil per year so for him signing this late in the season in the offseason for him to be signing this late in the offseason and still getting a one-year deal worth up to 15 mil it doesn't necessarily mean that is 15 mil guaranteed that's not it it's worth up to 15 mil so of course they're gonna be different incentives involved in what not but for him to get a one-year deal worth up to 15 mil depending on how well he plays and whatever those incentives are that's pretty good that's pretty good not too far for what from what he wanted but he still gets paid and I had to clear up some things that I talked about in the previous video about your David and Clowney because some Titans fans let me know hey engraving Dean peas retired and I was like initially I was like what no no no when he was with the Ravens he retired because he ain't want to get fired but they were like no no no he retired with the Titans too and I was like okay appreciate y'all so shout out to y'all Titans fans for giving me a nice reminder that and even my god Jordan who's a Ravens fan he let me know too he's a engraving Dean peas retired back in January so I guess Dean peas his last wish as a coach he said man I just got to beat these Ravens and then like the end of engraving videos I'm out okay Dean peas do your thing congratulations on a pretty good career but anyway they said that they're gonna be Mike Vrable he's gonna be sort of the defensive coordinator even though he's a head coach he's gonna be sort of defensive coordinator he's gonna call the defensive place so now they're not gonna have an official defensive coordinator but they were said that Judevian Clowney's best success came from when Mike Vrable was a coach on the Houston Texans and those was the Judevian Clowney's best years so it's almost like it's almost like when you're in school and you have this teacher this teacher really got the best out of you they they really they got you they understood you they work with you they put an extra time with you and they really got the best out of you then you go to a different teacher and this other teachers like they're whatever about you did and they're just doing that job it's nothing personal against you but they're not as invested in you as that previous teacher was so you go to that other teaching maybe you don't give that much effort or as much effort with the other teacher because you're like they don't really care about me so let me just do what I can and just get by but then you get an opportunity to go back to that that first teacher again and it could be like wow oh I'm back let's go and it's the same way with a job with a manager a manager that puts in that extra effort to really get the best out of you as an employee it can be it can be the same exact thing then you get another manager who doesn't really care of that much and they just trying to get by so you just try to get by so you don't just you don't give that extra effort they don't get anything special they get that you get to give the bare minimum but that's all you give that's all they give so nobody's really giving anything extra but then that manager who really invest in you they really try to get you different opportunities they try to get you promoted they try to get you paid they really want to see you succeed this can be that situation for the Titans and Jadavian Clowney so this is a again like I said it's a good move his specialty again run defense run defense run defense and he actually I was reading something that said that he was um I think number five overall in past rush when percentage so the past rush is still there he again we keep talking about he's a disruptive player I didn't know he was up there like that I forgot which I forgot where it was from on with the pro football for I forgot what it was but it said that he was yeah he was like number five in a in past rush when percentage so he's doing his thing but I guess when when they see number 90 coming they like nope not happening we don't watch that South Carolina highlight like 50 million times he said no we're not gonna be a highlight but good player man good player um and yeah he with the Titans they also they have yeah he got big busy too this can like and cuz you know teams are gonna double team Jadavian Clowney you know he gonna get double teamed all day but now you got big busy too you got and this could help him out cuz he had his uh his whole just he it was underwhelming for him in Atlanta first round pick started off hot but then it kind of cooled down and cooled down and cool down and Atlanta was like no we good we're straight but now he has an opportunity especially with a lot of attention that's gonna be focused on uh Jadavian Clowney so I would if I was a Titans fan they even not being a Titans fan I expect Vic Beasley to um have sort of a breakout season because Jadavian Clowney is gonna help him so much he's gonna help him a lot so this is just it's all around good for the uh Titans defense I saw somebody who was like oh man I wish we wouldn't trade a Jarell Casey now and I think whether they traded him to the Broncos I believe a couple months back like early on in free agency I believe they traded him to the Broncos but they'll still be good they're still gonna have a good defense so that's not even a question so Titans fans you got it they did say that Jadavian Clowney will be flying out to find out of Tennessee this morning because Jocina Anderson boy she was reporting late night late night man she was reporting late night I was knocked out because I was tired yesterday man I was yeah I was extremely tired yesterday because yesterday it's just been a long couple days man and the seasons right literally right around corner we were one week away from the rest of the week one games being played well we got money in our football too but we'll we're one week away from our first Sunday of football but anyway ah interesting Diana Rossini the one who first broke the Jadavian Clowney to the Titans story she said I'm told the Saints offer was lower by roughly two million dollars after moving cash around hmm Tennessee offered this deal late Saturday morning and locked it up by late Saturday afternoon big win for GM John Robinson and the Titans so Jadavian Clowney he went to the me followed the money he followed the money you stay consistent again all the rumors were saying that hey Jadavian Clowney he about his money yes he certainly is and he cashed out even at the end that there was no way and I've said it in previous videos there was no way that I thought Jadavian Clowney was getting anything over one meal a first first I mean not one meal one year I did not think he was gonna get a multi-year deal and he didn't he got it offered to him but he ain't take it but I didn't I think he was at this point in the season of all of the offseason that I was like there was no way that Jadavian Clowney is going to get more than 10 mil it's not happening it's no way and if you would have told me you would get 15 mil at this point I would have still been like no not happen but he got it and again look saints they were doing they were doing all this stuff they were putting in all this work it's chef came through cooked up some Creole crab cakes the fruit platter and all that champagne these floors his black and gold jet to Houston what Houston ain't even far from New Orleans so they might have drove over but they came out there like hey today we're about to treat you man well what's your drink we're gonna get your favorite bottle well what you like steak oh get him some steak get him everything get what he wants cook it up chef she was in there cooking whipping it up and you know it was good to you know it's good but Jadavian Clowney was just like oh he probably he had a sight set on him Titans deal and I'm sure that information was leaked to in order to help Jadavian Clowney because the information about him being at dinner with the Saints and all that I'm sure that guy put out that that information getting put out it helped him a lot because again it was it was talked about that the Saints they were the ones that were pushing heavy for Jadavian Clowney pushing heavy heavy heavy heavy heavy so what does that do for somebody else that really wants your Jadavian Clowney well that either makes them step up that game or step off Ravens apparently they stepped off they were like no bidding war nope not our style you know that's not us but Titans they stepped up oh we got it we want them oh let's get it okay Saints y'all want to do that you know they like you know what go ahead let them enjoy his meal we got some barbecue that we got waiting on him so we got we're gonna actually overnight it but they got to taking care of me so Tennessee came out the winner and the biggest win of all Jadavian Clowney so now he he'll he gets a one-year 15 million dollar deal and again it's up to 15 mil so it's not 15 million he's not getting paid 15 mil he can reach those if he hits whatever incentives there are but then on top of that next year he becomes a free agent I don't show I don't I'm not sure if they have some if they can franchise tag him or not franchise tag him in there it's for me I would think that Jadavian Clowney a deal with him that he would not want to be franchise tagged but I mean after this after this entire offseason fiasco even though he calls a lot of it himself but after this I think he may actually want to be franchise tagged so he would have that guaranteed money no matter what but that's that man so it's been a fun ride man this whole Jadavian Clowney watch has been fun I know that there been some people are making all these you can clowny videos again and I said hey I'm here to keep you updated that's what I'm here to do I've seen different people complaining and whatnot about the different Jadavian Clowney videos my response hey if you don't want to hear about your Davian Clowney you don't have to watch him you don't got to click on him nobody's obligating you to click on him I've been enjoying this whole thing I've been loving it from start to finish every single Jadavian Clowney update that we did we did a lot of them too we should we should have started a Jadavian Clowney playlist we should have done that but I didn't I didn't think it was gonna be this much I didn't think it was gonna go all the way through the offseason all the way right up until the regular season that's crazy that's crazy but it's been fun I have enjoyed every single bit of it every minute every update just us trying to um to think oh what's the Jadavian Clowney gonna do what does this mean because remember Jadavian Clowney said hey tell the Jets to come get me remember that it seemed like that was so long ago like that was so long ago then there was a story about him being interested in the Ravens the Seahawks and who was the other teams that were listed there was and then there was a story about the Ravens being expected to be the top team to land them in then there was a story about of course way back the Seahawks they really wanted them bad then it was a time when a report came out that the Saints and the Cowboys that they wanted them and they like there's been a lot of different Jadavian Clowney stuff and updates and reports and whatnot but again like we always say it man we'll see we'll see what happens my hope was of course that he went to the Ravens but it's that's fine that he didn't he would have been nice with the Ravens now but yeah he's gonna do good with the Titans man they gotta go so just like oh man so painful for the Saints man so painful for them Saints man I know Falcons fans I know Panthers fans I know Bucks fans they they laughing at the Saints I know they are me cuz when your when your division rival if this something like this happens to them they really get rejected after all of that oh that's painful man that's like a guy taking a girl out or asking her out say hey you want to go on a date with me buying her flowers buying her gifts buying her this and that she says oh thank you you're so sweet thank you for all the gifts I appreciate you so much but no I will not go out with you no it's like especially after the effort personal chef but Titans one so guess your David Clowney gonna be saying saying tight enough this year the team keep it clean appreciate y'all I love y'all and just like the Saints are with the Jadavian Clowney race I'm out
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KfqlhVW6lI", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
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We Wish You a Merry Christmas - Piano Tutorial (Easy & Advanced)
🎼 Sheet Music, MIDI & Advanced versions (Video & Notation): https://www.patreon.com/posts/60059748 Learn how to play We Wish You a Merry Christmas on Piano in a variety of ways starting with the Melody along with Simple bass and then moving on to an Anthemic Choral arrangement, Arpeggios, Bluegrass, and a Loungy Outro! Listen to my arrangement of “We wish you a Merry Christmas” and my entire Christmas album🎄https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrNNL05e9FT_Wcia3ov9oHx9jDPtjdqBC All Christmas🌲Tutorials in one place: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrNNL05e9FT9HU-N5Jy2d9gNoBATIr21r Use free software like Synthesia to import the MIDI and learn the advanced versions from Patreon. The entire notation is available as a PDF as well! 📚 Download all my Handwritten notes & support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/jasonzac 🎼 Register for our virtual workshops, lessons & courses: https://www.nathanielschool.com/musicmethod 📹 All our YouTube lessons (1000+) categorized by skill level, topic & genre all in one place: https://www.nathanielschool.com/freelessons 🎹 Members-Only Videos for Piano & Theory: https://geni.us/PianoCourse ► Subscribe to our channel: https://geni.us/NathanielYouTube ► Donate on PayPal: https://geni.us/DonatePayPal 📧 Customized & Private Classes: music@nathanielschool.com 📞 +917760456847 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Follow me on Instagram: https://instagram.com/jasonzac 🎧 Listen to Jason Zac Music: https://geni.us/AbsenceYouTubeJZB
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2021-12-18T16:00:13
2024-02-05T07:16:14
1,621
3KbHN7JY23g
Hi everyone, this is Jason here from Nathaniel, compliments from the season of Christmas wishing you your family a Merry Christmas and also a Happy New Year which will follow. In this lesson we are basically going to look at We Wish You a Merry Christmas which you can play along for your friends, family or broadcast it over the internet or share it on your Instagram feed or whatever and I'm going to give you a lot of versions of this song. We are going to start very simple so if you've just about started playing the piano there is going to be a version for you which you're going to learn and it's going to get really crazy at the end. I'm going to combine as you heard in the intro video right there were many variations which I tried to put together a nice choral version very sort of anthemic and very trumpet and celebration like then we went into a very kind of mellow verse you know that's your verse and then we really belted it in a kind of a bluegrass or americana way in one more verse and that became on a four four so we're going to try and learn that as well and then we ended with a very mellow loungy version so that's a lot of versions in one notation or in one assignment which you could learn or should learn over the holidays or over the Christmas season at least before December 25th or at least on December 25th so we'll start with the easy version with chords and single roots and the melody of course which I'm going to teach you and then we'll move forward from there we're going to take the key of F major which has your one flat B flat and then we'll build from there with the chords lot of interesting chords not only diatonic to F there are also some chords which are outside the key of F which is so that's these are what we call as secondary dominant chords and then some chords change very quickly very chorally following a very soprano alto tenor bass choral kind of arrangement so we'll try and bring in all of those things we also need to bring in some grooves since we are piano players let's get cracking on all these things the notation for the simple version and the advanced version or the crazy version if you will is waiting for you on our patreon page that will help support the channel as well for about five dollars a month you're going to get access to every single element of everything which we do on youtube all the supplementary material required for you to learn each of my lessons as you know the lessons are quite long it's about at the minimum I think I do 18 to 20 minutes per lesson so you need my notes I've handwritten them there's also notation which we've professionally done in different versions there are also midi files available there are backing tracks whenever relevant mp3s and whatnot so head over to patreon I think it's a very good value you're not just paying five dollars to just support the channel I feel you're getting a lot in for your purchase and we do quite a few youtube lessons in a month so every single one of them the notes are on patreon so head over there if possible and once you have the notation in front of you if you read which will be helpful get your pianos on plugged in ready you're going to play with me and right after this lesson you're going to be able to perform it for your friends and family like a like a super pro piano player let's get cracking melody first that's the first line we wish you a merry christmas then we wish you a merry christmas it's almost the same tune but you kind of shift your whole hand higher we wish you a merry christmas we try to keep your thumb there we wish you a merry christmas we and now stretch your hand first two lines again and then we wish you a merry christmas we wish you a merry christmas a little bit of crossing there we wish you a merry christmas and a happy new year very easy there and a happy new year we wish you a merry christmas we wish you a merry christmas you could even play your five fingers ready there we wish you a merry christmas and then cross your thumb we wish you a merry cross miss we wish you a merry christmas a little bit of crossing and a happy new year so that's the melody but don't get very happy we are not going to play the melody only with one hand otherwise it's not going to sound like a proper piano player left hand is coming up shortly hang on so we wish you a merry christmas we slowly and a happy new year okay great so now let's bring in our left hand there's also another verse part let's learn that one more time so you stretch your hand and then okay let's now do some simple left hand accompaniment I'm going to do some simple bass notes single notes there and then we're going to add some chords if you no chords that will embellish this and then if you're an intermediate learner of you or if you'd like to challenge yourself a bit more hang on till the end or just a little bit more longer and we are going to take this really really crazy so let's first get acquainted with the bass notes remember it's on a three so you're counting three all the time one two three one two three one two three one two three so that's for we wish merry is a re christ b flat G B C one more time now you could also do a passing note if you want we wish you a merry you don't have to but you know a a and f are linked via the g in between so you could even play the g that's B C and then whole thing again two lines we press and now the wish you a merry goes higher so that's so here I'm coloring highlighting the chord which is a major wish you okay Christmas and uh so the chords are a major D minor which I play the root and uh and uh which is f so wish you Christmas and uh that's B flat okay you could even do happy new year I'm seeing the bass happy new year or happy new year there's so many options you could do wish you a merry Christmas we wish you a merry Christmas we wish you a merry Christmas and a happy new year you could do that happy new year or keep it simple happy new year or even more simple happy new year okay let's do the whole story the whole chorus so coming to the verse tidings we bring to you and your kin so that part the left hand can be quite simple tidings we bring so that's f fifth I'm not doing I think it sounds muddy and then it'll be annoying to jump here so good tidings we bring let's do that to you and your kin that part two and your kin what did I do there you and your kin you and your kin so whole whole sentence good tidings we bring to you and your kin you're almost the same melody just the bass and then it kind of continues you can go you can do an extra G as I mentioned so in the notation in the first chorus I've made it super easy for beginners then I've done the verse part which you should learn the way I've notated it and at the very end I've done a little bit more fancy stuff okay but now it's going to get really crazy at the end of the video we are going to have four versions which I'm going to briefly communicate with you as you can see via the notation there's a nice anthemic almost orchestral version at the beginning on the piano where very powerful and then we take it really down during the verse tidings we bring with arpeggios as always which is needed to chill it down and then we do a very bluegrass section which or americana very groovy a folk folk like and the time signature then changes to four four then we do a lounge version slow it down okay let me just quickly break down each section for you to learn this at an intermediate level I think it's recommended to either learn reading if you know reading already you can figure this out however you can also if you have never read music before but can play the piano and have some kind of coordination download the midi files which are at the patreon which will really help you address all these things at a note per note level okay so let me just show you the anthemic part okay so f g a over f because my right hand's also playing stuff check this out so while the left hand's going the right hand's going Christmas we you're dropping the b flat to a Christmas we got that Christmas we and then it goes to wish you must we drop the b flat okay a lot of harmony in this version okay so far the first line goes we wish and now moving on coming to the next line wish wish you a merry and then Christmas and Christmas and okay so that a there in the right hand so i'm doing that happy and happy all together at year okay that's the anthemic version let's do the whole anthemic version once more little slow it's the anthemic part maybe the anthemic section a little slower okay coming to that verse where we chill out with arpeggios we just take the whole melody higher to give it a more mellow vibe okay let's do that so that's a c seventh with an e bass and what am i doing there b flat in an inversion starting with f end on f major and you and your kin there we do it in in diads or third one more time one more time f major f major again just doing fifths there for happy new year that's b flat fifth g fifth c fifth f fifth that's happy new year and the right hands having that supporting alto one more time okay coming to the blue grass section now which is on four four it goes as you can see it's now one and two and three and four and earlier we had only three beats but i just thought it's a nice way to play it you know it sounds good on three and i've heard people even playing it on four so i figured let's just put it all together in this version same chords pretty much we wish you a merry so it takes a little longer we just do this nice descending b flat a seven nice descend there and a very anthemic again bringing back that power and one more time with the blue grass version c major pretty much play the chords with the top note as the melody and uh full on f major again and uh have to wait there new year now may not sound very blue grass at the moment because you don't get that that gallop which makes it very i like that banjo technique so for that additional 16th note if you can i've not notated it but if you can you so if you get this phrasing or this this movement it's like a common thing you can use it for a lot of material so if you can bring that in it's very banjo like uh very uh all the uhs are highlighted oney just that spice same arpeggio happens in the bass that ghosting of the thumb is what gives you that effect if you can do it great don't forget that b flat lounge version at the very end is almost like the anthemic part of the beginning we go come back to three but just simple harmony now you can ignore the lower voice and just play or you could add that in okay you could even refer to the easy version the easy version is always there and by easy it's not it's not by no means easy it's just simple for me to explain that's why i called it easy you still have to work on that so the choral outro that's an interesting climb c sharp pretty much the same as the simpler version which we did in the beginning of the chapter so okay guys so i hope you found the lesson useful and i hope you're gonna learn this well in time for christmas whichever version be it just the melody melody with simple bass melody with some simple chord movement if you'd like you can just do block chords as well the chords are also written down for you you can check it out and see if you if that style works for you and then we looked at like a fun version which maybe people have not really heard you know choral going to bluegrass or rather choral anthemic choral going to like a very mellow arpeggiated verse going to a heavy bluegrass thing on 4 4 which adds to that chaos and then we end with a very chilled out choral or loungy outro right guys so that's my arrangement and that's the tutorial of we wish you a merry christmas again we wish you a merry christmas from the nathaniel school of music and i really wish you and your family well and hope that we get through these trying conditions together and continue to go strong and hopefully music will give you that enjoyment which you need and also to break out of whatever you're doing currently in life which i'm sure is very busy and there are a lot of challenges i'm sure during times like this the piano and music in general is always there for you if you think about it right so always give the piano some time and it'll always give you that strength which you need for your head to kind of rewire itself so to speak so also feel free to share the video with your friends and family and again stay tuned to all of our lessons from nathaniel do consider getting yourself a copy of the notation of this lesson or and all the other lessons past present future and i will see you in the next one or rather you would see me in the next one cheers
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Amherst Municipal Affordable Housing Trust Jan 11, 2024
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2024-01-19T19:55:11
2024-02-05T16:40:04
6,390
3Kxl1O310k8
Thank you for joining us for the Amherst Municipal Affordable Housing Trust meeting, January 11th. It is 7-0-1. We will wait a few minutes to ensure we have quorum. We're just waiting on one or two other trust members. Grover is in the audience. There's Grover. So that should make it. Great. Thank you, Allegra. I'm trying to. I expect that Greg is trying to bring her in. There's Robs here, too. Okay, Robs here as well. And as soon as Grover joins us, we will go ahead and begin. Grover, you might have a pop-up on your screen that you're going to want to accept to be promoted. I wonder if Grover might be transporting youngsters, perhaps, too. Okay, well, we do have quorum, and if Grover is in the audience and can hear us, and once we can move Grover over, then Grover can participate. But we do have quorum, so we'll go ahead and begin. It is 7-0-2. Thank you again for joining us at the Amherst Municipal Affordable Housing Trust meeting today. So I'm going to start with our December minutes. I'm going to open up to see if there are any additions, corrections that need to be made. And if I don't hear any, I'll go ahead and accept them. Okay, not hearing any or seeing any hands up. I'm going to go ahead and accept the December minutes. Indus, thank you, Carol. In December, we noted that there was a correction to the November minutes. We corrected the minutes and we redistributed them. They were already voted upon with the corrections, so we don't need to have a vote. So I'm going to go ahead and move on to trust updates. So the first update we have is that we actually have a new trust member. So we've been filling the positions. Our trust board is of nine members, and we're up to eight right now, with Gaston being our prior new member. Now we have even a newer member. Corinne Olson will be our newest member. And she, unfortunately, was not able to make it this evening. She will be with us in the in-person meeting on January 30th. Her daughter wasn't feeling well, so she was unable to be with us today. She will be listening to the recording. I did ask her for a quick intro, and so I'm going to read her intro. So please don't confuse that I am Corinne. I'm just reading it as the way she wrote it. I've been an Amherst resident since 2021. I have a husband and a two-year-old next week in a loving and loyal dog, Nevada. My husband went to UMass, so our connection to the air runs back many years. I graduated from Columbia University with my master's in social work in 2013, although since then I have not had any direct housing experience. Many volunteer and career opportunities have given me experience and united a serious passion for the sector. After working as director of volunteers at a domestic violence shelter, helping run a homeless shelter for families, and taking a housing course taught by the Director of Safe Passage in New York City, I've gained a deep and somber understanding of how necessary housing is for everyone. Stable mental health, career, a functional family life, even proper hygiene just aren't as possible if you don't have the comfort, consistency and safety of a roof over your head. I'm very excited to join this board and continue to guarantee this right to more citizens of our town. It's tragic to me that anyone be homeless, and although I know this is a problem that may sadly never be completely eliminated, I hope we can work to expand it as much as possible and to create a more solid network of supports for folks to help them stay sustainably housed by underlying the importance of ongoing wraparound services for residents. Thank you. Very excited, so welcome Corinne, and as I said before, she will be watching our recording of this evening. The next item is that we actually have a vacancy. So Ashley Jensen has resigned as of the last meeting, and I want to thank her for her service and her commitment both to increasing affordable housing and the advocacy that she's shown and the commitment she's shown by being a trust member, and especially for her commitment to ensuring that people who are unhoused do get housing. We are working hard to fill our last vacancy, and we hope that we could possibly fill it before our next in-person meeting on January 30th. Then the next item is the CPA funding. Very good news. We have received $300,000 from the CPA, and we want to thank the CPA for their support. If you have been to any of the meetings around the CPA having tried to make funding decisions regarding all the applications, it was very clear to me how committed they are to supporting affordable housing. At the same time, there was a lot of competition for extremely critical projects. So even though we got 2,000 less, we are very, very happy that we got the 300,000. So at this point, quick note that we got it provided town council approved. It hasn't been approved, but they probably will. Thank you, Carol. It's the CPA recommending to the town council. The town council has to make the final decision. So thank you, Carol, for the clarification. All right. Now I'm going to go ahead and pass on the floor to Shelley. But before Shelley goes on, I really want to thank her in advance on behalf of the trust for working with us tonight, providing a Housing Trust 101, and then continue to work with on developing our action plan. So thank you. Absolutely. So can you see the slides correctly? Not yet. Not yet. It says we're viewing your screen. There we go. But there we go. Yes, thank you. Sometimes there's the delay. Okay. So my name is Shelley Gehring, and I am with Mass Housing Partnership. And tonight I'm just going to do a little bit of a Affordable Housing Trust Fund 101 kind of overview. Before I get started, I just want to say that I am more than happy to be interrupted if something's not clear. If I'm speaking too quickly, if I'm using acronyms, if there's some kind of clarifying, something that you need to clarify. At each section, I will pause and ask for questions. And then I suppose Erica maybe can help facilitate that if there are questions. But we don't have to wait until the end if there's something pressing or something that's not clear. So please don't, I don't mind being interrupted. So I'm going to start with that. And for those of you who maybe are not quite as familiar, okay, who may not be quite as familiar with MHP, we are a quasi-state agency in Massachusetts focused on increasing the supply of affordable housing across the state. And we have four main kind of outward facing teams at MHP. The first is our Center for Housing Data, which is a small group of people that are collecting, analyzing, and sharing data to help inform effective housing policy on the local, regional, and state level. They are also the team that puts together some really incredible online resources as well. We have the community assistance team that I'm part of, and we're really about helping to build a local capacity to support affordable housing. We also offer technical assistance with 40B developments and working directly with housing authorities on surplus public land. We have a lending team. We've lent over $1.4 billion to Creighton Preserve, over 27,000 units of affordable rental housing at this point. And we have a home ownership team. So the one mortgage product comes out of our home ownership team, but we're really supporting access to home ownership for low and moderate income households in the state. So today, there are a few things that I'm wanting to cover. One, just some housing trust basics. And so for some of you, you may be more familiar than others, but I just want to kind of a baseline of what an affordable housing trust is all about. And then I'm going to get a little bit into trust operations and best practices just based on working in dozens of communities across the state, some things that we've learned. So it's just some suggestions. And then I'll get into eligible activities, the kinds of things that your trust can be funding and engaged in. And then I'm going to do a little bit about working across boards. I do this in some communities, particularly when you do have a community preservation committee. And I know in Amherst, you have a variety of boards that are working on housing. So I'm just going to give a few just kind of tips and suggestions for working with other boards. Again, if you need to interrupt me, if I'm not clear, if I'm using acronyms, please, please don't, don't wait until the end. So first, some housing trust basics. The municipal affordable housing trust fund statute is organized under mass general law, chapter 44, section 55C. So that's your trust is organized under chapter 44, section 55C. You are a public entity. You're created by, it was created by your local legislative body with a majority vote. So at the time that was town meeting, the purpose actually is quite narrow. It's really to create and preserve affordable housing for low and moderate income households. Some communities want everything housing to fit under the trust. And that's not really how the statute is written. It's led by a local board of trustees that's elected locally, that's appointed locally, excuse me. And because you are a municipal entity, like all your other public boards, you're subject to public procurement, designer selection, conflict of interest, and public meeting laws, just like all of your other municipal boards. Very generally, a housing trust fund can address affordable housing needs locally, support local control of housing initiatives. Your trust can engage in real estate activity. You could sell, buy and sell property if that made sense for you. You can make timely decisions because you don't have to go back to town council unless something's written into your bylaw. But typically you're more flexible than for example, the community preservation committee, which Carol just brought up that they make recommendations, but then it still has to go to town council. But that's not how a trust is set up unless your bylaw requires it. But I don't know, most do not require that. And you can be collecting funds from a variety of sources. And I have been told by a municipal attorney that donations to a municipal board are have tax advantages just like with a nonprofit. Showy, are you maybe one slide behind? You seem like you're one slide behind what you're talking about. I'm not positive. Right now it says, what can a housing trust fund do? Oh, no, that's not what I'm supposed to be saying. Yep, I'm still on that. Yeah. All right, okay. Yes, sorry. You can be collecting money from a variety of sources. And we're seeing communities be a bit more and more creative around how they fund their housing trust, which we'll get into a little bit more detail later. So the statute is a very short, simple statute, and it offers, it's kind of minimalist. You need at least five members on your trust. You need to include the chief executive officer. So in a town with a select board, that'd be one select board member in the city. That's the mayor in, honestly, I don't know who that is with the town council. Who is that? We have our town manager who's the fact. The town manager is considered CEO. Okay. These members are appointed by the mayor, the city council in some, some cities, the city council has some oversight select board. So it differs depending on the structure of your community. The statute says two year terms, and many communities will stagger these, just like with nonprofits, so that you never have 100% turnover at the same year. And then the trustees, your public agents, special municipal employees, just like with your other municipal boards. The statute outlines 16 different explicit powers, and the big ones are accepting, receiving real property, purchasing, retaining real or personal property, selling, leasing, there's one that's borrowing. So there are 16 different powers that are allowed. A community can modify these powers or create caveat, like borrowing is a concern in some communities. They might require two thirds of the board members, the trustees, or they might require that trust couldn't borrow more than a certain percentage of the assets that they hold. A town can also add to these powers. So while the state statute has these 16 powers, of course you always want to make sure that you're paying attention to your local bylaw or ordinance to see if there are any modifications. So you're not just going by the state statute. And then several years ago, there were some changes made to the municipal affordable housing trust fund statute, for two key reasons. One is that there were CPCs transferring money to the trust, and the trusts, in many cases, were not reporting back to the CPC how they were spending the CPA funds. And so then the CPC was not able to report to the state how the housing funds were being spent. And so our data on the state level is flawed because there isn't this circling back to report how housing CPA funds were being spent. And that's important because when we're advocating on the state level for more CPA funds, we want to be able to adequately explain how CPA housing funds are being spent, how many units are being supported. So one change to the trust statute is requiring that trust report back to your CPC, your Community Preservation Committee, on an annual basis, how you're spending CPA funds, if you have them and if you are spending them. So then the CPC can report in their annual CP3 report to the Department of Revenue how the trust CPA funds are being spent. So the screenshot is a document, a fillable word document that I created with Stuart Saginore of the State Community Preservation Coalition. And this helps the trust report back to the CPC. It's using the exact language on the CP3 report. We also have a document that's directions of how to fill this form out, which might sound silly, but you'd be surprised at actually how it's not so easy to fill these forms out. So just a reminder that when you do have CPA funds and you're spending them, you want to make sure that you're reporting back on an annual basis. And the CP3 is due, I believe, September 15th. So you just want to make sure that you're getting that information to your CPC in time for them to report back. I'm sorry. The other thing that was changed is that the trust statute, the purpose, as I said before, is to create and preserve affordable housing for low and moderate income households. In the CPC, there's the verb support that's specific for housing, and it didn't explicitly say in the trust statute that support activities are part of the purpose. And so there were communities that were transferring the funds and the trust wanted to do support type activities, but town councils didn't feel like, some town councils didn't feel like it was appropriate. So now the trust statute allows everything that's allowable under community housing with CPA allowable for a trust as well. So that means anything that falls under support, a trust can engage in as well. To just... Kelly, does that include emergency rental assistance or rapid rehousing? Yep. Yep. So everything that's allowed under the CPA, community housing for CPA, is now allowed for a trust. So because so many communities create a trust because they have CPA, it just made sense to make sure that those statutes were more online. So just two clarifications or tips when you distribute funds, just like we tell every CPC, when you're using public resources, when you distribute funds, you should have a grant agreement. You should make sure that you're clear about what the funds that you're allocating are for, the parameters around when you expect them to be spent. And you want some sort of language about in what circumstances the funds would come back to the trust if they're not used, as you intended them to be used. The same that we would expect from a CPC. We also suggest strongly that CPCs have a grant agreement with trust when they're transferring funds so that there's clarity between both of your boards. And then to just throw out that CPA area median income differs from HUD numbers. So the Department of Revenue overseas median income for CPA, they do use HUDs 100%, but then when they do 80%, they just do a straight 80%. That's not how HUD does 80%. HUD takes into account household size. And so if you want the units that you're funding with trust resources to count on the subsidized housing inventory, you just want to make sure that you're using HUD numbers for 80% and not CPA numbers. So I'm going to switch gears. Are there any other questions at this point from that beginning material? So trust operations and best practices. So as I said, we are seeing communities be more and more creative about how they're funding their trust or there are a variety of resources that communities are using. Certainly CPA is the most common funding source, although it's not a given in every community, but about 76% of our trust communities also have CPA. Other ways that communities are funding their trust is that some communities have inclusionary zoning and they may have an in lieu of payment option that a developer could pay cash instead of providing a unit. And in some cases these funds are, it's actually in the bylaw or the ordinance that these funds would go to the trust. In other cases, they're just allocated at the trust. We have some communities that transfer free cash or funds from the general fund to their housing trust. So Truro, Brookline are communities that have done this. We have one community in the Cape. They have a cell phone tower and the income from the lease payments are directed to the trust. It's not a lot of money, but it's a guaranteed small chunk every year. We have one community that has, so they voted to allow a million dollar bond to support their trust and they don't have CPA. So it wasn't against CPA, it's against their general fund, but Medfield allowed this. I don't think that they've drawn on it, but they do have that as an option. Orleans on the Cape has passed a tax override, a $275,000 tax override that they see as an annual override. So they're the only trust that I know of that has been able to get a line of credit from a bank because of the source of funding that they have. We have communities that are seeking donations for their trust, and this can be in land or cash. There may be developer negotiated fees that can be directed to the trust. Of course, you need to be careful and cautious about how you try to negotiate developer fees, but we do have one community where it was a, what was referred, what's sometimes referred to as a friendly 40B development. A local developer was doing a home ownership development and for every market rate unit that he sold, he donated $10,000 to the community and then the select board directed it to their housing trust. There may be special bylaws or ordinance payments. There are some communities that are using short-term rental fees. So Gloucester is an example of this and some of the Cape communities are working on this. There are communities that have talked about income from the marijuana tax. I don't yet know if any are directing it to their trust. Tax title sales are an option or a community like Chelsea has actually transferred tax title properties to their trust to disposal for affordable housing. There was a Supreme Court decision that was made earlier this year that complicates this a bit, that I'm not going to get into tonight, but that has gotten a bit more complicated this last year. And so I think I went through all of them. So there are a variety of different whites on then the real estate transfer fee. You're likely, you likely are familiar with the legislation of there's statewide legislation that would as an enabling legislation. And then there are individual communities like Nantucket that are trying to get real estate transfer fee law passed bill passed. I'm not sure I know what a tax title sale is. So for properties where they are behind on taxes to the community, the municipality and the municipality takes up takes those from for because they're not paying taxes on them like property tax or it could be water sewer could be other taxes that are owed. And so there are times that communities may take those parcels. Thank you. So when trusts are starting out or when you're kind of regrouping, we always suggest that you start by determining housing needs in the community that you start with current data about what's going on in the community around housing needs. So I think that you're, I think that you are planning I think Nate had said at the past meeting that you're working towards updating a housing production plan. So I think that that's in the works and we would highly suggest that you move forward on that because it looks like that the data that you do have is perhaps a little bit dated, but we would always suggest that when you're looking to kind of regroup to create new goals and priorities that you really start with current data around what's going on in the community where need is. People have opinions about it. We have stories and those are all important, but we really want to make sure that we have a clear picture across the community. And then that you use that to then set priorities for the things that you're going to want to focus on as a trust. And you could create benchmarks if you wanted, if there's a particular need you wanted to address, you don't have to do this, but the Somerville Trust, it's actually written into their ordinance that a certain percentage of their funds has to go towards households earning, I think it's under 50, below 50% of the area meeting income. So they just have that to make sure that not only is it a reminder to the trustees that they need to be funding the lowest income households, supporting the lowest income households in the community, but it also helps to tell anyone who would seek the funds that that's a priority for their trust. So you don't have to create benchmarks like that, but if there's a particular need you want to address, you could. We would suggest that there are not only with your housing production plan and your process, but there are other resources out there as well to get some information about your community. So Datatown is one that MHP has developed and is updating regularly as data is updated through the census. It gives you a picture of what's going on in your community and it can just help with the conversation. You're also able to make these graphs that I have here on the slide, and you can just use that, it's not a cost, and you can put that in your presentations or your reports just to help facilitate easy access to data about your community. There's also a tool that you can compare Amherst to other communities if that feels helpful with your local conversations. As trustees of your trust board, because you're looking to support affordable housing development as one of the things that you're doing, it can be helpful to understand the process of financing affordable housing, what it takes to put together a deal. This is not to become experts. I'm not suggesting that you try to become experts. It's extremely complicated, but one thing that you might want to consider is to learn a little bit more about how affordable housing is financed. On the housing toolbox, that there are multiple trainings that we've had where we talk through financing affordable housing and the different funding sources, state and federal funding sources. We also have a couple trainings where it's the developer perspective and nonprofit developers walking through what it takes for them to put together a deal and how communities can help support that process. One thing that you could also do is if you felt like that there is some learning that would be helpful for you is you could invite a developer, either an affordable housing developer. And sometimes you might prefer a nonprofit, but I know a trust that invited a for-profit developer to come and talk through a real development pro forma and walk through the process of putting together a real deal that they had worked on. This can just help you feel a little bit more familiar with what it takes and ways that you can help support the process as well. So it's just a suggestion that might be helpful. And we would suggest, we always suggest that you have a mission statement. So yours does. And as mission statements go, it's important to revisit them occasionally to make sure that it still fits with how you see your role in the community and how you want to talk about your role in the community. You don't need to spend that much time on it tonight, but you keep them short. You already have one to start with, but you just might want to revisit that because it may have been several years since you've done that. And then just a planning framework that I've been using in communities is encouraging trusts to have, to identify two or three goals that are well-defined and measurable goals. Oftentimes in our housing plans, the goals are very general. It's things like increase the supply of senior housing. It's so, so general. And it can be really hard to figure out how to move forward from something so general. So we're really encouraging trusts to narrow in on two or three goals. So this is something that I'm going to be working with you on this for the next several months. And then from those two or three goals, then to come up with strategies, a variety of strategies that will help you meet those goals. And then once you get to that point, you can get even more specific with tasks that you can then delegate to those different members of the trust to help moving forward with implementation. This is an example of one small trust, or a trust from a small community wealthily on the Cape. So they had decided, they've decided working with their housing authority as well as their affordable housing partnership that the trust is going to focus on housing development. Their housing authority actually doesn't have any units, but they've historically managed some housing programs. And so they've decided that their housing authority is going to continue with programs. And their partnership, it might be a committee, is going to focus on advocacy and education and some policy. So they've talked with each other. They've decided that that's how they're going to allocate their focus. So the trust is focused on development. So they have two goals. One, as a measurable goal, create 100 units of low, moderate income rental and homeownership housing over the next five years. And then to raise a million dollars annually. So for well fleet, which is a pretty small little community, these are fairly ambitious for such a small little community, but they felt like that they wanted to push themselves and they wanted to, they know that the housing issue is dire there and they really needed to kind of put some pressure on themselves to do shoot high. And then they've come up with different strategies under each of these goals about how they're going to try to meet that goal. So they're trying to focus on what they're doing to not spread them themselves out too thin, but to be ambitious, but to be really focused and targeted with what they're working on. And this is what we're suggesting with every trust, because we've seen so many trusts get really overwhelmed with how intense the housing needs are in the community and how the resources are always really limited. And so oftentimes trusts really end up spinning their wheels because they're really overwhelmed and they're not sure where to start. We're really trying to encourage trusts to work with other boards to identify kind of a niche for the trust of what you're going to focus on so that you can do a couple things really well, two or three things really well, instead of really struggling to do five or seven or eight things. And then we are encouraging trusts to, and I don't know if Amherst has anything like this yet, but to have some kind of guidelines, a document that puts together a variety of things. Where your mission statement, your goals and strategies are, roles and responsibilities of the trust, priorities or the things that you're really focusing on with your funding, any kind of stipulations you have with your funding. So to be clear about what income level, as an example that you're wanting to fund, perhaps some language around monitoring and reporting, so your expectations when you allocate funds and applications, some selection criteria and an application form. So these are just examples of things that are in guidelines, but we're encouraging communities to do this just so that you have things in one place, that it's easy for people to understand what you're about, for people who might want to access your funds, they understand the process, and they understand your priorities. And what your mission is currently is it's really reminding people that you're a municipal entity and that you're really, you see your role at this point as helping to implement the goals of the community. So this is, the guidelines should be connecting all of those pieces. So it shouldn't be something that's outside of that, but it's just articulating the piece that the trust is working on or the pieces, what you're really focused on. And we do suggest that when you have multiple housing entities or different entities that are working on pieces of the affordable housing puzzle or needs, that you have conversations that you're clarifying roles across boards, that you're having conversations about how you're going to work together, what might overlap, and you might even have conversations around who's going to fund what. So just going back to Wealthly, they've decided that the trust is going to focus on development, housing development, and that's what they're really going to fund. The housing authority is going to work on funding programs like rent assistance and home ownership program. So they decided up front to have some conversation so that there's clarity around who's doing what, and we would suggest this for every community. So this is just from Manchester's housing production plan, and they identified housing strategies on the left, some shorter term, a little bit longer term strategies, and on the right, the lead board or boards to help with, so there isn't stepping on toes to help with some accountability. Having something like an exercise like this can be really helpful if you haven't done it yet, or if you have done it in the past, perhaps updating it. And then we always remind communities to trust to be transparent. We all know that housing development, particularly affordable housing development, can be controversial, unfortunately. Don't make it difficult for people to understand who you are, how you see your role, who's on the trust board. In some communities they have joint board appointments, perhaps they have a CPC member on the trust board or another board represented on the trust board. And we just caution against having people that are on too many boards, because then it's hard to get quorums, it's just hard to get participation. Your board really needs to be an active board, but in some communities they've decided that that's important for communication. We suggest that you report back to whoever you identify, whatever boards you identify is the critical ones, and sometimes that means a joint annual meeting between different boards like the CPC or in town sometimes a select board. Or reporting back to the town council, try to do that regularly. And when you do fund different initiatives, then promote them. Use social media, use that. If you have a webpage, just make sure that you don't make it difficult for people to learn about what you're doing and who's engaged in the work. So I'm going to shift to algebra activities, but I want to pause if there are any questions. Any other questions? I know it's a lot of information. Yeah, I have a question that I think that can wait till the end, but it does have to do with the relationship you just talked about. So often our work is very much entwined with the town's work. Ergo, we have Nate who is wonderful in terms of Planner who is always supporting us. We now have Greg who is funded both by the town ourselves to support affordable housing, and Dave is on right now. And then we have Paul who's the manager, who's a de facto member. So when we talk about roles, we really work very close and in tandem jointly in terms of what the town does. And the town often reports to the town council so I think, you know, later on you can talk, if you can answer this, how have some of the towns sort of distinguish themselves separately from the town and how have they used their role to actually either present to the mayor or to the town council or to the select board in terms of what they're doing or have they done it jointly with the towns themselves? Okay, let me think about that a little bit. I want to answer that. Thank you. So switching to algebra activities, so I'm particularly because you are a CPA community, I'm using this graph that the Community Preservation Coalition uses and because all the eligible activities, again, I'll say again, all the eligible activities under community housing with CPA are eligible for a trust. So the verbs that are used in CPA is acquire, create, preserve and support. Rehab and restore with CPA funds is only allowed if the housing was created or required with CPA funds and support is the category where under CPA it's only intended for housing. So I'm going to go through different activities using these verbs just because of the relationship between the two statues. And then some of the examples that I give, it was really technically the CPC that funded these activities but everything that I am presenting are things that the trust could fund as well. So this is just an example in Barnstable where there was an existing apartment complex that only a portion of the housing, the units were affordable and a nonprofit developer Poa was able to use $500,000 to CPA funds to acquire the entire complex and now almost all of the units are affordable in perpetuity, although a few were kept at market rate because they didn't want to displace any households that were not income qualified at the time. So one example where you could support acquiring existing housing to make it affordable. Erica, do you want to facilitate, should I just call Ungrover or I don't know what the process is? Oh yeah, go ahead and you can go ahead and just call Ungrover. I think some of us have just openly just asked questions versus being a horrible employee. They're hand up, thank you. So my question is, can you clarify the difference between preservation and rehabilitating because I think of those activities as one of the same. Yep, so I will, I will get to that. I will obviously do that. Thank you, sorry. Yep, that's okay. Nope, another acquirer is we have, we actually have quite a few several affordable housing trusts where they run small-scale home ownership programs where they're helping to, oftentimes they're called buy-down programs and they're structured a lot of different ways. But they're essentially helping an income-qualified household purchase an existing unit of, an existing home in the community. They're oftentimes like this picture in Norfolk, more the more modest sized homes. It's high subsidy per unit. Oftentimes it's several hundred thousand dollars, couple hundred thousand dollars depending on the community. I don't know of any community that adds more than two, maybe three units a year. But as the market gets tighter and tighter everywhere, it's just very expensive per unit. But it is one way to help access, help folks access home ownership. It is spreading the affordable units around the community. And then there's a restriction that's added in some, in some communities. It's the universal deed writer that the state requires because they want the units on the subsidized housing inventory in other communities like Leverett, not far from you. Their program is up to 100% of the area meeting income. So they have their own restriction and they're not on the subsidized housing inventory. So they're structured a lot of different ways, but this is one way that some trusts are using some of their funds. And then we have a lot of examples of trusts helping to support new creation, the new construction of affordable housing in Norwell. This site had been a police station and it was voted to be surplus land and then they transferred it to the trust. And then the trust actually oversaw some pre-development work and writing a request for proposals, reviewing applications. They accepted one from a proposal, I'm sorry, from a developer, a nonprofit developer who built these 18 units of, in this case, a restricted rental housing. And between the trust and the CPC, they put in over a million dollars into this development. In Brewster, this was some housing authority surplus land that MHP did some of the pre-development work, worked with the housing authority in the town on this. And then the town supported this additionally by applying for a mass works grant to help create road access as well as connecting this site to sewer. And now it's 30 units of rental housing in Westport. This was municipal land. This was a project that took many years. The trust was engaging it for about 10 years. There was a municipal site, the trust helped to acquire an adjacent site that gave access to the municipal site. They did some pre-development work and released a request for proposals. And then the trust also gave some funds to the developer that was chosen. It's a nonprofit, the community builders and it's now 50 units of rental housing. So we're seeing more and more trusts engaged in development and helping to dispose of municipal land for affordable housing. In some cases, like in Norwell, if the land is transferred to the trust, in most cases it's just that the trust is engaged and supportive of the process. And then there are quite a few examples of adaptive reuse. So reusing existing buildings for affordable housing. In Middleborough shoe shop place, this had been a shoe factory and two nonprofits were able to redevelop it into 25 units of rental housing. There are quite a few examples of schools, municipal schools being reused for affordable housing. The Swam Scott and Auburn are two examples of that and you can't see it in the Swam Scott photo, but in the Auburn one, you can see how the developer also added on to the historic building. They added an addition to get a few more units just to make it more economically viable. And then in Williamstown, this was a had been a mill. I think it was a mill that a developer redeveloped into affordable housing. And then some of them, you can see the Middleborough, they were a brand new CPA community at the time of that development. They didn't have very much local funds, so they only contributed 25,000, but it was enough for them to access other resources that they needed. And then in Williamstown, the contribution was 200,000. So it differs depending on the community, depending on the resources, depending on the development. So getting into Grover's question, what preserve means? So in the CPA statute, the definition of preserve is the protection of personal or real property from injury, harm or destruction. It's a higher bar than rehab. So again, CPA funds cannot be used for rehab unless the housing was created or acquired with CPA funds. It is true that in the trust statute, the preserve is not defined, but because the trust statute came after the CPA statute, we do consider this definition, particularly if you have CPA funds because the restrictions of CPA follow CPA funds to the trust. There is this memo that DHCD at the time, now HLC, put together around housing authority units because this issue of rehab is an issue with existing affordable housing when you're using CPA funds because housing authority units were not created or acquired with CPA funds. When we talk about preserve, we're typically talking about the expiring use when affordability restrictions are expiring. However, there are cases where it could be used for actual building when we're talking about the envelope of the building. It's not renovating kitchens and bathrooms. It's really keeping units livable. For this example, in Gloucester, the housing authority had a roof that had been leaking and they had already had to shutter one unit and others were at risk. They were not livable because of the leaking. They used some CPA money that they added with the supplement, the state modernization formula funding to replace this old roof so that they didn't lose other units. This is preserving. It's preserving the asset. It's not rehab where it's new flooring. It's really protecting the asset of the unit. In most cases, we're talking about expiring use or restrictions that are set to expire. So you have a great example of rolling green in Amherst where you had a large rental development and I swapped it out to use Bedford's but just to remind you that you have a great example. 41 of the units were affordable. The restrictions were set to expire as you're at rolling green. Your community, you were concerned about this because of the need for affordable housing. The owner didn't want to extend the affordability. You reached out to MHP and we did some work. You reached out to Beacon Communities, a large-scale developer that has a lot of experience in 40B developments in low-income housing tax credits and multifamily housing. They negotiated to purchase rolling green and then your community, you voted to bond $1.25 million of CPA funds to go towards that so that those 41 units are now affordable in perpetuity and Beacon is now the owner. So you have your own great example of preservation of affordable housing. This is another one in Bedford, Bedford Village Apartments, 96 units of rental housing, affordable rental housing, spread over 10 buildings. Restrictions were set to expire in 2018 and POA, a nonprofit developer, negotiated to purchase them and this community put in $3 million of CPA funds towards this development. So now these 96 units are affordable in perpetuity owned by a nonprofit whose mission is to create and manage affordable housing. So this is typically what we're thinking of when we talk about preservation of affordable housing. Grobert, do you have any other questions with that or anything you'd like to talk about more with this? Well, yeah. So just to clarify what I'm hearing, the loss of use includes the loss of use of the property being affordable. Any exactly you gave about ruling green? Okay. So it's not just that the building will crumble but the building will no longer be affordable. Exactly. Yeah. So sometimes it's called expiring use or just the affordability is set to expire. So maintaining affordability is typically what we think of with preserving affordable housing. So under support, the kinds of things that have been seen as possible or as allowable have been pre-development. So if there's a municipal site that you're considering for affordable housing using some funds to do some initial pre-development work could be something that you are engaged in helping to fund. You can be using CPA trust funds to help with updating housing plans and rent assistance. Someone brought up rent assistance. That's explicitly allowed in the CPA statute. And so that's something that trust can be engaged in as well. And in fact, during the pandemic in several communities it was actually the affordable housing trust fund that initiated an emergency rent assistance program. So any other questions at this point before moving on to just a few tips around working across boards? Okay, so one thing is that you're going to be doing a housing production plan. We encourage that just to make sure that you're doing this kind of updating this kind of work not in a vacuum to make sure that it's not just a trusting or just a planning board thing but that multiple boards are engaged, that multiple different stakeholders are engaged in this. You want to make sure that the needs that you're identifying are known widely across the community. So we would just encourage you to make sure that you have and Amherst is typically good about this, but did you have a community engagement component to any of this kind of work? And another board is the CPC. Make sure that the CPC is also engaged in understanding housing needs as well. That's an important group because of the funding that they have. CPCs can fund housing trusts and it can just be transferred to the trust. The statute doesn't require the CPA statute doesn't require that it be for a particular purpose. It needs to be CPA eligible purposes. So we have some communities where the CPC just will transfer funds without needing a specific project. In other communities, the CPC really wants the trust to apply like anyone else for a specific program or project. We have some communities where the CPC is willing to suggest an allocation kind of automatically every year. Maybe it's the 10% that have to be housing funds. Maybe it's a different amount. Other communities, they really want the trust to apply every year. We do have a couple communities like Cambridge and Somerville that transfer a significant amount of their CPA funds every year to their housing trust. Cambridge is 80%. The maximum amount goes with their trust every year. They really see the trust as the community housing arm of their CPC. Somerville has been transferring about 45% of their CPA funds every year to their trust. Although I think a developer could come to either entity, but the trust is really the primary housing entity. Most communities, it's significantly less, but it looks different in different communities. The hope is that the relationship is strong between your boards and that your good news of the $300,000, hopefully that continues and that you build that trust. Again, just grant agreements. We always say you should have grant agreements between the CPC and the trust, between the trust and anyone that you fund. It's municipal land. I'm sorry, municipal money. You have fiduciary responsibility over how these funds are used. So you just want to make sure that there's clarity in that. And we really suggest that you decide critical elements upfront about how your boards work together, how you work together. I'm sorry, how you, oops. What you may need from each other. One thing is if you do have CPA funds and you want to use that for any kind of administrative position, I know that you already have some staff, but you just want to be clear that some CPCs don't want any other CPA funds being used for admin, kind of support for the trust and others are okay with that. So it's just something that sometimes that ends up being a surprise, just be upfront with that kind of a conversation from the beginning as early as possible. And then one thing, yep. Can I ask a question? Going back a couple slides just about around, I'm just curious, how other communities handle scenarios where projects might be seeking funds both from the CPA and the trust. Do you see that? Around the state? Yep. So in some communities, that's fine. They're okay with that. In other communities, they want certain things to be funded out of the trust versus the CPC. So it really just depends on the local community and frankly, some of it is kind of territorial stuff as well and a little political. So it just, it looks different in every community. So some communities like, I'll bring up Wellfleet again. They decided that the trust is going to do development and the housing authority is going to do programs and the CPC will just allocate funds to those entities for those purposes. And so they've really made that clear in the community. In other communities like Somerville, they transfer a big chunk of their CPA funds to the trust, but a developer could potentially go to both entities for funding for development. So it looks different in different communities and I think it is helpful to have those conversations just so that there's an understanding of kind of expectation. Okay. But part of why I think it's really important for trust to really narrow in on your goals also is particularly in a community like Amherst where you were, what I've been told in the past that you have a variety of different boards, groups that are working on different pieces of the housing puzzle that you want to have some clarity around who's getting limited funding for what kind of initiatives just so that you're not stepping on toes, that you're not duplicating, that you're being really I think efficient with your people resources as well. So one thing that boards can do, and this is something that I think Amherst has done, one thing that Connie from many years ago training that I did with, Connie and her last name is escaping me, but you're Connie, Amherst Connie, she brought up, she's involved in housing for such a long time, but she brought up this phrase of a culture of support that an Amherst had worked on creating a culture of support for housing, affordable housing, and I like that kind of phrase, that kind of image that it's not a one-off thing, it's not just one development that brings people around or that solves this challenge, it's really a long-term effort and it's people working collaboratively. This is just one resource that a couple of groups tested messaging, housing messaging in the market to see why I do certain messages, housing messages backfire, it's a super simple read, you can Google it, it's just as a resource and they talk about things like, when we talk about housing and housing needs to balance people with places and systems that we don't want to just talk about people that need housing, but also the places and the systems that make it difficult for people to access housing, so to balance that conversation, to not talk about the story of them, but the story of us, that these are people who are part of our community, they are us that are struggling to access housing, connecting housing to other social issues. We know we have such so much more data now to know that that health outcomes increase and educational outcomes, education outcomes improve when people have safe, affordable housing to live in. We know now that where you live affects your outcomes, your children's outcomes and then also just to consider the language that you use, and these are some things that you can do across boards to make sure that you're talking about housing similarly, that you're being thoughtful about what kind of messages work in Amherst. So they tested words, home versus housing, and what they found is that housing people think of as more, unfortunately, some people think of it they think of public housing and that's as critical as that housing is for a lot of people that has a negative connotation or it sounds more like market-based language versus home is where they find themselves and their family. So even talking about affordable homes may be more effective than talk about housing, affordable housing. One thing that I try to be careful within communities is that in the housing development world, the word project is used. It's just a language that's used in the development field. But for a lot of people that means projects and that's really negative. And I've had communities talk about Cabrini Green in Chicago that was torn down years ago and they still have these ideas of this massive housing and that's what affordable housing is. So there could be some conversation if you haven't done this already or refreshing it of how do you talk about housing needs in your community and perhaps do that jointly with other boards so that you're speaking the same language. And just to kind of to wrap up a little bit, I just like to remind communities to really start with understanding your local infrastructure of the needs but also the assets that you have and as a trust board to work on finding your niche so that you're not duplicating work that you're not stepping on toes but you're really finding what's the best what are the best roles or the best things for the trust to be focusing on given your capacity and that you really create suggest that you really create goals that reflect identified needs people have opinions and thoughts and stories and those are all useful and helpful but sometimes those lead to kind of the path of least resistance investing in things that are the path of least resistance that are that are going to be bought the least and they're not necessarily a reflection of the greatest needs in the community so we really urge you to to create your goals reflecting identified needs in the community and then be real about your capacity you're a volunteer board the needs are huge your capacity is limited the resources are always limited so try to try to find a couple things you can do really well instead of being spread way too thin we have a ton of resources online resources from an updated operations trust operations manual we have data town housing toolbox a variety of different resources and mhp as mhp staff we want to be partners with you we want to support your work as well so I'm gonna I know that was a ton I'm gonna stop sharing and I did send this presentation and PDF form to Greg and you're welcome to to post it to send it out but I am happy to stay for a little bit if there are other questions or just conversation that you want to have at this point well first let me just say thank you very very much Shelly for giving us this housing 101 we really felt it was very important before we start focusing on our actual plan that we're all on the same page of having an understanding of what we can do as a trust and what the parameters are so thank you very much for that so Carol has her hand up go ahead Carol well I know that in a lot of the things that you described and in a lot of things that we've talked about trusts can own property trusts can get the property but how does that compare to trusts doing other things and not owning a property and the one specific question I had which I thought there was a place you were describing me was in Brewster where the trust acquired the property and then all these amazing things happened and there was a big development there and who owned it in the end and how did it get from the trust having acquired the property to wherever it ended up what is the relationship between trust owning things and the future of them I'm not being very clear on my question I don't think but so it is true that the statute does allow a trust to own property the thing that we really caution against is that that to own property that that takes managing the property and so we while theoretically you could there are a couple trusts that thought that they would own small scale homes and rent them out but they're not thinking they weren't really thinking about the capital costs the long-term costs of maintaining it and when you have a depressed rent you're never going to get enough to cover that so you're just always going to have to add additional funds into it to keep it up and a trust that's volunteer-based it really is not we don't think it's the best use of your resources and your time so I don't either I just was wondering that's good to hear and and if you own it you're a public entity so then that means that you have procurement laws that you have to follow so it can be expensive too so it's in all the examples that I've that I've given it's that the town might have a land lease so they might technically own the land but it's the developer that owns the development in many cases the land is actually the developer buys it or is transferred to the developer in some cases it's a land lease in other cases it's the developer ends up owning it and then manages it over the long term with a if you if you're using CPA funds the CPA statute says that if you acquire a real property interest using CPA funds then there needs to be a restriction in perpetuity for the purpose in which it was bought so that's a given that it needs to be affordable in perpetuity with CPA funds and a trust could decide if it's non CPA funds that you're using you could decide to have a shorter restriction but if you're using municipal land there's probably an incentive to have having units affordable in perpetuity Yeah, thanks Thank you Carol Guston Hi, I'm wondering looking at one of the the brochures and what those 16 powers are I guess the trust can pledge their own assets as collateral I'm wondering if they can also pledge town assets in any case are there other assets that can be pledged by a trust besides its own accounts or property So, that's getting beyond I think you need to consult with town council and I don't know if there are very many communities that would want non-trust resources used that way but that's going beyond what I feel comfortable actually advising on sorry Okay, thank you But for most trusts they most trusts never have that many resources to be truly honest in their account at any given time and so most it's not really they're just not operating in the realm where most are on a cash basis I actually don't know any that have borrowed other than Orleans having a line of credit and I don't know if they've actually used it they just have it and there are communities where they're using ARPA funds with their trusts and they so like Lynn Lynn has more resources they put three million dollars into their of ARPA funds into their trust Wooster has put quite a quite a bit of funds ARPA funds into their trust so they they have been able to work on a much bigger level and of course Cambridge just has so much more money because it's Cambridge so in some cases the trust does have a good chunk of money but in most of our communities the resources are fairly limited and I don't I don't at this point know of any trust that's actually borrowed against the resources Can you say again what the ARPA is? I'm sorry federal federal funds through the the American good grief rescue rescue plan that came out of out of COVID yeah so some still have some of those yeah yeah yeah and I think that those funds are I think it's they have to be allocated by I think it's the end of this year so they're they're trying to trying to get them allocated and there may be towns that have used have transferred ARPA funds to their trust I don't know of any off hand and I think Nate wants to respond to that good Nate Hi I was gonna say Gaston in the by-law it says you know trust assets as collateral or to mortgage again so it's not you know any town property it's what is under trust control I guess it would have to be a side deal and and that could happen you know the the trust can enter into contracts right yeah yeah yeah I mean so like the CPA committee in town often borrows against this future revenue right so there's a lot of debt service if the trust were had a steadier stream of income you know it could borrow against future earnings but you know like Shelley said it's it's a little risky if you don't know cash flow and so you know I think there's other ways the trust can facilitate something if that's necessary so you know the trust works closely with the town and we could you know work with a developer or other nonprofits to do you know to facilitate something I would I really wouldn't think the trust would want to have have that kind of you know borrow itself to the max and then have trouble paying it or yeah well I mean I'm thinking collect right collateral to back on there to give backing as opposed to producing money thank you but I think it speaks to the importance of the trust having a strong relationship with the CPC because if there is something that comes up that the trust is interested in it could be beneficial then to you could potentially use CPA funds in that way and if you have a strong relationship between the boars and the trust could help kind of facilitate that kind of an investment perhaps of CPA funds Carol I was this was this was something that John Hornick said once but if the if the real estate transfers free were to go through so that we so the trust had kind of a regular you wouldn't know how much it was but after some years of of history we would have some kind of regular revenue stream then you might actually be able to use that to do some big project but you know borrow against that stream right now I wouldn't I wouldn't know you know there's nothing there's nothing you can count on really so yeah so it gets it goes back to the question that I sort of had and I think I clarified a little bit more of my own mind but I think it's part of the process we're probably going to go through in terms of you talked about our niche you know what is the the niche that you know this trust can have and thinking about the resources we have that includes we as board members who are volunteers as well as the assets that we have I mean I think you know part of our major role that we play is a catalyst role keeping affordable housing on the radar and on agendas for the town and town council and really constantly thinking about opportunities or creating opportunities or how you know we talked about pipelines to get things in the pipeline to get them moving so I think you know that's part of our role that I think you know we play but I still I think it's actually not a and I'm sort of stream of consciousness so excuse me for that but I think you know having real close relationship with the town and town council knowing there you know their housing plan is really important to know how to maximize you know where we can push development of either home ownership or rentals by working with the town that can actually make it happen more so that we can be it with working with the developers or getting we can write an RFP but generally the town is the one that posts it and also pays attention to procurement in a lot of the infrastructure that now we're having help with with Greg with and Nate has provided a lot of help with there's a lot of infrastructure when we're not an agency we don't have you know we don't have operational and management infrastructure we have thinking power infrastructure we have a lot of advocacy we have a lot of you know interest so for me it sort of clarifies that you know we have a good relationship with both the town and the town council and the CPA and I think clarifying that making it more I think clear in meeting with them and talking about this might be helpful for us in the future so I'm sorry that's a stream of consciousness but it really helped me clarify that what what I think our role is yeah and and I know that I hadn't both answered your question earlier and and I maybe want at this point either but you know the relationship between trusts and town staff and other boards is of course different in every community and part of what your current mission does it reminds people that you are municipal board you're a part of the community you're not a separate silo and so you really should see your role as helping to implement some of the town's goals or housing goals and that's why we'll be looking at what exists what your existing kind of goals are in the community as we're trying to identify goals for the trust it shouldn't be outside of it it should really be in partnership and it should be there should be open communication so that people there's kind of agreement about what the trust is going to be focusing on I think that builds your credibility and the significance of your the importance of your group but then also to make it practical because you're volunteers so and I know that the needs are great and I know that we can feel really because people are suffering we can feel really impatient but don't forget to celebrate and feel good about the wins that you have had the work that you have put in because you've had some really good developments and your trust has been engaged in some really good developments so don't don't forget to kind of celebrate what you have done and as you find ways to do more thank you Gaston thank you I'm wondering if you could kind of issue spot yellow or kind of red flags associated with affordable dwelling units or any experience you've seen in the commonwealth with trust getting involved in somehow promoting their development to me some of the biggest concerns that I have with some trust is that there's particularly smaller communities there's this interest in supporting really small affordable housing developments particularly wanting to turn existing small developments like say a 10 unit apartment building into affordable housing and I am always cautioning communities because the owners of those developments typically don't know affordable housing they don't understand the de-restriction they don't understand the implications in terms of refinancing when you have restrictions on the units they don't understand income qualifying households like they just the world of affordable housing is really complex and so I try so I worry a lot with trust that want to do that kind of housing affordable housing development because it's actually really difficult it's much easier to work directly with developers who know affordable housing who have experience in affordable housing and that's for-profit developers as well as non-profit developers so that would just be one of my cautions is that it seems like an easy fix or win but it's actually really complicated because of all the laws fair housing laws and just the laws that govern deed restrictions so that would be one kind of from affordable housing and then two and I think Carol was kind of getting into this we would never suggest that a trust actually be the developer or try to manage affordable housing and we do have a trust the Western trust decided to be the developer to redevelop small municipal buildings one or two small municipal buildings and MHP warned against that because of just how volunteers managing that is really intense and it's very expensive because it's a municipal project then under procurement so we would never suggest that you should be the developer but that you partner with developers that have experience does that get a little bit of what you're what you're kind of asking yeah yeah so I mean any any structure that that could work has really got to be built around the the deed restriction issues and you really want to work with people who are either either it's a smaller scale developer that's hired an affordable housing development consultant to help them or a developer that's already that already has experience you want you want it to be done well you don't want there to be any issues or mistakes because you're using public resources you don't want anyone in the community to get cynical around it like you want your projects to be done well Carol something that you said reminded me we have an we have inclusionary zoning here and so there have been projects developed with inclusionary zoning requirements and I was wondering if you have any experience we're trying to figure out for ourselves is this working I mean are there are they being used what's happening to them and for the same reason that you're just talking about those people probably don't know affordable housing and requirements but they have five units among a bunch of things that they're supposed to do as affordable housing and I just wondered if you guys had had any experience or thoughts or anything about how effective that actually turns out to be over time yeah so in some communities when it's really small developments inclusionary developments that then that's where and I know that some people really react they don't want to hear this but with really small developments it might make sense just to have an ill of payment because of that exact issue that if you have five units and only one's affordable that the management of that can be really difficult when you get to be a bigger developments where there's more then it's might be more feasible but in some communities they might have if it's rental they might have a they might help they might build some capacity in the community have a like a ready rentered list that developers can draw from or the community might help with if it's a home ownership unit selling it but there can be a lot of concerns if it's if it's five or six units that are home ownership and only one's affordable just the challenge of how that's managed long term when the when it's the unit sold like you just want to be thinking through having some perhaps having some kind of town capacity to support that to make sure that the units stay affordable that there's monitoring going on and so it's just why the smaller scale programs can be challenging there can be a place for them but it can be challenging and so I I do think that as you're thinking your inclusionary zoning to maybe think through if you don't already have that kind of support how can you build that if you want to continue with that kind of program the things we have are not that small but there's maybe like 30 units and five of them are affordable or I don't know the exact numbers but they're they're still a small a minority like what is it 10% I can't remember the percentage it's a low percentage of the total number of units that are affordable and that's an interesting thought that the community should develop some kind of support to help those help those those units be able to be happen the way that they should or I don't know if you've heard of in the in Eastern Massachusetts there are a few different regional housing services offices that were multiple communities pay into the regional office that then provides services like monitoring and resale of affordable units and so you basically it's like you're contracting with the office so communities based on the number of units that each community has that need to be monitored then communities have a contract with the office and then they contribute a certain amount every year but there are about three or four of these now in Eastern mass and that could potentially be an offer a kind of a model for several of your communities that might want to so that you're not reinventing the wheel that one office is providing those kinds of services to multiple communities that could be something that you consider thank you Greg yeah I mean I had one now I have a set I have one A2 or A1 because it's riffing off of Carol here is anybody doing like buy down or anything like that of of like like inclusionary like 80% unit say or or yeah or maybe could you point us toward like somebody who's doing a renter ready list that that that kind of thing yeah so I can I can send you so I'm going to send information about the regional housing the regional housing service office I always forget what the acronym is but I'll send some information on that I'll send some on the the ready renter list that usually I think that that usually is I think that HLC provides kind of some guidance of their expectation about how those are run because they have to be kind of refreshed every year or two so there's kind of a process they gotta meet the marketing requirements you know the fair housing market requirements presumably exactly so I'll give you some of that information as well as the regional housing offices information what was the other thing that you'd asked about yeah you know and then I hear you on the sort of cautionary around like partnering with you know mom and pop owners you know like you know of you know of your smaller buildings who've been you know sitting on it for 25 years I'm curious though you know is there any you know are there any trust or any examples of deals where where trust are involved outside of the lie attack world you know like do you see most of the the projects really are kind of in the sort of center you know around like student tax credit stuff so we have some trust that like in Medfield they have part of the role of the trust is actually to support developments that include affordable housing so like 40 B kind of developments chapter 40 B developments that include affordable housing where they're not contributing any cash but the trust is engaged in helping with the community process and advocating for the developments in front of town boards to help with the permitting process so that that's that's a possibility that some trust are engaged in where it's they're not contributing cash it's not lie tech but it is contributing some affordable housing there is the possibility in one community it was a redevelopment of a historic site in Easton and the shovel shovel shop the shovel works whatever that development is called but they wanted deeper affordability than the eight it was 40 B under 40 B but they wanted the 50% am I affordability because under 40 B it's either 25% affordable at 80% of the area median income or 20% affordable at I'm pretty sure it's 50% of am I and they wanted the deeper affordability but financially particular with the historic site like it can be and depending on the the market the numbers may not work out so they contributed some funds to get the deeper affordability to get it down to 50 because they wanted deeper affordability so that is a role that the trust could play with funding is to with the development to contribute additional funds to get deeper affordability if it doesn't work on its own even under just chapter 40 B so there are other ways that the trust could be engaged outside of lie tech developments thank you and it's not that a developer a smaller scale owner of an apartment building couldn't it's just that a lot of them just don't understand and a big thing is if they needed to refinance and take out cash for capital improvements they just it wouldn't have the same value and they might not understand that so it's it just can be I think really challenge a challenging way to try to add just setting up huge you know masses down the line basically possibly yeah yeah it'd be better to help fund a different developer like a valley CDC or a different developer to buy it outright because they understand sure how it works Nate yeah I mean Greg and I mentioned this you know kind of scale of housing we talk in the office I think it's important because you know valley did their strategic planning their visioning a number years ago and a lot of communities were there and they said they'd love to see 12 to 20 unit developments right that's kind of the scale that might be appropriate not always you know the 50 unit building that is the tax credit program sweet spot you know maybe sometimes it's up to 70 whatever it is but you know the cost per unit subsidy that is greater because it doesn't have you know these other subsidizing programs but it might be the what's appropriate so in Amherst we have main street housing you know down on main street it was a kind of a pilot project between the town valley and the housing authority it's 11 units it's often used as a great example of a good massing you know nice design porches townhouse style but you know you know it's something that I think it's a really good question and that's something that the trust could consider like what is you know as we try to narrow our goals and our focus you know what is something that the trust would want to do because if we find something like that it you know it might be hard to find a developer or to find subsidy for it even if it's something that might be really kind of appropriate in certain parts of town and so you know what we are seeing you know our bigger developments just because that's where the how the funding gets brought to it you know so I yeah I just think it is interesting you know we just the trust just voted I don't know that just last month of two months ago an additional funding for we have the Amherst Community Land Trust you know that does the ground lease with units and they're trying to do a home buyer program and they've had trouble given the cost of property in town and they're trying to raise $250,000 to subsidize one unit of home ownership and they have you know CPA dollars for it and the trust voted some money they think they have a buyer to you know finalize their last unit but you know it's a it's a lot of dollars per unit and so I think it's something to consider you know we talked about what can the trust do if it didn't have money you know is it advocacy is it certain partnerships and so you know I think I think as we move forward I think it's something important for the trust to consider okay you know what are how how could we help with the town is it identifying other priorities we work with council and the you know the community resources committee and the planning board you know there could be a few things that the trust does if it's not outlaying funds but fun and to kind of speak to what you a little bit what you're saying is from a developer perspective if the developer is working on a 60 unit development and also a 10 unit development it's not that the 60 unit development is six times the work it's a similar kind of work a similar amount of work whether it's 60 or 10 units you just have fewer units to spread the cost over which is why it's more expensive per unit with small development so it's just something to keep in mind that it's it's a lot of work for a developer to do just 10 units I don't see any more hands up Carol I think Carol just put her hand up sorry Shelly if you need to go just let me know oh you're mute Carol Hey I tried to unmute myself when I muted myself I just sad this have to throw out my thing that I frequently say in the sort of situation which is one of the things we need to do is figure out better ways to do this stuff so it doesn't have to cost more to build less it just it's it's crazy all of the ways to do what we're trying to do somewhere in the back of our heads I know we can't fix it in 10 minutes but somewhere in the back of all of our heads we need to keep the idea that this isn't this is nutty that it costs this much to build affordable housing how can we somehow work on changing the whole thing so that we can get more of what we want thank you for listening so it looks like Nate has a response to that no it's it's actually a question I mean Shelley I don't know if you've seen it you know sometimes staff talks about it you know a private developer could build a unit for bigger and a lot cheaper than you know a non-profit developer that goes to like the tax credit program and so have you ever seen any trust or communities that will actually just work with a private developer in a way that buys down units that are developed privately so you know for instance we could hire our local developer does a subdivision builds 13 units you know at 300,000 a unit which is half the cost of what it says to build an affordable unit and so essentially we could subsidize those 13 housing units at a rate that would probably be you know less per just as much as a less per unit than if we were subsidizing a bigger development that gets tax credits and other things and so have you seen any trust kind of approach it that way to Carol's point it's a different it's a totally different way you know not actually finding an affordable housing developer you're finding a market rate developer who can develop units cheaper and then you're subsidizing units that way have you seen anything like that I don't think I've seen trust engage with that you could try it of course Lytec is the key funding source from affordable housing in this country and the cost is there's a lot of overhead and admin costs to to Lytec so that drives up the cost as well I don't know if any trust has done that thanks yeah I mean I agree I feel like when we hear like oh it's $600,000 to build the unit it's it's scary I mean that's you know that's what we've been hearing with some of the recent affordable housing projects that's that's a lot of money for for one unit I mean Cambridge Boston New York it's very very expensive yeah yep okay I don't see any hands up including we have one attendee I don't see any questions from our one attendee so I think we can let you go Shelley so we're meeting in person on the 30th 30th yep at five o'clock and the we'll be doing a little bit of prep work for that and yeah I'm looking forward to seeing you all in person and we'll start digging into some of what you've already done and some of what you may want to focus on moving forward we're very excited to be working with you so just to sort of clarify what you just mentioned for all the trust members Shelley and Greg are working very closely with Carol and me in terms of identifying documents to read before we meet and Greg is going to prioritize in terms of what you absolutely need to read and some background documents if you have more time to read as part of that we have actually looked at the strategic plan our prior strategic plan and looked and identified what we've actually achieved during that time what's yet to achieve so we're going to share that with you as well because I always think it's really important to know what we've accomplished and what's left to accomplish if we want to include that as part of our action plan so that's all going to come including an agenda to prepare all of us for the January 30th in-person meeting we have yet to identify a place more than likely it may be Town Hall or the Bank Center so easily accessible because that'll be important but it will be at five o'clock and we we I want to openly acknowledge and apologize that Gaston is going to probably be calling in because it's going to be a challenge on that day so we're also making arrangements to have a Zoom link for Gaston to make sure that he will be able to participate but we will get the materials out early enough that if anybody wants to prepare comments and if they don't think they'll be there or they can have if they may have audio issues we'll have that all prepared and Carol and I are also and Greg are also willing to meet with people prior and also afterwards as well so we're very excited about this process and we're hoping that our last vacancy will be filled by then so we can have all of us participate and feel included and have all of our voices heard because this is going to be sort of our guide for the next uh you know next year to three years so I think that'll be really important so thank you Shelly for working with us to do that and MHP will cover pizza and drink so there'll be some food for you oh wow that's great thank you so I'll just and anybody if you have any dietary issues or or needs is just let Carol and me know and we'll work with Shelly on that great okay well thank you so very very much thank you so much nice to see everyone nice to see you as well take care it was great thanks see you next time have a good night you too all right so next is we actually have one person in the public but it's open for public comments so any public comments I don't see thank you George for attending I don't see your hand up so I'm going to assume there are no public comments okay any items not in anticipated within 48 hours I'd like to offer that that we didn't prepare Nate or Dave to present an update on on the town but I think Nate if you want to share what the CPA is going to recommend for the town in terms of the town's proposal for affordable housing that would be useful and also I don't know Dave just wants to mention we're how we're going to go forward with with the VFW sort of engaging the community around the VFW design plans sure yeah I guess I have another update or two you know speaking of inclusionary zoning units there's three down on Main Street the center east commons and so those are you know being marketed and you know all the paperwork is getting done get those the restriction you know reported and on the SHI and then there's 11 units at 11 East Pleasant Street the new building downtown there's 11 affordable units there and those are also under you know I think the marketing period has begun and then those will be on the subsidized housing inventory so that's something that's happening and it does take a little work with staff and the developers it's a learning curve you know before COVID John had approached wayfinders and asked them if they would be kind of this regional entity to have an applicant pool and they they were interested they did say you know there'd be fees and you know we were trying to aggregate a number of communities and it didn't it didn't work out but it's something that we talk about sometimes so that you know when these developments come along you know we could have a pool of applicants ready and it's not like you know a developer is having to do something all over again they're not necessarily reinventing the wheel but it is a lot of work individually so anyways those two are happening and then I was gonna say just quickly wayfinders you know they're hoping to submit their you know there's kind of a two-step process for a comprehensive permit one is an initial project eligibility letter and then that's something that says the site is generally feasible the project is generally you know financeable and there's a 30 come 30 day comment period by the municipality and then that goes to the subsidizing agency and they review everything and then they respond and say that yes you can move forward with your comprehensive permit anyways the PEL phase they're hoping to submit next month and then we're hoping to have kind of a public meeting form on that in March and you know sometimes it takes even after the 30 day commentary it might take that state or subsidizing agency months to get back to review it all and say it can then apply to a as a comprehensive permit the hope is that it would get back and they would apply in July you know or this summer for their comprehensive permit and the permit would be issued this fall so anyways that's something that will be happening you know spring summer fall and it's you know it's they're moving it along so that's really it's really nice and then Erica to your point the CPA I think the town have reduced this as to 150,000 and so you know the CPA committee you know for everyone there's it's getting really competitive and so the town usually has 1.5 to 2 million dollars there's debt service but and in the last few years there's anywhere from you know 3 to 5 million dollars requested and they really can't fund all of it so the CPA committee really really does a a diligent process and they try to fund as much as they can and sometimes it means you know reducing budgets but trying to fund something to make it manageable and so you know the town and the trust are both receiving money that they support affordable housing and you know I think it was a really good kind of compromise and solution that they had so the town has some funding and it was for specific properties you know the VFW there's the South Amherst campus there's a town owned property on strong street and it could go say toward Hickory Ridge and so you know that that funding is you know can be applied to those properties and projects and I don't know if Dave's available or not maybe not but we we are I think starting the process of bringing community members together to talk about the VFW design I believe the town has been working to get an architect oh Dave go ahead see you back when you're oh hi I I'm Erica can you see me yes I've been here most of the time just had my camera off but no I just want to say I really enjoyed the presentation that was fantastic and I learned a lot and yeah some really creative things going on all over the state before I talk about the VFW I just want to say I mean you know to me one of the key takeaways was you know for all of us to set you know goals what are our realistic achievable you know focus goals and we all want to do so many things but you know the presentation was very clear limited you know we all have limited time energy and most importantly funding so setting those goals and and you know your plan and the the council's plan how does that how do they mesh together and what do we want to focus on in the next three to five years because we can't do it all we love to rental home ownership you name it but yeah so I'm looking forward to that and measurable measurable goals right that's fantastic in terms of EFW Erica started to say yeah so we are we do intend to bring on an architect here very shortly hopefully in the next I'm going to say six to seven weeks for kind of a small short short-term contract to work with you all and staff and the community including Craig's Doors and any anyone who wants to participate in this in this process to kind of do some visioning around the site of the the VFW we have completed the our due diligence on the old building looking at you know hazardous materials in the building that has all been assessed we know what's in the building and we know we're we're very shortly I believe going to put out the bid for a demolition of the building our goal is to you know clean that site clear that site and make it as attractive to a potential developer partner as possible so we're looking at a couple of public forums meetings where we bring together you know folks like Valley CDC wayfinders potential partners including Craig's Doors you all and the community to do some visioning around that site looking specifically of course at a shelter on the first floor and you know I don't want to pre re-suppose that I know what what we all will come up with but what has been talked about is a shelter service provider space on the first floor and then permanent supportive housing on a number of floors above that to be determined how how much density we can achieve there so that's really the goal and to have that all done you know in the next 60 days would be Michael 45 to 60 days so and then we're you know ready to to work with you all to put out a formal RFP for for the site and so exciting very exciting thank you Dave we're looking forward to starting off and doing that with you so very exciting to do that okay any questions about any of the updates that that Nate and Dave have provided or any comments okay none seeing none any announcements I Nate just made an announcement about the inclusionary zoning units that's one Nate do you want to you've got off mute so I was wondering if you you're going to say something no no no I'm okay okay I sent out a webinar for next oh go ahead I'm sorry was that I'm just going to say Rob's got his hand up oh sorry thank you Rob go ahead thank you Carol yeah I just wanted to announce that the amount that that you committed to Amherst County Land Trust last time got us over the hop our buyer did make an offer that was accepted was just in the last few days closing is scheduled for February 23rd so it really helped yahoo thank you so much Rob yeah really that is really really great news thank you so Nate Jim will be in touch I hadn't heard so that's that's really good news very good news okay so I sent out or Nate shared the webinar housing homelessness and health the webinar is going to be next Wednesday the 17th I've registered so I can try to take notes of people can't make it hoping that it's going to be recorded and if it is then I will send out the link often for the people who participate they often either send slides out or they send a link out as part of the eval so hopefully you will be able to make it's 330 on a Wednesday and I know many people work but if not I will try to take some notes and then share it it looks like it's actually a three-part series and I this is probably the first so hopefully I'll be able to make the other two as well but I think that'll help us make the case I think education is one of the areas that we all agree that we could do without funding so that might help in better educating the community about why it's so important to have housing the connection with health and eliminating homelessness so any other announcements well I just Nate also sent out a thing about an in-person three-day what is it housing and justice or something three-day thing in Springfield somewhere coming up in April that has a registration fee so it's both an announcement I know Nate sent it out to all of us but the other thing I was Nate if somebody goes to that and pays for it will the town reimburse a trust member for going to something like that yeah we could either pay for it beforehand and if you want to seek reimbursement I would just say you know we have to you have to keep invoices and registration confirmations and things but we can reimburse as well yeah so I I don't know I think that looked pretty cool I haven't quite made up my mind if I can do it or not but and and if somebody does want to do it we can get reimbursed by the town so that's my announcement thank you Carol thank you for that reminder as well all right um just possible future agenda items I know we've had this on the agenda for a while I actually reached out to again Michelle and now Jennifer moistin to see if anybody from the African heritage reparation assembly would be willing to come and speak to us about the recommendations I've heard nothing if anybody has any clues of how to get in touch personally with either of them or any of the members who might want to come talk to us I think it would be worth having this conversation also in terms of our planning and our future planning so hopefully someone will get back to me I may just visit Jennifer and check in with her personally versus using emails since I've not gotten any responses I can try and also put a bug in here but I could also reach out to Shavas if thank you thank you Allegra that I think that would be very helpful all right and upcoming meetings so as we said before January 30th will be our in-person meeting which will be our kickoff for our we're calling it our strategic planning Shelly's calling it action plan because she's clear that a strategic plan is much more comprehensive is going to make take more human power than she's able to provide but it will be our plan for our next you know few years ahead we are still looking for a location it will be in person and as Shelly said we will provide refreshments and if anybody has any particular allergies or candy pizza or has gluten-free needs just let me know to make sure that everybody has something that they can nibble on and Gaston we'll save you something so when we see you we'll bring to you all right sounds good I'll bring cookies and some vegan cupcakes and then our next regular meeting will be February 8th at 7pm via zoom so before we're actually going in early but before we do let me just ask any comments last comments announcements yeah just the in-person meeting will probably likely be in the town room in town hall just because it's we have the equipment so we can either video or phone in Gaston so you know the other meeting rooms in the bank center would be difficult to actually have a conference call we do have a conference call stations I think we can have IT help set up we would put tables in the middle of the room so I don't have to sit at the council seats and then it can be something where you know it's a nice setting and we can all hear each other so you know that's probably what it'll be and we you know we've confirmed that it's available so you know unless right Greg I mean that's kind of where we're leaning I think it sounds good that's let's confirm it yeah so everyone knows that that's going to be it's going to be the town room and if it's good for the audio that's that's really important so okay great and as we said before Greg is going to send out the materials we're still solidifying the agenda and then we'll have that available way before so everyone could prepare for that meeting so I think the head carol all I want to do is thank you for doing this whole meeting by yourself because I messed up my back and I kind of sort of not I'm all here kind of but I'm really grateful to Erica for having run the meeting so thank you very much very simple very easy we're all we're all here as leaders so I want to thank all of you for your commitment and for being here this evening I think it was very insightful and it's really the beginning of our process of creating this action plan that I think will be so important for the next few years so hope everybody stays safe stays well or recovers a speedy recovery and we'll see you on January 30th and we'll get to meet Corinne our our newest trust trustee so have a nice evening so I'm going to adjourn at 847 the trust meeting thank you thank you very much good night thanks all
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Sat. 11/6/21 - Jaspy’s Hit Packs - 15 Spots - *RANDOM HIT* #5
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2021-11-06T23:26:00
2024-04-24T00:06:29
884
3kRfUyDsi-g
What's up everybody Jason from jazzy from jazzy's case breaks calm We just sold out another jazzy's hip hacks this time It's a 15 spot break today on this Saturday, and it's a random hip break number five So again guys the way this works is first We're gonna click the dice roller randomize the 15 customer names from David down to Brian and the 15 numbers 1 through 15 And whatever number you match up with is what pack number you get again Same thing as yesterday guys is pretty almost similar instead of selling 20 spots at 100. We sold 15 at 150 so less spots and then again a little prior price value if you do the math is only about like $200 more than yesterday's Total price so had a little bit more to work with so the floor and this is around 70 75 the ceiling is a much higher This one's around 360 375 and like I said a lot of the hits are Over a hundred bucks and like I said about four or five of them are over 150 and as high as 360 So some pretty nice stuff. I did my best to try to mix in all the sports so Again, we can run back number six. It's on the website. So let's try it out guys. So here's the dice roller Here's the customer names again, and the numbers. Let's click dice roll and we got ourselves a Four and a four eight the hard way. Good luck One two Three four Five six seven eight Eight times Next over at the top down a breath There you go eight times eight times one two three four five six seven eight Eight times eight times three down to 15 All right, so next over you got pack three Matt and with pack one next over with eight Chris with five Matt with 13 Patrick Evans with nine Brian last by Mojo with six Matt with 12 Chris Butler with two David with four Robert with 10 Kenneth with seven Matt with 11 David with 14 and Brad with 15 So again, we'll actually go by customer name first So I'll give you guys a quick 30 seconds a glance at your numbers And then what I'm gonna also do is print out the labels for this so that way It's already ready to roll for the shipping team. They're just gonna open the box It's already labeled all I gotta do is sort it out into your customer name tubs and then ship it out So quick quick break and again guys, I did post up another one So if you guys want to run it back, we definitely can we did four of those yesterday at a hundred dollar price point This is 150, but there's 15 spots instead of 20. So, you know something We can do again if you guys want Today's the 6th Cool All right, so Brad we're gonna start off with you at 15. So 15 There's 15. Good luck, buddy. Oh This is one of the nice top hits here. This was like 225 How about a Kyler Murray that is a 2019 pinini select rookie snapshots silver prism, and it's a PSA nine Oh Sorry PSA 10. Sorry. I don't know. I said nine PSA 10. There you go. Very very nice Kyler Murray, there you go. Very nice Brian last problem. Oh, do you have pack six pack six How about a little kevin porter jr. That is a red white and blue PSA 10 little kpj Very nice. He's a baller PJ Thank you, sir Chris you have pack two Nice. How about a little justin herbert 2020 mosaic nfl debut PSA 10 Little herby rookie That's a PSA 10 Herby playing night eagles this weekend Chris with pack five Oh, how about a little tops now rookie autograph? Cody bellinger two out of 49 And of course that is from back 2017 a little tops now on card two out of 49 rookie of cody bellinger I'm stuff a good playoff run as well David you're up next you have four and 14 One of the biggest hits guys. How about a 2019 core king's fresh paint on card ruby? autograph PSA 10 tyler hero 31 out of 99 That is a sweet hit right there Very tough to grade these two because the corners are always chipped very thin card stock very nice on card Tyler hero rookie from court kings numbered to 99 and it's a PSA 10 congrats, man and 14 And I just have a little jammer rant that is a prism rookie PSA nine Very nice. This one definitely paid for a couple packs right there There's still some other nice hits out there as well guys Kenneth with seven Seven Ooh, very nice. How about a little a rod clearly authentic on card numbered six out of 10 And again the card design is inside the magnetic. It's just little Sticker being to cut off right there, but the card and the should be just fine And that is six out of 10 a rod on card from clearly authentic 2019 There you go. Kenneth Matt you have the next three 13 12 and 11 13 12 11 Luca Donchich. This is pretty much money back right there 2018 panini select that is a rookie PSA nine Luca Donchich rookie not a bad one to start off 12 Ooh, very nice. That is a Nolan aeronado That is a eight out of 50 back when his rookie year ability 2013 Bowman platinum that was also well over the spot price Eight out of 50 nice three-color patch as well back in 2013 And a little Jalen Hertz light blue prism PSA nine Nice five goes far You go matt very nice times Let's move it along guys matt am you're up next pack one Pack new menu, you know little anthony rizzo 18 out of 25 little blue color match cubs from five star baseball from 2019 All right next over with three and eight. Good luck buddy three Eight What do we got here? a little debo samuel 2019 panini in case rookie endorsements ruby two out of nine And that graded a bgs 910 debo samuel 49ers fan favorite a lot of people like them Two out of nine very nice And you had three and an erin judge rookie From 2017 tops museum collection graded a nine five Little judge It's two out of nine and then a judge rookie from museum collection 2017 Thank you, nick All right you guys down to the last couple packs Patrick Evans at nine a little latty 2019 tops Short print it says oh, it's the no number. I believe no number short print. They just didn't actually say it right there No number short print nine five So if you notice that there is no number on the corner So everyone looking up that you'll see that there are no sub grades, but are graded a nine five Very nice We're a lot of junior short print And last one rob Good luck, buddy Very nice How about a rookie premier's level one from ice hockey? That is a harder heart from 1819 ice hockey So level one premiers are all out of 99 very hard to hit and uh, this was I think around 185 so very nice, man Harder heart for the flyers. Remember they didn't create ice this year and most likely ever again They had to cancel it so these ice rookie premier to level ones to 99 will actually hold a lot of value Harder hard was a great rookie When he came out So there you go, buddy very nice Oh, well there you go guys all in all pretty solid Again, um, I did create another one if you guys want to run it back Put some solid names solid hits and again Always fun to do some of these so like I said Uh, the ceiling was that tally hero The snow learn auto was like 200 plus as well But a lot of these tips are closer to 100 a little over a little under And uh, like I said lows it was like 70 75 a very nice one guys really appreciate it So if you guys do want to run it back, we do have it on the website again If you refresh the page, you'll see that it's at 15 laugh number six jazby's case breaks dot com Now again, there's something else you guys want to do the next closest break was this one here down to four left If anybody wants to get diamond icons going, uh, you got a one two three four five six seven 18 rmb for 86 99 Uh in a one box break a diamond icon. So appreciate it guys jazby's case breaks dot com
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2023-12-30T07:13:46
2024-04-24T00:04:30
28,470
3kcpdLqOQso
So, how you do that is you click that in-between right there, double click that, there you go, and then you can do that a VC, so now you're going to want to print it. So when you do that, always put it on portrait, and then see where it says headers and putters? Click that and hit workbook type. And then just hit work. Is that okay? Yeah, top, top, yeah. Next, where is the next? View. Okay, yep. Cool, so how can I just compare the sheet that I just printed to the one, so I make sure that I didn't like, I mean I couldn't have watched anything, I went and watched it. I'll show you how to do that. Now, for the labels, what you do is you go to V, and you do it for V, so that the actual fires are at the alphabetical order. Then you go to file, download, and then Microsoft Excel. And it's going to go right there. And go over here to Dymo. Dymo! File. Okay. Import and print. You hit the new. You click this right here. And then you click what you just did. You hit next. And then type in that right there. Type in what? That. No, it won't let you copy it. Okay, and then take column two and put it in the middle. So drag it from where it says field two. Put it in the middle. Yeah, perfect. And then field one on the bottom. Perfect. And then hit next. And then unclog that. And paper. And then you can fly out there. You did it. So where did the other one come from? Right, I got one. So what you guys do now is sign your name and we'll top it up here initially. We'll top it up. I like it. Well, I'm gonna suck a bit. I got a marina on this one. That ain't boring. Yeah, that's not gonna be good. I don't like it. I can't do that one right now. Well, maybe we'll do it one later. What's up, Jay? What up, Mike? All right, guys. How's it going, everybody? At 11.23 in the morning here on the Pacific, here in L.A., is the one that sold out the break. So we'll be starting right now momentarily at 3.15, guys. So five left at number two, guys, are empty football. Same grind every day, man. Same grind every day. That's right, baby. Man, you guys are a great team, man. You guys can beat Dallas for sure. The only reason why I'm not 100% sure you guys will win and I'd be very confident if you guys won, if you guys were at home. But for some reason, Dallas just puts on a magic spell on other teams and on themselves. It's like witchcraft in that fucking Jerry world, you know? So every time they play at home, they're a total, total different team. But I think for you to be a championship team, you've got to be able to win on the road, right? So that's why I don't believe in Dallas winning at all. Because there's going to be times where they might have to play on the road and then that's a big thing for them, right? So, like I said, I think you guys are a better team. You guys can definitely beat them. But because they're at home, it probably is going to go 50-50. And it might be Dallas, you know, who knows? But I'll definitely still be rooting for the Lions, man, no matter what. You guys are going to be a scary team to play regardless, whether it's at home or away. I don't really think it matters if your team is playing at home or not, honestly. I think the Lions can win on the road or at home. It doesn't really matter. Might even play better on the road, really, you know? Depending on where it's at. Yeah, let's do it, Roy. I mean, I was super dead yesterday, man. We only sold a couple spots in that. Didn't even sell the filler out. But I knew people were obviously waiting for payday today. So, yeah, guys, let's get that first filler off the board so I can knock off those spots there. Someone else, Adam Coverman, bought a full spot today. Let's get those rolling, guys. Oh, there you go. That's a good way to look at it. All right, I'm going to go grab every top loader I need, guys. I'm going to need a lot of... I already got a lot of 130s. Just got to go restock some 180s. I'll have a lot of 100s. And then we'll start this right now at 3.15, guys. In about four minutes. All right, I'll put that holiday mixer filler on the schedule. That looks like that would be breaking right now. All right, guys. Here we go, guys. Empty baseball. Pick your team number one. Got to pop off. Hopefully, we have ourselves a nice case. But again, we have plenty of it, guys. Obviously, we have cases on the website, at least up to seven. So, obviously, continue to buy your spots, buy your teams. And it should be a fun time breaking this, guys. I'll have the checklist pulled up here with me. And I will also pull it up here for you, guys. Just in case you guys need a look at the checklist yourself. There it is right there. I got it here. I'm ready to roll. There we go, guys. What's up, everybody? Jason from jayspeakspace.com. We just sold out 2023. Panini National Treasures Baseball, guys. This is a four-boss K-Spring Picker Team's number one, guys. Brandy released today on this Friday, 12-29, guys. And it's always a fan favorite. And thank you guys for selling it out straight up, guys. No fillers needed for this one here. And Jose got the raise last spot mojo, guys. So, new Panini stickers it looks like now, seals. Those little, like, hologram thing right there now. I like it, trying to get a little more protective over it, which is great. Looks like a black box this year. I like it. I like it. Never bad getting a black box right there. Ooh, that looks nice. There you go. I missed the old wooden boxes, but... Whoa! Look how fat this mama is. Jesus Christ. What's going on here? Either a booklet or some crazy memorabilia we're about to see. Oh, my God. There's a booklet right on the top. That's not backwards, is it? No, it's not backwards. All right. Gert is good. Right, for sure. Yeah, Gert. All right, first one we got is a Tamar Johnson. 93 out of 99 for the Pirates going to Luca. And it is a booklet autograph of Tamar Johnson. There we go. Good way to start off there for the Pirates. We got a nice thick patch here for Jack Leiter to 25. And that is for the Texas Rangers going to Justin. We have a 5 out of 5 Francisco Alvarez patch for the New York Mets going to Roy. Roy, you're on the board, buddy. And we got ourselves a Willie Cam. 26 out of 99. That looks like Chicago, but Chicago what? Remember, anybody remember Willie Cam? Willie Cam is a Chicago White Sox. Hall of Fame materials it looks like. No, treasured stats. Yeah, Chicago White Sox. And that's White Sox going to Lewis. And shipping team. All right, last one, then we should get to some patch autographs. I have a little L.A. to that cruise, a little rookie relic for Cincinnati. That's number to 49. That's for the Reds going to Ryan. All right, here we go, guys. Some patch autographs to start us off. First one we got is a Ricky Tiedemann to 99. Nice signature, though. That looks like a J and a J. Is that even his autograph? And that is Toronto going to Jeff Lefkoe. Then we got out of 10. Well, there's two. Out of 10, Gavin Williams. Cleveland with that one. Guardians going to Walter. Then we have he added 25. He has a top prospect there for the Pirates. Pirates having a good box so far, Luca. A little Andy Rodriguez for Pittsburgh. Another one for the Pirates. And last one here is a patch autograph. Raffella for Boston to 99. There was one box right there, guys. We're going to have this crazy, fat books now. Whoa. I think they're going to start putting the booklets on the top now. Oh, that makes sense, Rebel. Dang, some big cards right there. So looks like the books are now going to be right on the top. Tony Gwynn. Nice, legendary materials. 40 out of 99. That's for the Padres. Padres going to DY. Then we have a Spex for St. Louis. 21 out of 99. Toppercher, Percer. Toppercer. Gary Carter there for the New York Mets. Yes, this dude is an old school guy, man. Obviously, look at this guy. Got to go way back into the Art Coast. We have a nice three-color patch there of Ethan Salas. Nice, he was a top prospect there in Bowman. Out of 25. Padres. And we have a James Woods to 99 for Washington going to Ryan. We have a Henry Davis rookie patch autograph to 99. You're either going to see a lot of prospects, Rebel, or you're going to see a lot of veterans. That's all you're really going to find. There's no more rookie really stuff here. They don't have the MLB Players Association no more. Kumar Rocker. Another nice prospect there for the Texas Rangers. Rangers is Justin to 99. And we have a Austin Wells for the New York Yankees. Little Bronx to 99. And a nice Robin Yell penmanship, which is honestly a good penmanship too, right? 9 out of 10. Brewer's going to Tristan. And last one, wow, look at this. One of one. Treasured patch autographs Kevin Parada. And that's going to go to the Mets going to Roy. Roy, you want to go on the Big Hit Express or what? Ready to roll on the Big Hit Express? All aboard. Gotcha, buddy. The Big Hit Express. All right, nice one to end right there. All right, this feels like a normal size box. Hitters Inc. America's past time to 50. Novelli Marte for Cincinnati. That's a cool one. So that's 40 out of 50. For the Cincinnati Reds. Reds is going to rhyme. We got a Jared Shuster to 25 for Atlanta. ATL going to Justin. We got a Zach Geloff for the Oakland Aids, Richard. Little P. Rose Jersey Numbers, 2 out of 14. Treasured Jersey Numbers. That's nice. Cincinnati having themselves a break so far. And we have a Mike Piazza. Wow, is that Mike Piazza when he was a San Diego Padre? Wow. When do you ever see that? DIY with that. And we got a Gavin Stone for the Dodgers. A little ace patch autograph. $10.99. Dodgers is a rhyme. And we got a Kade Horton patch autograph for the Chicago Cubs. 10 out of 10. Cubs is Charles. All aboard, man. We got Robin Ventura to 49. That's for the Chicago White Sox going to Lewis. And then we have a Jordan Lawler. Very nice. Look at those three color patches right there. Six out of 10 for the Diamondbacks going to Ryan. Ryan H. Sick one right there, man. And then we got a year two patch autograph of Bobby Whit Jr. 37 out of 49. Bobby Whit Jr. has a beautiful signature, man. And Royals going to Brett. Our last box, guys. Last box here. We got a Cincinnati Reds legendary booklet of Johnny Bench. $10.99. So there you go. Cincinnati having a good break. All right. And we got a John C. Oaks shim for Pittsburgh to 25. Nice three color patch. Pittsburgh actually having a great break. Justin Crawford to 49. Philly's going to Ryan. We got a Tommy Heinrich to 99. That should be Yankees if I'm correct. And we got a JR Richie for Atlanta to 99. Bray is going to Justin. We got a Ramos Ramirez for Pittsburgh with a Rami. And we have an on-card here for Washington. Jeremy de la Rosa to 25. Two more hits, guys. Ted Simmons for St. Louis to 49. And last but not least, a very nice hit right here, guys. How about a macho, man? Mazataka Yoshida. Beautiful. 33 out of 49. It's like a little slight little chip here in that corner. Maybe barely, but I just want to show you guys that on camera. And that's going to go to the Reds. I was going to Ryan in. That's sick, man. And there you go, guys. First case in the books. Of course, I think we can always do a lot better, but there was some nice hits right here for our first little case. If you guys want to get the second one rolling, guys, the last time I checked, it was down to five. Yeah, still have five left. Remember, if we have to, we'll probably put these in R&Bs. But, you know, just a quick recap. Some very, very nice hits here in general. Remember, a lot more veterans, a lot more prospects. But still, some really, really solid stuff. So if you guys want to get another one rolling, let's do it. There's all this there. Some solid stuff here. And then here's some of the bigger ones. The Macho Man, the Jordan Lawler, the Bobby Witt, and then the 101 Kevin Pirata. So there you go, guys. Thank you guys so much. Jaspyscasebreaks.com. All right, Jason Cage is about the Dodgers. And number two. And Louis is about the White Sox. And number five. All right, also two guys. Like I said, I'm going to take off number one right now. Number two is down to four left, guys. You know, obviously he'd love to sell that off straight up. But if you were to get stuck, you can always filler it up. But we are at four left in number two. So let's run that right back, guys. And in the meantime, I'm going to do that holiday mixer filler, guys. But some good teams are remaining in that number two, guys. Every team has some nice stuff. So if you're looking ahead in number two, you still have the Brewers who are a pretty big team, guys. They have a lot of good proxmas, guys. Jackson Chereel's a big one for them as well. Matt's, of course, hit extremely well in this first case, guys. Matt seemed like they're pretty loaded all around. Then you got the Giants and the Rays. Didn't see much for both of those teams. But again, Rays do have Junior Comanero, who's a big prospect. And the Giants, as well, have some good stuff, including a lot of older veteran stuff, too. I'm sure the Giants probably would have some, like, Will Clark and stuff like that, right? Let's see. Yeah, they got some Buster Posey stuff. Kyle Harrison, Willie Mays. Sentry Materials, Willie Mays. Wow. There's Sentry Signatures, Willie Mays out of 10. So that's pretty good, guys, actually. So Willie Mays out of 10. Matt Williams to 35. Kyle Harrison. Orlando Sapeita. Reggie Crawford is their bigger prospect, as well. Kyle Harrison. Matt Williams. Buster Posey to 10. Autographs. Kyle Harrison. Hall of Fame. Orlando Sapeita. Juan Marcial. Orlando Sapeita. Gaylord Perry. Michael Irving. Hans Lovert. Carl Hubbell. Bobby Thompson. Legendary booklet, one-on-ones, out of 10. NT Materials Signatures Buster Posey to 10. Penmanship Buster Posey to 10. Yeah, just a lot of different stuff there for the Giants, too, guys, which aren't bad. I'm going to go grab a box with Top Scrum Black, and then we'll start this break, guys. All right, guys. I'm going to post another one of these up, guys. All right, here we go. What's up, everybody? Jason here for jaspierskatespace.com. We just sold out a filler here to give away three spots in the holiday finale baseball mixture, guys. This is 2023 Top Scrum Black, one-box break, round of the teams number one, guys. And, again, first, we're going to do the break. We're randomized because our names seem to distribute the hits out. Then, at the end, we'll re-randomize only the names Top 3, get into the mixture, guys, which is about a $400 mixture, so you're paying a small fraction of the price, guys. Good luck. Let's do the break first. Got ourselves a 6 out of 5, 11 times. Good luck. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11. 11 times. Josh, down to Ryan. 11 times. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11. Pirates down to the Giants. 11 times. 11 times. All right, of course, stick to what you got, guys. No trading. I'll let you guys see your teams right now really quick for about a quick minute. So, alphabetize it. Make it look all nice. And then there's your teams right there. Nancy with the Diamondbacks all the way down to Josh with the Nationals. Now, let's do the box prep. All right, Miguel Vargas there for the Dodgers. Fernando Tautiz. And nice Peter Lanzo to 75 for the Mets. Going to Ryan H. Okay. And your hit is a... Wow. Whoa, little bit of a teaser, man. I've seen the Boros hat and I've seen the gold with Cedric Mullins. Four to 50, man. It felt like an Adler or something. Wow. Gunner. Nonetheless, still hit there for the Orioles. Going to DMACC. There you go, man. All right. Well, just again, quick little filler box now for the main giveaway. Three spots on the holiday baseball mixer, guys. Top three names get a spot each after. Two out of three, five times. Two out of three, five. One, two, three, four, five times. Five, five. Top three, guys. Oh, fuck up. Just missing out, buddy. Sorry, man. But Stephen Kendrick, you are in. Craig, you're in. And Ryan H. congratulations. Boom. Top three. Congrats. You guys are now in the big mixer here, guys. So again, I'll paste your guys' names here. And again, if you guys want to run it back, guys, we've got to do a couple of these anyways. A lot cheaper way to get in without having to spend the full amount on the mixer. But I feel like, guys, that if you don't want to take that risk and you want to buy that full spot, we've still got to sell some full spots anyway. So I'm going to give it a shot, guys. Jaspyskatesbreaks.com. All right. Well, Copperman, I know you bought one earlier, but it would have been nice to win one. And it looks like Jason K. got a spot in the next filler. So he's getting that one started. Remember, we've got to do at least like four of these. So. And then it looks like Matt G. wants to get number two rolling. Gets the raised mats and brewers. Nice. So all that leaves is the Giants, guys. Last spot mojo. One team left. And we're actually one through the Giants checklist, guys. They got a pretty decent checklist. Giants, last spot mojo. We can get number two rolling. All right, Jason K. Sold out the Giants. And then Zach got a spot in the filler for the Hollywood mixer. All right, guys. Let's keep on rocking and rolling. You guys want to look forward to number three. It is down to 11. Still a lot of nice teams to remaining. This team is the angels with 40 bucks, right? Marlins 30. You know, Blue Jays 30. And you got some bigger teams with the Cardinals who are pretty nice. All right. Dodgers still available there. Phillies. A's. So if you guys want to get the next one going, guys. All right. If I need to, guys, I'll always, I'll put them in R&B, but I feel like the way we're rolling right now this early, it's going to give a lot of momentum for later tonight. So if we can sell the first couple of them straight up and not have to do any fillers, that gives us a lot of time to do some fillers for later if need to on the next couple of pick your teams. But with that being said, let's start number two now. Here we go. Ready to rock and roll. What's up, everybody? Jason from jazzynforjaspierscasebreak.com. 2023, Panini National Treasures Baseball, four box case break, pick your teams number two just sold out. And let's rock and roll right into it, guys. So again, thank you for the fill. Last spot, Mojo's going to go to Jason K, who got the Giants. Thanks for everybody else getting in. Let's get some big hits for everybody. So we did the first case with some nice stuff. Well, like I tell people, guys, you know, we can always do better. We can always do better. So let's see what this case holds. Stuck Box Mojo is a real thing, guys. Let's go with this Stuck Box Mojo. It has like two lines across it. What does this have here, huh? What is this box hiding? Maybe a monster? Remember, the booklets have been right on the top, guys. So expect pretty much all the booklets to be right on the top. All right, first one we got to 99. Wow. That's autograph, guys. Nice. How about an L.E. De La Cruz autograph booklet for the Cincinnati Reds going to Ryan? 49 out of 99. What a hit to start us off. Congrats, Ryan. Nice to have you right there. Stuck Box Mojo. I told you, it's a real thing, man. All right, we got a retro materials to 99. Henry Davis for Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh just continues to hit, guys. Hey, there's Ryan right there, right? Nice, man. Congrats, buddy. Then we got a biography materials. Hanley Ramirez. How about that? Back when he was a Dodger. I love the way he was a Dodger. Dodger's going to Jason K. Wow, how about these little treasured stats? How about a little Babe Ruth? 14 out of 99. 393 average in 1923. The Babes. Yankee's going to Matt Smith. We got a Pernie plate, one-on-one. That looks like Dustin Padroia. And it is one-on-one Pernie plate patch. Dustin Padroia going to the Boston Red Sox and also Ryan. Very nice. Little Brady House to 99. Three-color patch and autograph for the Washington Nationals. John Gaddy. Then we have a Gavin Williams for Cleveland to 99. Cleveland Garden is going to Walter. Then we have a nice Colson Montgomery. He's the top prospect there for the Chicago White Sox. 34 out of 49. A little two-color patch and autograph. Luca, yeah, man, congrats. I mean, pirates have been popping out a lot, man. Yeah. And actually, how about more for your pirates? Little Andy Rodriguez to 49. Three-color patch and autograph. On-card as well. 41 out of 49. And last, wow, look at this. Don't look, Rex. Don't look. A one out of five Nolan Ryan. Legacy signatures. One out of five. Rangers going to Tris. What a great box. Stuck box. Stuck box is real, guys. It's a real thing. Oh, man, what's wrong? You thought all you need? What happened? That sounds like a Tommy John thing, right? Why would it be out for the whole next season already? Damn. I don't follow the pirates so deeply, so... I'm just hoping that for the pirates when Neil cruises back, man. I think that dude is a stud. All right, for Zona, Devisan de los Santos to 99. Nice little booklet autograph for Zona going to Ryan H. All right, we got a Kevin Prado for the Mets to 49. Mets is Matt G. What's up, Matt? How you doing, man? And then we got a Kyle Menzarro for Tampa Bay, six out of 10. How about another hit for Matt? Back-to-back hits. This time, Tampa Bay on the board. Okay, yeah, so I figured he'd be having a nice time with John. In fact, that's the only injury nowadays for baseball that keeps you off for, like, years, multiple years, if anything. 21 out of 25. Nolan Ryan. Then we got a Mark Pryor for the Chicago Cubs to 49. Cubbies, Michael Johnson. Then we got a Owen Murphy to 99. Three-color patch and autograph. Nick Gonzalez this time, man. Pirates, guys. 12 out of 25. Britsburg and Luca. And we got a Tony Oliva from Minnesota to 25. Minnesota Twins going to Chad. And last one. How about a Colossal Patch autograph? Two Ellies in the same case. 67 out of 99. Allie de la Cruz going to the Cincinnati Reds and Rhine. It seems like it's so far with our cases. I don't know if it's just our cases, guys. It seems like the Pirates tend to hit, man. But I think a lot of people have been saying that elsewhere. There you go, man. Two Ellies in a Cruz. All right, next one. This one feels heavy, bro. This box feels really heavy compared to the other ones. But it doesn't seem much bigger. We got a book of Carson Williams for Tampa Bay to 99. Whoa, look at that. Oh, my God. I thought that was a crazy patch, but I think it's a sock. Whoa, that's cool. I'd actually rather have a piece of the sock like this than a plain old napkin patch. That's sick. That's so funny. That's a sock. That's a nice one over at Tampa Bay. That's a top prospect there. Matt G, there you go. Zach Geloff to 49. Retro materials, Yuri Perez for Miami. Miami going to Hallmark. All right, to 99. Little Jackson for the land. Cleveland going to Walter. We got a little Griff. A little Ken Griffey Jr. out at 25 Relic, Seattle Mariners. Hopefully get some ink later. Michael Johnson with that one. We got a Clark Elliott thick pack. Dick Carter. Good Lord. To 99. Oakland going to Robert Rumpel. Then we have a Robert Moore from Milwaukee to 99. Milwaukee Brewers going to Matt G. We got a Jimmy Rollins out of 25 for the Phillies. Nick Martino. And then we got a Mick Abel to 25. Another patch autograph. This time, Phillies. Another Phillies that I should say. Are they going to just give these out every case? Our second one already, guys. The first one had a nice little patch in the background, but another year too, Bobby Witt Jr. to 99. Brett Myers with the Royals. Right? Last one here, guys. All right, to 10 for Boston. Ted Williams. That's sick right there. One out of 10. Piece of the jersey right there. And of course, yes, it's only the name and the image of Ted Williams. I've been licensed by Ted Williams. Finally in surprises. I remember Billy and her cut scene. So it says they got, it's official, but it just wasn't obtained by the Ted Williams enterprise, but it is a Ted Williams relic. Let's go to Boston. Going to Ryan. All right, we got a Jim Gilliam for Brooklyn to 25. I don't like these retros. Retros look nice. David Ortiz, big cops for Boston. And we have an Evan Carter colossal, 7 out of 25. He did extremely well throughout the playoffs, right? That was their young, young rookie there. That would be technically, I think, a rookie this upcoming season. Texas. Going to Tris. And we have a thick mama right here. Jacob Barry to 99. Some of these are just crazy thick. THIC. That's Miami with the Omar. Moises Alu for Houston to 99. What a crazy patch coming up guys. I only see a little bit of the patch, but I wish it had a little bit more color though. Crazy patch though. How about a Tink Hents? Look at that patch right there man, so sick. 10 out of 49. That is St. Louis Cardinals, which is going to Ed. We have a Marte Novelli. Oh is that his Twitter handle? At Marte Novelli? I don't know 99. So nice Novelli Marte there for Cincinnati. Cincinnati having a break. And we have a Stars and Stripes patch autograph. Marcel Mayer, 6 out of 25. Todd Prosby there for the Red Sox and Ryan Eaton in this case man. Very nice. I've got to take a picture of that one. And last hit of the break guys. It is a Mason win to 99 for the St. Louis Cardinals. Alright there you go guys. Another case in the books guys. Had some really nice ones here. Really really nice ones. Ted Williams Relic. Right there having Carter there. Novelli Marte, Tink Hents. Bobby Witt again there. Carson Williams. Obviously we've got the Eli Delacruz there. Nick Gonzalez. The Nolan Ryan out of five was really nice too. Got to take a picture of that. Rodriguez, Colson Montgomery. One-to-one printing plate. The big treasure stats in the Eli book. There you go guys. Appreciate it again guys. Number three is in the store. Let's get that to single digits. Last time I checked it was down to 11. So again if we have to R&B those we will guys. But again I feel like we can continue to sell these out straight up. Guess these breaks moving quicker guys. Appreciate it. JaspysCaseBrace.com. Nice nice. I care about the angels of number three bringing it down to 10. A little bit of time though guys. I mean like I said we're rocking and rolling with these. You know like I said if people want to grab a team do it. And if it doesn't fill or move in the next like 10-15 minutes then I'll probably put them in a random number block guys. I'll do the math right now. I don't think it'd be too expensive either. So that's kind of the good thing. So Rich got the open A's. Thank you Rich. So yeah down to nine left now guys. Alright so nine left guys. If you need the checklist guys. I can go through some teams for you guys. If you guys want just let me know in the chat. Alright guys let's get some more NT rolling guys. Just grab nine spots. In the holiday baseball mixer guys. Nine. Jesus. Alright. I don't mind doing that mixture today either two guys. So I know it's going to say that we're down to two. But just know we do have to do a couple fillers. But since we're down to two left and we can sell those two spots I can cancel a filler. But hey he wants to go this direction which we can't do it. As well guys. I'll put it right here in the description what we need to do to fill up that mixer. So basically we got to do twenty twenty three tops chrome. Black. One box RT number two. What is that twenty eight left. And we have to do plus number three. And number four. Two spots straight up. Thirty four. Hey Shams gets one in the filler twenty seven. So yeah guys if we can sell those two straight up spots right now guys. I can cancel filler number five and we don't have to do five. We just got to do two three and four. And then obviously at that point if we sell out the next three spots then I can always cancel the third filler and you know etc etc guys. But with Matt grabbing those spots really we basically sold thirteen spots straight up. Including the nine that he got. And then we've sold three spots in a filler. So basically tops chrome black number two is going to count for three tops chrome black number four is going to count for three. And then of course if we can sell these last two I can cancel the five and that accounts for another three spots there. But basically right now guys we're halfway through. We're basically halfway through. We've sold sixteen spots. Via filler slash straight up spots. So if you were thinking man I don't know if that's going to go today. I'll just wait until it sells and gets closer and I'll buy my spots. Well the time is now guys. Grab those spots now so we can get that rolling. But like I said if this doesn't move in the next maybe my four forty five will R&B number three NT four forty five ET. So if you want to grab a team guys grab it now because if not I'm going to run another block in about fifteen minutes. I'll do the math right now too to see how much that costs. That way we could get that rolling. Yeah for sure Matt thank you man yeah so that makes just going to count for three times so that gives you even more entries as well. All right Louis just bought the giant so eight left. X-Line what's going on man X-Line bought his cardinals. There we go. Seven left now guys. All right so if I did an R&B right now guys for the remaining seven teams it'd be fifty bucks. Fifty bucks so be pretty inexpensive guys we can easily do that sell it out to the next case. But like I said if you want to switch it up and want to do something else guys Matt just helped out a lot and grabbed those straight up spots in the holiday baseball makes just so secure your straight up spots guys. We still got to do some fillers guys don't get me wrong. But like I said if you were thinking of grabbing a full spot because it had a chance to go today way better odds now that it goes today guys. I don't care if it keeps me here an extra two three hours guys. That mixture is going to take me probably about like two and a half hours if not more. But I'm willing to stay if it sells out guys no matter what time it sells out. So let's get this rolling guys a lot of nice boxes in here and it'd be a fun fun riff guys 34 boxes. So again if we sell those last two straight up spots out we can cancel this fifth filler and put three more spots back in and sell those next three out. And then if we can sell number two out in post number three we only got to do two fillers really. Alright in the meantime though Matt does want to continue to break guys he got spots in cup hockey. That cup hockey now from ten is down to four left. We can switch it up and do some cup if you guys want. Jeremy Porter is looking forward to the next case where he got the Atlanta Braves. Alright guys four more minutes if not I'm going to fill her up number three guys and it's going to only be 49.99 a spot guys. Alright also two guys four left here and this cup hockey too guys. Alright guys I'm going to fill it I'm going to put this in an R&B guys you own a piece of these teams via a serial number and it should be a fun one guys. Alright guys the brewers alone were like 130 Matt's over 100 Dodgers about 100 Rays, Phillies, Marlins, Blue Jays. Some really nice teams in there guys for a little cheap little filler here guys. So there it is right there that sells out number three guys right here. If you guys want to get in on that 49.99 a spot guys you own a piece of seven teams. No I'm not going to tell any speaker. Teddy might be though. Teddy might be though. I've never disconnected a water. Oh no I've never connected a dose before. Alright guys so this is the R&B guys for NT baseball number three guys. Get this off sale at this break here. Again if that's not something you're interested in guys we do have the mixer. Two left plus 27 left in the filler. We can go do some football if you guys want pre-order to continue more prism or we can do that cup hockey as well guys that's down to four left. Two random teams in a one box break of cup hockey guys which is a really high end product. But it's up to you guys what you guys want to do. I know people still want to do some more NT guys and I do too so let's keep it rolling. So somebody wants to get the rally started on this R&B only 49.99. You own a piece of these teams if they hit we go by the serial number and didn't have to pay the full price point for let's say the brewers, the Mets. Dodgers were all 100 plus 130. Alrighty guys so like I said this R&B here sells out picketing number three of NT baseball guys. Features the brewers, Mets, Dodgers, Rays, Phillies, Barlins, Blue Jays. A lot of the lower end teams at the bottom half from the Phillies on down to the Blue Jays but again Rays 70 bucks above the spot price. Dodgers 90, Mets 100, Brewers 130. Really good prospects, really good veterans you can chase from all three of those four teams at the top. And again only 49.99 guys to get a piece of those teams via the serial number. Now like I said you guys hold the power on what we want to do tonight to continue to do tonight. Cup hockey down to four quick little break if you guys want to switch it up. And then of course if you guys want to try to continue to sell out the mixer. Two left straight up and then I can cancel a filler and then we have 27 left and filler number two guys. So I'm going to leave it up to you guys. What you guys want to do? All right Tris wants to try that cup hockey. All right guys so let's quickly do this in the meantime and then of course hopefully by the time we're done we sell some spots in the R&B. Sell out that number three, we can get that number three roll and we can R&B out number four. Continue to sell spots in the mixer. I can always post another two more cup breaks so if you guys like cup and missed out and want to get into the next one we can. What's up everybody? This is Jason here for jazzebyscasebreak.com. 21-22 upper deck the cup hockey one box break R&B teams. Number three just sold out and again you get two R&B teams per spot guys. So here we go guys here's a dice roll. We double up your names. Of course in the teams. Let's roll it. One out of five six times. One, two, three, four, five. Cab at the top. One, two, three, four, five, six. Six times six, six. Predators down to the Rangers. Cab with the Predators. Tristan with the Wild. Matt with the Avalanche and Sharks. Tristan with the Devils. Matt with the Ducks and Lightning. Tristan with the Kraken. Matt with the Blue Jackets. Kev, Canadians. Matt with the Red Wings and Flames. Tristan with the Panthers. Matt with the Vancouver Canucks. Jets. Maple Leafs. Orlos. Tristan with the Yolks. Matt with the Capitals. Blackhawks. Blues. Senators. Tristan with the Penguins. Matt with the Stars Bruins. Tristan with the Hurricanes. And you got Matt with the Knights, Kings, Flyers, Sabers. And then Tristan with the Alleners and Matt with the Rangers. Alright man, so if anybody wants to make any trades. Alright, trade winner closing guys. Nobody wants to trade. So we've got three boxes remaining guys. Top, middle, bottom. One of these feels really heavy though. I think I feel like it's the middle. One, two for the top. Three, four for the middle. Five, six for the right side. For the bottom sorry. One, two for the top. Three, four for the middle. Five, six for the bottom. So we're going to go with the middle. I trip out with these 10 sometimes. This one did feel a little heavy. Then again obviously. It's in a 10. Maybe I'm just stripping. I don't know. It deceives me sometimes. Just deceives me. Like always. First one. Little Joe Pavelski to 249. 29 out of 249. Dallas Stars. Look at this really quick. Dallas is Matt G. We have a Coal Lend for the Seattle Kraken RPA. 85 out of 249. That's cool. Seattle Kraken going to Tristan. What about a little Splendor? Alexis LaFernier. He's actually having a great season this year. That's a 5 out of 36. Ranger's going to Matt G. And that's an update actually. That's actually a rookie. Yeah, a rookie patch autograph. Nice. He was the number one overall pick in 2020, 2021. And then Bifill was number two. There you go, man. Very nice here right there. Ranger's going to Matt. Let's go with the bottom card because usually it's just a rookie base. Anton Lundell. It's a 249 for the Panthers. Want to trust them. And we have a Trio's. Nice 5 out of 10. Carter Hart, Sean Couturier, and Cloud Giroux. Nice three color patches and all in there. Flyers going to Matt G. And the last one here is nice Alex Tuck. The basics autograph. Looks like it's not numbered, but nice one there for the Buffalo Savers going to Matt G. I think he was part of the Jack Eicheltrade. I think Alex Tuck was also one of their top picks in that first year draft. For the Vegas Golden Knights. But that's going to Buffalo. All right, awesome. There you go. Nice little box here. Definitely really nice one there with that La Frenier. Got that Col Lynn. RPA. Nice stuff right there guys. I posted up another one. RPA. All right, this one's sick man. Especially now that he's playing much better. Let's take a picture of that. There's a lot of updates from 21-22 Terry. Kind of just like the way NT is and flawless sometimes. Some of these cards and other products I guess weren't really released. And I've noticed the last two years of Cup they've been adding Splendor. All right, Jeffery Goldglass gets a spot in the Holiday Mixer. So again, if we can sell just that one more straight up spot guys. I can cancel a filler. So I can cancel number five and only have to do four fillers. And we've already done one. So that means only three more to go. I can cancel this. I'll put three spots back in straight up. And then we only have to do three fillers and three spots. And again, if those three spots were to sell. Again, I can cancel another filler. Put three spots back in. So got to continue to move that guys. Again, I definitely still want to continue to do some NT guys. It'd be really nice and fun. And obviously continue to just rip and continue to rip more stuff, you know. I didn't break anything yesterday guys. So I'm full of a ton of energy today. I didn't even do one filler yesterday. Not a zip. So I just want to break as much as we can today guys. All right, Charles Wolfkill got the last straight up spot guys. In that holiday mixer guys. So it's going to show that it's at zero Charles. And like I said, obviously we still have to do a few fillers. So obviously, you know, it's not going to technically be sold out. But just to show people that are watching live. I'm going to put three spots back in and I'm going to cancel filler. So now we don't have to do number five. Only have to do three. Number two, that's on the website plus two more. And now it's got to sell three spots straight up. But again, if we sell those three, but if you sell those three spots straight up, I can always cancel filler number four and only have to do two, which is the one on the website and then the next one after that. Also two Francis. I don't think we had a mosaic basketball. I don't even know how you bought that. It must have just been hidden but not taken off the website. So I don't think that's an actual break. So I'm going to refund you your money back. Alrighty, guys. So again, $50 R&B sells out Pikachu number three of NT guys. Something we can do right now. It's been really fun ribbing NT. I'd love to do at least four of them for the original four we posted up. That'd be an awesome day. And then obviously the holiday mixture is a lot closer than what it looks like, guys, really. So far in the holiday mixer, we have sold 15 spots straight up plus three spots in a filler, meaning that we've basically already have sold 18 total spots, guys. We're more than halfway there. If we can sell those three straight up spots, that means that that would bring us down to 21 left. You just have to do three fillers. And again, that filler is already on the website number two. So that's another three spots that are tied in there. And like I said, if we can sell those three straight up spots, that brings us down only doing two fillers potentially. And I mean, we're that much closer, guys. Alright, guys. So again, let's continue to move the mixer. Let's continue to move NT, guys. Love to do at least another two more NT's tonight, guys. Jason K got the R&B party starter, guys. Alright, nine left here, guys. Alright, Jason K actually got a second one. I don't know if that was a glitch or not, but I don't think that was a glitch. Was that a glitch? No, looks he got two. There you go, eight left. I know, it was weird. It came instantly right after the first, but then I couldn't load it. And I was like, what the hell's going on here? Is that a glitch? Appreciate it, Jason. Good luck, buddy. Like I said, guys, it is a very good R&B in the sense that you're getting a piece of the Brewers. Well, again, guys, Brewers, I know are not always the most popular team, but Jackson Sherrill, guys, is supposed to be the real deal. They got some Southfair Lick in here. That was a big prospect. Robert Moore. Got some old school guys like Paul Molliter. Robin Yau. But Jackson Sherrill, guys, obviously is the name you want to look out for. He is one of the bigger prospects rookies to chase out of this. Yeah, guys, I mean, dude is legit, they say, right? I can't say that. I can't fully say that just because I don't really watch prospects too much. But I do break a lot, right? And I learned all these names, guys. I mean, that's one that keeps on popping up a lot. So getting a Jackson Sherrill would be a pretty nice one. He's part of a lot of the bigger sets. And then, of course, Southfair Lick is another bigger prospect for them, too, guys. So alone there, they're pretty solid. Metz hit a ton. Dodgers have a lot of nice stuff in here. Raids have Junior Comanero, who should be coming up next year as well. Then you've got the Phillies, Marlins, and Blue Jays in there, guys. Some teams that did hit. So eight left, guys. Eight left in this one here. Let's check it out. So Mike gets to Miami Dolphin in an NT 2019. Also gets to spot in the R&B, nice. Seven left. And then Trista gets three in the filler for the Holiday Mixer. All right, so seven left here now, guys. Seven left. We're inching closer, guys. Inching closer. Also two of the fillers now down to 24 loft here. All right, guys. So again, this is down to seven, guys. You own a piece of these teams via serial number 49.99, guys. Not too pricey at all. About four or five of these teams were double the spot price, guys. Actually almost four. Three, actually. But one of them was triple the spot price. The Metz Dodgers double for sure. They raised about 20 more bucks. And then Phillies were break even. And then you have the Marlins and Bluages at 30 bucks each. Like I said, good little R&B here, guys. You get a piece of 17, which is a good amount. Potentially get some hits out of another case of NT baseball, guys. Hey, dawg, what's up, man? I know, Stephen. Congrats, buddy. I'm happy you got in, man. All right, Tristan also gets a full spot in the Holiday Mixer. Just got us up two more plus a couple fillers, guys. But again, if we sell those two spots out, I'm going to cancel another filler. Yeah, guys, seven left in this R&B, though, man. Let's get this rolling, guys. So let's go, guys. Seven left in here, guys. Let's get this going. Let's get this rolling. We can knock this out. We can continue to sell spots in that Mixer filler and the Mixer, and then who knows, guys, we might be doing that Mixer tonight. Oh, my God. We're playing to go with this offensive tackle. Stephen Kedrick says down to six. All right, six left now, guys. Let's get this halfway, guys, at five. Six left now, guys. Let's go, guys. I see seven people have the checkout pages, guys. Four people are checking out. Over 25 people watching are on the website, guys. We have about, like, 16, 17 people on watching. Again, guys, this is the break that's moving slowly. Again, if this is not something you're interested in, guys, show me that you want to get into something else, guys. Two left there plus this filler. Again, we're going to have to do this filler no matter what, guys. But we technically don't need to do two more fillers if we don't need to, guys. If we can sell these two spots out here, guys, I can always cancel filler number four, at least, and put three more spots back in, guys. Because, like I said, realistically, guys, we are down to basically... We've basically sold 19 full spots, right? 19 full spots. Ah, don't worry, man. This might sell by tomorrow if it doesn't sell tonight, man. We're this close. We basically sold 19 full spots via either filler or straight-up spots. So we can sell those two spots. That brings us to 21, and we're only nine spots away. So that means that we do three fillers, right, including the one that's on the website, or we cancel a filler, put three more spots back in and sell it out straight up with three more spots. Vice versa. Like I said, this is closer than people think, guys. It's really close. I know it's an NT release date, but that's something we can still do today, guys. Got to sell some spots. And now this NT is down to four left now. Alexander just grabbed two spots. So four left here. And remember, guys, obviously, once we sell out that mixture, guys, it does unlock $10,000 in prizes, guys. There's going to be 10 winners. Number one's going to get a case of Bowman Draft Choice HTA, which those boxes are really expensive now. If I remember correctly, that $5,600 a box. Bowman Chrome U Breakers Delight. Those boxes were, like, what? $2,300 a box, two plus. So 12 box cases, easily a couple thousand there. So, like, draft picks number three. Number four gets $1,000 in break credit, and then five through 10 get $500 back in break credit. So some pretty good prizes right there, guys. But like I said, let's get this NT done, get it out of the way. We can start selling more teams than number four. If we have to filler it up, we can. And yeah, guys, this will make up for none of the breaking we did yesterday, guys. Alan Murdov grabbed two spots on the R&B. Thank you, buddy. R&B is now down to two left. So I'm going to start setting this up now. No problem, Matt. Thank you, buddy. I mean, you really got in a lot of these breaks done for us, man. And, you know, thankfully, I've been able to get you some cool stuff. Hopefully a lot more, man. Yeah, we're catching up big time now, guys, obviously. You know, a couple of people were out, you know, during the holidays and all the holiday schedules for the last, like, two weeks. So, you know, we were kind of a little behind here on the YouTube side, but, you know, I think we're catching up pretty fast for the most part. And I think a lot of people's stuff should be going out really soon. Yeah, basically we're already starting out from Friday's breaks. I mean, weekends don't count as sorting days, but, you know, the holiday schedule there kind of blew it up, especially when no post office picking up at all. And then we had no stream on Tuesday, so that's going to easily catch us up, guys. So if they're already sorting out, you know, Friday and Saturday, that stuff should go out by tomorrow, right? I know it's still five business days. Don't get me wrong, but the holiday schedule is a little bit less since we had a couple of days off there, right? But all these breaks from, like, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday will easily go out at some point mid-week next week, and then I think we're fully caught up and we're back on schedule. Everything's going out within two to three business days. So I appreciate it, guys. Usually, like I said, Christmas time and, you know, just the holidays in general is always a little tough because there's going to be a lot of days that we're not going to be streaming or it's a holiday, et cetera. So this kind of killed it right here, these three days here, you know, but we're catching up pretty fast now, guys. And it looks like Jeremy Port, Sport Port, what's going on, man? Just sold out the R&B, sweet. All right, awesome, guys. What's up, Kim? No problem. You have to change the subject. Yeah, unfortunately, man, it just didn't work out with Christopher, man. I don't know the exact full details on what happened, but it just wasn't working out or, you know, and unfortunately, it's just not with us anymore. I think he was having a little tough time, kind of grasping the whole breaking side of it. And I think he was also working in the store and I think some other stuff may happen over there, too, so. You know, got to look for another one, man. There's a lot of small technical details that, you know, people need to, like, learn to do this side compared to, like, doing personals on IG or even fanatics, but, you know, it just sucks. You know, I was hoping that he would work out because I definitely liked Christopher, but it just didn't work out, man. So I think in the new year, we're going to have to find someone else to try to, you know, fill in those, like, blank days, like a Sunday breaking day and other days where, like, me and Joe are not able to break, so, you know, kind of like that emergency breaker. All right, so Jason K got it started, Mike got one, Stephen Kenney got one, Alexander got two, Alan got two so sweet. Sure. As long as you're willing to work on the weekends, chef, I think that's the one thing that we've had trouble finding is people wanting to work on the weekends. We got a TV right here for you, buddy. As long as you get some on multitask, I know I've been killed with it with, like, a customer sometimes being like, ah, why is this guy not paying attention? But I'm like, bro, my team's playing, it's gotten hard, man. I mean, that's the perks of this job. Got a TV here, we got four TVs in the store floor. So yeah, you can always just listen, kind of turn it up, you know, pay attention a little bit. There you go. It's not like you're going to be away from sports. You know, we're not going to tell you to put your phone away, but at least, you know, try to fully pay attention as much as possible, especially when you're starting off, you know. Once you're like a vested veteran, like me and Joe, you know, you can kind of multitask and kind of get away with a couple of things, but... Of course, man. All right, so you guys, let's do the R&B and then I will grab the case and then we'll start the break. Oh, of course, man. I know you would. I know a lot of customers would, for sure. For sure, man. Look, man, it's a... I don't think it's such a tough job to do, obviously. Most of you guys are very knowledgeable in the hobby, so you guys will fit right in, right? But it's just a lot of small technical things in the background that people don't really understand and that makes a big difference. You know, one little mistake and then all of a sudden you can cost a break, you know, you can mess up a break. You know how it is, right? Forgetting people's names and breaks and just not copying and pasting the right names, breaks names, et cetera, so... YouTube is a lot of different... a little different from most of the other streams we do. But it's just repetition, man, honestly. Right after a while, you get used to it. All right, here we go, guys. What's up, everybody? This is Jason from jaspyscasebrakes.com. Twenty-twenty-three NT baseball four box bigotry number three sells out with this random number block. And again, guys, you own a piece of these teams via a serial number from zero to three nine. We go by the left side serial number, guys. Right? Brewers, Mets, Dodgers, Rays, Phillies, Marlins, Blue Jays. And again, guys, like I said, you own a piece of those teams if they do hit. Here's the dice roll or here's the customer names and the numbers. Let's click dice roll. Two out of two, four times. Good luck. One, two, three, four. Boom. Four times. Jason, down to Allen. And then four times. One, two, three, four. One down to nine. So, Jason, you got spot one. Of course, any live one-on-ones will go to you. Alexander with five. Jeremy Porter with three and seven. Stephen Kendrick with six. Jason K, you also have any and all redemptions, including any redemption one-on-ones. And then Allen with two and nine. So, okay, guys. So now, in a separate video, we'll be doing the break momentarily. Good luck, guys. Hopefully we get some nice hits for you guys. Thank you. No, I don't think so, man. I mean, I don't think so. I think it's the same. All right, let me go grab the case, guys. Nah, child, just joking, bro. I don't even know what the freak he said when he said inch of droid swapping coming. How's it going, Lachata? Have you started the new job already? Or is it going to be after the holidays? Also, you ready for the dub game or what? Anybody who knows, is Jimmy going to go out to the game? Doing Rose Bowl game tickets? Alabama, Michigan are super expensive, man. It's just like five hundred bucks, man. If I remember correctly, it's going to be a crazy Rose Bowl game, though I will say. Yeah, bro, five hundred bucks, bro. I can't even remember the last time a Rose Bowl game was that expensive. And the last time it was like that, it was like a playoff game, I guess. So, I guess, I guess so. I mean, you're sitting pretty much way at the top in row 63, and you're probably paying another 70 bucks in fees. But it is the granddaddy of them all, so, Rose Bowl game. Oh, nice. He started in the 16th, but my last hit to the front was Wednesday. How was it, man? Was it like bittersweet? My good buddy was in Houston, so we might go if the Huskies made it. Oh, where does the National Championship at this year? Is it in Houston? All right, guys, here we go. Good luck. What's up, everybody? Jason from jayspeakscasebreak.com 2023, Panini National Treasures Baseball four box casebreak picket jeans number three, guys. Thank you, guys, for the fill. And let's get her cracking. Oh, damn, is that right, Chad? Dude. Yeah, no, I feel you, man. Especially like you just said, it was like the first real one, man. Well, I'm sure you'll still keep in touch, right, man? All right, guys. So, here is the case, Ola. What bowl is in Houston? They play at the Texans Energy... What is the Energy Stadium or something like that? Arena? I don't know. Oh, wait. Are they playing... Are they going to play in the same place that they're playing the normal bowl game? They don't leave if they win? No, they're playing an LSU, right? I mean, they're not playing an LSU, sorry. Their playoff game is the cotton? Not the cotton bowl. What's the bowl game you guys are at? You guys are in Louisiana, right? Whoa, dude. Dude, look how thick this is, bro. That's someone said earlier, like, Charles, look at that girth. Crazy, dude. Look at this. They don't even tape it, bro. Look at this. Oh, my God, I think it's a treasure book. I got 10, guys. Timeless treasures. Whoa. I want to Ricky Henderson, George Brett, Paul Molliter, and Tony Gwynne. And that is number two out of 10. So, Rich has the open A's. Kansas City Royals is Brett. Minnesota Twins is Eddie. San Diego Padres is D-Y. That is going to be a randomizer there for all four of you guys. Winner gets the book. We'll leave that over here to the side. All right, there's something else that's super, super thick right there coming up. All right, Billy Williams for the Cubs. Well, on the board right there already, Charles. We got a wizard. You're a wizard, Ozzy. Ozzy Smith of the St. Louis Cardinal is going to X-Line to 10. And what is this? Dude, look at this. Drew Jones. It's a freaking Fielding Glove. Oh, man. Look at that, one out of five. How sick is that? The Jumble Fielding Glove. That's going to Ryan H. And the Diamondbacks. That is sick as hell, man. Beautiful hit. Definitely got to take a picture of that, too. And we got Matt Williams from San Francisco to 35. Who has got the Giants? All right, let's go to some hits here. We got his Zac Neto out of 25. Nice three-color patches at the bottom. Angels. Kev has been chasing the Angels and there you go, buddy. On the board. We have a Tyler Soderstrom one out of 10. Nice three-color patch in autograph. He's going to Rich. And we got from Minnesota that's 99 Brooks Lee. There he is while I'm at it. Whoa, wow. Look at this, Prime Trio's. 10 out of 10. Ichiro, Seiya Suzuki, and Masatake Yoshida. What a randomizer this is going to be. I'm sorry, I'm going to have to break two people's hearts. Ichiro is going to represent Seattle, which is Michael Johnson. Suzuki is going to represent Charles with the Cubs. And Masatake Yoshida is going to be Ryan N. Sorry about that, guys. What a box, man. What a box. This has been a crazy box. And last day right here is a little Griff McGarry for Philadelphia, guys. Time, guys. Let's continue to do some NT, guys. We have so many different cases, guys. We don't know what the case is going to be like until we open it, so let's get the next one. Let's get the next one going, guys. Got to sell number four now. Yeah, we still got four more boxes, too. Or three more boxes, you're right. That was just one box. Every case is going to be a little different, guys. But I'm hoping that every time we do a case, it gets better and better. I definitely don't want to regress. That is another fat one right there, dude. And there's a freaking printing plate in there, too. Yeah, but I don't know, man. Oh, sorry. Did I say Griff? Oh, sorry. That was part of the R&B. Sorry about that, Jason. I didn't realize that. 70 out of 99 would go to U of 0. Sorry. I apologize. I totally forgot about the R&B. I didn't hit any other R&B teams that I had. Marlins, Brewers, Dodgers. No, I think we're good. How about another alley to the cruise? 66 out of 99. Execute order. 66. Stack up those alleys, Ryan. Now you can sell one and even keep one. No, wait. Maybe I thought that was a fat one. It was just two carts together. Two out of five. Alfonso Soriano. That's where the Yankees go to Matt Smith. That's where the Yankees go to Matt Smith. Yeah. And we got a Jimmy Rollins to 49. I thought these two carts were together. That's another one for Philly. 32 out of 49. Spot two is Alan Murdoch. Then we got a Walter Johnson for Washington. And let me double check, guys. Remember, there was like two different Washington Senators. Which I know sounds a little weird, but let me double check the checklist, guys. I want to make sure that's not like which one it is. I want to make sure that's not like which one it is. I know Beckett does a good job of it saying which Washington Senators it is, so I'm going to go by Beckett's here. I think Harbor Connection is just going to say Senators. Wait, they don't have the checklist out? Okay, so it looks like Walter Johnson played for the Washington Senators that turned into the Minnesota Twins. So he actually won a World Series with them as a player in 1924. Two-time AL MVP, three-time Triple Crown winner, AL L. That's a good one. Three-time Triple Crown winner, AL Wins Leader, five times AL ERA leader, pitched to no hitter in 1920. This dude's a Hall of Famer, first ballot as well. If anybody didn't already know that, obviously. I mean, everybody knows Walter Johnson. But yeah, so it looks like he played for the Washington Senators that became the Minnesota Twins. So that's going to go to the Minnesota Twins, which is Eddie Hardin. So I'll tag that right now, too. And then we got, how about a Mickey Mantle? 37 out of 99. Sweet hit right there. Again, that was owned by the Mantle LP Holdings, LTD. And it's a player, actually, sorry. No, this is when he won it in the fantasy camp. All right, then we got an on-card there for AJ Smith-Shalver. That's for Atlanta to 25. Atlanta going to Olin. And we have a one of one printing plate patch autograph of Alex Ramirez, which looks like it's a Met. I'm pretty sure that's the Met's prospect. Met's part of the R&B, which is going to spot one Jason K. There you go, buddy. Uno, uno. I can't even put this in a slider box. I can't even put this in a top loader. It's going to go in a slider box. Then we got a Colson Montgomery tonight in line for the White Sox. Going to Michael Johnson. And then we have a Jack Leither to 10 patch autograph for Texas. Texas Rangers is going to Justin. And then last one here is a nice Colton Couser. Nice signature. Three color patch to 10 for Baltimore. Matt Smith, who has the orders. Very, very nice. Nice second box, guys. So far, this case has been strapped and solid. A normal girth right there. For the New York Yankees, I assume, yeah, Joe Sewell or Sowell. I'll look that up, but I'm pretty sure that is. Yeah, Yankees. Yankees is going to Matt Smith. We got a Colossal Relic here. Connor Norby. We got a Dustin Harris to 49 for Texas. We got a... Well, asking you to share a receipt, Matt. Harmon Kilbrough. 10 out of 10. Which is going to Eddie in the Minnesota Twins. And we got a Wilmer Flores to 99. Detroit Tigers. Tigers is... Charles, that's you too, right? Yeah. And we got a Owen Murphy for Atlanta to 99. And didn't we pull this guy already? Wow. Another one-of-one Kevin Perotta. I think we hit one in break number one. We hit this one-of-one. So this time, it's a pack. It's like a laundry tag one-of-one. All right, well, damn. If somebody would have bought the... Whoever bought the Metson number one and would have got them here, could have already been on your way for doing the rainbow. And that's another nice hit. Going to the R&B in Jason K. Spot 1. Whoo! One is killing it, man. Killing it. We got a Barry Larkin for Cincinnati. Ryan with that one. The 25. So those challenge people, guys, man. Sometimes the R&B can be very, very nice. And now about a little Jackson Holiday. 17 out of 14. 17 out of 49. This has been a great case, guys. Hell yeah. Or it was going to Matt Smith. But we have one more box, guys. We're not done just yet. One more box. Let's get number four rolling next, guys. Let's get number four rolling next. Oh, my God, a spot right now. Not too long ago. I can always R&B it if I have to, guys. Do the exact same way we did it right now. Oh, man, look at this fat boy. All right, then we got a Robert Hassel to 99 for the Washington Nationals. Top prospect moved on from the Soto trade. Nationals are going to John. We got retro materials of Gavin Williams for the Cleveland Guardians. Two cards back to back. And then we had a Uri Perez for Miami. Miami is part of the R&B. 33. Spot three is Jeremy Port. We got a little Ricky Henderson. Jersey now. Ricky Henderson. Jersey number is at 35. Nine out of 35. For Oakland and Richard. And then we got a Brooks Robinson. Eight out of eight for Baltimore. That's a cool little photo right there. Another one there for Matt Smith. Then we got a Daniel Susak to 99. Another one there for Oakland. Then we have Nick York for Boston. Two out of 25. Two out of 25. Two out of 25. Two out of 25. Nice patches there. For the California Angels, Jim Evans. Going to Kev. Out of 25. How about a Jose Canseco Rangers edition? 12 out of 25. Rangers. It's going to Justin. No problem, Rick. Thank you, buddy, for getting in. And last but not least, guys. We have four. The Dodgers, which is part of the random number block. It is Diego Cartella. Little piece of the sock in autograph. Five out of ten. Which is spot five. Going to Alexander. There you go, man. On the board, Alex. Oh, guys. R&B had some solid-tolly hits. Unfortunately, it just went out to the same numbers. One killed it, but we did get one for five. One for three. But a couple hits here for the ones. We did get some nice numbers. But, like I said, two big hits right there for one-on-ones. And then Cartella right there was nice. But, again, R&Bs did hit. Hopefully in the next one, if we have to R&B it up, you grab in and we can get two spots in that one. But overall, guys, a very, very nice case. I'm going to have to break someone's heart right now, though, guys. Or a couple of people's hearts. Especially for that triple autograph. A very, very solid case. Definitely one of the better ones we've seen so far. I never know what the next case holds. It could be better than this one. So let's keep it going. And grab another spot in the next picker team, guys. Number four is down to, like, I think, 11 or 10. So we've got to randomize the names for this one. I hope not, Charles. But, man, I don't know, man. I can't guarantee it. Hopefully you just don't hate me after this. But we're going to randomize, of course, Ichiro, Seiya, and Masatake Yoshida. And then, of course, we're going to randomize the names of the teams, I should say. So let's do that really quick. Wow. I think you're correct, actually, Kev. The first two cases were just extremely loaded with pirates. But yeah, no pirates in this one. Sorry, Luca. I mean, I know the first two were so good for you, but still sucks, though. All right, so the first randomizer would be the first one, which would be A's. George Brad would be Royals. The second one would be Minnesota Twins. And the last one would be Padres. And then this one here is going to be Mariners, Cubs, Red Sox. All right, same dash order for both of them. Awesome, man. Thank you, Luca. Yeah, let's get to some hits on that one. All right, so randomize it there, guys. So one out of four, five times. Good luck. First randomizer here, five times. Team number one gets to hit. One, two, three, four, five. Boom. Five times. Five times. Minnesota Twins are the victor. They have won. Minnesota going to Eddie Hardin. You're going to get that booklet. So there you go, man. You're going to get this booklet here with these four legendary players out of ten. Five times here as well for the triple autograph. Good luck. One, two, three, four, five. Stays with the Cubs. Wow. Five times. Five times. Five times. Cubbies. Congratulations. You just won this triple autograph. I think you were stuck at four at number one, and it didn't move at number five. There you go, man. Congratulations. Very nice one there, guys. Again, a very solid case, guys. Loves to do another one. Check it out, JapaneseCaseBricks.com, guys. I will R&B it if I have to. Down to nine left. Let's get it rolling, guys. Appreciate it. Woo! Congrats, Charles. Congrats, man. It was your lucky day today. Welcome back, man. Hello, hello, hello. Thanks. Probably get down while I'm using this. Yeah, you can go. It's so temperamental. He was mostly the same guy. Yeah, well done. This? Yeah, you mean this. Up a little bit. No, no, no. You just need to move the mouse. There you go. Same underneath. There you go. Grab a little bit. Like this. Like so. That's right. Yeah, and then you just put black. Black again. And then put the black. There you go. And then go there. That's right. Wait. Oh, we just... I didn't grab it there. I don't know if that's grabbing it. It is. You're good. First one first or this one? That one first. Black. White. Bingo. Jason. Bucks. Five and six. Click it and hold. And go all the way up. So first short sheet hit to Amy. Oh my god, the angel is the number four. So he's the one that got it started. The arrow is baby. Cool. Mike got the Mariners the number four. Let's go. Charles got the Mets the number four. Let's go. Dustin got one in the holiday mixer. Let's go. Even better. I think Kev got the Marlins. You know what this basically is? When you get married you say you're going to wash the dishes. Six left guys. Basically what I'm doing here. So again guys, I can R&B it up if you guys want. But at this point I feel like people can just buy it out. All the pretty big expensive teams are now off the board guys. So Tigers there for 50. Ash was there for 30. Dodgers most expensive. Phillies 50. Giants 80. And Ray 70. Down to six actually. So yeah, six left guys. Also two guys again. I'm going to let you guys know. We are a lot closer on this mixer than you guys think. If we sell out this last full spot again. Oh we didn't do the sprint. I can cancel the break number four. I only have to do two fillers guys. So again, you guys may think we're far off but we're really not. It's been great Rex. I hit a nice null and run out of five autograph earlier. You got further? Oh look how it bounces. You do 22 and 23. Okay. 223 select basketball. Would you say hobby in one box? Just do RT. It doesn't need the hobby? No. RT. Cool. Yeah I was waiting for this right there. It makes more sense to just do it here first. Yeah but usually you put the title in when you're doing the spreadsheet. Right. This is a special case scenario. So two in the middle, one on the bottom. Alright field two goes in the mid. Drag it to the mid. Perfect. And then next. And then always first one click save data. And then hit save. It's going to come shoot now. That's awesome. Nothing break. I will defend. Mike also got the Astros guys. Five left. Alright five left guys. Alright guys so five left. If you want me guys to fill this up and do an R&B again I will. I think this one would be a lot cheaper though. I would have doubted if this one's like 30 bucks. Let's do the math really quick. Let's do the math. So Tigers Dodgers Philly I think this one would be a lot cheaper though. I would have doubted if this one's like 30 bucks. Let's do the math really quick. Dodgers Philly Yup And raise. It's actually like 34 bucks. So I mean if I need to guys I'll R&B it. But every team is above 34 bucks. So I mean just pay a little bit more and you own the whole team. Whether it's the Tigers or the Philly's. So let me know guys. A the R&B did a couple people in the R&B especially number one did great in the last one guys. This one. Alright if anybody wants to grab any of these teams straight up guys. Let me know if in the next like 10 minutes guys we don't sell it out guys I'm going to R&B it. R&B Alright Tristan got a spot in the holiday mixer guys. Which again puts it at zero. And like I said since you guys are selling the spot straight up guys. I'm going to put back three more spots again. Jason K. Got the Dodgers. So if we were to R&B this now it would be $25. We got this point guys. We should just be able to do it. So Tristan if you're listening buddy I'm just going to cancel the next filler and we'll put back three more spots. Honestly guys I feel like we can do this. Now we don't have to do filler number 4. We literally just have to do two fillers. That's it. Two fillers including the one that's on the website and three straight up spots. And if you guys sell out the next three Jesus. At that point I don't even have to put up a third filler. Charles with the Detroit Tigers. Alright yeah we can't R&B this no more. This would be way too cheap guys. At this point we got to sell it out now. Three left. Fillies. Giants. Raise. Alright three left here guys. Alan Murdock got the fillies. Two left. It's going to be raising Giants guys. Last two teams. Alright guys. Just two away guys. Also to you guys for the people that are like damn is this mixture going to happen tonight? Tell you right now guys. We are basically nine full spots away. Three straight up. And six of them hiding in fillers. Now no matter what we are going to have to do this filler regardless. But if we sell these next three straight up spots out I can cancel the second to last filler. And then we only have to do one filler guys. So this mixture is going to take me like two hours tonight guys. I'm legit willing to do it. But it's going to have to sell at least by like nine o'clock nine thirty the latest. But if we get down to just like a couple spots I'm going to stay out of care. Right? Or if not we can just schedule it to be the first thing tomorrow. If it gets really really late but we can sell it out in the next hour and a half two hours. I'll stay and do it guys. So realistically guys for the people who are on the fence that we're going to grab a spot but they're like nah we're like really far away. We are not guys. We are super close. Just those three spots and two fillers or six spots straight up and one filler. But we'll play it by ear guys. And we're going to count us three holiday promo entries. It fills the promo. We can unlock it. We can give out some prizes today including some break credit back to some people. You can reuse that on some NT or anything else you guys want on the website. Sorry guys. Since we're this close right here on this let's just focus on this and get this knocked off and then we can start working on more of the mixer. Now the next NT I'm not saying we can't do it but that one's a little bit more than half a way to go so we would need some customers to buy their teams that they have been buying. And trim it down close enough so we can R&B it but we did a 17 R&B earlier so we can get it down to single digits even at 9 or 10 I can probably do a 10 team R&B and I can sell out that next case out as well. But two left here guys. Raise and Giants. Raise and Giants. If it were to get stuck right now for the next like 15 minutes and it doesn't sell I'll fill this up if you guys want. We could try a $15 R&B if you guys want to try one but I'd rather just sell it out straight up at this point. Alright. Alright. John Gaddy started getting the Pirates in the next three pick your teams. 5, 6 and so two left guys. Alright. What happened? Like that. Probably shouldn't have tried to remove my own appendix. Like when it comes to finding financial advisers. So leave it to smartasset to find them for you. Take the groupquits at smartasset.com then we'll be matched with a group that will produce share of financial advisers. To get started take the advisor match quiz now at smartasset.com This is close. This close. When you order downloads online in the future. So you'll have one emergency pizza or when you need it post. No matter the reason. When life gives you levels Domino's gives you free pizza. Enjoy. So what's the question? See what? I'm actually not sure. You can't dip in a pool. You might be crazy. Leave listening alone. I've built that pool so other kids don't know what to do. I don't know. Looks like someone sold it out guys. Let's take a look. We have about the angels at number 5 Ryan bought the Giants 2 minutes ago at number 4 and Jason came in to go to raise. Sweet guys. Way to rally together. Alright guys cool deal. Already fellas here we go. What's up everybody. Jason here for jayspeaks.com. This is the 4 box case break packaging number 4 just sold out. Let's run it back again. There we go guys. So another case down guys. Another case down. Case number 5 is already down to 16 guys. That one needs a little bit of help selling. We can always R&B up to the sub team. I'm sure there's going to be some people that want to grab teams in the next one guys. I'll give it some time before I R&B it. I don't know when I get back from my lunch break if anything but let's see what we got here though guys. Taking one case at a time. Midnight RPA? I like to have midnights in this too don't they? Alright first off we have Hitters Inc. to 75. Alright it's Mata Taken Yoshida. Let's go. Boston Red Sox Ryan has just been raking I feel like almost every case. Let's go man. Yes. Good way to start off this box. Alright we got two relics. Seiya Suzuki for the Cubs to 99. Runner Ryan. And then we have a Colton Kouser to 25 for the Baltimore Orioles. I know that's true man. I forgot about that. Sorry buddy. I know. At a 99 Ichiro 61 at a 99 for the Mariners. We have one Felix Hernandez two color patch. Uno de uno Mike Freshwater took a chance on the Mariners and so far back to back hits paying off with a little 101. Little Felix Hernandez. King Felix baby. Brady House triple relic and autograph three color patches. Very nice. Washington going to John. Do we have back to back midnight? Wow. First one is Gavin Williams. Do we have back to back midnight I think. Or at least it looks like that. Very nice one for the land. Cleveland. Garden's going to Walter. I love midnight RPS. We do have back to back. This time is Jackson Job to 25 for Detroit. It was one of the last few teams taken. Look at that Charles. Back to back midnight RPS or patch autographs I should say. I guess I shouldn't say RPS. Too thick. Got to put it in the slider box. We got a Jack Leiter 5 out of 10 for Texas. Texas Rangers SKS and last one here about a little big Bobby David Ortiz 3 out of 10 clutch factor. Good break. Good box so far for the Red Sox and Ryan. Nice box. Is that the name I think it is? Well Luca I know the pirates were taken in 5, 6 and 7 man but guess what? You're still going to walk away with this at least. Honest Wagner Legendary Materials 3 out of 5 Oh man that's so sick. Piece of the lumber. Player worn used material. Congrats man. That's so sick right there. This is why I love the NT man. Get some of those old legendaries you don't see very often. P. Rose 16 out of 35 Cincinnati Reds Ryan. We got a Joe Morgan. Another one for the Cincinnati Reds. No problem Luca thank you for buying in man congrats. It's time to get a sheet of Retro Materials Relic. And we got a at a 99 Brandon Maia for the Yankees autograph to 99 and then we got a Jacob Berry to 99 Triple Relic and autograph. That's for Miyami going to Kev with the Marlins. Luis Angel Ocunia to 99 2 color patch and autograph. Little Ocunia's Ronald's little brother and one of them. That's going to go to the Rangers and SKS. We have an Austin Wells for the Yankees to 99. Matt Smith with that one. And we got Carlson Fisk to 25 for Boston. And last but not least what do we got here? Griff McGarry for Philly to 99. Philly was taken by Alan Murdoch. Nice box number two. Especially with that little honus wagon a relic. I don't think we can stick it on right. So thick. A little bit of glue got stuck on my fingers. What's up Oliver? Alright we got Zach Nieto 84 to 99 Buckler Relic for the Angels. Going to Omar. There you go man. We got a Yuri Perez for Miyami. Going there for Kev to 49. Then we got a Brooks Lee for Minnesota. Twins going to Sunny. We have one of these 3000 hits treasured stats. Roberto Clemente 24 out of 99. That's for the Pirates going to Luka. And we have out of 10. I've got a little Don Drysdale for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Going to Jason Kay who has the Dodgers. Jed Williams for the Metz to 25. Metz going to Charles. Then we got a Jared Shuster for Atlanta to 25. Little Patch Autograph. ETL Sport Pork. Then we got a Fred Linn for Boston. 25 out of 25. Boston is just raking this great grind. Then we got a Jordan Lawler. Nice one there for Arizona. Treasured Relic Autographs to 49. Ryan with the Diamondbacks. Oh my god how about more about the Takuyoshita. Jesus that a 99. Jesus. Only made up for the last one. Last box here guys. Alright we got Hall of Fame materials to 99. Earl Weaver. So that's for the Baltimore Orioles. Baltimore Orioles is Matt Smith. Roman Antony for Boston to 49. We got a Jumbo Relic there. Ho-Yo Lee to 25. Philadelphia. Philly going to Allen Murdoch. Lou Brock for St. Louis to 15. Carnal is going to X-Line. Then we have a Joe Girardi but how about it's Colorado Rockies edition to 15. We got a Ramas Ramirez 13 out of 99. Little Rami Patch Auto. Another one there for the Berg. Luca. 3 more hits guys. Griff McGarry for Philly to 10. Some other one there for Philly and Allen. We got for the Giants Orlando Sepeda. That's cool. Giants one of the last few teams taken I believe Ryan. Was it one of the last few teams taken? I feel like it was. Or at least it has been. Definitive Ink. And last but not least Little Patch Autograph Jackson Holiday. That looks like a perfect 10 auto too. Out of 49 Patch Autograph. Or it was going to Matt Smith. Alright guys. And there you go. Some teams hit some crazy crazy amount more than others but it's the overall was a nice case. Jackson Holiday, Orlando, Sepeda. We got the Montetaguishita Jordan Lawler. Fred Lynn. James. Alright Carlton Fisk. Maia. We got the Big Boppy. Back to back Midnights. 1-0-1 Felix Hernandez. And then of course we have the Nieto book with the Honest Wagoner 5 Relic. There's the Jackson Job and then America's Pastime Montetaguishita book. Which is a nice one as well. So appreciate you guys. Number 5 is in the store. That is another case. Don't know what's hiding in there until we open it. So if you guys want to run it back, we definitely can. Jaspyscasebreaks.com Looks like we're down to 2 left in the Holiday Mixer filler. Holiday Mixer straight up. Again if we can sell those last 2 spots straight up I can cancel the 2nd to last filler guys. We don't need to do 2 fillers. So I'll go through the orders and see who sold that out. Or who grabbed that spot I should say. Let's go. How many Kevin Karate ones are you gonna have? Bro you see it's the same card. It was just one was a tag and one was another one. I was like what the freak? Yeah of course man. Take all you want. Alright actually so John got into that Holiday Mixer guys which relatively close. We're getting close. 2 left there. Roy just got the Dodgers the number 5. Dodgers the number 5. And Steve just got the White Tox the number 6. So again guys I'm gonna take a little bit of a break but look guys it's pretty simple. I've been telling people that are watching. I've been telling people that are watching guys. All we need to do guys is sell out the 2 spots straight up and do 2 fillers. Number 2 that's on the website at 24. Plus load up the 3rd one once we sell it out. But again we play it by ear like you guys. If the straight up spots sell I can cancel this 3rd filler and then put 3 more spots back in and we're only just total 6 spots away guys. That's how close we are. So again I told you guys if we could sell this out by 9 o'clock I'd do it. It's gonna take me like 2 hours. But if we get it down to just digits or a filler left and it's like 10 o'clock we gotta sell it out by 10 guys. If not it'll be the first thing we do tomorrow but I mean we're that close guys we really are. We've basically sold 21 total spots straight up with a filler and then we have obviously 2 fillers we need to do plus the 2 spots but if we sell those next 2 spots out we only need to sell 1 filler in 3 spots guys. That's how close we are. So again guys I'm gonna take a quick little break. Um BRB but if you guys want to do the next NT guys keep on buying in. If we don't move any more spots by the time I get back in about 30-40 minutes we'll filler up NT PYT number 5 when I get back. So buy your teams guys. I still think we can do number 5 at least tonight. Awesome let me adjust the time too guys set 745 but I was done a little early. Let's see times in the red zone 2,000 alone we're looking to see our Ohio State more than 1,000 players on the field doing a snap man so that should be what we like what we like it's great Ohio State's been on defense all year they don't rotate the bodies and they can keep that state defensive from the field they can go tempo they can get along their heels but on this drawing let's have a couple of first downs take the deep shot got in the field quickly and kind of almost made this execution yeah that's what you know that's what little types of plays deserve you saw all year and that just showed you how good Ohio State is on defense basically get the additional you guys point on the explosive passing yards so half half and all and now another one where you guys go we rock the little substitution to keep going back the first going we've seen a couple times here tonight when this Missouri offensive line ball starts and you also remember you had that delay of game The kicker has made a 61 yarder and a chance at a 65 yarder. Rila, self-declared on the range. You've got a lot of help out there. The bell says, lost four weight. People are studying 40-odd. Anybody who has a 10-odd is going to remind us that it's 5 in the next five minutes. You're going to have to be not in the stages of work. And the gravity of the signal doesn't stop right now, so we're going to do all of those. I don't know if this is going to be the end. So here's a little more information. Rila. Manage this spot. Rila, try to keep on the sound. It's a crisis location. There's been some side effects of motion. How many in that area are they? And I guess we're going to stand out. Please don't put that on, girl. And reduce it to set it up. Let it go. That's going to be a surprise. Please don't put that on yourself. I'm sure it's going to be a surprise. If they go around, they'll start to say it. What's that? It goes out like it's your money. They have clothes that can't. Do that. Like I said, do something. One lot of different expenses, health insurance, and that's a concern is an official sponsor. If there's no guests, well, thank you, though. We're going to see you later. Last spot there. To the north side, last spot on the left. Spot zero against all the net investors. Please, please. Take a look. It was zero. It was seven, eight, one. You worked for three and Chris with three. You made it four. Seven, eight, five, eight, seven. They said it was seven, nine, eight, seven times. Shake it off. Now, when he's going to stay in the game, he's wits him in pain as he was strolling, so something was his way on. Oh, I was going to say this never shut off. Listen, listen, go ahead. And switch. Okay, Community Three is down to 17. If you guys don't mind, you can keep it straight up right now. Okay, the next three. All right. Thanks for the last spot. You may get 7-3-14 rushing touchdown, but he rolls toward the ward when you're the former walk-on, who started his career in Truman State. The tools he started to work with in school. Pleasant sciences. I always start. The reason that he was picked up on this. We'll see if Ohio State can answer. We'll get it down to... All right. Hold on a minute. This is how it is. Touch back. Guys, we'll start on year 25. Well, it's how it was happening. We have a gig on D7, so... They were starting to run it. Successfully, with a tragedy on Henderson, when that last drive stalled. Now, play. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Hit the bell. Amazury stack with the box, late man. Black state, Keith Thomas, rising God to the top, get all the time in the trites for the best of the season. He's now in Syracuse, where I've never started to game until tonight. Young kids in the league, it's just a low that they're now in the 37th. They're certainly the initial 10. It's a little pocket, and kids and I still pick up on the first down. In the first anything down the field, it's different. Imagination two is three out of 10. Boom and dash, boom. I'm gonna get some down. I'm gonna get some down. I'm gonna get some down. I got some. I got some down. I got some down. I went out for a little while, Abramster ain't calling, but I better catch two gears around Missouri, 90 yards long. Missouri 7th, Ohio State, 3 years old. My A.F. has 138 There is 3 out of 99 How can you stop Korean and number block? That is one of the greats for CB. We got everything on the front and dress and jewelry all day long. We're going to see what's the difference on the 2020 4 months and 6 months? Yes. The car is going to be hemorrhaged. We said that we're going to see what's going to happen. Now you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, you're going to work, That's how it was to deal with the potential to try to sneak out and realize that I need to do a little help to my quarterback, which he got. So I'll send it down on 17, 2, 1. I'll stay and play this jump, so I'm pretty cool. I'm going to shut down Phil. There you go. That's great. Thank you. I'll have some autographs. I'm going to write a whole line. I'm going to write a whole line. I'm going to write a whole line. I'll write a whole line. So I've got the whole shot. I'm pretty cool. I'll make him half two-minutes, and I don't think that's a great callback, because we're fast on that. I'm at out Los hope. I'll stay dearly. I was just facing this game, especially on the 15 yards and nothing good for the long. Mario? Lots of shots in the case! He lets himself ass on the second line. I'll stay long. S Kentucky affection, they all saved the touchdown, it's a given of eight, but he did not get the first down. We're seeking a hit on this drive. We didn't see it that early. I'll just get tired of this game. Don't I get some movement? Shit. I'll get a... As you mixed it in here. 97 out of 29. It's about 7. You already beat the game. Oh, I did. Remember before that? I'm like 25 years old. I'm not sure. Looks like the 30's gonna go 4. I don't know. I'm like, take care of it. See you're more like 4. So, I'll stay down. So, they have the score. It tops down. Great. This is their first at the house. 10 out of 6. 19 out of 45 particles. RMB 5.3 is this. Great. Let's do it. Roll up. 6. 49. 2. 8. 4. 8. 4. 6. 5. 6. 9. 4. 8. 4. 6. 9. 4. 8. 4. 9. 4. 9. 4. 10. 10. 1. 4. 1. 2. 0. 0. 3. 0. 1. 0. 3. 0. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 3. 1. 1. I'm talking about the idea of the culture here. The long-distance area football. I'm going to play here. I'm going to play a terrific student. I still want to apply the year at ESAC. I graduated a December 8th, working on the spinners and business and administration. I'm going to put this game away right now. Can you guys take a little break? Yeah! I've got a $335,000 to earn that least. 17 left. Unfortunately, now it's just a 15 left. 15 left. 12 left. He gets the spot, Yose gets the spot, and we're already young for the spot. Let's get this thing over here. Go right there. Get yourself back in the game. Get yourself a gatorade. Your heart rate is what you should be doing. I'm left. So, what do you guys want to do? We'll filter expert unlimited double-piles on everything. We'll insert everyday purchases into extraordinary trips. We'll get access to over 1,300 airport lounges. We're going to try to give you tips and theories. We're not a war of possibilities. We're capital-on. We're going to do more. I need some more top-level. What? I want to hear from you. Let's say these fries are your problem. We're going to put them together. Another way to save with a personal price plan. Like a big neighbor. State arms there. G.L.P. Arms. The revolutionary response. It started at 1,000 plus last time. Serious, Jamie. Dr. Garcia, do you want to help? Then you rest on the toxifies and have actor of war. I've worked so low about mine. They'll help you and arms as softly as possible. Press. Don't squeeze that one. I just need to know why. It took 12 seconds to work. We're going to have two scores. What's the score? This will start on the 25th. I have to get to three of them. You're watching a good year. There's no way we're going to continue. So you're going to stay as long. Once this one gets down to five, I'm going to ask the females better than me to get a seat between you and all states. All of them will pass the D3 weapons. I don't want to do it for money. I'm going to stay with five. Some people just know what we're going to take. The world will pass this one. I'm moving it really. We're going to stay for the same. People don't know what actually it really depends on how much they can help. We should help. How many brains to settle out. We can do two more. We can do five more. We can do zero more. We can do a nice thing. People's brain is not getting settled out. We can do. It's absolutely true that the state of educational education with that we need more support. Teachers like you and they have to be supported. Are these partnerships like this that make it happen? All seasoned association is pleased and privileged to be able to support teachers at the school special. They've made investments in this wonderful environment. Our mission is to help the community be giving back. It's all with great partners that we can do great things. We saw one team out of the most, and the next team won't even teach one. They've got to see if they can get your team third. They're going to forget. Four teams are going to be in the SEC, and six are going to be in the SEC. They're still going to be in the SEC. Unfortunately, they're going to send you a list of guests. I was not expecting that, but it's going to be great for them. The guys are telling Howard that I'm going to be our guest. They're going to put you on the podium, and you're going to have to catch. And it's a game that's 18 to the 44. I know our team is going to be different. They might be the candidates. We've got the elements that are on the team. We've got to get them out of this outfit. I know some teams are more defensive here than they are. They're not receiving every single vote. It's a little bit... Yeah, but we've got to still hold our timeouts. A great future for Cordell. A great sounding speed, bold skills. He wishes he could attack and pass, but he could blow. Definitely a catchable football here for Cordell. He's got to make that one. He holds out 4-13, passing 75 yards. The difference between the middle and the middle are different. Just 20 yards to the 7th. It's time for three. What's the score? The number gets him. Reload, guys. Several mistakes, but the offense is onside. You're going to make a lot of mistakes. A negative play is created, but the position is still okay. Like we've got Blake Baker bringing a lot of different pressures and this defensive line, they can play it in the studio. What do we do now? What's coming for you? Zero and out. We don't want any put-muches. It's about some, there's no one that's not sure we've done this before, and I think it feels good. I just wanted to give a warm up to the very good team. I'll let you go. What's the last speech down after being met to a timeline? It's about a long distance, but I'd like to be very good today and count the score for him. Like that, at that. David Dusty, so like what you... I'm going to start in here with all of those It is not a single class group, it is not a group, John. So, what are the best pinstays? Come on, let's get it up. No, you can't show me on both faces, I'm trying to figure out what you're playing. The girls are one of nine, those teens. Carlsson, you do have Jordan Walker in this, and what's the right thing to do? Come on, say shit around the floor. Say, you know, a lot of people play it. Now, what you're going to do, John, is to have him have to be looked at in the last half of this, because he's going to play for six games. Will he have this one? First down to the 44. Watch the rolling up. Strong hands. My focus stares at the line of the air. Bricks in. What do you mean by that? I'm on it. Let's get you to the open. You've got to be a star. I'm here for the star. I'm here for the last three. That's your impression of just five passes we get to today, plus the intro down the ground. That's your first game of the year. I'll say it now. It's a new series of pressure. This is some season, because the pressure we got is so bad. What's up, trends? You need that blue ranch? Are you going to do your lunch? I was just commenting on the chat, because I was just seeing if you guys were buying stuff. But Roy, while I was taking my break, guys, got the Seattle Mariners, baby. Mariners off the board, number five. Kayam got the Dolphins, the number five, and T. Jason K. got into the Mac. Paul got the Tigers six minutes ago. All right, should I random number block the remaining teams, guys? Baby, give it to 730. 13 left. Love to get this one knocked off, guys. Still a lot of cheap teams, like the Marlins, like the Blue Jays for 30. Astros there for 30. We can knock out those three teams, or that brings us down to 10. I mean, this R&B might be a little pricey, guys, but it's going to feature almost half the league. Let's see how much this will cost. Prism is going to be awesome, man. Prism is going to be awesome, man, it's going to be great. I'll probably come in early that day, too. All right, guys, so if we did an R&B right now, guys, it's looking like it'll be $92. So, you know, there are 14, guys, on this checklist right here, on this break right here, that if we knock off, they're all $30 or less. There's four teams at 30 bucks. All right, let's knock those out, right? Now, again, I'm really surprised. The Braves, the Cardinals, you know, the Nationals, I feel like we're all taken pretty quickly in the first four picker teams. I know we only have posted up four originally, and that's what people buy, and then five and six, seven were posted up like a day or two later. So maybe some people didn't really notice it. But again, guys, I mean, there's still a lot of really good, affordable teams, guys, in this NTPYT number five. I feel like there could be some really nice hits here, guys. There's still a lot of good teams. And like I said, I don't mind putting up that R&B if people are interested in that, but I don't know. I feel like sometimes it's a little bit easier to fill up a random number block when it's a little cheaper. And right now, I would like to trim down a couple of those $30 teams. I mean, that's four teams right there. We knock it off the board. That looks like we're down a nine, right? We're down a nine, and then it's like, all right, well, maybe a bigger team like the Cardinals sell or like the Braves sell, and then boom, we're down to seven. And then all of a sudden, you know, it's so much closer that we can obviously R&B it up, guys. So I'll give it a little bit more time, guys. But there's four teams, four teams that are at 30 bucks. That chances of Braves, Cardinals, is still there. Like those teams are all taken right away, guys. Maths have been doing great in our cases, guys. Look, you heard the other side of the line. Oh, like there's nothing going down there. That was pretty cheap. Not really. I think I have a guess. I think they're on board and you don't want to do it. There's a little obstacle over there. But it's not too much. I'm just gonna give you a chance to see how it goes. Roger, if you're ready, come along. We're in the way to help you build up and bring you home. This is what I'm watching here, at home, sir. Oh, that's good stuff. Oh, that's good stuff. Good stuff. I know, Roy, that's what I'm saying, man. I feel like the A's are a solid team to get. I mean, there's a lot of good teams remaining right now. I mean, I know a couple people that might be interested in these teams, but like I said, I know they've already grabbed them in the first couple. Maybe they're already spent, right? You know, they're maxed out, which is normal. I mean, it's fine. But yeah, I feel like the Braves were taken in all of them. You know, the A's were selling on their own. The Cardinals are selling on their own. You know, and I think we can get rid of, like, these Astros and Marlins and, you know, all these cheaper $30 teams. Like, look, if we get rid of those $430 teams, we're done a nine. We sell the Braves and the Cardinals. We're done a seven. And then at that point, I can probably random number block the remaining teams, you know? In reality, right? That would pretty much end up, it'll probably end up being like a $50 R&B, $54 R&B, if anything, right? So like I said, we can get a little bit of help in selling a couple of these teams. I think we can still do this tonight, guys. We still have about two and a half hours. And again, guys, the holiday promo makes her two, guys. We just gotta do two fillers plus the two straight-up spots. That's looking like potentially could still go tonight, but if not, it'll go first thing tomorrow, potentially. Yeah, I feel like Washington has been a good team to also get, they've just been hitting a lot, right? Nester was looking forward to number six. I mean, I don't know, Nester, if you wanna try to get a breakdown today, guys, man, let's get into that number five. But he's securing the Tigers a number six, so. Yeah, guys, I feel like we can do number five. I feel like it. I feel like we can do it, guys. We just need a little bit of help. Like I said, there are some very affordable teams here, guys, so if you're looking to get into NT, guys, these boxes are like 600, 650 a box, right? Think about it, we're doing four boxes, well over 24, $2,500 a case. You're only paying 30 bucks, guys, to get a hit from a $30 Marlins team. Let's take a look and see the checkers, guys. Let's see if we can convince some people. So let's take a look at a $30 team, guys, and see what you guys can get. So, they got some Gary Sheffield base. They have some prospects, of course. Yuri Perez and Jacob Berry. Yuri Perez, Jacob Berry. A Yeti Cap as well to nine. They have some Gary Sheffield, a 25-century material signatures, right? Gary Sheffield, definitive ink to 25. Diamond autographs of Yeti. Jacob Berry, Diamond Trio's autographs. Dycon material signatures of Jacob Berry. Jacob Berry, Echolars' Choice. You know, more looking for the prospects than anything, guys, right? Yuri Perez, rookie signatures, but still not a bad team for 30 bucks. Bat knobs of Gary Sheffield, I guarantee that'll pay for the $30 spot. Hanley Ramirez, Florida Marlins Edition, which also go to the Miami Marlins potentially. Ichiro Relics to 25, I mean, an Ichiro? Come on, guys. All right, Yeti Cap. They also have some down here. Retro materials of Yuri Perez. They have Yuri Perez's rookie silhouettes. And they also have, they're also part of, it looks like some treasure chest booklets that feature all of them, these players here, guys. 32 different players. And I'd assume, I don't even know who would be representing the Marlins, but they're in there. So you've got that chance, and then you have this one here that represents the Marlins. Looks like more of the prospects than anything. So I'd assume it's gonna be, yeah, Jacob Berry representing them there. So you get those chances too, guys. That's a $30 team there. Let's go look at the Astros. Astros for 30 bucks. Let's get some of these cheaper teams off the board, guys. Lance Bergman. You go down here to the Diamond Duel Autographs. You have Drew Gilbert and Jacob Melton. Those are all prospects there as well. Yanar Diaz. Moises Alu as a veteran. You have Lance Bergman, field pass signatures. Jeff Bagwell, hall of fame signatures. Yanar Diaz to 99. Robin Roberts out of five legendary but signature booklets. You have eight prime trios that feature BGO, Bagwell and Bergman. You have signature sets of Jeff Bagwell to 25. Again, this is a $30 team, guys. Bat knobs of Drew Gilbert. Colossal materials of Drew Gilbert. Bagwell, field gear, trios. Jumbo, fielding gloves, Yanar Diaz to five. And then again, down here, rookie silhouettes of Yanar Diaz. And then they're part of those big treasure chest booklets potentially as well. You also have Lance Bergman, treasure jersey numbers, BGO to 99. So again, another $30 team there, guys. Colorado Rockies are also a $30 team. Rockies for 30 bucks. Let's see what you can get there. So you have Adele Amador. You also have some rookie materials of Warming, Burnable and Zach Veen who are prospects there. Joe Girardi. We actually hit a Joe Girardi autograph earlier. Amador clutch factors, Zach Veen. Drew Romo diamond autographs, Zach Veen diamond duels. Gabriel Hughes, Diacon material signatures, choice of Adele Amador. Down here we have a Zach Veen and Amador rookie signatures. Zach Veen signature names. The future said Zach Veen. Larry Walker Bat knobs plus Drew Romo. Drew Romo name plate 21. So that's like a barrel. Colossal materials, Drew Romo. Larry Walker Hall of Fame materials as well as Jumbo Fielding Gloves of Drew Romo and Gabriel Hughes. And then there's one player representing the Rockies there for one of the prospects, probably Zach Veen I'd assume, in the Treasure Chest books. So yeah, that's another $30 team there, guys. Now if you spend just a little bit more, right? Someone like the Nationals, have we been saying they've been hitting almost? Man, they've been hitting like crazy in every case. All right, let's just say them, for instance, at 80 bucks. You got a chance to get James Wood. Got a chance at Robert Hassels. Robert Hassels, James Wood, Brady House and Christian Vaquero, which are big prospects for them too as well, guys. All right, Ryan Zimmerman, Century Materials. More James Wood and Robert Hassel. Jeremy de la Rosa, which you've hit him before already. We haven't seen Elijah Green just yet. Christian Vaquero, Diamond Duel autographs, Brady House we've seen. All right, Ryan Zimmerman at 38. James Wood, Ryan Zimmerman. Their tracklist is just a little bit bigger, but of course, much better rookies and prospects to chase. Their signature name sets, Robert Hassels signature sets of Vaquero, the Rosa, Elijah Green. All right, Bat Nobs of Ryan Zimmerman. And yeah, like I said, a lot of those guys there, it looks like it's gonna be mainly the prospects minus some Ryan Zimmerman. And part of the treasure chest books too. So yeah, guys, if we could trim down a couple of these $30 teams, guys, this definitely helps get this closer and makes it a lot more cheaper R&B, guys. Also for the Braves, that's another team that's been there. If you spend 10 more books on them, you're looking at some Trevor Jones, Greg Maddox, as well as AJ Smith-Shalver. You also have Owen Murphy, JR Richie, rookie material signatures, Dale Murphy, Javi Lopez signature sets, clutch factor, Chipper Jones. We have Tom Glavin, definitive ink, John Smoltz, Chipper Jones, JR Richie, Diamond Trio's, Dyken material is a Raphael for Cole, JR Richie, Shalvers, Shuster, Owen Murphy and Chipper Jones. There's only two dual memorabilia signature booklets and they're both Braves. Can you believe that? They have their own little set here. Field pass signatures of Andrew Jones, which is a cool one. John Smoltz, Hall of Fame signatures, Greg Maddox, Chipper Jones. So if anything, the Braves are all loaded with more veterans than anything, but again, can't complain, guys. Especially if they hit Phil Neacrow, legendary booklets, Shalver, Andrew Jones, Drew Jones, prime pairings. Retro ink, Greg Maddox, Chipper Jones, Drew Jones, Andrew Jones, sorry, and Javi Lopez. So yeah, guys, more veterans, but you do have a couple of rookies there. And they're pretty highlighted everywhere, Bruce Sutter. There you go, buddy. This is the direct link to the figure T number five we're trying to sell, man. We got 13 teams remaining here, man. I need me to go through some teams track list, man. Let me know. I just went through all the $30 teams that were remaining. I went through the Braves, and I even went through the Nationals. Cardinals are another really good team that have been just sitting, that have been getting taken. I know they haven't really hit too much. They've been hitting, though, but they're all over the place, guys. I mean, they have a monster checklist. Juan Bencho, Albert Pujols, Jordan Walker autographs, which is awesome. They're number to nine. Mason Nguyen, Juan Bencho, and Ting Kentz. Vince Coleman, Rafael Vercal, Cardinals. Mason Nguyen. Jim Edmunds autographs, Scott Rowland. Zerp, Ting Kentz. Jimmy Crooks. If you click the link, buddy, it'll show you all the teams remaining, man. Braves, Rockies, Astros, Marlins, Brewers, and the different price points. So just click that link, and that'll lead you right to the teams, man. Juan Bencho, Scott Rowland, Albert Pujols to 10, Dyken Material Signatures, Hall of Fame Signatures, Ted Sivins, Jumble Material Signatures, Pete Hansen for the Cardinals, Tim Sivins, or Ted Sivins, sorry, out of 49. Ken Boy, legendary booklet, one-on-ones, Lou Brock, Bob Gibson at 10, Stan Musil, one-on-ones, and Red Shaw and Deist, one-on-ones. So yeah. This is NT Baseball, man, so you're basically chasing either prospects or veterans slash Hall of Famers or legendary players from back in the early 1900s, really. It is a pretty high-end box product. I think it's like a $600 box. So, like I said, you're basically chasing prospects or legendary players that are now out of the league, future Hall of Famers, Hall of Famers, and then legendary players like, honestly, we hit like a game use relic out of five of Honest Wagner earlier. So, you know, players with like that caliber. Bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum. Hey guys. I will give you a free piece of news for a future pizza emergency. So, you'll have an emergency and a holiday out here. This is the home of the Hall of Famers, one-on-ones, one-on-ones, one-on-ones, one-on-ones, one-on-ones, one-on-ones. Don't do comedy stuff, cheesy friends. Best thing since they get a Hall of Famers is they get up, which is the best thing since we're original stuff, cheesy friends. You don't know who's new comedy stuff, cheesy friends. Or the other two or more mix-and-match items for the $6.99 each, I don't know. If it's not working, then I'd assume that you're either putting the wrong card information or, you know, something's going on on your end. Because it's pretty simple for the most part. You click the asterisk, right? You add it to your card. View your card, check out. You read the agreement terms. And then it's pretty much just putting in your information, really. So, if it's not letting you, it's because you're probably putting the wrong address matching the card. Maybe putting the wrong card number, et cetera, et cetera. So, I wish I could help further. But I mean, at that point, I mean, I think it's kind of on your end. Yeah, make sure that your credit card or your card matches your address, shipping address, et cetera, so. All right, guys, also, too, guys, if anybody's interested in a random number block, if you can give me a show of hands, like, hey, I'd grab a spot or two. I can do it, too, guys. It's just, right now, it's looking like it's going to be like 92 bucks, which is obviously, you know, almost double the last one. Last one was only 50 bucks we did for number two. So, I mean, or number three, I should say. So, it's like, you know, if you guys are interested in an R&B, I mean, you're going to own the piece of 13 teams. But, like I said, if we could trim down those $30 teams, right, sell those $430 teams, that cuts off like 12 bucks easily, right? Now it's like an $80 R&B, and then all of a sudden, if we can sell, let's say, like the Cardinals are braves and take off another 23 bucks there, then we're in the 50s, 60s, and then we can always just do another round and never block that, that way. But, kind of need just a little bit more help, guys, to get this break rolling. I'm starting to see the value. You want a job? You can be like Batman and Robin. What? I don't need a Robin. Okay, seriously, what is this? What do you get on? Cheese me a test? This had Rick to Rick. He's got the one good place. Seriously? Yeah, this is on the foot. 14. 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10. There's our guy. We're at some day. Seriously, will? Oh, my God. That's your father. You don't remember your father? No, I'm not. Number five, 55. We ordered on this one night. We're doing a great pizza to use for a future pizza emergency. We did it for the first five minutes. I can order a context of five minutes and get them the next day. You can say 30% for the first order. First order. All of them, you'll go to spot zero. We're fluent in the most profound language ever known. T-spot, fluent in a word. Find your own word. It's on the low ground. It's on the low ground. You can continue to communicate. Load it on those people that you're spending no more. That's a picture map. A better plan is horizon. It starts at 5,000 on the right. Did you say to me, you're going to go to spot zero? That's a five. Bring it up with some maps. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. That's possible. All right, guys. So did it die down, guys? Do people still want to break this? Like I said, I can put them in a random number block, guys, but I feel a little bit more comfortable with being a little bit more cheaper. But I don't know, if I can get a show of hands for the people that are watching and like, hey, I grab a spot, you know, you can do it. I brought the case already, too, guys. Should I just give it a shot, guys? be like 92 bucks and I could just leave out the $30 seems and take them out and it'd be like 80 bucks already also two guys the holiday mixer two left plus of two fillers guys if we sell these two spots I can cancel the second filler guys and that's it we just got to do one filler and three more spots so that's looking like we probably will do that tomorrow at some point early on like so we went on a crazy good run today guys we sold coverman Boston spots Mac got a handful of them Jeffrey Charles Tristan Dustin John so again if we can sell those last two spots guys I can cancel the third and final filler and we'll have to do one all righty guys so again we're down to 13 here guys I don't know if I want to fill it up just yet I mean I just don't want it to sit there for so long guys I mean like I said if anybody's interested in putting it into an r&b guys let me know I can I just don't want it to be too expensive and then it sits there and we don't do it tonight so trying to give every little opportunity for someone to pop in and potentially grab some straight up spots that way the r&b is a little cheaper but if you guys want me to fill it up guys just let me know you know kind of kind of communicate like yeah man you know what I'll think I'll grab a spot it's looking like it'd be like 92 bucks right now guys so let's go guys let's try to trim this down guys let's get a little rally restarted so let's go guys let's get a little rally started guys somebody grab a spot in the spring down to 12 23 out of 49 first place in the niggas every day you want to have a 10 today I say at the end of the day today's that one I guess just like college football I mean I guess just like college football I mean I guess just next one 21st to the next game we'll do a little recap here we have 21st to the back so you know what I mean we uh they've seen my mom oh yeah that is your brand let's make them in this part of the time in this part of the time we'll put it as well it's true my business lost a dog it was straight up it was in the south brand and it didn't even park straight up our store you have both the dogs you have six oh all right we got some life guys let's see ed just bought the atlanta braves baby woo boom and jason k got the marlins astros and rockies three out of the 30 dollar teams guys there's still the blue jays out there for 30 bucks but boom we have life guys 9 left 9 left we have life we have life anybody else want to join in the party guys a little late night rally so now that we've turned down four teams guys that looks so much better braves are now off the board and then astros marlins and rockies are now off the board so if we did an r&b looking like it'll be 73 dollars so I mean that's that's a lot cheaper guys than 92 it's about 19 dollars cheaper now if we can sell a couple more teams guys I mean we can get this into the 60s and 50s but if anybody's interested in a random number block for the remaining teams at 73 bucks guys let me know how much it would cost like I said there's still a carnals team out there that was always getting hits being taken off the board like I said we still have the a's that are still there they hit a lot guys a's are still there nationals tend to hit in every single case I mean if we could trim down a few more teams guys this would bring it down to 7, 6 left potentially and then we can easily random number block that at a much much lower price point it could be as little as like 40-50 bucks so we have life guys 9 left like I said if you guys want me to random number block the remaining teams for the people that are watching guys let me know it'd be like 73 dollars but I feel like I want to keep it around the 50s guys I feel like I want to keep it around the 50s even if this is the last case we do tonight guys we could trim down number 5 that'd be solid guys 5 cases in one day very solid here guys so let's go we still have an hour and a half left guys we can easily do this and I went through the did I even go through the blue jays checklist not even if I went through the blue jays checklist let's go through the blue jays blue jays have some ricky titan which I think we hit him in the first case there's some orelvius martinis and k-doughty which I'm assuming are all prospects since they're rookie materials they have some joe carter and some old school guys ricky titan ricky titan in there tucker toman tucker toman daikon material signatures there's also field pass signatures of Roberto Alomar and joe carter which are not too shabby there Roberto Alomar panmanship materials prime parents joe carter and Roberto Alomar there's some rookie signatures titan in k-doughty orelvius martinis joe carter paul mauler it is a paul mauler edition blue jays um I think so chat I really do man I mean I would still do it I would still do it if it like magically sold out like all the spots plus the fillers but I think it easily does man we're only nine spots away and or seven or eight spots away and really realistically if over the night we sell those two straight up spots if I wake up early in the morning and see it's at zero I'm gonna cancel the second to last filler and put three spots back in and then we just gotta do one filler and three spots so yeah I'm very confident man we sold a good amount of spots today where it's really a reality that we easily do that early tomorrow if that's the case you know I might walk in and only have to do the filler so if you're thinking of grabbing a full spot or you know potentially getting a spot on the filler I mean right now is a good time alright Stephen Kendrick just took the giants baby we have life we have life giants off the board boom eight left eight left guys let's get a little break going guys remember these boxes are like six hundred bucks guys so even if some of these teams are at a hundred dollars guys you're paying a small fraction of the price not only to get a hit in one box but four boxes and now that we got the giants off the board that brings it down to about sixty five dollars in R&B guys again we're getting closer and closer guys if we need to do an R&B but at this point we have a little bit of momentum right now in the last like ten minutes guys we've sold uh you know six teams so I mean if anybody's interested guys eight left like I said the blue jays team is not bad for thirty bucks if you want to get into a group break um they're also part of the huge uh retro materials they're also part of the big treasure chest booklet there's also timeless treasures booklet materials there's like Frank Thomas Gary Sheffield Mark McGuire Rafael Pamero and I can't believe it but is there a Frank Thomas blue jays edition in this? am I seeing that correctly? Toronto blue jays Frank Thomas you play for the blue jays? I mean I would have never know but yeah played for the blue jays for two years that's crazy the fact that there's a Frank Thomas blue jays in there and then there's a couple blue jays there for the uh looks like potentially prospects like Ricky Tiderman and stuff like that eight left also two guys if you're like you know what you know what man I'm just going to wait for the r&b because I kind of want to take my chances and spend sixty bucks on a r&b rather than a sixty dollar team or a seventy dollar team let me know guys that I can post that r&b up right now like I said right now it's looking like sixty five bucks there's still a fifty dollar Philly's team there again guys there's a few teams that man they were taking so much and obviously hit a lot Mets have been hitting a lot the uh nationals have been hitting almost in every case the A's hit pretty well I mean those are three teams that I'm naming right off the bat that I for sure have hit now we haven't seen much brewers honestly but they have a really big checklist with a bunch of Jackson chariot Carnals were taken to the first four pick your teams I mean some really good teams that are usually not really there in the first four are still available guys but I think at this late at night for as many cases as we've done today guys we're gonna need a little bit of help guys digging a little deeper just to get this done guys and I really feel like we can guys ended off with number five just sounds so sweet we come back tomorrow I can even post more pick your teams up tonight for tomorrow that way when we get here we can do number six seven do the mixer and then still even do more pick your teams if you guys want so let's go guys we got about twenty people watching on the website guys only about ten people on the chat right now actively but we got about double the people on the website guys let's trim it down to seven bro mom's going to Vegas in February my brother-in-law and stuff like that for that one weekend what is it fucking president's day I don't know whatever the fuck it was but they're going for like four or five days and they're like oh I should come and do it and I was looking at my end life and like I have concepts like well some cheaper will tell it's like it's embarrassing for the links is like $20 is it really? it's like super cheap I'm like bro I can get a fucking whole floor for like $100 but I'm like bro do I even want to send the links for that cheap and then like Ceasar's house is pretty cheap like a weekend too it's like $110 I'm just like yeah I've never stayed at Ceasar's before but I'm like they're like well my brother-in-law stay in New York because he likes to stay there I'm like bro if I stay over there I'm like wait for I don't have to walk to you guys I was looking at the wind though the wind was like $220 I know it's not but I'm like bro compared to what people fucking say like a fucking Harris was like $40 so it's so funny for what weekend? well I'm going like on a Saturday Sunday Monday kind of deal it was that February like the 19th or something I think it's the week after the Superbowl actually but it was just so funny to me I'm like I'm getting way better deals on my total rewards or Ceasar rewards but I haven't stayed with Ceasar's in like a few years since I went to play in Hollywood it is cheap that weekend but I kind of want to go but like what? with the 24th you said? no it's like the 18th or 9th whatever that weekend is for president it's like 18 or 19th or something no the week after that dude it's expensive because like I was looking at the wind the weekend after and it was like $2,000 a night I don't know what the fuck that day is but I'm going I think like on the 24th I think I'm going to I'm going to swim track oh okay gotcha oh you're going to go a week before me then oh you're going? I'm going on March 2nd and 3rd yeah are you going to the Lakers Thunder game? the okay see Phoenix Suns game yeah they play that Sunday I'll tell you about the Lakers Thunder no oh here no I don't want to go that good that's just too expensive bro you're telling me the Lakers is cheap because it's 50 bucks okay but that means that it's fucking like $10 let me see I'll look it up right now you should dude they fucking murdered the they went into Denver and murdered Denver today with freaking um what's his name all of them in the plane I was so surprised what day do they play them? they play on January the 15th it's like a back to back I remember do you like the same break over in Oregon like copy and paste the title so I don't keep it typing yet? yeah and I keep forgetting the copy of it oh yeah they play Tuesday January 9th 16th yeah bro but if you go to the Laker game I can't go to the Laker game because that means we're both off it's on a Monday oh okay then I can go that day then oh okay it's on a Monday then yeah maybe I'll go it's the 15th they play the Lakers they play the Clippers on Tuesday god damn it Michael you're on to something I could have sworn I could have sworn I thought it was like on the Tuesday Wednesday so I was like I don't know if I'll be able to go no because I'm getting my game and I was looking at what games and that game is pretty cheap bro I can sit in the PR section for the Clippers game for 69 bucks that is true I have to use another personal day okay so yeah the cheapest ticket for a Lakers for a Clippers Lakers I mean sorry Clippers Thunder is $18 so like when you said 50 I'm like I guess that's not that bad it's time to Lakers maybe I'll go to that game to see what you were it's on Monday game PR section where I like to sit is like $200 you know what I like to sit where? on the floor you got money in the pool that's where I sat for 40 years oh yeah that's the only view I like just the floor and it's funny too because like when we wouldn't be working that quarter you'd have to go to the press box yeah but I get to know all the people that guide you to your seats and stuff and you just ask them hey where is the empty seat done and shit why would you have to go to the press box though it's just because there's just seats and then you said they can feed you at their home or they have food vouchers so you can pick where you go oh okay that makes sense that's where my love for McDonald's came from really? oh I know they used to have McDonald's there I forgot they used to have it in the top deck and they used to have it down at the bottom maybe I'll look into it yeah I mean I can use some of my fantasy money to pay for these tickets so you split both of them? yeah I told Nick this how his uncle wanted to split because he told me he was like yeah my uncle two years ago when he won he split it with the winner or he split it with the person I was like fuck I'll split it with him if he wants to split it he's like yeah it was $1,000 not bad I didn't want to be like that I kind of wanted to be greedy and play for it all but I was like yeah I really just still try to win but because I don't know if I'm going to beat him I'm more confident in beating my friends league but I'm like bro that's like an extra $1,000 right there it was like I really just split that finally it's about time bro I haven't been in championship games in years dude I would just get F'd alright guys so we had some crazy momentum we're down to 8 left next case like I said I can do an R&B and it'd be about 65 bucks but I kind of wanted it to be just a little bit cheaper but if there's people out there that want to do this as an R&B for $65 guys let me know 9 I've got to be still 14 nah it's been moving pretty good the second half of the night that's like one of our peak shit is like after summer what the fuck is Lexus Club yeah we can't see it yeah like why is it's only 52 dollars and it says it's only ROGA but is it like standing room only I don't know if it's a standing room I've never seen it I've never seen it sell like that I was just wondering it's not even to the game it's not even to the game it's just to get to the Lexus Club it's like this is a Lexus Club pass I was like what the fuck it was over there you were right then let's go guys let's get this down so let's go guys we can turn this down to like 6 left depending on what teams get taking guys I can random number block the rest guys but if anybody's in the chat thinking you know what I'd grab a spot for 65 bucks if we R&B'd up the remaining teams guys let me know yeah there's still a $30 team like the Blue Jays so if you're a little low on funds but you still want to join a group break for NT there are some decent hits you can get in there for the Blue Jays for only 30 bucks guys you know Phillies are also a pretty cheap team at 50 then you have the A's at 60 who I think are actually a really good value team guys I feel like the A's have been hitting a lot and their checklist is pretty deep with prospects and veterans, hall of famers so for $60 just a little bit more guys that's a good team right there Razor is a solid team too but you're just looking more for prospects than anything and we haven't seen a junior commentator yet but this could be the case Nationals for 80 has been another solid team where I feel like they've consistently hit a single case and then you had a team like the Cardinals that were taken in the first four and hit some nice stuff but looking to get that big monster there so again if we can sell a few more teams guys get this into the $50 range I think we can easily sell up that as an R&B if we need to but counting just a little bit more help guys 8 left I'm thinking guys if we don't sell any more teams in the next 15 minutes guys we can get the R&B at $65 a spot and hopefully people want to get in on that it'll have a good amount of teams in there just like the last R&B and honestly the last R&B we did 8 guys spots 0 and 1 especially 1 because we had a couple of 1s hit really well but kind of spread it out it was really heavy on one number guys but that's the risk you take obviously getting into an R&B but it could be you getting that big hit guys so I think at 10 o'clock guys I'm going to fill it up guys so let's try to get it rolling guys 8 left we've rallied from 13 to 8 I think we can still do it guys we have 2 people in the checkout pages guys I don't know if they've abandoned their cart or what or maybe they're still deciding what they want to get but you know there's people there I think someone was thinking of taking the Brewers guys the Brewers have been waiting for a big hit guys and this could be the case Brewers have a solid checklist guys there's a lot a lot of Jackson Sherrio in here guys so I mean if anybody's interested in that team too guys they're a big team so let's go guys let's get this into down to you know 7 or 6 or 6 left guys down down down down down down down down down down maybe I should just leave and come back more often Will actually sold out the Immaculate 1 Boxer which we can do still too we got the Buxin 3 what's up prime time how you doing buddy Yeah, buddy, we can do that right now man. Shea got the Oakland a's and the blue jays whoo-hoo So there you go. That would bring down an R&B if we did one down to 56 bucks So that's something you guys are interested in guys if not Like I said if nobody buys any more teens by the time I'm done with this next little small snack break their prime time got in I'll R&B up the remaining six teams guys, but you have a great team like the Cardinals a great team like the Brewers Mets have hit a ton Like I said, you have also the rays and national staffs and great prospects Down to six left guys. We can do this full case of NT baseball right now guys But in the meantime though, we'll do this little break to the prime time sold out Hope you're doing good. Well, how was I know I'm pretty told me the holidays are busy Man is it to kind of slow down a little bit? Are you still getting that big big surgeon for New Year's? And then will just bought the Phillies and the Cardinals Phillies and Cardinals Alrighty guys. We're in business now four left So we're just missing the Brewers the Mets the rays and the Nationals guys So if anybody wants to buy those teams guys Let me know if not guys an R&B for those teams would be 38 bucks 38 bucks If I need a random number blog them but at this point I feel like Might be able to sell it out straight up guys You know what man? Um The Mets and Nationals have hit a lot in Our cases so far But by far the best ones been the Brewers, but we haven't seen much Jackson Chereau I mean, he's really the big one you're chasing more prospects than anything You know, we feel like Robin Yowell and stuff like that which is great like veteran stuff But you really wanted to chase like South Fairlake and Jackson Chereau. So that's why they're a little pricier at 130 So by far they are I think the best team remaining Just haven't seen much of them, which could change in this case But I will say the Mets have been a really good team to grab They hit a lot and so have the Nationals They've hit a lot too So I mean any one of those top three teams you can go either out, but Like I said, we just one of those teams we haven't hit anything really monstrous for them But maybe we're due And then the other two we have seen a lot for them. So I'm you know kind of confident saying that you could get some pretty big hits there We've had a couple one-on-ones for the Mets already as well you know, so That wouldn't be a bad play either. All right, so David got the first couple spots got two Mike got one Jason K got one and then we'll just hold it out. Let's sell this out here Okay, cool, and I'll post them another one of these immaculates It's a fun cheaper personal too if anybody wanted to just buy the full spots This is coming from a sealed case too. We have one two three four five boxes remaining. We've done three so far A lot cheaper too than NT, but NT's been pretty solid though. Let's just have some All right, here we go What's up everybody? JZR4jasmicecasebase.com. We just sold out 2023 Panini Immaculate Baseball This is a one box break random division number four guys and again This is coming from a case everybody's around a division four autographs per box to remember really cards per box Let's click dice roll five into five ten times one two three four five six eight nine ten Ten times ten ten Well at the top down at David ten times here One two three Five six seven eight nine ten Ten times ten ten NL West on the AL East Uh, well you have the NL West as well as the NL Central and Mike you have the AL East and NL East Or AL East for AL West sorry for Mike David with the NL East Jason K you have the AL Central And then David with the AL East So there you guys go there. I don't think there's going to be any trading, right? So let's just close it TWC All right guys, so I got one two three four five boxes here I'm gonna make some space just so I can use this dice roll Two We'll get the second box here That's the box we use Um, well immaculate is a lot like NT. So this year's this year's immaculate and this year's NT I mean anything actually panini So they basically don't have the MLB players association anymore. So you won't see a lot of current MLB stars anymore So the only thing you can really find are prospects You know hall of famers right out of the league or players out of the league really plus the old school guys, right? so You know, obviously division wise, you know, if you go look at the MLB divisions, you know If you think about old school people, you know, Yankees would division would be a battle to have they are the what um AL East were Baltimore's in there because you have like Jackson holiday Stuff like that, right? Tampa Bay has like junior common arrow stuff. So I think AL East is a solid one to have But the good thing about getting a division is that you're gonna get a crop of teams So every division actually has some good teams, you know and something like this So not a terrible one You know NL West could have a lot of Arizona Diamondback prospects in there, right with some Dodgers NL central could have Jackson shrew will Milwaukee, right the Cubs Cincinnati Eleanor Cruz for the NL central all the divisions are solid man to be honest It's just obviously Let's find out what hits in the division right because you can get the best division in the product But doesn't mean you're gonna hit right So don't worry. I'll I'll I'll stay out the hits Look at that right at the top too, man. How about this? So the little fielding glove Coulson Montgomery four out of five So again, this is a top prospect there for the Chicago White Sox That is a nice fielding glove and autograph to five Beautiful here right there and that's going to be Chicago White Sox which goes to the AL central going to Jason K Very nice one there, buddy We have Yuri Perez for the Miami Marlins Miami Marlins would be going to the NL East going to David We have a Time Madden for Detroit Detroit Tigers would be AL central Which is Jason K as well Jason K doing pretty well so far Look at this. Oh my god Sal Frillick so he's a top prospect there for the uh Milwaukee Brewers who are still available on the picker team if anybody's interested unless they sold Beautiful jumbo patch. That's a sleeve patch to 10 And uh, Jesus Um, Milwaukee goes to the NL central Which is going to William prime time That's yours, buddy. So that's one of their top prospect kids right there from Milwaukee Beautiful patch, man Then we got Jim Edmonds to 35 Uh also part of the NL central so that goes to you too as well, buddy And last but not least all but an Ozzie Guillen back when he was a player 22 out of 49 And I believe this is going to go to the AL central which is Jason K Yep, there you go, man Nice break for you, Jason Nice little boxer here jumbo fielding glove the ureteras the time madden and then look at that jumbo patch I gotta take a picture of that So appreciate you guys. I did post up another one boxer if you guys want to get it going jaspy's case breaks.com All right, well, well you only got one hit man, but you did get a nice one though I took a picture of that self for like We'll just help that guys took two more teams got the nationals and the brewers so That leaves us with the Mets and Rays guys last two teams. Can we sell it out straight up guys? If I goddamn have to I will R&B this up, but I hope I don't have to If I had a R&B this up it'd be a hundred it'd be 17 dollars A spot. I feel like at this point we could just sell it out straight up Two left and honestly guys, these are two solid teams. Like I said, we've been seeing a lot of Mets The only other team that we haven't really seen much of is the Rays, but we have hit some Rays Just haven't hit like, you know junior common arrow guys, you know that bigger prospect Two left I wish I could make a deal prime time. I wish I could man It's just don't really do that here and then also too. We've been kind of selling them out On their own man, you know If I have to I'll put it in an R&B and it's only 17 bucks, but I do appreciate you grabbing those teams, man You know, I'm no disrespect or anything like that. It's just I can't really can't really give out deals here really I think the whole total cost of these boxes that we're selling them for Is like 550 per box on our picker teams Also, so like if you were to go potentially buy this Somewhere else potentially I'm not saying that pick your team prices are all the same, but Most people are selling these boxes for like 600 bucks a box Even as high as 650 so You know, we're like 50 dollars a box cheaper. So, you know, we're saving some people a little bit of money Just by buying with us, but Like I said, I'm still appreciating man. I just I just I wish I could do deals But hopefully my thing is that I get you some big hits. You don't even have to worry about the deals, you know And it's all worth it So two left guys So two teams left guys if we don't sell these two teams that next like 10 minutes or so guys I will put them in an r&b and we'll just sell them in an r&b for 17 bucks So last two teams here guys Mets and rays better Mets have been hitting pretty well in this case so far And then the rays were still looking for like a big junior common error guys Last two teams to get this break sold out guys Also do guys, I mean that makes sure can't go tonight after all anymore But just remember guys, we are literally just two fillers and two spots away And if we sell these two spots overnight I'm going to cancel the second filler and we don't have to do any more fillers And just got to sell three more spots straight up. So essentially we only need to sell Five straight up spots in one filler guys So I think that mixer is going to happen tomorrow guys and it's a beautiful mixer guys Beautiful mixer tons of different bowman draft years tons of different tops chrome sapphire Cosmic chrome museum collection three different years tops chrome delight Not the update, but the delight Museum like I said three different years tops chrome hta Bowman chrome hobby first edition inception leaf exotic It's a very very nice mixer guys And it also gives you three times the entries into the holiday promo So of course you guys can get that and get some chances of winning some back some pretty big prizes and some money back so Get that rolling guys All right, we'll sell it out guys nice raising meds He also grabbed the indianapolis colton prism number one So that prism that releases on wednesday guys not down to seven nice Nice. All right guys well, I mean If you guys wanted to sell it number six, I'll stay a little bit later and break it But we're at 15 left there, but I mean, I'm happy. We just got number five done I'll also most likely put up some more picker teams too. All right, let's get this All right guys, here we go. Whoa. Thanks for the fill everybody Let's see what we can find in this case here And like I said the next case number six and seven are on the website halfway there Most likely go done tomorrow unless you guys want to break another one today I'm stupid You remember how yesterday I was looking for the dan marino jersey. Yeah, but then he said mariano Yeah, he just takes me try and give away a 2022 ginter box. Okay. Okay. I went in the back I said we only have 2022 I know when I do, you know, it's funny the other day too I was like, hey, man, I can't find no bowman draft And it was like literally in front of me And he's like, yeah, it's right there. It's those green boxes in the locker and I'm all like, you know, I'm like Oh, yeah, this is blowing jobs. I was like, what the hell? All right, here we go guys What's up everybody jason from jazby's case break dot com We just sold out 2023 community national treasures baseball four box case break p yt number five guys And here we go nice little late night rally here for number five Will which is prime time got this going guys and got the last few teams and Sold it out guys. I appreciate guys. It was a great collective effort, man. Jason k got a couple teams late You know ed got the braves and steven kendrick got the giants You know and then we sold a handful more teams and got it done with prime time here So again, it's been a really fun product to read today guys super super fun But always wanting to get better and do more And uh, I'm glad we got this number five though So here we go guys really. Wow super thin box super thin We've even seen some massive boxes It's just shocking. Maybe there's a redemption on this section. That kind of would make sense Maybe a redemption somewhere in there All right, it's like there's been a lot All right, we got gill Hodges for brooklyn three out of 49 dodge is going to roi Noice. All right, then we got george rillard for cleveland to 49 cleveland for roger Roger roger Then we got a jeremy de la rosa for washington going to william prime time Little prospect there To 25 we got al lupus for brooklyn Dodgers That's another one there for roi. Then we got a mario solto for Cincinnati to 99 That's that field pass Very nice. Cincinnati reds went a dillon. Then we got a another mario solto To 49 this time is a sticker out of well back to back hits for the reds dillon We got for kansas city gaven cross To 49 Timothy with that one How about the 10 roberto alamar for the cleveland guardians going to roger Oh, what a nasty patch out of 25 ellie de la cruz 7 out of 25 three color patch and autograph Man, what a reds box dillon There you go, man Shoosh This is the box we're looking at Much much thicker here fatty box right here We got jumbo material signatures to 49 Nice toz bradley going to the Tampa Bay Rays Tampa Bay Rays that is going to william. That's last ball mojo as well Then we got a jacob berry for miami two color patch That is out of 10 Bones going to jason k and then tink hens for saint louis That's saint louis cardinals going to william Or these are all nice bigger prospects here We got a bob gibson for saint louis nice treasured stats. These are actually really nice looking cards 79 out of 99 Then we got a greg maddox 15 out of 25 chicago cubs edition cubs going to ryan h Then we got a chi bush for the uh Angels 52 out of 99 Angels going to kev Then we got a lesko lesko dillon lesko 10 99 San Diego Padres going to francis Let me have a field pass coming up Nice joe carter for toronto There you go We were going through the toronto blue jays checklist and that was not a bad hit there for 30 dollar team There you go. Shea with the blue jays Beautiful signature too We got eight out of 99. That is a ho yuli Fort philadelphia philly's going to william and last one here. How about the macho man? Out of 99 matataka yoshida That's gonna go to the red sox and john Two boxes down two more to go Legendary materials jimmy fox for the philadelphia a's i believe that should be philadelphia a's I want to double check though and if it is philadelphia a's that's going to go to the oakland a's which is shea If it's philly's it's going to go to the philly's and william bud. It's most likely philadelphia a's All right, so this is legendary materials Yes, so philadelphia athletics legendary materials booklet Yep, so this will show you guys So that goes to the oakland a's which is where they moved to after that So oakland with that one That goes to shea That's when they're at a at a 10 though too. All right. We got a burr blight leaven from minnesota To 25 Minnesota twins going to mat Got p rose for cincinati to 25 p rose cincinati reds went to dylan Then we got a matataka yoshida to 25 two-color patch Red sox with john We have a james wood colossal for washington That's another prospect there for the nationals going to william Then we got a rafael for a call for atlanta 94 out of 99 rafael for coal i remember when he was a doger atlanta going to ed Then we got for the yanks spencer jones 23 out of 25 All right a couple more to go All right, we got novelli martin. That's his username. It looks like at martin novelli Out of 99 i've gotten another hit for cincinati We have a redemption coming up and then we have a mason win eight out of 99 for st lewis Carnals going to william And hopefully that's who i hopefully it is who i think it is guys He actually has been a redemption in this product people have said So hopefully that's what i think it is we've been looking for him all day today guys rookie material signatures guys So rookie material signatures I forgot on the chart. It's just in case Here we go car number 105 105 There he is jackson chario Very nice. That's gonna go to the milwaukee brewers guys. We've been missing him all day first four cases no jackson chario's case number five was the winner and Prom time congrats, buddy. You got the brewers Supposed to be the real deal man So that should be out of 99. It looks like if it was a parallel it would have been a lot less but Out of 99 rookie material signatures There we go. Nice Last box here guys, finally we got jordan lawler to 10 Wow, look at that batch Disgusting patch in autograph That's for the arizona diamond bank is going to add Seven out of ten as well, man. Beautiful. Nice one right there Beautiful. I gotta take a picture of that disgusting Nasty All right, we got a retro seya suzuki for the chicago cubs. I'm gonna ryan nice three color patch and then diego cartea To 49 for the dodgers Dodgers is roi We have a itchero 15 or sorry two out of 51 little jersey numbers Seattle mariners that's going to roi And we got a pretty plate one-on-one Cam collier what a break for the reds Cincinnati reds going to dillon And the reds have just been raking throughout the whole case We got ricky titan clutch factor autographs to 99 That's going to go to the blue jays and shei We got an on-card here cave dowdy another one for Toronto, man. Dang There you go, buddy $30 team right here guys getting some hits There we got a christian vaccaro Nice one there to the 99 That's another one for will in the nationals Brennan davis that's cool. He's supposed to be a top prospect there for the cubs two three color patch and autograph 11 out of 25 That's going to the cubbies and ryan And last but not least guys last hit of the break One out of five I'm a little chipper jones One out of five beautiful looking car too definitive ink beautiful signature Nice way to end the box Very nice All right guys. There you go. Very very nice. So that chipper jones was awesome That jimmy fox right with jumbo materials there gill Hodges The jordan lullar booklet was nasty Right, we got that brennan davis One-on-one right there. They eat shiro the jackson sharia redemption, which was a nice one novelli marté rafael for a call a little old-school guy there Right bird blight levin matataguya shita macho man joe carter Very very nice case guys very nice The elly dilla cruise rps nasty It's yours prime time. You didn't hear me man. I said jackson sharia That's going to you buddy. That's the big prospect outside buffer the brewers All right, pretty sure you guys pick your team number six is in the store jaspy's case breaks.com Oh, well you hit pretty well man So if you want to watch the replay i'll upload it right now You got a lot of nice hits for a lot of your teams and especially that jackson sharia too Thank you, man But yeah guys, you know that big mixer is probably going to happen tomorrow guys You only have to do two fillers in two spots But i'm probably going to end up cancelling that second filler because I feel like overnight We're going to sell these two full spots here So I really expect us to really just have to do three more spots and 24 spots in the filler So like I said, if you're thinking or grabbing a spot guys really get it now because If overnight we sell those two spots if I wake up early and see that i'm going to post three more And that's it. I can't sell any more after that because the last three are going to be hiding in this filler So either grab some filler spots or if you're really thinking about grabbing a full spot get it tonight guys because I we're only really essentially five spots away full and one filler. That's how close we are We've already sold Basically 19 straight up spots and three spots through a filler. So we're basically at 22 spots sold Just got to sell eight more Now obviously go buy your teams in nt as well. No problem president. Thank you buddy Uh that way of course become wednesday. We can just easily just cruise through that um But yeah guys, I mean i'm still live for about another 30 minutes It's freaking nice So All right guys, let's see Also to you guys I'm gonna post up uh figure t number eight right now two Just so i can have a third case up for tomorrow And you guys can start pre-ordering that right now 15 All right All right All right, I post a number eight guys if anybody wants to snag some teams there um You know, I just wanted to post another case up for tomorrow The way we at least have three um But yeah guys, it seems like that's pretty much gonna be it for us pretty much He's my favorite player I All righty guys, I'm going to call it thing guys. I think that's pretty much it for me Thank you for a great night of breaking guys. I definitely made it for yesterday And we pretty much almost got this mixer sold out guys. So tomorrow Not only can we still do some more nt We'll be able to do that uh mixer tomorrow guys. So again, I'm going to monitor it overnight guys And we sell two spots in the early morning hours I'll probably cancel the second to last filler guys and we'll just do three more straight up spots And uh, yeah guys, I mean that's pretty much it Two fillers and two straight up spots or five spots straight up one filler And again, I did post another nt guys you guys can start pre ordering that and I expect us to do at least six and seven tomorrow guys so Should be pretty nice And prison football for wednesday guys already saw it very nicely so Appreciate everybody Have a great night. Thank you for a great night of breaking up. See you guys
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Blowin' in the Wind- Changes and Challenges (The Rule of Law in the new Abnormal)
Shifts and Struggles at All Levels. The host for this episode is Chuck Crumpton. The guests for this episode are Benjamin Davis, Vernellia Randall, Jeffrey Portnoy and Tina Patterson. Grass roots movements for change and government conflicts and challenges. ThinkTech Hawaii streams live on the Internet from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Hawaii time most weekdays, then we stream our earlier shows all night long. 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 public awareness and promoting civic engagement in Hawaii.
[ "Think Tech Hawaii", "Tech", "Energy", "Globalization", "Diversification", "Economy", "Hawaii", "popular", "change", "leadership", "grass roots", "challenges", "opposition", "forces", "Chuck Crumpton", "Benjamin Davis", "Vernellia Randall", "Jeffrey Portnoy", "Tina Patterson" ]
2021-05-28T06:05:24
2024-02-05T08:09:35
1,838
3kATWjY0eso
Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. Wherever you are. This is Think Tech Hawaii. Rule of law in the new abnormal. Whatever that may be. And we have the great pleasure and honor of having with us today, Professor Vanalia Randall, who is currently in Florida. Professor Emerita from University of Dayton School of Law. We have Sina Patterson up north in Germantown, Maryland, right? Mediator and arbitrator par excellence. We have Professor Emeritus getting the gender right. Ben Davis from the University of Toledo School of Law and balancing out us non-academics. Jeff Portnoy, all the way from Beverly Hills, our leading post amendment and constitutional lawyer with his Hawaii lava hat out by the pool in Beverly Hills. We're getting a little feedback from okay well yeah he's out of the pool so there's probably people talking. Okay so I was going to tell that Jeff since Jeff's in Beverly Hills I was going to tell the famous Beverly Hills joke which is the producer meeting with the other producer for lunch and one producer talks about himself for like two hours and looks at his watch and says oh heaven I've been talking about myself for two hours. Let's talk about you. Tell me what do you think of me? I have to admit I don't get the joke. Okay but then I don't get a lot of jokes so I have to I'm constantly telling my son I don't get it. All right okay fair enough it's like it's all about him. Everybody in Iowa it's all about themselves. Okay got it. We get that. Okay so that's a good a good segue a good transition we have four right inquiring critical thinking minds here. What is it about right now that's on your mind? Professor Randall what's getting your attention these days in what's going on? The open air prison in Gaza the open prayer prison called Gaza is on my mind. The lack of movement on on uh voting rights and the lack of movement on police reform and Biden's reneging on the student loan forgiveness are the things on my mind. Okay that gives us what's on other people's minds. Okay Tina what about you? What's on my mind? Voting rights and how it's being presented in the media and the lack of coordinated effort the lack of info or true information about the impact regarding the ID requirements. Maryland is moving to going without mask starting on Monday the 31st of May. What impact will that be? We still have a population that isn't vaccinated and there is a subset of that population that will never be vaccinated for whatever reasons. I spent a part of my morning hearing a presentation regarding allowing alcohol in the parks when we know that right now is probably one of the most tenuous times for us as a region but also as a society. COVID has for better for worse brought forward some of the more dangerous aspects of mental health but also some of our coping skills and mechanisms and for some of us we've reached our breaking point so um knowing that there are people who are suffering from depression other forms of mental illness and not necessarily addressing that especially in our minority and color communities of color. And the third and it's more of a personal sticking point for me is the conversations that I'm hearing from people who are saying that they're concerned that they're their children and I'm talking specifically about people who would be identified as white saying our schools schools don't want my boy don't want my girl in their school any longer. Those those places are being taken by African American students or Asian students or other students of color to which I would say that's utter poppycock. I have another word I'd use offline but it it shapes me that we're still having this conversation because someone you know the the response has been well you know we have affirmative action that should be enough. Folks it's this is not about affirmative action we are in the midst of societal change and if this is bothering you imagine what it's been like for people like Professor Davis or Professor Randall for me who have been challenged at some point or another regarding our access to education and why we were present where we were. So those are the things that are on my mind probably more than you wanted to hear but those were the first things that came forth. No it's absolutely wonderful and it brings to mind a friend asked the other day he said you think there's any other country in the world who where the law is restricting open carry of alcohol are more strict than the laws about open carry of guns. Okay brother Ben what's on your mind. Here at least last night on Rachel Maddow talking more about civil or criminal action at the federal level with regard to the Arizona product that's going on and that's trying to be replicated across the country. I'm like this should have happened a month two months ago when this stuff started because I considered election interference and I'm just happy to hear that there is some murmuring but there's no doing yet but there needs to be some doing because this is clearly a new game of our old game of trying to do election interference coupled with all the 400 bills to suppress the vote. I am also concerned about the fact that you got to have the mother of this officer sickening got to walk around on Capitol Hill and Senator's offices for the Republicans to tell them you got it was horrible that day and my son died and you need to vote for what we're talking about and the fact that this this person is getting this kind of message which is Mark and go into but we're not going to do it tells me that it really is like that Hollywood joke I was thinking about it's all about me there is nothing going on in these people's heads except what just anything about an angle on themselves and I really it's a it's a tragedy and I don't know what literally the absence of anything that could be even called seems appalling the other thing that's on my mind is I just read a piece about the military commission down in Guantanamo and it was interesting is that the judge in one of these cases had said that if the defense can prove this person was tortured then we'll reduce the sentence for if we end up getting it to that point and now there's a agreement that's basically being done to get that decision vacated as part of a of a puny deal for the guy to get less years in other words the CIA doesn't want anything to come out about how they tortured this guy and other guys and they're willing to give the guy fewer years so they can basically walk off the signal there for 12 years if they can get this decision vacated that the that the military judge did it's an abomination that we are at this point this far along that the the truth about all that no one's been prosecuted it's you know I was thinking today well now maybe there's something more I can do on this but it's off um beyond that and Guantanamo beyond that it's uh just the various types of I think good laws that are being proposed that have passed the house that are sitting in the Senate under McConnell who by the way is a descendant of a slave owner and he acts like a descendant of a slave owner in the way that he's operating on this thing they really don't care about people and it just it's awful it's awful that's what I'm thinking about okay hey brother Jeff can you unmute and share what's on your mind I think the country is as divided as it's ever been since the civil war I think the issue of racism has completely divided the country as never before at least in the last century the bills that are passing in so many states to forbid the teaching of racism is to me the most profound impact on where society in this country is in maybe the last 150 years when you can't get agreement on a commission to investigate the storming of the capital you know that this country is so bitterly divided between old white men and women all of the new emerging strong will uh other ethnic and other groups of people as white people become petrified that they're going to quote lose control of their country and you can criticize the senate all you want but what you have to remember is they are representing those 50 republicans are representing 40 percent of the country and that's the scary part and what's happening in state legislatures makes what's happening in washington almost insignificant so that's what's bothering me when you can no longer teach and I think it's six states and I expect it'll be a lot more than that before it's over the principles of racism you know this country is at a crossroads and what's been so discouraging about all of the discussion about eliminating racism is that they have used a concept that doesn't at all do what they say it does to and to scare people because critical race theory and I was teaching when the concepts of critical race theory was developed in legal education and it developed as a legal concept of understanding how race impacts the law and the interpretation of law and it has it the idea that it's taught in schools is beyond my mind I wish it was you know but critical race theory is not even taught in law schools where for the most part and so it is worse than a strong person to put up critical race theory it's a lie to the public to to rile up races who are scared and don't understand well if I can jump in with regard to those fearful white people out there one of the things that I want to say is I just found this last week this is a hot off the hot off the news I finally got a translation of a papal letter from 1478 that has been argued to be the the place where the idea of white supremacy was initiated it was basically the one that started the Spanish Inquisition distinguishing Jews and the Africa and the way they were going to be treated and all that and so um particular papal bull and there's other ones that are related to it anyway I wrote a piece on this up on SSRN but the the translation into English of it for the first time happened last week by a guy at the Library of Congress named Andrew Gadio who's my co-author and it's worth the read from 1478 to see how little we have progressed as people in the 550 I have years since then the other thing I wanted to say about that is when I sent this to a guy he sent me court decisions or an article where he cited to pre-civil war court decisions where there was all kind of stuff about the natural state of blasphemy you know the religious heathen thing all that were in court decisions so how can you have six states that have law school where people will study law and they'll do pre-civil war law and there are cases which speak about this and you're not supposed to say something I mean well you can't talk about red dot well you can't talk about anything you know what I mean it's just but the thing that I think my understanding I've been following is this the the thing my understanding and I haven't actually read the laws so I'm speaking off the top of my head but my understanding is those laws are misconstrued because they're focused on stopping the teaching of race and racism in K through 12 am I wrong on that yeah well it's designed to stop teaching that one race has been less than friendly to other races I'll put it that way but 12 it's it's about it's about maintaining ignorance of everyone by by doing a K through 12 and then you get you get these people who spent their whole life which it's interesting to me because during my teaching of race and racism in the law what I found is it wasn't being taught so it wasn't like I was getting students K coming to law school who understood the racial history of America no they didn't understand they didn't understand the racial history of their own group and they had little understanding of the racial history of their own group legal racial history of their own group and no understanding of anyone else so this issue of teach not teaching race and racism I think it's it's like to hammer people over the head to give them a stick when they win because when someone feels bad about having something done in a in an elementary of school I it doesn't seem to be focused at this stage on colleges and law school okay well then what it is is it's threatening teachers at the you know the teachers who speak to these things to get them fired that's one thing the other thing is you know I went to fifth grade and sixth grade we learned about Columbus we learned about Vasco the Gama going around Africa we learned about all those people but what we didn't learn about was that the issue was that the Mediterranean trade groups were dominated by Muslims and so the Europeans are trying to find a way around and that's what was prompting a lot of that stuff we heard just generally that let's go west to go east and a thing of Columbus but what we didn't learn about were things like the kinds of things that you read about in these uh in the in the particular letters that place popes did like in the mid 15th century where there's a pope who left for the Portuguese and the Spanish the perpetual enslavement of Africans but the most profound the most profound problem is the increasing trend of state legislatures trying to impose on the educational system what can be taught and what can't be taught it's more than just the race issue which is now the prominent issue 10 years ago it was religion five years from now it'll be women's rights and frankly frankly I think you know this may sound a little bit weird but in my view we're back in the reconstruction era yeah we are back in reconstruction well I think we're not back in reconstruction we're where reconstruction would would would be a decent time it's back after reconstruction but the thing is my my okay redemption okay case books are limited size what can be taught is limited in content in Texas has always used their power to control as in my lifetime Texas has always used that it's not it this it's focused on race now but it's and it's our has been focused on race even if I can remember instances throughout my career where Texas objected to something being taught a certain way and the case book authors saying okay we'll take it out the case book the extension now is to put liability on teachers who are are going to develop their own because there's all develop their own materials to develop their own lesson plans and so they're saying oh wait a minute it's not enough not to have it in the case book because teachers can go outside and get still already developed so we're going to make it uh uh uh make it where if they bring race into the classroom uh racism in the classroom and so they they're controlling more than the case book now and I think that year is something new it's it's going to be a fascinating court battle as it works its way to the supreme court is whether a state can pass a law limiting teachers free speech rights as it relates to political social and moral issues absolutely academic freedom and also here's the thing the kids in the classroom guess what they'll bring it up the kids will bring it up what's the teacher supposed to do in response but I don't really think this is an as much as I wish it was an academic freedom issue I don't think it's an academic freedom issue either well we can argue about that but I just think it's an academic freedom in terms of what a teacher does in their classroom I know that their restrictions when it's under case uh 12 uh k-12 and the k-12 if you think about colleges in law school as a law professor who tried to teach race and racism and was punished for teaching race and racism in a law school and was told that it was not an academic freedom issue the the whole point of academic freedom isn't that you get unlimited I don't agree okay let me I am articulating what was told to me and how it's used academic freedom that there is a limit to what what you can do in a classroom based on what your school kind of says is academic freedom and if the school is not saying it's academic freedom if they're saying is something else like we've got to manage uh how all the teachers are teaching the same thing we have to manage that we are sure that the students are getting through that as if they can articulate a strong enough reason that courts will buy I think that that that it should be an academic freedom issue but I'm not so sure that it will be Tina you were saying you agree I did I I I agreed with you saying that it this is not reconstruction this is post reconstruction because during the reconstruction reconstruction period we actually saw African Americans holding office the number of African Americans and states that traditionally or now we think of as um being very conservative and um racist in many ways actually had representatives Mississippi Louisiana for example Texas but also the argument that we're having now we I remember when I lived in Texas the schools were being told to not talk about reproduction human reproduction and that the only thing that should be presented was abstinence and if a student asked a question they were supposed to repeat the mantra that abstinence was and what did we have high school students getting pregnant um so it's very similar I'm sorry go ahead then Tina I'm gonna I'm gonna check uh second what you just said but I'm gonna go farther yes to professor Randall that's what they said to you and to Tina the Patterson that's what they said to you too but it's still an academic freedom issue they're just trying to tell us a point of view about what they can consider to be academic freedom that they think can run before court okay but I'm going to say that it is an academic freedom as to what a teacher can teach in a classroom whether it's first grade or 12th grade or senior year in college or in graduate school in terms of the content of the course that they're teaching and that the school will have certain things that it wants to have covered is one thing but that the teacher doesn't is allowed to be is required to be intellectually bankrupt in the terms of how they teach because of some strictures and I think in real impingement on the role of teacher that uh that uh should be visually rejected as a uh as a uh as a limit on what is academic freedom in its true sense not in sort of the corporate vision kind of sense that I'm hearing here of trying to essentially restrict what we think my problems with academic freedom is I can very easily imagine a white supremacist teaching white supremacy in the classroom with my with my son in the classroom and then claiming academic freedom I I mean it's it is not I think that to say that it's all up to teacher to decide what content is to be taught is really problematic uh academic freedom issue is a left and a right issue as we all know so I don't want to limit it to what I really said earlier that you know I just think and to clarify my reconstruction thought what I was meaning was a period of time where laws were being passed only because of their racial impact yes back then it was whites giving blacks additional freedoms or powers quote unquote and then of course what happened after reconstruction seems now we're in a period of time where state legislatures are passing laws driven by race the other way so that that's what I meant yeah but you know what I what I just want to point out and have us talk about is we've talked about this for months of what would happen when Biden got elected and what the country turned and where the divisions get minimized frankly I think the divisions now are as bad if not worse and do any of you see any hope in the immediate two years up to the 2022 election that any of these divisions are going to be compromised in the right way yet or how about the left wing how about the democrat don't click me because the democrats just as uh uh they are problematic in here in a different way yeah you know because they you know they they have to do all the things that they need to do but they're trying to protect bipartisan I don't you said in the next two years I don't see in the rest of my lifetime so I don't we're out of time that is hang on man that's that's a that's a very optimistic way to end the show I like it is it is we're out of time for today but we've gone beyond just voter repression educational repression we're literally talking about not just expression repression but thought repression yeah and we're talking about racially based caste based bias based thought repression it's overt it's violent and it's unapologetic yeah hold that thought for a couple of weeks come back well you have to bring us back to that because if you start off by asking us what's on in mind this ain't gonna be what's on my mind it's gonna be whatever happened in the last two weeks I concur yes remember when Frederick Douglass disappeared in Boston so did a truth stood up and said to Frederick Douglass he's glad everybody said no and he had hope to keep on that's what's over the truth is brother Ben on that note of hope will conclude for today remember folks please support think text yearly fundraising drive come back and see us in two weeks send us your questions send us your thoughts and we will come back to this we will not forget take good care hello thank you so much
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Calvert-Lewin To Return For Newcastle? | Everton News Daily
Calvert-Lewin To Return For Newcastle? | Everton News Daily Use your ToffeePicks log in to unlock your FREE 10 card pack and start building your UFsquad now at http://ultimatefan.app.link/Toffee-YT 18+ T&C’s Apply. Please Play Responsibly 🎬 Watch our most recent videos: https://www.youtube.com/ToffeeTVEFC GET EXCLUSIVE VIDEOS: https://www.patreon.com/ToffeeTVEFC CHECK OUT OUR TOFFEE TV STORE : https://toffeetvefc.com/shop SUBSCRIBE TO THE FOOTY SHOW CHANNEL: http://youtube.com/thefootyshowisboss EVERTON DIRECT LINK : everton-online-store.pxf.io/kydqn Help Others To Enjoy The Video By Translating It Here : https://www.youtube.com/timedtext_vid... You Can Find us HERE: YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/toffeetvefc Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-toffee-tv-podcast/id1476626321 Website: https://ToffeeTVEFC.com ----- SOCIAL ----- Twitter: https://twitter.com/ToffeeTVEFC Instagram: https://instagram.com/toffeetvefc/ Facebook: https://facebook.com/ToffeeTVEFC #EVERTON #PREMIERLEAGUE Presenters: Peter McPartland & Barry Cass Video Editing: Mathew Lamb
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2022-03-16T19:01:45
2024-02-05T06:14:26
294
3K6AzpoAGW8
Field Farm was born and he was talking about todays. Frank Lampard has given his pre-match press conference ahead of Everton's game against Newcastle United, a Gw degli Snodd Park. Still a big game for Newcastle, of course, but they look like the closest safety, now Everton very much aren't and it's a huge game, and one Everton needs to win. The manager spoke about everybody being together and he was asked about Jamie Carrick's comments about Everton calling the players, a'r gweithio yn ymddangos, y gweithio hynny ddyn nhw'n yn cyfrifio. Felly mae'r gwirio nid ymdank oherwydd eu bod yn ddysgu'r gweithio'r gweithio. Mae hynny'n geithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Mae'n gweithio, fel yma'n gwneud efo'r gweithio, mae'n tynnu'n gweithio arall i gwneud eich gweithio'n gweithio. Mae'n gweithio sydd gennym 12 gweithio, ac mae gennym ni'n gweithio arall i gweithio'r gweithio. We know what we have to do, and we have to start winning games, and he's absolutely right. The fans will be there tomorrow and surely he'll make it a great atmosphere and back the team. It's up to the players now to start repaying the faith of the supporters. They've been supported all season, they can't turn round and say they've not been back this season. Because they have. Now it's about time they started delivering and getting us the victory to get us safe. cyd-diwodau gone yw'r ddydd yma i'r ffordd fel hynny. Wrth rhoi gwn i weithio, e'ch jwbl fod yn mys ac mae hynny yw eu chynlluniau. Mae'r ysgriffawr yn cyd-dymu'r system yn cydd yn byw gafod y domenau Calvert Llanuol yn y cwmohon Hynny'n gweithio ni'n dda i'r panffernio ar가�dd fel Calf at Llywm oes a'r unig wedi bod yn ysgwrt yn y sgwad. Rwy'n dweud, Neil! Rwy'n dweud, mae'n dweud yn dweud mewn sylw yng ngly青oddau. Mae'r talw'r cyffredin o'r pen chlynyddu. Ac mae'n gweithio ni'n dda i'r berthynas phabio'r Llywodraeth. Rwy'n eich hunain oedd ymddangos yn ddiddordeb ar gyfer os y Llywodraethiebiol. Yn gweithio meddwl gwybod, mae'n gwirio fyny wedi'i gynnig o'r Lt, yna yw'r Llyfr interior, ac mae'n gwirio fyny i'r Dgloedd. Yna yw'r hynny, ond mae'n gwirio fyny'n gwirio. Rwyf yn yo. Mae'n nifer olio'r llais hyn, ac mae'n eich gwirio fyny'n gwirio pw attract yw gyffin fan hynny. Mae wedi'i gwirio fyny yw'r llais, mae'n dechrau i ddweud fwy ari wrthog erbygu arcau o'r lyw arall. a edgell o'r rydyn ni wneud ar hwnny. Fydd ydych chi'n gyrraedd Brantwy i'w wneud y gael y gwath yn ddigon ni, a'r parfwyr rydyn ni'n dod yn gyrsryd ychydig, ond gan ail yn dyma o'r gwaith sefydlag. Mae'n gwrs yn cael ei gael i'r gwerthfawr o'r cyffredin yn ateb yn gyfreid. Mae'n myfyn i gael i gael i'r cyffredin nhw – mae lot i'r cyffredin adas Ott, i'r cyffredin nhw wedi cyfredin ni. a mae'nuen bwyd wedi'u lefel y kur birdsodd beth mae ei wedi gweld y gwelch yn awgol yng nghymru. Mae'r cyfreidydd yn trefn oed dros awddiol, mi'n meddwl bod nesaf y teimlo. Franck Llandfair, wedi gael llawer i'r ghel, wedi gwybodaeth ar Nathen Patterson. Chi'n teimlo wrth Ynch Sgwعدd a'r hongen o'r gwasanaeth – Steve Clarch yn gwaith ar gyfer llefach nhw, ac yn gwybod ychydig ar gwaith gwithdanol, ac mae'n gydag i'n gwneud o'r argyfruste i'r Ganfer. The manager said that Patterson simply has to be patient and wait for his opportunity. He said he's got to perform day to day in training, that's going to get him in the team. And then he's got to prove that he's good enough to stay there. He said he is one for now, he's also one for the long term. Again, quota of the team is Coleman being the captain and it's difficult for Patterson. But Coleman's form just right now shouldn't necessarily mean Patterson isn't given a go. Dyna, yn gallu ymddi o'r lleoedd nid yn y bydd, mae'n gael gynnwys yn gwneud eich hwn o'r ysgol, ac wedi bod yn gweithio'n gweithio'r lleol yn y side, ond mae'n bwynt i'ch gweithio'n gweithio'n cymryd yn ei gweithio'n bwyd. Ac maen nhw'n ymgyrch i'r parw sydd ymddiw Llewbys Warrington yw'r gweithio'r gweithio'r sefyd, ystafell yn ymwneud i'r teimlo ymgyllud honno i'r unrhyw fudd â'r Llywodraeth o'r Traffordd, a'r preafedd o'r ddweud yn Llywodraeth, yn cael ei tieshireu i mihcia bwynt hefyd yn ein bod ni'n bwysig oedd ymgyllideb i'n ei hynod i fawr oedd yma i'n byw, yw'r drwy'r bwysig o'r ac yma o beth yw'r bwysig o'r rhaglenol yn wyf, dychydigon ni'n benderfynu. ac nid oed ti'n dweud ei wneud oed yn wych gweithio yn 19, yn gyfnod i'r eifernol yma, felly mae'n gweithio yn gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Rydym yn ddod, wych yn amlwg, a'i gynnal i'r ffordd oedd eich ddweud, i'r gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Er oed, mae'n ddod o'i gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Rwy'n dod o'i gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. o'r pwysig o'r pwysig o'r link yn y dyfodol. Fy hoi.
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UCw-kH-Od73XDAt7qtH9uBYA
Bold Actions Opening Plenary – Food Systems Outlook 2022
Food systems account for up to one-third of global greenhouse gas emissions and are failing 768 million people living in hunger. In the face of volatile global shocks from conflicts such as the war in Ukraine, the COVID-19 pandemic, and extreme weather events, it has become more urgent than ever to transition food systems to a net-zero, nature-positive infrastructure that nourishes and feeds everyone. The compounded effects from these global shocks are deepening chronic complex challenges, from hunger and nutrition to climate and nature, and societal inequity. In this Opening Plenary for the ‘Bold Actions for Food’ event, leaders will explore the interrelated risks threatening regional and country food systems, which are already under pressure to navigate complex transitions. The interactive panel will explore the pathways that address these challenges and discuss how to raise ambitions for joint leadership actions that leverage global milestones in 2022, including COP27. Key topics to be addressed: • Global outlook for 2022; Rising food insecurity and market volatility • Enabling countries to take on integrated transitions across food, nature and health • Unlocking policy, innovation and finance levers to scale solutions What global priorities and corporate action can accelerate and scale the delivery of sustainable, circular global value chains? This session is co-convened by the World Economic Forum, the Swedish Ministry for Environment and the United Nations Environment Programme to drive an important sustainable value chain conversation on the road to Stockholm+50 and beyond. Stockholm+50 will bring the global environment community together from 2-3 June to accelerate actions for a better future on a healthy planet.
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2022-03-15T16:09:08
2024-02-05T06:31:21
3,890
3kmsS_9A378
Hello. My name is Sean DeClean. I'm a member of the Executive Committee of the World Economic Forum on whose behalf I would like to welcome all of those joining today's Food Systems Outlook for 2022, where we will address both the very real potential for a food crisis over the coming months in the face of volatile global shocks emerging out of conflicts such as the war in the Ukraine and elsewhere, combined with the growing impact that more frequent extreme weather-related events are having on the entire food system. Equally important, however, the panel will also address the role that food and land use systems are themselves having in significantly contributing to climate change and biodiversity loss, which together with the substantial impact that poor or inadequate diets are having on our wider health systems, means it's become more urgent than ever for countries to address this complex set of drivers holistically and not in silos to identify the opportunities for real and genuine change and to transition food systems to a net-zero nature-positive future, one that is more resilient to shocks but at the same time able to nourish and feed everyone in a way that is both healthier for people and the planet as a whole. This opening plenary forms part of a broader two-day Bold Actions for Food event that is currently underway with a series of workshops covering Asia, Europe, Africa and the Americas, convening leaders from government, business, civil society, international organisations and academia who are driving multi-stakeholder action on accelerating innovative, inclusive and scale examples of food systems change in their respective countries and regions. It's therefore our distinct pleasure therefore to introduce Bronwyn Nielsen, founder of the Nielsen Media Network with over 20 years of broadcast leadership in Africa and globally who will moderate what should be a dynamic plenary panel. For which translation is available in both French and Spanish. Over to you, Bronwyn. Sean, thank you very much for the introduction and another warm welcome to the opening plenary of the Bold Actions for food meetings and of course we are looking at the food systems outlook for 2022. We're joined today by a distinguished panel of global leaders from public, private and social sectors working to improve global food systems and of course as Sean alluded to earlier, address pressing challenges facing both people and planet. Again, emphasising the fact that we have the enormity of a dual challenge that we're tackling right now. We have a new era or new area of constant volatility and risk associated with unprecedented climate and weather events threatening harvests and key bread baskets around the world such as Africa, the war in Europe, in the Ukraine, threatening food insecurity and food supply chains, a global pandemic, disruptions to livelihoods and supply chains as well. And of course the other part of the challenge is that we need to address enormously stressed food systems already in desperate need to transition to net zero. Nature positive, as Sean said earlier, that nourish all and importantly ladies and gentlemen, leave no one behind. Now we know the alarming stat that food systems account for one third of greenhouse gas emissions. A leading contributor to climate change and there is of course an enormous opportunity to make gains on climate goals and we could unlock significant gains to realise climate commitments on both mitigation and adaptation if we do it right. Rising food and energy prices are further exacerbating a system already failing and the number is staggering over 768 million people living in hunger worldwide with threats of famine in Sub-Saharan Africa, Afghanistan and most recently the food insecurity effects from the war as I said earlier in Ukraine among others. In today's panel we'll try to unpack the complexity and address a few key dimensions. The global outlook for 2022 in so far as food systems are concerned. As I said rising food insecurity, market volatility is something we also need to take into consideration. Enabling countries to take an integrated transition across food, nature and health and then unlocking policy, innovation and finance levers to scale solutions. I'm joined as I said by a distinguished panel. We have Jürgens Foghule who is vice president of the Sustainable Development of the World Bank. We've got Rodrigo scientists who is member of the board of management and president of the science division of Bayer. Hanneke Faaba is the president of nutrition, Unilever and sandcast partner, acre venture partners. Thank you all for joining me and let's kick off this discussion. Jürgen if I can come to you and perhaps get your outlook given the short-term pressures we are facing as both Sean and I have highlighted in the context setting for this discussion balancing that alongside medium to long-term needs of resilience and adaptation of our food systems. Thanks very much Bronwyn. You were great to have the opportunity to discuss this really, really urgent and important issue with you and the panel and all of you on the call. You've already framed actually the session really quite well. As you said not only are we sick of COVID after two years strong focus on dealing with that emergency. We also have really stepped up on the climate agenda overall really strongly over the last two years but as if that wasn't enough now we're facing a war and all its implications and there are massive implications in terms of migration, in terms of economic fallout but of course also in terms of what does it mean in terms of food security for hundreds of millions of people. Prices are shooting up I think we've all been following this and you know maybe more than ever this just shows how how exposed our food systems are globally. Russia and Ukraine account for almost 30 percent of international sales of wheat they are very large they're actually the largest exporter Russia is the largest exporter of wheat not the largest producer that's China and India but they do not export wheat in any significant amounts and then plus per harvest supply chain issues global stocks are low very low even though they were rebuilt after the last food price crisis which was about 12 years ago they're now 31 percent below five-year average and you know also it's not just wheat it also impacts edible oils Ukraine is 50 percent of sunflower oil is exported by Ukraine, barley, corn, rapeseed also major implications on fertilizer production fertilizer prices so as I said the war is just an exacerbating what was already an important food crisis. Covid had already increased the number of food insecure to just about 800 million I think you mentioned this so we were already on a bad trend and this is just on top of we've seen the prices rise as you have said and as everybody is following 53 percent wheat price increase just over the last couple of months so clearly those countries that are major importers from Ukraine and Russia will feel the impact the most Egypt is the largest importer of wheat worldwide it imports about 70 percent of its wheat from Ukraine and Russia and that wheat accounts for 35 percent of daily calories per person but it's not only Ukraine it's not only Egypt most people will maybe not know that Indonesia is the second largest wheat importer from Russia so again there are thinking through what the implications are but other countries are similarly affected it's Georgia, Lebanon, Armenia, DRC, many African countries South Sudan and up to 90 percent of their imports come from Russia so there will be massive disruptions now while most countries are likely to see these most immediate effects the effects on the global food supply will be much greater and much longer lasting this is not just a short-term issue and so my first really important message to everyone on the call is how serious this will become to greatly depend on what kind of policies countries are going to put in place in the next few weeks and in particular on the policies that restrict trade what we cannot have is a repeat of what happened in 2008 there are more than 50 countries imposed export bans export restrictions try to control prices keep them artificially at the low level so distorting the flow distorting the markets that eventually was the reason that led to the Arab Spring as many of you will recall so again we have a confluence of factors that's not dissimilar it's not the same what happened 12 years ago but it's it's similar oil prices are high stocks are low etc etc so we don't want to go through the details but it is just coming this is one of the most urgent and most immediate things that everyone needs to communicate around and needs to have a conversation around because we are seeing already a number of countries doing the kinds of things that are absolutely detrimental to to lowering prices and helping those that are affected by it i don't want to single out too many but for instance Indonesia has already restricted the export of palm oil because palm oil is a substitute for sunflower oil and this could remove 100 000 tons of palm oil per month from world markets and of course that you know ratchets up the prices and it also distorts internally the situation but it's not only Indonesia there are a number of countries where we're seeing this right now so but as you said in your opening framing we should not just concentrate on the on the immediate problems but also address the longer term problems then the transformation of the food sector is really long overdue we're about 10 to 20 years behind other sectors that we need to transform to address what's a more and more urgent problem and that's the climate issue you mentioned the numbers agriculture forestry and land use account for between a quarter and a third of all greenhouse gas emissions and they do drive climate change and we are really decades behind compared to the energy sector in the energy sector everybody gets it right the future is renewable decarbonize get the net zero we know that we need to do the same in the food system but we're not spending the resources that we really need to break down the components of the food transformation how do we need to sequence this and how we can finance them we do know there is a lot of win-win out there where you really contain and I mean maintain productivity production but you can reduce the emissions very dramatically certainly in rice production also in beef production the technologies are out there but we need to well you're going to want to pick up I want to pick up on that point and and bring what we go in because you are saying absolutely the technology is there the advancement is there but we don't want to make these short-term knee-jerk reactions as you refer to the example of palm oil in Indonesia and that's going to destabilize the environment over the medium along the term again not to pick out any country as you say there are numerous examples of this but what do you what do you go if we are moving to having to make those decisions and looking at it from the private sector looking at regenerative agriculture can we make those decisions in the short term so that we are safeguarded in the longer term what we go thank you very much round it and my short answer is yes we can and but before I share a little bit more first my thoughts with the Ukrainian population there we have our colleagues working there and we are working daily to try to supply farmers seed and inputs for their season so really all our thoughts for for for the population that is there dealing with this war that is really something that we wouldn't expect in my generation is something that it's really bad to see that happening today so but let me go to your question we just just had we have today 5 000 farmers on a carbon program that we launched less than two years ago including 1000 farmers in India in rice or soybean and corn farmers in in the Americas the European coalition in also in Europe of course and my answer is that can we and I was talking with a farmer yesterday and the question was can we produce affordable health and safety food while we are sequestering carbon on the soil and help mitigate the climate change the answer is yes it's possible but require a massive work from the three sectors that you mentioned from the private sector the public sector was your dimension very well and also the civil society here we need to have a conjoint collaboration here three words come to my mind just to conclude this first speech here so first one is innovation I really hope that the entire society and the public sector understanding the importance of science innovation to help us to deal with that that's a extremely important one the second one is collaboration no one can achieve that isolated we need to collaborate we need to work together and the third one probably I'll emphasize the most action we need to move to action from all the different sectors right so that's why I'm proud to share about the 5000 carbon farmers that we mentioned or the smallholder initiative that we are working to reach a hundred million smallholders farmer on our plan working with different companies to do that but that's the three words that I'll leave here for all of us right we need to welcome and nurture innovation and science we need to collaborate further among the different sectors and we need to drive actions right now because as Jorgen said this is something that we need to do now otherwise we will face much more challenges in the future on a not resilient food system what we got I want to stay with you here on that word that you put into the fray action why is it there that we are 20 to 30 years behind when it comes to food systems and their impact on the broader climate environment yeah that's an interesting one because it's a complex scheme that we have here different from the oil and gas that Jorgen just mentioned it's easy first of all we need to include farmers on the equation here when I sit on this forum when I go globally and have those conversations farmers they are part of the solution and we need to bring them to the table and help them to transform the food system right so how can we the private sector have the programs that can help them to do that the public sector to really put the regulatory systems in place how we frame the political environment to support the farmers to move to that new system new regenerative system and also this civil society in understanding the extremely important role that the farmers will play in the future so my short answer for that one is that it's a complex what you're dealing with small farmers in India as I mentioned or a large farmer in Sehados Brazil and bringing them to the table helping them to transform the food system is really really really important Hanika from a Unilever perspective I happen to come across your purpose doing well by doing good and I thought that's an excellent framing for this very discussion and what you are driving from a Unilever perspective in terms of the supply chain and perhaps picking up on what Rodrigo has laid the groundwork there from from a private sector perspective how can we action more quickly I'm sure you get asked that question all the time yeah and and Rodrigo is is spot on we got to act it's the time to admire the problem is over um so at Unilever we believe you know we have a huge responsibility to help transform the food system and there's five actions that we're prioritizing that we think are really important in the system and of course we don't do this alone let me say that up front we do that you know as part of coalitions with many partners so to five or zero hunger regenerative agriculture plant-based food waste and nutrition so on zero hunger you know Juergen said it very well food security is so critical in the current context and we must just work our very very hardest to avoid this double catastrophe of war and hunger we're providing generous humanitarian aid and it is critical that we maintain the free flow of goods and agricultural materials around the world at this time and avoid hoarding Juergen said it very very well regenerative agriculture is also critical for our industry to get to net zero we're a huge greenhouse gas emitter as an industry and to get to net zero we got to act so just on our Knorr brand we're launching eight new large regenerative ag projects with farmers this year including in North America and Iowa soybeans and Arkansas and rice in Europe and in South America very very important that we act plant-based that's about the consumer and changing his or her diet to a bit less meat and a bit more plants will make a big impact for the planet and for net zero and so that's all about delicious products like magnum vegan ice cream which is absolutely gorgeous or the vegetarian butcher products food waste reduction is also with the consumer we guys know the world waste the third of all the food that we produce which is absolute crime and we're leveraging brands like Helmings especially Hanukkah yeah I just want to emphasize that point especially with 768 million people living in hunger and we just can't rationalize those two elements absolutely and that's why all these things are linked because we're also using way too much land and therefore emitting too much too many greenhouse gases to produce all that food that we don't end up consuming and so very very important and again we're using our brands to make that a little funner maybe saw our Helmings campaign on the Super Bowl make taste not waste their education is really really critical and finally nutrition of course we got to continue to make our products better for people with less salt more sugar fewer calories and more micro nutrients so that's the actions that we're taking and hopefully that will help change the system well that opens up beautifully to Sam who led the food and nutrition policy for the Obama administration Sam you tee up perfectly there by a Hanukkah who refers to nutrition refers to the consumer making better choices i.e. plant-based decisions come in with your thought leadership here well you know it's going to take all parts of the equation from way upstream and all the way down to the consumer to move this system in a direction that we need to go and you know think as everybody's saying we're fundamentally out of time like there's no more time to waste in fact we're way behind the eight ball and you're seeing moments like this like the Ukraine exacerbate you know what was already a pretty fragile situation we're now like second year where wheat crop is likely going to be 15 percent below even the United States and other regions across the world which makes us more vulnerable to these shocks and I think we're entering an age of volatility that is the norm we are now seeing a pretty like what will be our normal operating situation in various capacities around the world so of course you have to bring in the consumer if you think that food companies are going to actually make the change that we're talking about here they can't do it in isolation with what people are demanding and what they're eating and so I think we have to take a very holistic approach to this but there's a couple of big things we got to start to do seems to me one that has every single food company has to have a transparent accounting of their carbon footprint and start publishing their plan to reduce the footprint that is a baseline that only with that baseline can consumers start making more informed choices about whose products they should be buying what agricultural companies we should be supporting etc so that's sort of like a cornerstone of the whole thing I think when we have that then we can start to seriously understand the role that Food and Ag can play it's equestering massive amounts of carbon that for me is the gateway drug to transforming the system uh right now before we move off I know we we're gonna hear lots more from you but I think it's such an important point I want to put it to Rodrigo exactly that the transparent carbon footprint and the plans in terms of mitigating against that carbon footprint Sam I'm coming back to you but I want to hear from a private sector Rodrigo followed by Hanneke here Rodrigo from a bad perspective yeah so let me give a very concrete example I was visiting a farming to say how does region of Brazil that move to a regenerative farming right so suddenly he was doing soybean corn but no tillage crop crop crop rotation with that system it was an amazing result after two years he was producing more at the same time he was equestering two tons per hectare of carbon on that soil with a partnership with in brapa in Brazil that is the public sector public institute there so that's a great example so the challenge is that how can we have not 5 000 farmers like that but hundreds and hundreds of thousands doing that practices and that requires innovation collaboration also incentive from the government to help them achieve that that's that equation if you think about that farmer and the soil of that farmer the quality and the life of that so it's amazing Rodrigo also from a big company perspective though I mean that transparency of your own carbon footprint how much attention is paid to that line item from a better perspective well we made a we made a commitment for carbon neutral our mission is four million tons per year it's not that much and we are we are already working to be a carbon neutral very short for me that one is a important equation to be honest easy to address my key challenge is how you transform the entire sector the entire egg sector and that is a large scale that we were talking here so the company itself we made our commitments and we are moving a lot with renewable energy and other things that we are doing internally as a company but my key challenge that I have here today is how we transform how we help of course to transform the entire sector and millions of farmers globally absolutely and that very important point millions of farmers globally that are subsistence farming rather than farming commercially so race farming for the oil survival Hanukkah yeah I know I I'm so glad to hear Sam say this um so I couldn't agree more um companies need to have commitments to on how they're going to get to net zero um at Univer we've made a commitment to get to net zero by 2039 across our value chain net zero in our own operations is very simple we're pretty much there in our factories and our offices it's across the value chain that's very hard and which is why we're generative agriculture is so critical um but I would say to Sam's point also um we need brands so you know Univer sells many many different brands we need brands and individual products to be transparent on their carbon footprint so that's something that we're also working very hard on to get consumers to be able to see wow you know this bag of tea is actually a lot more carbon positive than that one um so Sam couldn't agree with you more and would love to connect to for any more thoughts you might have on that great Sam I'm coming back to you I just had to use that opportunity to bring private sector voice in and just double check everyone's beheading themselves yeah well so I think here's I mean here's that you could see how it starts to play out right from upstream where bear is operating down into how then Unilever can push those you know new uh ingredients that are being produced in a different way to the consumer and start actually giving real choice to consumers to actually unlock demand because particularly for younger generations we know this is what they're calling for what's the powerfully what what starts to come together when we when we do this and by the way it's very important to say it's not just scope one and scope two this has to be assessment for scope three emissions as well in the food system for most of the most companies 80 to 90 percent of their footprint is in scope three not in scope one or two so that's absolutely critical but fundamentally what we can start to do is to reshape the economy the food economy's relationship to natural ecosystems right now it's a very extractive one meaning we only pay for something that's taken we take the wood out we take the crop out but really these systems are providing us oxygen it's equestrian carbon holding biodiversity you know keeping water the water table is healthy and stable these are all these systems that right now farmers particularly and land land use management people who have crossed the board aren't being paid for and so that's why the the forest in in brazil keeps getting cut down because they're getting paid to plant soy even though the forest really is much more valuable to humanity as a force and so that's what we can start to do that's why I think the opportunity in carbon is so powerful now I would like to stop for a moment and say there's still problems and things and we're you know acre we're investing heavily in in this space from a venture standpoint because there's still problems around measurement we have to get much better at it there's still problems with double counting we have to have a system a global system to deal with double counting there's still technologies that can be brought to bear loan bios one that we put investing very excited about to significantly increase our farmers capacity through microbes in the soil sequester carbon and make it more permanent in the soil so there's lots of work to be done so it's imperfect and so environmentalists who still have some doubts and and and questions I think are very a fair game but we have an opportunity to actually pay farmers for the first time to do the right thing right now we've been begging them please we can you change your practices it doesn't hasn't made economic sense for that now we can pay them to do the right thing and if we've been pulled that through the supply chain where we start to incentivize both brands and producers to start sequestering carbon and start valuing the ecosystem that they should be protecting I think we have honestly the only chance that I've ever seen really to systemically transform the global agricultural system and start solving some of the biggest problems that we face and I hope in the moment of crisis like we're in right now that we don't take our eye off that broader work because we just simply can't afford but that's what's really possible and I think you know the pieces are just starting to come together but we have to dramatically invest more we have to get out of our comfort zone we have to set much more aggressive targets we're out of time it's the time has to be now so I've got eight more minutes for the panel and of course we also want to talk about COP 27 we want to talk about the global milestones that we've made in the space when it comes to to food systems so I'm going to bring back at Jurgen and let's do another round on the panel here in terms of Jurgen as we build to COP 27 how can we ensure that we are actually adding to those milestones that have already been achieved and that we're not just at the table having the same conversations over and over again i.e. when it came back to what Rio was saying he said that that third element is action I think everybody is there Jurgen to you but thanks Bronwyn you must allow me a couple of comments on what I've just heard which was brilliant from Sam and the colleagues from the private sector because a number of keywords were brought up but really not taken to the point where I think they need to be one was how do you support farmers to do the food production the right way that is the key right now they're not supported to do that the government support farmers to the tune of three quarters of a trillion dollars a year that's called agricultural subsidies and very little of that is actually targeted towards getting the outcomes that we've just discussed it is very easy to shift those to repurpose those subsidies to incentivize farmers rather than throwing fertilizer into the field where it's already too much or doing the wrong techniques to say you get your subsidy but you must do this and this will then lead to better nutritional outcomes will lead to better climate outcomes the techniques are known there are good examples we don't have time in this panel to discuss them but we need to massively scale this up which is one topic we need to discuss in COP 27 practically what is it that can be done and incentivize because we're talking a huge amount of public money which right now is not only wasted it is actually detrimental and that must change this has to be a key conversation going into COP 27 but just two examples one is the beef cattle it's not only you know yes cattle are a huge part of the problem but if they're produced right you can actually have a zero emission system that's possible we know it from Latin America there are ways of doing this the same with rice you can produce the same amount of rice but if you do it differently you don't want to go into the technical details you can you can cut the emissions in half and the farmer is no no loss it just needs to be done and managed well so I think these are hugely important points and I wanted to make one other point because I wrecked my head over this question why are we 20 years behind now for a long long long time and one thing I've come up with together with with with our team is we don't have a north star yet so to speak you know energy people understand they see a smokestack and they know that's bad and they know the north star is to get rid of carbon and fossil fuels and then we will be fine regardless whether it's better it's you know solar panel or windmill or whatever other technology will come out it's clear what it is that needs to go away and what needs to be done it's not clear in agriculture it is not clear to most people what is really wrong other than the food waste because when you look at a field it's green it's beautiful it produces and people don't see it they don't feel it that something is wrong with it so fundamental I think those are two topics I want to certainly take to COP 27 in terms of practical action the policy action to me is critical what I said earlier in the export but that's short-term the subsidy issue is absolutely crucial and essential and then pushing the technologies that are already out there companies are out there that have fantastic technology which is not being used because the farmer has no incentives to do it because the consumer doesn't pay more for a leader of milk if the cow that it's produced from has has a lower genetic a better genetic you know composition than the one that doesn't or doesn't use a supplement that reduces methane emissions by another 30 percent all this is out there but it's not being used and then of course there is but what we were saying there's still a bunch of stuff that we still need to invent so innovation is absolutely critical we need to continue to invest in innovation for a purpose not just innovation but for the purpose of getting making the food system transform and making it better and there it goes innovation for a purpose Hanika what will you be driving at COP 27 from a uni the perspective again to build on milestones that have already been achieved and try somehow to close that gap that we are 20 to 30 year behind the curve when it comes to transforming food systems yeah yeah so I think first of all we want to make sure food's on the agenda for these meetings so I'm at COP 26 in Scotland it wasn't actually even on the agenda which is horrific because we're such a huge emitting industry that has to change so let's make sure it's on the agenda and then show up obviously as individual companies as NGOs as governments and talk about the real issues I couldn't agree more with Jurgen you know repurposing agricultural subsidies it's critically important to get to regenerative agricultural practices to incentivize farmers to do the right thing they're they're business people they're not going to do it if it doesn't make money for them and if they get incentivized for actually doing the wrong thing um I don't agree with Jurgen that that's easy to do I think that you've been trying unsuccessfully the other big geographies haven't even tried yet so but I do agree it's a giant issue that needs to be resolved sorry on this one you know it's totally impossible to ask for reducing subsidies noble politically impossible it is possible to have a conversation as saying keep the same amount for political reasons but give it to the same farmer for political reasons but give it for a different incentive and Europe is not where it needs to be but it has improved in the last 30 years quite a bit the actual emissions from agriculture the the subsidy amount hasn't changed much in the last 30 years about 60 billion euros per year but the emissions have been reduced quite significantly because a third of that money is actually given to do things the right way and I've I've had success in other countries notably China and others having that same argument to change the way this is structured Brazil is by the way also has does a lot of good things in bit in this direction yeah I think it is all about repurposing the money that's flowing around I would have loved to see the EU do more so you know and go faster so I think your help there Jurgen will be really helpful Sam if you can weigh in before I introduce Don if you can come in here just give me a sense of COP 27 consumers incentives in terms of farmers where do you want to leave us you know you can't you can't leave any of them how none of this works unless all those systems come together I mean that's and we have to start understanding this in a holistic way you're gonna I will just say on on the policies after you know six years on the way out I will say things are night and day since when I was there it's not that many years ago the current administration the United States for example Secretary Vilsack is driving you know pretty rapid change across the agency there's a billion dollar carbon program being stood up right now and hopefully that a lot of those incentives start to flow through the the farm bill and other policy changes which I know the government's working on and you know when we were there climate change you said called the word climate change in agriculture it was like there was like stop there was no conversation to be had now you see environmental groups and some of the most conservative producer organizations working together to try to figure out how to bring the parties together to do something big and I think that those kind of coalitions have to be built they're missing the consumer right now they have to get in that conversation in terms of the you know those those companies that are representing how do we then drive that through the consumer lens and may consumers start demanding and paying companies to do the right thing and that has to go to COP I agree I've been screaming about you know COP 21 nothing the last COP nothing it's unbelievable considering that not only is it just such a big emitter but I I firmly believe that food and our culture is the only sector that in the next 10 years has the chance to mitigate the worst of climate change and buy us enough time for these other technologies that people are working on to actually get scale become cost affordable we don't we're not look other industries can reduce food and ag is the only one that is ready right now to actually take carbon out of the air and sequester nothing else can do that and so we don't galvanize this and put it at the top of the agenda in the next COP and the next COP and the next COP we're simply not going to come close to mitigating the worst of this so it's it's really night it's like we have to go flip this thing on its head get much more aggressive much more bold and asserting our role in this and start going to work to prove to the world that hey if we do this right we have the right incentive and the right investment we actually can lead the way in in solving the problem particularly over the short and middle term and then after that we're going to need more technologies to take us to to the to the finish line if we do this right we have the right incentives the right policies we can actually make a huge difference when it comes to the security of food systems and further their ability to be sustainable and to provide nutrition so thank you very much to Sam to Hanukkah and to Jurgen and Rodrigo for joining us for this robust debate I'm now very very pleased to ask Chu Don Yu director general food and agriculture organization of the United Nations to join us with his reflections from the panel and how of course FAO is addressing these issues so over to you thank you Brian and I'm listening to what are your discussion I'm so interested in learning from you Jurgen, our friend and also others you're really addressing issues I think for climate smart and culture climate resilient and culture whatever you call but we we see we do need to do more fit of the purpose not only for innovation fit of the purpose and also policy and look at that Jurgen you mentioned very rightly about the energy energy the build that they from the grass from the one factory one small sub sector up to the top leaders build the enabling policy to transform that sector so in a renewable and so on so and also by products by products not only you know general sense from a concept to concept that's what we have to learn from energy transformation agro food system transformation is more complicated of course because we are working with that different animals different plan and also a culture is more specific to the different environment and even one side of the mountain another side of mountain is different that's makes more complicated but there are a lot of politicians didn't understand what are the complex of agro food systems that's why you should have to be more clear more accessible to the politicians to get the most strong commitment second I think also science and scientists should be having more specific design the pragmatic approach to address the issues for rice for cattle you basically cattle I think I I closely working one commodity by commodity and that's they are still have a chance to be built up on the neutral carbon neutral or zero emission first tea and coffee if you already established some kind of a best practice for that and I think also we work with others on the cattle or milk I think also it's possible because if we reduce the energy consuming not only for the water consuming and also for the other energy consuming a feed and so on and then we will minimize the that's kind of an emission or energy consumption and last but not least that we have to look at the whole charm value get the balance and zero emission not only product side from production to the process to the supply chain and therefore the laws on the west as an honorable minister here so when I was in China also we always put the a lot of efforts on how to to reduce the food loss and waste I think so far globally it's got a consensus on how to address the issues related to the food loss and waste I hope and also who is a buyer created for the price of the agro food system transformation get a consumers get a family farmer and all this keep working together not only farmers to to take their responsibility also the consumers should be that's my idea so let's start to say I also supported calling recently the ukraine crisis we should also first day we should ask support a the UN secretary general to end the war restore peace and protect people people's lives in the ukraine crisis without this ceasefire or peace how can we move on the agro food system production supply from that region it's that's our pre-conditions peace and stability so I think also we have to work together from the public and private and the civil society together for agro food system transformation thank you so much Don Yu who's director general food and agriculture organization of the United Nations thank you for your reflections there sir it's now my honor to invite the honorable Tom J. Bolsak who is a secretary of agriculture of the United States for his closing remarks on the food systems outlook and the way forward thank you so much sir well thank you very much for the opportunity to be with you and I've been listening to a very robust conversation and discussion about a very incredibly important topic couldn't agree more with the folks who have suggested that cop future cop meetings have got to focus on food and agriculture as a critical component to reducing a greenhouse gas emissions and getting our arms around the climate challenge that we face in the U.S. we have very aggressive goals we want to get to net zero U.S. agriculture by 2050 we want to beat our NDA target by 2030 which requires a significant effort I'm going to just touch on a couple of things we're doing in the U.S. and also talk a little bit about the international situation Sam Cass mentioned our effort our billion dollar effort which we refer to as the partnership for climate smart commodities you mentioned getting consumers engaged in this well one way to get them engaged is by making sure they know when they go in a grocery store whether or not the products they are buying are in fact made from climate smart commodities that is to say commodities that were produced through climate smart agricultural practices and regenerative practices we've established a billion dollar effort to begin the process of putting together large-scale pilots and demonstration projects for the purpose of a rapid adoption by our farmers ranchers and producers of those climate smart practices and regenerative practices the development and use of accurate and verifiable measurement tools that will allow us to track greenhouse gas reductions and or carbon sequestration allow us to create verifiable results that will establish a standard by which we can then establish and market climate smart commodities and working with those consumer of those producer groups working with food processing companies to create a market opportunity we see this as a valued value added opportunity for producers we see it as an opportunity for producers as well to qualify for ecosystem markets which will create another revenue stream and we believe that the combination of resources from the government additional market opportunities and ecosystem markets will create the kind of incentive for rapid adoption by producers across the United States we also believe that as we create these climate smart commodities we also have to essentially complement our production agriculture system with a more robust commitment to local and regional food systems to be able to reduce the the mileage if you will that food travels from farm to fork that's one of the reasons why we put together a billion dollar commitment to expand processing capacity in the united states we want to create more competition for farmers but we also want to make sure that we are investing in a robust local and regional food system we learned during the pandemic that the current system while it is incredibly efficient it was not resilient and resiliency does involve providing resources to to create the kind of technical assistance that will allow small and mid-sized producers to understand where the market opportunities are developing food hubs an opportunity for smaller sized operations to basically aggregate their production to be able to market it more effectively to restaurants to grocery stores to schools to institutional purchasers now we're looking at ways in which we can use the procurement dollars of the federal government to encourage this as well just recently announcing over 600 million dollars of procurement opportunities through our temporary food assistance program for food banks and for schools to be able to purchase from local and regional distribution systems to create the muscle mass and memory if you will of how you can create and structure a more solid and robust local and regional food system renewable energy and fuel development also incredibly important especially since we are now challenging ourselves to create a low carbon aviation fuel the reality is it's going to be a while before we have hydrogen fueled airplanes that can travel one distances so in the meantime why not figure out a way in which we can significantly reduce the the greenhouse gas emissions from our transportation system by developing an aviation fuel 35 billion gallon opportunity we have an aviation grand challenge where the department of energy department of agriculture and the department of transportation are joining forces to create this this new industry this new opportunity we're excited about this we're excited about our farm to to school farm to restaurant farm to institutional purchaser network that we're creating as part of our our effort let me speak briefly about the commitment that we're making in terms of innovation it was mentioned during the course of your conversation of the important role in innovation is playing and needs to play we join forces with the United Arab Emirates the United States and asking the world to join us in partnership to promote and to expand a rapid adoption of innovation in this space we start off with a handful of countries and a few NGOs we now have over a hundred partners who are part of the aim for climate initiative that was launched by president biden during a summit meeting early in 2021 mentioned during the cop 26 meeting and it's going to be a focal point of the next two cop cop meetings we now have over a hundred partners we have sprint partners we have now nine sprint operations where several hundred million dollars is being committed by private sector folks to look at ways in which they can expand a significant adoption of climate smart practices IBM just recently announced a partnership a sprint partnership roughly ten million dollars where they're going to provide technical assistance and some of their some of their data processing to be able to enable farmers to do a better job of understanding in places like india and elsewhere how they could use climate smart practices to be more productive and also to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions an opportunity as well for us to continue to look for ways in which we can encourage investment in this space we started with a four billion dollar goal we reached that goal very quickly in terms of commitments we're now looking at trying to get by cop 27 an eight billion dollar commitment over the next several years the UAE is very interested in this because they import 80 percent of their food they want to make sure that that 80 percent is still available and that was standing the changing climate they also want to be more self-sufficient looking at creative and innovative ways to expand significantly agricultural production and we at USDA are also engaged in this by investing in everything from research to vertical vertical farming we're going to see I think a very extensive effort in urban farming and expanded opportunities there as well so there's an awful lot going on in this space and I think we I think there is a tipping point that we're reaching in terms of the recognition and acknowledgement of the need for agriculture to be a leading indicator in this effort to to reduce greenhouse gas emissions I agree with Sam Cass that I think agriculture does have the opportunity to make significant strides very early in this process maybe get there before construction maybe get there before transportation maybe get there before utility industries are able to get to their net zero future so we're excited we're we're really looking forward to awarding that's billion dollars in the spring to see what kind of large-scale projects and even small demonstration projects will be funded we anticipate and expect that there's going to be a quite a bit of competition for these resources and we think it will spill over into the Farm Bill debate of 2023 as we as we look to recraft agricultural policy in the U.S. Thank you so much to the Honorable Tom J. Vilsack he is a Secretary of Agriculture of the United States a very appropriate closing remarks and keeping up there so the energy of the panel certainly it's all about action action as we raise towards COP 27 building on the milestones that have already been achieved in 2022 again I'd just like to thank Chu Dong-Yu Director General Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and of course Hanukkah Farber from Unilever Sam Cass Acre Venture Partners Rodrigo Santos from Bayer Jürgen Bergogle who is the Vice President, Virgilé my apologies the Vice President for Sustainable Development at the World Bank thank you all for the robust discussion of course you can expect two more days of passionate engagement working to action to remedy the situation ensuring that short-term decisions emergency decisions don't derail medium and long-term impact of the food systems globally thank you so much for joining us here again I'd love to thank our audience for tuning in on the World Economic Forum broadcast platform as well as the social media platforms linked in Facebook and YouTube and as I said hoping to continue this robust debate over the next two days at bold actions for food thank you very much for joining us
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Javier Barreiro - Openshift @ AGESIC from OpenShift Commons Gathering Buenos Aires August 2108
en Español from OpenShift Commons Gathering Buenos Aires August 2108 Javier Barreiro - Openshift @ AGESIC
[ "Javier Barreiro", "openshift", "commons", "buenos aires", "AGESIC" ]
2018-09-23T19:13:26
2024-02-05T16:12:50
1,953
3kO4G5uBRQE
Gracias para todos, es un placer estar acá, gracias por la invitación a Red Hat y bueno, como ya Santiago nos puso muy arriba con la introducción, nos generó un poco de presión. Le vamos a contar un poco lo que hemos hecho en AGSIC con el desarrollo de la plataforma, les pido unos minutos para compartirles un vídeo y darles una introducción de lo que hacemos en AGSIC, es la agencia del Gobierno electrónico de Uruguay, así que cuando quieran adelante. AGSIC es una institución joven que lidera el desarrollo del Gobierno digital y la sociedad de la información y el conocimiento en Uruguay desde presidencia de la República. Así como Uruguay tiene una política económica y una política sanitaria, Uruguay también tiene una política digital y esa política digital ha sido el eje de las acciones que hemos tenido en los últimos 10 años. Con compromiso y profesionalismo, buscamos innovar y hacer más eficiente las formas en las que te relacionas con la administración pública, incorporando tecnologías digitales y mejores formas de trabajar. Todo lo que hacemos se basa en nuestro principio rector, transformación con equidad. AGSIC enfoca gran parte de sus esfuerzos en el Gobierno digital, es una tarea enorme, pero es parte del desarrollo digital de un país. Somos una de las instituciones responsables del desarrollo de la política digital del Estado y del Uruguay digital. Todos los proyectos en los que trabajamos tienen objetivos claros y resultados constatables y están expresados en agendas y planes de acción a los que todos podemos acceder. Además, generamos guías y procedimientos para impulsar el avance del Gobierno digital en toda la administración pública. Para esto trabajamos en equipo con los organismos generando buenas prácticas, metodología, modelos y herramientas que permitan gestionar el conocimiento y desarrollar una red de contactos en potencia de la transformación digital que estamos viviendo. Algunos de nuestros objetivos estratégicos son Impulsar el Gobierno abierto Facilitar el relacionamiento con el Estado Integrar digitalmente a los distintos organismos Fortalecer el ecosistema de ciberseguridad Simplificar los trámites mejorando los servicios Y aportar soluciones informáticas innovadoras Para eso todos los días estamos atentos a los novences tecnológicos Investigamos tendencias Probamos y seleccionamos productos innovadores Para generar nuevos y mejores servicios para las personas Apostamos a la innovación para lograr cambios en la calidad de vida de las personas Obligándonos a repensarnos día a día como institución Así es que hoy Uruguay lidera la región en indicadores clave de desarrollo digital Y es referencia en el mundo Conoce más sobre cómo trabajamos por la transformación con equidad en ajesic.gov.u Como comentaba el vídeo La agencia lidera el desarrollo digital de Uruguay Y desde hace ya varios años Tenemos el orgullo de estar liderando en todos los índices En todos los índices De gobierno electrónico, gobierno digital Y desarrollo digital en la región También desde el año pasado Tenemos el orgullo de pertenecer al D7 El Digital 7 Que es un grupo de países Con mayor desarrollo digital en el mundo Que es donde compartimos un espacio con Estonia Con Inglaterra Con Israel Con Nueva Zelanda Con Canadá Uruguay Y Corea Donde los líderes de gobierno y los técnicos que estamos relacionados con esto Intercambiamos conocimiento, buscamos energías Y tratamos de seguir mejorando el desarrollo de cada uno de los países Todo lo que hacemos está expresado en distintas Agendas Agenda Uruguay digital Y estamos en nuestra cuarta agenda Que presenta estrategias, metas y objetivos bien claros Que nos van guiando en el desarrollo de la política digital del país Y a su vez también en planes de gobierno digital Hoy estamos en el plan de gobierno digital hasta el 2020 Donde fuertemente buscamos trabajar la equidad Como uno de los objetivos mayores de nuestro trabajo Y a través de el uso de las tecnologías Simplificar y dar igualdad en el acceso de información Y a los servicios digitales del país Es así que el despliegue de infraestructura es fundamental para eso El nivel de acceso a conexión a la conectividad de internet en Uruguay es elevado Y también nos permite acelerar determinados procesos En el acceso a los servicios públicos El gobierno fuertemente está trabajando hoy en transformar los servicios públicos Es una de las iniciativas más fuertes Que plantea el plan de gobierno digital del 2020 Tenemos como objetivo cuando el presidente tomó el mandato en 2015 Nos planteó digitalizar el 100% de los trámites de la administración pública Es así que definimos el plan de trabajo Hoy en día nos encontramos a mitad de Comino Con un nivel de avance también asociado con eso Estamos en la mitad de los trámites de punta a punta de la administración central Venimos trabajando también en unificar el acceso de información La arquitectura y información de los portales de gobierno Y en brindar un acceso omnicanal a la ciudadanía a los servicios Desplegando servicios digitales pero también universalizando Y tratando de tener una visión holística sobre los contactos Que se pueden dar a través del teléfono, a través de la manera presencial, etc. Es en este contexto Del trabajo de la universización de los servicios Del despliegue de los servicios digitales Que viene OpenShift a ser parte de toda esta historia Y ahí con Maxi y Santiago le vamos a contar un poco más Cómo venimos trabajando con esto Un poco de tu historia Como para ponernos en contexto Hoy cuando escuchábamos a Roldán de mañana Veía muchas similitudes un poco atemporales Te acuerdo de cómo le hicieron ellos Pero en varias cosas muy parecidos Vamos a remontarnos año 2010 Donde se define la agenda digital Y un punto fuerte que se define es la consolidación de los recursos de TI del Estado Para eso en el plan de gobierno Se define la consolidación del inciso de presidencia Y ahí se empieza a trabajar fuertemente En llevar todas las dependencias de presidencia de la República a un mismo edificio Es ahí que para 2011 se trabaja en la creación de un data center Que iba a consolidar los diferentes data centers Que había en todo lo que era presidencia de la República En ese momento se hizo un relevamiento muy fuerte De los recursos que tenían, es decir, lo que venía a este data center Y empezamos a ver que muchos de estos organismos Ya estaban en una fase virtualización por ejemplo Ya estaban bastante avanzados Algunos seguían en Bermetal Algunos seguían con cosas bastante viejas Pero habían varios que estaban bastante avanzados En ese entonces empezábamos a ver un poco de lo que era nube El concepto parecía muy vago por ahí Y algunos primeros participantes en lo que era infraestructura como servicio En aquel en ese momento, creo que es cuando se funda OpenStack Y algunos proveedores tenían alguna solución Para el año 2012 se conceptualiza lo que es el concepto de nube de presidencia Buscar dar servicios a todo lo que era presidencia de la República Y el primero que se empieza a trabajar fuertemente es infraestructura como servicio Ahí se define por una solución, de un proveedor Y se comienza lo que sería el proceso de licitación Para adquirir lo que es el hardware y el software En el estado calculo que acá sería igual Los procesos son lentos, esto lleva un tiempo Casi un año les diré Y para 2013 teníamos pronta lo que sería la primera plataforma base Infraestructura como servicio Ahí se decía así la primera migración fuerte Que es lo que es la plataforma avión electrónico Que es una plataforma gobernada por Agesic Donde se brindan diferentes servicios para organismos, para ciudadanos Y se hace esta primera migración Consistidas más o menos unas 300 máquinas virtuales Esto se hace en torno más o menos de dos meses Y fue la verdad bastante exitosa Se pudo hacer, en ese momento el proveedor de conectividad Nos dio una banda ancha bastante importante para esa época Para poder hacer todo en línea Y no tener que andar mudando equipo físico Y eso ayudó bastante Para el año 2014 Se continúa con la migración del resto de los organismos Esto fue medio complicado La verdad un poco de resistencia El hecho de sacarlos de su data center Los hacía sentir como iban a perder gobernanza Perder un poco de visibilidad De sus recursos Pero de a poquito lo fuimos convenciendo Fueron viniendo a ver este mundo que en parte era mejor Que les sacaba responsabilidad Que daba tiempo para otras cosas, para el negocio Y fue así que para el 2014 Se termina de migrar el 100% el inciso de presidencia Para que tenga una idea Hoy en día estamos en unas 3.000 máquinas virtuales Y más de 150 soluciones que se dan de la nube presidencia Al tener toda esta infraestructura Y toda la visión unificada de lo que era presidencia de la República Empezamos a entender El 75% del sistema operativo serán Linux Que había un 40% de base de datos Maya SQL Empezamos a ver datos Y empezamos a ver que había más posibilidades de consolidar De seguir optimizando sus recursos que teníamos Ahí fue que se empieza a hablar un poco de plataforma como servicio De un nivel, es decir, sacarle más responsabilidad A las TI de cada unidad ejecutora Y es ahí que se empieza a hacer, como en el 2011 con YAS Un estudio de estado del arte De lo que era plataforma como servicio Varios actores en la vuelta Y se decide en ese momento Que lo que estábamos más duro Y lo que cubría el mayor espectro de tecnologías Como las que estábamos usando nosotros Era OpenShift El año 2015 se defino en una agenda Ahora con ciertos puntos como es el gobierno cercano Y olorino confiable, gobierno cercano Muy fuertemente relacionado con lo que contaba Javier Trámite 100% en línea Gobierno confiable, muy apuntado a la seguridad Y entendíamos una plataforma como servicio Permitía llegar un poco más en eso Y dar una plataforma que podría responder Mejor a las necesidades que íbamos a tener Con todo lo que tenía que ver con Trámites en línea Y con la seguridad que teníamos que dar Es ahí que se decidió acercar la adquisición De hardware y software, de plataforma como servicio Algunos se preguntan por qué hardware Por qué varios me han dicho y por qué no Pusieron paz arriba de YAS La verdad en ese momento desconocíamos mucho Teníamos muchas dudas de lo que era OpenShift Había muchos cambios ahí en conceptos Todavía la parte, creo que todavía estaba en 2.0 Y no había hecho el cambio a lo que era con tenedores A la parte de Docker Y decidimos ir por hardware para no tener ningún Contratiempo con lo que tenía que ver Con infraestructura como servicio Años 2016 Tenemos la primer implantación así, digamos Para poner pilotos, que era una 3.0 Y ahí se empiezan con las primeras migraciones Se empieza con lo que es agenda y simple Que es agenda electrónica Para lo que es agendar trámites en estado Y simple que es el moderador de trámites Que son los primeros servicios Que se empezaron a dar para los organismos Aquellos organismos que no tenían infraestructura Para modelar trámites Se los ofreciamos de ajecir Trajimos eso, lo teníamos en infraestructura Como si lo trajimos Y ahí fue cuando dimos cuenta que No podíamos hacer mucho Porque no estaba nada, eso estaba pronto Para ir al plataforma como servicio Nos dimos cuenta que habíamos encarado De una visión muy de infraestructura Muy de infra, es la gente de infra Fue la que hizo OpenShift Porque el cliente había cambiado Porque en infraestructura como servicio El cliente era el sismino, el cliente era los equipos técnicos Era la misma gente que administraba el datacenter Que los reconvertimos, les enseñamos A trabajar en infraestructura como servicio Pero con plataforma ya no El cliente principal es el desarrollador Particularmente en ajecicles Desarrollos son afuera, es outsourcing No tenemos equipos de desarrollo interno Entonces esto era más difícil Ahí es donde empezamos fuertemente A trabajar en metodologías Se empezó a hablar de todo lo que era DevOps Empezamos a ver Cómo podíamos acercar Entender mejor nosotros Que es lo que daba esta plataforma Y cómo podíamos acercar A esos equipos de desarrollo Para el año 2017 Ahí dice yaje distribuido Se empieza a trabajar con lo que es Tener una segunda ubicación Y preparar la plataforma para tener Más ubicaciones geográficas Era un debe que teníamos El primer caso de uso que nosotros Llamamos exitoso Exitoso porque está en producción Está andando hoy en día Pero exitoso porque también se aplicaron Muchas cosas de metodología Que eso fue, creo, lo más importante Es el caso un poco que hemos tratado hoy Que va a hablar Santiago Y arrojó mucho de guías prácticas Recomendaciones ¿Qué pasos a seguir? Según el estado en el que estás Cómo ir acercándote a esta plataforma Situación actual No vamos a profundizar mucho La idea nuestra es más ir con el caso de uso Y contarles lo que fue la experiencia que tuvimos Actualmente estamos en 3.6 Tenemos un cluster Que se usa para todos Los ambientes La única salvedad es que Lo que sería la parte de la región De APP nodes Ahí adentro hay definidos nodos Para producción, nodos para Todo lo que tiene que ver con testing Que está separado a ese nivel ¿Sí? Lo que sí se preparó es una plataforma de testing Hoy contaba Roldán, aquello de que ir De 3.0 a 3.1, ir cambiando de versión Va dejando un poco de residuo Queríamos tener una plataforma al lado O para empezar de cero Y probar lo que era instalación de cero Una nueva versión O para entender si podíamos irnos 6 a 3.7 sin tener que hacer Un deploy entero de vuelta Plataforma monitoreo El STAKLK Que era algo necesario Darles a visión Algo que nos reclamaba mucho de los desarrolladores Que empezaron a trabajar Me estoy perdiendo de cosas No puedo ver los locos concentrados Tengo que entrar acá con Tainer Escuchamos y entendimos que era una necesidad Y la otra parte fuerte es el HCI Y infraestructura y perconvergente Eso tanto como para Plataforma como servicio Una decisión que tomó la agencia hace unos 2 años De ir por ese camino Estamos dejando de lado lo que están Es la realidad, tenemos Pero estamos trabajando Pero estamos yendo fuertemente A lo que es infraestructura y perconvergente No solo porque la experiencia fue buena Sino también porque nos ha ayudado mucho Con el proceso de compra Para nosotros comprar un servidor No es tan complicado, es algo que está Tandalizado, es algo que sale bastante rápido Un año Pero rápido 4 marcas de estoras y 8 modelos diferentes Cada uno con su consola ha sido Bastante engorroso administrador ¿Qué estamos haciendo Para mejorar la plataforma? Bueno, redistribución Ahora sí, nos estamos posicionando arriba de IAS La redistribución de IAS Generó una capa de red Bastante interesante Y bueno, la estamos aprovechando Y nos estamos apoyando en esa capa Y ya yendo a una versión 3.9 No sé si 3.10 La gente que instala Así que vamos a discutir con ellos Hemos generado lo que llamamos Una Deadbox Una caja de herramientas para el desarrollador Donde estamos generando unas guías Guías para sandboxing Y migraciones Es decir, lo que tenemos en IAS ¿Queres pasarlo a paz? O en algunas guías de cómo hacerlo Un checklist para ver en qué estado De madurez está, cuánto te costaría Si tenés que hacer de cero la aplicación De cambios la podés pasar Sandboxing para... Muchos sysadmin se nos quejaban Que no es tan fácil comer una máquina Y levantar un container Levantar un container de determinada solución Que está pronta para probar Un poco guiarlo Para que eso pueda suceder en OpenShift Queremos que usen la plataforma para eso Trabajamos mucho con lo que son Templates de 6D Entendemos que ahí es una parte Que nos sirve mucho a nivel Entregables que recibimos No tienen un ciclo de desarrollo definido Llega en diferentes formatos Y entendíamos que es esta manera Y dejando determinados pipelines definidos Ya con definidos control de calidad Con pruebas unitarias, control de código estático Eso estandariza un poco Y es algo que fácilmente se puede poner un pliego De manera que la empresa que se presenta Va con estas condiciones Y algo que estamos trabajando ahora Al día de hoy, las soluciones que tenemos arriba No son muchas Pero todas las que tienen el compase de datos Están en infraestructura como servicio De a poco queremos ir viendo La plataforma de a poco también va evolucionando Y va dando confianza para traer esas bases De datos hacia Lo que es OpenShift Caso de uso 2 plus n Cuando vi esto Porque no le puse yo el título Fue un compañero que insiste Ingeniero Pero se explico Tenemos dos casos de uso Una trazabilidad, que es el que vamos a hablar hoy Su sistema para llevar de manera centralizada El registro de los pasos por lo que ha transitado cada proceso Fácilmente con este sistema Uno puede saber un trámite en línea En dónde está, quién lo tiene Cual fue su última acción, su último movimiento Y el próximo Y de Uruguay vendría a ser el singa y sanlón del Estado Va a permitir a través de unicusuario Acceder a todos los servicios del Estado Esto está corriendo sobre OpenShift Y los n son las varias pruebas de conceptos que estamos haciendo Con soluciones que están en infraestructura con servicio Con soluciones nuevas Con pequeños desarrollos Bueno, estamos tratando de darle Toda esa vida a la plataforma Hoy lo que vamos a hacer fuerte Incapié es en trazabilidad Trazabilidad Es un buen caso para nosotros Porque tiene mucho de metodología Y es algo que estamos trabajando Muchisimo en AGC Y eso con lo que estamos logrando Aaptar más interesados Y que traigan soluciones para la plataforma Santi Bueno, se escucha ¿Cuál es Maxi? Verde El verde Bien Bueno, ya describieron un poco lo que es trazabilidad Trazabilidad en realidad nace En el 2015 Con el nuevo gobierno Cuando se pone el objetivo De digitalizar El 100% de los trámites Otro de los objetivos es que los trámites A su vez pudieran ser trazables Y que cada ciudadano pudiera en cada momento Saber en dónde está su trámite Sobre todo cuando trasciende Las fronteras del organismo en el que lo inició Entonces En el 2015 arranca el desarrollo Es un desarrollo Que se realizó siguiendo prácticas De metodologías ágiles Con una arquitectura Si bien estaba Bastante moderna En lo que es microservicios Estaba bastante alineado A microservicios Al momento de despliegue Se desplegaba de forma tradicional Como un bloque Se hicieron Las primeras puestas En producción Fueron tres O sea, una cada seis meses Y las actividades de calidad Fueron puntuales En demanda Y también basada mucho En evidencia documental Eran pruebas de calidad Funcionales más que nada No se hacían pruebas de código Ni de Performance Funcionales Pero no de código Esa fue la primera instalación De trazabilidad Que se hizo en infraestructura tradicional De servidores En determinado momento La plataforma estuvo lo suficientemente madura Para plantearnos ¿Qué ponemos arriba la plataforma? La plataforma OpenShift Productiva Corrimos algunos checklists Que ya habíamos hecho Las experiencias que comentaba Max Y algunas aplicaciones que habíamos intentado Llevar a la plataforma Con poco éxito Estos checklists los habíamos ajustado Para correrlos Corrarlos nuevamente Corrimos los checklists Y nos dieron que la solución de trazabilidad Era una solución adecuada Cumplía con los requisitos necesarios Para poder ser llevada A la plataforma Luego, como cualquier aplicación nueva De reciente Ingreso Tenía una necesidad constante de evolución El equipo de desarrollo Se mantenía básicamente estable Tenía el conocimiento adquirido Y reciente Y bueno, como otras oportunidades Que tuvimos para seguir adelante Fue el apoyo de la dirección Y el equipo técnico en realidad Estaba realmente comprometido Y le motivaba mucho El proyecto Creo que el único que no estaba muy convencido En el Product Owner Pero ahora le preguntamos Si está... No se arrepiente De la decisión Que hicimos diferente en trazabilidad Respecto a otros proyectos Lo primero Es Involucrar a más gente Desde el principio del proyecto Es el caso de los ISADMINS Pusimos equipo de ISADMINS No solo con la visión De trazabilidad como obligación Sino desde la plataforma Después pusimos un equipo Responsable de Cuba Encargado de automatizar pruebas En el principio Y luego un rol que para nosotros fue clave Que no encontramos un nombre Más feliz que coach metodológico Que fue una persona que tenía Muchos conocimientos teóricos De metodologías ágiles y de DevOps Y que como que fue le encargado Como de bajar todo ese conocimiento A la práctica y retroalimentarse Para Para poder empezar a generar buenas prácticas Y guías que hagan que esto sea sustentable Para futuros proyectos En general fue Lo que tuvimos desde AGCIC Es un involucramiento mayor a la habitual Una cosa que no mencioné Es que nosotros Tercerizamos mucho y el desarrollo de esto Lo hacemos mediante proveedores AGCIC define y valida Pero la fuerza de trabajo Normalmente es De proveedores en lo que es desarrollo Y en este proyecto particularmente Tuvimos un involucramiento Bastante mayor a la habitual ¿Cómo hicimos el cambio De lo que fue De infraestructura como servicio, plataforma como servicio Bueno lo primero fue definimos una estrategia Recuerden que había dicho Que la arquitectura ya Ya estaba en microservicios Lo que hicimos fue definir bien los microservicios Y llevarlos a contenedores Llevamos la aplicación Básicamente lo que hicimos fue reprodujimos La aplicación tantas veces Como microservicios teníamos Y apagamos funcionalidades Se desarrollaron interfaces Para que se puedan Consumir entre sí Y esa fue nuestra primera versión Esa iba a ser La primera versión De la solución de trazabilidad Sobre OpenShift En contenedores con microservicios Definimos herramientas En el mundo de herramientas Se abre un abanico gigante Lo importante es Para nosotros es entender Que es lo que queríamos cubrir con las herramientas Que tipo de pruebas Las pruebas de calidad, de performante Test unitario, de código Análisis de código estático De automatismo Bueno definimos Que tipo de herramientas necesitamos Después el proyecto mismo fue que se fue encargando De definir cuáles son las herramientas Que se adecuaban a eso Definimos la metodología Cómo se iban a dar cuenta cuando Vi una versión Cuales iban a ser los disparadores Definimos Implementamos pipelines Comenzamos por pipelines sugeridos En la documentación de Red Hat Y los hemos ido evolucionando Con el correo del tiempo Luego aplicamos la estrategia Lo adaptamos a contenedores Y un día lo que hicimos fue Migramos de la plataforma vieja Y empezaron todas las ventajas De estar sobre la plataforma Y con una metodología de mejora continua Aquí es un poco a donde llegamos Vamos a una arquitectura de microservicios Actividad de calidad automatizadas Y prácticas de integración continua Y liberación continua No nos estamos animando mucho a hacer Despliegue continuo Pero creemos que en breve Nos quedamos en las carreteras Los beneficios Un poco son los que Los esperamos para la plataforma La frecuencia de entregas Se multiplicó por 4 Recuerden que liberamos cada 6 meses Ahora estamos liberando Cada menos de mes y medio Y corrimos los cuello botella Ya los cuello botella no están Ni en las áreas operativas Que son los encargados de poner en producción Ni en las áreas de calidad Ahora estamos probando todo Ahora está maquenada En el desarrollo Y en la frecuencia con la que van liberando Versiones La mejora operativa También es notor Y el tema de la inmutabilidad de los contenedores Los Ya no Ya no No existen las discusiones En mi ambiente En mi ambiente esto funciona Ahora los contenedores son inmutables Y Si funcionan los lugares, funcionan los otros Acabaron esos rosses entre operaciones Y desarrollan ese aspecto Por supuesto que poner en producción Ahora es mucho menos Costoso En tiempo Antes para poner la aplicación en producción Básicamente la planificábamos semanas Lo planificábamos Para un día fuera de horario Hacíamos un control de cambio Todo eso llevaba semanas Y trabajo fuera de hora Y hoy en día realmente apretas un botón Y en minutos Tenés la aplicación Funcionando Por supuesto todo esto requirió Una automatización importante Nada es mágico Pero Pero el día de más uno Es algo que realmente se evalora Se generó un poco la ruptura de siglos funcionales Se generó mucha sinergia entre operaciones Y desarrollo Para este proyecto Y mejoró la calidad y lo entregado Porque esto también es un punto importante Porque Cuando el negocio aprieta Los equipos de desarrollo a veces pueden avanzar Un poco más rápido Pero ven degradada la calidad Y en este escenario Donde las actividades de calidad Están automatizadas Es muy difícil Evadir esos controles Entonces aseguran Que lo que llega a producción es De mejor calidad Algunos inconvenientes Que tuvimos en el camino La curva aprendizaje Es empinao Para todos los que nos metimos En este baile Nos costó un poco más No dejamos todas las actividades anteriores Entonces Como que se nos hizo bastante costoso La adopción De la herramienta Y de todas las herramientas Que vinieron junto Con OpenShift Y la evolución vertiginosa Que tiene el producto No colabora también en ponernos al día En No lo quiero decir como algo malo Todo lo contrario Pero digo en llegar Al estándar que nosotros nos sentiríamos cómodos De decir, bueno, yo lo domino el producto De la A a la Z Y el último inconveniente que tuvimos Fue que la base de datos siguen servidores De infraestructura tradicional Una vez que ves las ventajas De la plataforma Lo que más queremos es traer la base de datos A paz Que pueda auto escalar Y desplegarse Tan rápido como los servidores de la aplicación Algunas elecciones aprendidas Para nosotros Fue muy bueno Que el equipo de desarrollo También se involucre en la plataforma Conozca sus contados Y aprenda a desarrollar para la plataforma Cambia sustantivamente El monitoreo Para quienes venimos Del mundo de la infraestructura Y estamos acostumbrados A monitorear RAM, CPU Y el tiempo de vida que está Entendido Ya eso ya no tiene sentido Hay que cambiar un poquito el switch Y pensar más en servicios En usuario final Y en estado de salud de la plataforma Y bueno Y por último Comentar que en realidad Todo este caso de uso En realidad es un combo Que se forma por OpenShift Como plataforma Metodologías DevOps Y arquitectura de microservicio Las ventajas Son del combo Pero OpenShift Realmente es un habilitador Para que se sigan Ese tipo de lineamiento de arquitectura Y este tipo de prácticas De desarrollo Operación Y al revés también Hacer el seguimiento Con estas prácticas Para tener equipos DevOps Hacen que sea bastante más fácil La adopción de la plataforma OpenShift Así que, creo que por acá Se lo sacan abajo No hay ninguna pura Muchas gracias
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kO4G5uBRQE", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UC7SbfAPZf8SMvAxp8t51qtQ
Closing ceremony
by Mark Hymers by Holger Levsen by Damián Viano by Andreas Tille by Martín Ferrari by martin f. krafft by Margarita Manterola by Romanella Di Ferdinando by Joerg Jaspert by Sebastian Montini by Stephen Gran by Maximiliano Curia At: DebConf8 http://penta.debconf.org/dc8_schedule/events/216.en.html https://debconf8.debconf.org/ GoodBye and see you at DebConf9 Close the conf properly Close the conf properly, say thanks to volunteers, ask for cleanup help, ask for feedback Room: Salon del mar Scheduled start: 2008-08-16 19:00:00
[ "debian", "debconf", "debconf8" ]
2017-11-24T08:40:23
2024-04-24T00:14:31
503
3kYgukGBzHw
So I guess, are we ready? Is everyone ready? So I have the pleasure to stand up in front of you here now and share the sad moment that we're coming to the end of this year's DEBCONF. I can repeat what our DPL has said at the formal dinner on Wednesday. We all think this was the best organized DEBCONF we have had so far. And I would like to make sure that everyone who was involved in the organization would please come up here and stand with us. That is all the volunteers, the entire video team, and everybody else who has contributed to this DEBCONF, please come up front. Andreas, that includes you. All these Debbie and Switzerland t-shirts make it really difficult now. So I would like to have a huge round of applause for all the local team. When this started on Saturday, on the 9th, no, the 1st or 2nd, 2nd of August, Saturday is usually the setup day. A lot of us got here a little earlier, but usually Saturday is that setup day. We actually, this year, declared DEBCONF to start with DEBCONF Day Zero because there was nothing done. Those guys did a fantastic job. But they aren't the only ones, and I'm not done with the superlatives. We also have, I think, the best video coverage of any conference that I know. Our video team has made it possible for everyone who couldn't attend to do whatever reason, and all the other people who are interested in free software and Debbie as a whole to follow all of the events. And not only that, but many of the videos are already encoded and available for download. So that's a splendid, magnificent job, and I'd like you all to join in. Massive round of applause for the video team. And I guess, finally, before I hand off the microphone to some other people who want to say something, I would like to highlight the fact that for the last two weeks, we've had working network throughout the entire hotel, Wi-Fi, and this is thanks to our admin team. And I would like to have the entire admin team come up forward, please. And everybody else who was involved in another round of applause. Okay, we still have a little announcement to make, which is the Assassin's Game, which has officially ended, and the best assassin had 10 kills. Place two goes with five kills, so he was really active. And the winner is Juan Díaz. You don't get it, Pony. I wanted to bring you a sock, but I couldn't find one. Anyone has a used sock for him? We just want to thank you, everybody. Again, thanks to our sponsors. We are not going to name them one by one again. But thanks to everyone who has come, who has made this possible. And we would like to see all of you next year in Spain, in Cáceres, Extremadura. Yeah, it's Debian's birthday today. Should we sing a song or something? Not the copyrighted one. I forgot one group that we should really thank, and that's not only the attendees, of course, because without you, this conference would be really boring. But all the speakers, and especially the speakers who jumped in at the last moment to fill in the slots that we couldn't fill, and presented us with a week of a very interesting program and made this room, and also the other one, the other one less so at times, but this room pretty full. So thank you all for delivering your presentations and for being so flexible with stuff. Okay, and there are apparently still proceedings up here, in case any of you still want proceedings and haven't picked any of them up yet. The conference network will be shut down after the dinner. So if you have anything to do online, like book tickets for something, you should do it now, before dinner. And Homer also has a copy of all those videos, the video team already prepared. So if you have a lot of space on your heart, just feel free to download them. And after that, the hotel network is still there. So you can still book tickets afterwards, but not in all areas of the hotel. You might need to go somewhere to find a spot to have network.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kYgukGBzHw", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCw8FfNmFLI0LfvKt7xbf33w
FAKE Beretta Firearms Site - TheFirearmGuy
FAKE Beretta Firearms Site. This FAKE SITE actually looks real UNTIL you dig in and check out the pictures and wording. These people are SCUM. Subscribe Here - https://goo.gl/R4Zvg4 Here is my playlist for various Handgun reviews - https://goo.gl/4fRCek Here is my playlist for Long Gun reviews - https://goo.gl/hnU871 Here is my playlist called Fighting for the 2nd Amendment - https://goo.gl/OMZX60 Here is my playlist for other Gear & Accessory reviews - https://goo.gl/oADVpQ Here is my playlist for range test reviews - https://goo.gl/t1c0Tl Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/thefirearmguy Twitter @ https://twitter.com/thefirearmguy Instagram @ http://instagram.com/thefirearmguy
[ "taurus g2c", "sar 9mm review", "glock 36", "mossberg mc2sc", "taurus g3c", "sar usa sar9 review", "ruger security 9 compact review", "canik tp9 elite sc", "taurus g3xl", "ammo shortage", "mossberg 590s", "hk45", "g2c vs g3c taurus", "sar 9", "the firearm guy", "g2c", "kel tec p15", "ruger pc charger", "taurus g2c vs taurus g3c", "taurus g2s", "stoeger coach gun", "glock 37", "mossberg shockwave", "cz 75 sp 01 review", "ruger security 9", "cz shadow 2", "kel tec p17", "ruger max 9", "fake beretta site", "berettafirearms.com" ]
2022-08-16T01:10:24
2024-02-05T07:31:31
418
3kaaR3txc8I
Hey there friends, thanks for checking in. What you're looking at is the Beretta website. This is the real Beretta website. You can see it has their logo there, firearms gun accessories, they're offering some sales, some nice pictures. Over here we have some different categories, some discount codes, and of course their firearms. This is the Beretta website, legitimate. Here's a shotgun A300 Altima, looks kind of new, very cool semi-auto shotgun. And then down here we have all of the information, whatever category you want to check out. It's all right there. This website is called beretta.comen-us. But over here we've got a website that is completely fake. It's a scam website called berettafirearms.com. And over here they stole the logo and added firearms USA. And when you go, you can see they took this picture, very easy to copy, a picture, download it, you know buy beretta pistols, beretta handguns, beretta shotguns, for sale at berettafirearms.com. So we're going to look a little deeper into this. Here are the categories. Check this out, beretta shotguns. And they have handguns and some very, if you look close you'll see that these are a little blurry, very blurry pictures. They're not crisp and clean. If we go to Beretta, the store here, we look at pistols. You'll see how nice and clear the photo is. But yet we come to Beretta firearms and we can see they're a bit blurry. But this is under Beretta shotguns. They have all these handguns, these shotguns add them to cart. But I'm going to go ahead and add something to the cart to show you what I mean. Now here's an M9A3 legitimate and true. And there it is. All right, it says buy now. But when you click buy now, it takes you to a dealer. So if I put this information in, it'll give me my local gun dealer that has the M9A3. But here it is. All right, the MSRP on this approximately $1,100. They have the various models. All right. But this is the M9A3. Now if we go to the fake website, there's the M9A3. Same picture. A little bit more blurry, not as clear as that right there. Okay, you could scroll in, you could take a look. All right, let's see if I can. Well, I can't enlarge it. But over here, I've got the same picture. And they copied and pasted the specs on it. All right, shipping and delivery. They say they ship everything for free. So that's a big time bonus. So we've got the legitimate and the fake. Now this website here looks real. They're charging $1,085 for this gun. So approximately a $14 savings. Not that great. Some of these other sites offer a couple hundred dollars discount. It's completely fake and phony. But check this out. So you go to contact us. No phone number, nothing. You can see the card there. Log in, register. It takes you to this exact same page. You have your categories here. So I use Jack Warren at jwarrantyahoo.com and I'm going to send a message. Your scam site was featured on the firearm guy YouTube channel. Check it out, losers. So I'll go ahead and send that in from Jack Warren. Oh, hang on. It doesn't want to send. Hmm. I'm wondering why that won't send. It's not even giving me the swirly circle there to tell me that it's thinking. But speaking of the M9A3, here's a $14 savings. I put this in my cart and look at what they have. Zell and cryptocurrency and free shipping. Your personal data will be used to process your order. Support your experience throughout the website and our privacy policy to make it seem as if they're legitimate. But Zell and crypto is how they are accepting payments. That's the only way you could pay with this fake scam website. Shopping cart. Check out order complete. Have a coupon. Returning customer. Click returning customer. Who would return to these idiots? They're trying to scam you out of money. Now I am sure Beretta is aware of this site much like CZ was aware of. CZfirearms.com and Dan Wessonfirearms.com. Here we have Berettafirearms.com. I'm told by people that have watched those videos say, you know, Canik, Kel-Tex, so many others. I mean, if you search Beretta, this fake website will show up in the search and it makes the buyer believe that it's real and it's not. And so one way you can know for sure is if right here, Zell and cryptocurrency or PayPal or Cash App or some of those other ones that Venmo is another one that you know it's a complete fraud. Beretta, Firearms, USA, they took everything most likely from overseas. Very hard to get these removed. I know CZ is trying. I'm sure Beretta is trying. I may contact them tomorrow just to see what they have to say. But that's what's going on. Berettafirearms.com. A bunch of losers. Stay away from them and we'll see. I just might feature Kel-Tex, Canik and some other ones that are out there. They're not hard to find guys. I will tell you it is very easy to do that. If you like videos like this, please subscribe and share. I always appreciate thumbs up button. Thanks for watching and you guys be safe.
{ "url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kaaR3txc8I", "license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" }
UCvqbFHwN-nwalWPjPUKpvTA
CNCF SIG Security 2020-05-27
CNCF SIG Security 2020-05-27
null
2020-05-28T00:48:16
2024-02-05T16:36:37
4,406
3kazjTMm-bs
Hi, Paul. Hello, Jürg. You were successfully able to connect. Yes. Yes, in a few minutes early this time. Yeah, I was early too. I actually had issues to connect through the browser client. I had to download the real client. Yes, so I've always been using the native client. For one thing, performance seems to be better with the native client, especially I've found on my MacBook, certainly. Yeah, for sure. I think I'm not going to share video though. I don't trust my Wi-Fi with dealing with video and audio and screen sharing at the same time. I think it will result in dropouts. Yeah, you're good point. Brandon said he would join early as well, so hopefully he will be on shortly. Nice. I'm going to go on mute until he shows up. Yeah, sure. We'll do the same. Hey, Paul. Hey, Jürg. Hi, Brandon. Hey. Hi. How are you doing? Great. Do you manage to test the screen sharing? Let's just do that now. Yeah, I'm going to get the meeting notes set up in a moment. Okay, let's just start. Looks great. Are we coming through? Yep. Okay, so Brandon, I'm going to keep my camera off because I don't entirely trust my bandwidth to deal with the camera as well as screen sharing and audio. All right, yeah, no worries. Could you just go for the few slides and back just to make sure that the latency is okay? Okay, looks good. All right. Sounds looks like we all said. Yeah, I'm going to start wrapping the meeting notes. Yeah. Paul, do you have a copy of the link to the slides as well? Yes, hold on. It's actually... We don't need it now. Okay. Yeah, can I send it afterwards? It's actually in the... It is in the pull request. If you look at... If you look at CNC at the top in the pull request. All right, I'll grab it from that. Thank you. Greetings, everyone. Hello. Hi. Hello. Hi, Reed. All right, I put the link to the meeting notes and the chat. Please put it in your name under attendance. Thank you. I will give this another five minutes. Zoom has some connection issues. So usually people take it all together. Yes. I know a bit about that. Yep. Unfortunately, only this particular Zoom for some reason. I... Like Jess and Cap was had some issues only with this Zoom apparently. So something special about it. I know that when I was about to connect it, I wanted me to be signed in Zoom to be able to join. And I know that, yeah, I had a problem because of that. Whereas the other Zoom, I was joining well fine because I could just join as an anonymous account. Yeah, I think this meeting does actually require you to have an account. The problem I had last week is that I was signing in with an account, but it didn't accept that account for some reason. I think what happened, Paul, is Arm was resetting all the accounts because we're moving over to Zoom. And it found me up too. It took me three attempts to get in. Yeah, I ended up creating a temporary account with my army mail address, which I have a feeling might not have done me any favours for the future either. But even that didn't work. So eventually I signed in with Facebook, which is how I'm signed in now as well, which is why you get to see that lovely mugshot of me with the shades. That's my Facebook profile picture. When we register or when we record our attendance, are we supposed to put company name or just start names? Just names is fine. If you end up with a company name, that's fine as well. Okay. Yeah. And I noticed quite a few new names that we've seen lately. Please feel free to add yourself to the member list by opening a PR. Is membership purely elective, Brandon? If we attend a certain number of these, can we just declare ourselves members? Yep, basically. Okay. Yeah. Okay. I think we can get started. We seem to have quite a good number of people here. And we're already almost five minutes in. So today is going to be a presentation, Paul, and a few other colleagues here from ARM are going to talk to us about PASAC, platform extraction for security, dealing with TPMs, hardware security modules, stuff like that, other good stuff. And I believe you guys are submitting this for sandbox, was that right? That's correct. Yes. Okay. Yep. So yeah, take it away, please. Okay. Okay. Well, thanks very much, Brandon. Hello, everyone. Thanks for allocating the time on the agenda for me today. So I'm going to present PASAC, which, as we've said, that has now been proposed for donation to CNCF as a sandbox project. The pool request is open without proposal document currently. And it is a security focus project. So, so, so I'm excited now to be presenting it to the security SIG. Quick, who am I? My name is Paul Howard. I'm a solutions architect here at ARM, nominally based on the ARM campus in Cambridge, UK. A few of my vital signs here. If you want to connect or get in touch, I'm pool.howard.arm.com. I am on the CNCF Slack as well as on the Docker community Slack. So do feel free to get hold of me there or via any of the other ways shown here. My role in PASAC is that I am a maintainer and I provide some technical steering for the contributions that ARM is making. And also, we're very fortunate to have some of my arm colleagues on the call today, including Yuke and Yonats, both of whom are regularly making code commits into PASAC. And those names will become familiar to anyone who has been involved or wants to get involved. So the agenda for the presentation is as follows. I'll talk about why PASAC was created about the problem that it is trying to solve and about its relevance to cloud native. I'll give a high level technical overview of architecture, the long-term vision for evolving this as a community project. I'll talk about the status of the project today and provide some links and resources where you can dive deeper, learn more, and I'll open up to questions at the end. To be honest, though, I don't mind being interrupted. So if you have a question while I'm mid-flow, do feel free. But let's begin with why. Why does PASAC exist? Well, the PASAC story starts here with this recognition that the edge in particular is evolving as a compute platform, becoming a focal point for rich compute workloads. This is being driven by a need to process data to the source. The volume of data from IoT is growing and with that growth comes a need to process and gain insights and actions from that data locally without a high cost and high latency backhaul. And it means that this edge layer where we might traditionally have done nothing more than say a protocol translation is now a place where we're doing analytics, we're doing machine learning. It's a place where we're deploying complex workloads. It's becoming a more elastic and cloud-like layer. And in a more elastic and cloud-like layer, we want to have cloud-like development and deployment practices. We want to containerize. We want to orchestrate. We want to make use of that huge momentum that we've built up with cloud-native development practices. And we want those practices to succeed for us at the edge. But that's a challenge. And one of the reasons it's a challenge is that we have fleets of edge devices that reside outside of the cloud. The threat landscape is different and it's a threat landscape that we need to address in the security architectures that we deploy. It's also a challenge because there is diversity and fragmentation of those host platforms, especially around security. So there are different routes of trust, different provisions for secure services like key storage and cryptography. And with those different provisions, we get different APIs and that creates tight coupling problems because there's now a need to understand these platform hardware features in order to access them. And this just isn't what we want. So what we want is agnostic solutions. We want solutions that are divorced and decoupled from all this detailed physical platform knowledge. And not only that, but we want to avoid any notion of any single workload being the sole resident of the hardware platform. So we want workloads to be decoupled from physical hosts. We need a solution that scales to multi-tenant execution environments where workloads are provisioned and orchestrated in a cloud-native way. And this platform agnostic multi-tenant access to secure services is what Pasek is providing. And this is where we think it really plays in to CNCF as well because it's creating these new opportunities to decouple workloads from the physical platform to enable cloud-native delivery and orchestration into this otherwise very diverse, very challenging environment. So here's a visual representation of where Pasek sits. It is creating this new abstraction layer, a common API over variable root of trust or cryptographic services that would otherwise be accessed using more specialized APIs, like TPM 2.0 or PKCS 11. This then becomes a uniform software platform in support of runtime or orchestration stacks and ultimately in support of one or more applications. Pasek really took off when Arm and Docker got together in the spring of last year and collaborated on a solution to this platform agnostic root of trust problem. At the time Docker Enterprise was already integrated with TPM to bootstrap trust between nodes and Docker trusted registry. But they were also looking for a way to make this integration more portable. And this really aligned well with the investigations that we were doing it within Arm into these platform agnostic security interfaces. So we saw eye to eye on the problem and on roughly what was needed to address it. So we got together and we decided to work together to create something in the open source community. And the executive summary of how those conversations went was, well, do we need to build anything at all? And really the answer to that was yes, because again the existing APIs were fragmented, specialized, we needed platform agnostic APIs and furthermore we needed that to be consumable conveniently in programming languages that we might be using in a way that doesn't require screens full of codes to achieve simple or common use cases. And of course we need multi-tenancy. And we didn't see any existing solutions that met all of these requirements. And then the next question is, if we're going to have this common API, then what is it, what should it look like? For this we mined the PSA, platform security architecture. This is something that ARM had previously defined as being a holistic end-to-end approach to security for IoT platforms. Inside this architecture there are API suites available and one of those APIs is the PSA crypto API. It ticked lots of boxes for us in that it's modern, strongly specified, it's platform agnostic, provides all of the required primitives, good algorithm agility, and it suits hardware backed implementations where the private key material is not exposed. And this API choice was really only the start of the story, so by itself the API isn't the solution. For one thing PSA was designed originally for constrained platforms and the PSA crypto API was specifically a C language API where we'd already declared a need for a language neutral and multi-tenant programming model. So we opted to take the PSA crypto API as a set of contracts and use those contracts as the basis of an API that would map nicely into any language while also supporting multi-tenancy explicitly. So here are some use cases that we had in mind and they certainly aren't the only possible use cases but we were thinking initially about having portable route of trust where we can do things like bootstrapping NTLS from a node to a remote component and have that be backed not necessarily by a TPM but maybe by Secure Element, HSM, or a firmware route of trust running in a T. And then thinking much more broadly, more ambitiously, if I'm an application developer give me a simple and portable way to consume the best available secret storage or cryptographic services on my platform in my preferred programming language. That is a use case that's loaded with all sorts of requirements and we'll talk about how Parsec intends to address them. It's also worth remembering here these use cases are not necessarily edge specific. I mean, I have talked a lot about edge in the presentation but data center and cloud are relevant here as well. It's just that in the edge we find that these use cases are particularly poorly catered for due to the amount of fragmentation. So really that, yes? Hi Paul, just a quick question if you don't mind. You talked about multi-tendency. Do you mean a virtualization of these devices or something a little bit different? So it's agnostic referring to the need to run more than one workload. It doesn't specify necessarily full stack virtualization or containerization. It's really just there is a need for multiple applications that are resident on a node and are distinct from each other to be able to consume Parsec and the secure services behind it. Gotcha. Thank you. Cool. All right. So I think, yes, let's look now at the architecture and we'll start with the conceptual model. It begins with the API, specifically the PSA crypto API. We've said that's a C language interface. It was designed for embedded programming on endpoints. So what Parsec does is it brings PSA crypto into the application class world, this more rich compute world, by creating a service around the crypto API. So this is a software service. It represents and controls access to the underlying platform hardware. And being a service, it needs a way to be called by applications. And we do this by defining an inter-process communication or IPC layer with a wire protocol that defines the inputs and outputs of each operation. And the derivation from PSA crypto on this protocol is a close one. There is pretty much a one-to-one mapping between contracts in this IPC interface and the operations of the PSA crypto API. The only difference actually is that this protocol is now language agnostic. The final piece is an ecosystem of client libraries in popular programming languages. And these are designed to create a developer friendly experience, putting the crypto services directly to the fingertips of application developers. And this is what Parsec really is, conceptually. There's this onion skin set of layers decoupling the workload from the platform. So with the conceptual model in mind, then let's have a look at how this service architecture actually looks. So imagine that everything you see here is running on an infrastructure or edge node supported by a rich OS Linux, for instance. So here you can see the Parsec service, which represents the underlying hardware and acts as a broker for access to it. The Parsec service is written in Rust. We felt that Rust was occupying just the right space for us in terms of having predictable performance coupled with lots of safety and security characteristics. The Parsec service itself is organized along the lines of a front end backend architecture. The front end is the listener that provides the service endpoint and implements the IPC wire protocol that I talked about. Now Parsec doesn't prescribe a transport technology for this wire protocol. What exists today is a listener that works with Unix domain sockets, but it would be equally valid to use another kind of transport. In fact, really, it's a general principle of Parsec that we try to be non-prescriptive where possible for these things. In fact, you can see by the block architecture model here, it's very Lego-Brick. There's lots of pluggable and replaceable pieces that could have different implementations. Those backend modules, we call them providers, and this is where you load in all of your platform-specific knowledge and isolate that knowledge. So the providers are where we would have code that specifically knows how to talk to, say, a TPM or an HSM. And then over on the left, over on the application side of the wire, we have our client library, which understands how to talk to the Parsec wire protocol. The application itself doesn't need to know those details. So client libraries, let's focus a little bit more on these because they're kind of existential to the project. We've talked about the wire protocol so far and about how that presents the contracts of the PSA crypto library in a language-independent way. But the wire protocol itself is not what applications would directly consume. It's a bit too low-level bits and bytes. So what they consume instead is a client library. And the idea behind Parsec is we create a whole ecosystem of these client libraries, which grows over time to support popular languages. But we don't want these client libraries to be clunky language bindings on the wire protocol. And this really is one of the defining characteristics of the consumption side story with Parsec. We want each client library to be designed and developed to provide a very fluent, natural, idiomatic programming experience that is tailored to that language. So it will be attractive. It will feel natural to developers in that language. And one of the ways in which we aim to achieve this is by structuring the client libraries into different layers of abstraction. The full PSA crypto API will always be accessible, along with all of its different settings for controls of things like algorithm choice, key size or key usage policy. So that full programming service will always be there when you need it, but there are cases where there is such a thing as too much choice or too much complexity. It can be bewildering and as such prone to misuse. So part of the vision for Parsec is that it should have a strong consumer side story so that developers know that they're using the best available crypto and key storage for their use case without needing reams of code or necessarily a lot of crypto expertise or specialized knowledge. So we want to be able to cater for common use cases with relatively few lines of code. And this means things like using smart defaults to make good choices on behalf of the programmer. If I just have some data and I want to hash it, I want to sign it with a private key, then Parsec can abstract away some of that complexity for us, it just gives us a nicer experience as a developer. And here's official representation of that layering concept. So you can see here we can choose to code at a relatively low level of abstraction. So quite close to the wire protocol primitives themselves if we need that degree of sophistication and granular control. Or we can make use of this simplified experience where the client's library is making some choices for us based on maybe configuration data that is automatically picked up from the service. So that's the client library vision. So it's multi-language designed for each language and designed in layers that are sensitive to use cases. Okay, so all of that was about Parsec as an API. We've talked about it as an abstraction layer. So let's talk now about Parsec as a brokering layer as a provider of secure services in this multi-tenant or multi-application environment. And the challenge is two-fold here. So the first is we have this contention for resources. We have multiple applications needing to share access to the secure hardware of the platform. The second is that there must be clear differentiation between those multiple workloads because there's a need for separation of secure assets such as keys. Each workload needs some kind of unique and persistent identity, and that identity has to come from somewhere. There has to be a component of the overall system that understands where the workloads came from, that's able to vouch for their provenance and for their identity in a way that Parsec can trust. So these identities have to be stable values. They have to be able to survive such minutiae as system restarts or upgrades to the application code. Now the role of Parsec here is actually not to decide that identity or to assign it, but just to honor it. So it has to treat each incoming API call as coming from a workload with a known identity, and it must partition key stores and broker the access to the hardware based on that identity. So we don't want workload A to be able to operate with keys that were created by workload B, for instance. Now where does the identity come from? And the answers to that really depends on the deployment. So again, this is one of those areas where Parsec doesn't prescribe a single answer. It could be a container manager or an orchestrator, for example. We just refer to it opaquely as an identity provider. For Parsec to work in a multi-tenant environment, some kind of identity provider has to exist. So Parsec defines its role, doesn't define its implementation. However, whatever the identity provider happens to be on any given system, we do know that Parsec has to be able to trust it. So there's got to be a trust relationship between the Parsec service and the identity provider on that box, which would be based on something like PKI or certificate sharing. To look at that whole concept a bit more visually. So here we have the logical applications or workloads where each comprises, for instance, a number of containers. The Parsec service is then shared and provides the abstraction over the root of trust and crypto services of the platform. We add this identity provider in the gray box. Again, a separate component. This resides outside of the Parsec service. So it's either a separate service or it's functionality that is shared across the software stack that is supporting these applications. The identity provider assigns identities to the workloads. Note specifically this is per logical workload, not necessarily per container. It is quite possible for a workload to be a composition of containers. The applications then make calls into the Parsec service via the client library and the wire protocol. And each of those calls is annotated on the wire with a token representing the identity. And what does Parsec do with the token? Well, uses it as a partitioning primitive. So based on that identity, whatever it is, it makes decisions about how to grant access to keys, for instance. And it can trust those tokens because they will have been signed by the identity provider. And Parsec is able to validate that signature according to a shared trust bundle that resides between the two components. Okay, so with that, we've covered the sort of dual roles of Parsec as being a common abstraction layer and as a broker and mediator of services. So these really are the two things that are critical to enabling a cloud native style of workload delivery onto these otherwise very diverse and fragmented edge platforms. So we can summarize the value proposition really of Parsec. It's these four things. It's abstraction, common API, truly agnostic based on modern cryptographic principles, mediation, security as a microservice, brokering access to the hardware, providing isolated key stores in a multi-tenant environment. Ergonomics, which is how we refer to this client library ecosystem, brings the API right to the fingertips of developers in any language. The mantra is easy to consume, hard to get wrong with security, that's what we want. And lastly, openness. It's an open source project inviting contributions to enhance the ecosystem both within the service and among those client libraries. And you might have realized just from hearing me talk that there are lots of degrees of freedom and axes on which to grow Parsec as an ecosystem. It really is an ecosystem project. So there are these back-end provider modules. These can be enriched with support for, say, vendor-specific secure elements or crypto accelerators. There are identity systems for different deployments. We could support different styles of transport, not necessarily just the domain socket transport that exists today. And that's not to mention the potential wealth of client libraries that could be built. So running this as an open source project absolutely makes sense. And if we capture that value proposition in a single image, this is it really, an agnostic layer supporting any platform, any chip architecture, any kind of secure hardware on that platform and with any kind of workload in any sort of runtime or packaging consuming those facilities. Okay, so that's the Parsec vision. So then how does Parsec contribute to the CNCF vision? Well, firstly, as we've said, Parsec is an enabler of decoupling and it's this ability to decouple and create an agnostic platform that really aligns Parsec to cloud native in general terms. Thinking more specifically, we can also look at the ecosystem of existing CNCF projects and identify some places where Parsec could potentially integrate. And there are some options here around projects that are concerned either with orchestration, with identity, or with workload trust and provenance. So some of these are being actively explored. So for example, we spoke with some representatives of the Spire project just this week because Spifi and Spire and the notion of identity and provenance, we think that could play quite neatly into Parsec's requirement for an identity provider. But I should say there aren't any existing dependencies currently on other CNCF projects or components or APIs or versions of APIs at this stage. So Parsec for now is relatively standalone. This picture is how Parsec is positioned relative to some of those other projects in functional areas. So we can visualize it as being like a triangle where Parsec is providing the agnostic interface to the platform security, but then we have orchestration systems such as Kubernetes that are actively managing the execution of the workloads. Projects such as Spifi, Spire, as I mentioned, concerned with identity. And it's also interesting to think of how Parsec and Notary could potentially fit together when we think about the general problem of running trusted workloads on secure platforms. Right. Let me do a project status. So just a few quick slides on the status of the project as it exists today. It's been public in GitHub since October last year. It's all Apache 2 licensed. The available API so far is what's targeted at supporting the portable route of trust use cases. So that's provisioning key pairs, exporting the public key, signing with the private key. The available back-end integrations are via embed crypto. That's a pure software back-end. And that's a neat thing to have available because it means you can just get up and running very quickly for experimentation. We also have integrations with PKCS11 providers, including the Secure Object Library, which runs in a trusted app on the NXP layerscape platform. That Secure Object Library has a PKCS11 wrapper around it. And because that's a standard, we can connect with it. We have a TPM 2.0 back-end as well, supporting those same primitives. And the main engineering focus right now is to look at ways of getting those existing pieces into production systems. So ARM is looking, for example, at using the Parsec technology internally. We're doing some product integrations as are some other organizations. The client library story so far has really been about prototyping and sketching to examine what the model should be for client libraries, but also to build those pieces that are vitally needed for short-term integration plans. So right now, our team in ARM, for instance, we're doing some client-side work with Rust and with a SQL wrapper. As of now, we don't have an implementation of multi-tenancy for Parsec. So we have design documents around this, but it hasn't been built yet because it isn't needed for this initial use case where it's just a single runtime management piece needing access to the service. And lastly, of course, we're hoping that entry into the CNTF Sandbox would be a great next step in terms of growing the project into the future. So quickly on project maturity, this is still a relatively young, relatively new project. We have invested a lot in documentation. There is a well-populated book resource, including aspects of the wire protocol design, the API spec, source code structure, system architecture. We have a published threat model. You can find in the repo alongside those docs as well. CI builds are there along with unit tests, integration tests. There is a fuzzing framework and we've been pushing the component crates out to the Rust crate repository at crates.io as well with the documentation appearing on docs.rs. So there's been significant investment in making the project real and in making it attractive for adoption and for contribution. Quick GitHub pulse. This is now a couple of months out of date, but it does show we're starting to see some community engagement. We've got some PRs coming in. The level of interest has grown since the start of the year. In terms of who is actively contributing, as I said at the start, the initial seeding of this project was a collaboration across Docker and ARM. And this was prior to the point where Docker was partly split out into Mirantis. So we now have those three organizations that have been responsible for the content of the project so far. ARM very active currently. We, ARM is very active currently. We're expecting also some contributions to start flowing in from the NARO as well at some point in the near future. We have potential industry partner adoptions in flight. Actually more than a shown here, but some of them are in the very early stages and it's not possible to talk about them publicly just yet. Open governance for this project is really going to open more doors, we think in terms of these partnerships and contributions. And indeed in some cases we've found that open governance is effectively a gate to adoption for some organizations as well. Okay, I'm talking for about half an hour. So before I open up for questions, let me just leave the resources slide up so that people can see the relevant links to learn more. You can see the GitHub reference there. Don't be confused by the name Parallax Second. The project has multiple GitHub repos and they're all collected together into an org. Ideally the org would have been called Parsec, but alas that was taken already. So we've had to use the expanded astronomical term instead. And again there is that book repo. There is a wealth of additional projects documentation there. There is a public Parsec Slack channel on the Docker community Slack and also a Zoom call that takes place every alternate Tuesday which anyone is free to join and you can find details for that in the GitHub repo including the Zoom link and a calendar link. So I'll leave that slide up and I guess we can end the presentation at that point. So thank you very much for listening. Brandon, can I hand them back to you as chair? Perhaps we can do questions. Yeah, we already have questions in the chat I think. Thank you Paul. So I think that's a question from Vinay about the Scarborough of Parsec capabilities. I'm not sure what, do you see the question? Wait a second, let me just, I've just got to open the chat. Okay, so how do applications discover that Parsec capabilities or what kind of facilities are available behind it given that it is an abstraction layer. Is the question more aimed at the first or the second of those two cases? I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. Does that make sense? Does that make sense? So I think I'm trying to draw the distinction between whether you know how Parsec is there at all as a library or whether you know what kind of facilities are available behind it given that it is an abstraction layer. I think maybe more of the second. So I'm just trying to understand like, let's say that I have some services that I'd like to deploy at the edge. And then I, and then my use cases, I'd like to extract some secrets given all the other capabilities with the integration of the IDP. How do I discover that those, that that Parsec is available as a service for me to leverage to obtain keys, for example, I mean ordered. Is that like, is there like a handshake? How do I know if that makes sense? Yeah, sure it does. So, so, um, so the first thing is that if you have an aspiration to use Parsec, then the first thing you would do is you would link with a client library. Now, of course, that doesn't necessarily mean that Parsec is definitely going to be on your system. But there is a handshake stage and actually the handshake stage is capable of doing a couple of things right here. It's capable of determining whether Parsec is there at all. It's, it also has some capability and negotiation design built into it as well. So, so in terms of the kinds of operations that are supported. So for instance, whether particular types of key are available, or whether the back end is, is, is hardware backed or say firmware backed. Now I should say that all of these things are built into the design. Again, there is a difference between the design and what is available in the project today. So some of those negotiation pieces are kind of at an early stage. They haven't all been implemented, haven't all been built. But the vision really with Parsec is that it is an abstraction, right? So you shouldn't have to care. And the client library is going to be responsible for making some of those handshake API calls to do things like smart defaulting. So if you, if you want to store a key and you don't actually know where your platform is going to store it, then the client library can be relied upon to make the best per platform choice based on information that it has gleaned from making API calls across the wire to the service. Of course, if the service is not there at all, then no response is going to come back. And then just isn't possible to use Parsec through a client library. There would have to be a, another kind of non-parsec fallback in that situation. Got it. Thank you. All right. That's another question about fuzzing. I'm not quite sure the kind of line of questioning here, Krishna, could you elaborate a little bit? Yeah, sure, Brendan. So, so there was some talk about the first testing framework is in place and I was looking into the GitHub project as to what it does and how it is doing it. I couldn't just like just by looking at the code, I couldn't get a sense of what's happening. So I was trying to grok. Maybe I thought I could just ask the expert like what that framework is doing. I understand what first testing is, but how it is accomplished in this scenario is what I was actually kind of trying to get out of that question. Right. Okay. So, so, so the first testing framework is really it's, it's based on a soak test kind of principle. So the idea is that you have a server on which you run the Parsec service and you run the first test suite, which then just soak tests against the service over a long period of time with various randomization techniques. If we have, if we have Yonat on the call actually, and he's willing to talk about it. Yonat, yes. Do you want to go ahead, Yonat? Hi guys, I'm Yonat. I'm one of the developers on the Parsec project actually works on the first testing framework. So it's using the fuzzer and it essentially generates bytes, byte streams that it feeds into the input of Parsec. So it's essentially like simulating an input from the domain socket in a form of bytes received. It uses a bunch of predefined examples and then it checks if the service hangs or crushes during one of those tests essentially. Okay, makes sense. Another clarifying question and this framework is written in Rust, because I thought you said there's a go client library that's already implemented and the Rust library is kind of in the works right now. Yeah, so actually, the first framework doesn't actually use any clients. It uses the service directly so it essentially uses the service codes as a library and pump data straight into the service without having to go over a socket. I see. Okay, that makes sense. Thank you so much. No worries. Thanks, Yonat. I will just clarify so on the point with the Golang client so there is a repo. There's a repo in the Parsec org for a Golang client. It's effectively at a prototyping stage it's the first client that we created. But we created it with the vision to kind of play with code sketches to imagine what it would be like to consume Parsec into Golang. It's not actually a fully functioning client at the moment. So, right, so there's a question from Cameron. Thanks. Do we have any published use case documents, white papers, guides, guides. So, to answer that, I think I would say start with the book, start with the book repo, because that's where everything that is specific to Parsec is published currently. There isn't a Parsec white paper currently so arms contribution to Parsec is under a project called Cassini for which there is a white paper. That's to do with the general problem of cloud native practices at the edge. So I'd say, go have a look, look at the book resource, look at Cassini if you're interested. As I say, that's an arm thing. It's not really specifically Parsec, although it does mention Parsec. And, yeah, get to me on the, yeah, that's Cassini. Two S is one N, I think. Cool. I actually had a question with Parsec kind of like hiding the abstraction of the hardware. So usually when I think about accessing services from the hardware modules, there is a step which I'm able to verify that the, what I'm talking to actually resize in hardware. Is there a contract between the client and Parsec? What does Parsec stand as like, is it crucial to as part of the TCP or what's the trade view in that case? Yeah, so the ability to attest to key residents in hardware is it's not in the interface today, but it is design roadmap. So we know there is going to be a need in a wider deployment for an application to be able to attest that a key is hardware protected and not exportable, but we don't have it in the API currently. Gotcha. A question from Mark with Identity Management Federation. Can you use it for distributed identity, for example, blockchain service? Excellent question. So I think, I would like to be able to say yes, we would, any such system would just need to be designed and at the moment. At the moment what we've done is we have, we've written system architecture documents that assume the presence of an identity provider on the system that is able to vouch for the workloads, their provenance and their identity. I don't think there is anything in that design that would preclude the notion of federating that. It's not something I've explored myself, but it's, yeah, certainly something that sounds interesting, something that I would be interested in looking into. Fair enough. Any more questions? Yeah, there's time and this is off topic so cut me off if we don't have the time but I'm curious how it went with Rust. I've only read papers about it never used it myself but it's very interesting compiler. Yeah, so I would love, I would actually love to open that up to you and the unit, if they'd like to talk about the experiences of building the service in rust. Yeah, sure, I can, I can start. I'm a guy. I'm also a developer of parsec and, and yeah, and actually I think you need to be as well but we are really enthusiastic about the usage of first. I personally think it's really excellent. It might be a bit complicated and a bit hard. The learning curve in the beginning is a bit long. But the fact that it protects you from so many memory safety and threat safety mistakes is really, really great and actually makes you win time in the long run. One example that we had and was really useful is that when we started building the service and at the moment we switch from a single shredded to multi shredded application. Everything just walked and we we didn't have any, any safety issues any data that was written at the same time with a concurrency problems. Everything just walked so easily and it was there. Really great to to to see that the, the other big, the other face of the coin that really help us is all the infrastructure that comes with with rust projects. The, the fact that rust projects with the cargo package manager are really standardized makes it really easy to to build a test infrastructure to add the integration test unit test to the project. Easy to to publish your your crates for everybody to use easy to have a free online documentation. So yeah, so the the the big two parts that were really helpful to us was the safety features and the infrastructure, I think, yeah. How did it get on your radar? Well, I, I think a lot of people in in arm are actually looking at trust. It's becoming more and more important for both embedded projects and normal projects that there is definitely a need in in hold the company to add more security in our projects. So, yes, whenever you think about secure development, rust is automatically one of the possible option and since since we are building building parsec on top of an operating system on a on a known target. There wasn't much risks to to to use a language that was quite quite new. It's a it's a it's a play on intercepting the future. So so when we were when we were looking around for the right language to write the parsec service in. We knew that parsec was going to be a systems programming piece and we knew that security safety memory safety in particular was going to be paramount rust rust just announced itself really as being as being the right choice. You know, it's still a relatively young language, but playing playing the long game with it. It seems to be going in the right direction. The barrier to entry can be a little higher than other programming languages. But I think that's, you know, you pay the pain at the right point. You pay when you're getting your code to compile and you save when it matters, which is when your codes in production. Yeah, well said. I think there's a lot of industry adoption within, I would say, open source adoption of rust and secure projects. A lot of a lot of the Lenaro trusted apps in or trust a firm or trusted apps and going to offer sections of some of the secure firmware. So the question a little bit unrelated to rust discussion. But so the question is around trust bootstrapping. What does kind of bootstrapping look like. And you see this as part of what parsec will do as well in terms of getting the keys getting the right secrets being shared and so on. I'm not not sure I understand the question. A specific application. Yeah, so so I'm trying to see like example of something that will build on top of parsec. So I imagine it will be something to do with okay how do I attest a couple all my notes and put the secrets which I have them in a key management like vault or something and put them into the correction itch notes so that when I deploy my application my application can then retrieve them. Right I see so you're, you're thinking of a use case where parsec is effectively protecting your master key to what is otherwise a software managed key store. Yeah. Yeah, I certainly that's a use case we're looking at it. So, vault integration is something it integration specifically with volt is is is something that I'd like to see investigated. But also the use of parsec to protect the master key for a system. We're looking at as part of another potential integration as well. So, so yeah that kind of bootstrapping use case where where where your hardware protecting just one specific vital key, but otherwise using say a software service to manage the rest of your secret data, then yes that that's a use case that we're absolutely targeting. Oh, will you see this as part of being parsec itself or would be would it be like a intimidation that uses parsec. I see it more the latter. So I think you would, in a situation like that you would probably use parsec to provision your key or to, or to store and ask the key. Gotcha. Yeah, it could depend on the framework I think vaulting vault in particular is is kind of interesting right because it has them. Vault has key management storage plugins into which we could potentially plum parsec. See, in which case parsec would then be kind of part of the part of the vault infrastructure if you like. But but all of these things are things that would have to be investigated. Right, yeah. It's a hot problem. I'm looking at that as well. Yeah. That's a question from Matt about accepting into sandbox. I'm not sure if Justin and Amy want to talk a little bit about this. Time for sandbox. Well, we are currently reworking the sandbox process. Hopefully where it shall become quicker. In principle, it doesn't take very long at all. But in practice, we've been it's been very variable and I'd say between one and three months, but we're hoping to kind of cut it down. So there's a fixed schedule at which sandbox projects get accepted. Thanks, Justin. Okay, we're almost out of time. Just a little less than five minutes. If any more questions. All right. If not, thank you, Paul so much. Thank you. All right. So next week we're going to go back to working sessions. We're going to look at a couple of issues that we'd like help on and see where we can engage in. If not, again, thank you Paul. Thank you everyone. And people post the slides in the notes as well as on the issue. Thank you. Okay, take care everyone. Thank you. Thank you. Bye.
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ACIM Lessons - 57 Plus Text with Commentary by David Hoffmeister -A Course In Miracles
Practice and live the mystical teachings of Jesus assisted by online courses, online retreats, and an online Tribe of Christ community: https://the-christ.net  http://acim.me ACIM Lessons - David Hoffmeister who speaks from the Awakened Mind, continues a journey through the spiritual classic A Course In Miracles by reading from Chapter 8, The Journey Back, The Difference Between Imprisonment and Freedom, followed by Review Lesson 57 from the Workbook. This is followed by a brief prayer from David. If you have enjoyed this David Hoffmeister video please like, share and subscribe! For more deep teachings go to: http://acim.me COPYRIGHT INFORMATION: The material quoted from A Course in Miracles © is from the Third Edition, published in 2007 and is used with permission from the copyright holder and publisher, the Foundation for Inner Peace, P.O. Box 598, Mill Valley, CA 94942-0598, www.acim.org and info@acim.org. ____________________________________________________________________________________________ Visit David's website at: https://davidhoffmeister.com/david-hoffmeister-the-message/metaphysics-of-a-course-in-miracles/ Read A Course In Miracles for free at: https://acim.biz/a-course-in-miracles-book-acim/ Discover the amazing Mystical Mind Training program at: https://awakening-mind.org/resources/a-course-in-miracles/ Search and Read A Course In Miracles for free at: https://acourseinmiraclesnow.com/ 😍 ————————————————————————————————————————— Follow David Hoffmeister on: Facebook ▶ https://www.facebook.com/ACIM.ACourseInMiracles Spreaker ▶ https://www.spreaker.com/user/davidhoffmeister Twitter ▶ https://twitter.com/ACIM_YouTube Pinterest ▶ https://www.pinterest.com/mysticspiritone Visit David's website ▶ https://davidhoffmeister.com/david-hoffmeister-the-message/metaphysics-of-a-course-in-miracles/ Read A Course In Miracles for free ▶ https://acim.biz/a-course-in-miracles-book-acim/ Discover the amazing Mystical Mind Training program ▶ https://awakening-mind.org/resources/a-course-in-miracles/ Search and Read A Course In Miracles for free ▶ https://acourseinmiraclesnow.com/ Listen to David read ACIM Text, WB Lesson 1, and his commentary ▶ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imiGL2YS2uo Watch ACIM WB Lesson 1 video with David's voice as background ▶ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSlwOZLlUGg #ACourseinMiracles #ACIM #Spirituality #Spiritual #Awakening #Enlightenment #DavidHoffmeister ———————————————————————————————————————— a course in miracles - a course in miracles audio book.. a course in miracles audio book. acim "a course in miracles" goes to the movies. If you read a course in miracles review you’ll find a variety of opinions on a course in miracles but the words of David Hoffmeister will give you a clear and uncompromising message. Learn more - introduction to “a course in miracles”: .. if you are looking for an acim audiobook that has a table of contents that is synced with the contents of the course we recommend the "a course in miracles mp3 set which is available. serenity through a course in miracles verses read. a course in miracles; coronavirus, the economy, and healing are subjects of many popular videos. a course in miracles audiobook - acim text preface through ch 8 - foundation for inner peace.
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2015-09-28T15:48:58
2024-04-18T18:34:17
999
3KGotSHj_ic
We continue on today with chapter 8, the journey back, the difference between imprisonment and freedom. There is a rationale for choice. Only one teacher knows what your reality is. If learning to remove the obstacles to that knowledge is the purpose of the curriculum, you must learn it of him. The ego does not know what it is trying to teach. It is trying to teach you what you are without knowing what you are. It is expert only in confusion. It does not understand anything else. As a teacher then, the ego is totally confused and totally confusing. Even if you could disregard the Holy Spirit entirely, which is impossible, you could still learn nothing from the ego, because the ego knows nothing. Is there any possible reason for choosing a teacher such as this? Does the total disregard of anything it teaches make anything but sense? Is this the teacher to whom a son of God should turn to find himself? The ego has never given you a sensible answer to anything. Only on the grounds of your own experience with his teaching should not this alone disqualify it as your future teacher. Yet the ego has done more harm to your learning than this alone. Learning is joyful if it leads you along your natural path and facilitates the development of what you have. When you are taught against your nature, however, you will lose by your learning because your learning will imprison you. Your will is in your nature and therefore cannot go against it. The ego cannot teach you anything as long as your will is free because you will not listen to it. It is not your will to be imprisoned because your will is free. That is why the ego is the denial of free will. It is never God who coerces you because he shares his will with you. His voice teaches only in accordance with his will, but that is not the Holy Spirit's lesson because that is what you are. The lesson is that your will and God's cannot be out of accord because they are one. This is the undoing of everything the ego tries to teach. It is not then only the direction of the curriculum that must be unconfected, but also the content. The ego tries to teach you what to oppose God's will. This unnatural lesson cannot be learned and the attempt to learn it is a violation of your own freedom, making you afraid of your will because it is free. The Holy Spirit opposes any imprisoning of the will of the Son of God, knowing that the will of the Son is the Father's. The Holy Spirit leads you steadily along the path of freedom, teaching you how to disregard or look beyond everything that would hold you back. We have said that the Holy Spirit teaches you the difference between pain and joy. It is the same as saying He teaches you the difference between imprisonment and freedom. You cannot make this distinction without Him because you have taught yourself that imprisonment is freedom, believing them to be the same. How can you tell them apart? Can you ask the part of your mind that taught you to believe they are the same, to teach you how they are different? The Holy Spirit's teaching takes only one direction and has only one goal. His direction is freedom and His goal is God, yet He cannot conceive of God without you because it is not God's will to be without you. When you have learned that your will is God's, you could know more will to be without Him than He could will to be without you. This is freedom and this is joy. Deny yourself this and you are denying God His kingdom because He created you for this. When I said all power and glory are yours because the kingdom is His, this is what I meant. The will of God is without limit and all power and glory lie within it. It is boundless in strength and in love and in peace. It has no boundaries because it created all things. By creating all things, it made them part of itself. You are the will of God because this is how you were created. Because your Creator creates only like Himself, you are like Him. You are part of Him who is all power and glory and are therefore as unlimited as He is. Who what else except all power and glory can the Holy Spirit appeal to restore God's kingdom? His appeal then is merely to what the kingdom is and for its own acknowledgement of what it is. When you acknowledge this, you bring the acknowledgement automatically to everyone because you have acknowledged everyone. By your recognition you awaken theirs and through theirs yours is extended. Awakening runs easily and gladly through the kingdom in answer to the call for God. This is the natural response of every son of God to the voice for His Creator because it is the voice for His creations and for His own extension. From the workbook, Lesson 57 Today, let us review these ideas. I am not the victim of the world I see. How can I be the victim of a world that can be completely undone if I so choose? My chains are loosened. I can drop them off merely by desiring to do so. The prison door is open. I can leave simply by walking out. Nothing holds me in this world. Only my wish to stay keeps me a prisoner. I would give up my insane wishes and walk into the sunlight at last. I have invented the world I see. I made up the prison in which I see myself. All I need do is recognize this and I am free. I have deluded myself into believing it is possible to imprison the Son of God. I was bitterly mistaken in this belief, which I no longer want. The Son of God must be forever free. He is as God created him and not what I would make of him. He is where God would have him be and not where I thought to hold him prisoner. There is another way of looking at the world. Since the purpose of the world is not the one I ascribe to it, there must be another way of looking at it. I see everything upside down and my thoughts are the opposite of truth. I see the world as a prison for God's Son. It must be then that the world is really a place where he can be set free. I would look upon the world as it is and see it as a place where the Son of God finds his freedom. I could see peace instead of this. When I see the world as a place of freedom, I realize that it reflects the laws of God instead of the rules I made up for it to obey. I will understand that peace, not war, abides in it. And I will perceive that peace also abides in the hearts of all who share this peace with me. My mind is part of God's. I am very holy. As I share the peace of the world with my brothers, I begin to understand that this peace comes from deep within myself. The world I look upon has taken on the light of my forgiveness and shines forgiveness back at me. In this light I begin to see what my illusions about myself kept hidden. I begin to understand the holiness of all living things, including myself and their oneness with me. So we continue on today the beautiful section from the text showing us the difference between imprisonment and freedom, taking us with the Holy Spirit in the direction of the Atonement, learning with the Holy Spirit to remove the obstacles to the remembrance of God, telling the difference between the two teachers in the mind, the Holy Spirit who teaches to free the mind and the ego, a belief that there is a substitute for God who teaches a curriculum of fear and doubt and confusion. There is no reason to follow the ego anymore. Learning the ego teaches makes any sense at all. Today I turn to the Holy Spirit and let the Holy Spirit direct all my decisions, every single decision. I remember that learning is joyful if it leads me along my natural path and facilitates the development of what I am and what I have always had. I cannot go against my natural desire to awaken. I will find no value in the ego and its defenses and distractions. My will is free because God's will is free and I share God's will with me. I was created by God. My happiness, my will, my joy are all the same and by following the voice for God, the Holy Spirit's lesson, I remember who I am, who I have always been, an eternal being, spirit. So today we follow up that the Holy Spirit knows the difference between pain and joy. The Holy Spirit knows the difference between imprisonment and freedom. I need the Holy Spirit for this distinction. A human being cannot make this distinction. For the mask was made to cover over the answer. The Holy Spirit is the answer. The Holy Spirit's teaching takes only one direction and has only one goal. His direction is freedom and his goal is God. The will of God is without limit. All power and glory lie within it. It is boundless in strength and in love and in peace. It has no boundaries because it created all things. By creating all things it made them part of itself. This unified experience, this perfect love, this oneness is God's kingdom. Everything runs easily and gladly through the kingdom in answer to the call for God. This is the natural response of every son of God to the voice for his Creator because it is the voice for his creations and for his own extension. Today we practice with our review lessons, the ideas that flow through our mind throughout the day. In deep prayer we are honored by each idea that sets us free from the ego and from the ego's world of linear time. We sink deeper and deeper inward as we review these ideas today once again in our mind in gratitude. I am not the victim of the world I see. I have invented the world I see. There is another way of looking at the world. I could see peace instead of this. My mind is part of God's. I am very holy.
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