Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Youtube daily report Apr 11 2017

Me and Angelo are just fine.

And he knows that I am just with him now, so.

Good.

And he better act right, too, cuz I voted for him.

Ma, I told Thirsty to fall back and he wouldn't.

And I think Kennedy gonna wig out on us.

Calm down.

What's wrong?

Why are your panties in a bunch?

Didn't she drop the case?

No, cuz Thirsty went hard at her,

and she kind of fell apart.

You know what, I gotta do us right.

What do you mean by victim blaming?

What's that?

It's what you do.

You remember your song "Can't Trust 'em"?

Or "The Clap Back" where you dragged Tiana for filth?

You are consistently making music where you make it seem

like it's the woman's fault. And your fans,

they treat the women that way because they look up to you.

It's not my fault how other people act.

No, that's bull.

I'm serious.

You remember that little homophobic rant

that you threw against me right in my own damn house?

You know how many threats I got after that?

Bro, I didn't know.

See, Hakeem, you think just because you're

father now of a daughter that you

can't be a misogynistic pig.

Music is very powerful, son--

very powerful.

Look man, you're on your way to bein' woke, all right?

You also have an opportunity to change the message,

make some music that means something.

K. Andre shut down my extreme channel.

Jamar has more followers on his channel

after he released his damn teaser from his album.

So, but you ain't heard it from me.

For more infomation >> Hakeem Learns How Powerful His Music Can Be | Season 3 Ep. 13 | EMPIRE - Duration: 1:47.

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Anika Is Threatened By Lucious And Thirsty | Season 3 Ep. 13 | EMPIRE - Duration: 2:01.

[inaudible]

Yeah.

We'd like to know when you're going to find a time to wear

this wire, get Tariq to fess up to all his illegal tactics

so we can get these feds off our back.

I am working on it.

I just need a little time to get his trust first.

I can't rush this, Lucious.

If he finds out, then he's going kill me.

So let's be clear.

If you don't get this done, you can still be killed and Tariq

framed for the whole thing.

Is he behind this?

It's just one of my thoughts.

Boss, I've got prepare for the deposition.

You cool for now?

[snapping]

Well, Lucious.

It looks like it's just you and me.

And since you're all sedated, this might be a perfect time

to take advantage of you.

Please, don't die Lucious, please don't die.

Because if you die, I'll get everything.

Because you know, we didn't sign that prenup.

[beeping]

Are you OK?

[groan]

Lucious are you-- do you want me to maybe

just keep holding on to this?

[choking]

Lucious, you tell Thirsty that I am not in your fam.

You tell him to [inaudible] back.

I am not his bitch.

For more infomation >> Anika Is Threatened By Lucious And Thirsty | Season 3 Ep. 13 | EMPIRE - Duration: 2:01.

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Cookie Moves Up The Shoot Date Of Jamal And Delphine's Video | Season 3 Ep. 13 | EMPIRE - Duration: 1:43.

[music playing]

Our concept for the video is idealized young love.

With you and Delphine as Lucious and Cookie,

showing us what that crazy mad love looks like.

Well, team, we have a new production date.

We gonna shoot this baby tonight.

Tonight?

Tonight?

Cut the music.

Turns out your slimy father caught some nasty virus

and he can't get out of bed.

It's probably the sceevies.

Mom.

Anyway, if we move fast, we can release

a teaser this week on Extreme, before he finds out

and blocks it.

While that man is laid up in the bed?

That is unnecessarily shady, Mom, come on.

Did he pump the brakes on "Inferno" when you were laid

up in rehab trying to recover?

After you took a bullet for his dirty ass?

Huh?

So now I am the sole, healthy, CEO

and I have the power to make this all happen.

All right, well, just a teaser, OK?

Just a teaser, you know, to get people hyped.

Like "Formation" did for "Lemonade."

And like Frank did with the woodworking loop on "Endless."

You know you love it, go ahead.

Look, boy, I bared my soul for you to tell this story.

It better be good.

Do you hear me?

I got you, Ma.

OK.

Make me proud.

OK.

I love that afro, girl.

For more infomation >> Cookie Moves Up The Shoot Date Of Jamal And Delphine's Video | Season 3 Ep. 13 | EMPIRE - Duration: 1:43.

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Nissan Micra 1.2 DIG-S ACENTA - Duration: 0:47.

For more infomation >> Nissan Micra 1.2 DIG-S ACENTA - Duration: 0:47.

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Audi Q3 1.4 TFSI CoD Sport Pro Line S - Duration: 0:58.

For more infomation >> Audi Q3 1.4 TFSI CoD Sport Pro Line S - Duration: 0:58.

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Audi A4 1.8 TFSI S EDITION | Navi | Climatronic | Cruise Control - Duration: 1:01.

For more infomation >> Audi A4 1.8 TFSI S EDITION | Navi | Climatronic | Cruise Control - Duration: 1:01.

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Audi A4 Sedan 2.0 TDI 150pk Automaat, Pro Line S, Xenon led, Navi , ECC, LMV - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Audi A4 Sedan 2.0 TDI 150pk Automaat, Pro Line S, Xenon led, Navi , ECC, LMV - Duration: 1:02.

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King's Row Uprising Origin Story (české titulky) - Duration: 1:12.

For more infomation >> King's Row Uprising Origin Story (české titulky) - Duration: 1:12.

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The Gary Smith Story | Topgolf - Duration: 3:28.

[MUSIC]

Golf has been magic for me.

My joke is the par-scription for Parkinson's is golf.

Parkinson's is a progressive neurological disease.

Another way to describe it, it's like a movement disorder.

>> When Gary was diagnosed with Parkinson's, my heart sank.

It was very difficult to hear this diagnosis.

>> It definitely shattered our dreams.

I just was furious at God, major, major struggle, but we're not quitters.

We decided to fight it.

We had back to back weddings with our daughters.

And I walked Heather down about a 100 foot aisle and

I remember walking down trying to get my rhythm.

At that time I was still very stiff and rigid.

I still remember, it's like, come on body, work.

Started doing all kinds of different activities.

Of course the big turning point was when I started golfing daily.

We went over to Scotland, golfed a St. Andrews, which was a dream come true.

And I ended up noticing a difference in my body like I wasn't as rigid.

And that led me to going to Topgolf.

>> I thought, well go for it, Gary.

That sounds great, do the membership.

>> About this time Nan really noticed a difference, and I called a neurologist.

And when she looked at me she said, my gosh, what have you been doing?

And golf was the only thing that had changed

>> Around this very same time,

I found out I had breast cancer.

So it was a time where I was strong for him for the first years of his diagnosis.

And then, he was able to become strong for me through my diagnosis.

And I can't even tell you how thankful I am for Gary's life.

>> I think golf has really lit a fire under Gary and motivated him.

Golf involves a very precise balance between mobility and stability and

a combination of fine motor skills and gross motor skills.

And using those in a complex manner would certainly benefit brain function.

>> His social network has expanded.

He's actually out there, really enjoying himself.

So it's not just golf,

it's a connection that he's got with people that are his friends.

>> He just brings a smile to your face.

He keeps on fighting and he doesn't give up.

Golf for him is more than just a game.

He has found a therapy and healing.

>> Laughter's been a key.

I can just tell when I'm laughing and smiling, I feel a lot better.

Basically I have a second family out there that greets me and treats me with dignity.

>> Gave him a golf bag with his name on it and new golf clubs, we were shocked.

There's no words, absolutely no words for it.

>> Golf has changed my life, in that I'm no longer rigid, or stiff,

I no longer shuffle my feet.

What I'd like to say to other people with Parkinson's is that there is hope.

[MUSIC]

For more infomation >> The Gary Smith Story | Topgolf - Duration: 3:28.

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Que va faire la ministre pour éliminer les délais en justice? - Duration: 2:30.

For more infomation >> Que va faire la ministre pour éliminer les délais en justice? - Duration: 2:30.

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The Blockchain and Us (Wir und die Blockchain) (2017) - Deutsche Synchronfassung/German version - Duration: 31:27.

A Film by Manuel Stagars

THE BLOCKCHAIN AND US

In 1903, the Wright brothers invented the airplane.

It was hard to imagine then that today, there would be

over 500,000 people travelling in the air at any point in time.

In 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto invented bitcoin and the blockchain.

For the first time in history his invention made it possible

to send money around the globe without banks,

governments, or any other intermediaries.

Satoshi is a mystery character and just like the Wright brothers

he solved an unsolvable problem.

Whenever this happens, it inspires incredible innovation.

The concept of the blockchain isn't very intuitive

but still, many people believe it is a gamechanger.

Despite its mysterious beginnings,

the blockchain may be the airplane of our time.

Chapter 1: First Contact With The Blockchain

I found out about blockchain first

as most people around that time were through bitcoin.

Personally, at first I thought bitcoin was a terrible idea.

I was teaching at Stanford back in 2010

and a teaching assistant for the class sent me an article.

She said "There's this really cool thing, it's open source money."

I remember thinking "Open source money, isn't that cool

but it will probably never work."

I did what most people do the first moment

they are exposed to bitcoin. I discounted it.

I thought this was silly Internet money

you could mine it, it's like a golden goose.

It took me about a year to really re-explore the technology.

By 2012 I did what I tell most people to do today:

Turn off your phone, lock your door, and study this technology for a day.

It's the best advice I could give.

I was on a sabbatical from work.

I decided I take a year off, live off some savings

and figure out what I want to do.

It was there that I discovered this little orange icon with a B in the middle

and said "What is this strange thing."

I started looking... Bitcoin... interesting.

That was about 2012/2013

and I haven't left this space since.

I continued further down the blockchain rabbit hole if you will

and I've been pleasantly surprised

and had no reason to crawl my way back out

and find another technology.

There's a point at which you almost can't stop.

It just gets so interesting and you're so fascinated by it

and you just want to learn more and more.

Even to this day, there are new developments

and new ways of solving problems, new approaches

and it's very exciting to be in this world.

It feels really exciting to be involved in blockchain.

It feels like we're at the forefront of something

that has at least the potential to transform

our interactions between each other

between corporations, the underlying infrastructure

of both the private sector but also of government.

For me part of the fascination is that

we don't yet know exactly what this thing is

and yet, there are still lots of people gathering around it.

I thought of it as a space rock that crashed on earth.

You'd have a bunch of people that gather around

and they're all pointing and asking "What is this thing?"

You don't really know but it's still very interesting.

Chapter 2: Blockchain Technology

For me, the blockchain has two main technical ingredients.

One ingredient is cryptography.

When I say cryptography, I really mean asymmetric cryptography.

The other ingredient is so-called distributed systems.

These are the two main things.

If you understand them you understand all the

technical details of blockchain or bitcoin.

You have the ability to create records that are indelible.

You have the ability to transfer value

by making updates to those records.

And you have the ability to automate updates to the records

through these things called smart contracts.

That means potentially that you could transform

the structure of financial services.

Today there are all sorts of institutions

that exist to maintain sets of records.

To be "trusted third party" in industry parlance.

That role is potentially fundamentally reshaped.

Blockchains are networks.

Networks that we see today

Alibaba, AirBnB, Uber...

those are interesting networks but they are centralized.

Here, you're going to have networks that are decentralized

that are working more as a cooperative.

I think some of the challenges will be

what are the economics of those networks,

what are the economics of certain blockchains

versus today's discussion which is all about the technology.

I think tomorrow's discussion will be about

how do you build network effects off of these new railroads.

What's especially interesting for me is that

it was a grassroots movement from the technology sector.

Not a movement of established businesses

trying to find a new selling point.

It's really a bottom-up movement from us geeks.

It's one of the most amazing things in science

that happened in the last 100 years

that this thing is actually possible.

You can digitally sign transactions or other kinds of information

so that you can prove that you actually signed this.

It's much more secure than these

curvy, wriggly signatures that we use every day.

It will probably replace those things soon enough.

Chapter 3: Influence Of The Blockchain

We spent two years trying to understand this space

and what it really meant.

We found that it meant a lot more than just

another digital currency.

As the blockchain became more influential in our thinking

we began to realize that it was a profound shift

in how the Internet could be used

to create new forms of value

and how it could be used to enfranchise

and include people in global finance.

We've had the Internet for years now

and on the Internet, still nobody knows

whether you're a dog or not.

Identity fraud is completely out of control.

So the area where we need some new thinking

is in the identity space.

Maybe the technology brings something new into that space.

And we need it fairly quickly because

we haven't fixed the identity problem for people

but we're about to put ten billion, trillion, gazillion

things on the Internet.

We can have a trust relationship

without really having ever met each other

or having done business at all with each other.

I think that's fundamental.

Security is another.

Blockchains are military grade cryptology

and they've never been cracked.

When you hear about hackers stealing bitcoin

they're not stealing from the blockchain itself.

They are stealing at the point of entry

at the wallet or browser level

where they intercept messages.

But the blockchain itself is very secure.

The Internet of Things will probably be

the best test case for a lot of blockchain technology.

Because if we're going to have millions or billions or trillions

of Internet-enabled devices doing everything

from driving us around to managing our affairs

to monitoring our health, they need a way to

move and store and manage value and

data that has value in a way that is secure and private.

Right now we don't have that.

I'm concerned about the ubiquity of data and how

it flows in and through Internet-connected devices.

I think with a value platform like blockchain

we can at least address some of these problems and

maybe even create new opportunities.

Chapter 4: New Business Opportunities

We cannot sit in our office and study

of course we do that as well

but we need to go out and participate

in this whole blockchain community.

Honestly, what's very new to me

especially regarding younger persons in my team

is how enthusiastic they are about that.

If there is a hackathon, for example

they never come to me and ask if

they can go there and get some money for that

they just go. They're so interested.

They just go and participate and share

what they learned, and we have further discussions.

This is really a new way, also for us

to deal with new technology.

We're in the middle of it, nobody tells us what to do.

It's really we together shaping what we stand for

in the end for blockchain.

We need to be much more technological.

We need to have an awareness of

how something is programmed

so we can check if the programming is correct.

This might be a capability that we have

but not in the way it's needed in the future.

In the future, you always need to have

a technological link to things so you can understand them.

Otherwise you always need your IT guy sitting next to you

helping you in the understanding of the problem.

This is not something that's going to impact one of two industries

it's going to affect every industry

in the same way the internal combustion engine

affected almost every industry

or the Internet affected almost every industry

or the steam engine created new industries.

This is one of those big generational technology shifts

that requires a concerted and focused response.

Otherwise, you will miss the boat.

We are all, also in the financial services industry

trying to recognize that we don't have to be defensive

but we rather have to embrace not just this technology

but this enabler it brings us to access

a vastly underutilized or undiscovered market

that we have to do business with on an eye-to-eye level.

We talk to all sorts of senior executives in financial services

and often the say "We looked at bitcoin,

we had smart people come in and explain

how the blockchain works

but I still just really don't understand

what it means for my business."

I think that makes sense in a way because

if you think about an iPhone, for example:

What's really important, when a new iPhone comes out?

Is it the new chipset or some new way of

compressing frequencies?

I'm not an engineer and don't know how any of that works.

What matters to people is what they can do with the technology.

Of course, success is in now way guaranteed.

One day we may look back on this and say

"Oh, wasn't that great..." But:

If you ask me, there is undoubtedly

a huge amount of progress that has been made.

There's something here.

I find it hard to believe that I'm going to look back

in ten or twenty years and say

"None of this ended up happending."

Because we're really seeing a new way

of transacting value on the Internet.

Chapter 5: The Blockchain And Banks

I know how big financial institutions work.

They're not going to do something reckless with technology.

This is people's money and livelihood they're working with.

These are slow upgrade processes.

These systems, once they get implemented,

will run in parallel with the old systems for a while

before you have a switch over to the new one.

That's standard in technology upgrade.

I knew this was going to take time.

But there are antagonists, players who are threatened.

It's the AT&T/Verizon/Kodak analogy again.

Their business model is threatend by this

and they're going to do things to slow down

and water down the transformational networks.

There is a game theory approach to how the technology

is being rolled out in the markets, for sure.

We made different roundtables here in Zug

after the start of our bitcoin experiment.

For example, we invited banks and bankers from Zug

and tried to connect them with people

of the "Zug cryptovalley".

They were talking, but the bankers were not so happy.

They said there were different things with the law

and "It's not so easy for us."

But it's also a question of attitude.

It's the same as for our city, for our administration:

banks have to get ready.

I know that in a way they are defensive

but on the other hand have research and teams

that face these questions.

Maybe they are waiting a little bit now

but they can't deny it, I'm sure.

I think there's going to be a lot of disruption

a lot of revolution with respect to blockchain-based technologies.

That's going to drive not necessarily

banks worrying about other banks being competitors.

What banks worry about is the "bank of one"

the next generation of a banking network that's

resident on a phone, that's decentralized, distributed

and that's based on a digital token, a digital asset

that's not issued by a bank or government.

It creates all these different permutations and opportunities

not only for enterprises and governments

but also for society.

We see a lot of example of banks and consulting companies

and other Big Four audit firms talking about

how they can strip cost out of the business

of—I don't know—trading in public markets

or whatever it might be.

But if you take the example of public markets:

How can you cut cost out of a market that doesn't exist in the future?

What if the trading of securities happens peer-to-peer

in the marketplace that doesn't have traditional intermediaries

of exchanges, brokers, agents, escrow agents, clearing houses

and all the other parties we rely on?

That's the cost you're cutting out but

what if the market can function without them?

The important thing for leaders of big companies

is not just to think about cost

but also to think strategically.

What can this technology enable me to do

that I wasn't able to do in the past?

I think it's going to take a long time

for it to weave its way into the system.

It may take a normal tech upgrade cycle for it

to fully weave its way into the system.

I have said publicly I think within twenty years

financial services will be just software

and the smart contracts technology in particular

is going to automate a lot of the things

that institutions and people handle today.

Chapter 6: The Blockchain And Financial Inclusion

Seventy-four percent of the world's population

according to the World Bank

does not have access to basic financial services.

In my home country, in the United States of America,

which is one of the wealthiest countries in the world,

about fifty percent of the population

does not have access to basic financial services

including bank accounts.

There's a huge amount of people around the world

that don't get to experience and be a part of the global economy

because they don't have access to the financial system

for a variety of reasons.

I do think this technology will lift

a lot of people out of poverty

but will also be an inclusive technology

that allows more people to engage in global commerce.

I don't like to think that we're creating

so much prosperity for the less than one percent.

I like to think of purpose-led businesses.

By the way, that's the trick I think

for large corporations: to understand

that the cost efficiencies of embracing this new technology

will potentially widen their accessible markets

at a cost that's reasonable.

That in itself will create prosperity in different areas.

Something that we should think about.

Pretty soon, when smartphones can be had for

less than five dollars each, which is right around the corner

nearly every person living in poverty on earth

will have access to a smartphone

and be connected to a network.

That is game changing in and of itself.

When you have digital wallets on these phones

and the ability to trade assets

we're going to answer the question

"What happens when everybody has money?"

Capitalism itself has thrived in some areas

by the natural exclusion of others from markets.

It actually uses that scarcity principle

as its driving basis.

So what happens when money is not scarce?

We will look at people and say:

"What are the things that I cannot do

and where we can join forces?"

Much more than today, where we say

"How big is your car and how much money

do you have on your bank account?"

So, I believe the future will be even more

human, or humane—no... human

than the last hundred years we have seen.

Chapter 7: The Real Revolution

I don't think blockchain is a revolution.

It has been done forever, for forty years,

which is really forever in computer science.

Both ingredients of the blockchain—security and distributed systems

have been around since the early seventies.

This is not the revolution.

The revolution, or the evolution is that

jobs will change.

That's something I believe in.

Jobs will be digitized in some sense.

Computers will do a lot of the manual labor

that we still see in service domains today.

It's called the "fourth technological revolution"

and I think we are at the beginning

of such a revolution just now.

That's why we don't close our eyes.

Some people say "There will be much trouble

people will lose their work," and so on.

I'm sure it will happen

but it's better we face it than deny it.

Offshore working, automation, robots

are they threatening our work?

It's a real-life question when your own son

who is prepared to go get an advanced education

asks you that question.

I concluded I do have a genuine answer:

It's not threatening.

It is forcing us to think a little bit different

but if we do it smart, we actually give

the next generation a great new opportunity

to reinvent why they get up every morning

and why they go to work

and make sure they really make best use of

the degree they studied for

and the things they really want to do in life.

I want to make the world better.

Just better.

Whatever my measure of better is, or yours

is what might be valued by society.

The other thing is this wonderful opportunity

to create a little bit of prosperity.

Because what prosperity offers you is independence.

We don't have to have people who are living in squalor

simply fighting for a handful of rice every day.

There is too much in the world

to live like that anymore.

I think certain countries and even corporations

are beginning to understand that.

Certainly this movement, this blockchain movement

is the technology underpinning

the technology part of that mindset

which exists offline as well.

The idea is out.

If it's not being realized here it may be realized there

or even in the Internet, uncontrollably.

Bitcoin is here, it is here to stay

and will become bigger and bigger.

As the blockchain, as cryptocurrencies

as the possibilities connected to the blockchain and cryptocurrencies.

That's out of the box.

And the whole system does not need any government.

It exists. It works.

It's like a computer network surrounding the world.

You can say "We don't want to be part of it."

So be it.

It's here. And it won't go away.

Chapter 8: The Blockchain And Us

I feel like this is a generational opportunity

for entrepreneurs and investors.

Quite frankly, I have not seen something

as exciting in my entire investment career.

Let's try to build a new system

that has better trade-offs and features

and less downsides.

And let's make it work.

Now the pendulum is going to swing back.

What that's going to do is frankly

make confidence in capital markets higher.

Blockchain has enormous potential implications

outside of financial services.

We might even see the full-scale implementation

of some of those more real-world applications

leapfrog financial services.

This invention, when it came up in the seventies

is really one of the groundbreaking ideas.

It will change society for sure in many domains.

It already has changed society in a sense that

the Internet is a secure place

that you can make transactions on the Internet.

The potential for creating trust

or even permissionless trust

within the Internet

that's something that we haven't had before.

Its impact on society, on business, on government

could be profound.

Blockchain is to be fair nearly ten years old.

I think it has another ten years to run before

we really see what its long-term impact is.

I think it's going to be a long, much more steady journey

we go down and you're going to see

multiple technologies inspired by this thing.

Blockchain technology is not the solution to

all the problems under the sun.

As it matures we will begin to see its potential benefits

but also its limitations.

You can deny it or you can face it.

We always said we have to face it

because these things are coming

if we want or not.

I have seen long-standing partners

when they saw the opportunity, to change

and say "I don't understand everything

but I understand there is something behind this

so we need to go forward." That's really great.

People often say necessity is the mother of invention

but I like to say necessity is also the mother of adoption.

If there is a real use case

that people need a technology for

they start using it.

I started with Commodore, we had Atari, Apple

but at some point in time, Windows came.

Everybody just started to use Windows

without asking "What is the code behind it?

What is the code behind moving the mouse?"

We have a whole lot of possibilities.

Everything will change.

In my opinion, the possibilities are endless.

It reminds me of the situation where all of a sudden

we have two or three huge inventions

happening in one moment.

We are living in a very interesting window of opportunity.

I'm surely very excited to fully embrace that.

Even one little step can be a great step for mankind.

I think we are exiting the industrial age

and are entering an age we still have to name.

Where that will take us is very hard tell.

My suspicion is it means a sort of

resurgence of the notion of community.

It absolutely feels like a whole new paradigm

for changing the world.

We're at a crossroads here.

We have the wherewithal now to create technology

that would help the entire human race.

The question is: Will we do it?

But we can do it now.

There is so much innovation

that blockchain technology has spurred

all throughout the world.

I have absolutely no doubt in my mind

that this technology is going to affect everybody.

I would say in ten to twenty years

there won't be a human being

whose life is not impacted by this technology.

For more infomation >> The Blockchain and Us (Wir und die Blockchain) (2017) - Deutsche Synchronfassung/German version - Duration: 31:27.

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For more infomation >> Le jour où le camp de Grand Synthe a été réduit en cendres - Duration: 1:43.

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Le jour où le camp de Grand Synthe a été réduit en cendres - Duration: 1:43.

For more infomation >> Le jour où le camp de Grand Synthe a été réduit en cendres - Duration: 1:43.

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WOMEN AND MIGRANTS - THE UNHOLY ALLIANCE. - Duration: 5:17.

We are talking about children, we're talking about-

(No, I'm sorry but we don't) Silence, I'm talking right now! We're talking about children-

-and we're talking about the group in our country which is the most fragile group.

This is about children! It's about children! You're talking- You're talking about- For fucks sake!

(Try to calm down) No, I'm also trying to speak here!

It's about human beings and every human beings equal worth.

People should have the right to flee for their lives and it must be made in a safe way.

What do you think we could do other than being here today?

Ehm... We should open the borders completely, no quotas, instead just create "no limits", I think...

How is it?

Good.

I'm a deputy parent for this lad over here-

-so you do things like visiting, development discussions, checking up on things, I get to know if he's feeling ill or is away.

Yeah, I'm like a parent.

Is it possible to combine a Swedish welfare state with the migration policy you are advocating?

Yes, of course! And most of the investments we have to make to meet this increased migration is-

-investments that have to be made to make the society better for others as well.

And we have in fact had a pretty large migration for a long period of time and a working welfare state!

27 years ago, the driving spirit Birgitta Eriksson opened her home for children with problems...

Today, she is working full time with this and operates two places for unaccompanied refugees.

First and foremost, my name isn't Birgitta over there, my name is "mum"!

Okay!

Do you call her "mum"?

Yes...

Adnan, you too?

Yeah...

One thing that occurred to me, it might not be the sole reason but-

-it feels like a gender question! The speakers in the news coverage, all the people who wanted a generous migration policy were women.

It's unlawful toward human beings!

They focus on hunting down people that have already lost their human rights-

-who have fled war and pursuit because they didn't have a choice and they go through the exact same thing here in Sweden!

It's terrible!

A different type of politics is needed-

-that includes all human beings!

It's political decisions that they make on this matter, but I think you should see these teenagers as a resource to Sweden-

-as people who can contribute to the Swedish society.

It's completely blood-curdling to even ponder the thought of a break from refugees, a break for whom?

People fleeing today don't have any breaks, their lives look like this!

-that you don't consider the possibility that this could be my own children coming here, you can't just care for oneself!

You could view the whole world as a soccer field, if there is a weak link in a position you have to go there and support!

A human being can't control where they are born!

But a human being has the right to choose where hir should move!

Robbed of happiness and joy,

A grinding of angst and sorrow in circulation,

Come to Europe in order to survive,

Is met by borders, shut out, just like REVA.

Right now we have countries in Europe building walls!

Instead of offering protection!

They are building walls against human beings in desperate need of help!

This kind of behavior can never be accepted!

Goddamnit! Kjellén was right, women's right to vote was so fucking stupid to introduce!

For more infomation >> WOMEN AND MIGRANTS - THE UNHOLY ALLIANCE. - Duration: 5:17.

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Que va faire la ministre pour éliminer les délais en justice? - Duration: 2:30.

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The Blockchain and Us (Wir und die Blockchain) (2017) - Deutsche Synchronfassung/German version - Duration: 31:27.

A Film by Manuel Stagars

THE BLOCKCHAIN AND US

In 1903, the Wright brothers invented the airplane.

It was hard to imagine then that today, there would be

over 500,000 people travelling in the air at any point in time.

In 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto invented bitcoin and the blockchain.

For the first time in history his invention made it possible

to send money around the globe without banks,

governments, or any other intermediaries.

Satoshi is a mystery character and just like the Wright brothers

he solved an unsolvable problem.

Whenever this happens, it inspires incredible innovation.

The concept of the blockchain isn't very intuitive

but still, many people believe it is a gamechanger.

Despite its mysterious beginnings,

the blockchain may be the airplane of our time.

Chapter 1: First Contact With The Blockchain

I found out about blockchain first

as most people around that time were through bitcoin.

Personally, at first I thought bitcoin was a terrible idea.

I was teaching at Stanford back in 2010

and a teaching assistant for the class sent me an article.

She said "There's this really cool thing, it's open source money."

I remember thinking "Open source money, isn't that cool

but it will probably never work."

I did what most people do the first moment

they are exposed to bitcoin. I discounted it.

I thought this was silly Internet money

you could mine it, it's like a golden goose.

It took me about a year to really re-explore the technology.

By 2012 I did what I tell most people to do today:

Turn off your phone, lock your door, and study this technology for a day.

It's the best advice I could give.

I was on a sabbatical from work.

I decided I take a year off, live off some savings

and figure out what I want to do.

It was there that I discovered this little orange icon with a B in the middle

and said "What is this strange thing."

I started looking... Bitcoin... interesting.

That was about 2012/2013

and I haven't left this space since.

I continued further down the blockchain rabbit hole if you will

and I've been pleasantly surprised

and had no reason to crawl my way back out

and find another technology.

There's a point at which you almost can't stop.

It just gets so interesting and you're so fascinated by it

and you just want to learn more and more.

Even to this day, there are new developments

and new ways of solving problems, new approaches

and it's very exciting to be in this world.

It feels really exciting to be involved in blockchain.

It feels like we're at the forefront of something

that has at least the potential to transform

our interactions between each other

between corporations, the underlying infrastructure

of both the private sector but also of government.

For me part of the fascination is that

we don't yet know exactly what this thing is

and yet, there are still lots of people gathering around it.

I thought of it as a space rock that crashed on earth.

You'd have a bunch of people that gather around

and they're all pointing and asking "What is this thing?"

You don't really know but it's still very interesting.

Chapter 2: Blockchain Technology

For me, the blockchain has two main technical ingredients.

One ingredient is cryptography.

When I say cryptography, I really mean asymmetric cryptography.

The other ingredient is so-called distributed systems.

These are the two main things.

If you understand them you understand all the

technical details of blockchain or bitcoin.

You have the ability to create records that are indelible.

You have the ability to transfer value

by making updates to those records.

And you have the ability to automate updates to the records

through these things called smart contracts.

That means potentially that you could transform

the structure of financial services.

Today there are all sorts of institutions

that exist to maintain sets of records.

To be "trusted third party" in industry parlance.

That role is potentially fundamentally reshaped.

Blockchains are networks.

Networks that we see today

Alibaba, AirBnB, Uber...

those are interesting networks but they are centralized.

Here, you're going to have networks that are decentralized

that are working more as a cooperative.

I think some of the challenges will be

what are the economics of those networks,

what are the economics of certain blockchains

versus today's discussion which is all about the technology.

I think tomorrow's discussion will be about

how do you build network effects off of these new railroads.

What's especially interesting for me is that

it was a grassroots movement from the technology sector.

Not a movement of established businesses

trying to find a new selling point.

It's really a bottom-up movement from us geeks.

It's one of the most amazing things in science

that happened in the last 100 years

that this thing is actually possible.

You can digitally sign transactions or other kinds of information

so that you can prove that you actually signed this.

It's much more secure than these

curvy, wriggly signatures that we use every day.

It will probably replace those things soon enough.

Chapter 3: Influence Of The Blockchain

We spent two years trying to understand this space

and what it really meant.

We found that it meant a lot more than just

another digital currency.

As the blockchain became more influential in our thinking

we began to realize that it was a profound shift

in how the Internet could be used

to create new forms of value

and how it could be used to enfranchise

and include people in global finance.

We've had the Internet for years now

and on the Internet, still nobody knows

whether you're a dog or not.

Identity fraud is completely out of control.

So the area where we need some new thinking

is in the identity space.

Maybe the technology brings something new into that space.

And we need it fairly quickly because

we haven't fixed the identity problem for people

but we're about to put ten billion, trillion, gazillion

things on the Internet.

We can have a trust relationship

without really having ever met each other

or having done business at all with each other.

I think that's fundamental.

Security is another.

Blockchains are military grade cryptology

and they've never been cracked.

When you hear about hackers stealing bitcoin

they're not stealing from the blockchain itself.

They are stealing at the point of entry

at the wallet or browser level

where they intercept messages.

But the blockchain itself is very secure.

The Internet of Things will probably be

the best test case for a lot of blockchain technology.

Because if we're going to have millions or billions or trillions

of Internet-enabled devices doing everything

from driving us around to managing our affairs

to monitoring our health, they need a way to

move and store and manage value and

data that has value in a way that is secure and private.

Right now we don't have that.

I'm concerned about the ubiquity of data and how

it flows in and through Internet-connected devices.

I think with a value platform like blockchain

we can at least address some of these problems and

maybe even create new opportunities.

Chapter 4: New Business Opportunities

We cannot sit in our office and study

of course we do that as well

but we need to go out and participate

in this whole blockchain community.

Honestly, what's very new to me

especially regarding younger persons in my team

is how enthusiastic they are about that.

If there is a hackathon, for example

they never come to me and ask if

they can go there and get some money for that

they just go. They're so interested.

They just go and participate and share

what they learned, and we have further discussions.

This is really a new way, also for us

to deal with new technology.

We're in the middle of it, nobody tells us what to do.

It's really we together shaping what we stand for

in the end for blockchain.

We need to be much more technological.

We need to have an awareness of

how something is programmed

so we can check if the programming is correct.

This might be a capability that we have

but not in the way it's needed in the future.

In the future, you always need to have

a technological link to things so you can understand them.

Otherwise you always need your IT guy sitting next to you

helping you in the understanding of the problem.

This is not something that's going to impact one of two industries

it's going to affect every industry

in the same way the internal combustion engine

affected almost every industry

or the Internet affected almost every industry

or the steam engine created new industries.

This is one of those big generational technology shifts

that requires a concerted and focused response.

Otherwise, you will miss the boat.

We are all, also in the financial services industry

trying to recognize that we don't have to be defensive

but we rather have to embrace not just this technology

but this enabler it brings us to access

a vastly underutilized or undiscovered market

that we have to do business with on an eye-to-eye level.

We talk to all sorts of senior executives in financial services

and often the say "We looked at bitcoin,

we had smart people come in and explain

how the blockchain works

but I still just really don't understand

what it means for my business."

I think that makes sense in a way because

if you think about an iPhone, for example:

What's really important, when a new iPhone comes out?

Is it the new chipset or some new way of

compressing frequencies?

I'm not an engineer and don't know how any of that works.

What matters to people is what they can do with the technology.

Of course, success is in now way guaranteed.

One day we may look back on this and say

"Oh, wasn't that great..." But:

If you ask me, there is undoubtedly

a huge amount of progress that has been made.

There's something here.

I find it hard to believe that I'm going to look back

in ten or twenty years and say

"None of this ended up happending."

Because we're really seeing a new way

of transacting value on the Internet.

Chapter 5: The Blockchain And Banks

I know how big financial institutions work.

They're not going to do something reckless with technology.

This is people's money and livelihood they're working with.

These are slow upgrade processes.

These systems, once they get implemented,

will run in parallel with the old systems for a while

before you have a switch over to the new one.

That's standard in technology upgrade.

I knew this was going to take time.

But there are antagonists, players who are threatened.

It's the AT&T/Verizon/Kodak analogy again.

Their business model is threatend by this

and they're going to do things to slow down

and water down the transformational networks.

There is a game theory approach to how the technology

is being rolled out in the markets, for sure.

We made different roundtables here in Zug

after the start of our bitcoin experiment.

For example, we invited banks and bankers from Zug

and tried to connect them with people

of the "Zug cryptovalley".

They were talking, but the bankers were not so happy.

They said there were different things with the law

and "It's not so easy for us."

But it's also a question of attitude.

It's the same as for our city, for our administration:

banks have to get ready.

I know that in a way they are defensive

but on the other hand have research and teams

that face these questions.

Maybe they are waiting a little bit now

but they can't deny it, I'm sure.

I think there's going to be a lot of disruption

a lot of revolution with respect to blockchain-based technologies.

That's going to drive not necessarily

banks worrying about other banks being competitors.

What banks worry about is the "bank of one"

the next generation of a banking network that's

resident on a phone, that's decentralized, distributed

and that's based on a digital token, a digital asset

that's not issued by a bank or government.

It creates all these different permutations and opportunities

not only for enterprises and governments

but also for society.

We see a lot of example of banks and consulting companies

and other Big Four audit firms talking about

how they can strip cost out of the business

of—I don't know—trading in public markets

or whatever it might be.

But if you take the example of public markets:

How can you cut cost out of a market that doesn't exist in the future?

What if the trading of securities happens peer-to-peer

in the marketplace that doesn't have traditional intermediaries

of exchanges, brokers, agents, escrow agents, clearing houses

and all the other parties we rely on?

That's the cost you're cutting out but

what if the market can function without them?

The important thing for leaders of big companies

is not just to think about cost

but also to think strategically.

What can this technology enable me to do

that I wasn't able to do in the past?

I think it's going to take a long time

for it to weave its way into the system.

It may take a normal tech upgrade cycle for it

to fully weave its way into the system.

I have said publicly I think within twenty years

financial services will be just software

and the smart contracts technology in particular

is going to automate a lot of the things

that institutions and people handle today.

Chapter 6: The Blockchain And Financial Inclusion

Seventy-four percent of the world's population

according to the World Bank

does not have access to basic financial services.

In my home country, in the United States of America,

which is one of the wealthiest countries in the world,

about fifty percent of the population

does not have access to basic financial services

including bank accounts.

There's a huge amount of people around the world

that don't get to experience and be a part of the global economy

because they don't have access to the financial system

for a variety of reasons.

I do think this technology will lift

a lot of people out of poverty

but will also be an inclusive technology

that allows more people to engage in global commerce.

I don't like to think that we're creating

so much prosperity for the less than one percent.

I like to think of purpose-led businesses.

By the way, that's the trick I think

for large corporations: to understand

that the cost efficiencies of embracing this new technology

will potentially widen their accessible markets

at a cost that's reasonable.

That in itself will create prosperity in different areas.

Something that we should think about.

Pretty soon, when smartphones can be had for

less than five dollars each, which is right around the corner

nearly every person living in poverty on earth

will have access to a smartphone

and be connected to a network.

That is game changing in and of itself.

When you have digital wallets on these phones

and the ability to trade assets

we're going to answer the question

"What happens when everybody has money?"

Capitalism itself has thrived in some areas

by the natural exclusion of others from markets.

It actually uses that scarcity principle

as its driving basis.

So what happens when money is not scarce?

We will look at people and say:

"What are the things that I cannot do

and where we can join forces?"

Much more than today, where we say

"How big is your car and how much money

do you have on your bank account?"

So, I believe the future will be even more

human, or humane—no... human

than the last hundred years we have seen.

Chapter 7: The Real Revolution

I don't think blockchain is a revolution.

It has been done forever, for forty years,

which is really forever in computer science.

Both ingredients of the blockchain—security and distributed systems

have been around since the early seventies.

This is not the revolution.

The revolution, or the evolution is that

jobs will change.

That's something I believe in.

Jobs will be digitized in some sense.

Computers will do a lot of the manual labor

that we still see in service domains today.

It's called the "fourth technological revolution"

and I think we are at the beginning

of such a revolution just now.

That's why we don't close our eyes.

Some people say "There will be much trouble

people will lose their work," and so on.

I'm sure it will happen

but it's better we face it than deny it.

Offshore working, automation, robots

are they threatening our work?

It's a real-life question when your own son

who is prepared to go get an advanced education

asks you that question.

I concluded I do have a genuine answer:

It's not threatening.

It is forcing us to think a little bit different

but if we do it smart, we actually give

the next generation a great new opportunity

to reinvent why they get up every morning

and why they go to work

and make sure they really make best use of

the degree they studied for

and the things they really want to do in life.

I want to make the world better.

Just better.

Whatever my measure of better is, or yours

is what might be valued by society.

The other thing is this wonderful opportunity

to create a little bit of prosperity.

Because what prosperity offers you is independence.

We don't have to have people who are living in squalor

simply fighting for a handful of rice every day.

There is too much in the world

to live like that anymore.

I think certain countries and even corporations

are beginning to understand that.

Certainly this movement, this blockchain movement

is the technology underpinning

the technology part of that mindset

which exists offline as well.

The idea is out.

If it's not being realized here it may be realized there

or even in the Internet, uncontrollably.

Bitcoin is here, it is here to stay

and will become bigger and bigger.

As the blockchain, as cryptocurrencies

as the possibilities connected to the blockchain and cryptocurrencies.

That's out of the box.

And the whole system does not need any government.

It exists. It works.

It's like a computer network surrounding the world.

You can say "We don't want to be part of it."

So be it.

It's here. And it won't go away.

Chapter 8: The Blockchain And Us

I feel like this is a generational opportunity

for entrepreneurs and investors.

Quite frankly, I have not seen something

as exciting in my entire investment career.

Let's try to build a new system

that has better trade-offs and features

and less downsides.

And let's make it work.

Now the pendulum is going to swing back.

What that's going to do is frankly

make confidence in capital markets higher.

Blockchain has enormous potential implications

outside of financial services.

We might even see the full-scale implementation

of some of those more real-world applications

leapfrog financial services.

This invention, when it came up in the seventies

is really one of the groundbreaking ideas.

It will change society for sure in many domains.

It already has changed society in a sense that

the Internet is a secure place

that you can make transactions on the Internet.

The potential for creating trust

or even permissionless trust

within the Internet

that's something that we haven't had before.

Its impact on society, on business, on government

could be profound.

Blockchain is to be fair nearly ten years old.

I think it has another ten years to run before

we really see what its long-term impact is.

I think it's going to be a long, much more steady journey

we go down and you're going to see

multiple technologies inspired by this thing.

Blockchain technology is not the solution to

all the problems under the sun.

As it matures we will begin to see its potential benefits

but also its limitations.

You can deny it or you can face it.

We always said we have to face it

because these things are coming

if we want or not.

I have seen long-standing partners

when they saw the opportunity, to change

and say "I don't understand everything

but I understand there is something behind this

so we need to go forward." That's really great.

People often say necessity is the mother of invention

but I like to say necessity is also the mother of adoption.

If there is a real use case

that people need a technology for

they start using it.

I started with Commodore, we had Atari, Apple

but at some point in time, Windows came.

Everybody just started to use Windows

without asking "What is the code behind it?

What is the code behind moving the mouse?"

We have a whole lot of possibilities.

Everything will change.

In my opinion, the possibilities are endless.

It reminds me of the situation where all of a sudden

we have two or three huge inventions

happening in one moment.

We are living in a very interesting window of opportunity.

I'm surely very excited to fully embrace that.

Even one little step can be a great step for mankind.

I think we are exiting the industrial age

and are entering an age we still have to name.

Where that will take us is very hard tell.

My suspicion is it means a sort of

resurgence of the notion of community.

It absolutely feels like a whole new paradigm

for changing the world.

We're at a crossroads here.

We have the wherewithal now to create technology

that would help the entire human race.

The question is: Will we do it?

But we can do it now.

There is so much innovation

that blockchain technology has spurred

all throughout the world.

I have absolutely no doubt in my mind

that this technology is going to affect everybody.

I would say in ten to twenty years

there won't be a human being

whose life is not impacted by this technology.

For more infomation >> The Blockchain and Us (Wir und die Blockchain) (2017) - Deutsche Synchronfassung/German version - Duration: 31:27.

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PhoneTeacs - Word stress and suffixes [Part 2/4] - Duration: 9:33.

Previously on PhoneTeacs...

While Serge was telling us George's story to explain to us that one word was more important

than the others in a sentence.

- "George gave her flowers last night", it means "George gave her flowers last night"

- Yes, I know, very romantic.

He fell madly in love with George, but this love was impossible and he had to resolve himself to

travel across nature. - He's taking a stroll outside, without even suspecting

- whatsoever. It's taking a stroll, innocently, without suspecting that at its heart, it carries an accent.

But Serge also met plenty of other words, including 3 syllables or more words. And these words, he says,

we must use a total of 7 rules to place their stress.

- So...It won't change anything in the place of the stress.

- Yeah, we don't call them weak suffixes for nothing.

- "Animal" is respecting the first rule, the one which says that the stress goes on the first except if contraindication.

Hi everyone, welcome on PhoneTeacs, the show that teaches you how to speak correctly in English.

Last time, remember, we saw that placing stress in a 3 syllables or more word, makes a mess.

We saw that there are 7 rules that allow us to place the stress in a 3 syllables or more word.

We already have rule n°1 and n°2. Today, let's see rule n°3 and n°4.

Last time, I was cool, I didn't go too hard on you, I showed the pretty side of stuff

by showing you 2 rules that don't change anything and suffixes that don't change anything either.

But, believe me, there's plenty of suffixes that make a mess.

And so, we're going to see some of them today. Start the opening.

It might be true that there are 6 billion people in the world and counting...

Tonic stress and suffixes

Rule n°3 : Suffixes that make a mess are not rare, there are so many that I feel obligated to

read the list to you. I even made myself a paper teleprompt especially for the occasion

to be able to read them to you.

Among suffixes that have this mess label, we find -able. Oh, it rhymes !

We also find its cousin -ible, and also -cian, -ery, -ian, -ic, its cousin -ics, -ian, -ish, -ia, -ient,

-ious, -osis, we also find -ual, its cousin -ial and finally : -etyyyyyyy.

The general rule is : suffixes ending in i or u, preceding a vowel that is followed by a consonnant

will affect the place of the word stress.

But don't go assuming, their cousins, -ic or -ity do all the same, them cheaters !

And how do they do, will you ask ? Well, they place the accent on the syllable that precedes the suffix.

For -able, we're going to find DURable or LAUGHable.

For -ible, we're going to find comPAtible or reSIStible.

For -ial, we're going to find diffeRENtial or fiNANcial.

For -cian, we're going to find phySIcian, cliNIcian or muSIcian.

For -ian, we're going to find coMEdian, ciVIlian or techNIcian.

For -ery, we're going to find aDULtery or deBAUchery.

For -ic, we're going to find arCHAic, plaTOnic or characteRIStic.

For -ics, we're going to find diaBEtics, TOpics or phoNEtics.

For -ion, we're going to find classifiCAtion or vegeTAtion.

For -ia, we're going to find bacTEria or VicTOria.

For -ient, we're going to find ProFIcient or inGREdient.

For -ious, we're going to find mysTErious or reLIgious.

For -ish, we're going to find emBEllish or esTAblish.

For -osis, we're going to find Hypnosis, OSmosis or diAgnosis.

But beware of exceptions that will find their stress on the first syllable

like for example POlitic, CAtholic, SPIritual or else, HEretic.

Well, after that, the stress isn't necessarily placed on the first syllable for all exceptions.

There are exceptions for which the stress will be placed on the 2nd, 3rd or 4th syllable,

it depends on the exception, but I don't want to make a list out of it, because it would be boring.

On the same page, beware of words like Comic. It looks like a suffix, it tastes like a suffix

but it's not a suffix, because the word com doesn't exist.

Moreover, this word has 2 syllables, so it doesn't work.

Rule n°4 : We'll place the stress on the antepenultimate syllable

for all words ending in -cy, -ty, -phy, -gy and -al.

- WHAT ? WHAAAAT ? Wait dude, are you serious ? In the last video, you told us that when it

- ended by -al, it didn't change anything, and now you're saying it changes everything ?

- And you also use over-complicated vocabulary to explain it, like, what does it mean

- antepenultimate, it's you who should be an inmate ! Seriously, you suck ! Go away !

- Ooooh ! I see ! It's an april's fools, is it ? Ha ha ha, so funny, so funny !

- In fact, no, it sucks, honestly, your videos are dumb, I'm off,

- I'm unsubscribing, it's over... - What ? No, no, don't unsubscribe, wait !

- Stay ! You'll see, I'll explain, it's not complicated !

In the last video, I told you that when it end with an -al suffix, indeed,

it doesn't change the place of the word stress.

But did you feel the nucleus of my sentence, here ? Yes ! We're speaking of suffixes !

When it's an -al suffix, indeed, it doesn't change anything, when it is not a suffix, it changes everything.

Well, yeah, it doesn't get better than that !

And also, antepenultimate syllable, it just means third from last syllable.

Yes, because in latin, ante = before, paene = almost and utimus = last.

So it a very not posh word and pretty much practical.

Let's say that it is sexier than saying third to last...

Do you get bored watching TV shows ? So, you too, learn new words

while learning english phonetics. With the PhoneTeacs' channel, by Mr Tea.

For example,if we take the word "Critical", why Critical ? Well, because I like it, that's all.

And also, it goes well with April's fools.

So, Critical, 3 syllable word, Cri, Ti, Cal.

As we saw it, we're going to place the stress on the antepenultimate syllable, so it won't be

Al, nor Ti, but Cri.

Jaffa, kri !

Jaffa, kri !

Therefore, we'll find words like PHARmacy, DEmocracy, Allergy, geOgraphy, CLArity or also

CRItical.

And you see that for each of these words, the stress is on the antepenultimate syllable.

Oh, and by the way, the same thing goes for Animal. Yes, I know, I told you in a previous video

that if we place the stress on the first syllable on Animal, it is thanks to the 1st rule, but no, it's thanks to

the 4th rule ! Because the first syllable of Animal is also its antepenultimate one.

Yeah, I know, I'm awesome, so maleficient, I've got plenty of ideas that come to me, like that.

Ideas swarm in my mind to make you go nuts. Mouahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah !

- There it is ! I found it ! I just had an horrible idea, no two, even three ! Oh my god, I've got plenty of ideas.

- I'm that good ! Tssstssstssstssstssstsss...

- I don't like it when you laugh like that, boss, it scares me.

- Let's get back to work.

I hope that you liked this video, you'll, at least, have learnt a new word, for lack of speaking

correctly in english.

I remind you that you can share this video on social networks,

put a blue thumb, yeah, because it wasn't green, but no one told me

no one ever tells me anything, so...

You also can subscribe !

Or else you can send me gifts, it's up to you, why not ?

Some tried.

Meanwhile, I'm telling you, see you another time to see how to speak correctly in english

even if everyone doesn't speak like that and that it depends

on area, social class and plenty of other stuff.

For more infomation >> PhoneTeacs - Word stress and suffixes [Part 2/4] - Duration: 9:33.

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Stereotypen Kletterer Teil 2 The Climbing Gym Series S4 EP02 - Duration: 7:07.

Stereotypes Climbers Part 2

Nobody can hold on to that shit ... it's so slippery

The extreme - holdcleaner

Maxi ... it's your turn!

The safety - first - guy

You got me?!

Yea I got you!

Ok nice!

You're ready if I'm falling?!

Sure ... I'm there!!

TAKE!

The ignorant

The forgetful

Aren't you freezing??

The always - freezing - guy

Maxi!!! ...

The stressful

Belay me!!!

Basti ... I got you ...

I'm on top...

The clpping - everything - guy

Come on ... you got this!!!

The filthy climber

The slowmotion climber

I'm on top!!! ...

Eeeehhhy I'm on top!

For more infomation >> Stereotypen Kletterer Teil 2 The Climbing Gym Series S4 EP02 - Duration: 7:07.

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Mental Omega 3.3 Challenge Solo - Superweapon Challenge - Duration: 46:14.

Difficulty - NORMAL Allied AI Skill - Easy. Resigned from MCV unpacking.

This one is surely the toughest challenge available, you need to pull of some tricks. The best way is to choose the Allies because of Stallions.

During the first 10 minutes concentrate on training Engineers and Stallions, to transport them capture power and Construction Yard.

The Soviet base is the hardest one to capture, it requires some luck to take down both power plants and CY during the first raid.

You know why the Soviet base is the hardest? Tempest is out of range for Destroyers and they can build Nuclear Power Plants.

Don't panic in this challenge, I had to repeat this challenge over 20 times, you have to be very careful.

If you steal the Construction Yards in first Allied and Epsilon bases, take out their power, you are on a very good way to finish this challenge.

First, take out their power and CY to make them harmless, then concentrate on the last Soviet base. You must harass it as hard as possible.

After taking down their Power and stealing their CYs, I went Naval with Destroyers to take out the 4 SWs in the final base.

BUT SOMEONE WAS FUNNY AND DECIDED TO MAKE TEMPEST OUT OF RANGE FOR THEM HAHAHAHAHA

For more infomation >> Mental Omega 3.3 Challenge Solo - Superweapon Challenge - Duration: 46:14.

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Can Danger Give You Super Strength? - Duration: 2:18.

You might've heard some version of this story before: A kid is trapped under a car,

and, in a panic, his mom somehow lifts the car up to get him to safety.

This sounds like something straight out of a movie, but it actually does happen!

So what really goes on in these life-threatening moments?

Can anyone summon superhuman strength?

Well, kind of.

Some biological changes can give you a boost in extreme situations, but there's a limit

to what your body can do.

When you're stressed or terrified, your brain signals your adrenal gland to release

hormones like cortisol and adrenaline into your bloodstream.

Cortisol can increase the amount of glucose in your blood, and adrenaline can pump up

your breathing rate and heart rate to shuttle more oxygen around your body, including to

your muscles.

And this can give you an energy boost!

There's also some evidence that your brain releases chemicals called endocannabinoids

when you're under stress, which can reduce the pain you feel.

Now, scientists can't exactly create high-pressure, dangerous situations in a lab to study all this.

Like, y'know, trapping a volunteer in a room with an aggressive bear or something.

So it's hard to know how much of an effect these chemicals have on pushing your body

to its limits.

And figuring out what those limits are is even harder.

Scientists who research human body movement, called kinesiologists, have tried to study

competitive athletes to get a better idea of these limits.

It's thought that your body doesn't usually generate all the force it's capable of.

Partially because it's more efficient — after all, you don't need every muscle cell in

your arm to pick up your phone and send a text.

But it's also a way your nervous system makes sure you don't injure yourself by

pushing your muscles too hard and damaging tissues.

In a life-or-death situation, or a high-pressure situation like the Olympics, your brain seems

to throw caution to the wind.

And stress responses cause your body to use more energy.

Still, it's important to remember your body has its limits: If you can only lift 50 kilograms

on a good day, you probably can't pick up a 2000-kilogram car no matter what.

Plus, those sensational news stories can be kind of misleading.

Sure, maybe someone did pick up a car to save their kid, but they probably didn't deadlift

the whole thing like Captain America.

They probably just lifted one end, which isn't nearly as heavy.

So while there's some evidence for bouts of super strength, we've still got to separate

science from science fiction.

So... probably don't try to stop a train like Superman or anything.

Thanks for asking, and special thanks to all of our patrons on Patreon!

If you'd like to help us keep making episodes like this, you can go to patreon.com/scishow.

And don't forget to go to youtube.com/scishow and subscribe!

For more infomation >> Can Danger Give You Super Strength? - Duration: 2:18.

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Marvel, Mamrie, and Minis - What's Up Weirdlings?! April 10, 2017 - Duration: 1:04:18.

For more infomation >> Marvel, Mamrie, and Minis - What's Up Weirdlings?! April 10, 2017 - Duration: 1:04:18.

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Le financement : le principal obstacle pour créer votre entreprise ? - Duration: 3:16.

For more infomation >> Le financement : le principal obstacle pour créer votre entreprise ? - Duration: 3:16.

-------------------------------------------

Message pour votre nuit. 11 Avril - Duration: 1:10.

For more infomation >> Message pour votre nuit. 11 Avril - Duration: 1:10.

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KILLSHOT! This General Just Told Trump A Secret That'll Put Obama In Jail Details - Duration: 11:51.

KILLSHOT!

This General Just Told Trump A Secret That'll Put Obama In Jail (Details)

Obama ought to be blameworthy of the surveillance demonstration, or if nothing else that is

what Lt. Gen. Thomas Mcinerney said something regarding Devin Nunes and his stunner disclosures

from this week.

He says that the Trump group was certainly kept an eye on by the NSA/CIA and says that

it wasn't Russia-related.

The Russia thing was recently utilized as political cover with a specific end goal to

keep an eye on Trump.

As per Vessel News, McInerney trusts that when the proof turns out that Obama will lament

the day that he kept an eye on Trump.

He says that both Clinton and Obama are chimping out and pushing a created Russian spy novel

intended to bring down Trump.

The Lt. General additionally trusts that Clinton and Obama abused the undercover work act:

"Section 793 (f) of the federal penal code (Title 18): With lawful access to highly classified

information she acted with gross negligence in removing and causing it to be removed it

from its proper place of custody, and she transmitted it and caused it to be transmitted

to others not authorized to have it, in patent violation of her trust.

"

This is deserving of substantial fines and up to 10 years in jail.

This implies Trump has got Hillary and Obama on the ropes.

They can ACTUALLY go to jail.

What do you think about this?

Do not hesitate and write your thoughts in the comments section below.

SHARE the truth, be patriots!

Thank you for reading.

H/T Vessel News WACK JOB!

Nancy Pelosi Tries To Hammers Trump, Then Truth Checkers Find She's A Deranged Woman

(Details)

When you achieve a particular age, things begin to wind up distinctly subtle.

Your visual perception starts to get fluffy, you're hearing gets somewhat overcast, your

joints squeak significantly more, your muscles appear to be neverendingly sore or wounded,

your feeling of notice begins to befuddle fragrances and scents, and so forth.

On account of Representative Nancy Pelosi, your mind numbs and you start to spurt gibberish

expressions and nursery rhymes you thought you'd long overlooked.

It's sort of tragic, really.

That is to say, Trump quite recently got her lying and that was past pitiable.

This lady has turned out to be such an extensive amount an equivalent word for stupidity that

expert numbskulls ought to get her annuity as pay.

Truly.

Furthermore, on the off chance that you thought she couldn't best herself, reconsider…

Conservative Tribune:

"It's no secret that House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi does not like President Trump.

A quick perusal of her Twitter account reveals more ragetweets against the president than

your average liberal arts student.

And they say Trump's tweeting is unbecoming.

Pelosi managed to move from unbecoming to laughably wrong on Twitter Tuesday when she

tried to hit Trump over health care reform.

'47 Days into his presidency, @realDonaldTrump has done nothing to create jobs – but he's

finding time to #MakeAmericaSickAgain, 'Pelosi tweeted.

"#MakeAmericaSickAgain," In case you were wondering, is the left's hashtag for any

lawmaker who wants to do anything with Obamacare except get down on bended knee and sing songs

of unadulterated praise to its munificent creator.

"

For the record, here are a couple of the occupations that Trump HASN'T made:

1.

More D.C.

Lobbyists 2.

NASA Outreach to Muslims Director 3.

More IRS Agents 4.

PPP (pay-per-protest) Protesters 5.

Carbon Footprint Inspectors 6.

Climate Change Shamers 7.

University Professor Agitators 8.

Congressional Black Caucus Coffee & Donut Go-Fers

9.

RINO Whisperers 10.

Establishment Politician Masseuse

With respect to the accomplishments in employment creation, what about Intel, Fiat Chrysler,

Ford, IBM, Tesla, Alibaba, Mitsubishi, Walmart, Home Depot, Sony, Boeing, Apple, Microsoft,

Lockheed-Martin, General Motors, Amazon, and so forth., and so forth.

Is that a sufficient rundown?

Or, on the other hand, is it a deception?

Liberals are so urgent, they're calling all the considerable economy news a "dream,"

as well.

"It's not genuine, it's not genuine!"

MAN is it miserable.

One thing Trump isn't doing.

He's not making the Democrat race misfortune any additionally consoling for these hapless,

defenseless and sad Liberals.

Goodness, and, Nancy… simply close your trap.

Nobody is occupied with got notification from you any longer.

What do you think about this?

Do not hesitate and write your thoughts in the comments section below.

SHARE the truth, be patriots!

Thank you for reading.

H/T Conservative Tribune Here's What CNN Is Trying To Cover Up – Expose Them NOW

While the mainstream media have been salivating with its relentless reporting of Fox News

host Bill O'Reilly's sexual harassment scandal, CNN's own dirty laundry have been

swept under the rug…

Breitbart reported that a class action racial discrimination lawsuit was filed against CNN

last year, and it now looks like it's about to grow to include more plaintiffs.

The initial suit was filed in 2016 by two plaintiffs who allege widespread discriminatory

practices at the network, including alleged pay differences and fewer advancement opportunities

for African-American employees.

This week, The Hollywood Reporter warned that an amendment was just filed by the plaintiffs

that would allow other current and former employees to join the suit.

Plaintiffs Celeslie Henry and Ernest Colbert Jr. claim that CNN gave more negative performance

reviews to African-American employees, and that higher-ups at the network allegedly used

racial slurs, including "Who would be worth more: black slaves from times past, or new

slaves?"

The defendants recently tried to have the case dismissed, at which time the plaintiffs

fired back by telling the judge they wished to file an amended complaint, explaining that

their lawyers had been contacted by nearly 200 additional employees with claims of alleged

racial discrimination.

"Since the filing of this action, counsels for the plaintiffs have been contacted by

more than 175 people, both former and current employees of the Defendant, requesting to

be members of the putative class action, all having similar complaints of intentional racial

discrimination, discrimination impact and discriminatory practices employed by the Defendants,"

the plaintiffs said in the motion to amend.

CNN will have until the end of this week to respond.

It's laughable that a liberal news network like CNN is accused of racism…an accusation

that they continue to viciously and without proof hurl at President Trump.

Trump Announces Major Change – Nobody Was Expecting This…

During his presidential campaign, Donald Trump repeatedly promised that he would be committed

to tax reform.

That's why it came as a surprise this week when the president took a major step back

from this.

Western Journalism reported that Trump is moving away from his own tax plan in the hopes

of finding a plan that can win support from Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Learning from his failed healthcare fiasco, Trump thinks he needs to take a more active

roll in the creation of the new legislation.

Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin had previously set an August goal for tax reform, but it

now looks like that likely won't be met.

However, Gary Cohn, director of the White House National Economic Council, that timing

is not that important on this.

Western Journalism reported that Trump is moving away from his own tax plan in the hopes

of finding a plan that can win support from Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Learning from his failed healthcare fiasco, Trump thinks he needs to take a more active

roll in the creation of the new legislation.

Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin had previously set an August goal for tax reform, but it

now looks like that likely won't be met.

However, Gary Cohn, director of the White House National Economic Council, that timing

is not that important on this.

JUST IN Trump Orders US Navy To STRIKE – IT'S HAPPENING

Tensions between the U.S. and North Korea have been rising over the past few weeks,

and now President Donald Trump has ordered the Navy to take action.

Daily Mail reported that a U.S. official just confirmed that a U.S. Navy strike group will

be moving toward the western Pacific Ocean near the Korean peninsula as a show of force

as North Korea continues to test their nuclear weapons.

The strike group will be led by the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson, and it will leave

from Singapore heading toward the Korean peninsula.

"We feel the increased presence is necessary," the official said.

This came days after Trump met with Chinese President Xi Jinping and pressured him to

do more to curb North Korea's nuclear program.

He had previously warned that the policy of "strategic patience" with this maverick

regime was over.

"If China is not going to solve North Korea, we will," he declared bluntly.

Experts have warned that time is running out to solve the deepening crisis with North Korea.

"If they continue to develop nuclear capability and create missiles that can reach the United

States, that changes the calculus for us," one US diplomatic source said.

What do you think about this?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments section.

She Knew Frat Guys Could See In Her Daughter's Window, But She Had No Idea THIS Would Happen

Lexi Brown is a 12 year-old girl who has been battling cancer since July of 2014.

After winding up in a hospital room overlooking the Sigma Alpha Epsilon House at the University

of California, Los Angeles, something happened that Lexi and her family were never expecting.

Independent Journal Review reported that Lexi and her mom put up a sign in the hospital

window asking for pizza as a way of forgetting about her illness.

The men of SAE ended up seeing the sign, and they decided to take action.

"Five guys come in, and they had a guitar and dozen roses and a box of pizza," Lexi's

mother Lisa said.

"They introduced themselves and said, 'We saw your sign; we're here.'

They stayed for a half an hour, they sang this song and I started bawling my head off.

I'm like, 'I can't believe these people are here for my child.'"

"I texted my teammates and they all stepped up to the plate to visit her," SAE member

Chase Gasper recounted.

"Everyone who got to know her was really moved.

It was an incredible experience and we really want her to get through this."

SHARE this story if this warmed your heart!

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