Friday, November 3, 2017

Youtube daily report Nov 3 2017

hello guys

oh energy, oh energy

oh I just woke up now so I'm a bit down, thats why my energy is a bit low.

you guys must have already read the Tile of the video before coming here

So I dont have a reason to explan what I am about to do

so you guys must be thinking, this must be like a usual review

where I would sit down on a desk and talk with you all

But No

You guys should know better than that

you must have seen my videoes before hand

well, there's only one video out there right now, so its ok.

I have planned a variety item

But before putting up the review, we have to meet an inportant person

but

going there looking like this...

so lets change this

ha so guys, i'm here at Akkulam

and what I was saying was that

There are a lot of movie reviewers in our state

so I am here to conduct a really small discussion about them

I hope all yof you must know vinu by now.

hi

Im goanna discuss it with him

lets see

who all are the reviewers in kerala

Vinu bro, whose the first one.

Generally in kerala, youtubers are really low

But if we have to choose a good reviewer, Abhijith Vlogger is good.

For more infomation >> Thor Ragnarok-Is it worth watching? | Malayalam Movie & 4K Theater Review| Karthik Surya - Duration: 10:08.

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

YouTube TV Now Available

For more infomation >> YouTube TV Now Available

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

Thor Ragnarok-Is it worth watching? | Malayalam Movie & 4K Theater Review| Karthik Surya - Duration: 10:08.

hello guys

oh energy, oh energy

oh I just woke up now so I'm a bit down, thats why my energy is a bit low.

you guys must have already read the Tile of the video before coming here

So I dont have a reason to explan what I am about to do

so you guys must be thinking, this must be like a usual review

where I would sit down on a desk and talk with you all

But No

You guys should know better than that

you must have seen my videoes before hand

well, there's only one video out there right now, so its ok.

I have planned a variety item

But before putting up the review, we have to meet an inportant person

but

going there looking like this...

so lets change this

ha so guys, i'm here at Akkulam

and what I was saying was that

There are a lot of movie reviewers in our state

so I am here to conduct a really small discussion about them

I hope all yof you must know vinu by now.

hi

Im goanna discuss it with him

lets see

who all are the reviewers in kerala

Vinu bro, whose the first one.

Generally in kerala, youtubers are really low

But if we have to choose a good reviewer, Abhijith Vlogger is good.

For more infomation >> Thor Ragnarok-Is it worth watching? | Malayalam Movie & 4K Theater Review| Karthik Surya - Duration: 10:08.

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

Why Is There an Opioid Crisis? - Duration: 5:21.

Last week, the opioid epidemic was declared a 'public health emergency' in the United

States — something advocates have been pushing for a while.

Because at this point, experts agree that America is in the middle of an opioid crisis.

According to the CDC, around 90 Americans die from opioid overdoses every day

That's about as many as those who die in car crashes.

There are all kinds of different factors that led to this crisis.

But the main reasons have a lot to do with what these drugs are, how they reduce pain,

and why they're so addictive.

First, some terminology.

You hear people throwing around words like opioids and opiates, not to mention heroin,

oxy, and fentanyl.

But those mean different things.

Opioids are any drug that acts on opioid receptors on your cells.

Opiates are essentially the same, but they're made from the poppy plant.

Yep, the plant that gives us lemon poppy seed muffins also makes opium and morphine.

So opiates are natural, while opioids include both natural and synthetic drugs.

For our purposes, what matters is that they all bind to opioid receptors on cells around

your body, like in your brain and spinal cord.

These receptors come in different shapes, like mu opioid receptors.

And when opioids bind to receptors, it makes it harder for neurons to send along signals

that get interpreted as pain.

This happens in the spinal cord, where peripheral nerve cells pass on incoming signals.

And it happens in the brain, where neurons in a region called the periaqueductal gray

prevent cells from releasing neurotransmitters, which are basically chemical messages.

All this means opioids are really good pain relievers.

And in the 1990s, because of a combination of factors including misrepresented research,

doctors started prescribing more painkillers like oxycodone and hydrocodone to try to treat

pain.

But opioid receptors are also in reward centers of the brain, and binding to cells there can

create euphoria, which is that 'high' feeling.

That's what makes them addictive.

Plus, your body builds tolerance to them pretty quickly, so you need more of the drug to control

the same amount of pain.

You can also become physically dependent, experiencing symptoms of withdrawal if you

stop taking the drug.

Since neurons get used to the opioids, they become more active to compensate for the drug

suppressing signals.

And if it's no longer there, the cells become way more active than normal.

So you can become agitated, anxious, or feel like puking.

Addiction, on the other hand, is a psychological condition where you seek out the drug despite

the damage it does to your life.

While physical dependence is common with addiction, a person doesn't have to be dependent to

become addicted and vice versa.

With the opioid epidemic, it's thought that many people who originally took the drugs

as prescribed started to take more.

In other words, they began abusing them.

And when pills became too expensive or difficult to get, they turned to heroin, an opioid made

from morphine, which was more readily available.

Regardless of the source, the addiction can turn deadly because of the other physiological

effects of opioids.

That's because opioid receptors aren't just in areas of the brain that control pain;

they're also in the parts that control breathing, like the brainstem.

And when they block signaling there, opioids slow down and can even stop breathing.

Doctors call this respiratory depression, and it's usually what kills people who overdose.

Fortunately, we now have some ways to counteract overdoses.

For instance, naloxone can be injected or squirted up someone's nose and, within minutes,

seemingly bring people back from the dead.

It's actually an opioid, too, since it binds to opioid receptors.

But unlike heroin or prescription painkillers, which are agonists, naloxone is an antagonist.

That means that when it binds to a receptor, it doesn't turn on any of the usual effects.

Instead, it acts as a blocker.

Naloxone works so well because it binds to opioid receptors more strongly than the overdosed

drug.

So it can flood your system and prevent the drug from binding.

Problem is, you need to treat someone with naloxone pretty fast.

It doesn't always take long after an overdose for them to stop breathing.

And that's especially true if they've taken one of the stronger synthetic opioids,

like fentanyl.

Fentanyl is a prescription drug that's around 50-100 times stronger than morphine.

Because of its structure, it can cross a protective membrane called the blood-brain barrier more

easily, which means your brain can get flooded with the stuff faster.

Lately, illicit versions of it have been added to heroin and other drugs sold on the street.

And other, fentanyl-like drugs are even more powerful, like carfentanil, which is used

to tranquilize elephants.

Not only do these drugs cause faster overdoses, but they also need more antidotes to counteract

the effects.

So even if the person is given a treatment like naloxone in time, there might not be

enough on hand to save them.

Deaths from overdoses have spiked in recent years, and as the problem has gotten worse,

experts have been trying to figure out how to deal with it.

For the most part, doctors are starting to cut back their prescriptions of opioids, which

should help reduce the number of people who go on to develop addictions.

And researchers are working on finding opioids that can knock out pain without all the dangerous

side effects.

Some groups, for example, are studying drugs that are closer to the opioid peptides our

bodies make, which may bind to receptors in more specific ways.

But in the meantime, there are already a lot of people out there with substance abuse disorders,

and helping them get into treatment is a whole other challenge.

So, there's still a lot of work to do.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow and thanks especially to our President of

Space, SR Foxley!

We really appreciate your support.

And we really appreciate all of you for watching too!

SciShow wouldn't exist without you, and we want to learn more about who you are and what

you'd like to learn from us.

So, we're doing a viewer survey right now that you can fill out to let us know.

If you haven't taken it yet, there's a link in the description where you can go do that.

Thanks!

For more infomation >> Why Is There an Opioid Crisis? - Duration: 5:21.

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

The Reason Why I'm Leaving Blackberry - Duration: 3:18.

there comes a time in a man's life where

there comes a time in a man's life where he just has to let the thing that he

loves the most go I never knew it was gonna be this way

I just I'm sorry blackberry we have to break up

you couldn't provide me what I needed in this relationship I wanted better apps

I wanted better you gave me the security I knew you wouldn't cheat on me you gave

me the security it's just I feel like we're not compatible anymore I'm gonna

have to leave blackberry now for all the people who subscribed to him for that

reason I'm sorry I mean I tried I was always about blackberry it was like my I

that's the only phone I've ever had I knew of no other phone it's crazy that

it has to be this way sike at the blackberry key one let's get it what's

good what is good in the hood you already know I will never leave this

let's get it

so this beauty just came in the mail and I am already in love I thought

blackberry just couldn't provide me with what I wanted which was a better app

system this is the one like the one so look no pun intended the key one I made

a video just to let you guys know that I'm never leaving blackberry you know

i'ma stay here i'ma die with this let's go so anyways guys I got the

limited-edition blackberry key one if anybody cares shout out to everybody who

subscribed to me because of my blackberry video I shout out to

everybody who subscribed to me because of my comedy videos either way I got you

here I got you watching and I want to say that I love y'all keep supporting

you know what I mean I ain't stopping I'm gonna keep going and this is gonna

take me there and I'm bringing you guys with me for the past few years I've been

using the blackberry Passport and also the blackberry classic amongst

other blackberries that I've had like the q5 I was on the brink of giving up

on this brand but then again I knew it I knew black we could have filmed me I

found the key one and I fell in love with it and

I realize that the black edition was coming on I'm like alright let's go Add

to Cart bye let's go bring it to my house

welcome home Amazon da less but get it blackberry key 1 you already know

English to all the haters out there who does that your I'd be giving up I

already know we strong we 64 gigabyte 4 gigabyte RAM strong I'm talking about

3505 milliamp power battery if I even said that right strong I'm talking about

8 megapixel front-facing camera strong I'm talking about 12 megapixel back

facing camera strong I'm talking about motherfuck

octa-core 64-bit Snapdragon 6 whatever the that even means strong by the way

the first picture that I'm gonna be taking is gonna be with this phone and

I'm uploading straight to Instagram so follow me on Instagram I just recently

made it I probably have 0 followers but it is at brown status it'll be written

on the screen and also my Twitter at brown status follow me there keep

following me make me feel creeped out let's go so let's get it it's your boy

Brown status I'm out peace

For more infomation >> The Reason Why I'm Leaving Blackberry - Duration: 3:18.

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

Renault Trafic - Duration: 0:51.

For more infomation >> Renault Trafic - Duration: 0:51.

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

Audi A4 - Duration: 0:50.

For more infomation >> Audi A4 - Duration: 0:50.

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

Emmanuella Mark Angel Co...

For more infomation >> Emmanuella Mark Angel Co...

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

Film d'action le meilleur que j'ai vue | New Adventure movies 2017 - Duration: 1:31:28.

For more infomation >> Film d'action le meilleur que j'ai vue | New Adventure movies 2017 - Duration: 1:31:28.

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

JAK MIEĆ NIESKOŃCZONOŚĆ SUBÓW NA YT? (Naprawdę działa :D) - Duration: 0:33.

For more infomation >> JAK MIEĆ NIESKOŃCZONOŚĆ SUBÓW NA YT? (Naprawdę działa :D) - Duration: 0:33.

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

14 * Les Sanglots Longs des Violons de l'Automne - Duration: 5:14.

For more infomation >> 14 * Les Sanglots Longs des Violons de l'Automne - Duration: 5:14.

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

Why Is There an Opioid Crisis? - Duration: 5:21.

Last week, the opioid epidemic was declared a 'public health emergency' in the United

States — something advocates have been pushing for a while.

Because at this point, experts agree that America is in the middle of an opioid crisis.

According to the CDC, around 90 Americans die from opioid overdoses every day

That's about as many as those who die in car crashes.

There are all kinds of different factors that led to this crisis.

But the main reasons have a lot to do with what these drugs are, how they reduce pain,

and why they're so addictive.

First, some terminology.

You hear people throwing around words like opioids and opiates, not to mention heroin,

oxy, and fentanyl.

But those mean different things.

Opioids are any drug that acts on opioid receptors on your cells.

Opiates are essentially the same, but they're made from the poppy plant.

Yep, the plant that gives us lemon poppy seed muffins also makes opium and morphine.

So opiates are natural, while opioids include both natural and synthetic drugs.

For our purposes, what matters is that they all bind to opioid receptors on cells around

your body, like in your brain and spinal cord.

These receptors come in different shapes, like mu opioid receptors.

And when opioids bind to receptors, it makes it harder for neurons to send along signals

that get interpreted as pain.

This happens in the spinal cord, where peripheral nerve cells pass on incoming signals.

And it happens in the brain, where neurons in a region called the periaqueductal gray

prevent cells from releasing neurotransmitters, which are basically chemical messages.

All this means opioids are really good pain relievers.

And in the 1990s, because of a combination of factors including misrepresented research,

doctors started prescribing more painkillers like oxycodone and hydrocodone to try to treat

pain.

But opioid receptors are also in reward centers of the brain, and binding to cells there can

create euphoria, which is that 'high' feeling.

That's what makes them addictive.

Plus, your body builds tolerance to them pretty quickly, so you need more of the drug to control

the same amount of pain.

You can also become physically dependent, experiencing symptoms of withdrawal if you

stop taking the drug.

Since neurons get used to the opioids, they become more active to compensate for the drug

suppressing signals.

And if it's no longer there, the cells become way more active than normal.

So you can become agitated, anxious, or feel like puking.

Addiction, on the other hand, is a psychological condition where you seek out the drug despite

the damage it does to your life.

While physical dependence is common with addiction, a person doesn't have to be dependent to

become addicted and vice versa.

With the opioid epidemic, it's thought that many people who originally took the drugs

as prescribed started to take more.

In other words, they began abusing them.

And when pills became too expensive or difficult to get, they turned to heroin, an opioid made

from morphine, which was more readily available.

Regardless of the source, the addiction can turn deadly because of the other physiological

effects of opioids.

That's because opioid receptors aren't just in areas of the brain that control pain;

they're also in the parts that control breathing, like the brainstem.

And when they block signaling there, opioids slow down and can even stop breathing.

Doctors call this respiratory depression, and it's usually what kills people who overdose.

Fortunately, we now have some ways to counteract overdoses.

For instance, naloxone can be injected or squirted up someone's nose and, within minutes,

seemingly bring people back from the dead.

It's actually an opioid, too, since it binds to opioid receptors.

But unlike heroin or prescription painkillers, which are agonists, naloxone is an antagonist.

That means that when it binds to a receptor, it doesn't turn on any of the usual effects.

Instead, it acts as a blocker.

Naloxone works so well because it binds to opioid receptors more strongly than the overdosed

drug.

So it can flood your system and prevent the drug from binding.

Problem is, you need to treat someone with naloxone pretty fast.

It doesn't always take long after an overdose for them to stop breathing.

And that's especially true if they've taken one of the stronger synthetic opioids,

like fentanyl.

Fentanyl is a prescription drug that's around 50-100 times stronger than morphine.

Because of its structure, it can cross a protective membrane called the blood-brain barrier more

easily, which means your brain can get flooded with the stuff faster.

Lately, illicit versions of it have been added to heroin and other drugs sold on the street.

And other, fentanyl-like drugs are even more powerful, like carfentanil, which is used

to tranquilize elephants.

Not only do these drugs cause faster overdoses, but they also need more antidotes to counteract

the effects.

So even if the person is given a treatment like naloxone in time, there might not be

enough on hand to save them.

Deaths from overdoses have spiked in recent years, and as the problem has gotten worse,

experts have been trying to figure out how to deal with it.

For the most part, doctors are starting to cut back their prescriptions of opioids, which

should help reduce the number of people who go on to develop addictions.

And researchers are working on finding opioids that can knock out pain without all the dangerous

side effects.

Some groups, for example, are studying drugs that are closer to the opioid peptides our

bodies make, which may bind to receptors in more specific ways.

But in the meantime, there are already a lot of people out there with substance abuse disorders,

and helping them get into treatment is a whole other challenge.

So, there's still a lot of work to do.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow and thanks especially to our President of

Space, SR Foxley!

We really appreciate your support.

And we really appreciate all of you for watching too!

SciShow wouldn't exist without you, and we want to learn more about who you are and what

you'd like to learn from us.

So, we're doing a viewer survey right now that you can fill out to let us know.

If you haven't taken it yet, there's a link in the description where you can go do that.

Thanks!

For more infomation >> Why Is There an Opioid Crisis? - Duration: 5:21.

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

GOOD BURGER BUT EVERYTIME ED SAYS/DOES SOMETHING RETARDED IT GETS FASTER. - Duration: 6:56.

OOF

For more infomation >> GOOD BURGER BUT EVERYTIME ED SAYS/DOES SOMETHING RETARDED IT GETS FASTER. - Duration: 6:56.

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

Trick or Treat Pranking「Splatoon 2: Multiplayer 🦑 Ep31」 - Duration: 49:27.

For more infomation >> Trick or Treat Pranking「Splatoon 2: Multiplayer 🦑 Ep31」 - Duration: 49:27.

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

WDB KIDS TALK PART 5 - Duration: 13:16.

For more infomation >> WDB KIDS TALK PART 5 - Duration: 13:16.

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

Frígida Melancolia - Minimus Contemplation - Duration: 5:11.

For as long as my heart beat and my mind hunts itself I will be waiting for my

death And as Anxious and grimm as it can be i croon these words for thee

I am nothing and so are you we watch everyday pass by and every raindrop fall,

outside, and as our moment approach there's nothing we can do. We shall

embrace the unknown and smear his guts on our bloom.

Say no more Just pay attention to the show. The unceasing presentation, starring...

the world. The minimalistic acts that sorrounds you on your every day on your

every night observe them... from a sunlight to a gigantic catastrophe

it's astonishing how their final purpose is identical there's is tiny constrast there's

is differences, but they are the absolute same thing. Both be analyzed by human

eye, or simply ignored by the rushed lives. Watch this show! it's not a matter

of choice... because you are already part of it.

as I was saying you are not the star on everybody sky you are part of a

colossal event which has no purpose at all, it just happened. "Mankind is a mistake"

and so is their attainable ideals we are the unpurposed mistake

we are the gloom in nature and nothing more and nothing else

And with theses thoughts i watch myself drown i watched the show and i learned from it

and i don't even know

what should i regret first !? The loneliness and

existence of this erroneous mankind buried me alive

the mind that kills itself the mind makes the rest of the body succumbs The mind that deny his own existence the cursed mind

that gives you more reasons to die than anything else...

Welcome yourself to the world that you've been living with contemplation

For more infomation >> Frígida Melancolia - Minimus Contemplation - Duration: 5:11.

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

Arka Sokaklar 456 . Bölüm Fragmanı - Duration: 0:45.

For more infomation >> Arka Sokaklar 456 . Bölüm Fragmanı - Duration: 0:45.

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

Как по-английски сказать "могу", "не могу " - Duration: 4:48.

For more infomation >> Как по-английски сказать "могу", "не могу " - Duration: 4:48.

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

Utilisez ce médicament une fois tous les 5 ans et oubliez les maladies !!!-astuces santé - Duration: 3:10.

For more infomation >> Utilisez ce médicament une fois tous les 5 ans et oubliez les maladies !!!-astuces santé - Duration: 3:10.

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

Breaking News : Female Lawmakers Allege Harassment by Colleagues in House - Duration: 10:05.

You are watching top daily breaking news

for years former Republican

Representative Mary bono said she endured the increasingly suggestive comments from a fellow lawmaker in the house

But when the congressman approached her on the House floor and told her he'd been thinking about her in the shower

She had enough

she confronted the man who she said still serves in Congress telling him his comments were demeaning and wrong and

He backed off

Bono who served 15 years before being defeated in 2012 is not alone as

reports flow almost daily of harassment

Or worse by men in entertainment business and the media one current and three former female

lawmakers tell the Associated Press that they also have been harassed or

Subjected to hostile sexual comments by fellow members of Congress the incidents occurred years or even decades ago

usually when the women were young newcomers to congr s

They range from

Isolated comments at one hearing to repeated unwanted comments to lewd remarks and even groping on the House floor

Coming amid an intensifying national focus on sexual harassment and gender hostility in the workplace the revelations

Underscore that no woman is immune even at the highest reaches of government

This is about power said former, California Senator, Barbara Boxer

After describing an incident at a hearing in the 1980s where a male colleague made a sexually suggestive

comment the colleague using the traditional

Congressional parlance said he wanted to associate himself with her remarks adding afterward that he also wanted to

associate with the gentlelady

Boxer said the comment was met with general laughter and an approving second from the committee chairman

She said she later asked that it be removed from the record that was an example of the way

I think we were thought of a lot of us it's hostile and embarrasses and therefore could take away a person's power she said

boxer and the other female

lawmakers spoke on the record to tell their stories following revelation about Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein

Serial attacks on women as well as disclosures from current and former Capitol Hill

staffers about harassment by lawmakers and aides those accounts published in The Washington Post and elsewhere

Revealed that Congress has few training or reporting requirements in place to deal with sexual harassment

Largely untold before now is that some female lawmakers themselves say they have been harassed by male colleagues

While rare the accounts raised troubling questions about the boys club environment in Congress where male

lawmakers can feel empowered to target not only

staffers, but even their own peers

The lawmakers declined to identify the perpetrators by name

But at least two of the men continued to serve in the House none of the female lawmakers interviewed reported

What happened and some noted that it was not clear where they could launch such a complaint

At least three of the four told friends or aides about the incidents which in some cases were witnessed by other lawmakers

When I was a very new member of Congress in my early 30s

There was a more senior member who outright propositioned me who was married and despite trying to laugh it often brush it aside

It would repeat and I would avoid that member said representative Linda Sanchez

D Whittier she added that she would warn other new female members about the lawmaker in question

But she declined to identify him while saying he remains in Congress

I just don't think it would be helpful to call the lawmaker out by name

Sanchez said the problem is as a member. There's no HR department you can go to there's nobody you can turn to

ultimately they're employed by their constituents

Sanchez also said that a different male colleague repeatedly ogled her and at one point touched her inappropriately on the House floor

while trying to make it appear accidental

She declined to identify the lawmaker but said he was no longer in Congress

Bono, said she ultimately confronted her colleague on the House floor after he'd made repeated harassing Komets

Bono, who arrived in the house at age 36 to replace her husband Sonny Bono after he died in a skiing accident

Said it seemed like the lawmaker didn't know how to talk to a woman as an equal instead of being housed the weather

How's your career? How's your bill?

It was I thought about you while I was in the shower. So it was a matter of saying to him. That's not cool

That's just not cool

Bono, declined to identify the lawmaker saying the behavior stopped after she finally challenged him he still serves in

Congress, she said it is a man's world. It's still a man's world

Bono said not being a flirt and not being a bitch that was my rule to try to walk that fine line

former representative

Hilda Solis now a Los Angeles County Supervisor

recalls repeated unwanted harassing overtures from one lawmaker though

She declined to name him or go into detail

I don't think I'm the only one what I tried to do was ignore it turn away walk away

Obviously, it's offensive. Are you supposed to be flattered no

We're adults not appropriate said Solis who left Congress in 2009 to join the Obama

administration as labor secretary

It's humiliating even though they may have thought they were being cute. No, it's not it's not appropriate

I'm your colleague

But he doesn't see me that way and that's a problem Solis said

The experiences occurred against the backdrop of broader gender inequities in Congress where women remain a distinct minority?

Making up only about 20% of members in the House and Senate

That's up from fewer than 10% in the quarter century since politics year of the woman in

1992 that election season large numbers of women sought office following hearings by the then all-male Senate Judiciary Committee

Over Anita Hills testimony about alleged sexual harassment by Clarence Thomas who was subsequently confirmed to the Supreme Court?

albeit by a narrow margin

the increase in numbers and the prominence of a few individual women such as House Democratic Leader Nancy

Pelosi has not resulted in parody in all measures nor

Eliminated the potential for male members to demean or even harass their female counterparts

nonetheless a few former female lawmakers

Contacted by the AAP expressed surprise and even disbelief at the notion that lawmakers themselves could be victims of harassment

representative Jackie Speier D Hillsborough has recently gone public with an account of being

Sexually assaulted by a male chief of staff while she was a congressional staffer

She has criticized the vague rules in place on the issue and is preparing

legislation to mandate sexual harassment training for congressional offices among other changes

In a video posted to Twitter last week she called Congress a breeding ground for a hostile work environment

And encouraged others to come forward

Yet when it comes to lawmakers themselves

Speier said I think the women in Congress are big girls

The equalizer that exists in Congress that doesn't exist in other settings is that we all get paid the same amount

And we all have a vote the same vote so if you have members that are demeaning you it's because you're letting them

Former bay area representative Ellen Tauscher flatly argued that harassment can't take place between members of Congress

Female members and male members are equals they don't sexually harass each other tells your sin in

Fact the law specifies that harassment can occur between equals said Jennifer drobik a professor at Indiana

University's Robert H McKinney School of Law who teaches a course in sexual harassment law

Formerly two members of congress may have the same status that doesn't change the fact that sexual harassment

Can occur between peers drobik said noting that numerous other factors can come into play?

Including the difference in age and length of service between the members and the mere fact that men have more power in society than

Indeed the harassment or hostile incidents

Experienced by current and former lawmakers occurred when they were young newcomers to congr s with less

Seniority than the men who targeted them yet the fact that some dispute whether harassment could even occur between members of Congress

underscores the complexity of the issue and the fraught questions surrounding it

Bono, said she found power in confronting her harasser and that after she did so it never happened again

She emphasized that she understood her experience was different than those of young staffers who may face harassment from someone

They rely on for a job and that she was fortunate because as an equal elected by her constituents. She would not fear retaliation

But bono strongly disputed any suggestion that she or any other female lawmaker could not be harassed by their peers

My career didn't suffer. I didn't suffer

Bono said, but it did happen that is all from the newsroom. That is all from the newsroom

Thanks for watching top daily breaking news

No comments:

Post a Comment