[natural sound, door opening]
ATLAS is the laser instrument on the ICESat-2 satellite.
February 15, 7:30 am ATLAS leaves its cleanroom
[natural sound, music]
February 15, 10:00 am, ATLAS is lifted onto the transporter
[natural sound, music]
[natural sound, music]
[natural sound, music]
February 19, 2:30 am ATLAS leaves Goddard
[natural sound, music]
[natural sound, music]
[natural sound, music]
For more infomation >> NASA Space Laser Heads on a Road Trip - Duration: 0:51.-------------------------------------------
The dirty secret about natural gas - Duration: 3:05.
Here's a dirty secret, natural gas is not clean.
It's bad for our health and it's bad for the planet.
Natural Gas is often called a 'stop-gap' or a 'bridge' to a clean energy future.
When in reality, it's a 'bridge to nowhere.'
Yet, the companies that profit off of it are working hard to make that idea stick.
And fine, as the tech developed and gas became cheaper, coal burning in the US has decreased.
This is even noticeable when you look at global carbon dioxide emissions over the last several
decades.
The rate at which we increase our emissions year to year has slowed.
Even though we are still emitting more CO2 each year than ever before.
But as great as those reductions in emissions are, that won't be enough.
It isn't even close.
Switching to natural gas isn't a solution, despite what the companies are advertising.
Shifting reliance from 'dirtier' fossil fuels like coal only cuts the amount of carbon
dioxide released in half.
If we want any hope of meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement and limiting temperature
rise to 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius, the US and other high-emitting countries have to get
as close as we can to zero emissions.
Gas definitely isn't going to get us there - especially because Methane, the main component
of natural gas, is far more potent a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.
There isn't as much methane naturally occurring in the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, so each
molecule we pump up there has an outsized effect.
The consequences of climate change – increases in sea level, flooding, drought, ocean acidification,
agricultural instability among dozens of others – are only going to get worse as we pump
more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, so we need to leave the vast majority of the
earth's remaining fossil fuel reserves unburned and in the ground.
Increasing investments in gas -- through pipelines, markets for liquefied natural gas, or converting
coal plants to natural gas plants – will only spur more drilling and fracking.
There's also substantial evidence to suggest that gas is not great for our health.
Exposure to Benzene, a chemical compound found in many fossil fuels, has killed oil and gas
workers.
Families living near oil and gas developments have reported increased rates of illnesses
like asthma, liver failure, and cancer.
And a study in Colorado found that mothers living near high concentrations of oil and
gas wells were 30 percent more likely to give birth to a baby with heart defects.
Plus, fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, the process by which gas is often extracted from
wells can contaminate groundwater with hydrochloric acid and other chemical additives.
Fortunately, we aren't stuck with gas – expanding renewables like wind and solar can meet electricity
demands in the US.
There are hurdles, in the short-term, it'll require investing in a more flexible grid
which may be more expensive than the glut of cheap energy from gas.
But it is important to remember that this 'cheapness' is artificial.
The climate and health costs are carried on the backs of everyday people, future generations,
and the rest of the planet.
Delaying the transition to clean energy and doubling down on fossil fuel infrastructure
like pipelines will continue to hurt our health, our wallets, and the climate in the long-run.
If you're looking for more ways to get involved go to earthjustice.org/action and find something
in your local community or on the national scale to help combat climate change.
If you're looking for more information or all the sources, they're listed in the description
down below as always.
This video was made in partnership with Earthjustice and if you want to go check out their YouTube
channel, *clicks*, link right here.
Thanks so much for watching, and I hope you have a great day.
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Queer women artists in the Harlem Renaissance | #LGBTHM - Duration: 13:35.
In honour of LGBT History Month in the UK I'd like to talk about some amazing
queer Harlem Renaissance artists. I've just written an essay on some of these
people and I found it so fascinating, so I really wanted to talk about it.
Also, even within the progressiveness of queer studies, women, and particularly women of
colour, tend to be forgotten, so today I'd like to focus on particularly queer
female artists. Therefore I am by no means going to be covering everything;
as the renowned Harlem scholar Henry Louis Gates once said, "the Harlem Renaissance
was surely as gay as it was black" so there is a lot out there. This is
designed to just give you a bit of a flavour of some of the experimental and
huge creative output of the Harlem Renaissance. So you might be sitting
there going, hang on Izzy, what is the Harlem
Renaissance?! Well it was a period in the 20s and 30s in Harlem in New York where
black artists started creating all sorts of experimental art, particularly
literature, and they also experienced a surge in popularity from both black and
white audiences. In my previous video on my favourite black writers I actually
named two Harlem artists, Jean Toomer and George Schuyler. Now I don't have time to go
into this fully but before I get into the literature it's worthwhile
understanding the two major artistic ideologies during this time.
One was known as uplift culture and was spearheaded by W.E.B. Du Bois. This was the
idea that art should be propaganda for racial issues.
It was idealistic and the idea was that african-american art should always be political.
The opposing view was supported by Langston Hughes. rather than
idolising the African American, this school of thought wanted to have a
gritty complexity to the depictions of black life, regardless if it showed them
as depraved. And it is worth noting as well that there was a lot of tension
between these two philosophies. The other bit of context that you need to know is
the law, and to summarise - being queer was just very much not allowed.
Homosexuality between men was illegal according to sodomy laws, and
laws about promiscuity and indecency could be used against lesbians.
Also, transvestitism was illegal and it was possible to be arrested on the street
for it. However, Harlem was a hub of experimentation and relative freedom. It
was infamous for its prohibited drinking, thriving nightlife and it was considered
a safe zone compared to lower Manhattan because sexuality was less
rigidly policed. There were huge drag balls at Hamilton Lodge, there were
buffet flats where you could pay to watch people have sex, and the were rent parties
with uncensored theatrical performances. Basically, this really was a
place for artistic, gender, and sexual experimentation. That said,
even in Harlem there were still fines and prison sentences for disorderly
conduct, so even though it was a lot safer, the threat of the law was still
always there. 'Strange Brother' by Blair Niles is a really good book for
understanding the sort of weirdly experimental yet at the same time
constricted atmosphere in Harlem at this time. One of the two main characters is a
gay man, and the book also depicts how people who were sexual or gender
"deviants" were treated by the law. Given that homosexuality was still illegal
when this book was written, it is remarkable how open it is about talking
about philosophies of gender and sexuality and in portraying Mark as a
normal, functioning, intelligent man just with a slight difference. For this time
that really was quite revolutionary. That said, if you do want to check this book
out and read it, I would give a warning for a lot of internalised homophobia.
In 'Strange Brother', a major catalyst for the characters' encounters with their
sexuality is the Harlem blues. Homosexuality was far from being a
secret in the blues bars of Harlem. If you've been wondering what this song has
been: *solo piano blues plays* This is James P Johnson's recording of 'The Dream'
It was also known as The Bull-dyker's Dream, Bull-Dagger's Dream, The Diggah's Dream;
basically it was a really popular tune played by a lot of artists and according
to Willie "the lion" Smith, was an anthem dedicated to lesbians. It might even be
where the term "Dyke" comes from. Songs about lesbians were not uncommon.
George Hanna's 'Boy in the Boat' is basically one long innuendo for oral sex,
and includes the line *Sings: sent them over there, those Germans to hunt. That the women at home can try all the new stunts*.
And then there's Memphis Willie B's 'Bad Girl Blues' in which he complains *Sings: Women loving each other, and they don't thinking about no men*
Basically, men complaining about lesbians not having sex with them... nothing changes.
But that is not to say that women didn't write their own songs. Bessie Smith was quite
well known for having relations with both men and women and Ma Rainey was
pretty damn notorious for being a lesbian. In fact, in 1925 Bessie Smith and
Ma Rainey were found naked with a couple of other women in their home and Ma Rainey
was arrested for hosting an indecent party. But did that stop her? oh hell no
In 1928 she recorded 'Prove it on Me Blues' in which she sings: *they say I do it, ain't nobody caught me, sure got to prove it on me*
I absolutely adore this song so much I mean check out how relatable this line
is it's a testament to the remarkably subversive culture of Harlan that Marv
aney released this song in 1928 which is the same year that Radcliffe halls the
Well of loneliness was judged to be obscene just for a couple of really
brief references to lesbian sex Morini wasn't the only out lesbian in
Harlem GLaDOS Bentley became a legend for her
raucous sexualized parodies of popular songs and how incredible blues voice she
wore men's clothes was well known for her masculine features and even changed
her name to Bobby Minton so that she could get married to a woman sadly we
don't have many recordings of her songs but she has been mythologized and
described in a lot of literature at the time including strange brother and also
in texts by Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten
however in 1952 she wrote an article for Ebony called I am a woman again in this
she describes her depraved inverted past and how she is now happily married to a
man thanks to female hormone treatments this is a really odd article for various
reasons it's almost a character of womanhood it shows her you know making
dinner for her husband doing the dishes for a husband picking out jewelry for
her husband and then it never quite commits to saying that homosexuality is
an abnormality it just says what society calls normal either way this article
must be taken with a pinch of salt because she wrote it during the McCarthy
era so it's very likely that she felt the need to publish it to repair her
reputation but it wasn't just the daring and promiscuous blues singers who were
openly queer there was lots of literature at the time as well I've
already mentioned strange brother and another famously daring depiction of
bisexuality in polyamory is Richard Bruce Nugent's smoke lilies and Jade
which was a short story published in the magazine fire but to return to queer
women quite a few short story fictions had a queer subtext to them one example
is nella last passing which is about two black women
who can pass for white and their different approaches to the privileges
this gives them on the surface it doesn't seem to have much to do with
queerness but certainly in the relationship between the two women could
raise a few eyebrows but furthermore parallels were often drawn between race
and queerness in terms of passing and how you can secretly integrate into a
society in which you don't quite belong the story addresses themes of a fluid
identity that on the surface pertains to racial issues but can also definitely be
read with a queer reading but the person we mainly want to talk about is Angelina
weld grim que not to be confused with the white abolitionist Angelina Graham k
world who was her aunt grim k wrote plays short fiction and poetry and he
was best known for her treatment of domestic race issues for example her
acclaimed play Rachel explored the problems of motherhood when raising a
black child in a racist world but despite often looking at themes of
motherhood grim K was undoubtedly gay in a letter that she wrote to Mamie Bell in
1896 she asked her to be her wife saying Oh
Mamie if you only knew how my heart beats when I think of you and it yearns
and pants to gaze if only for one second upon your lovely face signed your
passionate lover green-keyes poetry is characterized by a hushed sadness
longing and frustration because she has a had a lot of difficulties with being
open about her lesbianism especially because of the criticisms from her
father therefore not much of grim k's queer poetry is published however in
some of the ones that she did publish there are a sort of subtle code for
example in her acclaimed poem el beso published in 1909 she simply elides the
femininity of the speaker and the subject Twilight and you quiet the Stars
snare of the shine of your teeth your provocative laughter the gloom of your
hair lure of you eye and lip yearning yearning langa surrender
your mouth and madness madness tremulous breathless flaming the space of a sigh
then awakening remembrance pain regret your sobbing and again quiet the Stars
Twilight and you in other poems she doesn't cover up the female persona but
instead codes the queer desire this is seen in a Mona Lisa which is undoubtedly
addressed to a woman but her wish to fall into the woman's eyes and sink down
and down and down and deeply drown carefully implies something more than
just a platonic friendship and or admiration
her unpublished poetry is unsurprisingly even bolder in my shrine the speaker
adopts a male persona and uses male poetic conventions in order to
legitimize her desire for another woman and then finally I'm going to leave you
from with an excerpt from her unpublished poem Rosabelle which
perfectly illustrates her wish to express her desire but her fear to do so
leaves that whisper whisper ever listen listen prey birds that twitter twitter
softly do not say mean a wins that breathe about upon her lines I do not
dare whisper Twitter breathe unto her that I find her fair tell her white gold
red my love is and for her for her the Harlem Renaissance drew to a sort of
close in the 1940s when white audiences lost interest in the novelty of African
art but the culture has certainly left its legacy the queer culture of drag
balls and coded language in songs and literature as still go on to this day
contemporary gay blues singers such as gay attackable ola gwen avery and faith
nolan have all drawn directly from the songs and identity of Bessie Smith
mulraney and Gladys Bentley quim K and other queer women's poetry wasn't
published very often so it's hard to say that
there was a direct influence but certainly there was a remarkable
similarity to the themes and styles of their poetry to more modern poets such
as Audrey Lorde and Adrienne Rich so that is everything I wanted to talk
about today in the description below I have left a playlist of all the songs
that I mentioned and some others that you can check out and I'm also going to
give lots of details about various books and websites you can look at for more
information whether or not you've come across these people before I would love
to hear what you think it's amazing how much was produced during this time and
how experimental and interesting it all is so yeah let me find out what you find
what you like what you find interesting thank you very much for watching and
good bye
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500 Million-Year-Old Human Footprint Fossil Baffles Scientists - Duration: 7:44.
Archeology is one of my favorite topics on this channel because well that's how we
are able to get a glimpse of our past.
Basically everything we know or think we know about where we came from, our planet, the
timeline of human history has all been based on clues that we have uncovered.
And that could be an ancient text, some age old bones or a prehistoric fossile.
But that's the thing, we base most of what we know about how our planet was formed, our
ancestors and how they lived on clues that we have found.
But on this vast planet filled with unexplored caves mysterious mysterious waters there are
still so many clues that could be out there, some of which could drastically alter our
version of history.
So far according to scientists the way it goes is that modern humans have been around
for about 200,000 years, before that we were Neanderthals, go back 4 million years and
we were basically a bunch apes then go all the way back 2.1 billion years ago and we
were all just cells with a nucleus.
But again and again new clues seem to emerge that tells a different story and all we have
to do is follow the footprints...literally…
because In the summer of 1968, an amateur fossil collector, William J. Meister, made
the discovery of a lifetime 43 miles west of Delta, Utah.
To his surprise he found a fossilized human footprint, but whats even more strange is
that, well its not just a footprint, it was a shoe print about the size of a US 13 shoe
(3.5″W x 10.25″L).
Now finding a shoe fossile is not all that uncommon because our ancestors had shoes but
this particular fossile is that of the shoe stepping on a trilobite.
And if you dont know, Trilobites were small marine invertebrates related to crabs and
shrimps.
What makes this incredibly important is that well... trilobites only existed between 260
to 600 million years ago and that's pretty amazing beacause Scientists currently think
humans emerged 1 or 2 million years ago and only began wearing such shoes a few thousand
years ago.
As one might expect, this sent shockwaves throughout the scientific communities with
excitement for a new paradigm shift as well as skeptical denial.
Meister took the rock to Melvin Cook a professor of metallurgy at the University of Utah,,
who suggested he show it to the university's geologists.
But none of the geologists were willing to examine it, so Meister took it to a local
newspaper called The Deseret News and the news quickly spread around the country.
This amazing find was presented on March 1, 1973 in a creation-evolution debate at Cali
fornia State University in Sacramento.
The creationist team included Dr. Duane Gish of the Institute for Creation Research and
Reverend Boswell of a local Sacramento church.
The scientific team consisted of Dr. Richard Lemmon of the University of California at
Berkeley and Dr. G. Ledyard Stebbins of the s.
Reverend Boswell said: "I have here something that pretty much
destroys the entire geological column.
It has been studied by three laboratories around the world and it's been tested and
found valid.
It represents a footprint that was found at Antelope Springs, Utah, while digging for
trilobites.
The man was digging for trilobites, and these are trilobites here and here embedded [pointing
to photo].
This is a brick mold of a trilobite footprint [laughter] of a human footprint with a trilobite
in it.
The man stepped on a living trilobite, [thus burying] him in the mud.
This particular strata is dated Cambrian, supposedly 500 million years extinct before
man arrived on the face of the earth.
The interesting thing about this photograph is that there is also heel marks, which would
indicate that they were made by modern man."
And In a news conference, the skeptical curator of the Museum of Earth Science at the University
of Utah, James Madsen, dismissively said: "There were no men 600 million years ago.
Neither were there monkeys or bears or ground sloths to make pseudo-human tracks.
What man-thing could possibly have been walking about on this planet before vertebrates even
evolved?"
Now this was not the only time fossile of what looks like a modern shoe has been found.
On January 15 1917, Albert E. Knapp an employee of the Nevada Mining Company found a fossile
of the heel of a shoe in dated 225 million years ago.
the fossil amongst some loose rocks when he was descending a small hill in the Fisher
Canyon, Pershing County, Nevada.
The rock was later examined by an expert geologist at the Rockefeller Foundation.
Where it was confirmed that the rock is undoubtedly limestone from the Triassic period.
Also what was amazing was that the age-old shoe-sole print bore a well-made leather stitched
by a double row of stitches.
The twists of the threads are clearly visible.
This finding puzzled investigators as double-stitching done with such refined threading had not been
implemented by shoemakers in 1927.
Also In 1997, a fossillized shoe print was found Urumqi City in china that measured 10
inches long.
The fossil was estimated to be around 200 million years old.
Now whether you choose to believe that these are really footprints of modern humans from
hundreds of millions of years ago or not.
The point is that, these clues have been found all around the world and just because they're
not lauded by main stream scientists doesn't diminish their existence and to me it's
really pompus to think that yes we have everything figured out, modern humans emerged out of
africa and that's it, but even
that is just a theory and constantly debated.
I mean is the possiblity that we are so very far off in terms of what we think we know
about our past that hard to belive let me know..
And guys, like I mentioned at the begining, this video is sponsored by audible and I love
using audible because now that I live an hour or so away from the city, audio books has
essential for me to stay awake, and audible great cost effective way for me to have access
to all the audio books I want.
And in this new year im trying to also improve myself, you know, be better, be smarter, and
im using audio books to help me with that because, well i drive alot, might as well
be productive.
And right now i'm listening to You Are Now Less Dumb by David McRaney which is a fun
way to get to know your own mind better, the book talks about all these tricks your mind
has that you may not be aware of, pretty interesting listen.
Audible is offering our listeners a free audiobook with a 30-day trial membership.
Just go to audible.com/beyondscience and browse the unmatched selection of audio programs
– download a title free and start listening.
It's that easy.
Go to Audible dot com slash beyondscience or text "beyondscience" to 500-500 to get
started".
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Mito de morar juntas - Duration: 11:11.
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How to Draw and Paint Sweet Fruits | Fruits Coloring Pages | Art Colours for Kids | Learning Colors - Duration: 4:21.
How to Draw and Paint Sweet Fruits | Fruits Coloring Pages | Art Colours for Kids | Learning Colors
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DIY Slide Wire Canopy Kit
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Une maman partage la dernière image déchirante de son fils qui s'est « sacrifié » - Duration: 5:05.
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Durejine - BINGA (official audio) | Hook By PABLO - Duration: 3:19.
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大S晒家庭合照引人羡,小S屡次拍醉酒痛哭视频,家暴还债太辛酸 - Duration: 11:23.
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Decluttering your workshop (part 2 glue guns and glassware) - Duration: 9:54.
Here I am back for stage two of my workshop decluttering and I'm ready to
tackle my glassware area so again need to tuck the curtains out of the way so
here I've got glass down here don't he who sits just off screen I've got a
little filing cabinet full of craft supplies which I'll need to go through
and then some shelves up at the back here so I'm going to tackle what's
around the back here first of all so go sticks they need to be put with some
other glue sticks and again if you saw my first tidy up I've been collecting
these lacy doilies and turning them into scarves and I must have so many of them
now that I'm not going to make them into scarves anymore so I shall donate those
back to the charity shop so they can go in my charity shop pile down here so I
should say I've got three piles going one for the charity shop and giveaways
one is dis total rubbish which I'm not going to compost if it's dried flower
materials or recycle or throw in the bin and then the other stuff will be what I
will put back and make more efficient use of the shelves I've got so here I'm
really heavy floristry wise I've got a new place to muffle oyster wise now so I
want to keep them all together so actually I'm going to put that on one
side to put away later on and then another whole stack of Oh blue six which
I've just opened at the wrong end so I need to put all those back and keep them
together so I know where to find this next time
and actually what I might do they've got that big hole I've got this plastic jug
and me just draw them in there for the moment and then a race dish I've quite
often use this when I do my adult education class it's really nice when
you're doing flour agents to lift them off the table a little bit so that's a
really handy dish and in here I've got a bag full of glue guns so the
glue guns and the glue sticks need to be kept together so I shall put those back
in a moment and on the top shelf I've got a little cup of box which I
will be using as a prop box for my photographs in fact as I empty that out
I've only got one sheet of wrapping paper you see use rattling papers the
background to my photographs so I'm like to actually put that in why wrapping
paper pile and then got the boxes on the psychs I'm sure I can feel that with
something else as well and then two plates if you followed my vlogmas for
Christmas 12 days of Christmas I bought these plates to do some styling with and
they only cost me one pound fifty for the pair and I don't need them anymore
so I think I will give those back to the charity shop and then down here I've got
a glass jug all my glassware is just a bit dusty and ideally needs cleaning out
but all I want tend to do because I'm working in the workshop space everything
is washed as soon as I finished using with it but I tend to wash it again
and when I use it again because it does get a bit dusty on the show so I'll keep
that to one side and then two jars here there's more coffee jar I think now I'm
doing a workshop later on this month using jam jars to arrange flowers in so
I'm going to put that in my jam jar pile this work this glass jar here is
actually in old kiln Rajasa it's quite nice to use so I should be saving that
I went through a phase of by all sorts of glassware from the charity shop and I
don't think I've ever really used this one and I'm going to send that back to
the charity shop and a wine carafe which I'm going to keep because we used to use
that at home and it just needs a good wash I can't not quite get rid of that
yet and an old stopper which I think must have come from my mum
I'm going to hold on to that for a while and then also I had this thing for
collecting these cake stands and again sort of supplies for classes and these
days I tend to do a lot of classes where the ladies bring their a material so I
don't need to supply everything for them I am going to keep this one because I
like the little up stand here but this one was always really difficult to use
it's more fluted so I think I'll donate that back to the charity shop and I got
a matching pair think those look like matching pair so I might keep the two
you never know I could have a one arrangement to either end of the table
and then this stand lovely sort of rise of you something my screaming but
actually it's too flat and when you put the flower foam in here it doesn't sit
so well so I'm going to get rid of that one as well I can't believe I'm getting
rid of these I searched high and low for them and now here I am just getting rid
of them crunched up bit of chicken wire which is really handy when you are
arranging in visors because you can put it down into your bars and arrange your
flowers through that so I will keep that
and then a plastic glass I thought these might have been a good idea for a class
and never really use them so I shall donate that to search and shop get rid
of all those bits of green is falling out there and then back at the top here
I've got all my supplies of Oasis shapes which I've wedged in so I'm keeping all
of those it's all those kind of things back at the side and I have a tray as
well it's originally when I first of my classes my workshops I've had a vintage
tea party theme to them and quite like that tray but what I find now though I
don't use the tray it's quite handy putting on the shelf
because anything small and rest on the tray without falling down there the
holes in the breads and then there is I quite like this fast it's it's wider at
the bottom than this one so it's more practical to use and looking at it I
think this is the vars that I stood my flies and when I
preserve them with glycerin so you have to check back and look for that video
I'm reasonably sure I eventually transferred my glycerin into this floors
because it's a better shape the glycerin stood up quite high and then the flowers
could spill out some holding onto that one and at the bottom here a little
glass dish I've never used that again like the idea in the charity shop but
wasn't for me and basket I think that we originally would have been filled with
like a planted arrangement and again I've not used that and although I've got
a couple of truffles you've seen the earlier video I've got a couple of
trough farces I think I will charity shop that one pass that on to make some
space for myself and also gosh how dusty is that again I just have a thing for it
these verses and they only cost me a couple of pounds each it's almost like a
fruit bowl so I shall be getting rid of that one as
well and what to have me around I'll sweep more glassware with lots of bits
and pieces in it a cold fish bowl okay that's quite handy it's sort of quite a
classic shape particularly nice for arranging tulips in when you bend them
around so I think I'll keep hold of that one and then a much deeper glass glass
now this look great filled with sticks and flowers arranged
through it but it's quite large not quite sure about that
and then this trough here really big it's almost looks like a casserole dish
but it was again I went to a workshop and we supply with these so I think I
might get rid of that big one and keep the two smaller ones I think they'll be
a bit more practical down like that and I can see white at the bottom I think
I've got another so a combination of a cylinder of ours and a goldfish bowl as
well so I shall put those all back in my cupboard and bring up some space and as
I do trying to sort of consolidate everything so it packs down really
neatly in the hope that when I've done a workshop I will just have some what I
can put my bag and empty it back in and hopefully the whole workshop will be
tired yeah so fingers crossed so I'd love to hear how you're getting on with
your decluttering so do drop me a comment below and if you enjoyed the
video give it a thumbs up and don't forget to subscribe if you're interested
in hearing lots of flower arranging hints or tips and bits of chat I'll see
you again another time
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⚫🐚 Siyah İnci/Czarna Perła, odcinek 20, FINAŁ, napisy PL ⚫🐚 - Duration: 2:22:10.
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Democrat State Found Hiding 100K Illegals On Registered Voter Rolls - Duration: 2:39.
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LEGO® Marvel Black Panther...
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Message des devs : présentation de Brigitte (VOST) - Duration: 7:11.
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Live in the D: Taste Italian Tradition In The D - Duration: 5:07.
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Live in the D: How Animals Weather The Winter - Duration: 3:42.
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Live in the D: "Good Girls" Stick Up For Themselves - Duration: 3:39.
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Live in the D: How Animals Weather The Winter - Duration: 3:00.
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What the China-Vatican Deal Could Mean for Taiwan - Duration: 6:20.
On this episode of China Uncensored,
what's a Pope got to do
to get some respect in China?
Welcome back to China Uncensored.
I'm Chris Chappell.
In China, if you want to be Catholic,
you have two options:
Belong to the official
Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association,
which is under the supervision
of the atheist Communist Party—
or worship at an underground church,
where priests and even worshippers
can be arrested and persecuted.
The Communist Party has never recognized
the Vatican's authority over Catholicism in China,
and vice versa.
And China's 10 million Catholics
are caught in the middle.
The Vatican has made attempts in the past
to work out some of these issues.
Like back in 2007,
Pope Benedict the sixteenth said that
loyal Catholics could worship
in the state-backed churches.
But now Pope Francis is looking to make a deal
with Chinese leaders on the most hotly contested issue:
Who gets to appoint Chinese bishops.
I went to Washington DC to sit down with
human rights activist Benedict Rogers.
He work for Christian Solidarity Worldwide,
which works for freedom of religion
and belief for everyone.
Mr. Rogers, thank you for
joining us again today.
My pleasure, very great to be with you.
So, I'd like to talk a little bit about
the situation for Catholics inside China.
Please tell me about it.
Well, historically, ever since 1949
the Church has been essentially
divided between underground Catholics
who have remained faithful to Rome,
to the Pope, to the Vatican—
and an official Catholic church
that is under the control
of the Communist Party...
Well recently,
Pope Francis has been trying to strike a deal
with the Chinese Communist Party
which ties into all this.
Can you tell us a bit about that?
His goal is to try to unify the church in China
and have the whole church
in communion with Rome.
The compromises that I think are being made,
and we'll have to wait and see the details
of the exact deal that they end up with,
but so far,
I'm extremely concerned about
the way things are going.
We've seen courageous underground bishops
being asked to step down in favor
of Communist Party approved bishops.
Well, I don't know.
The state approved bishops
don't sound too bad to me.
I mean, of the seven Pope Francis looked at,
only two had mistresses
and only one was ex-communicated.
Well, maybe looking at the Church worldwide,
statistically, perhaps that's not such a bad rate,
but no, it's very concerning the way things are going.
Well, tell us a bit about your work
with Christian rights in China.
Well it's important to say that my work
is not just on Christian rights.
I work for freedom of religion or belief
as set out in Article 18
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights for everybody.
I work very actively with people of other faiths:
Uighur Muslims, Tibetan Buddhists,
Falun Gong, and others.
But in terms of Christians,
we've certainly seen a severe increase
in repression in recent months.
We've seen the destruction of churches,
the destruction of crosses,
new regulations just introduced
controlling religious practice,
and I think that's one of the troubling things
about the Vatican's—not just the substance
of what the Vatican is doing,
but the timing of it—
to be striking a deal at the time
when actually regulations and physical repression
are intensifying,
seems very wrong to me.
What might this Vatican-China deal
mean for Taiwan?
Well, that's incredibly serious.
I find it very hard to imagine that Beijing
would accept a deal that didn't involve
changing diplomatic recognition
from Taiwan to Beijing,
and I think that would be devastating.
So if you were the Pope,
what would you do about
the Catholic situation in China?
I would be insisting on an arrangement
that has the church outside
the control of the government,
has the appointment to bishops
coming from the Pope alone,
and an arrangement that does not in any way
affect relations with Taiwan.
So, China has many beliefs and religions.
If I lived in China,
what religion should I choose
to not be persecuted?
I think you'd have to be of no religion
because even if you choose a religion
that is within the official structures,
even they have come under pressure in recent years.
Official Protestants and I think Catholic as well,
but certainly Protestant churches
have had crosses torn down in recent years.
So, you'd be best off as an atheist.
So what religion should I definitely not choose?
Well, again I think all of the religions
face varying degrees of persecution,
but it's clear that the one belief system
that seems to be target of most hatred
is Falun Gong.
So, if you want to be sure of
condemnation and persecution,
that would be the belief system you practice.
But, really if you're an underground Christian,
if you're Uighur Muslim or Tibetan Buddhist,
you're in for a hard time as well.
Thank you very much for joining us today.
That was a pleasure.
Thank you.
I know, you watch China Uncensored
because you're hungry for knowledge.
But I also know you get hungry for food.
Well now, you can take care of both.
Thrive Life delivers ready to go meals,
with gluten free, organic, and GMO free options
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But it's freeze dried so it won't go bad.
And if you order through the link below,
Thrive Life gives us a commission.
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that feeds your knowledge
by feeding your belly!
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-------------------------------------------
Andamur constitutes its Management Board - Duration: 1:41.
Currently at Andamur,
we are experiencing growth and expansion.
Expansion towards Europe and other markets,
also growth regarding turnover,
number of employees and as an organization.
Our growth as organization
is also due to a change in our structure.
A change in which we have incorporated a Board of Directors,
which is chaired by Juan Carlos López,
formed by the owners and as such,
we have incorporated an external advisor.
The Board of Directors have made me responsible
for the management of the company.
As CEO,
I take on the challenge
of guiding the company
towards a new innovation strategy,
expanding the range of services and products for our customers
and organising a new structure
which is forever more competitive
and adaptive to new markets.
We have important challenges and goals.
These include the incorporation of new alternative energies,
such as, gas and electric power in our service stations.
We also have a very important and ambitious program
of Customer Experience where our focus truly on our customers.
Thank you very much for joining us with this growth.
-------------------------------------------
Beet Cake Recipe - Duration: 5:48.
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TANDEM - La culture sans handicap (l'intégrale) - Duration: 25:55.
-------------------------------------------
3 Manifestation Processes More Powerful Than the Law of Attraction (Try These) - Duration: 17:04.
video will show you three manifestation processes that I think are more powerful
than the stereotypical Law of Attraction process that we go about I'm gonna share
with you how to apply these in your life and how you can really make this
something that makes a change for you
welcome back to another video my name is Erin and I help people expand their
consciousness now this video I'm gonna be sharing with you those three other
processes that I think are more powerful than the understanding of Law of
Attraction now first off let me say that with these processes the idea is to just
pick what works for you now the reason I say that is because ultimately our
beliefs are creating our reality now if we buy into a certain process then we'll
get the result based on how much we're putting into that process how much
belief we have behind it now with this I've been learning these higher level
consciousness understandings of bringing in some Eastern philosophy and how to
have these new perspectives about how the law of attraction works and the old
ways like my old law of attraction videos can still absolutely work for
people but these are ways of understanding it from a higher level
paradigm and I think that these three things can absolutely transform your
life now the first one is gonna be one I have never talked about before it's
actually one that I listen to I was watching another YouTube last night and
it has to do with understanding Arturo Deol field and how the power of
our heart works now there's this guy I used to watch years ago and he used to
always talk about the power of the heart and how we can create from that place
and how when we create from the heart we create from a singular point of view
where as when we create from the head we create from a dualistic nature because
think about it the head the brain has the left brain
the right brain the logical mind the creative side the dualistic nature then
creates dualism creates polarization in life now this comes from understanding
the energetic point of view of our body and kind of what I've been learning from
something called the heart math Institute which studies the
electromagnetic energy of the heart now the electromagnetic energy of the heart
is thousands of times more powerful than that of the head and that when we learn
how to tap into this I believe we create what we want in a much
powerful wait now I want to use this analogy because I heard it last night
and I think it could be so powerful think of it like this
our thoughts the things that we're thinking our beliefs the stories we tell
ourselves energetically because we have an aura that actually extends far
outside of our body what we are thinking we are carrying around in our energy
field how we feel about ourselves any reaction we have to the outer
environment those things are imprinted in our energy field now when we walk
around they've shown and I'll put a chart up that shows this detour or deter
Oriole nature of our energy field and how it kind of feeds into it it kind of
is this loop that goes around and it goes through our hearts and then it goes
through our outer energy field now think of it when we're walking around and when
we're feeling a certain way we are triggering certain emotions and what
happens is we carry those around with us so when we're around other people though
something we can feel from other people because even though we're not touching
them physically if we're close to them we can feel what's in there within their
energy field now the idea is that those emotions that we carry around those
thoughts that we carry around for about a month I'd say maybe even longer we're
carrying those around with us of what we thought and felt for the prior month
behind us it you know literally speaking just because we continue to create the
same momentum of what we feel now think of it like this as we go around in our
daily life what happens is we link ourselves up with other people that
resonate with it with other situations that resonate with it and that begins to
be something that we pull in certain experiences from based on what we're
carrying in our toroidal field now the power of knowingness is the power of
understanding first off momentum whatever we're consistently thinking and
feeling we are carrying around with us and that is something that is affecting
our environment that other people can feel that off of us just like we can
feel that off of other people now what this means is that we can become much
more aware of what we are thinking of we could become aware of how we are
relating our inner world to our outer world and how when we do that we start
to transcend the lower paradigms of thinking around the law of attraction
and just kind of some of the you just got to constantly think of certain
things understand more about a holistic understanding of your
energy field in general now this is something I'm newly developing this
perspective I'll get more clarity as this as I go
but I wanted to share that first with you guys because it's different than the
next two I'm gonna share which I've shared a little bit about before but
I'll go a little bit more in detail to them so that's the first one understand
let me give you guys a practical tool and technique that I think could
transform your life what you can do is this is a process that I've use is this
is called from the heart math Institute the freeze-frame technique now what you
do is you first off simply you put the awareness on your heart center as you
put the awareness on your heart center you immediately start to grow the
electromagnetic energy of the heart and you start to feel from that place which
is much more powerful than just out of the head now what you do is as you feel
from the center of your heart what you do is you think of things that you're
grateful for and you start to think of things and you start to put the
awareness in your heart and you start to think of memories of you being grateful
for certain things happening you can think of memories of things of states of
being that you want to be in and you could even visualize certain things that
you want to happen into your life and as you do that from your hearts place make
sure it's something that your heart really understands something your heart
is connected to you really start to connect that at a powerful way and as
you do that consistently and you breathe into it
you start to grow the electric magnetic energy of your heart which from the
torque field you'll see that it expands very very far out there so that's
something that I think is just so powerful and I'll be developing more
perspectives on this in the future the second process that I think is more
powerful than that of the law of attraction is understanding that of what
is called reality Tran surfing now reality Tran surfing is something I've
been sharing a lot in the channel I think it's literally one of the most
transformative law of Striped processes I've ever used and just to give a little
bit of a basis for it reality Tran surfing is a book that was written in
Russia by a quantum physicist his name was Vadim Zealand and it's a
book that was written it's just now being translated to a whole bunch of
different languages it's starting to really gain popularity and I wanted to
share with you the ideas because I read the book but the suggestion of a friend
that told me to read it and I read it I started to apply it then I started to
get more I started to get much easier results things started happening a much
more smooth way so it started to work for me
so now I'm on the YouTube channel I'm like hey I want to share these ideas
with you because I think they can transform your life now let's understand
the general basis for it and why it's a little bit different than Law of
Attraction first off general basis general basis is that there is what is
called the alternative space alternative space is everything that has been is and
will be it's infinite possibility we connect with that alternative space
based on our intention and based on our focus if we simply first off set more
intentions your life will begin to change if you do that your life will
begin to change just simply by setting intentions most people don't set
intentions most people think about where they are the resistance they have with
where they are and they don't set intentions as to what they prefer to
experience in their life therefore they get the same results that they've always
gotten simply first off set more intentions now the next part of this is
understanding how do you decrease importance this is an idea that has to
do with understanding importance in the sense that anything we ever give excess
meaning to excess importance to we immediately distance ourself from think
of this like there's a specific person or just a person in general you want to
attract into your life you're thinking about this person so much you put them
on this high pedestal and if they come around you and you're around them you
feel nervous because they're so important to you
the moment you start to do that is the moment you distance yourself from them
because you're making them more important than they have to be any time
we make something more important we create what is called excess potential
and metaphorically speaking balancing factors come into play that balance out
that energy and they will keep you from getting that because it's balancing out
that energy this is one of the most transformative concepts within reality
transfer fee decrease the level of importance of what you want to
experience and everything will begin to change now what this means is that under
the stereotypical way that it relates to the law of attraction is we think we
need a white-hot burning desire right desire is the best thing however under
reality transfer fee desire is only powerful if it's translated into
intention or into action if I ever desire to put up my hand right now but I
don't do it the desire is meaningless and useless but if I have a desire and I
translate that into intention and I do it with action then it is powerful so
the idea is instead of having a desire because if
you have a desire you're also telling yourself in the present moment that you
don't currently have what you want if I want an ice cream cone but I want that
that water over there and I desire it so much I'm saying I don't currently have
it but at the moment I go over there and I grabbed it and I drink it I no longer
wanted so I resonate with it so the idea is to focus on what you want but not to
give it too much importance and to understand you can create from a much
more observation point of view a much more neutral point of view and that
anytime you want something you don't resonate with it so start to see
yourself as already having it now there's more to reality Tran surfing
there's understanding that alternative space what are called pendulums the idea
is that our thoughts have an electromagnetic energy and
electromagnetic reality in of it itself and when people in the collective
consciousness so other people in society think similar thoughts it creates these
thoughts structures that start to carry momentum of themselves so sometimes you
may think you're having your own thoughts but in reality you may just be
thinking the thoughts of a pendulum a pendulum will influence you and Spike
you to feeling the emotion of certain things that aren't actually your
thoughts but you're buying into it so for example being Republican or Democrat
if you're on either side of the spectrum you're carrying with that some type of
pendulum and because a lot of people think one way or the other it sucks you
in anytime you have an emotional reaction to it it's what the news does
the news keeps you tied into the lower-level paradigms of those pendulums
and you begin to perpetuate more and more of that thinking that though your
thoughts but really they're the thoughts of those collective consciousness those
thoughts structures so the power to this is just simply being aware of what
you're thinking as you're aware of what you're thinking everything begins to
change because that you can then choose to have a new perspective you're not a
victim of those pendulums now if you want to
know more about reality transfer fien I've created a powerful mp3 guided
meditation that will wire those in for you using NLP using powerful technology
in order to get it so that you are able to create from that place it'll also
help you to decrease the amount of importance you're giving to your
manifestations so that you can actually resonate with them and it's something
that I think that if you listen to for 21 days can
family change your life so I'm gonna give it to you for absolutely free you
can see in the description box below if you download it I think you'll find that
something that's just so powerful that's why I want to give it and offer it to
you to try so other than that the third process that is just so powerful is
understanding parallel realities which is kind of similar to that of reality
Tran surfing but a little bit different now parallel realities and creating from
parallel reality point of view what we do is we have this awareness that
everything we can possibly imagine exists right now in the present moment
because this is what quantum physics shows us quantum physics and shows us
that the only moment that exists is this moment right now that even though we may
have perceived different moments they're actually just moments from different
perspectives but we know this because we've never actually experienced the
past because when it was the past it was this moment right now we will never
actually experience the future because by the time the future gets here it will
be this moment right now now actually the idea behind this is that there are
an infinite number of parallel realities that exist and they are all different
snapshots think of this like a film projector and in that way there may be
different frames that go through the film projector but the idea is that if
you were to actually take out the film and stretch it out you'd see that those
individual frames each individual frame is a totally separate parallel reality
what we perceive of as time even after even if I'm doing this with my hand
right now it looks like one long fluid motion but that is just an illusion of
continuity because we are able to perceive them as all coming together we
say oh this is all one fluid movement but in reality this is me shifting
through billions of parallel realities per second it's just something that we
see because we have memory and we're able to tag these thoughts together tag
these parallel realities together using time using space so the idea behind this
is understanding that when we come to really understand this what we can then
focus on is how to detach from the story that we tell ourselves and how to tell
ourselves a new story to create what we want you can create and connect to any
parallel reality you can imagine imagine right now for yourself the best possible
parallel reality you can possibly imagine what is that represented about
for me if me traveling the world speaking in front of
thousands of people it's me going to amazing restaurants and being around
friends and family mean networking was some of the best people in my field and
Industry me connecting with people that listened to my message and that I can
connect to and and really feel like I'm adding value to other people it's me
going anywhere I want the world and you know being able to vacation at the same
time and creating YouTube videos that is the perfect version of me that I imagine
that parallel reality exists right now and in order for me to connect to it
what I can do is start to see myself as that type of person and as I begin to
act from that place I begin to literally pull from within the infinite parallel
realities I pull within it that reality and I make that more of who I am so
normally when we look at the past we think that the past is set we think that
the past is a part of who we are now in actuality there's an infinite number of
probable pasts that exist and if we just simply drop the story that we tell
ourselves if we have the awareness that we don't have to constantly remember
certain things in our mind we start to tell ourselves a new story and as we
tell ourselves a new story we allow ourselves the ability to then start to
create what we want in our life we can then shift and create whatever we want
in your life so what I encourage you to do the practical tip of this one is to
imagine the best possible version of yourself
to imagine the body language that you have when you're in that specific
scenario or that kind of lifestyle imagine how people respond to you
imagine what you do for a living you know this I believe that the parallel
reality that you're gonna get the most fulfillment out of is going to be the
one that's connected to your passion so find out what that is what do you love
doing what do you you know feel from your heart is the most exciting thing
for you to do and then imagine that feel into that know that that exists right
now and start to take action as if that is who you are what did you do to get to
that place did you create content did you start a business did you find
yourself being a manager and helping other people going for that job
promotion that you didn't think you were worthy of whatever it is start to view
yourself as enough start to view yourself and change your self image if
you change your self image I promise you everything will begin to change in your
life you can apply that towards parallel realities as well
and if you apply all of these things I think they can profoundly change your
life now I believe that all three of these processes are more powerful than
the stereotypical Law of Attraction process of have a desire focus on it and
then create what you want this is a little bit more beyond that in the sense
of the awareness of how reality may work I think that the best way for you to
find out is for you to just simply try them to try them out and to see how they
work and if it works for you than to do that one and to keep doing that to rinse
it and repeat it and refine it these are all different ways of going about the
same thing to get the same type of result but understand that as you follow
your passion that's gonna be the highest route to you achieving what you want
that you can use the toroidal field of the body you can understand how your
thoughts carry momentum your emotions carry momentum you can understand how to
link yourself up with what you want to experience by cultivating the gratitude
in your own life you can use the freeze-frame technique of using your
heart in a powerful way that secondly you can use reality transfer fees to
decrease the amount of importance you can download that free mp3 below if you
want more on wiring in that process and really decreasing the manifestation of
what you want to create that's something that could be very powerful and then
thirdly parallel realities understanding that every possible reality exists right
now in the present moment so why not create what you want your life by
connecting to that version of you so the Debian said I hope you guys enjoy this
video don't free to like this video if you guys liked it subscribe if you
haven't already as always I will see you guys in the next video peace
much love and namaste
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General Grievous Hero Channel Trailer - Duration: 3:47.
(heroically laughing)
(heroically laughing)
(heroically laughing)
(heroically laughing XD)
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Green Sanctuary Episode 2 "Hope in the Dark" - Duration: 6:19.
I haven'd slept…
I kept walking the whole night…
I'm thirsty - and hungry…
God damned!
Maybe I can find some food inside there.
It looks deserted...
Why am I feeling so watched?
I hope they lost my track!
A blanked...
...might be useful for the night.
I still can't believe I lost everything I was given…
What do we have here?
Some gloves. They might be useful as well.
Damn it, too large!
I really need something to drink right now! I can feel how I'm getting dizzy…
Matches!
Yes, it's full!
I have an idea! If I can manage to make a fire, I can boil some rainwater.
It worked!
Now I have at least some water for the next day. But...
...unfortunately, I still did not find any food…
This seems to be the best place here for some rest.
I'll hide here for the night… and then I'll have to see…
How am I supposed to travel to the factory now? I don't even know where I am…
That's… that's the North Star! I can't believe it! Maybe I can still make it!
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Z-Band - I Got A Mission - OFFICIAL VIDEO - Duration: 3:18.
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Decluttering your workshop (part 2 glue guns and glassware) - Duration: 9:54.
Here I am back for stage two of my workshop decluttering and I'm ready to
tackle my glassware area so again need to tuck the curtains out of the way so
here I've got glass down here don't he who sits just off screen I've got a
little filing cabinet full of craft supplies which I'll need to go through
and then some shelves up at the back here so I'm going to tackle what's
around the back here first of all so go sticks they need to be put with some
other glue sticks and again if you saw my first tidy up I've been collecting
these lacy doilies and turning them into scarves and I must have so many of them
now that I'm not going to make them into scarves anymore so I shall donate those
back to the charity shop so they can go in my charity shop pile down here so I
should say I've got three piles going one for the charity shop and giveaways
one is dis total rubbish which I'm not going to compost if it's dried flower
materials or recycle or throw in the bin and then the other stuff will be what I
will put back and make more efficient use of the shelves I've got so here I'm
really heavy floristry wise I've got a new place to muffle oyster wise now so I
want to keep them all together so actually I'm going to put that on one
side to put away later on and then another whole stack of Oh blue six which
I've just opened at the wrong end so I need to put all those back and keep them
together so I know where to find this next time
and actually what I might do they've got that big hole I've got this plastic jug
and me just draw them in there for the moment and then a race dish I've quite
often use this when I do my adult education class it's really nice when
you're doing flour agents to lift them off the table a little bit so that's a
really handy dish and in here I've got a bag full of glue guns so the
glue guns and the glue sticks need to be kept together so I shall put those back
in a moment and on the top shelf I've got a little cup of box which I
will be using as a prop box for my photographs in fact as I empty that out
I've only got one sheet of wrapping paper you see use rattling papers the
background to my photographs so I'm like to actually put that in why wrapping
paper pile and then got the boxes on the psychs I'm sure I can feel that with
something else as well and then two plates if you followed my vlogmas for
Christmas 12 days of Christmas I bought these plates to do some styling with and
they only cost me one pound fifty for the pair and I don't need them anymore
so I think I will give those back to the charity shop and then down here I've got
a glass jug all my glassware is just a bit dusty and ideally needs cleaning out
but all I want tend to do because I'm working in the workshop space everything
is washed as soon as I finished using with it but I tend to wash it again
and when I use it again because it does get a bit dusty on the show so I'll keep
that to one side and then two jars here there's more coffee jar I think now I'm
doing a workshop later on this month using jam jars to arrange flowers in so
I'm going to put that in my jam jar pile this work this glass jar here is
actually in old kiln Rajasa it's quite nice to use so I should be saving that
I went through a phase of by all sorts of glassware from the charity shop and I
don't think I've ever really used this one and I'm going to send that back to
the charity shop and a wine carafe which I'm going to keep because we used to use
that at home and it just needs a good wash I can't not quite get rid of that
yet and an old stopper which I think must have come from my mum
I'm going to hold on to that for a while and then also I had this thing for
collecting these cake stands and again sort of supplies for classes and these
days I tend to do a lot of classes where the ladies bring their a material so I
don't need to supply everything for them I am going to keep this one because I
like the little up stand here but this one was always really difficult to use
it's more fluted so I think I'll donate that back to the charity shop and I got
a matching pair think those look like matching pair so I might keep the two
you never know I could have a one arrangement to either end of the table
and then this stand lovely sort of rise of you something my screaming but
actually it's too flat and when you put the flower foam in here it doesn't sit
so well so I'm going to get rid of that one as well I can't believe I'm getting
rid of these I searched high and low for them and now here I am just getting rid
of them crunched up bit of chicken wire which is really handy when you are
arranging in visors because you can put it down into your bars and arrange your
flowers through that so I will keep that
and then a plastic glass I thought these might have been a good idea for a class
and never really use them so I shall donate that to search and shop get rid
of all those bits of green is falling out there and then back at the top here
I've got all my supplies of Oasis shapes which I've wedged in so I'm keeping all
of those it's all those kind of things back at the side and I have a tray as
well it's originally when I first of my classes my workshops I've had a vintage
tea party theme to them and quite like that tray but what I find now though I
don't use the tray it's quite handy putting on the shelf
because anything small and rest on the tray without falling down there the
holes in the breads and then there is I quite like this fast it's it's wider at
the bottom than this one so it's more practical to use and looking at it I
think this is the vars that I stood my flies and when I
preserve them with glycerin so you have to check back and look for that video
I'm reasonably sure I eventually transferred my glycerin into this floors
because it's a better shape the glycerin stood up quite high and then the flowers
could spill out some holding onto that one and at the bottom here a little
glass dish I've never used that again like the idea in the charity shop but
wasn't for me and basket I think that we originally would have been filled with
like a planted arrangement and again I've not used that and although I've got
a couple of truffles you've seen the earlier video I've got a couple of
trough farces I think I will charity shop that one pass that on to make some
space for myself and also gosh how dusty is that again I just have a thing for it
these verses and they only cost me a couple of pounds each it's almost like a
fruit bowl so I shall be getting rid of that one as
well and what to have me around I'll sweep more glassware with lots of bits
and pieces in it a cold fish bowl okay that's quite handy it's sort of quite a
classic shape particularly nice for arranging tulips in when you bend them
around so I think I'll keep hold of that one and then a much deeper glass glass
now this look great filled with sticks and flowers arranged
through it but it's quite large not quite sure about that
and then this trough here really big it's almost looks like a casserole dish
but it was again I went to a workshop and we supply with these so I think I
might get rid of that big one and keep the two smaller ones I think they'll be
a bit more practical down like that and I can see white at the bottom I think
I've got another so a combination of a cylinder of ours and a goldfish bowl as
well so I shall put those all back in my cupboard and bring up some space and as
I do trying to sort of consolidate everything so it packs down really
neatly in the hope that when I've done a workshop I will just have some what I
can put my bag and empty it back in and hopefully the whole workshop will be
tired yeah so fingers crossed so I'd love to hear how you're getting on with
your decluttering so do drop me a comment below and if you enjoyed the
video give it a thumbs up and don't forget to subscribe if you're interested
in hearing lots of flower arranging hints or tips and bits of chat I'll see
you again another time
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Milla Jasmine: elle tacle Nadège Lacroix et se fait lyncher en retour ! - Duration: 2:13.
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Queer women artists in the Harlem Renaissance | #LGBTHM - Duration: 13:35.
In honour of LGBT History Month in the UK I'd like to talk about some amazing
queer Harlem Renaissance artists. I've just written an essay on some of these
people and I found it so fascinating, so I really wanted to talk about it.
Also, even within the progressiveness of queer studies, women, and particularly women of
colour, tend to be forgotten, so today I'd like to focus on particularly queer
female artists. Therefore I am by no means going to be covering everything;
as the renowned Harlem scholar Henry Louis Gates once said, "the Harlem Renaissance
was surely as gay as it was black" so there is a lot out there. This is
designed to just give you a bit of a flavour of some of the experimental and
huge creative output of the Harlem Renaissance. So you might be sitting
there going, hang on Izzy, what is the Harlem
Renaissance?! Well it was a period in the 20s and 30s in Harlem in New York where
black artists started creating all sorts of experimental art, particularly
literature, and they also experienced a surge in popularity from both black and
white audiences. In my previous video on my favourite black writers I actually
named two Harlem artists, Jean Toomer and George Schuyler. Now I don't have time to go
into this fully but before I get into the literature it's worthwhile
understanding the two major artistic ideologies during this time.
One was known as uplift culture and was spearheaded by W.E.B. Du Bois. This was the
idea that art should be propaganda for racial issues.
It was idealistic and the idea was that african-american art should always be political.
The opposing view was supported by Langston Hughes. rather than
idolising the African American, this school of thought wanted to have a
gritty complexity to the depictions of black life, regardless if it showed them
as depraved. And it is worth noting as well that there was a lot of tension
between these two philosophies. The other bit of context that you need to know is
the law, and to summarise - being queer was just very much not allowed.
Homosexuality between men was illegal according to sodomy laws, and
laws about promiscuity and indecency could be used against lesbians.
Also, transvestitism was illegal and it was possible to be arrested on the street
for it. However, Harlem was a hub of experimentation and relative freedom. It
was infamous for its prohibited drinking, thriving nightlife and it was considered
a safe zone compared to lower Manhattan because sexuality was less
rigidly policed. There were huge drag balls at Hamilton Lodge, there were
buffet flats where you could pay to watch people have sex, and the were rent parties
with uncensored theatrical performances. Basically, this really was a
place for artistic, gender, and sexual experimentation. That said,
even in Harlem there were still fines and prison sentences for disorderly
conduct, so even though it was a lot safer, the threat of the law was still
always there. 'Strange Brother' by Blair Niles is a really good book for
understanding the sort of weirdly experimental yet at the same time
constricted atmosphere in Harlem at this time. One of the two main characters is a
gay man, and the book also depicts how people who were sexual or gender
"deviants" were treated by the law. Given that homosexuality was still illegal
when this book was written, it is remarkable how open it is about talking
about philosophies of gender and sexuality and in portraying Mark as a
normal, functioning, intelligent man just with a slight difference. For this time
that really was quite revolutionary. That said, if you do want to check this book
out and read it, I would give a warning for a lot of internalised homophobia.
In 'Strange Brother', a major catalyst for the characters' encounters with their
sexuality is the Harlem blues. Homosexuality was far from being a
secret in the blues bars of Harlem. If you've been wondering what this song has
been: *solo piano blues plays* This is James P Johnson's recording of 'The Dream'
It was also known as The Bull-dyker's Dream, Bull-Dagger's Dream, The Diggah's Dream;
basically it was a really popular tune played by a lot of artists and according
to Willie "the lion" Smith, was an anthem dedicated to lesbians. It might even be
where the term "Dyke" comes from. Songs about lesbians were not uncommon.
George Hanna's 'Boy in the Boat' is basically one long innuendo for oral sex,
and includes the line *Sings: sent them over there, those Germans to hunt. That the women at home can try all the new stunts*.
And then there's Memphis Willie B's 'Bad Girl Blues' in which he complains *Sings: Women loving each other, and they don't thinking about no men*
Basically, men complaining about lesbians not having sex with them... nothing changes.
But that is not to say that women didn't write their own songs. Bessie Smith was quite
well known for having relations with both men and women and Ma Rainey was
pretty damn notorious for being a lesbian. In fact, in 1925 Bessie Smith and
Ma Rainey were found naked with a couple of other women in their home and Ma Rainey
was arrested for hosting an indecent party. But did that stop her? oh hell no
In 1928 she recorded 'Prove it on Me Blues' in which she sings: *they say I do it, ain't nobody caught me, sure got to prove it on me*
I absolutely adore this song so much I mean check out how relatable this line
is it's a testament to the remarkably subversive culture of Harlan that Marv
aney released this song in 1928 which is the same year that Radcliffe halls the
Well of loneliness was judged to be obscene just for a couple of really
brief references to lesbian sex Morini wasn't the only out lesbian in
Harlem GLaDOS Bentley became a legend for her
raucous sexualized parodies of popular songs and how incredible blues voice she
wore men's clothes was well known for her masculine features and even changed
her name to Bobby Minton so that she could get married to a woman sadly we
don't have many recordings of her songs but she has been mythologized and
described in a lot of literature at the time including strange brother and also
in texts by Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten
however in 1952 she wrote an article for Ebony called I am a woman again in this
she describes her depraved inverted past and how she is now happily married to a
man thanks to female hormone treatments this is a really odd article for various
reasons it's almost a character of womanhood it shows her you know making
dinner for her husband doing the dishes for a husband picking out jewelry for
her husband and then it never quite commits to saying that homosexuality is
an abnormality it just says what society calls normal either way this article
must be taken with a pinch of salt because she wrote it during the McCarthy
era so it's very likely that she felt the need to publish it to repair her
reputation but it wasn't just the daring and promiscuous blues singers who were
openly queer there was lots of literature at the time as well I've
already mentioned strange brother and another famously daring depiction of
bisexuality in polyamory is Richard Bruce Nugent's smoke lilies and Jade
which was a short story published in the magazine fire but to return to queer
women quite a few short story fictions had a queer subtext to them one example
is nella last passing which is about two black women
who can pass for white and their different approaches to the privileges
this gives them on the surface it doesn't seem to have much to do with
queerness but certainly in the relationship between the two women could
raise a few eyebrows but furthermore parallels were often drawn between race
and queerness in terms of passing and how you can secretly integrate into a
society in which you don't quite belong the story addresses themes of a fluid
identity that on the surface pertains to racial issues but can also definitely be
read with a queer reading but the person we mainly want to talk about is Angelina
weld grim que not to be confused with the white abolitionist Angelina Graham k
world who was her aunt grim k wrote plays short fiction and poetry and he
was best known for her treatment of domestic race issues for example her
acclaimed play Rachel explored the problems of motherhood when raising a
black child in a racist world but despite often looking at themes of
motherhood grim K was undoubtedly gay in a letter that she wrote to Mamie Bell in
1896 she asked her to be her wife saying Oh
Mamie if you only knew how my heart beats when I think of you and it yearns
and pants to gaze if only for one second upon your lovely face signed your
passionate lover green-keyes poetry is characterized by a hushed sadness
longing and frustration because she has a had a lot of difficulties with being
open about her lesbianism especially because of the criticisms from her
father therefore not much of grim k's queer poetry is published however in
some of the ones that she did publish there are a sort of subtle code for
example in her acclaimed poem el beso published in 1909 she simply elides the
femininity of the speaker and the subject Twilight and you quiet the Stars
snare of the shine of your teeth your provocative laughter the gloom of your
hair lure of you eye and lip yearning yearning langa surrender
your mouth and madness madness tremulous breathless flaming the space of a sigh
then awakening remembrance pain regret your sobbing and again quiet the Stars
Twilight and you in other poems she doesn't cover up the female persona but
instead codes the queer desire this is seen in a Mona Lisa which is undoubtedly
addressed to a woman but her wish to fall into the woman's eyes and sink down
and down and down and deeply drown carefully implies something more than
just a platonic friendship and or admiration
her unpublished poetry is unsurprisingly even bolder in my shrine the speaker
adopts a male persona and uses male poetic conventions in order to
legitimize her desire for another woman and then finally I'm going to leave you
from with an excerpt from her unpublished poem Rosabelle which
perfectly illustrates her wish to express her desire but her fear to do so
leaves that whisper whisper ever listen listen prey birds that twitter twitter
softly do not say mean a wins that breathe about upon her lines I do not
dare whisper Twitter breathe unto her that I find her fair tell her white gold
red my love is and for her for her the Harlem Renaissance drew to a sort of
close in the 1940s when white audiences lost interest in the novelty of African
art but the culture has certainly left its legacy the queer culture of drag
balls and coded language in songs and literature as still go on to this day
contemporary gay blues singers such as gay attackable ola gwen avery and faith
nolan have all drawn directly from the songs and identity of Bessie Smith
mulraney and Gladys Bentley quim K and other queer women's poetry wasn't
published very often so it's hard to say that
there was a direct influence but certainly there was a remarkable
similarity to the themes and styles of their poetry to more modern poets such
as Audrey Lorde and Adrienne Rich so that is everything I wanted to talk
about today in the description below I have left a playlist of all the songs
that I mentioned and some others that you can check out and I'm also going to
give lots of details about various books and websites you can look at for more
information whether or not you've come across these people before I would love
to hear what you think it's amazing how much was produced during this time and
how experimental and interesting it all is so yeah let me find out what you find
what you like what you find interesting thank you very much for watching and
good bye
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Alessia Marcuzzi furiosa contro Barbara D'Urso? Lo sfogo va in onda - Duration: 3:39.
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GTA 5 Online Hardest Target Crazy PvP Grand Theft Auto 5 - Duration: 14:16.
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Les Marseillais en Australie: Jeremy déjà critiqué à cause de sa lourdeur et son côté dragueur ! - Duration: 3:47.
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Panasonic Lumix TZ200 - the new top model in its enormously popular travel-zoom series - MEGAPIXEL - Duration: 3:28.
Panasonic's Lumix TZ200, or ZS200 as it's known in North America, is the new top model
in its enormously popular travel-zoom series.
Announced in February 2018 it comes two years after the Lumix TZ100 / ZS100, and like that
model packs a relatively large 1in / 20
Megapixel sensor into a compact body with a built-in viewfinder and decent zoom.
But where the earlier TZ100 / ZS100 featured a 10x
/ 25-250mm equivalent range, the new TZ200 / ZS200 extends it to a 15x / 24-360mm equivalent
range while maintaining much the same
pocketable dimensions.
Surprisingly in the two years since the TZ100 / ZS100 was released, no other manufacturer
has attempted to compete with it on lens
range.
Sure there are plenty of compacts with longer zooms, but they have much smaller sensors.
Meanwhile the premium compacts with
larger 1in sensors have generally stuck with shorter zoom ranges typically of less than
four times.
The price to pay for the longer
zoom is a slower focal ratio: f3.3-6.4 on the new TZ200 / ZS200, making it optically
dimmer than its predecessor's f2.8-5.9, both of
which are already way behind the typical f1.8-2.8 of their rivals with shorter zooms.
This in turn means a reliance on higher ISOs
to maintain hand-holdable or motion-stopping shutter speeds, especially when zoomed to
the longer-end of the range, but if you want
a big sensor, a long zoom and a bright aperture, you'll need a much larger and heavier camera
like Sony's RX10 IV or Panasonic's
FZ2000.
Like its predecessor, the TZ200 / ZS200 is fairly unique amongst its peers to include
a built-in electronic viewfinder and unlike
Sony's RX100 series, there's no need to pop it up either.
The image remains small in the viewfinder and continues to employ a
field-sequential panel that's not as solid as an OLED for me, but Panasonic's at least
boosted the resolution.
The screen's sadly
still fixed in place, thereby lacking the tilt of most Sony and Canon premium compacts,
but at least it remains touch-sensitive.
The
TZ200 / ZS200 also keeps the 4k UHD video of its predecessor, but now offers 1080 at
up to 120p for slow motion, as well as improved
focusing (still contrast-based) and Bluetooth to complement the existing Wifi.
The literally big news though remains the 15x zoom
range, the longest for a 1in compact with a pocket body.
Expect the TZ200 / ZS200 in March for $800 USD / 729 GBP.
-------------------------------------------
SegMate Messenger Marketi...
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A 2012(F )-AndroidTHE KING OF FIGHTERS-Android games -Episode#3[Android Tutor PRO] - Duration: 4:37.
gaming
-------------------------------------------
Panasonic Lumix TZ200 - the new top model in its enormously popular travel-zoom series - MEGAPIXEL - Duration: 3:28.
Panasonic's Lumix TZ200, or ZS200 as it's known in North America, is the new top model
in its enormously popular travel-zoom series.
Announced in February 2018 it comes two years after the Lumix TZ100 / ZS100, and like that
model packs a relatively large 1in / 20
Megapixel sensor into a compact body with a built-in viewfinder and decent zoom.
But where the earlier TZ100 / ZS100 featured a 10x
/ 25-250mm equivalent range, the new TZ200 / ZS200 extends it to a 15x / 24-360mm equivalent
range while maintaining much the same
pocketable dimensions.
Surprisingly in the two years since the TZ100 / ZS100 was released, no other manufacturer
has attempted to compete with it on lens
range.
Sure there are plenty of compacts with longer zooms, but they have much smaller sensors.
Meanwhile the premium compacts with
larger 1in sensors have generally stuck with shorter zoom ranges typically of less than
four times.
The price to pay for the longer
zoom is a slower focal ratio: f3.3-6.4 on the new TZ200 / ZS200, making it optically
dimmer than its predecessor's f2.8-5.9, both of
which are already way behind the typical f1.8-2.8 of their rivals with shorter zooms.
This in turn means a reliance on higher ISOs
to maintain hand-holdable or motion-stopping shutter speeds, especially when zoomed to
the longer-end of the range, but if you want
a big sensor, a long zoom and a bright aperture, you'll need a much larger and heavier camera
like Sony's RX10 IV or Panasonic's
FZ2000.
Like its predecessor, the TZ200 / ZS200 is fairly unique amongst its peers to include
a built-in electronic viewfinder and unlike
Sony's RX100 series, there's no need to pop it up either.
The image remains small in the viewfinder and continues to employ a
field-sequential panel that's not as solid as an OLED for me, but Panasonic's at least
boosted the resolution.
The screen's sadly
still fixed in place, thereby lacking the tilt of most Sony and Canon premium compacts,
but at least it remains touch-sensitive.
The
TZ200 / ZS200 also keeps the 4k UHD video of its predecessor, but now offers 1080 at
up to 120p for slow motion, as well as improved
focusing (still contrast-based) and Bluetooth to complement the existing Wifi.
The literally big news though remains the 15x zoom
range, the longest for a 1in compact with a pocket body.
Expect the TZ200 / ZS200 in March for $800 USD / 729 GBP.
-------------------------------------------
How to Build House. House Construction. House Construction Step by Step. Build House Cheap ♦DIY CAM♦ - Duration: 3:20.
Hello, friends. Now we are at our facility in the village of Dyadlits,
Lomonosov district in the cottage village The Baltic Sloboda.
Now I'll tell you how to equip the cabins overall dimensions of 4 by 2 meters for
building a house that was cozy and inexpensive this video
will be useful both for customers and for builders come with me
well-established way of life is a guarantee of health and good performance of the builder that
significantly affects the quality and speed of work we have sought
complete the cooking as if they were going to live in it 100
For this, four zone one is the locker room
The second zone is for products and for cooking on 1 shelf can be
put tile and kettle for 2 shelves
We put the dishes on the third These areas are small enough but not
less they are very important in everyday life The third zone is 3 beds
we made of 25 boards with a cross section of 25 special
the bottom 2 place we located about at the height of the knees in our case this is
is 45 centimeters from the floor The upper tier should be placed on such a
height so that the seated person does not fight against
his head next to the upper bedroom place for convenience we arranged here
such a small pause for storage tablets and phones and so on important
next to her place an outlet for chargers
Well, the last important place is this area for We placed her food in such a
way that three people can follow it calmly fabel an important point is
the location of the retaining racks in our We did not break the wall
began to perform them directly in this way we had the opportunity to clean this place
kamik at any time can be advanced had dinner
pushed back and it does not interfere passes such small premises and yes
in any room sharp angles need to be cut so as not to
get injured
Well friends to arrange this cabins
we spent 3 thousand rubles on my the look was cozy and comfortable on
today we all have questions in subscribe to our channel
and until new meetings
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