Monday, March 26, 2018

Youtube daily report Mar 26 2018

Hello, and welcome to our new series—Crash Course: History of Science.

My name is Hank Green, and I've wanted to produce this course for years.

I'm obsessed with how people throughout the ages have uncovered truths about the universe

and converted these into a wealth of technological wonders.

This process has decreased the suffering of millions of humans—even as it's sparked

entirely new problems.

Regardless of the outcomes of scientific inquiry, the process itself is fascinating.

The world you inhabit today is full of gadgets that once belonged to science fiction.

We can model what the earth looked like millions of years ago, or zoom in and observe the atoms

that make up our own bodies.

We are going to tell that inspiring story: we'll be thinking about thinking with Aristotle,

digging canals in Song Dynasty China,

listening to robot musicians in medieval Turkey,

fighting an electrical war in New York City,

and discovering the shape of DNA in Cold War England.

But the history of science is not only a story of humanity's collective movement from ignorance

to knowledge, for two different reasons.

First, as much as scientists today may not like to admit it, we are still pretty ignorant…

And we don't agree on what it would mean to reach the ultimate Truth, capital T.

Take a big question that we've been asking for a long time like "what is stuff":

While modern physicists will tell you that

stuff is made of atoms, and atoms are made of quarks and leptons, we still don't know

why quarks exist.

Or why there appears to be far more matter in the universe than we can account for.

Even something as basic as "stuff" needs a lot more sciencing!

Second, and more importantly for historians, "science" isn't a stable or single idea.

That's why, in this episode, we're going to be thinking about some ways to answer a deceptively

simple question:

what is the history of science the history of?

[intro music plays]

Today, "science" can mean both our body of knowledge about the world as well as the

methods we use to create that knowledge, or how we know the stuff that we know.

Within that "how," there are two main practices—things that we do—that systematically

generate knowledge:

One: observe some specific aspect of the world.

For example, Darwin spent decades obsessively observing the subtle variations in different

kinds of barnacles, orchids, turtles, birds, and other living things.

This led him to theorize how they had changed over time.

My dude loved barnacles!

Two: conduct an experiment to answer some question about the world.

Did Galileo drop two metal balls of different masses from the Leaning Tower of Pisa, to

show that they fall at the same rate and disprove Aristotle's theory of gravity?

Probably not.

But Dutch thinkers Simon Stevin and Jan Cornets de Groot did conduct that experiment soon after.

Today, we have much bigger "towers" for testing theories in physics: the Large Hadron

Collider is seventeen miles long!

Finally, when I said systematically, I meant that there are rules about observing or experimenting—rules

that anyone can follow.

That notion of anyone being able to be a scientist is super important.

In fact, a lot of contemporary scientists have three Latin words tattooed on their arms:

"NULLIUS IN VERBA"—"on no one's word…"

Let's explore this phrase because it's important.

In this series, The Thoughtbubble is going to bring to life different wonders from the

history of science.

Today, our wonder is pretty abstract: the wonder of the reproducible experiment.

"NULLIUS IN VERBA" is the motto of the Royal Society.

This group of knowledge-makers was founded in 1660 as a "College for the Promoting

of Physico-Mathematical Experimental Learning" and re-founded in 1663 as "the Royal Society

of London for the Improvement of Natural Knowledge."

And it's still around today!

The Society was started as a place to debate new ideas about nature.

Its members demonstrated experiments in front of each other—"witnessing" the proofs

behind their theories.

They wrote up these theories in the Society's Philosophical Transactions, one of the world's

oldest peer-reviewed scientific journals.

Influenced by Francis Bacon's ideas, which would eventually become associated with the

"scientific method," the founding members of the Royal Society chose a motto with an

unambiguous meaning:

don't believe something just because someone tells you it's true.

Test out each new hypothesis, or educated guess, yourself.

In other words: your individual proof of how some natural phenomenon works should be something

that anyone can reproduce.

This idea had an enormous impact on the history of science.

Later members of the Royal Society included stars such as Ike Newton, Ben Franklin, Mike

Faraday, Chuck Darwin, and even Big Al Einstein, who was about as British as sauerkraut.

In fact—plot twist!—the early scientists who adopted the creed "NULLIUS IN VERBA"

were not actually "scientists."

They were well-off alchemists and medical doctors,

and they called themselves Natural Philosophers.

Or, "People who loved truths concerning the world around them."

Natural philosophy in seventeenth-century England was sort of like the contemporary

natural sciences mashed up with medicine, mathematics, some philosophy–philosophy,

and a whiff of religion.

The word "scientist" was only coined recently, in historical terms, in the 1830s, and caught

on around 1840.

It was made up by an English scientist named William Whewell who was also a historian of

science and a priest.

So if we only cared about the history of people called "scientists," our job would be

easy: there aren't any until around 1840!

And most people called scientists, or natural philosophers, looked suspiciously similar

to one another.

Take the Royal Society: its members have been, until recently, almost exclusively rich English

men.

Even though their ranks have included many incredibly clever scientists, they haven't

represented anything like all knowledge makers.

The sixty-second President of the Royal Society, biophysicist Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, is

the group's first non-white leader.

And there has never been a female President.

But the history of systematically knowing stuff goes back much further than the Royal

Society and includes more types of people than English blokes.

Thus "science" is a historical and social concept—not one that's existed forever,

in the same way for all people.

Because the history of science includes many systems of understanding the world, we have

to consider these systems on their own terms.

It may seem simpler to focus on the "winners" of history.

But hearing only the big Euroamerican names—Plato, Einstein—doesn't teach us as much about

our global system of science today.

Taking the time to highlight different knowledge worlds will help us see our own as relatively

recent, not entirely unified, and evolving.

For example, we'll learn about the Greco-Latin-Jewish-Arabic medicine of the medieval Mediterranean world,

millennia of ayurvedic knowledge across the

Subcontinent, traditional Chinese medicine, and Incan "talking knots" and engineering—just

to name a few.

Each of these systems has its own social norms about what count as valid ways to make and

share knowledge.

We'll look at modern scientific norms in a later episode.

And each of these can help us see the "otherness" of these past or different cultures as not

so other, after all.

We can see natural philosophers and other proto-scientists as smart people making sense

of their world, not as "bad" scientists.

They understood the world around them in the smartest way they could.

For example, according to medieval Mediterranean medicine, the organ in my head was for venting

waste heat, not thinking.

People in the past weren't stupid: they knew that if your head was chopped off, that

was curtains for you.

They just weren't sure what all this weird gray stuff did.

Even today—though we can see a neuron fire in high-resolution—we struggle to understand

what really goes on when it fires, that is, the role a single neuron plays in thinking…

much less answer the question, what is consciousness.

The history of science really gets even juicier when incremental, nagging questions about

the natural world add up and cause a scientific discipline, or an entire society, to change

in a "revolutionary" way.

Later in the series, we'll look at moments of revolution within the sciences alongside

philosophers such as Thomas Kuhn and Michel Foucault, who... did not always agree.

They show that science isn't only historical and social, but constructs entire worlds of

knowledge in which we all find ourselves trapped.

But don't worry about that just yet.

By learning the history of science, we will automatically start to think about our own

knowledge world as historical—not finished, not capital-E enlightened.

Around the world, humans are still actively working to understand our universe… but

they don't all agree on how to do it.

We may be able to make more accurate models of natural phenomena… but we may never find

the ultimate answers we seek.

At its limit, the history of science touches on the study of religion: the diverse and

changing nature of the never-ending human search for Truth, capital T.

Our path through past knowledge worlds is going to be a beautiful and powerful one.

There are many, many marvelous insights to celebrate.

To help us keep our footing as we jump across centuries and continents, we're going to

keep our eyes on five big questions.

Questions that, to this day, we do not have complete answers to.

First: what is stuff?

From atoms to dark matter to spacetime: what are things made of?

"Things," by the way, includes air, fire, and outer space:

if you think I'm going to sit here and not celebrate the death of phlogiston with you,

you're sorely mistaken!

Number two: what is Life?

What's the simplest way to define living things?

Are viruses alive?

Is the earth alive?

Where did life come from?

Where did current organisms come from?

How do we understand their interactions with each other and their world?

Three: where are we?

What is this place, the earth?

What is its place in the cosmos?

Is this the only universe?

Four: when are we?

More questions of scale: how long have we been around?

What about living things?

What about the whole universe?

What came before that?

And five: how can we agree on what we know?

And how can I convince more people that the stuff I know is accurate?

For example, how can I show anti-vaccers that vaccines are necessary!?

Regarding technology, how should we talk about what to do what our knowledge?

All of these questions have been considered by people as far back as records exist.

They also remain active areas of study today.

But the last theme is so important that it gets its the final section.

Humans have always tried to describe the world, for lots of reasons: in part because it's

fascinating ("magnets—how do they work!?"), and in part to control it.

Knowledge, as they told us in grade school, really is power!

The power that knowing stuff gives the knower is exactly why we should study the history

of science.

Thus one goal of this course is to highlight how the values (beliefs about right and wrong) and ethics (acceptable behaviors)

of scientists and engineers shape our world.

And how, conversely, sciences and technologies are shaped by the societies that produce them.

We have a responsibility as citizens to understand

and to act accordingly.

Our world today looks radically dissimilar to that of three hundred years ago.

To quote Andy Weir, we've "scienced" the heck out of it.

We learned about stuff, made new technologies, and are currently scrambling to learn new

stuff to solve the problems that our old technologies created.

Facing an utterly unprecedented total ecological catastrophe, we may need to "science"

it even more, in one way or another.

We'll talk more about this in future episodes.

Learning the history of science can help shine a light on this dark future.

Next time—pack your spanakopita: we're heading to ancient Greece to invent natural

philosophy with the Presocratics.

Until then, this has been—"on no one's word"—Crash Course: History of Science!

Crash Course History of Science is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney Studio in Missoula,

MT and It's made with the help of all of these nice people.

And our animation team is Thought Cafe.

Crash Course is a Complexly production.

If you want to keep imagining the world complexly with us, check out some of our other channels

like Sexplanations, How To Adult, and Healthcare Triage.

If you'd like to keep Crash Course free for everyone, forever, you can support the series

at Patreon, a crowdfunding platform that allows you to support the content you love.

Thank you to all of our patrons for making Crash Course possible with their continued support.

For more infomation >> Intro to History of Science: Crash Course History of Science #1 - Duration: 12:20.

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Red flag conditions for a second day at Baldwin beaches - Duration: 2:55.

For more infomation >> Red flag conditions for a second day at Baldwin beaches - Duration: 2:55.

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El primer plan de Alejandra Rubio, la hija de Terelu, tras cumplir la mayoría de edad - Duration: 3:23.

For more infomation >> El primer plan de Alejandra Rubio, la hija de Terelu, tras cumplir la mayoría de edad - Duration: 3:23.

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Psalmen 103 - Duration: 2:18.

For more infomation >> Psalmen 103 - Duration: 2:18.

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FFXIV Monk Quest Level 63 (Patch 4.0) - Duration: 16:33.

and we're back for another episode in this episode we're going to be doing the

level 63 monk quest and as always all over me free so I hit level 63 by every

day doing the roulette and some pvp and stuff like that because I can't progress

through the main story because it's still broken like three days later but

well let's not think about that let's just talk to with our gal who's in

revenant stole yeah 21-7 so let's see what he has to say so

the quest is called return of the monk so indecision is rippling on wind our

girls face so are you ready to depart sister yep so good the professor has

already left he makes for a village called a lagana

there he will take the measure of the land

I would strike out soon as well but no matter troubles me still decreed for a

new fist of ragga we all do respect master but at this rate we'll never get

to Gharib Anya you're right sometimes the answer cannot be forced my hat it

will come to me on the road very well that's a way on route I would make a

stop the place called schism once what's trains there in revisiting the past we

may better walk the future okay I haven't actually got a clue where these

places are so okay so it's right there so let's go

so I don't it seems to be the same sort of distance walking whether you're are

you know going into the fringes going into rogues reached so let's just do it

now reflecting on the expansion so far not being up a lot of people have not

been able to progress through a level 60 quest called

cold steel or and it's already got a bunch of nicknames like robe on extreme

or robe on clicking game and so on and it's basically made early access very

very frustrating for people to play the game I personally have seen several

members of my free company now transfer away from this server and I can't leave

because I have my FC here I've got two houses here I can't just up and leave so

you know because of the technical issues and I said I hate technical issues in

gaming you know I can't just enjoy the game as it was meant to be played which

has really put a dent into the future of my time in fourteen of course I won't

stick around as long as I can I know they'll fix it eventually but the longer

they take to fix it the more damage is being done to the game and it might get

to a point of the thing you know unrepairable or in some cases for some

people it already is unrepairable so I think some people have already quit so

yeah because when we play games we just want to log in and play we don't want

technical issues we don't want any you know to be reminded of failure because

why a lot of times gaming can be the greatest form of escapism let's say and

you just don't want to be reminded of failure so but we'll see we'll see how

it goes hopefully things will be okay anyway so

let's talk to it with our go

so as a child I came to this place we face fearsome themes that we might open

our chakra in returning here I hope there would be a spark inspiration for a

new Creed but it is not so simple hmm the fist once taught that through

the pursuit of strength one can approach the sublimity of raga a teaching our

four bears followed in two that I'm doing and put your strength they sought

the power of rule and by that power they were destroyed our Creed must rise above

that dark past or it cannot light the way on to the future

nay we must find a new path well there's nothing like a journey for finding past

let's keep moving Master something will come to mind before you know it so so I

pray this answer so I pray but yes let's continue on to the peaks east to the

village of Alec Ghana there professor Eric awaits us okay so I hope they don't

ask me to go any further than that because I don't think I've even unlocked

my areas other than that anyway let's go tell the Ghana

thankfully that's one area I actually have unlocked so this can be the problem

if you don't so you see this is the story quest I stopped that so if they

don't fix these sort of issues and I won't even be able to do class quests

which is terrible anyway let's talk them hopefully this will be the last stop

so a lagana when I returned here I remember the day of the temple fist was

raised on that day I was training like all the days before and without warning

we were attacked we all of us fought bravely even little ones like me

desperate to protect our temple our home but it was all in vain one after the

other we felt old awhile the temple burned some few of us managed to flee me

with my closest brother Audrey we stumbled onto the into this village

smoke bellowing behind us but when I looked

around Audrey was not there I never saw him again

so forgive me now it's not the time for sorrowful recollection come let us look

for the professor

go on then join the bloody resistance add to the pile of courses that's the

only difference you're gonna make you're wrong I'm gonna make a real difference

I'm going to train hard and honor Olga and he'll grant me the power the power

couldn't save the temple our home what makes you think is going to save us now

don't be a fool no matter how strong you become you'd still be the one against

the might of the Empire say what you will but my mind's made up

I'm not letting the bastard Imperials take any more from us you just you just

take care of yourself you hear

so it's always crushed a submission the fire in their hearts distinguished so we

can the hope without within such people that must be the purpose of the new fist

so praise be I have it or new Crees to those who have had their home stolen

their loved ones taken nor is more disaster sorry Darius

oh sorry death Souris then strength the strength to protect that which they hold

dear so well well I see you've found your answer and rather more quickly than

I had expected for someone who'd sooner strike rather than think with his head

oh sorry I've got the voice well when I tell you that yeah more quickly than I

had expected of someone who'd rather they sent a strike then think with it

head you know me you know me you know I mean I'm Eric I'm a douchebag with the

other sisters we may consider the question of place I would have to say

however that the old temple grounds are currently occupied by the visitors and

there is no to indicate that they will vacate anytime saying you know man you

know I mean the ones whole symbolic meaning a fitting stage for reviving the

fist ultimately the physical location matters not for our mission lies in the

spiritual realm within people's hearts there we rekindle the faith and all may

know the solace of worship that they say is their spirit now then I shall report

on how most and in the lagoon the Jew first faithful remain even accounting

for those who practice in Syria nor has there been any trace of the sect of

Shadows not since their misguided leader example save for those who came over to

the light it is safe to assume that his ambitions died with him you know I mean

we have a long road ahead that much is plain but we will see our journey

through one step at a time and the first that begins here and now great so what

do we do exactly we hold a demonstration give the people tangible proof proof

that the fist is returned miss we first impressions last and you are the first

among us as such I would entrust this task to you am I gonna have to do like

this random emotes and fun of the people you may leave it to me to my doctor

beggars I hope I up a virtuous dog for the coming spectacle you know mean by

soda Center Otaka take the wooden dummy set it up on the village outskirts and

if we limber up and tell me when you're ready okay am I gonna have to

demonstrate my master skills these arms are very free they're very different to

anyway nominee came for fewer than I had hoped but no less of a show will we give

them for it come sister your performance will mark the arrival of the fist of

Ryoga lead in the inn with a steel peak follow on with a dragon kick and finish

it with the forbidden chakra

Steele peak I don't actually know what a Billy still Creek is i know dragon cake

obviously that's still tea okay done and dragon pick then forbidden chakra

forbidden chakra I'm like the best monk ever I don't even know like standards

abilities for monk the bitterness chakra

okay

ah here we go so they don't shock row was it just not on my boss hang on

deliver note I will post here 250 can only be used while under the effect of

5th chakra the chakra closes upon execution okay do I even have it on my

Bardo oh sorry hang on so the forbidden chakra it must

be the one where you have to do five meditates and then do it that's the one

okay sorry I was like wondering where it was right so hey ain't that the fist of

Roga but I thought all the monks were gone so a good people of a lagana I am

with with our go through crowd son of al amigo and brother of the fist of Roga

all know the sad tale of our order years ago the king of ruin laid our temple to

waste our faith was lost to the people but without faith is people who are lost

for to lose faith is to lose hope but we need hope now in this bleak age more

than ever before so I come before you today and I beseech you join me in

reviving the fifth of Roga let us restore hope to this land you can't fool

us you just want soldiers fodder for the frontlines you're no different from the

accursed masks so so it was in the past our order was seduced by power

so what allegiance to the royal family we monks were little more than tools of

war but that was the fist of old the new fist serves no king a hungry is not for

glory at first not for blood may friends we seek only to protect that which we

hold dear protect 'roger is a destroyer as his

disciples there is but one thing we ought to destroy our own weakness

therein lies the strength to protect therein lies hope I will not lie I am no

great warrior my forbearers would put me to shame but I am not alone

may I have stout comrades beside me well no less dedicated to the cause my

foremost pupil the center and Otaka

and Miffy who supplied skills you just witness

rarrr so Miffy please say a word to the people

might be difficult join us let us begin on you are you

ready for pain No

so to bring you hope we will give our all every ounce of our being this we

solemnly swear cool so we nearly doubled the size of our

monk troop there enough fair enough so my thanks me for your performance

paved the way for my words all present lent there is no if you know if you

opened their hearts already villagers have come seeking to learn of the new

fist the fine first showing our forbearers will doubtless be pleased by

restoring the fist we honor their memory i shall commence the village of training

at once initiate them in the fundamentals of the faith when that is

over we may continue our mission till then proceed to holding your own skills

ear long they will be called upon again cool

so obviously the next quest is now at level 65

epic all right so anyway guys that's it for this episode thank you for watching

and as always good bye from me and good bye from me free I guess

For more infomation >> FFXIV Monk Quest Level 63 (Patch 4.0) - Duration: 16:33.

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Play Doh Lollipop Colors for Children to Learn with Lollipop - Colours for Kids - Video for Kids - Duration: 13:51.

Play Doh Lollipop Colors for Children to Learn with Lollipop - Colours for Kids - Video for Kids

For more infomation >> Play Doh Lollipop Colors for Children to Learn with Lollipop - Colours for Kids - Video for Kids - Duration: 13:51.

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Michael Schu­ma­cher : le message de sa famille, quatre ans après son terrible acci­dent - Duration: 4:03.

For more infomation >> Michael Schu­ma­cher : le message de sa famille, quatre ans après son terrible acci­dent - Duration: 4:03.

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Psalmen 104 - Duration: 3:38.

For more infomation >> Psalmen 104 - Duration: 3:38.

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Psalmen 106 - Duration: 4:41.

For more infomation >> Psalmen 106 - Duration: 4:41.

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MILLO NA DJ REMIX SONG VIBREAT & HARD DHOLKI V/S ELECTRO REMIX BY DJ IRFAN KS - Duration: 2:26.

For more infomation >> MILLO NA DJ REMIX SONG VIBREAT & HARD DHOLKI V/S ELECTRO REMIX BY DJ IRFAN KS - Duration: 2:26.

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婆罗门作贼畏打,终证圣果 - Duration: 3:31.

For more infomation >> 婆罗门作贼畏打,终证圣果 - Duration: 3:31.

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Satan's Sadists - 1969 - 1h26 - V.O St.Fr - Bikesploitation/Série Z - Film complet - Duration: 1:26:42.

For more infomation >> Satan's Sadists - 1969 - 1h26 - V.O St.Fr - Bikesploitation/Série Z - Film complet - Duration: 1:26:42.

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Anyone Else

For more infomation >> Anyone Else

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Alex Le Génie - Episode 1 : Devenir cadreur dans le PORNO - Duration: 1:25.

For more infomation >> Alex Le Génie - Episode 1 : Devenir cadreur dans le PORNO - Duration: 1:25.

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Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation: Review - Duration: 6:40.

Welcome back to my Dark Corner of This Sick World.

'Something bad's gonna happen, I can feel it'

Whenever we review sequels, there's a temptation to ask; why didn't this work like the original did?

'I assume that that is a rhetorical question'

And, the answer is equally often either; it just copied the original, or, it's nothing like the original.

'You probably didn't know that did you?'

Texas Chainsaw Massacre-The Next Generation manages to do both.

'Wait, I just thought of something so cool.'

The plot follows a group of teens who are dislikeable...

'I told you, I'm a bitch.'

yet self-aware.

'I told you, we're all going to die'

and who have a car accident on their way home from prom and get lost in the dark.

'Great now we can't see jack'

Probably a minor issue but; it's really not that dark.

'Oh right, like you'd know'

One of the teens stays with the car and...

'First I'm gonna kill you'

...meets a young Matthew MacConaughey.

Why are you running down the road? Go into the trees.

Idiot.

And his friends have no more luck as they run into a familiar face.

Maybe I'm mis-remembering but I don't recall Leatherface screaming all through the film.

'Arrrgh!'

Director Kim Henkel, who scripted the first film,

recognising that the original had a shock value this could not recapture, introduced black comedy.

'Are you having fun yet?'

Which perhaps explains why the Leatherfaces no longer live in the middle of nowhere.

'Think you got somebody in your trunk'

'That's just somebody I've got tied up back there'

but on the outskirts of a town where no one follows up on anything.

'What you got in the car honey?'

'Oh believe me, you don't want to know'

It's also presumably why MacConaughey has a remote control leg.

The comedy will either work for you or not,

'It's up to you'

As will MacConaughey's turned up to 11 performance...

'Welcome to my world'

Turned up to 12 ...

14....

Infinity plus one...

'BURRRRN!'

And Leatherface has clearly watched Silence of the Lambs recently

'Would you do me?'

'I'd do me.'

'I'm not going to put up with any more of your crap.'

'But Henkell also wanted to bring the franchise back to its roots so we have teenagers wandering into danger.

'Hold it right there.'

a girl on a meat hook,

Dinner with the family.

And escape by car.

All the beats are there.

True Rene Zellweger, also at the start of her career,

seems surprisingly in control for someone who's seen her friends tortured and killed.

'You, sit the fuck down.'

Which does take some of the bite out of it .

'Stop, you're scaring me'

But this is still Texas Chainsaw, drawing terror from the randomness of its brutality .

'They've been doing this kind of thing for 1000, 2000 years, I forget which, nobody knows their names.'

Say what now?

'You know how you hear all these stories about these people who run everything?'

Yes, it turns out that cannibal hillbilly attacks only seem random,

they're actually organised by a shadowy organisation like the Illuminati.

'This is appalling'

Yes. And, although I don't think there's any answer that would make me think otherwise; why?

'I want these people to know the meaning or horror.'

How ironic. Not least because he quickly demonstrates the 'meaning of horror' to be elaborate belly button rings...

and licking Rene Zellweger.

This movie is mess but, let's be honest, on paper, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre shouldn't work, so why did it?

'Good question'

because it is utterly uncompromising and offers no explanation.

'Will you please tell me what all this is for'

The Next generation - and if you don't have Patrick Stewart you don't get to use that title -

compromises by spoofing its own set up...

'What's wrong with that?'

Then offers an unnecessary explanation so piss poor, so head-scratching,

so undermining of the original's integrity, that even Ridley Scott would have rejected it.

'It's been an abomination'

And wheeling out original survivor Marilyn Burns, literally.

Only serves as a reminder of how much you'd rather be watching the original.

'You know this isn't the first time something like this has happened'

On the other hand, if you want to a see a six foot, dead faced, Ethel Merman dancing with a chainsaw, then this is the place.

Thanks for watching.

And thanks to patreon shadow Dan D Dotty for recommending this film,

Franchises often fail through vain attempts to recapture the success of the original

But can you think of any entries that actually succeed?

For more infomation >> Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation: Review - Duration: 6:40.

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CBC NL Here & Now Monday March 26 2018 - Duration: 1:02:54.

For more infomation >> CBC NL Here & Now Monday March 26 2018 - Duration: 1:02:54.

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Pitch Black 14 훈련중인 싱가폴공군 F-15SG와 F-16C/D 등. | 한국의 군사력 - Duration: 4:45.

For more infomation >> Pitch Black 14 훈련중인 싱가폴공군 F-15SG와 F-16C/D 등. | 한국의 군사력 - Duration: 4:45.

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Hanami Announcement - Duration: 0:53.

Hey guys, just a quick announcement!

We'll be at Hanami.

April 7th!

So if you want to see us, that's where we'll be!

There will be a link in the description.

That's go to Hanami together!

Bye bye!

For more infomation >> Hanami Announcement - Duration: 0:53.

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FBI In Hot Water For Conspiracy, Obstruction of Justice, and Contempt Of Court - Duration: 15:17.

FBI In Hot Water For Conspiracy, Obstruction of Justice, and Contempt Of Court

The FBI may have violated as many as five criminal statutes.

The federal government acted like criminals during the last administration.

Obama and his flunkies abused their power.

Nothing was off the table for these con artists.

They even went as far as spying on American citizens in order to protect their agenda.

In many ways, they acted like Communist dictators.

If you got in their way, they'd crush you.

Even if that meant breaking numerous laws.

Now it looks like some of them will have to face the music.

Top officials from that era might be charged for their criminal actions.

From Washington Examiner:

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., informed the Justice Department

on Thursday that the FBI may have violated criminal statutes when it sought Foreign Intelligence

Surveillance Act warrants to spy on ex-Trump foreign policy adviser Carter Page…

In a letter sent to Sessions, Nunes wrote that the apparent use of the controversial

"Trump dossier" to make the case for spying on Page suggests a "clear violation" of

FBI protocols because it contained unverified information.

And such a breach of protocol may have violated five criminal statutes, including conspiracy,

obstruction of justice, and contempt of court…

Nunes is demanding a response by March 8, in exactly one week.

His letter, first obtained by Fox News, shows that FBI Director Christopher Wray and DOJ

Inspector General Michael Horowitz were carbon copied.

The country was stunned by the Nunes memo.

He exposed what the DOJ—under Obama—did to thwart the Trump campaign.

They used a bogus dossier to get fraudulent surveillance warrants.

To boot, they didn't even disclose to the judges that they were using this dossier.

The charges leveled at them by Nunes are not unfounded.

They overstepped their power—limited by law and the Constitution—to go after the

Trump campaign.

The dossier was their only "evidence" of collusion with Russia.

The dossier did not contain any verifiable facts and has been largely discredited by

even liberal journalists.

Yet the FBI and DOJ covered up that inconvenient fact, just to persecute a political rival.

Conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and contempt of court might only be the beginning.

If the current DOJ actually investigates this, we might find much more.

But will Sessions do anything?

Will we have to live through the indignity of Mueller's bogus investigation, while

real criminals go free?

I guess we'll have to wait

and see.

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