Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 2 2017

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For more infomation >> MUSICONSIGLIO EP.03 | Esistono band in Kentucky? - Duration: 6:16.

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Drawing Pokémon From Memory! - Duration: 7:02.

Hi guys! My name is Anouk, and today..

Jack hit 15 million subscribers!

So we are going to make some cupcakes-

..Just kidding.

You saw the title already.

I'm not baking every goddamn week okay

Yes, I know

KickThePJ literally uploaded the same video like this..

A week ago!

But I don't care

We are going to d- I am going to draw!

Pokémon from out of my..

Memory? My hair is in my wAY

So I have this camera, which is not even mine

And I don't even know how it works, but..

We'll just figure it out

I have a small list of Pokémon on my Laptop right here!

So I'm going to try and draw those just from..

Memory

Okay we're gonna start off easy..

We're going to start with Pikachu!

I know that one- Everybody knows that one!

He has..

A face..

The ears- Oh, this stift isn't working, great.

Something like that?

*Laughs* that is terrible!

A little paw here

And.. Oh God

And the tail! Everybody knows the tail!

Like that, riiiight?

And he has stripes on the back

Like this

Voilà!

That's my Pikachu

This was the easiest one, and..

*Sigh* no..

Okay the next one

Is also very simple, so..

Let's do that one

It's Eevee!

So..

Everybody knows Eevee, right?

Eevee..

It has kinda like the same ears as Pikachu?

I think?

Cute little eyes..

And a nose, I think

And then the fur- I don't have space for the fucking body oh my God

Like that..

This is.. this is terrible

Oh and I know the tail! I know the tail

Like thaaaatt..

Something like.. this?

I'm disappointed at myself

I am so disappointed at myself

Okay the next one is easy, because..

I drew that on another video.. It's Cosmog!

So I think I know what it looks like

It had like a cloud body

Right?

Something.. like.. this?

And then the face..

Was a circle?

That is so creepy, oh my God

*Laughs* Nooo

It looks like a fucking tree

Let's just see what the original picture was, because..

I can't handle this

Oh my God

Those were the easiest ones!

Okay let's just move on to the next one

Okay so now we're going to the little bit harder ones

I think I know them, but..

Looking at the easiest ones

I'm probably going to fuck up real bad

Lucario is the next one

I.. think..

I know him

It has.. does it have ears?

It has a nose like this

Oh that is terrible

It has something like.. a choker or something

Like a little bit of fur I think

Let's just draw that!

It had a thin body..

But the hips..

Were like.. really big, I think

This is terrible, I'm... I'm sorry

And then it had like.. legs like a fucking dog or something

Uhm, did it had a tail? Oh, I'm for- I'm forgetting his arms, okay

Let's just draw them like this- He had big fingers, right?

Oh! Wrong side, okay!

*Sigh*

And then a tail

That is Lucario

I was right with the nose! And the big hips

But the rest is just completely wrong

Okay, let's move on!

To the harder ones, because I'm already filming for 17 minutes

..Fuck

I see 3 names..

That I've never..

Heard of before

One of them is..

Pyukumuku?

Is that a real Pokémon?

Are you fucking kidding me

Well..

To me it sounds like, uhm.. the Pokémon..

Disguised as a Pikachu

So I'm just going to draw that one?

I can't even remember what this Pokémon looks like, and I'm just..

I don't know what I'm doing, okay

I know it has spikes on the..

On the bottom of the Pokémon, so I'm right with that!

And then he has something black underneath

From like, the real Pokémon

And then the tail

Is that Pyukumuku?

I don't think so

It's ehm..

Just a little bit different than my drawing

Let's just stop there, because..

I don't think you can even call these Pokémon, because they are..

THAT terrible!

Well there you go!

That was me drawing Pokémon!

If you liked this video, please give it a thumbs up!

And if you want to see my latest video

Click over here! And if you want to subscribe to my channel, click over here!

And..

Don't..

Don't ask me to do this again because I can't

Bye!

For more infomation >> Drawing Pokémon From Memory! - Duration: 7:02.

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С Днем Рождения! Видео поздравление подруге.Радуга слайд шоу - Duration: 2:13.

For more infomation >> С Днем Рождения! Видео поздравление подруге.Радуга слайд шоу - Duration: 2:13.

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Sunday: Be prepared for threat of severe weather - Duration: 3:50.

BUTTER AND JELLY SANDWICH.

A GREAT DAY TO CHECK OUT A PB

AND J.

DAMON: MAY BE SO.

RIGHT NOW, NOT THAT BAD.

FOR MOST OF THE MORNING, WE WILL

BE IN PRETTY GOOD SHAPE.

A FEW SHOWERS AROUND.

THE WORST OF THE WEATHER IS

PRIMARILY IN THE EARLY MORNING

HOURS, 4:00 A.M. UNTIL 11:00

A.M. TOMORROW MORNING.

THE VIEW THROUGH OUR TERRY

LABONTE CAMERA.

DOWN IN PARENT -- DOWN IN

TERREBONNE PARISH IS CLOUDY.

LET ME SHOW YOU THE BIG PICTURE.

THERE'S QUITE A BIT OF ACTIVITY

ACROSS TEXAS AND HEADED IN THIS

DIRECTION.

LOW PRESSURE AREA ASSOCIATED

WILL BE OUR BIG BRAIN MAKER OVER

THE COURSE OF TODAY AND

TOMORROW.

THE AREAS THAT YOU SEE OUTLINED

IN RED, A TORNADO WATCH AREA AND

YOU CAN SEE THIS LINE OF SHOWERS

AND STORMS IS PRETTY INTENSE.

THE BOW INDICATES VERY STRONG

WINDS MAKING THEIR WAY ACROSS

INSERT TEXAS AND INTO LOUISIANA.

THE AREA LIKELY TO SEE SEVERE

WEATHER IS ACROSS CENTRAL AND

NORTHERN LOUISIANA STRETCHING

INTO EASTERN TEXAS WERE A LOT OF

SHOWERS AND STORMS ARE FIRING UP

RIGHT NOW.

LOCALLY, AND OUR IMMEDIATE AREA

TO THE WEST OF US OVER LAFFEY AT

HIS AND INTENT -- LAFAYETTE IS

AN INTENSE STORM DROPPING A LOT

OF HAIL.

THE REST OF US ACROSS SOUTHEAST

LOUISIANA AND THE GULF COAST IN

PRETTY GOOD SHAPE.

AS I PUT THE MODEL IN PROMOTION

-- IN MOTION, YOU WILL NOT

NOTICE MUCH ACTION.

I THINK WE WILL SEE MORE

RAINFALL THAN BEING DEPICTED.

KEEP THE UMBRELLA WITH YOU.

A 30%, MAYBE 40% CHANCE LATER

ON.

THE WORST OF THE RAIN INTO

SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA OVERNIGHT

AND INTO TOMORROW MORNING.

AS YOU CAN SEE, A LINE OF

INTENSE WEATHER PASSING THROUGH

OUR AREA WHEN YOU ARE TRYING TO

MAKE THE MORNING COMMUTE TO WORK

AND TO DROP OFF THE KIDS AT

SCHOOL.

ESPECIALLY BAD ACROSS PARTS OF

THE NORTH SHORE WHERE THERE IS

AN AND HENCE RISK OF SEVERE

WEATHER.

IT IS PRETTY INTENSE FOR MANY OF

US.

-- WHERE THERE IS AN INTENSE

RISK OF SEVERE WEATHER.

AND TO THE LATTER PART OF THE

MORNING BUT I THINK WE WILL BE

DONE BY 11:00 ON 12:00 TOMORROW.

TUESDAY LOOKING LIKE A

PICTURE-PERFECT TODAY.

WEDNESDAY, CLOUD COVER AND RENT

POTENTIAL BACK.

LARGE HAIL, TORNADOES AND LOTS

OF LIGHTNING AS A RESULT OF THE

FLASH FLOOD WATCH UNTIL TOMORROW

AFTERNOON.

THE WIND ADVISORY WILL BE WITH

US.

STRONG WINDS IS WHAT I AM

EXPECTING INTO TOMORROW MORNING.

COASTAL FLOOD ADVISORY BECAUSE

OF STRONG WINDS PUSHING ALONG

THE LOW-LYING COASTAL AREAS.

THE AREAS THAT TYPICALLY SEE

FLOODED WHEN YOU HAVE THAT

SITUATION, YOU MAY SEE IT AGAIN

INTO TOMORROW.

RIGHT NOW, AIRPORT, 73.

THE WINDS BLOWING AT 16.

HEADING OUT TO THE TREME CRAB

FESTIVAL, 30% CHANCE OF RAIN

FALL THIS EVENING.

THE HUMIDITY WILL PROBABLY THE A

BIGGER ISSUE.

THE WINDS WILL BE PICKING UP.

IF YOU WANT TO THE TULANE GAME,

PROBABLY 79 AND UP 30% CHANCE OF

RAIN FALL AS WELL.

THIS AFTERNOON, I EXPECT

TEMPERATURES TO RISE INTO THE

UPPER 70'S.

ON THE NORTH SHORE, SIMILAR

NUMBERS.

INTO NEXT WEEKEND, FOR SATURDAY,

THE RUN FOR THE FALLEN 5K, I

THINK THE WEATHER WILL BE GREAT.

IT LOOKS LIKE IT WILL BE PRETTY

COOL.

For more infomation >> Sunday: Be prepared for threat of severe weather - Duration: 3:50.

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Landscape Photography - Early starts and stunning sunrises - Duration: 11:55.

I do have those 360° views all the way around and there is some amazing colour in the sky.

Hello and good morning.

It's very, very early.

I've dragged myself out of bed to go on another landscape photography mission.

Today, I'm heading over to Filey, which is on the east coast.

There is a part of Filey called Filey Brigg, which is a little headland which juts out

into the water and I'm hoping to capture a really beautiful seascape, sunrise shot.

I think it is going to be good.

The weather is looking good.

It is probably gonna be the sort of day where there's not a lot of clouds in the sky.

So, I think my opportunities to capture a great image is going to be very early on.

I'm looking forward to the day.

I've got a bit of a journey ahead of me, so let's go.

So, I have arrived.

There, already, is some really nice colour in the sky so I'm going to get down there

as quickly as possible to start capturing some shots.

As many photographers will know, particularly, landscape photographers, and, if you've been

enjoying this channel for a while, and you've seen me get out and about, these early mornings

do not get any easier.

A 3.30 alarm this morning, a long drive and it's hard work.

But, when you're welcomed with scenes like I have in front of me, it is all worth it.

Right, I need to get into position because I'm worried that colour is going to disappear

pretty quickly this morning.

My opportunities are going to be really early on.

Right, I'm in position.

I'm working up a little composition here.

It isn't the composition I wanted but I'm starting to lose the colour in the sky even

though it's about 45 minutes before sunrise.

What I'm doing is, I've got the camera on the tripod here.

I've done a couple of things already.

I'm using the headland here as my lead in to the sun rising over there.

I'm on f/8, because my foreground interest is quite far away from me, so I can get the

maximum sharpness out of the lens at f/8.

I am at ISO100, as always with landscape photography, and then I've tried a couple of things.

I've gone with a six stop filter: I've bracketed that.

I want to smooth that water just to add a little bit of interest to the image and smooth

out the water making it a bit of a nicer image.

That's worked quite nicely but the sea is quite rough.

So, I've then gone with the 10 stop filter, as well, and gone for an exposure of about

three minutes, which will smooth out the very rough sea.

I think it will work.

But, I'm quickly losing the colour in the sky The reds and pinks are, already, starting

to disappear.

But, that's the beauty of long exposure during sunrise and sunset, is that, as the

colour changes in the sky, you're capturing all of that in the long exposure, so your

final image has more colour than you can see at the time.

I think it will be a good shot.

It's not, like I said, quite the composition I wanted.

I would have liked to have got a little closer down onto the beach but, by the time I get

down there, I'm pretty certain, the colour would have gone and the sea is a bit rough.

So, to be the honest, this morning, I don't fancy it.

I don't want to get washed into the sea morning.

I've got a nice enough composition up here.

So, hopefully, it will work.

It's one of the things I really love about landscape photography, especially, when you're

shooting sunrises.

You've spent the previous evening, or day, thinking about it, you get all the kit ready,

and then you head out way before dawn, especially, if you've got a bit of a journey like I

had this morning.

Sometimes rushing to get into position, then, all of a sudden, it's over.

Whereas, when you're going for a sunset, on like some of my other vlog trips, you're

building, you're building up, you're building up, you're taking shots, you're taking

shots, then, right at the end of the end of the day you get the shot.

Sunrise totally different, opposite way round.

Right at the start, you're doing it.

I'm going to get into position right on the top of Filey Brigg here.

I am also capturing a time-lapse for the sunrise, as well.

So that should be pretty cool.

I am at the top of Filey Brigg.

The sun is rising.

Apart from this little bit behind me, I do have those 360° views all the way around

and there is some amazing colour in the sky.

Getting up and getting out, at this time of the morning, just feels brilliant.

The fresh sea air, a bit of breeze, the light, the colour, the well-being is just invaluable.

We all feel down, sometimes, but making an effort, getting out like this, gives you such

a boost, such a good feeling that it's now going to set me up for the day and the weekend.

It's Friday today and it's also my birthday but don't wish me happy birthday because

by the time you see this it won't be anymore.

That was amazing.

Such a frantic few minutes of activity and its just brilliant, absolutely brilliant.

I'm back on the top now and I'm working up another little composition.

This time I'm using some of these daffodils, that are just down here, as the sun has risen

now and they have some of that golden light, that you can see on my face, that's hitting

the daffodils.

I'm just going to use a couple of sets of daffodils to lead you in to the sun and the

sea in the distance.

So, for this shot, I know you want me to talk about settings a bit more in these videos,

so here we go.

For this shot, I'm shooting in vertical.

This composition works better in a vertical.

I'm going for f/16 because the daffodils are quite close.

I want to maximise the depth of field as much as possible without losing any sharpness and

then I'm also bracketing because there is quite big change in exposure between the ground

and the sky.

Again, I'm at ISO100.

It's going to tell a nice little story of this area a little bit of spring and, hopefully,

you'll like it.

Right, I've come over to the other side of the Brigg and I'm determined to get a

daffodil shot today.

I want to tell the story of Filey Brigg in the Spring.

There is nothing that says Spring like a daffodil.

So, I think, now I've found a pretty nice composition.

I've got the camera set up behind me with Filey and the sea in the background going

into Filey beach There's, also, these beautiful daffodils on this bank, leading you in to

that shot.

I think that's going to work really, really nicely.

What I need though is the sun just to come up a little bit more.

You can already see it on my face but I need it to come up a little bit more and start

to light up these daffodils.

If that happens, that will be a really nice shot.

I've got the circular polariser on there to take some of the sheen off the water and,

also, the six stop filter is on there.

The six stop ND filter to extend the exposure time and smooth out the water just a little

bit, I don't want to do any more than six stop because, if the exposure time was any

longer, I'd see too much movement in those daffodils in the wind and, I think, that would

spoil the shot.

I think it will work as nice little composition to tell the story of spring.

I'm just capturing the time-lapse that will end this video.

This morning has just reminded me how great it is to get out and shoot landscape photography.

I've been here, again, pretty much, by myself. If I had done it next week, it would be an hour

later, as the clocks go forward.

But I made the effort to get up this morning and get out and have captured some great images,

made the most of the good weather, the nice sunrise and I then have the full day ahead

of me.

it's still relatively early.

Most people probably aren't out of bed yet and I've already achieved some great work and

created some nice images.

The reward is I've then got the rest of the day to be productive in other ways.

I don't think I'm going to capture any more landscape photography today because the sun

is going to be bright and high in the sky and conditions aren't perfect but there's

a lot of other things I can get done with that time.

It's been a brilliant morning.

I've had such a good time.

The feeling of well-being, like I said, is high and that's one of the beauties of landscape

photography.

So, I hope you enjoyed the video.

I'm going to end the vlog there.

Please do subscribe to the channel, if you haven't done so already.

I am putting videos out every Sunday now, some vlogs, landscape photography vlogs and

then the odd video during the week.

I'm not guaranteeing I'm going to do a video on Wednesdays anymore.

I hope you can appreciate that.

Leave a comment down below and let me know what you think.

I will see one another video very soon.

I'm Adam.

This is First Man Photography in Filey…

Out!!!

For more infomation >> Landscape Photography - Early starts and stunning sunrises - Duration: 11:55.

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Search for Answers (Clip) // Bayless Conley - Duration: 1:44.

Get ready to discover answers from the bible

with Bayless Conley

"Good leaders search for answers.

Proverbs 25 and verse 2, it says, It is the glory of God to conceal a matter,

But the glory of kings is to search out a matter.

Verse 3, As the heavens for height and the earth for

depth, So the heart of kings is unsearchable.

The Message says, "The understanding of a good leader is broad and deep."

It's the glory of a king, of a leader, to search things out.

Leaders think.

They ponder.

They dig.

If a particular department is continually ineffective, why?

The leader asks why.

"Have I got the wrong person in there managing?

Are they just not clear on the vision?

Are they not getting the kind of support they need to get?

You know, am I missing something somewhere?

What's the problem?"

And they investigate and they think about it, and they do what they need to do.

Ask for wisdom.

God will give it to you.

Now my particular field of labor, I lead a church.

And I'll tell you, so much of the time I'm asking God for wisdom.

James says, "If you lack wisdom, ask God.

He will give it to you.

He won't find fault with you.

He will give it to you liberally."

I can't tell you how many times I've prayed that prayer from the Book of James.

It seems like I'm always needing wisdom for something."

For more infomation >> Search for Answers (Clip) // Bayless Conley - Duration: 1:44.

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La fin du gaspillage alimentaire - Duration: 6:29.

For more infomation >> La fin du gaspillage alimentaire - Duration: 6:29.

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Crelando Watercolour 12 set - swatch and review English/Polish/soon Greek - Duration: 23:46.

For more infomation >> Crelando Watercolour 12 set - swatch and review English/Polish/soon Greek - Duration: 23:46.

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Story Behind 2 Million Views | Meet the real SHOGUN - Duration: 6:13.

For more infomation >> Story Behind 2 Million Views | Meet the real SHOGUN - Duration: 6:13.

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× TRAGEDY × | Meme ( April Fool's !!! ) - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> × TRAGEDY × | Meme ( April Fool's !!! ) - Duration: 1:02.

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Interview kennyS 2/2 : KQLY, transfert chez nV, sa plus grosse déception..[Subtitles Available] - Duration: 29:17.

For more infomation >> Interview kennyS 2/2 : KQLY, transfert chez nV, sa plus grosse déception..[Subtitles Available] - Duration: 29:17.

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Refinery29 Joined Rhett & Link Shoot Cover Of Their New Book | Behind-The-Scenes | Refinery29 - Duration: 4:18.

I am soaking wet because I just got out of a giant bowl of Cheerios

and I have no idea what just happened.

I care very much what I look like when I bathe.

This is Link.

Bath clothes one!

This is Rhett.

Their show, Good Mythical Morning, is the most watched daily show online.

No big deal.

Best friends since the first grade, they went to school to become engineers and then quit

after graduation to create internet content full time.

We joined them while they were shooting the cover for their upcoming book.

We get to make an internet show for a living, so we're gonna do things like bathe in weird things.

I do things that I only wished I could do as a kid.

Hey guys, we're here with Rhett and Link from Good Mythical Morning and we're talking

about their upcoming book, Rhett and Link's Book of Mythicality.

You turn Pop Tarts into spaghetti, you shower and eat oranges.

What does that say about who you guys are?

I want to teach anyone who watches it, as long as it's not hurting yourself or somebody else,

what's the harm in trying it?

The whole idea behind the concept of why we're in a bowl on the cover is because that is

something that we did as part of our show.

We took a bath in cereal.

Woohoo!

We've taken a bath in ranch dressing, in chicken noodle soup, and various other substances

that you shouldn't take baths in.

What is the best advice you give in the book?

How we wish that we would stop and celebrate more.

We wouldn't go from one project to the next so quickly without stopping to like appreciate

the moment, you know?

In the chapter called, "Embracing Maturity," which is something that I think if you watch

our show, you know we have embraced pretty thoroughly…

Ha ha!

I love it!

I love it!

We talk about the idea that yeah, you gotta grow up, you gotta be an adult, you gotta

have responsibility, but you gotta have a part of yourself that doesn't grow up.

You've gotta have a part of yourself that's willing to jump into a bowl of cereal.

It feels so good though.

So, here I am, watching these two guys who have a pretty cool approach to life and I

realized, if there was ever a moment to dive right in, this was it.

So I did.

I mean, how could you not?

The behind the scenes thing with the Cheerio bowl was so out of the ordinary for me,

I mean...I like to think of myself as a risk taker, but yeah, that was a little bit unusual.

But it paid off.

I think once you got in there, you were like, "This is worth it."

It was worth it.

I wasn't exactly prepared.

I mean, white jeans, but how could I not get into the bowl of Cheerios?

You'll never say, "Hey, remember that time I almost got into that bowl of cereal

with those guys?"

Right?

That's not a story worth telling.

Yeah!

You gotta make those kinds of decisions.

If the opportunity arrives, take it and dive into a bowl of cereal.

I don't blame you though, it's actually really nice.

Our motto is: be your mythical best.

Which loosely meant, just embrace the best about yourself and take risks and be creative,

have fun.

When we sat down to be like, "Let's kind of define what it is that we're saying is

mythical," and the definition came out to be, essentially a combination of curiosity,

creativity, and tomfoolery.

We try to never get into a place where we're taking ourselves so seriously that we can't

laugh at ourselves, we can't make fun of ourselves, even as we're trying to be creative.

We're gonna have fun.

We're gonna make each other laugh.

And mythicality kind of embodies all of that together.

If you're gonna jump in the bowl of cereal, A) do it,

B) go all the way under, but C) don't forget to come back up before you breathe,

and D) pre-order our book at bookofmythicality.com Do that.

Thanks for watching.

For more videos like this, click here.

To subscribe, click here.

For more infomation >> Refinery29 Joined Rhett & Link Shoot Cover Of Their New Book | Behind-The-Scenes | Refinery29 - Duration: 4:18.

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Salvador Sobral - Amar Pelos Dois || Cat Rox #SundaeRoxSessions - Duration: 3:35.

If one day someone asks about me

Say that I lived just to love you

Before you came along, I only existed

Tired and with nothing to give

My dear, listen to my prayers

I ask you to return

to love me once more

I know you can't love alone

Maybe little by little you can learn again

My dear, listen to my prayers

I ask you to return

to love me once more

I know you can't love alone

Maybe little by little you can learn again

If your heart doesn't want to give in

If it doesn't feel the passion

If it doesn't want to suffer

Without planning

what awaits us afterwards

My heart can love for the both of us

For more infomation >> Salvador Sobral - Amar Pelos Dois || Cat Rox #SundaeRoxSessions - Duration: 3:35.

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Application Utile : PC | ANDROID | MAC | LINUX - Duration: 0:44.

One page turns with TUTO ReplayHD

and a new one begins with

Useful application

Thanks again for all your support messages.

I will now devote myself

to the creation of useful, simple and effective applications

in order to facilitate your browsing on the Internet

For more infomation >> Application Utile : PC | ANDROID | MAC | LINUX - Duration: 0:44.

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8 Ball Pool - New To 9 Low Countries 100% Worked [No Root] 2017 - Duration: 5:16.

For more infomation >> 8 Ball Pool - New To 9 Low Countries 100% Worked [No Root] 2017 - Duration: 5:16.

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Пупсик Купается в Ванной с Киндер Сюрпризы Маша и Медведь Поет Песенка Пальчики Игрушки Зырики ТВ - Duration: 2:04.

For more infomation >> Пупсик Купается в Ванной с Киндер Сюрпризы Маша и Медведь Поет Песенка Пальчики Игрушки Зырики ТВ - Duration: 2:04.

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Thin people can be unhealthy | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 5:01.

So I think most people can recognize that skinny people can be unhealthy.

But the way that we often talk about weight and its relationship to health, often implies

that that's not the case.

What I mean by this is that weight loss in popular culture and in the mainstream is often

seen as an overwhelmingly positive thing.

There are always articles about how to lose weight, people compliment each other when

they lose weight.

A lot of people think it's a compliment when you haven't seen someone in a long time, and

you say, "Oh, wow, you look great, have you lost weight?"

Weight loss isn't always good, and it isn't always bad either.

It's complicated.

And in a similar vein, the relationship between weight and health is very complicated.

But a lot of the time, people act like they're directly related.

Like the lower your weight gets, the better your health gets.

But that's just not true!

There are unhealthy skinny people.

There are healthy fat people.

And I'm firmly of the belief that nobody owes you information about their health.

Like you don't get to go up to strangers and demand that they be healthier.

That's none of your business.

But I still wanna break down some of the myths about health and weight.

I just also wanna recognize that nobody owes you that information about their health, and

you shouldn't be making snap judgements about strangers' health anyway.

But basically, everyone's body is different.

I don't think that's a controversial idea.

And everybody's body has a different equilibrium.

It has a different place where it's happy.

And for some people, their body is happiest and healthiest when they're skinny.

And for other people, their body is happiest and healthiest when they're fat.

Now the thing that I always run into when I say that is that someone jumps up in the

comments and is like, "What about morbidly obese people?"

First of all, I don't really like that terminology.

But also, a lot of the shaming that happens happens to people who are just fat or are

maybe just a little bit bigger than normal.

But the thing is is that both of the extremes are equally unhealthy.

Like if you get super super overweight or super super underweight, both of those are

gonna have very bad health outcomes.

And yet in our culture, we still continue to universally praise weight loss, and universally

hate on weight gain.

So you know about the BMI, the body mass index.

We've known that it's a pretty bad indicator of health for a long time now.

I'll link to an article down below about that, but I don't think it's a very controversial

thing at this point to say that BMI is not a good indicator of health.

Like, for me, personally, I have a very low BMI.

And it's been very low for my entire life, whether I was healthy or unhealthy.

There have been times where I was very unhealthy, when I was eating junk food and not exercising,

and I was still skinny.

Everybody's body works differently, and your metabolism, your hormones, there are so many

different factors that play into what your BMI is.

So for me, my body tends to stay at the same weight, whether I'm not exercising and eating

bad, or if I'm exercising a ton and eating as well as I can.

And I've done a video on this before, but there's a lot of evidence that the biggest

factor in your weight is actually just your metabolism and how your body functions, and

that exercise affects a very small portion of your overall weight.

Like, yes, sometimes exercise can lead to weight loss or weight gain, depending on if

you're losing fat or gaining muscle.

But in the overall, like, percentages of how your body is gaining or losing weight, exercise

is a very small portion.

So like, maybe you can affect it, but you're affecting a very small portion of it.

So for some people, losing weight is going to be a lot easier than for other people,

just because their body responds differently to food and to exercise and metabolism.

And just like there can be skinny, unhealthy people, there can be healthy fat people.

Some people's healthy BMI is just higher than others.

People are diverse and their bodies are diverse.

And there's not gonna be one single BMI that's the healthiest for everybody.

Lots of people are healthy at a higher weight.

I've known people who exercised way more than me, ate way healthier than me, and they still

had a higher BMI than me, they still weighed more than me.

And that's just how it's gonna work for some people.

But the thing that I'm really getting at here is, like, you don't get to shame someone for their health.

If you look at a fat person, and you think that they're unhealthy, and therefore, that

gives you justification in shaming them or making fun of them, or whatever.

For one, you're just wrong.

It's not an indicator of their health.

But also, you're just being mean.

There's been studies that show that fat-shaming someone doesn't help them lose weight.

It's very obvious that when you do that, you're not intending to help the person.

You just wanna feel better about yourself by putting someone else down.

And even if a fat person is unhealthy, it's still none of your business!

People just don't make fun of skinny people in public the way they do fat people.

Even if those skinny people are unhealthy.

Like, I was never mocked for me weight when I wasn't eating well and not exercising.

Meanwhile, people would make fun of people who weighed much more than me

but were much healthier than me.

And it's just frustrating because you don't need to do that.

So just stop it.

Stop having fake concern for other people's health, and stop making fun of people because they're fat.

Because for one, their health is none of your business, and two, being fat doesn't mean being unhealthy.

Like, honestly, I've met some very unhealthy skinny people who will like smoke all day,

and drink all night, and eat poorly, and not exercise, and then they'll look at like an

athlete who's like a little bit bigger and make fun of them.

Like that just makes no sense to me.

Like, no one's on this high horse of being the healthiest person in the world.

We all do stuff that isn't perfectly healthy all the time.

We don't even understand what it means to be healthy.

Health and nutrition is a very complicated field that even the experts in those fields

haven't figured out fully yet.

So yeah, the moral of the story is just don't make fun of fat people.

Whoa, controversial idea, maybe we shouldn't be needlessly mean to people.

I know, wild, it's a -- what a concept, right.

Anyway, I hope all of that rambling made some kind of sense.

I didn't have a script for this video, so we'll see how it goes when I get into editing.

And yeah, thanks for watching this video, I love you all so much, and I'll see you next time.

For more infomation >> Thin people can be unhealthy | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 5:01.

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[SUB ESP] BTS reacción a 'House of ARMY'. - Duration: 3:47.

For more infomation >> [SUB ESP] BTS reacción a 'House of ARMY'. - Duration: 3:47.

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My journey on Internet ... New YouTube journey @ 0 Subscriber - Duration: 1:39.

Internet is like a wh0rehouse.

And sometimes I feel I am the most beautiful wh0re in that house.

Everyone wants to f**k me but nobody wants to give a single penny.

After using the internet for only 5 years I realized there are many other things on

internet beside porn.

Then I signed up for facebook without giving them my face pic.

Before signing up I thought it was a holy place where people like to stay connected

with their friends and family.

But I was wrong.

It was a world of racists, a**holes and losers.

They always try to fuck unknown people with their "INTELLIGENT" comments.

They love to troll people but don't want to get trolled themselves.

At that time I thought porn was much better than this.

Yes, I was missing porn.

But I didn't go back to porn.

I started following Kim Kardashian.

At that stage of my life I realized I am poor as fuck.

Then I asked google a question which was never asked before.

" How to make money online?"

Google returned with 155 million search results.

Then I found hundreds of online courses for guranteed income.

Thank god I didn't have the money to buy those shit.

That time I realized how internet is f**king our brains.

We don't want to think anything ourselves.

All we want to ask google and have suggestions from other people.

At that time I was very active on youtube as a viewer. I was watching hundreds of clickbait video about

how to make money.

Now I am ready to be a professional wh0re on internet.

I don't mind get f**ked.

But I want money in return.

This is my first video as a content creator.

More will come soon.

If you like this video like, share, comment and subscribe to my channel.

For more infomation >> My journey on Internet ... New YouTube journey @ 0 Subscriber - Duration: 1:39.

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Why Veganism Must be Anti-Capitalist (NOW!!) | My VegFest Talk - Duration: 32:37.

Hey Everyone!

Welcome to this video.

If you make it until the end you are going to be with me for a little while because it's

going to be long as f— It's been a little while since I filmed

my last video.

As you can probably tell my hair has gotten light, and probably longer since then.

This video is going to be pretty much word for word the talk that I gave at Brighton

Vegfest around 2 weeks ago.

It wasn't filmed which is sort of a bumper because there were so many great talks, but

for me it wasn't really a bummer because it made me a little less nervous at the time

and I was very nervous so anything was good for me, and it also gives me the opportunity

to film it in a way that is hopefully even more easy to consume for you guys, the viewers.

So yeah, what can I say about Vegfest?

It was so incredible, and it was a pro-intersectional vegan summit that was organized by Christopher

Sebastian, I want to give him a huge huge thank you for inviting me he's one of my

favorite animal rights activist, I was so honored that he chose me and also so honored

to speak with the other amazing people at the conference.

I recommend checking out Eshe's talk.

Their talk was titled "How Whiteness became the norm in Veganism and why this is harmful"

and someone filmed their talk with a smartphone, so that will be linked in the description

box I really encourage you to check it out it was amazing.

So all of the talks were around a common theme and we were given the challenge to give a

talk that addressed how times are changing and what this means for the vegan movement.

My talk was called "Confronting capitalism: the new politics of animals liberation".

I really tried to give people a basic explanation of what capitalism is and try to provide a

framework that was helpful for thinking about veganism, and animal liberation within that

understanding.

Hopefully it will be enjoyable and insightful to watch if you've thought a lot about this

subject, or if you haven't thought about it at all and you need a basic understanding

of how capitalism works and what that means.

I'm going to be reading my speech today, I usually make an effort not to, but today

is going to be a little bit different so do bear with me and let's get started!

I think that it's pretty obvious to everyone that we are in the midst of a very deep political,

social, and economic crisis.

So let's look at the situation we are faced with today… the first statistic I want to

start out with is from an Oxfam report came out in January which estimates that 8 men

have as much wealth as the poorest half of the world.

Meanwhile, 1 in 10 people are living with under $2 a day and hundreds of millions of

people are trapped into hunger and poverty.

Our climate also is also collapsing.

Temperatures are breaking record around the world, and experts are now saying the earth

could warm up to 6 degrees by the end of the century.

Glaciers all around the world are retreating and global flooding could triple by 2030.

Climate change will displace 250 million people by 2050.

This means it will be the largest migration in history.

So yeah, if Europe thinks its refugee crisis is bad now, they have no idea what they are

in for.

And sadly, things aren't looking good for animals either.

Due to human-created climate change, species are going extinct at a rate at least 10,000

species each year.

Globally, we are killing more animals today than ever before, and this number is expected

to keep growing.

Meat production is expected to nearly double from 70 billion land animals slaughtered a

year in 2010 to 120 billion in 2050, and this number has already tripled in the past 40

years.

Understandably, these various crises have led to deep political unrest.

In the last year, you guys gave us Brexit, the united states gave us Donald Trump, and

we saw the rise of far-right populism all over Europe, like the Alternative for Germany

Party, the National Front Party in France, the Sweden Democrats, the Party for Freedom

in the Netherlands and the Freedom party for Austria.

Although these movements surely have their distinct particularities, they all have in

common that they blame Islam and the refugee crisis for people's loss of status, and

offer ethnocentric nationalism as a solution.

Furthermore, these movements are united by a common vision of the future, which advocates

for freedom from government interference, freedom from the establishment, and freedom

from the invasion of non-whites.

When Brexit passed for example, Marine Le Pen from the National Front party in France,

declared it an act of freedom and Donald Trump praised the outcome as a brave and brilliant

vote, even declaring that people will soon call him "Mr. Brexit".

As many people have observed, this is first and foremost a crisis of capitalism.

At the root there is nothing particularly new or particularly different about this crisis,

although to be sure, that does not undermine its severity.

However, capitalism has always produced crises of various lengths and intensities and it

will continue to do so as long as it exists.

This is because at the structurally, capitalism contradicts itself, and eventually it will

always catch up to it and cause it to collapse.

This is because capitalism is never able to fix its inherent contradiction, it only creates

the illusion of recovery.

The problem lies in the contentious relationship between production and wealth accumulation.

Simply put, the system is designed to respond to one thing, and one thing only, and that

is profit.

Since profit can only be achieved through growth, a capitalist must always push production

farther and farther.

However, production requires the use of goods that are not infinite, like labor and natural

resources.

Since capitalism cannot administer a limit, it will always eventually crash.

In other words, capitalism always ends up destroying the hand that feeds it.

Alright let's take the example of labor.

On the one hand, you have a majority of people who work aka the laborers, and on the other,

you have small group people making the profits aka the capitalists.

To remain competitive, capitalists are always trying to increase profits by producing more

goods, and producing them faster and cheaper.

At the same time however, they are trying to keep the wages of their workers as low

as possible to make the highest profit margin when they sell their goods on the market.

Keep in mind that every other capitalist is trying to do the same thing, which inevitably

creates a downward pressure on labor.

Eventually, you will run into a situation whereby the capitalists produce too many goods,

which the masses of people, now in poverty cannot afford to buy back.

And as you know, when there is no purchasing power left, there is a recession aka a crisis

of capitalism.

The second major problem that results from overproduction is environmental crisis, meaning

a corporation will run out of resources to use or that pollution will start to be so

great that it will impact the cost and the feasibility of production.

This is the natural outcome of a system that seeks to produce the most amount of goods

for the least amount of money possible.

Capitalism is a system that needs to perpetually grow, and perpetual growth on a finite planet

with finite resources, is impossible.

Capitalism creates the market and destroys it at the same time.

And because of this feature, crisis is an inevitable part of capitalism, and it is ongoing.

That's why we are always in one: the environmental crisis, the unemployment crisis, the debt

crisis, the refugee crisis, the financial crisis, the housing crisis…The fact that

these crises have different names make them appear as though they are disconnected, they

are all just crises of capitalism.

Capitalism is remarkably adaptive though, and always finds new ways to accumulate wealth.

In order to survive, it will choose to do this no matter how bad the trail of destruction

is that it needs to leave behind.

When the system hit a new limit in the late 1970s, it responded by introducing neoliberal

doctrine which deregulated banks and integrated the economies of the world.

This was the start of "market fundamentalism" which was said to stimulate healthy competition

in the system.

It did just the opposite, by essentially giving capitalists free reign to take wealth in economically

depressed parts of the globe that didn't stand a chance at resisting its takeover.

It weakened unions at home and globalized labor such that labor could no longer demand

its share of productivity, because well corporations could just move your job oversees.

It also allowed capitalists to circumvent animal and environmental protection laws in

the western world by relocating to poorer, less regulated countries.

And for the next 30 years, neoliberalism worked, at least in worked in terms of increasing

profit.

This period was characterized by an almost unprecedented level of growth.

The problem is that barely anyone benefited, and the wealth all went to

the top.

Today, a CEO makes on average 475 times the amount of money as one of his workers.

This is not an unusual statistic, it is an average.

And in all the ways I outlined at the beginning of this talk, the ship of neoliberal capitalism

is breaking down, and the cracks can't be fixed fast enough to keep it from sinking.

This is hurting a lot of people, and generally people are very angry and desperate.

And, whenever crisis hits, the system's justifications for existing need to become

more and more radical.

As economist Richard Wolf said, "when capitalism is in crisis, it needs to come up with an

explanation to its problems that can lead to actions to be taken that will leave the

system out of the conversation."

And this is when toxic ideologies like right-wing populism are able to spread.

They are able to tap into people's pain and fear of lost status, whether racial, gendered,

or economic, and blame refugees and immigrants for the system's failure.

That's how ideologies that seem unacceptable when times are good, suddenly become acceptable

and even compelling when times are bad.

That's what happened in Germany when hitler rose to power in 1929.

Hitler didn't start by killing 6 million Jews.

It took him over 13 years.

He started in Munich, leading a tiny fringe movement of dissatisfied war veterans after

WWI.

His ideas were seen as absurd by most people until he began to gain power in 1929-1930

after the great depression hit and left tens of millions of people unemployed.

Hitler was able to tap into people's fear and anger, and turn it into ethnocentric nationalist

pride.

We are seeing a similar version of this play out before our eyes today.

Fascism and racism are the underbelly of capitalism, as these forces play a key function in preserving

the material conditions of capitalism.

Rather than blaming the system itself, it responds to capitalism's invariable crises

by redirect people's revolutionary anger towards victims of the machine, who have absolutely

nothing to do with it's technical inaptitude.

So now I'll spend the rest of talk focussing on what I think the vegan movement can learn

from this crisis of capitalism, and how we can leverage this knowledge to design a new

politics of animal liberation.

So first of all, full disclosure, I think that ending capitalism, especially in its

present deregulated form, would be the single most important thing for animal liberation.

I talk about a good amount on my Youtube channel, and I get so much pushback on it from other

vegans, that veganism has nothing to do with capitalism.

A big channel even said a few days ago that my anti-capitalist views are conspiracy theories,

which honestly, I have a hard time understanding.

How anyone could look at the current state of affairs and think capitalism is working

for animals is sort of mind-boggling to me.

To be effective animals rights activists, we need to be aware of the fact that this

economic system has been incredibly harmful to animals.

They do not stand to win anything from the salvation of the system, regardless of how

many nut milks and tempeh burgers are becoming sold on the market as compared with what was

available 30 years ago.

Actually 30 years go, there were around 75% less animals slaughtered for food than there

are today, so I worry they would not see vegan consumerism as a sign of progress at all.

Truth is, it is literally impossible to separate the history of animal agriculture from the

history of capitalism and from the history of capital accumulation.

I mean if you think about it in a sick and twisted way, something that the economic system

requires us to do, animal agriculture is the perfect tool for capitalists to colonize and

control the globe.

By definition, animal agriculture is hierarchical, centralized, and expansive.

It takes up a huge amount of land, and mandates the privatization of land, water, and the

displacement of entire communities.

For example, the history of euro settler colonialism in North America, would not have been possible

without animal agriculture.

500 years ago, there were no domesticated species of pigs, cows, and chickens on the

continent.

Breeding animals and setting up a centralized agriculture system was a way to displace native

americans and destroy the food sovereignty of anyone who tried to live outside of the

colonial state.

Centralizing and controlling food production is still a domination tactic for profit accumulation

today, and animal agriculture plays a vital role in that.

One-third of the earth's land today is devoted to animal agriculture.

Since virtually all the earth's resources are privatized, it makes sense that anyone

who wants to survive needs to good purchase food with money at the supermarket.

Hands down, animal agriculture could have never reached the levels of production that

it has today if our system wasn't governed by profit, which is distributed amounts a

handful of corporate monopolies.

And this endless quest for profit has, as it always does, led to overproduction.

Today, we kill so many animals that over one forth, 26.2% of all the meat that enters the

US retail market ends up in landfills.

Based on the data provided by the USDA, this corresponds to over 25 billion fish, 15 billion

shellfish, one billion chickens and one hundred million other land animals.

These are all animals who are bred and slaughtered, not even because they respond to people's

appetite for meat, but because their existence in the "production" chain responds profit.

The fact that they end up in land fills is irrelevant.

It's irrelevant because it makes profit, which by the way, are numbers on a screen

somewhere that literally correspond to nothing.

I think that, henceforth, the vegan movement could gain a tremendous amount by working

more closely with other social justice movements who resist capitalism because their own liberation

is tied to the same economic system.

This shouldn't be hard to find today, as most movements for social justice are anti-capitalist,

especially with everything that's happened this past year.

However, in order to do that, we need to be ready to shift away from the vegan consumer

culture that dominates the mainstream vegan movement.

As long as vegans believe that animal rights can be achieved by buying vegan products,

they won't be taken very seriously by other activists engaging in a systematic and intersectional

critique of how capitalism works.

To be clear, by "vegan consumer culture" I am not talking about boycotting animal products

and buying vegan goods in their place As a vegan, I of course do that too.

By "vegan consumer culture" I am referring to a particular type of ideology that embraces

consumerism as a form of pseudo-market activism.

It advocates that equality would come about if we each just created the right kind demand.

However, consumerism runs counter to activism, because of the exploitation that is inherent

to capitalist production which I discussed earlier in my talk.

I'm not talking about a fringe ideology in the vegan movement.

I'm talking about beliefs that are very prevalent, like that we can all vote with

our dollars, even though plenty of people don't have dollars to vote with or can't

choose what to eat.

I am also talking about the idea that everything we buy that is vegan is automatically cruelty

free even though so much food is produced by exploited workers.

I am also talking about the mass exodus of vegans moving to poor countries and claiming

to promote veganism by stimulating the fruit economy, while not understanding the colonial

politics of the fact that their wealth dwarfs the income of the local black or brown population.

I am really not trying to shame anyone who has engaged in these practices.

I totally understand the logic behind them and I was there not that long ago.

However, we need to understand that these beliefs come from an incredibly privileged

place.

Vegan consumer culture is dangerous, because it obscures how industrial production requires

the exploitation of workers and nonhuman animals, as well as the displacement their communities,

and the destruction of natural resources.

Let's face it, vegan consumer culture makes us lazy, and for people who don't have money,

painting veganism as a consumer lifestyle rather than an ethical stance makes it inaccessible.

The other way that vegans essentially become mass propagandists for capitalism, is by furthering

the idea that we can solve climate change by replacing meat products with plant-based

alternatives on our shopping list.

Again, I'm not trying to shame anyone because god only knows how many times that very argument

came out of my mouth when I first went vegan.

Even though it is absolutely true that the animal agriculture is one of the most polluting

industries on the planet, we need to get away from the idea that this industry can be considered

on its own, and taken down while we leave the other ones unchallenged.

It will never happen– too many powerful industries are in bed with animal agriculture

to ever let that occur.

Most often, vegans bring attention to animal agriculture by pitting it against other oil-dependent

economies like fracking, tar sands, and transportation.

Interestingly, the military, which is by far the biggest threat to climate change never

gets mentioned.

I don't have a problem with comparing the relative impact of these industries, but if

they are to be compared, they should also be connected put into context.

For example, when we dismiss pipelines as relatively unimportant compared to in the

struggle for climate justice, we fail Native Americans and animals by making it seem like

climate change is primarily due to unstrategic activism rather than the fossil fuel economy.

As Vandana Shiva explains in Soil Not Oil, our entire industrialized agriculture, is

a "recipe for eating oil".

Vegan or not, fossil fuels are at the heart of our industrial food system.

Oil is used for the fertilizers that pollute the soil and water, it's used to replace

small farmers with giant robotized harvesters, it's used to industrially process and package

food, and it's used to transport it farther and rather away.

We can't talk about the unsustainability of our food system without first talking about

capitalism, which has eroded soil fertility worldwide and colonized nature by allowing

the privatization of its resources by a handful of huge corporations.

Unfortunately, substituting our diet from one that is reliant on capitalist animals

to one reliant on capitalist plants, will not suffice to end the destruction of our

planet.

All this to say, that reversing climate change and achieving animal liberation is going to

take a heck of a lot more than changing our grocery lists.

In order to to maximize our impact, it is quite urgent for vegans to understand that

consumerist veganism will not yield the outcomes that many people claim it will.

So, now that I've gotten made the point that one) the crisis we find ourselves in

is a crisis of capitalism and 2) that capitalism is bad for animals and therefore so is vegan

consumer culture, I want to finish my talk on an optimistic note, which is that I truly

believe that the vegan movement, right now, has an unprecedented chance at politicizing

animal rights and becoming highly relevant in social justice circles.

Now more than ever, we need to show that animals are the natural allies of other anti-capitalist

movements.

The rise in Right wing populism only tells one side of the story.

Leftist movements are also rising up and demanding an end to capitalism.

I recently saw a pole that says that 51% of millennials don't believe in capitalism

and want another economic system.

That number is huge.

In the US, the Bernie Sanders campaign, the native-led movement at Standing Rock, the

fight for Immigrant rights, LGBTQ rights, and the Black Lives Matter movement are all

clear indicators that demands for economic, environmental, gender and racial justice are

getting louder and louder, which is also due to the fact that they are linking arms.

Sure Donald Trump won the presidency, but the largest crowd in US history showed up

to protest his inauguration.

In Europe, there are also similar movements at work.

Podemos in Spain, Syriza in Greece, or the Labor party in england are examples of movements

who have gained a great amount of traction in recent years, and beyond any analysis of

these movements in and of themselves, what they show is that a lot of people want an

end to capitalism, and they are looking for other solutions.

I want veganism to be seen as a part of that solution, and for animals to be on that agenda.

As their allies, we need to realize that this is the smartest move.

That if animals could talk, they wouldn't be asking us to cheer on capitalism by voting

with our dollars and sitting back hoping the rest will take care of itself.

We need to realize that animals also have a stake in the fight for native rights to

land and water, they have a stake in dismantling the prison industrial complex, they have a

stake in opposing militarism, oil extraction, environmental racism, and LGBT discrimination.

Animals stand to benefit from all movements that challenge and weaken White-hetero-capitalist

patriarchy, because this is the same system that they themselves are oppressed by.

As vegans, we need to show our solidarity with these movements.

This isn't just about feigning interest in other oppressions to get everyone to "go

vegan".

It's about starting from an understanding that human liberation and animal liberation

are intimately tied, and that only by building alyship on this basis can we really hope to

see movements for social justice succeed.

Of course, other social justice movements must realize that rejective animal exploitation

is crucial and urgent, and yeah, the information is out there and a lot of that is on them.

However, there are definitely a few things we can do to make that connection a more obvious.

For starters, we need to understand that connection ourselves, and as a result stop promoting

consumerism as a method of activism.

We also need to stop using tactics that are sexist, racist, classist or ableist that make

marginalized voices feel that "veganism is not for them".

There is also an increasing presence of anti-SJWs in the movement that harass people who fight

for social justice, and an alarming rise in neo-nazis who advocate pro-white supremacist,

anti-semitic views.

We need to be clear that these people don't have their place in the vegan movement, and

not hold back from doing so for fear of "being divisive".

Being divisive isn't challenging bigoted behavior, it's making it unsafe for anyone

who isn't privileged, thin, white, cis, etc.

We cannot expect other people to make the connection between their oppression and animals,

if we don't understand oppression ourselves.

We need to highlight how capitalism and white supremacy use the mass exploitation of animals

and people in their quest for profit.

There are countless examples of this, starting with corporations funneling disease inducing

foods into communities of color, exploiting vulnerable people to work in slaughterhouses,

or placing CAFO's (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) in PoC neighborhoods.

I'm at Vegfest, let's pretend, so I presume most of us are intimately convinced that veganism

is crucial for helping animals, the environment, and our health.

That's why this talk isn't devoted to that.

This talk was more aimed at giving people a framework for some of the many reasons why

capitalism, and other systems that require an exploited underclass, like White supremacy,

patriarchy, and speciesism, are inherently contradictory to veganism.

The future of animal liberation depends on the end of these oppressive hierarchies, and

the future of our movement depends on us understanding that fact if we hope to deliver all the promises

we have made.

It will make the difference between animal liberation being commodified as another fringe

consumerist trend, and animal liberation being seen as an inextricable part of anti-oppression

struggles.

I'm not here to sell you pro-intersectional, anti-capitalist veganism as something new

or a solution that will only be attained in the distant future.

There are a lot of people already doing this.

If you'd like to find those people, I'd like to shout out a page that Collectively

Free just made on their website.

If you don't know them, they are an amazing organization that you should check out.

They just put together a list of all the people doing this sort of pro-intersectional vegan

work.

It's amazing to have us all in one place so that we can all find each other more easily.

There are endless things to learn and people to be inspired by.

And I really hope that this talk was a good introduction in you wanting to learn more.

Check out the links I put in the description box and what your comments are.

Speaking at Vegfest was so much fun and I was

really nervous, for those of

you who were there let me know!

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