Thứ Ba, 25 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 25 2017

Just about everybody is grossed out by

cockroaches and they're carriers of

parasites like tapeworms. They're also a

trigger for allergens and asthma. Today

I'm going to show you how to deal with

these pests organically. There are three

major species of cockroaches that can be

problems indoors: German, Oriental and

American. German cockroaches are by far

the most common type to cause an

infestation. Oriental and American

cockroaches are usually only problems in

very damp humid areas. When it comes to

controlling cockroaches you need to use

an integrated pest management system.

Using just one type of control won't

eliminate the problem and it won't

prevent it from reoccurring again.

Control cockroaches through sanitation,

exclusions and perhaps chemical control.

The first step is exclusion. If the

cockroaches can't get into your kitchen

they can't infest it. Use weather

stripping around your doors and windows.

Keep shrubs trimmed so they're away from

the house. Caulk small cracks in the walls

and where wires come into the house. If

you don't have indoor pets or small

children

you can also put down some crawling

insect killer in front of vents to kill

roaches trying to come in the house. If

you're bringing in a piece of furniture

or an accessory into the home from

outside be sure and vet it very carefully

to make sure that there's no roaches

hitching a ride.

remove trash or stacked firewood from

against your home.

These can provide places for hiding

roaches. Cockroaches like dark warm

places to hide so check your meter box

and irrigation boxes regularly. Cockroach

populations in these areas may easily

make it indoors. if you do find evidence

of cockroach populations inside you can

spray with a product that's labeled for

cockroaches indoors like this orange

guard.

Inside your house practice sanitation.

Remove sources of food water and hiding

places to make your kitchen unattractive

to roaches. Store your food in plastic

or glass containers that cockroaches

can't get into. Vacuum the back of

cabinets, the back of drawers, to be able

to vacuum up any food or egg cases or

roaches.

Use a flashlight and mirror to check

for hard to see places. Check for egg

cases, roach skins and possible food

droppings. Be sure and check under your

sink for leaks. Cockroaches could get

thirsty and try to find water underneath.

Remove stacks of magazines, bags or

other places that roaches might hide. If

you can't remove a likely hiding place

you can place sticky traps like this

insect magnet to monitor your control

strategy. Use metal cans with secure lids

to prevent roaches from getting inside

your trash cans.

Be sure and practice monitoring

exclusion good sanitation and organic

controls and keep these baddies out of

your kitchen and grow organic for life.

For more infomation >> How to Prevent Cockroaches - Duration: 3:44.

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

Rick Ross x Drake x Kendrick Lamar Type Beat 2017 "LISTEN" | Hiphop Rap Trap Instrumental | Free DL - Duration: 4:08.

Rick Ross x Drake x Kendrick Lamar Type Beat 2017 "LISTEN" | Hiphop Rap Trap Instrumental | Young Forever Beats x Roc Legion

For more infomation >> Rick Ross x Drake x Kendrick Lamar Type Beat 2017 "LISTEN" | Hiphop Rap Trap Instrumental | Free DL - Duration: 4:08.

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

Propaganda: Faith, Family & Hip Hop | Frankly Faraci - Duration: 22:21.

(uplifting music)

- You know, the Lord works in mysterious

and amazing ways, right?

So a couple of years ago, I saw this video

of this hiphop artist explaining gospel,

and it really spoke to me,

especially because I thought,

you know? Young people may not listen to me,

but this guy is reaching a whole new generation.

So I did some clicking around and found out

he's an artist called Propaganda,

and I instantly became a fan.

Fast forward a couple of years.

My wife and I are sitting at a film premiere

and she points down the aisle and says,

"Isn't that that guy, Propaganda, that you like?"

I said, "Oh my goodness."

I ran up to him and I said, "Look,

"I don't usually do this, but I am a huge fan of your work.

"I love what you're doing."

Well, we instantly became friends,

and out of that, we had the opportunity

to go to a radio station and sit down with Prop

and talk to him about his life, his work, his faith,

and about changing the world.

- I'm really happy to be here tonight

with somebody very special I want to introduce you to,

and I'm actually meeting him for the first time.

So we're gonna learn together

about Propaganda.

♫ The pain that guides us

♫ The strings that tie us

♫ The coincidence that proves to us God's existence

So from the soil that grew in Jim Morrison, Tony Hawk,

NWA, Snoop, and Kendrick Lamar

grows another LA native, Propaganda.

What do you say about Propaganda?

He's a poet, political activist, husband,

father, academic, and MC.

With LA flowing through his veins

and armed with a bold message,

Propaganda has assembled a body of work

that challenges his listeners with every verse

and reaches across the spectrum of pop culture.

From aggressive battle raps to smooth introspective rhythms,

Propaganda's music will cause you to nod your head,

but most importantly, it will stretch your mind and heart.

I mean--

- [Propaganda] It's incredibly uncomfortable to hear

it when you're sitting there. - I learned a lot about you

in like three sentences.

- [Propaganda] Yes, Ma'am.

- But I really appreciate that last part,

stretching your mind and your heart.

- Stretch your mind and heart, got to.

- Thank you for being here, Prop.

- What up? What up, y'all?

- So everybody's got their musical preferences,

but what I'm always looking for

is excellence, right?

So I'm clicking around the internet

and I see this video that you and I talked about,

Don't Listen To Me, and Be Present,

where you're in this house,

and I didn't know, watching it,

and this is what I loved about it,

I didn't know that you were a faithful guy.

I just knew that I loved what you said,

fish out of water, the goulash that is you,

all that kind of stuff.

And then I saw your GOSPEL video,

which a lot of people have seen.

And then I saw your I Am Second testimony.

And I was like, "Ah, aha! He's a faithful guy."

What struck me about that whole experience was,

in Exodus 1:8, you may remember this,

it talks about the Kingdom of Egypt,

that there was a time when the Pharaoh didn't know Joseph,

that enough time had passed

that Pharaoh didn't know Joseph.

You are speaking into a culture of young people

that don't know like the faith message at all.

When I came across that, I was just

really struck by, here's a guy doing something different

and I instantly became a fan of your work.

And so is that sort of your experience,

that a lot of people have kind of met you that way?

- I think, in recent years, yeah.

Prior to sort of poetry and sort of the YouTube world,

I was just in sort of just

the hiphop kind of battle rap scene,

and so people kind of knew me as that,

just like an underground rapper.

You know, the GOSPEL video, the I Am Second video

definitely sort of changed the trajectory,

where people's entrance to me was poetry,

and speaking on like the things of God.

- For a lot of people

that have a specific idea of what Christian music is,

is hiphop Christian music?

- Well, hiphop is hiphop.

And, you know, Jesus ain't die for hiphop,

he died for people, you know what I'm saying?

Like any other genre, somebody puts

their personhood, and their faith, and their beliefs

into whatever they do.

So country music isn't Christian music, it's country music.

There are Christians that do it, you know what I'm saying?

And hiphop itself,

depending on who you ask and what day you ask them,

is much more than a musical genre.

It's a more of a cultural expression

that came out of

a sociopolitical and economic state that

the nation is in.

- But hiphop can be Christian.

- Absolutely, just like any other thing can be Christian.

So like all of the lights and cameras and stuff

are plugged into something.

So that's the utility.

The electricity, the outlet is a utility,

and whatever you plug into that

becomes whatever it is.

So as an artist who's doing hiphop,

hiphop is a utility,

but the artist plugging into that might

or might not be a Christian.

- I heard a musician, Jake Hamilton,

say something that really struck me.

He talked about the fact that God is the creator

of everything, right?

And so that means God created every kind of music,

and just because it's not your kind of music,

doesn't mean it's inherently bad.

Sometimes rap obviously has a bad name

because people have,

you know, because there's been so many bad actors

in the genre, but that doesn't make it inherently bad.

- Yeah, I have a worldview that believes

that there's no sphere of the universe

that God's not sovereign over.

So all music, all art, all beauty is God's.

So all of it is God reflecting, right?

Evil exists in the hearts of men and women,

you know what I mean?

But, I mean, I'm trying,

help me understand how the content of

hiphop is any different than like Hotel California,

you know what I'm saying?

Or any other musical genre where people are just

telling their soundtrack of life

that is sometimes full of incredible debauchery,

you know what I'm saying?

The racial undertone of that is like,

well, hiphop's made by black people.

So somehow or another,

we have to give this a caveat like it's wrong,

but it don't have to be wrong, you know what I'm saying?

How come nobody's saying that about any other genre,

you know what I'm saying?

So I would say that, again, when you're creating art,

you're either creating art about the light

or about what the light is shining on.

Do you understand what I'm saying?

In that sense, every album is

ultimately, actually telling God's story.

- You're speaking light and life

into a whole new generation of people

that haven't maybe heard that message.

They're not hearing a lot of positive messages.

How does that feel?

- Man, you know what?

- To be a role model like that.

- Yeah, you know, I still take a sort of

workhorse sort of like point of view where it's like

a lot of times you can't see the forest for the trees,

as not to say that I don't take

the responsibility, like I don't take it lightly,

and I'm not incredibly grateful for it,

but it's always,

I'm taken aback when someone says,

"Hey, yo, you know, I've never thought about

"life, the gospel, or anything like this

"until I saw you working them stories."

It's like, "Wait, what? Wait, me?" You know what I'm saying?

- That's because you're a trailblazer and you're the first.

Other people came after you,

but you took it into something new,

which is what God does.

You took it into something totally new

that hadn't been done before, you know?

- Well, I mean, yeah, I wasn't the first

like Christian rapper, but, you know,

on the other hand, yeah, I had to walk the--

- You're the first you.

- I'm the first me.

I'm the guy that walked my lane, yeah.

- So how did you know you were gifted

in the world of words?

- That's funny, like I still wonder, you know?

- Obviously, you were born this way,

but when did you know?

- You ask my father, it's the fifth grade talent show.

It's like I danced to Bobby Brown's like Ghostbusters song,

you now what I'm saying? - Oh, not Ghostbusters.

- Oh, man, I was killing it,

and I couldn't figure out for the love of me

why the teachers made me go last, right?

I was like, "Why I got to go last?"

And then somebody finally told me

it's 'cause you're the headliner.

And I was like,

"Oh, so that's a compliment?"

So I ain't knew, you a fifth-grader, you don't know.

I knew that I could come alive on stage then.

I just got bit by the bug, yeah.

- I don't know if you'd be comfortable with this label,

but sometimes I think you're a sarcastic Christian

in the sense that... - I am.

Yes. - Right?

- Yes. - Are you cool with that?

- Our sarcasm is a gift from God.

Yeah, I totally agree, yeah.

Satire is I feel like is a lost art.

- And then there's this other element of your work, which is

sort of cultural commentary.

You're looking up, you're asking us to look at ourselves,

both as faithful people and the larger community.

- Yeah, I minored in intercultural studies,

and then I went and got

a teacher credential in social sciences,

so I still really think of myself as

like a sociologist in a lot of ways,

in that a lot of my music is just commentary,

of culture, of life, and sometimes of myself.

- Some people love the spoken word,

you do spoken word, you do music,

and people loved one or the other,

they want both, and you were saying that

you have to have both.

- It's two sides of the same coin,

it's like asking a parent to pick

which kid they like better.

I would never like choose.

They are both 100% me, and they both serve

the type of messages and things and art

like I desire to create.

- Can you do a couple lines from maybe

whatever spoken word piece

that you love or that you're thinking about right now?

- I was recently told I was too creative,

that I was not quite centered enough,

and, "The peeps we trying to reach

"wouldn't understand your speech."

I told them, "It's cool, it's not a issue.

"I ain't so judgmental, thanks for your advice.

"I'm just not afraid of heights."

- So talk about that a little bit.

- Yeah, so that, again, was a true story.

Was asked to be a part of an event.

We're trying to be a Christian organization that had

reached into a general market

and they wanted to be evangelistic in their approach,

and the music, or the poetry that I present

oftentimes isn't,

it's not a very direct, if you will,

because that's just not the way I write.

So it's not like a very direct, up-the-gut,

it-is-what-it-is gospel presentation.

Most of my poetry is not.

In the interview process of being on this,

one of the elders kind of called me and said,

"We love your work, but it's kind of not...

"We're looking for stuff that's a little more evangelistic,

"and we kind of feel like it's almost like

"it's too creative."

And just the phrase was like,

"What?"

Like you know what I'm saying?

And it inspired a poem, and I was just like,

I felt like what I heard

wasn't like concern for the brand,

I heard fear,

and I was like, "You're just scared.

"Whatever it is, you're scared."

So that's why I was like, "Man, I'm not afraid of heights."

- Would it be fair to say you've got

a little John the Baptist going on there?

- Maybe, you know what I'm saying?

- Maybe not the locusts. - Yeah, that's disgusting.

- And the honey, right?

But the idea that you're unafraid to sort of

speak into the culture what you see.

- Man, I'm not afraid of the culture,

you know what I'm saying?

And a lot of times, people use that as holiness,

but I'm like, "It's not holiness, you scared.

"You're scared that whatever they are

"or whatever you think they are is gonna

"like somehow, by osmosis, get on you."

It's just not the message of scripture,

it's not the message of Jesus,

and it's definitely not the message

that I put out in my music.

But it made me realize

some of the fears that were in my own life,

you know what I'm saying?

So I'm like, "You scared,

"but you scared like the rest of us."

You know what I'm saying?

"You scared like I am."

I'm scared to be mediocre.

I'm scared to not ever reach a certain level of potential

or success in my career.

I'm afraid I'm all talk.

I'm afraid, you know what I'm saying?

So all of the things that I realize, like,

yo, I'm just as afraid.

- Let's talk about somebody who's faithful,

they're struggling with something in their life.

Give me a song or a spoken word piece

that's an example of how you try to address that.

- Yeah, well, I did a song called I Ain't Got An Answer.

And it was essentially about like

y'all having no idea what to do as a parent.

You upset, and like, you know, just being like,

I am clueless, I have no answer for you.

I don't like making music that ties up

with a neat little bow at the end,

because life's not a sitcom, you know what I'm saying?

It don't wrap up in 23 minutes,

and you have all the answers, everything,

it just don't work like that.

I still got questions about things that I'm like,

"Man, I have no idea why I went through that."

I dunno, you know what I'm saying?

- Especially as a dad.

- Yeah, you know, especially as a dad.

- Of girls.

Let's talk about that a little bit.

- Oh, jeez.

- You're a father, you've got girls,

how does that affect all this?

- Oh my gosh.

I realized a number of things.

I realized I had actually bought into

gender role patriarchy that I didn't know I had.

Quick story, my eldest daughter,

when she was in second grade,

she got pushed off the monkey bars.

She was crying, but she was crying

not because she was scared, but she just,

for the love of her, couldn't figure out

why another person would do that to her.

Just having a daughter made me sort of have the wherewithal

to be like, well,

you never know what that little girl is going through.

Maybe she was having a bad day.

Is she your friend, you know what I'm saying?

You don't want to lose a friend.

I just know that wouldn't have been my response with a boy.

Like with a boy, I'd be like, "Wait, he did what?

"He pushed you off of what?

"And what did you do?" You know what I'm saying?

Did you teach him he can't do that?

- Oh, I know what you're saying.

- Do you understand what I'm saying?

But just realizing like, why?

Why is it so easy for me to think that for my boy?

Why couldn't I say to my boy like,

"Yo, maybe homie was having a bad day."

You know what I'm saying?

Like why can't you just, you know what I'm saying?

So I just realize, having daughters

that I actually thought about the world in a much more

obtuse way than I

was willing to admit.

- You have an agenda. - I do.

- And your agenda, as I see it, is to speak,

like to speak positive, to speak good into the world.

As an artist, we all have that thing, that passion.

My passion is talking to people like you.

What drives you?

- Man, it's a T-shirt that we made

because it came from lyrics, but it's real,

like I'm not the artist, I'm the canvas.

- Ooh, I like that.

- Yeah, the Lord is the artist, you know what I'm saying.

I got to be who I am, I got to be what he made me.

To me, it's culture-shaking, you know?

And if you can get to like the fountainhead.

The fountainhead of culture is like virtue,

so if you have like virtuous like

men and women at like

the mouth of like the river of culture then downstream,

politics, music, and stuff like that, and education,

all that changes down there.

My attitude is that, how can I shape this up here?

What can I throw into the river up there,

that when it gets downstream, you know what I'm saying?

I can look back and be like,

I may not have any plaques on my wall, but

I tell you what, that's my plaque,

the fact that like this law is now passed or

this institution is this.

- You did what you were called to do.

Yeah, you did what you were called to do.

I mean, recognition comes from there.

- It comes from up. - Not from out there.

- So what's most important for you

as far as your message in your music?

- People asking me like, "So what sort of like

"high, theological, doctrinal issues you working with?"

I'm like, "Fam, I'm still trying to love my neighbor, Dog."

I'm still on number two, you know?

Love God and love neighbor.

I'm still working on number two.

You understand what I'm saying?

I don't know if I've moved past freshman year yet.

Yeah, there's a bigger picture of like

there is a God and that God loves us, but like,

more specifically, man,

let's learn how to be better humans,

you know what I'm saying?

- We working on it.

- We working on it.

- For parents that are watching, and they're thinking,

"Okay, I should introduce this guy to my kids

"if they don't already know about him, why?"

- You know what?

Wow, that's crazy,

I don't know if I'd have an answer for that.

Because I actually make music that's more for the parent.

- That's interesting.

- Hiphop doesn't have to be a youthful thing,

you know what I'm saying?

I talk about mortgages,

I talk about like having preteens,

I talk about paying bills,

I talk about like adult things.

- It's like Seinfeld, but with music.

- Yeah, you know what I'm saying?

I think that

it's sort of a misnomer that like hiphop has to be

a youthful thing, you know what I'm saying?

I feel like I'm talking to it,

I rap like an adult because I am one.

You know what I'm saying?

- But for young people that are fans of yours

and who are inspired by you,

can you leave them some advice?

I mean, people that say they see your work

and they go, "You know what?

"I want to follow in that path."

- Absolutely.

Yo, I would say, yeah, like

what my mom used to say,

"Be who you is, because who you ain't ain't who you is."

- Boy, it's so good.

- A million grammatical errors, but it's wisdom of the ages.

- Yes, it is.

- You just got to be the person

the Father has made you to be.

- Okay, so let's pivot just a little bit.

Racial tension has been a big subject

for the last couple years,

with the Black Lives Matter movement,

I don't even need to detail that,

everybody in America knows that.

A lot of people complain about it, they point fingers,

you actually do something about it,

and I want you to talk about it

because it's important for people to know what you're doing.

- Yeah, so a considerable amount of my work is

directed towards sort of systemic injustice,

and I think it all really just boils down to like,

how do we be a better neighbor?

Like you love your neighbor,

and sometimes loving your neighbor means

you got to understand your neighbor.

So as a believer, if I'm gonna talk about justice and race,

I can't go straight to reconciliation

without skipping truth because

that's not real reconciliation,

that's just flattery. - No, it's inauthentic.

- It's inauthentic and it's not real, right?

But I can't just stop at truth

because then we're not trying to reconcile.

So what I believe my heart is to say

it's got to be both.

It's reconciliation through truth.

So truth means you have to acknowledge

racism is real, we have a very real history of this.

Of course, black people ain't

the sole purveyors of suffering.

What did you think, that just when slavery

and Jim Crow stopped, all of a sudden,

everybody was singing Kumbaya?

- Everybody's happy, we're good.

- It's all good, like there's no residue of that.

That's like looking at a woman who's been beat for 20 years

by her husband and be like,

"Hey, but he stopped hitting you,

"so you need to stop complaining."

We would all think that that's ridiculous, right?

We would all say, "No, no, no, no, no.

"He needs to make this right."

So the truth is,

no, listen, we have real things we need to deal with.

But it's for the purpose of getting to reconciliation.

- People feel powerless to do anything.

So they watch you and they say, "Great.

"I'm gonna like what Prop said on Facebook,

"I'm gonna like it on Instagram."

But can you give,

like give people one thing that they can do, tangibly,

to take a positive step in that direction, in life.

- Yeah, make some friends.

It's super easy, make some friends.

You know, make some friends that don't look like you.

- What do you think the Church in America,

just speaking to the Church, what can be done better?

I'm kind of asking globally here.

- Yeah, I kind of think

we could stand to be a little more honest about our

shortcomings, our mistakes, our failures,

where we drop the ball,

and being willing to say, like the scripture says,

"I see through a glass dimly."

I don't have this figured out,

I'm running at the cross just like you are.

I am not what I want to be.

You know what I'm saying?

And I think that if we could, as a body,

just kind of embrace like what the cross says about us,

you know what I'm saying?

The cross says about us is that you're hopeless,

like that's the worst thing,

the worst thing anybody could say to you

is not worse than what the cross says,

which is you're hopeless,

there's nothing you can do about it.

You know what I'm saying?

- Thank you for saying that.

Hey, Prop, thanks for being on the show.

- My pleasure, man.

♫ You are receiving life

♫ Yes, life

♫ This is the Gospel.

♫ God, Our, Sins,

♫ Paying, Everyone, Life.

(lively music)

For more infomation >> Propaganda: Faith, Family & Hip Hop | Frankly Faraci - Duration: 22:21.

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

Tanks - car cartoons for kids | Babies videos by Fat Red Rat Kids Chanel - Duration: 30:18.

Tanks - car cartoons for kids | Babies videos by Fat Red Rat Kids Chanel

For more infomation >> Tanks - car cartoons for kids | Babies videos by Fat Red Rat Kids Chanel - Duration: 30:18.

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

KonTa & MC Intifada - "Rap Realness" (Official Video) - Duration: 3:40.

For more infomation >> KonTa & MC Intifada - "Rap Realness" (Official Video) - Duration: 3:40.

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

Quantico 2x20 Promo "GLOBALREACH" (SUB ITA) - Duration: 0:31.

For more infomation >> Quantico 2x20 Promo "GLOBALREACH" (SUB ITA) - Duration: 0:31.

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

Sonic Forces - Green Hill Footage Analysis, Drop Dash in Forces? - Duration: 5:45.

Hey everyone, welcome to my channel, it's me Gamerturk and topday we got a full 1 minute

and 40 seconds of Classic Gameplay in Sonic Forces, showcasing the entirety

of the Green Hill Zone stage that was teased during the Nintendo Direct

trailer.

You can click the icon on the upper right corner to watch the whole gameplay footage

uninterrupted, but in this video I will be analyzing the video, the gameplay,

music, stage design, environment and will also give my thoughts on this.

First off, let's start with the obvious things, this is indeed Green Hill Zone, not a Neo

Green Hill, not Sunset Hill, not Emerald Hill.

We start off with the familiar chequered ground, green grasses, familiar totems, sunflowers

and palm trees, along with bridges here and there.

The one difference as I mentioned in the short Nintendo Direct news video,

what runs underneath those bridges is not water, it is sand.

I mentioned that whatever Eggman did, possibly caused the rivers

and waterfalls to dry up.

As the stage moves on, if you keep looking at the background, the overall setting changes

from a full Green Hill Zone atmosphere to a more canyon-like

setting, which is very similar to what we have seen in the Modern Sonic

gameplay trailer, shifting from a full city scene to a more rural area on Green Hill mountains

towards the very end and so far, I really like these dynamic stages,

they are not just a single stage, it truly makes you feel like Sonic is travelling

some distance through varied settings, within a single stage.

On the topic of environment, some people have suggested that this is some sort of a "past"

version of Green Hill Zone due to having Classic Sonic in it, but I am gonna

have to disagree with that, as we can clearly see the enemies are not our

traditional Badniks, they are the new Eggpawns and robots from the Modern Footage we have

seen, so most likely, this is not a stage that takes place in the past.

The only traditional badnik we see in this stage is strangely a single Buzzbomber,

unlike the more futuristik ones we have seen in the Modern gameplay.

Even the Choppers that jump up on bridge sequences have had a futuristic redesign.

Before moving on to the gameplay, we can see our usual item and ring monitors around and

the good old springs.

It is lovely to have the Sonic CD spinny animation when

a spring launches you up though, that has been one of my favourite animations

from the classics.

The Classic gameplay seems much more refined than the one in Generations.

Sure, we cant really say much without actually playing it, but from the looks of it, Sonic's

moves look more natural and has gotten rid of that feeling from Generations,

that made it feel like his actions were slightly delayed, it certainly looks more fluid.

The spindash has obviously been balanced after being way too OP in Generations

and I'm also glad to mention that Sonic Team went back to the "Mash the button"

type of spindash than "Hold the button" spindash, which always felt more intuitive to rev Sonic

up.

You can also see the blue aura around Sonic spindashes, similar

to how it was in Sonic Adventure and onwards till Unleashed.

Everything looks more polished and more snappy than how they were in Generations.

What truly struck me the most however is what seems to be the new move from Sonic Mania,

the "Dropdash" being used in Sonic Forces.

At the 1 minute 26 second mark, Sonic does an instant Spindash as he touches

the ground.

At first I thought it was just a very well timed spindash, but then

I looked again, watching very very slowly and you can see Sonic starts revving up, about

3-4 frames before actually touching the ground.

I cannot say for sure if that is truly the case, since I do not want to spread misinformation

without an actual announcement, but it certainly looks

like that is indeed the Dropdash.

That is it from the gameplay department and before I want to talk about the stage design,

where I have some interesting theories, I wanna mention that I am really

glad the music is not yet another Green Hill Zone tune.

Yes, it has a distinct retro music style to it, but at least it is

a brand new track.

Now as I said, I have a theory what the stage design might suggest.

All this time, we have been accustomed to Green Hill Zone

being very easy and straightforward, since it has always been the first stage in games

it was featured in.

The Green Hill Zone in Forces however, while having certain parts

that can easily be dismissed as "easy", has certain sections that have constant

traps one after the other.

Falling platforms on top of hazards and the last section where it is filled with enemies

along with bottomless pits.

Compared to all the Green Hills before, where it was pretty much impossible to die, I am

assuming that this Green Hill Zone won't be the very first stage in Classic Sonic's journey

in this game.

And with that we come to the end of this video.

If you enjoyed this video, found it interesting and want more similar videos,

make sure to let me know in the comments and by hitting that like button.

Subscribe for more Sonic Forces videos.

You can also find me on twitter @gamerturk95 and on facebook.com/gamerturk.

I'll see you guys in the next video, until then, take care!

For more infomation >> Sonic Forces - Green Hill Footage Analysis, Drop Dash in Forces? - Duration: 5:45.

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

The Fourth Phase of Water — What You Don't Know About Water, and - Duration: 18:15.

The Fourth Phase of Water � What You Don�t Know About Water, and Really Should

Water is clearly one of the most important factors for your health � especially when

you consider that your body actually consists of over 99 percent water molecules! I sincerely

believe water is a really underappreciated part of the equation of optimal health.

I�ve previously interviewed Dr. Gerald Pollack, who is one of the leading premier research

scientists in the world when it comes to understanding the physics of water, and what it means to

your health.

Besides being a professor of bioengineering at the University of Washington, he�s also

the founder and editor-in-chief of a scientific journal called Water, and has published many

peer-reviewed scientific papers on this topic. He�s even received prestigious awards from

the National Institutes of Health.

His book, The Fourth Phase of Water: Beyond Solid, Liquid, and Vapor, is a phenomenal

read that is easy to understand even for the non-professional.

It clearly explains the theory of the fourth phase of water, which is nothing short of

ground-breaking. The fourth phase of water is, in a nutshell, living water.

It�s referred to as EZ water � EZ standing for �exclusion zone� � which has a negative

charge. This water can hold energy, much like a battery, and can deliver energy too.

For years, Dr. Pollack had researched muscles and how they contract, and it struck him as

odd that the most common ideas about muscle contraction do not involve water, despite

the fact that muscle tissue consists of 99 percent water molecules.

How could it be that 99 percent of the molecules were ignored? How could it be that muscle

contracts without involving the water in some way? These questions help catalyze his passionate

investigation into water.

So You Think You Understand Water?

Gilbert Ling, who was a pioneer in this field, discovered that water in human cells is not

ordinary water (H2O), but something far more structured and organized.

I began to think about water in the context of biology: if water inside the cell was ordered

and structured and not bulk water or ordinary water as most biochemists and cell biologists

think, then it is really important, Dr. Pollack says.

Dr. Pollack�s book also touches on some of the most basic features of water, many

of which are really not understood. For example, how does evaporation take place?

Why does a tea kettle whistle? Also, despite the fact that conventional science tells us

freezing is supposed to occur at zero degrees Celsius, experiments show that it can freeze

in many different temperatures down to minus 50 degrees Celsius.

There�s actually no one single freezing point for water! Other experiments show that

the boiling point of 100 degrees Celsius (or 212 degrees Fahrenheit) does not always hold

true either.

There�s a famous website1 put together by a British scientist, Martin Chaplin. Martin

lists numerous anomalies associated with water,� Dr. Pollack says. �In other words, things

that shouldn�t be according to what we know about water�

The more anomalies we have, the more we begin to think that maybe there�s something fundamental

about water that we really don�t know. That�s the core of what I�m trying to do. In our

laboratory at the University of Washington, we�ve done many experiments over the last

decade. These experiments have clearly shown the existence of this additional phase of

water.

The reason this fourth phase of water is called the exclusion zone or EZ is because the first

thing Dr. Pollack�s team discovered is that it profoundly excludes things. Even small

molecules are excluded from EZ water.

Surprisingly, EZ water appears in great abundance, including inside most of your cells. Even

your extracellular tissues are filled with this kind of water.

The Water in Your Cells Give Them Their Negative Charge

Other inherent differences between regular water and EZ water include its structure.

Typical tap water is H2O but this fourth phase is not H2O; it�s actually H3O2.

It�s also more viscous, more ordered, and more alkaline than regular water, and its

optical properties are different. The refractive index of EZ water is about 10 percent higher

than ordinary water.

Its density is also about 10 percent higher, and it has a negative charge (negative electrical

potential). This may provide the answer as to why human cells are negatively charged.

Dr. Pollack explains:

Everybody knows that the cell is negatively charged. If you insert an electrode into any

of your cells, you�ll measure a negative electrical potential. The textbook says that

the reason for this negative electrical potential has something to do with the membrane and

the ion channels in the membrane.

Oddly, if you look at a gel that has no membrane, you record much the same potential � 100

millivolts or 150 millivolts negative. The interior of the cell is much like a gel. It�s

kind of surprising that something without a membrane yields the same electrical potential

as the cell with a membrane.

That raises the question: where does this negativity come from? Well, I think the negativity

comes from the water, because the EZ water inside the cell has a negative charge.

The same is true of the gel�the EZ water in the gel confers negativity. I think the

cells are negatively charged because the water inside the cell is mainly EZ water and not

neutral H2O.

What Creates or Builds EZ Water?

One of the greatest surprises is that the key ingredient to create EZ water is light,

i.e. electromagnetic energy, whether in the form of visible light, ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths

and infrared wavelengths, which we�re surrounded by all the time.

Infrared is the most powerful, particularly at wavelengths of approximately three micrometers,

which is all around you. The EZ water can build on any hydrophilic or water-loving surface

when infrared energy is available.

It builds by adding layer upon layer of EZ water, and can build millions of molecular

layers. This is how it occurs in nature. For example, ice doesn�t form directly from

ordinary H2O.

It goes from regular water to EZ water to ice. And when you melt it, it goes from ice

to EZ water to regular water. So EZ water is an intermediate state.

Glacial melt is a perfect way to get EZ water. And a lot of people have known that this water

is really good for your health, Dr. Pollack says.

Testing water samples using a UV-visible spectrometer, which measures light absorption at different

wavelengths, Dr. Pollack has discovered that in the UV region of 270 nanometers, just shy

of the visible range, the EZ actually absorbs light.

The more of the 270 nanometer light the water absorbs, the more EZ water the sample contains.

EZ water appears to be quite stable. This means it can hold the structure, even if you

leave it sitting around for some time.

Water samples from the river Ganges and from the Lourdes in France have been measured,

showing spikes in the 270 nanometer region, suggesting these �holy waters� contain

high amounts of EZ water. According to Dr. Pollack, there�s compelling evidence that

EZ water is indeed lifesaving�

Water Mysteries:

Continued Research Supports The �Water Has Memory� Theory

Thoughts Create Reality � Dr. Masaru Emoto�s Scientific Experiments

Revisiting Masaru Emoto � The Nikki Owen �Apple Experiments�

EZ Cellular Water Helps Explain Health Benefits of Light and Heat Therapies

Heating equates to applying infrared energy, and Dr. Pollack has found that if you apply

infrared, the EZ water builds and doesn�t diminish. The implications of this are profound

when you consider the health benefits of sitting in an infrared sauna, for example.

Essentially, one of the reasons why infrared saunas make you feel so good is because your

body�s cells are deeply penetrated by infrared energy, which builds and stores EZ water.

The same goes for light therapy, spending time in the sun, and laser therapy.

There are various kinds of light therapy using different wavelengths. We found that all wavelengths

� some in particular � of light, even weak light, build EZ. If EZ is critical for

the health of your cells, which I think is clear, these therapies have a distinct physical

chemical basis, Dr. Pollack explains.

EZ water also provides a mechanism that explains other biological mysteries. For example, Dr.

Pollack describes another fascinating finding that further bolsters our understanding of

the mechanism of action behind the health benefits of something as simple as exposing

your body to the light and heat of the sun:

We found that if we put a simple tube, like a straw, made of hydrophilic material, in

water� there�s water flow through the tube at high speed. This happens spontaneously.

But it shouldn�t happen spontaneously.

The common idea is that if you want to drive fluid through a pipe or tube, you need to

apply pressure. But we have no pressure here. There�s no pressure difference between the

input and output. But flow builds up spontaneously, and it keeps going.

Recently, we found that if we add light, the flow goes faster. It means that light has

a particular effect; especially ultraviolet light, but other wavelengths as well. It speeds

up the flow.

We think that somehow the exclusion zones (EZs) are involved because inside those tubes,

there�s a little annular ring of exclusion zone, and inside that is an area full of protons�

It seems that the exclusion zone and the pressure of these protons are driving the flow.

Now, let�s apply these mechanisms to your body. Your capillaries receive radiant energy

from outside all the time. Energy is also received from the inside of your body, as

metabolic reactions continuously generate heat or infrared.

So the question is, is it possible that the flow of blood occurring through your capillaries

is automatically enhanced by exposure to light? It appears the answer may be yes�

This is an important issue because the capillaries are puzzling,� Dr. Pollack says.

They�re so small. Some of the capillaries are smaller in diameter than the red blood

cells that pass through them. Any competent engineer would never build a pipe that�s

smaller than the junk that�s supposed to go through. But nature, apparently, has done

that�

Now, that means there�s a lot of resistance. You need something to push those red blood

cells through� One possibility is that the flow in your capillaries is aided by this

kind of radiant energy� We�re starting to test this� It�s possible that your

cardiovascular system is assisted by radiant energy in the same way that the flow in the

tubes is assisted by radiant energy.

One of the more interesting healing modalities I�ve been exploring lately is the use of

a high-powered laser. The K-Laser also has frequencies in the infrared range, which can

deeply penetrate tissue.

This kind of laser therapy has shown to provide profound healing for many painful injuries

in a very short amount of time � sometimes just minutes of treatment.

While the benefits of laser therapy are thought to be due to its action on mitochondrial activity,

it may very well be that the benefits are also related to �recharging� your damaged

cells� EZ water, as well as promoting increased capillary blood flow.

EZ water in your body also plays a role is in hyperbaric medicine, which is also good

for injuries. In that case, your tissues are exposed to high oxygen under pressure.

The results are in. We think we understand the mechanism as to why hyperbaric oxygen

is so effective for wound healing� EZ water has a higher density than bulk water.

If you take H2O and you put it under pressure, it should give you H3O2 because the EZ structure

is denser than the H2O. We did the experiments and we found, indeed, that�s the case. If

you put H2O under pressure, you get more EZ water.

The same goes for oxygen. EZ also has more oxygen than H2O, and when you increase oxygen

content, you get more EZ water. So, hyperbaric treatment builds EZ water in your body, particularly

in injured areas where EZ water is needed.

Alkalinity and Your Body�s Negative Charge May Be Critical for Health

I personally drink vortexed water nearly exclusively as I became a big fan of Viktor Schauberger

who did much pioneering work on vortexing about a century ago.

Dr. Pollack found that by creating a vortex in a glass of water, you�re putting more

energy into it, thereby increasing EZ. According to Dr. Pollack, virtually ANY energy put into

the water seems to create or build EZ water.

We have looked at acoustic energy that seems to effect some change in the water. We�re

still not sure exactly what. Vortexed water puts enormous energy into the water. There

are several groups in Europe studying this phenomenon right now.

As mentioned earlier, EZ water is alkaline and carries a negative charge. Maintaining

this state of alkalinity and negative charge appears to be important for optimal health.

Drinking water can be optimized in a variety of different ways, by injecting light energy

or physical energy into the water by vortexing, for example. This is fairly easy using magnets.

Reversing the vortex every few seconds may even create more energy.

Clearly, more research needs to be done in this area, but some is already underway. My

own R&D team is working on a careful study in which we use vortexed water to grow sprouts,

to evaluate the vitality and effectiveness of the water.

As for a natural source of EZ water for drinking, an ideal source is glacial melt. Unfortunately,

this is extremely inaccessible for most people. Another good source is water from deep sources,

such as deep spring water.

The deeper the better, as EZ water is created under pressure. Natural spring water is another

excellent way to obtain this type of water and you can use FindaSpring.com2 to help you

find one close to you.

Besides optimizing the water you drink, you can help generate an electron surplus, or

support this negative charge within your body, simply by connecting to the Earth, which also

has a negative charge.

This is the basis of the earthing or grounding technique, which has been shown to have significant

health benefits by allowing the transfer of negatively charged electrons from the ground

into the soles of your feet.

In a sense, it�s as though your cells are built like batteries that are naturally recharged

by spending time outdoors � whether sunny or overcast, and walking barefoot, connecting

to the negative charge of the earth!

If you have an organ that�s not functioning well � for example, it�s lacking that

negative charge � then the negative charge from the earth and� [drinking] EZ water

can help restore that negativity. I�ve become convinced� that this negative charge is

critical for healthy function, Dr. Pollack says.

For more infomation >> The Fourth Phase of Water — What You Don't Know About Water, and - Duration: 18:15.

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

GG LIVE | DARK SOULS: Prepare To Die Edition #8 (PC) - Duration: 5:48:33.

For more infomation >> GG LIVE | DARK SOULS: Prepare To Die Edition #8 (PC) - Duration: 5:48:33.

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

Así era 'Paco' Jémez como jugador: el zaguero indiscutible de la selección de España - Duration: 2:43.

For more infomation >> Así era 'Paco' Jémez como jugador: el zaguero indiscutible de la selección de España - Duration: 2:43.

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

СУДЬБА по ДАТЕ РОЖДЕНИЯ / Деньги в вашей Судьбе. День 2/ Наталья Пугачева - Duration: 50:19.

For more infomation >> СУДЬБА по ДАТЕ РОЖДЕНИЯ / Деньги в вашей Судьбе. День 2/ Наталья Пугачева - Duration: 50:19.

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

alterinfo.gr - Μπρούσκο: Επεισόδιο 721 (trailer) - Duration: 0:26.

For more infomation >> alterinfo.gr - Μπρούσκο: Επεισόδιο 721 (trailer) - Duration: 0:26.

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

A Day in the Life of a CreaTe-student - Episode 2 - Zoë - Duration: 3:07.

Hi, I'm Zoë, 20 years old and second year Creative Technology-student

And today you'll take a look in my life as a CreaTe-student.

Good morning! I've just arrived at the University

We'll have a lecture

A company came to explain what they do.

The current module is the Business-module.

In this module, there is very much contact with creative companies.

For example, there are workshops and lectures from those companies.

The study association of CreaTe also organizes different activities with those companies.

We've got lunch break now. You can often find me in the SmartXP

That's the place where many CreaTe- related things happen.

And today there's a lunch lecture of a company which is interested in CreaTe-students

In this module there's a project as well, in which all subjects from the module come together.

In this project, every group writes a business-plan

for a product or concept which they designed themselves.

This afternoon, all the groups work on their business-plan.

Each module we've got a project. We can work on it this afternoon.

Welcome in my house!

I live on campus in my own studio

so I've got a kitchen and bathroom for myself.

In a minute I'll prepare a meal before going to scouting.

Many new students start to live on their own.

Enschede has different options for this.

You can live in the city centre, but the campus has student houses as well.

We're at Radix now, a students Scouting association.

Every two weeks we come together to do something fun.

The campus offers more than 50 student sports and culture associations.

All associations are run by students

This can be a part-time board year or a full-time board year

when a student decides to stop his study for a year to do a board year.

For more infomation >> A Day in the Life of a CreaTe-student - Episode 2 - Zoë - Duration: 3:07.

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

On My Shelf II [CC] - Duration: 7:31.

Hi everyone, it's Lily, and today I'm

going to be doing the On My Shelf Tag. So

this is just like a kind of video thing

that is around booktube a lot, and I did

this I think over a year ago now. And i just

think it's a really fun video, i get to

talk about some books that i don't

always talk about in videos so much. And I'm just

in a really chatty mood, I've literally

just decided to do this on the spot, so I

thought it'd be really fun, I just get to

chat about some books that I don't

always talk about on my channel.

Because I just decided to do this like

now, I've just got the numbers up on a

random number generator. So I have 10

shelves that i keep my books on currently. I

do have three bookshelves in my room.

So i have this one behind me which you

can see which has five shelves. And this

has all of my young adult books on them as

well as my TBR shelf. And then i've got a sort of

six cubbyhole bookcase in front of me

which you can't see, which has most of my

adult books and classics and like just

big classic anthologies and things like

that. And then there is a bookshelf to my

right and to your left which is on a wall

and at the moment my family are just keeping

some books on there, and there are some

free shelves which i will end up using

eventually as well because like I have a

lot of books. So I decided to go with six

combinations so I'm gonna be talking about six

books today so let's just get into it. So

the first combination I got was shelf

8 and book 2. Shelf eight is my graphic

novels and kind of just other random

literary fiction, literary adult fiction

shelf. I kind of organize my books by themes

I guess, like I have a favorite adult

book shelf and a favourite YA series.

So I kind of do it by genre,

and themes but it's not particularly

organized in any way other than that. So

the first book that i'm gonna talk about today

is Saga volume 1 by Brian K Vaughan

and Fiona Staples. I'm sure you guys will know

what this is about. It's like the most popular

graphic novel series on booktube. And this

is actually the first graphic novel I

ever read. I really wanted to get into

them but I wasn't sure where to start

and everyone was talking about this so I

just decided to pick it up. I am now six

volumes into the series and I really

enjoy it. I know the seventh volume has just

come out I do intend on getting it at

some point but graphic novels are

really expensive. And so I think maybe,

because I'm not like desperate to get to

the seventh volume in the series, I might just

wait until like my birthday and just get

them. I really do enjoy them they're

just really expensive. This is a space opera kind of

graphic novel series about these two

characters here who are from different

species. They're kind of warring and its

kind of illegal for them to be together

but they have a baby which is obviously a problem. So it's kind of

following them and everything that they

kind of encounter

because of that. It's really fun, really

good, lots of action and really fun

characters. The next combination i got

was shelf 3 book 17. And shelf three

is my favorite YA series shelf. And so

the book that i got from that shelf was

Six of Crows by Leigh bardugo. And I

wasn like 'oh I talk about this series

a lot' but actually i don't think i do,

I don't think I talk about it enough, as

much as I love this series. You guys all

know what this is about, it's a magical heist set in the

Grisha world. I just really really love

this, like I really enjoyed the Grisha

trilogy, it is also on my favorite series

shelf, but this is just like a whole other

level. Like I'm so attached to these

characters and I hadn't felt this

attached to characters since i read The

Fire and Thorns trilogy and before that it'd

been a few years since I felt really

attached to characters in this way. And I

just love all of them, they are all my

children. And like the plot in this is

good, I do you think that this book is

slow to get into definitely, I didn't

really mind that because I felt like we

really got to know the characters

through that. It has a lot of backstory in

this but again I don't mind because I'm

a character person and I like learning a

lot about characters especially if

they're as interesting as they are in

here. But I can see how that might be a bit

slow for people or they might get a bit bored. I

just thoroughly enjoyed this book and Crooked

Kingdom. I do prefer Crooked Kingdom a

littl bit more to this. But if you haven't picked up

this series, I'd really recommend it

because they're really good. The next

combination that I got was shelf 6 book

7. And shelf 6 is basically some

classics and some literary fiction that

I wasn't as keen on. There's a lot of

books that I read for school and then just

some other literary fiction I've read

that I didn't hate but just wasn't as big

a fan of. And so the book I got there was The

Secret History by Donna Tartt. I actually

read this this year. It was the second

book I read this year and i buddy read it

with Reggie from don't stop readin'

which was a lot of fun. And I picked this

a long time ago, I was just rediscovering

my love for reading after I left

University. And I read it and it was okay, it

wasn't mind blowing, it wasn't the best

thing ever. I liked her writing kind of, i

appreciated what it was trying to do, I

just felt like it was way too dragged

out. I didn't like the characters,

you're not meant to like the characters but

like I didn't love to hate them I just

didn't like them at all. So it was fine but

it wasn't as good as I thought it was going

to be. The next combination I got was

shelf 5 book 1 which is my TBR

shelf. So i haven't read this book, and book i got was

Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë. I

actually got this edition in Barnes and

Noble when I was in

America. So if you guys don't know I spent three

months in America in 2015, I worked at

a summer camp through Camp America. And when I was

staying with my dads friend who lives in

New York State just on the New York/Connecticut

border, I was staying with him to go to

New York City. One day I instead went to a town

over the Connecticut border, I'm totally

blanking on the name of, it has a big

shopping mall. I went into Barnes and Noble and this

was really cheap, I think this was like

five dollars. It was very cheap. And it

has deckled edges and I thought it was a

really really pretty cover. One of my

really good friends from camp loves the

brontës and so she was like 'Lily you

haven't read Wuthering Heights what are you

doing'. I always meant to read it. I don't think

I'm actually gonna like this book very

much, which is why it's still on my TBR but i

do want to read it so i can have like an

informed opinion. I know i'm not going to

like the characters but i am interested

to read it and see what everyone kind of

goes on about. The next combination is

shelf 9 book 12 and shelf 9 is again

it's kind of like adult contemporary/

literary fiction, there's a lot of Jodi

Picoult on there, Time Travelers Wife, so like

those kind of books. And so that book was

The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah. I read

this last year and this is a historical

fiction novel st in world war two in

France and it follows two sisters who

are very very different and just how

they experience the war in their

different ways. One is kind of I guess

more passive but they're both kind of

rebellious for their own ways. One is just

kind of more I guess actively rebellious

compared to the other one. I cried at the ending, I remember crying at the end a lot.

I just thought this one was really

well done. I do really love historical

fiction, I'm a history student so like yeah.

I thought that the character

development of the characters was really well

done. But there was one

little thing there was a scene in here I

remember I felt was weird which is

why it didn't get five stars from me. I think

I gave this like four or 4. There were

just a couple scenes that I felt like

were just really odd and didn't fit in with

the rest of story. Overall I did really

enjoy this book. And then the final

combination i have is shelf 2 and book

20 and so shelf 2 is my YA contemporary,

YA historical fiction kind of shelf, so

it's got both of them on there. And the book that

was chosen, book 20, was Liberty's Fire by

Lydia Syson. This is set in 1871 in

paris during the revolution

that happened that year. And it follows

the commune that arose from that and

then Bloody Week. And it follows four

different characters and I really really

enjoyed this. I think that the way Lydia

wrote the historical setting was so

vivid and you really felt like you were

there. There's a romance in this book

that to be honest I wasn't like a

hundred percent on. Like, i just, i'm a hard

sell on romance to be honest. But I

did really like the two other main

characters in this and I found the two

characters of Anatole and Zephyrine interesting

like as characters, I just wasn't a

a fan of their romance. And yeah this

also has lgbtq+ character in here which

I wasn't expecting and which was a really

nice surprise because there are not a lot

of lgbtq+ characters in historical

fiction even though obviously they

existed. I gave this four

stars, really liked it. So yeah guys that was

the On My Shelf tag, let me know what you

guys thought of this let me know if you

guys would want to see a video like this

again, I really enjoyed making it. If you've

read any of these books, let me know what you

thought about them. I hope you guys are

all having a lovely day and that you enjoyed this video.

And I will see you soon in another one. Bye!

all having a lovely day and that you

enjoyed this video and i will see you

food in another one sorry

For more infomation >> On My Shelf II [CC] - Duration: 7:31.

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

New Auction/Negotiation System | Top Eleven 2017 Update v.56 - Duration: 3:35.

For more infomation >> New Auction/Negotiation System | Top Eleven 2017 Update v.56 - Duration: 3:35.

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

SMARTEST KID IN THE WORLD BELIEVES OUR UNIVERSE WAS DESTROYED - tech and science - Duration: 3:02.

SMARTEST KID IN THE WORLD BELIEVES OUR UNIVERSE WAS DESTROYED BY CERN

The universe is so complex that if one stopped to take a look at what is actually happening

people would give in to the marvelous beauty of it.

Science hasn�t really begun to dent the surface of reality, and nature�s discoveries

are far more shocking than anyone could imagine.

There is proof of free energy, unified field of consciousness, superhuman ability, and

alternate reality and more, so much is mind boggling that no one would think that a kid

would have any understanding of it all.

However, one 13-year-old, Max Laughlin understands it all and can explain it in intricate detail

to those who perhaps aren�t as clever.

13 YEAR OLD INVENTED FREE ENERGY DEVICE However, perhaps a kid is just what is needed, they

are brave enough to give thought to outside of the box and have theories and ideas that

others would say are crazy, as the world of today has been built upon such.

Max Laughlin isn�t just any kid though; he is the smartest one in the world.

At the age of 13, he was behind the invention of a Free Energy Device, which is technology

that might power the entire world for free.

Laughlin is famous worldwide for his brilliant ideas along with his point of view on topics

such as alternate realities and the nature of the universe.

Now Laughlin has a theory that CERN could have destroyed the universe and we actually

live in a parallel universe that was the closest to it.

Laughlin thinks that the Mandela Effect is the result of this and he has gone on to explain

his theory in a video that is mind blowing when considering it comes from a kid.

Laughlin explains that an infinite parallel universe is constantly being created and there

is a universe in which god exists, and god is everything.

He then goes on to say that if there is an infinite number of parallel universes, there

may be a universe in which God doesn�t exist or one in which God is even more powerful.

Laughlin gives an example of God being able to create a stone that cannot be lifted; if

this were true then God himself wouldn�t be able to lift that stone, on the other hand,

if God is the all-powerful one then perhaps he could lift it as he could do anything.

So this then becomes a paradox as the stone wouldn�t be unliftable.

The theories of Laughlin are amazing as are the explanations that he provides, at one

point writing on a napkin as a way of explanation, in the video explaining to people much older

than himself about infinite in confined space and alternate parallel universes.

See his short video clip.

The link is in the article below in our description

For more infomation >> SMARTEST KID IN THE WORLD BELIEVES OUR UNIVERSE WAS DESTROYED - tech and science - Duration: 3:02.

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

des viennoiseries aux poivrons فنوازري مالحين في شكل هلاليات بعجين ناجح - Duration: 6:21.

For more infomation >> des viennoiseries aux poivrons فنوازري مالحين في شكل هلاليات بعجين ناجح - Duration: 6:21.

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

Поздравление с 1 Мая видео скачать. Первомай. Футаж 1 мая. Поздравительная открытка с 1 Мая - Duration: 0:26.

For more infomation >> Поздравление с 1 Мая видео скачать. Первомай. Футаж 1 мая. Поздравительная открытка с 1 Мая - Duration: 0:26.

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

TRAINING IN NETWORK MARKETING how to make learning more effective Roman Vasilenko - Duration: 1:17.

If a person writes, Means it works

Brain to work hand To write, then the brain must

Work several times Stronger because he directs

Even these muscles.

Accordingly, in humans Something remains in my head.

Even if a person is sitting And writes on the computer,

Or writes to the phone On the camcorder, from this

Less efeect, less Remains in the head and is remembered,

Rather than simply taking it Pen and writes on paper.

At this moment it works In man 2-3 dozen muscles,

more.

And if these muscles are bigger Work, respectively

Better brain activity, Respectively memory 0:00:36.020,0:00:37.879 Body much more.

The information is being digested Much stronger when

You record it simply on Paper by hand.

And when you record, You clearly choose, because

That speech is much faster, And you choose the main

Thoughts.

Correspondingly you have a brain Does a double analysis.

A - hears, b - that he Has time to write down.

And he writes down the most important thing.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét