Thứ Ba, 13 tháng 6, 2017

Waching daily Jun 13 2017

What's up? It's sick. It's so good.

It'll be prepping, booze, alcohol and rubbing it.

It's the feeling of togetherness and love. To wake up with a big hungover on Sunday.

Someone took a shit outside the tent, and used our white blanket to wipe themself.

I remember that. You just can't forget that year.

Hygiene and dignity, everybody!

-Emma Varg-

-A tribute to Led Zeppelin-

-Lost Society-

-Art Nation-

-Black Ingvars-

-Heavy Tiger-

-Grand Magus-

-Helix-

-Myrkur-

-Grave Digger-

-Black Star Riders-

-Stacie Collins-

Sweden Rock, a big welcome to Great King Rat.

-Phil Campbell & the Bastard Sons-

-Skeleton Birth-

-Apocalyptica-

-Nifelheim-

—Dead Sleep-

-Iced Earth-

-Hardline-

-Leading Light-

-The Haunted-

-Doro Pesch's Warlock-

—Svartanatt-

-Coheed and Cambria-

-Ian Hunter & the Rant Band-

-Nocean-

-Alter Bridge-

—Steel Panther-

-Primus-

-Aerosmith-

-Edguy-

-Primal Fear-

—Wishbone Ash-

-Picture-

-Mustasch-

-Rockklassiker Allstars-

-KIX-

—King's X-

Buy a sandwich. Really nice.

-Gotthard-

-The Dead Daisies-

-Bob Wayne & the Outlaw Carnies-

—Clutch-

-Metal Church-

-Lucifer's Friend-

-Little Steven & the Disciples of Soul-

-The Brandos-

-Ministry-

-Ratt-

-Scorpions-

How many of you believe in rock n roll?

-Supralunar-

-Electric Boys-

-Amorphis-

-Corroded-

-Thunder-

-Candlemass-

-Sator-

Conductor: Ulf Wadenbrandt Feels good to be here. Wonderful.

There are a few people out there. Damn, it's a lot of people.

We just have to go for it now. Feel safe, fun, just let loose.

-John Lawton-

-Tarja Turunen-

-Joe Lynn Turner-

-Dan McCafferty-

-Joacim Cans-

Magical, it feels magical, euphoric. Tired as a pig, but it was awesome.

-Carcass-

-Rival Sons-

Sweden Rock happened. My voice disappeared.

Knogjärn was the best this festival.

Horse!!!

-Venom-

-Treat-

-Ron Tognoni-

-In Flames-

It's an honor to stand here again, and play our kind of hard rock for you.

Klaus Meine stood here. Steven Tyler stood here. And Ralf from Mustasch as well.

-Sunny Bear-

For more infomation >> SWEDEN ROCK FESTIVAL 2017 - Duration: 49:26.

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

CREEPER RUSHING! THE MOST INSANE KILL WITH A CREEPER! Skywars Funny Moments Part #4 - Duration: 8:04.

If you are reading this then you have discover this video's hidden Easter Egg. Comment down below #Tremon1k

For more infomation >> CREEPER RUSHING! THE MOST INSANE KILL WITH A CREEPER! Skywars Funny Moments Part #4 - Duration: 8:04.

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

CREATION OF ASGARDIA GETTING CLOSER WITH FIRST SATELLITES BEING LAUNCHED! - Duration: 2:33.

CREATION OF ASGARDIA GETTING CLOSER WITH FIRST SATELLITES BEING LAUNCHED!

A little while ago it was announced that a new nation would rise, not here on Earth,

but in Space!This new nation follows a set of philosophies regarding peace and science,

as in a place distant from the "oppressions of the world" giving humanity freedom to evolve.

More than 100.000 people have signed to become citizens of Asgardia.

The project was backed by Russian billionaire Dr Igor Ashurbeyli and a consortium of scientists.

The project is now moving forward as the first satellites are being sent to space.

A nano-satellite will serve the purpose of "mapping the solar flux, and determine the

radiation dosing that the internal electronics are receiving".

It is equipped with two sophisticated two particle detectors.

Another aim of this ambitious project is to protect humanity from catastrophic threats

such as incoming meteors or rogue satellites.

Humanity is indeed progressing in this new Space age.

Watch the following video to know more!

See video link

below in our description.

For more infomation >> CREATION OF ASGARDIA GETTING CLOSER WITH FIRST SATELLITES BEING LAUNCHED! - Duration: 2:33.

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

EUROPÄISCHE UNION + SCHULDENKRISE = GRIECHENLANDKRISE | Die LATELY SHOW mit Florian Strzeletz - Duration: 8:00.

For more infomation >> EUROPÄISCHE UNION + SCHULDENKRISE = GRIECHENLANDKRISE | Die LATELY SHOW mit Florian Strzeletz - Duration: 8:00.

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

Putin-Proteste stoppen - Das geht besser! - Duration: 3:27.

For more infomation >> Putin-Proteste stoppen - Das geht besser! - Duration: 3:27.

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

The power of creative constraints - Brandon Rodriguez - Duration: 5:10.

Imagine you're asked to invent something new.

It could be whatever you want

made from anything you choose

in any shape or size.

That kind of creative freedom sounds so liberating, doesn't it?

Or does it?

If you're like most people, you'd probably be paralyzed by this task.

Without more guidance, where would you even begin?

As it turns out, boundless freedom isn't always helpful.

In reality, any project is restricted by many factors,

such as the cost,

what materials you have at your disposal,

and unbreakable laws of physics.

These factors are called creative constraints,

and they're the requirements and limitations

we have to address in order to accomplish a goal.

Creative constraints apply across professions,

to architects and artists,

writers,

engineers,

and scientists.

In many fields, constraints play a special role

as drivers of discovery and invention.

During the scientific process in particular,

constraints are an essential part of experimental design.

For instance, a scientist studying a new virus would consider,

"How can I use the tools and techniques at hand

to create an experiment that tells me how this virus infects the body's cells?

And what are the limits of my knowledge that prevent me

from understanding this new viral pathway?"

In engineering, constraints have us apply our scientific discoveries

to invent something new and useful.

Take, for example, the landers Viking 1 and 2,

which relied on thrusters to arrive safely on the surface of Mars.

The problem?

Those thrusters left foreign chemicals on the ground,

contaminating soil samples.

So a new constraint was introduced.

How can we land a probe on Mars

without introducing chemicals from Earth?

The next Pathfinder mission used an airbag system

to allow the rover to bounce and roll to a halt

without burning contaminating fuel.

Years later, we wanted to send a much larger rover: Curiosity.

However, it was too large for the airbag design,

so another constraint was defined.

How can we land a large rover while still keeping rocket fuel

away from the Martian soil?

In response, engineers had a wild idea.

They designed a skycrane.

Similar to the claw machine at toy stores,

it would lower the rover from high above the surface.

With each invention, the engineers demonstrated an essential habit

of scientific thinking -

that solutions must recognize the limitations of current technology

in order to advance it.

Sometimes this progress is iterative,

as in, "How can I make a better parachute to land my rover?"

And sometimes, it's innovative,

like how to reach our goal

when the best possible parachute isn't going to work.

In both cases, the constraints guide decision-making

to ensure we reach each objective.

Here's another Mars problem yet to be solved.

Say we want to send astronauts who will need water.

They'd rely on a filtration system that keeps the water very clean

and enables 100% recovery.

Those are some pretty tough constraints,

and we may not have the technology for it now.

But in the process of trying to meet these objectives,

we might discover other applications of any inventions that result.

Building an innovative water filtration system

could provide a solution for farmers working in drought-stricken regions,

or a way to clean municipal water in polluted cities.

In fact, many scientific advances

have occurred when serendipitous failures in one field

address the constraints of another.

When scientist Alexander Fleming mistakenly contaminated

a Petri dish in the lab,

it led to the discovery of the first antibiotic, penicillin.

The same is true of synthetic dye,

plastic,

and gunpowder.

All were created mistakenly,

but went on to address the constraints of other problems.

Understanding constraints guides scientific progress,

and what's true in science is also true in many other fields.

Constraints aren't the boundaries of creativity, but the foundation of it.

For more infomation >> The power of creative constraints - Brandon Rodriguez - Duration: 5:10.

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

YOU SHALL NOT PASS Battlefield1 Live Stream - Duration: 5:22:23.

For more infomation >> YOU SHALL NOT PASS Battlefield1 Live Stream - Duration: 5:22:23.

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

Polymer Clay - Making Your Own Fidget Spinner - Duration: 15:30.

For more infomation >> Polymer Clay - Making Your Own Fidget Spinner - Duration: 15:30.

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

How to Secure Your Wireless (Wi-Fi) Home Network, high Security - Duration: 8:33.

For more infomation >> How to Secure Your Wireless (Wi-Fi) Home Network, high Security - Duration: 8:33.

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

The Finger Family Song For Children - Funny DINOSAURS Cartoons for Kids - Kids video 2017 - Duration: 36:29.

The Finger Family Song For Children - Funny DINOSAURS Cartoons for Kids - Kids video 2017

For more infomation >> The Finger Family Song For Children - Funny DINOSAURS Cartoons for Kids - Kids video 2017 - Duration: 36:29.

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

Maryland, D C Attorney Generals To File Lawsuit Against Trump - politics - Duration: 2:28.

Maryland, D.C. Attorney Generals To File Lawsuit Against Trump

The attorneys general of Maryland and the District of Columbia plan to file a lawsuit

on Monday the WaPo reported late on Sunday, alleging that foreign payments to President

Donald Trump's businesses violate the U.S. constitution.

The lawsuit is to be announced at noon on Monday.

While Trump already faces a similar lawsuit that was filed in January by plaintiffs including

a ethics non-profit group, the case from two Democratic AGs could stand a better chance

in court as the first government action over allegations that Trump, violated the constitution's

so-called emoluments clause, Reuters adds.

In recent months, Democrat AGs have taken a lead role in the "resistance" against the

president, litigating against Trump's policies and successfully blocking Trump's executive

order restricting travel from some Muslim-majority countries.

They are also resisting efforts to roll back environmental regulations and insurance subsidies

under Obamacare.

In a previous lawsuit filed in January in Manhattan federal court, an ethics non-profit,

restaurant group and hotel events booker allege Trump violates the Constitution's "emoluments"

clause, which bars him from accepting gifts from foreign governments without congressional

approval, by maintaining ownership over his business empire despite ceding day-to-day

control to his sons.

According to Reuters, the DOJ on Friday argued that those plaintiffs lack the legal standing

to sue because they cannot allege enough specific harm caused by Trump's businesses.

The government also said Trump hotel revenue does not fit the definition of an improper

payment under the constitution.

AG Racine told Reuters in a March interview that the District of Columbia has suffered

particular harm because it subsidized the construction of hotels that are now impacted

by foreign payments to Trump properties.

That puts the district in a "unique position" to file legal claims over the emoluments clause,

Racine said.

For more infomation >> Maryland, D C Attorney Generals To File Lawsuit Against Trump - politics - Duration: 2:28.

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

Liberty Chronicles, Ep. 7: The Disastrous Consequences of Empire and Monopoly - Duration: 21:56.

Anthony Comegna: Along the road from serfdom to corporatism, every section of the planet

gradually mingled into a common marketplace.

Today we have the ability to readily appreciate this transition and its impact on overall

economic productivity.

We live in a vastly richer world than has ever existed before, and every one of us above

the bare level of subsistence lives better than the wealthiest [00:00:30] elites even

just a century ago.

But the costs of modernity were many, and they fell disproportionately on the most vulnerable.

This is Liberty Chronicles, a project of Libertarianism.org.

I'm Anthony Comegna.

In England, aristocrats fenced in common lands and used the law to push generations [00:01:00]

of so-called strolling poor, or masterless men and women, into the cities to beg or labor

for a wage.

The old futile order broke its ancient contracts one by one in pursuit of greater individual

profits and prospects.

The proliferation of private property of course created greater and greater stocks of food,

encouraging greater and greater elite investments in overseas exploration, trading, and colonial

ventures.

[00:01:30] Monarchs continued to grant away bundles of their personal rights in exchange

for a cut of the empirical take.

Over the early modern centuries, roughly the 1400s through the late 1700s, monarchs and

mercantile corporate capitalists both benefitted from a system of imperial cooperation.

The private actors would provide the capital, the labor, and the risk, while the monarchs

would lend legitimacy to the projects, military and [00:02:00] naval protection for chartered

ventures, and a legal framework designed to protect the interests of the crown's friends.

Over the centuries, sets of English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, and other imperial

conspirators conquered huge portions of the globe in the interests of a new species of

public/private partnerships.

Our task here is to step firmly away from a dreamy sense of accomplishment to starkly

see and understand the [00:02:30] human costs of corporate activities.

The costs of empire in the Americas included the most catastrophic demographic collapse

in human history and perhaps humanity's most tragic story.

Few of us are able even to approach an understanding of how dramatic the level of death actually

was.

Death rates reached 90 to 95% in the epicenter of Spanish contact in the Caribbean and Mexico,

declining [00:03:00] slightly the further out from first contact.

Native Americans as far away as New England felt the impact of Columbian Disease Exchange,

and by the time of Puritan settlement, the native population was a shadow of its earlier

self.

In Thomas Morton's The New English Canaan, Morton related a sympathetic portrait of native

life and their sufferings.

Speaker 2: "New English Canaan or New Canaan.

Containing an Abstract of New England.

[00:03:30] By Thomas Morton.

Of a great mortality that happened amongst the Natives of New England, near about the

time that the English came there to plant.

It fortuned some few years before the English came to inhabit at new Plymouth, in New England,

that upon some distaste given in the Massachusetts bay by Frenchmen then trading there with the

Natives for beaver, they set upon the men at such advantage that they killed many of

them, burned the ship, then riding at Anchor by an Island there ... distributing [00:04:00]

them unto 5 Sachems, which were Lords of the several territories adjoining: they did keep

them so long as they lived, only to sport themselves at them, and made these five Frenchmen

fetch them wood and water, which is the general work that they require of a servant.

One of these five men, out living the rest, had learned so much of their language as to

rebuke them for their bloody deed, saying that God would be angry with them for it,

and that he would in his displeasure destroy them; but the Savages (it [00:04:30] seems

boasting of their strength,) replied and said that they were so many that God could not

kill them.

"But contrary wise, in short time after the hand of God fell heavily upon them, with such

a mortal stroke that they died on heaps as they lay in their houses; and the living,

that were able to shift for themselves, would run away and let them die, and let their Carcasses

lie above the ground without burial.

For in a place where many inhabited, there hath been but one left alive to tell what

became of [00:05:00] the rest; the living being (as it seems) not able to bury the dead,

they were left for Crows, Kites and vermin to prey upon.

And the bones and skulls upon the several places of their habitations made such a spectacle

after my coming into those parts, that, as I traveled in that Forest near the Massachusetts,

it seemed to me a new found Golgotha.

"But otherwise, it is the custom of those Indian people to bury their dead ceremoniously

and carefully, and then to abandon that [00:05:30] place, because they have no desire the place

should put them in mind mortality: and this mortality was not ended when the Brownists

of new Plymouth were settled in Patuxet in New England: and by all likelihood the sickness

that these Indians died of was the Plague, as by conference with them since my arrival

and habitation in those parts, I have learned.

And by these means there is yet but a small number of Savages in New England, to that

which hath been in former time, and the place is made so much [00:06:00] the more fit for

the English Nation to inhabit in, and to erect in it Temples to the glory of God."

Anthony Comegna: Europeans, quite certain of their own righteousness, took the Indians'

mass death as evidence of their sinfulness, backwardness, and the inevitability of Christian

triumph over Satanic forces.

The end result was a colonial culture of apartheid, in which Europeans [00:06:30] of every class

steadily enclosed Indians on reservations and restricted their ability to compete alongside

whites in the global market.

Whites stereotyped the Indians as either gentle or barbarous savages whose depressing history

was recognized only when it supported colonial interests.

The costs of modernity in Africa included massive depopulation, the disruption of preexisting

developments, political [00:07:00] centralization, and monopolization.

Radical black historian Walter Rodney famously argued that European imperialism forcibly

underdeveloped Africa by exporting millions of people at the peak of their productivity

and encouraging what's call the gun-slave cycle.

Europeans looking for slaves usually had to deal with the local monarch.

Because kings generally acquired slaves through warfare and traded them for European firearms,

the more slaves one could capture, [00:07:30] the more guns one could get.

The more guns one had, the more powerful the slave raiders.

The more slaves captured at war, the more guns from Europeans, and on and on for decades.

The early 18th century empire of Dahomey in West Africa serves as a vivid example of the

human costs borne by Africans even before being transported across the oceans.

William Snelgrave was a contemporary slave trader and one of the first Western [00:08:00]

Africanists.

His personal accounts of human trafficking in Africa serve to inform audiences that slavery

was really the Africans' own fault and the systems' cruelty was actually improved by

European imposition into the process.

By turning men captured in war and sentenced to death into commodities, the Europeans were

saving lives.

Of course, while he is careful to detail African violence, he sees only benevolence in his

[00:08:30] own position in the process of state formation.

Speaker 3: "A New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, and the Slave-Trade (1734).

By William Snelgrave.

Containing an Account of the Destruction of the Kingdom of Whidaw.

In the chief Town of Sabee, the king allowed the Europeans convenient Houses for their

Factories: and by him we were protected in our Persons and Goods, and, when our Business

was finish'd, [00:09:00] were permitted to go away in Safety.

The Road where Ships anchored, was a free Port for all European Nations trading to those

Part for Negroes.

And this Trade was so very considerable, that it is computed, while it was in a flourishing

State, there were above twenty thousand Negroes yearly exported from thence, and the neighboring

Places, by the English, French, Dutch, and Portuguese.

As this was the principal Part of all the Guinea Coast for the Slave Trade, the [00:09:30]

frequent Intercourse that Nation had for many Years carried on with the white People had

rendered them so civilized that it was a pleasure to deal with them ...

"The Custom of the Country allows Polygamy to an excessive degree ... whereby the Land

was become so stock'd with People, that the whole Country appeared full of Towns and Villages:

And being a very rich Soil, and well cultivated by the Inhabitants, it looked like an entire

Garden.

Trade having likewise flourished for a long time, had greatly enriched [00:10:00] the

People; which, with the Fertility of their Country, had unhappily made them so proud,

effeminate, and luxurious that tho' they could have brought at least one hundred thousand

Men into the Field, yet so great were their Fears, that they were driven out of their

principal City, by two hundred of their Enemies; and at last lost their whole Country, to a

Nation they formerly had contemned.

And tho' this may appear to the Reader very incredible, yet it will sufficiently be illustrated

by the following account [00:10:30] ... "There is a constant Tradition amongst them,

that whenever any Calamity threatens their Country, by imploring the Snake's Assistance,

they are always delivered from it.

However this fell out formerly, it now stood them in no stead; neither were the Snakes

themselves spared after the Conquest.

For the being in great numbers, and a kind of domestick Animals, the Conquerors found

many of them in the Houses, which they treated in this manner: They held them up by the middle,

[00:11:00] and spoke to them in this manner: If you are Gods, speak and save your selves:

Which the poor Snakes not being able to do, the Dahomes cut their Heads off, ripped them

open, broiled them on the Coals, and eat them.

It is very strange, the Conquerors should so far contemn the Gods of this Country, since

they are so barbarous and savage themselves, as to offer human Sacrifices whenever they

gain a Victory over their Enemies; and Eye-Witness to which I was, as hereafter [00:11:30] shall

be related ... "The Country, as we traveled along, appeared

beautiful and pleasant, and the Roads good; but desolated by the War, for we saw the remains

of abundance of Towns and Villages, with a great quantity of the late Inhabitants bones

strewn about the Fields ... "We were plagued with Vermin that greatly

annoyed us; and that was such an infinite number of Flies, that tho' we had several

Servants with Flappers, to keep them off our Vittles, [00:12:00] yet it was hardly possible

to put a bit of Meat into our Mouths, without some of those Vermin with it.

These Flies, it seems, were bred by a great number of dead Mens Heads, which were piled

on Stages, not far from our Tent, tho' we did not know so much at that time.

"After we had dined, a Messenger came to us, about three o'clock in the afternoon, from

the Great captain, desiring us to go to the King's Gate; accordingly we went, and in our

way saw two large Stages, [00:12:30] on which were heaped a great number of dead Men's Heads,

that afforded no pleasing sight or smell.

Our Interpreter told us, they were the Heads of four thousand of the Whidaws, who had been

sacrificed by the Dahomes to their God, about three weeks before, as an Acknowledgement

of the great Conquest they had obtain'd ... "His Majesty was in a large Court palisaded

round, fitting (contrary to the Custom of the Country) on a fine gilt Chair, which he

had taken form the King of Whidaw [00:13:00] ...

"The King had a Gown on, flowered with Gold, which reached as low as his Ancles; an European

embroidered Hat on his Head; with Sandals on his Feet ...

"Soon, a principal Man of the Court came and stood by us, and bid the Interpreter ask us,

'How we liked the Sight?' to which we replied, 'Not at all: For our God had expressly forbid

us using Mankind in so cruel a manner: That our Curiosity had drawn us to come and see

it; which if we had [00:13:30] not done, we could never have believed it ... I observed

to him, that the grand Law both of Whites and Blacks, with all their Fellow Creatures

was: To do to others no otherwise, than as they desired to be done unto: And that our

God had enjoined this to us on pain of very severe Punishments.'

To which he answered, This was the Custom of his Country; and so he left us ...

"He answered, 'It was best to put [the old men] to death; for being frown wise [00:14:00]

by their Age and a long Experience, if they were preserved, they would be ever plotting

against their Masters, and to disturb the Country; for they never would be easy under

Slavery, having been the chief Men in their own Land.

Moreover, if they should be spared, no European would buy them, on account of their Age ...'

"It seems the King of Dahome is grown exceedingly cruel towards his People, being always suspicious,

that Plots and Conspiracies are carrying on against him: So that he frequently cuts [00:14:30]

off some of his great Men on bare Surmises.

This ... has so soured his Temper, that he is likewise greatly altered towards the Europeans

... "Now all the Countries near the Sea side,

which the King of Dahome could possibly get at, are not only conquered, but also turned

into Desolation, with the Inland Parts, in so terrible a manner, that there is no Prospect

of Trade's reviving there again for many Years, or at least so long as the Conqueror lives.

What little there is, is [00:15:00] carried on chiefly at Appah, a place secured from

him by a Morass and a River."

Anthony Comegna: The primary costs of corporate imperialism to Europeans came in the form

of indentured servitude, essentially impressment into New World prison labor regimes, �proletarianization�

in European cities, or in bearing the financial burden of hostile market forces so aristocrats

and their corporate creations [00:15:30] might profit.

While earlier colonial powers relied mainly on enslaved or semi-enslaved indigenous and

African laborers, the English efforts toward empire began with very different models than

their Iberian rivals.

Using the brutal conquests and expropriation of Ireland as their model, the English West

Country men staged a propaganda and lobbying campaign to replicate the process in the Americas.

The colonial promoters included Sirs [00:16:00] Francis Drake, Richard Grenville, John Hawkins,

Walter Raleigh, Humphrey Gilbert, and the brothers Richard Hakluyt, one a lawyer, the

other a clergyman.

The West Country men combined Protestant zeal with fresh experience in ruthlessly crushing

foreign populations.

Scenes from the English conquest in Ireland mirror Snelgrave's account of the Dahomean

Empire a century later under the influence of the slave trade.

Historian Alan Taylor writes, [00:16:30] "Treating the Irish as treacherous beasts, the English

waged a war of terror and intimidation, executing prisoners by the hundred, including women

and children.

The English commander Sir Humphrey Gilbert decorated the path leading to his tent with

human heads."

Taylor quotes Gilbert's personal publicist, who claimed, "The scenes delivered great terror

to the people when they saw the heads of their dead fathers, brothers, children, kinsfolk,

and friends [00:17:00] lie on the ground before their faces as they came to speak with the

colonel."

The promoters planned to gather investment capital, a monopolistic charter, and a bevy

of indentured servants to work the colony.

To get the capital, they would sell shares in a joint stock company of adventurers and

capitalists.

To secure the charter of their rights and privileges, they promised the queen a portion

of their revenues and their fealty.

Labor though, that was the [00:17:30] tricky part, and it remained so for the first half

century of English settlement in the Americas.

Very few of England's sturdy beggars volunteered to strike it rich in a new and wondrous land.

Rather, the vast majority of the early colonists came through a combination of force and fraud.

As part of their bargain with the crown, promoters secured legal changes penalizing previously

minor offenses like vagrancy with the perp's choice, [00:18:00] death or indentured servitude

in Virginia.

Some even more unscrupulous figures kidnapped children or drugged and sold masterless men

and women to their new rulers across the ocean.

The first attempt at English settlement in Roanoke was more of a conquering army than

a colonizing venture.

The 1585 colony dissolved within a year, and the subsequent colony vanished while the Armada

Crisis prevented the arrival of fresh supplies.

[00:18:30] Settlers probably adapted themselves to life with friendly Indian tribes, but according

to at least one native, the Algonquin paramount chief Powhatan killed any surviving Roanoke

refugees as retribution for their despicable, hostile behavior.

As we will see, the lives and prospects of indentured servants and early colonists of

all sorts did not fare much better for several generations.

But the costs of empire were not merely seen in violence on the [00:19:00] geographic fringe.

The masterless men and women fortunate enough to stay in London suffered untold horrors

of their own.

England's new proletarians included easily othered, marginalized people who were nonetheless

instrumental in generating the modern economy in modern culture.

As Marcus Rediker and Peter Linebaugh write in The Many-Headed Hydra, the proletarians

created by enclosure worked as skilled navigators and sailors on early Transatlantic [00:19:30]

ships, as slaves on American plantations, and as entertainers, sex workers, and servants

in London.

Forced to participate in the new corporate capitalist economy, they found their way from

enclosed common fields to whatever economic niche was available to them.

Many did not remember the days before enclosure in utopian fashion.

To them, it was a recent memory and a real way of life torn from them by the combined

[00:20:00] forces of wealth and power.

In many ways, medieval life was stolen from people during the fledgling days of early

modernity, and libertarians rather than wholesale ignoring or rejecting this legacy should learn

to reconcile with it, that we might avoid similar calamities during transformational

periods within our own time.

In 1607, the class of colonial promoters secured [00:20:30] a charter for the colony called

Virginia.

Possessed of a host of monopoly powers and privileges, and almost absolute authority

over the territory, including the right to institute martial law, the proprietors secured

nine ships for the first settlement.

Eight of them made it.

The Sea Venture ran afoul of a hurricane and wrecked off the Bermuda shoals.

Though they expected to find an isle of devils, the 150 shipwrecked [00:21:00] colonists found

paradise and plenty.

While Virginians starved to death, their reinforcements on Bermuda decided they preferred paradise

over hell.

Liberty Chronicles is a project of Libertarianism.org.

It is produced by Tess Terrible.

To learn more about Liberty Chronicles, visit Libertarianism.org.

If you've been enjoying [00:21:30] the show, we very sincerely ask that you subscribe,

rate the show on iTunes, invite your friends and family to listen, and tweet us your questions

@LibChron, or email libertychroniclespodcast@gmail.com.

For more infomation >> Liberty Chronicles, Ep. 7: The Disastrous Consequences of Empire and Monopoly - Duration: 21:56.

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

BT Daily: The Daniel Way - Duration: 4:39.

[Darris McNeely] I'm finishing up another one of my classes at the Ambassador Bible

College this week, World News and Prophecy class, where I take students through the book

of Daniel, the great prophet of the Old Testament.

It's a fascinating book.

I love going through it every year and helping students to understand about prophecy, but

also about current world events and how Bible prophecy relates.

Daniel is a book that tells us about a man who understood the times in which he lived

and he before his time, fulfilled what Jesus himself said, to learn to discern our times

and to watch.

It's a fascinating book.

Daniel had a number of visions, a number of dreams that he either had on his own or the

kings had, and he interpreted.

The story is a fascinating one to help us to understand essentially, what I call, "The

Daniel Way."

It's not just about prophecy and visions and dreams, it's about a man who lived a holy

life in the midst of Babylon, in the midst of his own day.

Daniel saw the eternal values of God's way of life, the biblical values of the law of

God that he had been reared with, and he kept true to those.

Even while he lived as a captive in Babylon, he did not abandon his faith, his ideals,

he saw God's way.

And as a result of living God's way, God gave him wisdom.

God gave him understanding of not only the visions and dreams, but the times in which

he lived.

And that to me is the critical lesson for us and why it's important to study the book

of Daniel because we live in some very interesting times as well.

We live in our own modern Babylon.

And if we can emulate the example of Daniel, living righteously and yet seeking to understand

our time, I think that we can learn lessons and we can better navigate our world today,

and without fear, but with a living faith and a courage that's important to us. 

You know, and Daniel chapter 12, at the end of a very long, faithful and fruitful life,

Daniel still wanted to understand what he was seeing, what was being revealed to him.

But God said, essentially, it's all going to be sealed up.

What he says there is fascinating.

Beginning in verse 3, in this chapter, the angel that relays God's message says, "Those

who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the firmament, and those who turn many

to righteousness like the stars, forever and ever" (Daniel 12:3). 

Daniel was wise and his example witnessed to two great kings in the world, and it teaches

us today, one's example does count.

It serves as a witness, as a testimony of God's way.

When people see it, it can work wondrous things according to God's purpose and will.

I think there's a lesson for us here to let our example do the same thing as Daniel did

here.

He says the reward will be to shine as the glory of the stars.

Is it worth it, the way we live?

Absolutely, Daniel's example proves that.

Daniel didn't understand all the visions that he had but God said to him that they're going

to be sealed up until the time of the end.

All of his life, he sought a deeper insight and understanding, but at the end of his life,

and at the end of the days, God's final words were this.

Daniel wanted to know what will be the end of all these things, which is the famous line

for any student of prophecy.

And here's what God's word said, "Go your way Daniel, for the words, are closed up and

sealed 'til the time of the end.

None of the wicked shall understand, but the wise shall understand.

Go your way 'til the end for you will rest, and will arise and your inheritance at the

end of the days" (Daniel 12:9-13).

Go your way, get on with your life.

He did.

His life was coming to a close, no doubt, at that particular point in time.

The teaching is very clear for us.

Go your way, go our way.

Make sure it's in God's way.

God will give us wisdom and understanding, let our light shine, seek to understand the

times in which we live.

The book ends with those words.

A good lesson for all of us.

We've closed that chapter, and the teaching for the Ambassador Bible College this year.

But why not open your own book, The Bible, and go into the book of Daniel, and read just

a little bit, maybe just the first chapter to understand what it means to stand for God

in a modern Babylon. 

That's BT Daily, join us next time.

For more infomation >> BT Daily: The Daniel Way - Duration: 4:39.

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

Oral Course-end Examination - Duration: 8:09.

Today, I'm here to present my topic "a big company or a small company

Nowadays, graduates have a lot of worries about working for a big company or a small firm

Each person has a different opinion. For me, after I graduate, I will apply for a big company

For more infomation >> Oral Course-end Examination - Duration: 8:09.

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

Planting Dragon fruit from Seed - Duration: 4:04.

Hi I'm George, Today we will plant dragon fruit seeds

Is a kind of cactus, and look at how many seeds are here

I gave them a friend, Catalin

Hello Catalin, thanks for the seeds, if you see this video

And we will plant dragon fruit today

I have already prepared a pot in which I will plant them and

I put sand on the bottom of the pot

Then I will put a universal substrate

And let's do that

In this substrate contains perlite, is not added by me

And it's very good, we put it

Then we will plant the seeds on the surface

But before planting the seeds, we will wet well

And we will wet with room temperature water

and soak very well

Then we will add a little more ground

The soil must be well wet, And if we see that

fell, add a little ground

Now we wait a bit to get the soil well and

We can plant the cactus seeds

Dragon fruit

I think there are enough seeds

and plant them here

We will see when they germinate

It seems to me that they will germinate very quickly

But to grow will grow hard

So we will see. When they germinate we'll make a video update

But I'm sure they'll germinate

Ready :) I planted them, now we have to cover this pot

With a ziplock bag

But before we cover it, we have to drain it out of the water

So, I'm leaving here for a few minutes

And I let the water drain, then

We will put it in this ziplock

I planted on June 11, 2017

And I wrote Dragon Fruit

To have the greenhouse effect I will use this thing

The water drained. Now we will have to put this greenhouse effect

And we're opening from here

And we put it here

And finally I planted the seeds of dragon fruit

So we will wait for germination

I had to plant them for a long time but I did not have time

And I left it later

Will grow hard, and that's it

We will have patience and we will wait

Thank you for watching , Leave a like

Share this video, and thank Catalin, He gave me the seeds then

I wish you a good day,

Bye :)

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét