Thứ Sáu, 17 tháng 11, 2017

Waching daily Nov 17 2017

On this episode of China Uncensored,

A coup attempt in China?

Sounds like a coup for the show!

Did somebody cut the cheese?

And finally,

the Communist Party's version of the Voice.

This is China Uncensored.

Hi, welcome to China Uncensored,

I'm your host Chris Chappell.

I have to start off this episode

by giving a big personal thank you

to the man responsible for it all—

Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

According to one Chinese official speaking on the sidelines

of the 19th Party Congress,

Xi Jinping "saved the party,

saved the military

and saved the country over the past five years ...

He saved socialism."

Which means...

he saved China Uncensored!

If the Communist Party fell,

what would I do with myself?

Make an America Uncensored?

That official was not just praising Xi Jinping in general,

he was also specifically referring to Xi Jinping

stopping an attempted coup.

And he named names.

Just like a good Communist.

That was just one of many bombs dropped

during the 19th Party Congress.

Fortunately none of them were from North Korea.

We'll have the full story on the 19th Party Congress later in the episode.

But let me just say,

something's rotten in the state of China…

What?

I'm talking about cheese.

China has lifted a ban on stinky cheese.

That's right,

stinky cheese can now proudly take its place again

on the shelves of Chinese supermarkets,

alongside Durian and stinky tofu.

Just don't go to any store

that specializes in all three.

So why the change?

Well, in September,

the Chinese regime put a quarantine on the bacterial and mold strains

that make several types of soft

and mold ripened cheeses.

They were probably cheesed off at the European Union for something.

But following a recent meeting with EU officials,

that got sorted.

Chinese sales are expected to reach 800 million dollars this year,

according to research firm Euromonitor.

And now the Chinese people can look up to Xi Jinping

for yet another thing—

cutting the cheese.

Don't ever say that, though.

He'll know.

Seriously, he'll know.

According to Human Rights Watch,

the Chinese regime

"has been collecting the voice patterns

of tens of thousands of people,"

to aid its dystopian surveillance network.

And you won't believe the person they hired to collect those voices.

The Little Mermaid (1989), Buena Vista Pcitures

Never trust a creature with more than four tentacles.

And the best part is,

the CCP isn't even telling the people

that are being sampled.

Police are allowed to collect

"fingerprints, palm prints, and profile photos,

as well as urine and DNA samples",

not just from criminals,

but also from anyone suspected of a crime.

And in China,

human rights aren't the only thing that's disappearing.

So are the glaciers.

Xinjiang is home to 20,000 glaciers.

That's half of all China's glaciers.

But "Since the 1950s,

all of Xinjiang's glaciers have retreated by between 21 percent to 27 percent."

That's about 30 feet a year.

At this rate, in 50 years,

more than half will be gone.

But don't worry!

That means more land for development.

But even you if you can't enjoy the gentle sound

of snow crunching under your feet,

you can at least enjoy the sound of glass

giving way under you feet

on the latest of China's glass bottomed walkways.

Let's take a look:

Yes, it's a fun gag.

Sensors detect pedestrians

and trigger the special effect,

and mortal terror.

Just another day in China.

What do you think?

Leave your comments below.

Thanks for watching this episode of China Uncensored.

Once again I'm Chris Chappell.

See you next time.

Hello?

Uncle Chang's Stinky Cheese, Tofu and Durian Emporium?

I'd like to place an order for five pounds of each.

Yes, and I'd like that delivered to one Shelley Zhang.

No it's not a prank!

Yes, charge upon delivery.

For more infomation >> Trung Quốc Xác Nhận Âm Mưu Đảo Chính Bất Thành | Trung Quốc Không Kiểm Duyệt - Duration: 4:21.

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ข้าว41 combine harvester รถเกี่ยวข้าวจ้าวช้าง 23 12HT 6m61T มีคลิปรถไถรถแม็คโคร ดำรงค์รถเกี่ยว - Duration: 2:03.

For more infomation >> ข้าว41 combine harvester รถเกี่ยวข้าวจ้าวช้าง 23 12HT 6m61T มีคลิปรถไถรถแม็คโคร ดำรงค์รถเกี่ยว - Duration: 2:03.

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OUR 2ND YR ANNIVERSARY Q&A!!! - Duration: 15:59.

should i put glasses on?

*Huge bell rings*

Woooah

What? -IT'S TIME

DUNDUNDUN

Anyway, hi guys!!!

Today we are in Paris!

We came to the neighborhood I used to live

and we're having an espresso and a croissant

So good!

The reason why we came to Paris is

because it's our 2nd yr anniversary

And we also came here for our 1st year!

-Right -So..we came back!

I love Paris

and of course...Josh likes it?

Yeah that's why we came back

Just a minute ago Josh live streamed

and we told you we were doing a Q&A

and asked you to comment on my Instagram

That was..like a minute ago

and already, we have 40 comments!

So, let's start our 2nd year anniversary Q&A!!

So, first question!

Q-How did Josh fall in love with Gabie?

I think I already talked about this but

at first.....

cuz she was cute and pretty!

cute and pretty?!?!

I mean, first impressions!

That's what you notice first! This cute and pretty lady

talks to me and stuff

But after that, I notice that

we had so many cultural similarities

so that's how I fell for her

and that means

We both moved countries a lot

moved schools...

-We grew up like that -yeah we were both culturally confused!

Both of us!

You know what I mean?

Like if someone asked "where are you from?"

that would be the toughest question for us

-Right -So we were BOTH confused

So that clicked immediately

-We both noticed our similarities right away -Yes right away

-and.. -it's easy to have a conversation

like 'Oh,this person'

'already kind of knows me'

'She already understands me'

That's riggght

Q-Do have special names you call each other?

-..names? -BABY

Yeah we just call each other baby

Josh calls me Sweety sometimes

Yeah...sweety

I don't know how we started to do it!

I admit that it's a cringey way to call each other

But..somehow we ended up calling each other 'baby'

Before we dated I never thought I would be 'that type' of couple

like, changing your tone of voice and stuff!!

-But after marriage.. -But as soon as we started dating I started to do it!!

So weird!

You like it huh

This is like a soju glass!

I want more coffee

Next question:

Omg there's 95 comments already

Q-Who asked out first?

-Me? -Before we started to go out, we sat and talked about it for 3 hours

LOL right -Like how serious this relationship had to be!

Josh explained why FOR THREE HOURS!

-I did? -Yeah!!

I just listened like this!

But for a month we were

like...

getting so close..talking till late

-so i was like 'why aren't we dating?' -Yeah

So on our first date

we were sososo shy

I rememeber that we were too shy to hold hands so

he held each other like this!! -Really?!?!

Q-How did you know you were going to marry this person?

For me...

How should I put this...

-Why? -Should I go first?

Well for me, as we were dating...

I realized we had so much in common

and as josh said earlier, culturally

we were both confused

A- I couldn't imagine to meet another person

who would understand me as much as he does

so I thought that if we get married, you would understand me on most of the things

So that's how I started to think of marriage

For me..I already knew as we started to date

-I told you! -Like, beginning-beginning???

Yeah when we started dating! -Oh yeah?

I had in mind to date ONLY with the person I would marry

like since years before we met

I already had marriage in mind

So I approached to you and tried to

'make it work' to get married some day

Since the beginning!

-I knew that... -Why did you pretend you didn't know just now!

Why? Cuz its the internet?

Yeah..feels weird to share

Also we weren't THAT young

Right. We were almost 30

Like...26 when we met?

27? Korean age?

like...27

So at the time

we partied out already lol

we wanted a serious relationship

Right..

Q-What has changed after you got married?

Before marriage..I mean..

After marriage we share a bed! That's a big change!

Yes! I thought that too just now

It's a big change...knowing your partner's sleeping habits and stuff

Isn't that the major one? -And

We are together all the time! -'cause of our work

We work from our home office

wait..is that right in Korean?

-Yeah -Cuz we work from home

we don't even leave the house!

and if we do, we go out together

and...

omg...so many comments. I will read first few

Q-When do you(gabie) miss Korea?

What I realized this year

is that British summer SUCKS

It was summer for only few weeks

A-so, when the weather sucked during summer?

That's when I wanted to go back

I don't care about humidity, I WANT SUMMER!!!

Yeah...this summer..I really missed Korea

It was so sad! So depressing!

Like, it was nice for a week!

but then the rest..

it was like..spring?(nope) Autumn?

Yeah...and in August

When it got cold on August

I was like...

'But..there MUST be a week that's like summer!'

but then NO! Summer was over already!

It was already autumn on August

So it got me really annoyed

BUT on the plus side! We can go to Greece easily!

Yeah but..

My problem is this:

I have to PAY to see the sun!

That's upsetting

-It's good... -So every time I felt miserable, I thought of Korea

No, but Korea

I think you just don't know how hot it was in Korea because you weren't there this year

like, how extremely hot it was over there

So hot...so hard to get out

u gotta stay in with AC on all the time

So Mr. Josh, you hate Korean summer?

Korean summer is very very hot for me

-It's SO humid, I can't even get around -Yeah I meat for Josh...

it could be too hot. He sweats a lot and can't handle the heat well

I think even Koreans would agree with me!

yeah?

That Korea gets too hot during summer!

summer...

-on summer.. -I don't even want to GET the sunrays

sorry lol

So for people who CAN'T handle the heat, UK is good

but I can handle the heat

I don't sweat much...

so i love summer

A-and also, when I can't find good Korean food? Like pig's feet..

stuff like that

Oh! French! French sound so cool

You like french?

Yeah it sounds good

This one is fun

Q-When do you feel happy that you got married to each other?

A- EVERY MORNING! -EVERY morning???

Really? -Not you?

-I'm like that A- For me...before sleeping!

-Before sleeping? -Yeah

yeah me too

For me, before sleeping, and in the mornings

-..really? -yes

wait but before sleeping..I'm tired..so i'm like

'I'm so happy that I'm marr..'and fall asleep

but in the morning

wait..but in the morning i'm sleepy

You're sleepy in the morning? So you just lied?

NO!!

A-for me..when we feel connected

when we like the same stuffs?

and when...he understands me

so when I feel that I think 'I married the right guy'

hehehe really?

Besides love...

A-Patience? I think you need patience

and

value? values?

-values! -also values

I mean, two different people can't be exactly the same

but at least know each other well

understand each other well

If the values aren't similar

I think it would be hard -Yes...if it's totally different, it will be tough

So your values should be kind of the same

otherwise you will struggle

Belief?

-Yeah -Belief

You mean faith!

Religion! -That's important too

and....

also what we liked to eat lol

Thats true. And also for me

Language was a big part too

oh, me too

because, honestly, I could have met someone who could just speak English

because my first language is English

but if that person doesn't know Korean at all

like...she wouldn't understand a big part of my life

-Yeah -It would have been challenging

If that person doesn't know Korean culture or the language

But my Gabie knows English,

the culture, the Korean language and all!

In conclusion, understanding, patience,

some level of similarities in values

values are important

So that you don't argue lol

Arguing is inevitable

But if you argue you gotta know how to

forgive...

...forgive (korean)

-How d'you say? -Forgiveness!

You gotta know how to forgive, how to resolve conflict

Communication is vital

and

this is out of the blue but

Can I share what we are learning from our marriage course?

What is it?

It's OKAY to argue

Arguments are okay

But when you argue, you get upset

you get angry

and my personality is...

I want to let it out IMMEDIATELY

i want to talk about it now and get it over with

Not me, I have to wait

And you, you gotta think alone

-I need time -You think about it alone

THEN talk about it

As you can see, it's different every person

but the most important thing is

if you are angry at each other

and there's a situation that you can't understand each other

you gotta let the other person know that you still love her

'we are arguing, but our relationship is more important'

It's important to let them know that

So

I am upset right now, however, I still love you

Try to say that

You mean, even though we are fighting, it doesn't mean that I hate you

I still love you

and let him know your feelings hasn't changed

tbh we say it like this but

it's difficult to do so!

-We're learning -We are still learning

It is not easy when you are angry

No..

That's patience!

Patience and communication is important

in marriage

Marriage is not fun times

it's not that simple

It's...

There's so much to work out

you gotta adjust to each other

you gotta be a team and work together

Marriage is effort!

Knowing that you gotta be together forever

could feel like a big responsibility

but no matter what happens, you have to know you are on the same team

-we are -always

Arguing or not, we are on the same team

because we are married!

Anyway, we chose few questions that were interesting

We went deep! -We went deep without realizing!

Anyway guys

we had a very happy 2nd year anniversary

and we feel so lucky

to be able to share this with you guys!

We are filming MORE in Paris

so come back for more episodes!

Let's go have some desserts!

Parisian desserts!

see you next time!

If you liked this video, please press like

and subscribe!!!

bye!!!

For more infomation >> OUR 2ND YR ANNIVERSARY Q&A!!! - Duration: 15:59.

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Train Cartoon For Kids | Unstoppable Train | Fun Video | Superhero Fun Rhymes - Duration: 26:11.

Baa, baa, black sheep, Have you any wool?

Yes sir, yes sir, Three bags full.

One for the master, One for the dame,

One for the little boy Who lives down the lane.

Baa, baa, black sheep, Have you any wool?

Yes sir, yes sir, Three bags full.

One for the master, One for the dame,

And one for the little Boy Who lives down the lane.

One little, two little, three little numbers four little, five little, six little numbers

seven little, eight little, nine little numbers ten little numbers...

One little, two little, three little numbers four little, five little, six little numbers

seven little, eight little, nine little numbers ten little numbers...

One...

Two...

Three little numbers...

Four...

Five...

Six little numbers...

Seven..

Eight...

Nine little numbers...

Ten..

Ten...

Ten little numbers..

One little, two little, three little numbers four little, five little, six little numbers

seven little, eight little, nine little numbers ten little numbers...

One little, two little, three little numbers four little, five little, six little numbers

seven little, eight little, nine little numbers ten little numbers...

Ten little numbers...

Ten little numbers...

For more infomation >> Train Cartoon For Kids | Unstoppable Train | Fun Video | Superhero Fun Rhymes - Duration: 26:11.

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SETH ACREDITA EM OVNIS? Amigo Gringo Responde #60 - Duration: 10:41.

Once again, Amigo Gringo...

OK, before I get started, you can send your questions about New York, American culture and English

in the comments, and of course, any other request.

For example, after so many people wrote asking for a video about Chris's neighborhood,

we visited, and made a video

Just don't forget to include your name, city and state.

OK, now that all you superfans of "Everybody Hates Chris" are taken care of, let's see what everybody else

want to know. The first question is from Eric, who didn't include his last name or city or state.

And he wrote: Amigo Gringo, is it true there are generic products in supermarkets, just like in

Everybody Hates Chris?!?!?! More about Chris! Doesn't anyone in Brazil watch anything else? Is that it?

OK, for those who don't know, in the series, which takes place in the 80s in Brooklyn, Chris's family was poor,

his mom always bought generic products in the supermarkets. In other words, brandless products.

That's exactly what Chris Rock's mother did - he's the comedian that created the program.

It's based on his adolescence. You can hear Chris Rock talk about this and practice your English

at the same time hearing his standup on YouTube, link in the description.

By the way, his English is not generic - it's quite hard to understand.

Junkie alcoholic! But doesn't eat pork because pork's no good for you.

OK, in the 80s generic products were VERY generic, in white packages with black letters, that's it.

Generics still exist today except not with that black and white packaging, they have the brand - or the "brand"

of the supermarket - like in Brazil.

I buy generic products all the time!

And not just food - there are medications and much more and you can save a lot that way in New York.

Oh, and a lot of the time the products are of the same quality as the more expensive brand product.

I swear, they are great, for example, this foot spray!

It's generic, it comes from Walgreen's, which is a pharmacy. I use it every day, and let me tell you,

and let me tell you, you'll never meet anyone with better-smelling feet. Patricia, come here. Smell this!

OK, next, Daniel Machado wrote: Hello Amigo Gringo! Talk a little about UFO's.

Here in my city Varginha, Minas Gerais, there was a sighting.

Do you and your team believe in them?

Of course not, that's absurd. Obviously there are no UFOs, right Patricia?

What? Of course Seth, obviously they exist. Are you nuts?

Argh, these people from Minas Gerais.

Etevaldo, get over here.

Where am I? Who am I? Who are you?

You're Amigo Gringo, we're filming, you were kidnapped by a UFO, but that's ok because they brought you back.

Just read the teleprompter, ok? Let's not delay, because I have a Swedish massage in an hour. Let's go.

Action!

OK!? The next question is from Agnaldo Rodrigues, who wrote: Amigo Gringo, if there are no public hospitals

there in the United States, like the SUS system in Brazil, what do poorer Americans do when they're sick?

How do they receive treatment?

OK, I already mentioned our health system in other videos, link in the description.

But it's such a common question among Brazilians that I'll respond. Our health care system is very annoying.

There is no doubt about it.

I pay more than US$500 per month for my plan, and even so I could end up spending US$6,000 out of pocket,

That's the Obama law - before that I could have paid even more out of pocket.

But the question was about poor people, not us, billionaire actors and host, right Patricia?

But even poorer Americans have access. For example, one of every five Americans- those with low incomes -

have Medicaid. It's a government health insurance that has been around for decades.

Every American above 65 years old, like my parents, or people with some disabilities, have access to Medicare.

In other words, about 110 million Americans have a large part of their health costs paid by the government.

And we're not even talking about the military or Native Americans on reservations, who also receive

health services from the government.

Of course the system is bureaucratic, and complicated, and undocumented immigrants are ineligible,

and even those who are eligible do have to pay something. Among other Americans, the majority

receive health insurance from their workplace, or buy it with a discount from Obamacare.

Next, Marcelo Sá wrote, Amigo Gringo: I'm from São Paulo, I'm 19, and I'm a guitarist - I love rock.

However, here in Brazil people don't like it as much as I do and it's practically impossible to survive working in

a rock band. my dream is to go live in the United States because almost every band I like is American.

Nowadays do you guys in New York like good, old-fashioned rock and roll?

Do you think it's possible to survive in New York playing rock?

Marcelo, I have good news, and bad news, and more good news.

First, the first good news. New York still likes rock and roll.

There are shows every night! You can count on it.

Now, the bad news: it's very, very hard to survive in New York playing rock. The possibility of making a good living

is minimal. You'll probably have to work in something else to pay the bills and rent,

and if you don't have a green card, even worse, see our video about illegal work.

And it's not just rockers, it's the same thing with other kinds of musicians, and actors, and writers,

same thing with painters. In other words, it's almost impossible for all kinds of artists.

But now, the other good news. That doesn't stop anyone!

Thousands of people come here following their artistic dreams every day!

And everyone knows it's hard, and that few will make it, and even so, they still come.

After all, it's New York! That's what we're here for!

And you know what? Even if you're not successful, you go home, get another job, and have great stories

to tell about your three years, or three months, or three hours in New York.

NEW YORKESE CLASS

Ok, that was Amigo Gringo Responds #60! The other 59 are in a playlist.

Don't forget to follow us on Instagram, and on Snapchat, and on Facebook,

And if you need English classes free online,

go to our Patreon page to find out how you can help

the channel and also have English class via Skype.

And now, your New Yorkese class, which comes from a question from Pedró Sá, the second Sá of the day.

And he wrote: Seth, please teach us to pronounce Fort Lauderdale correctly.

99% of Brazilians, even with advanced English, don't pronounce the Florida city's name right.

Hmm, Pedro, Fort Lauderdale? Fort Lauderdale? You think that's hard? I won't waste my time teaching

to pronounce Fort Lauderdale. Let's talk about five other cities that are much harder.

Look at this city, how do you pronounce it?

Forget about the "s", it's not there!

That's in Kentucky.

Next, a city everyone knows about, how do you pronounce it?

Now, a city in Texas! How do you say this city? Wacko?

It can't be wacko, that's a slang word that means "crazy".

A city in Arizona. Let's try. Try it out, how do you pronounce it?

That's it, the "c" disappears.

And finally, this city that's the capital of Iowa.

It comes from a French name. How do you pronounce it?

For more infomation >> SETH ACREDITA EM OVNIS? Amigo Gringo Responde #60 - Duration: 10:41.

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Free Thoughts, Ep. 213: Do Employers Rule Our Lives? (with Elizabeth Anderson) - Duration: 53:54.

Aaron Powell: Welcome to Free Thoughts, I'm Aaron Powell.

Trevor Burrus: And I'm Trevor Burrus.

Aaron Powell: Joining us today is Elizabeth Anderson.

She's the Arthur F. Thurnau professor and John Dewey Distinguished University Professor

of Philosophy and Women's Studies at the University of Michigan.

She was, I believe, one of the earliest guests on this show.

Trevor Burrus: Definitely the first 30 or so, I would say.

Aaron Powell: Yeah, so welcome back to Free Thoughts, Professor Anderson.

Elizabeth Anderson: [00:00:30] It's great to be back.

Aaron Powell: So today, we're talking about your newest book, Private Government, How

Employers Rule Our Lives and Why We Don't Talk About It.

I think this is a book, it's to some extent written to libertarians, arguing that libertarians

are missing an important aspect of the way that power plays out in society and one that

we used to be concerned about, but seem to have lost interest in, I guess.

[00:01:00] But you start at the beginning of the book, you start by saying that your

focus is on specifically ideology.

So maybe start by defining that term, what do you mean by ideology?

Elizabeth Anderson: Yes, so there's two senses of the word ideology.

One is neutral, and the other is pejoratives.

First let me tell you about the neutral sense of the word, ideology, all [00:01:30] it means

is that we all operate with a general picture of our social world, and how it works, what

the basic institutions are, how people interact in our society, and we need these large scale

pictures to navigate the world, and orient ourselves politically, to have ... Take positions

on what we favor or disfavor.

I think [00:02:00] we need ideology because we don't have direct contact or experience

with the entire social world.

We only are like little ants in a big colony.

We don't ... We need a bigger picture, we don't have direct access to that, and ideology

gives us a picture, the meaning of a lot of our local activities by situating it in a

larger understanding of how society works.

Now ideology could also [00:02:30] be negative though, if it leaves out important institutions

and doesn't allow us to understand what's really going on, misrepresents how they're

actually operating, misrepresents potentials for change or other ways of organizing society,

misrepresents causal connections in a way that justify institutions that aren't really

working out well [00:03:00] for people.

Then we say that somethings ideological in a pejorative sense that is it's distorting

our understandings in a way that legitimates some unjust institution.

Trevor Burrus: That one in particular, you think that there's a distinct problem with

the way that bosses ... Workers are dominated by their bosses and that's [00:03:30] being

ignored by ideology to some extent.

Elizabeth Anderson: Yes, that's correct.

In my book, I discuss a number of cases, which I think should outrage people who read the

book.

I've gotten outrage reactions from libertarians, just give you an example.

Most workers in poultry slaughter houses are not allowed to use the bathroom for their

entire eight hour shift.

When [00:04:00] they're ... When they complain that they can't hold it in for eight hours,

their boss just tells them to urinate in their pants, or wear a diaper.

Apple warehouse workers, or Apple retail workers have to stand in line for a half an hour unpaid

every day while their persons and affects are searched.

They don't get paid for that, it's half hour of their day wasted.

[00:04:30] 90% of restaurant workers experience sexual harassment on the job.

Even if we look at professional managerial, upper middle class workers, enormous numbers

of them, millions of them get pressured by their boss to make a political contribution

to their favorite political action committee or to show up in support for the boss's [00:05:00]

political candidate.

I could go on and on, there's lots of cases where I think it's pretty clear that managers

are exercising extreme and unjust authority, oppressive authority over their workers.

For the most part, this is legal, or if it's not legal as in the case of sexual harassment,

workers in practice have very little recourse.

Aaron Powell: I wanna then take a step back [00:05:30] because much of your book is about

that world that you just described, and how we got there, and how we ought to think about

it.

But you begin with I think a claim that might be rather surprising to a lot of our audience.

Trevor Burrus: Or more surprising to actually the left.

Aaron Powell: Yeah.

Trevor Burrus: I don't know how much of our audience, our audience might know.

Aaron Powell: Our audience might, but I think yeah ... To the left, it'll certainly be surprising

left too.

So you say you [00:06:00] write from a historical perspective, you said the ideal of a free

market society used to be a cause of the left.

Can you unpack that a bit for us?

Elizabeth Anderson: Yes.

Aaron Powell: Give us this historical picture?

Elizabeth Anderson: I'm defining the left as committed to an egalitarian society, a

society in which human beings interact with each other on terms of equality.

What I mean by that, by the society of equals [00:06:30] is best understood by contrast

with the opposite of an egalitarian society, mainly a hierarchical society.

Hierarchy, social hierarchy has three dimensions to it.

You have hierarchies of authority, that's where some people get to order other people

around in a fairly unaccountable way.

There are hierarchies of esteem, in which some people are honored and other people despised,

[00:07:00] and the inferior people have to bow and scrape and humiliate themselves before

the superior people.

Then we have hierarchies of standing, and that has to do with whose interest counts

when third parties are making decisions about them.

This could be policy makers in the government, or it could just be ordinary people in civil

society.

Aaron Powell: Can you give us an example of that, just to make it a little bit more concrete?

Elizabeth Anderson: [00:07:30] If you have ... If Congress is considering some law, are

they only considering the rich and the powerful, and their interests in passing that law, or

are they considering the interests of everyone?

That would be a hierarchy of standing if it's just taken for granted that only some people

count.

According to some political scientists, the opinions and interests [00:08:00] of the bottom

third of the population are pretty much ignored by Congress and really only the top third

get any attention in contemporary legislation.

So an egalitarian society in which is a society of which people interact on terms of equal

standing, everyone counts equally, their interests all count in the eyes of others.

Equality of esteem, you don't have any [00:08:30] group stigmatization or honor of other groups

like aristocrats.

Equality of authority, you don't have anybody entitled to order somebody else around arbitrarily

or with impunity.

Trevor Burrus: So it seems like as you point out a free market ... If you're thinking about

the world of 1650, which is full of a bunch of unequal situations as you described, then

a free market [00:09:00] is actually a step up from that.

Elizabeth Anderson: Absolutely, and I think I go back to the levelers in the English Civil

War who were also free marketeers.

They wanted to trade freely, and put petitions before Parliament to get that right, and they

were arguing its monopoly.

At the time, manufacturing was controlled by monopoly and [00:09:30] lands was locked

up in monopolies of a tiny number of aristocratic landholders.

The laws of inheritance were written in such a way that it was actually illegal for a landlord

or a great aristocrat to break up his estate and sell it off into small pieces.

The entire estate had to be inherited intact by the first born son.

So all the land was captured and monopolized [00:10:00] by a tiny class of people.

Manufacturing was monopolized by the great manufacturers and small craftsmen had to obey

the rules that were laid down to them by the big manufacturers who ran the guilds.

Ordinary people really didn't have many opportunities, so the levelers said, "We wanna get rid of

this, we wanna get rid of aristocratic privilege."

They wanted to abolish the House of [00:10:30] Lords, they wanted free markets and lands.

Abolition of monopoly, so anyone was free to trade with anyone they wanted.

Get rid of all these oppressive regulations that determined the hours and places of trade.

Why not allow any town to be open to trade?

In those days, there were specific market places, and certain towns had a monopoly on

those.

So if you didn't live in those towns, you had much lower opportunity.

[00:11:00] The levelers, of course, were completely right about this, and what they predicted

was if you broke up the monopolies, opportunities would dramatically expand for ordinary people

to be able to make money, and also practice their religion freely.

They wouldn't have to pay taxes to the Church of England, they could publish and print what

they wanted, instead of having to submit to the censorship [00:11:30] of the Church of

England.

They could manufacture what they wanted without having to submit to the courts of the guilds,

which were all run by the big manufacturers.

People would be both much more free, and also much more equal.

People would be able to interact on a plane of equality, they wouldn't have to bow and

scrape before lords and they wouldn't be subject to the arbitrary authority of the guild, the

lords, [00:12:00] and all these other oppressive big wigs.

Trevor Burrus: Even Adam Smith who I have ... I'm a big fan of, and I sometimes will

get attacked as being some proponent of Adam Smith, that selfish capitalist guy didn't

care about the common man.

But as you point out, Adam Smith was in the same boat as the levelers.

Elizabeth Anderson: Absolutely.

In fact, the image of Adam Smith that is in the popular imagination is almost the opposite

[00:12:30] of what he actually was.

Trevor Burrus: Yeah, we say that all the time, but it's really good to hear you say that.

Elizabeth Anderson: Yeah.

Look, I'm an endless admirer of Adam Smith, his theory of moral sentiments is one of the

greatest works of moral psychology ever written.

It's packed dense with empirically testable hypotheses, there's actually a fellow here

at University of Michigan, Ethan Cross, who is testing some of Smith's hypotheses and

[00:13:00] coming up with favorable empirical evidence for them.

Trevor Burrus: Cool.

Elizabeth Anderson: Smith was the great advocate of sympathy as the foundation of morality,

and he argued that the market was also deeply based on sympathy.

This is really important, he didn't think that market interactions were based on selfishness.

[00:13:30] His whole model of how successful market interactions arise is that each party

needs a healthy appreciation of the interests of the other party that they're transacting

with.

If you have no idea what the other person wants, or you don't appeal to their interests,

you're not gonna get a successful negotiation.

So on Smith's view, it was ... The market actually promotes sympathy [00:14:00] between

individuals because it makes them more vividly aware of other people's interests, and in

a well functioning market with the rule of law, people realize that they have to appeal

to other people's interests to get their own interest satisfied.

So the market for him was a great sphere in which people would learn to pay [00:14:30]

regard to other people's interests, wasn't a selfish realm at all.

Aaron Powell: Then you say step ... Stepping forward historically, you then make the claim

that this Smith-ian vision of the market was in effect the original version of the American

Dream?

Elizabeth Anderson: Absolutely, yes.

The real place where this vision gets picked up is America, in particular, [00:15:00] the

United States.

The reason for this is, the historically unique position of the United States, perhaps in

all of world history, you had extraordinarily high rates of self employment among the free

population of the United States at the time Smith was writing at the of the American Revolution.

[00:15:30] Perhaps about 90% of the free workers of the United States were self employed, that

is they owned their own farm, or their little shop.

That's really astonishing because around 1776, if you look at the world population, probably

around 95% of them were submitted to some kind of unfree labor.

If it wasn't slavery, it was indentured servitude or apprenticeship, some kind of debt [00:16:00]

bondage, all kinds of involuntary servitude.

In America, of course, there was slavery and that was a great stain on America's claim

to be promoting freedom, but among the free workers, those workers enjoyed astonishing

levels of freedom and autonomy at work because they were their own bosses.

So Smith's vision of how liberating free markets could be was really picked [00:16:30] up in

the United States in a huge, huge way, and the great advocate of free market society

was Tom Paine, who was also of course the most influential revolutionary pamphleteer.

What made Paine important from a philosophical point of view is that he advocated the revolution

not only because no taxation without representation, it wasn't just [00:17:00] a complaint about

how England was excessively taxing Americans, it was much more that if America could break

free, it could setup a society, a free society of equals and that would be a model for the

rest of the world of how to organize society on a non-aristocratic, non-hierarchical basis

[00:17:30] that would bring prosperity and freedom to everyone.

Aaron Powell: Okay, so I'm gonna say let's ... Enough then now with the ... This relentless

optimism.

Elizabeth Anderson: Yeah.

Aaron Powell: So you then say though that, "What began as a hopeful inspiring egalitarian

vision in the United States self-destructed in three ways."

Sorry, what were the three ways that this all went very wrong?

Elizabeth Anderson: Yeah.

We see Paine's vision, that free markets are gonna bring universal [00:18:00] self employment

along with the United States, right up to the Civil War, Lincoln campaigned on it, his

1860 stump speech, which you can find on the web, his address to the Wisconsin Agricultural

Society lays it out explicitly.

The problem is the Civil War brought it all down, even though the Civil War was actually

fought largely over slavery, that is Lincoln wanted to strangle slavery [00:18:30] and

the slave states rebelled.

The Civil War ended up propelling the Industrial Revolution in the United States.

The Industrial Revolution was the absolute key to the collapse of this older vision from

the levelers through Paine, and Smith, and Lincoln of how free markets would lead to

a free society of equals with everyone self [00:19:00] employed.

The key issue with the Industrial Revolution is that it created enormous economies of scale.

Large scale factories arise with huge concentrations of capital, railroads, these are really huge

concentrations of capital.

They can't be worked by just one hand or the hand of a family, they have to be worked by

dozens, hundreds of [00:19:30] people, in some cases thousands.

Once you get that, you get the employment relationship.

People are no longer their own boss, now they have a boss who tells them what to do often

in arbitrary and oppressive ways.

That was really the key turning point, was the Industrial Revolution and that was the

point at which the left, the egalitarians, turned against free markets [00:20:00] because

what they're fundamentally against wasn't markets in general, it was actually labor

markets.

What they were opposed to was the oppression of factory labor and the oppression of workers

under the thumbs of their bosses.

Trevor Burrus: You have a job of putting out something that a lot of people aren't aware

of that there were ... You could be a very big Adam Smith fan, [00:20:30] and then also

be into free markets, the general concept, but also be into high levels of worker protections.

Of course, Marx didn't, he didn't disregard Adam Smith and think that he was dumb, he

thought it was just a different kind of situation than before.

Then there are people, who libertarians ... We have Thomas Hodgkin, for example, who was

a very big free market guy, and a really big labor rights, labor unions guy.

Something that seems incompatible today, but it's much more of a continuum and [00:21:00]

as you pointed out, that Industrial Revolution and the situation of the workers is what changes

everything.

It does even bring about the Marxian critique.

Elizabeth Anderson: That's exactly right, yes.

Once you get the Industrial Revolution, and there is something ironic about this because

if you look at who the most radical workers were during the Industrial Revolution, it

wasn't actually the factory workers.

Marx was wrong about that, the most radical workers were the craftsmen, [00:21:30] and

the reason is the craftsmen were getting wiped out.

The Industrial Revolution just bankrupted them all, whereas the factory workers, that

was everything they knew, was working in the factory, so they were actually had more of

a stake of working within the system rather than toppling it over.

That's why they organized into labor unions, it wasn't to destroy the system, it was rather

just to get more of the fruits of the massively higher productivity that the Industrial Revolution

was bringing [00:22:00] about.

So ironically the labor movement far from being a revolutionary movement, was really

working within the system much more than the craftsmen, who saw they were doomed if they

didn't topple it all together.

Aaron Powell: You make the ... You use the provocative phrase when you're talking about

the structure we find ourselves in now with people employed in large firms, this post-Industrial

Revolution world.

You [00:22:30] say that we ... Well basically all work for a whole bunch of communist dictatorships,

so how is most of us ... We live in the United States, we don't live under communism, we

like to think we live in a free country, and we don't go to work thinking of it as a [crosstalk

00:22:50], I'm headed across the iron curtain.

Elizabeth Anderson: Right.

Aaron Powell: How is the typical American large [00:23:00] firm a communistic dictatorship?

Elizabeth Anderson: Okay, well first of all, let's just get clear, it is a government,

it's a form of government.

Okay, and it's a form of government because you have government wherever you have some

people giving orders to others that they're able to back up with sanctions.

Certainly employers are able to do that, they give orders to their subordinates, and if

you don't obey those orders, you could be fired or demoted or your pay could be cut,

[00:23:30] or they could just yell at you and harass you and so forth.

There's all kinds of sanctions that are available to bosses.

Trevor Burrus: I just wanna stop.

Would that include, just to make sure we're clear on this, a club, the benevolent order

of elks?

Elizabeth Anderson: Correct.

There's all kinds of governments, and my view government is absolutely pervasive.

We're not talking about the state, right?

The state is just one form of governments, which asserts a monopoly on religion to make

use of force.

But there's all kinds of other governments, [00:24:00] right, so clubs have to be governed,

churches, all kinds of things have a government.

Then the question is how does the government relate to the governed, to those people who

have to take the orders?

Here I draw distinction between public government and private government.

If something is kept private from you, it means it's none of your business, you're not

allowed to know about it, you don't have any [00:24:30] standing to insist that, that thing

be organized for your interests.

If it's private to you, then it is your business, and you're allowed to keep other people out

from meddling with it.

If something is a public thing, if a government is public, what it means is all the governed,

everyone who is governed under that government, gets standing.

They have a say in how the [00:25:00] government is run, they get to know everything about

its operations, right then, the government is a public thing.

So it turns out though that the vast majority of workplaces are private governments in the

sense that management can keep all kinds of vital information secret from the workers,

the workers don't necessarily know even if their job is gonna be around next week.

They can just get [00:25:30] notice overnight, means they can't plan ahead for that catastrophe.

Workers don't get to elect their managers, managers can issue orders, and workers really

just have to suck up and obey.

The form of government is a private government and basically it's a dictatorship, the constitution

of the typical workplace is a dictatorship because the workers can't elect [00:26:00]

their managers and don't really have any say over the orders that are issued to them.

Now there are exceptions with if you have ... If you're represented by a labor union,

but not many workers are represented by unions anymore.

Trevor Burrus: Now on some of that could be ... But what you're saying could be really

interesting.

On some level it could be mundane a listen, so is a private house a dictatorship?

I could walk in and say I'm not gonna take my shoes off, and I'm gonna wipe [00:26:30]

my mouth on your tablecloth and all this stuff, and you can make arbitrary rules if you're

there and say get out, and I don't have any say in that if I go into that private house.

So would that be a dictatorship too or is it not?

Is there in ... If it is then why can't private workplaces also be dictatorships?

Elizabeth Anderson: Yeah.

In my view a government has to cover a domain of life, so if you're just a guest in somebody's

house, sure they can lay down the rules, [00:27:00] but that's not a whole domain of your life

because you're just gonna be there, right, for a couple of hours having dinner with them

or something.

It's when ... Government exists over domains of your life like work or your capacity as

a citizen or subject of a state.

Trevor Burrus: Well depends on how you define it though.

Elizabeth Anderson: Now of course, there is a government of the family, and kids definitely,

right?

[00:27:30] They're living under a dictatorship, and there are reasons for that.

Mainly that they can't ... They're not capable of self government.

Of course, we hope that the dictatorship is benevolent, that parents love their children,

so they're not gonna be oppressive to them.

There's probably no other way to run parenting other than some kind of dictatorship.

But in the workplace, we have other options.

Here we're talking [00:28:00] about autonomous adults should have standing in a major domain

of their lives, where they're spending about a third of their life as adults, of their

waking hours at work.

Trevor Burrus: But in work, that's not necessarily a dictatorship.

You could ... I ... Whereas you said you've just ... Going over someone's house to eat.

But still in a private domain, my house, my rules and everyone is okay with that, or they

don't go there.

It seems like [00:28:30] there's not a categorical distinction you're making, it's just actually

how much of your life is there, and work is not necessarily a dictatorship, correct?

Elizabeth Anderson: Well, let's put it this way, the default constitution of the workplace

is a dictatorship.

That's just as legal point of view, we have employment at will, that's a default regime,

and that means that the employer can [00:29:00] hire, fire you for any or no reason.

So there's a level of arbitrariness there, the people can be fired, demoted, their pay

cut for any or no reason, it's arbitrary.

It's unaccountable, and that's what makes it in my words, a private government.

Trevor Burrus: You could also quit for no reason, though.

Elizabeth Anderson: That's right, but quitting carries enormous costs-

Trevor Burrus: [00:29:30] Often to the business.

Elizabeth Anderson: For the workers.

Trevor Burrus: Often to the business too though.

Elizabeth Anderson: Sometimes, or sometimes not.

It depends on how many people are lined up, certainly in times of high employment or in

regions of high employment.

Employers don't really care that much about turnover and you could ... You see a lot of

workplaces with pretty high turnover where it shows how little regard they actually have

for the workers.

Aaron Powell: Then this is why you would reject into the ... A ... Call it typical libertarian

response to the claim that [00:30:00] the firm is a communist dictatorship as another

form of government is to say look, I always have that option to exit.

That when I'm living within the bounds of a country, I'm subject to its laws unless

I'm gonna leave and leaving ... If I wanted to immigrate from the United States, it would

be incredibly costly and might be impossible, but if I wanted to jump ship to another [00:30:30]

think tank that would be, if not easy, at least easier than moving to Europe.

That possibility of exit then gives us not only a greater degree of freedom because we

can always just say, "Screw it, I'm going elsewhere," but also gives us some check because

even if an employer isn't extraordinarily harmed by a single employee [00:31:00] leaving,

if they have an environment.

You're creating an environment where all of your employees are unhappy, or where employees

... you can't build up any human capital in the firm because employees leave ... Really

rapidly is not a good way to become successful in the marketplace, but you don't think that,

that's a persuasive counter?

Elizabeth Anderson: Well, there are a couple things to say here.

Certainly the freedom of exit is a very important freedom for workers, [00:31:30] and it ought

to be enhanced.

It's worth keeping in mind that in recent years, there's been a dramatic increase in

labor contracts where workers are forced to leave their human capital behind if they quit

the firm.

Their non-compete clauses that say you can't work in the same industry for a number of

years if you work for us.

Trevor Burrus: No, most libertarians are against those.

Elizabeth Anderson: People have to sign that.

I [00:32:00] find that pretty outrageously unjust-

Trevor Burrus: So do we.

Elizabeth Anderson: Yeah.

Trevor Burrus: Most libertarians are against those.

Elizabeth Anderson: Well and good for libertarians, you ought to be against them.

It used to be it's only a tiny number of knowledge workers who are subject to those things, now

you've got Jimmy John sandwich maker who can't jump over to Subway.

But one of the difficulties with relying on exit alone to deal with these problems [00:32:30]

is that what do people have ... What jobs can they exit to?

What jobs can they enter?

It's just another dictatorship.

I have a big problem with that.

As we see in environments where workers don't have much bargaining power, their options

are even worse.

There are whole regions of the country with chronically high unemployment.

We have business cycles [00:33:00] with ... Where you have people go for years with high unemployment.

Right, they really ... The exit option isn't really working very well for people like that.

Trevor Burrus: It seems odd that your ... It sounds like you're defining all at will employment

relationships at dictatorships, which it seems like you need more for a dictatorship than

an at will employment relationship because as again, it does empower workers to some.

But you seem like you would need oppressive bosses and you've mentioned [00:33:30] horrible

things that I don't doubt exist.

It would be astounding to me if there weren't horrible bosses.

The thing that you're trying to do though is empower workers to be able to move around

and increase their wellbeing, and that's what strikes me as interesting in your book because

you think of farming for example.

We're going back to the story we were telling about Adam Smith, so farming sucks, right?

Even though it's self sufficient, there's a lot of really bad things about farming,

especially your wellbeing is very much tied to the weather [00:34:00] and you have to

be the one who works, so even moving into that industrial life in say like Lowell, Massachusetts

with the women going to work in the garment factories there.

So yeah, they were under a dictatorship.

They probably were leaving a dictatorship of their families on the farm, but they got

one day a week off, and they had a library, and they got wages that were guaranteed to

them and didn't move with the weather, and that was a trade off they're willing to make.

Sometimes it seems like that's ... Self sufficiency is great, but that also means uncertainty

in the possibility of extreme loss.

That means that [00:34:30] today, if you wanna start a business, you trade that off to security

of a salary that you're contractually obligated to pay someone, but less freedom in other

regards, so why is it okay that some workers make that decision?

Not everyone can be an entrepreneur.

Elizabeth Anderson: That's quite right.

In fact, I don't think that the ideal economy would be one of universal self employment

especially in modern conditions, they're a lot better [00:35:00] than they are in the

Industrial Revolution, they're a lot less polluted.

Here I'm talking about in the advance countries, obviously if you go to El Salvador you're

gonna see horrible sweatshops that aren't much different from what they had in the Industrial

Revolution.

Even in the United States, there are sweatshops and garment factories and so forth, that are

pretty horrible and often staffed by undocumented immigrants who don't really have any effective

power or rights in society.

[00:35:30] My point isn't that there shouldn't be government at work.

I think any large scale organization is going to need some kind of government that's gonna

involve authority relations, some kind of hierarchy of offices in which some people

are giving orders to others.

The theory of the firm and economics explains why efficient production on a large scale

typically requires some kind of hierarchy that is a government [00:36:00] at work.

My objection isn't to authority at work or government at work, my objection is to arbitrary

unaccountable authority, that's what private government is.

I think that workers being subject to dictatorship should have some remedies to that, and [standardly

00:36:22] in political philosophy, right?

If we look at dictatorship, it's got a lot of problems, dictators have tendencies to

abuse their [00:36:30] underlings.

We've devised remedies, you get a bill of rights, and you get some voice.

You make that government in some way a public thing that's accountable to the governed.

Aaron Powell: I'm curious about the work that the word, arbitrary, is doing here, and what

you mean by that, and what you mean by unaccountable because it seems like the objection as I understand

it, is not [00:37:00] necessary ... Is not, as you said, to the fact that there are people

who have authority in workplace, or even ... In necessarily, the fact that they're unaccountable

because if I'm an entrepreneur leading the business, and I say ... As they say in Silicon

Valley, we need to pivot our business, so we're gonna switch from being an instant messaging

app to a social payments app. [00:37:30] The ... It makes sense that I as the head of the

firm, get to make that decision, and that the engineers employed for me can't say, "No,

no, no," because that's the nature of entrepreneurial-ship and having someone who's in charge of the

product.

That's unaccountable in a certain way, it could also potentially be arbitrary because

I might not have good reasons for switching from an instant messaging app to a social

payments app.

But that's not necessarily as much the problem as the particular uses like what you object

to.

So when you [00:38:00] talk about the abuses, it's the forcing employees to urinate on themselves,

or dictating what sorts of stuff they can do in their home life, those kinds of much

more almost authoritarian uses of it.

So is it ... Do you think that ... Do we need to get rid of the unaccountability and the

arbitrariness simply because it enables these other things, no matter what other benefits

it might have, or ... [00:38:30] So there's ... Or do you think there's just something

inherently wrong with the very notion of someone at a firm being in a position where they can

dictate what the firm does and the employees can't override them?

Elizabeth Anderson: Right.

First of all, I've great respect for entrepreneurs and often it takes somebody with a big vision

to really bring about some dramatic innovation.

[00:39:00] For the most part, workers don't have any complaints if say some dramatic new

product is the new vision for this company, workers don't really complain about that because

they're still gonna be doing basically the same kind of labor, it's just now on a new

project.

You direct your software engineers to build this new cool software, and they're okay with

that.

It's [00:39:30] not really ... The complaint isn't about the entrepreneurial vision, and

the people at the top being able to direct the larger course, the strategy of the company,

it's more about the complaints are more focused on the character of the managerial relation,

and in particular how it is restraining choices by [00:40:00] workers that they really ought

to have.

So one clear boundary is between what you do at work, and what you do off duty in your

private life.

Under employment at will, those boundaries are effaced, and that's really problematic.

So just to give an example that I think should be of interest to libertarians, about half

of all workers get [00:40:30] drug tested.

I'm not a fan of drug addiction, or recreational drugs, but if you want to do that on the weekends,

I don't think your boss has any business firing you at work.

Now if you come to work high, and your work is incompatible with being high, then of course,

sure, you can be fired.

But of course, drugs, drug tests test drugs that were [00:41:00] only consumed over the

weekends, or on vacation.

It seems to me that boss ... It's really none of boss's business to trample on people's

private recreational choices.

Aaron Powell: Well let me ask about that because so ... God, was it a couple few years ago

the "Has Justine Landed Yet," hashtag thing on Twitter, where a woman who worked for,

I think it was a PR agency maybe, I don't remember, or she was in PR for her firm, [00:41:30]

hopped on a plane to Africa.

Right before getting on the plane, so being without internet, she made a joke-

Elizabeth Anderson: Right.

Aaron Powell: An extremely racist-

Elizabeth Anderson: Yes.

Aaron Powell: Joke, or at least an extremely racially insensitive joke, in very poor taste,

and it trended, so the "Justine ... Has Justine Landed Yet" hashtag was everyone knew she

was gonna get fired the moment she landed.

So that was ... [00:42:00] She was ... I don't know that she was traveling on her ... I think

it was a vacation, so this was her own time, but this was an instance where a firm ... It

seems like the only option the firm had was to fire her because it would've been-

Elizabeth Anderson: So, let's be clear about this-

Aaron Powell: Extremely damaging to their business.

Elizabeth Anderson: Yeah, I actually think in this case, look, it's an outrageous internet

pile on, sure she said something that was really stupid and offensive, [00:42:30] but

please, the idea that you should lose your job over something like this I think is really

crazy.

Aaron Powell: Well I ... No I agree that pile ons-

Elizabeth Anderson: Heres a way to wit ... Now there are certain cases, if you have the spokespers

... Somebody who's acting for the firm in the capacity of a spokesperson like the leading

executives or maybe even official PR person, then there is legitimate expectation that

what they say [00:43:00] is in some sense speaking for the firm and their attitudes

even off duty have implications for the firm.

I think a small number of workers at the higher ranks and official spokespeople, then I think

it is proper for the firms to say, "We're gonna distance ourselves."

But if it's just some ordinary low level person, I think they should be entitled to freedom

of speech.

There's a way to protect [00:43:30] workers in this way, and simultaneously protect the

firm.

If workers had something equivalent to first amendment rights against their employer, free

speech rights so that they couldn't be fired for this, then the employer would have a perfect

excuse, why didn't they fire them, because they're not allowed to.

This is the usefulness of a bill of rights, it would secure the freedom of speech of workers,

[00:44:00] but also secure the firm against any backlash on account of that because the

firm has a great excuse, "We're just not allowed to fire people for saying stuff like this.

They have their private life, they have their independent rights, and we can't fire them

for saying something stupid on Twitter or whatever."

Trevor Burrus: As the practicing lawyer in the room, I have to point out that this is

... There's an irony about what you're saying about the thesis of your whole book, a lot

of what these businesses are doing when they fire someone for a Facebook post [00:44:30]

or Twitter post, is just been created by government involvement through the Equal Employment Opportunity

Commission.

The ability to sue on discrimination and desperate impact claims, which is the government has

created, so the firms have to be hyper vigilant that they can't get a claim against them for

a racially biased say serving ... If you're Chick Fil-A and you have someone who's tweeting

this stuff out, your lawyers will tell you because of the government's ability to authorize

suits against you to fire [00:45:00] those people immediately 'cause everyone of those

people, if they're sexist, if they make these comments, they're a liability to the company,

and they can create a hostile work environment lawsuit against you.

That's what I would tell any employer on the planet, and that's interesting.

Elizabeth Anderson: What I would say is-

Trevor Burrus: The government has made them less-

Elizabeth Anderson: There's a difference between what you say at work and what you say off

duty.

Trevor Burrus: I wouldn't say that.

Knowing the law, I would say that they're going to find those employees, they're going

to find their racists, and they're going to [00:45:30] say, "Do you really think this

employee at your company didn't treat black people differently and create an environment

that is now we're going to sue you for billions of dollars?"

I'm just saying that, that is why they do it.

Elizabeth Anderson: Well right but-

Trevor Burrus: It's coming from the government-government.

Elizabeth Anderson: You could rework the law.

I don't think that what somebody says off duty, they're not addressing their fellow

workers.

People can have all kinds of obnoxious opinions off work.

Trevor Burrus: The irony is this-

Elizabeth Anderson: [00:46:00] You can insulate that from how they behave at work.

Trevor Burrus: I find it just ironic because a lot of these policies, so sexual harassment

and things like this, which you mentioned previously, the change in the law in this

originated with people who are afraid of the things that you're talking about in this book.

They were trying to change the workplace for domination and they were trying to make it

more hospitable to people of color and people indifferent, and less sexual harassment claims.

[00:46:30] So in doing that, they created an extremely hostile to free speech regime,

and this is interesting because in some of your prescriptions, I think that we should

... If you do instantiate more workplace voice, and more labor union rights and stuff, we

have to ask the question, are we going to have a backlash where it's impossible for

workers to get hired because of the extreme cost?

There are a bunch of things that are unintended consequences.

I'm sayin' this an unintended consequence of what you're talking about is the worker

free speech problem that you highlight in your book.

Elizabeth Anderson: [00:47:00] Well I think it wouldn't be hard to legally define the

workplace narrowly in terms of how this worker is interacting with coworkers and setting

aside how the worker interacts with random people off duty.

Aaron Powell: I had a quest-

Elizabeth Anderson: You can just bar the introduction of [00:47:30] some stupid Twitter remark or

whatever into a sexual harassment trial.

Aaron Powell: I wanted to ask about ... One way that you're saying we could address these

issues is through changing the legal regime, worker bill of rights, basically changing

the relationship that the law enables or allows within the firm.

But I wanted to ask about [00:48:00] other sorts of changes and how they might impact

the concerns that you raise in the book because to some extent, the system as you describe

it now is a result of technological changes.

Like the Industrial Revolution was a set of technological changes that enabled new kinds

of businesses to operate and to operate at scales that made it ... That made other arrangements

less profitable, or unable to compete.

That we [00:48:30] invented manufacturing in certain ways, but that because of the way

that the tech worked, it was easiest to do that in these concentrated firms.

But we have a lot of technological changes now that I wonder if those push back in the

other direction.

So for one, it would seem like you would be something of a fan of the gig economy, especially

if people are able to earn a living [00:49:00] within the gig economy, where everyone ... 'Cause

you talk in the book about everyone being effectively a freelancer.

Do you think that the gig economy is a step in the right direction?

Then do you think that ... I had emailed you ... Yesterday, I had come across some research

for a prior podcast, the decentralized organization building system online that would let everyone

have stakes and [00:49:30] vote and have contracted payment and stuff, but it's done without a

central authority and it's done without arbitrary control.

These are the kinds of things that simply from a communications' technology and a financial

technology stand point would not have been possible even five or 10 years ago.

So do you think that even in the absence of perhaps legal changes, we may see a move back

to the kind of world that Adam Smith envisioned simply because the tech is allowing us to?

Elizabeth Anderson: [00:50:00] That's really interesting.

There are a lot of people for whom the gig economy works.

The downside of the gig economy is precarity, right?

It's very hard to cobble together an actual living, and on top of that too, for people

who want to look back on their working life as something, which really adds up to something,

right?

There are a lot of people who [00:50:30] have ambitions for a career, right?

They want to actually build on their skills and be able to produce something bigger than

just a million random tasks that they fulfilled.

I don't think that the ... The gig economy definitely works for some people, and that's

a great option for them.

But for most people, I think it has too much precariousness to it, and for a lot of people,

it just doesn't carry [00:51:00] the same kind of meaningfulness as a career, which

you build your skills and work on some larger projects with other people that add up to

something big.

That's why maybe this alternative, this kind of non-hierarchical networking kind of economy,

where groups of people can work together and produce something big, but on a plane of equality,

I think that's an incredibly interesting idea whether networking will be able [00:51:30]

to deliver the productivity and the high degree of coordination that the modern workplace

under hierarchical management does.

I think I'm all in favor of experimentation along those lines, and let's see where it

takes us.

Trevor Burrus: But for right now, your biggest concern as you've said in the book, it's not

that you're against exit, and it's not that you're against markets and things like this.

But your biggest concern [00:52:00] is highlighting the abuses that the workers are experiencing.

Toward the fixing that, you basically you have focused on is your best solution but

you don't actually lay it out.

But your book is first just an argument for explaining what the problem is, but is giving

greater voice to workers.

Can you talked a little bit about that?

Elizabeth Anderson: Yes, right.

If we look at traditional firms, not these high tech network things.

What I argue is, we [00:52:30] should really be looking at the German example of co-determination,

it's an alternative to labor unions.

Under co-determination, workers work jointly with capital honors to manage the workplace,

both at the factory floor level or the shop floor level, and even some of the larger strategic

decisions is having to do with things like plant closings.

[00:53:00] Germany's very prosperous, you don't see high unemployment in Germany, looks

like you don't have a lot of negative side effects, workers have a genuine voice in that

system.

Obviously it's not the same as a pure socialist workers cooperative.

It'd be fun to explore that option too, I don't think that's really viable for most

workers 'cause they can't scrape up enough capital to actually own the firm.

So I think this an interesting middle position [00:53:30] that ought to be explored for American

workers.

Aaron Powell: That's for listening.

This episode of Free Thoughts was produced by Tess Terrible and Evan Banks.

To learn more, visit us at www.libertarianism.org.

For more infomation >> Free Thoughts, Ep. 213: Do Employers Rule Our Lives? (with Elizabeth Anderson) - Duration: 53:54.

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

Dollar-to-won exchange rate falls below 1,100 - Duration: 1:30.

The Korean won strengthened against the greenback.

The exchange rate is under 11-hundred to the dollar.

Kim Hye-sung point out what contributed to the local currency closing at the highest

level in more than a year.

The Korean won strengthened past 1,100 against the U.S. dollar for the first time in more

than a year, closing at one-thousand-97-point-five Friday.

It has appreciated nearly nine percent against the greenback since the start of 2017, including

a four percent rise in the last three months... thanks to easing geopolitical tensions and

strong economic fundamentals.

(Korean)- "Solid exports growth led to a current account

surplus, meaning more U.S. dollars coming into the country.

Second, the Bank of Korea is expected to raise interest rates soon, leading to a stronger

won."

In addition, a new currency swap deal signed between Korea and Canada on Wednesday also

played a part in driving up demand for the local currency.

Korea's real GDP expanded one-point-four percent on-quarter in the third quarter, nearly double

market expectations.

Most experts say that if the economy keeps growing at the current pace, the won will

continue to appreciate.

But a stronger won means more pressure for Korea's exporters, as it raises the prices

of goods sold abroad.

A Korean central bank official said Friday the won has appreciated quickly in a short

time and that the foreign-exchange authority is closely monitoring the markets.

Kim Hyesung, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Dollar-to-won exchange rate falls below 1,100 - Duration: 1:30.

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

North Korea most sanctioned country by EU according to new online map - Duration: 0:37.

A new map by the European Union shows North Korea leads the world in terms of the number

of EU sanctions.

The EU Sanctions Map, available online, is designed to help users find up-to-date information

on the various sanctions implemented by Brussels.

It shows countries under punitive measures, the specifics of the measures and even a list

of individuals and entities subject to EU and UN sanctions.

Thirty-three countries are marked on the map for illegal activities, like the proliferation

of weapons of mass destruction and terrorism.

To check the map out for yourself go to sanctionsmap-dot-e-u.

For more infomation >> North Korea most sanctioned country by EU according to new online map - Duration: 0:37.

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

MOST EMBARRASSING PASSWORD EVER! | Office Skit - Duration: 3:07.

*Error messages coming from computer*

Tsk.. Ah Sh*t...

*Looks around and finds other options*

*Ernest sees an available laptop*

*Klex rummaging through the pantry*

Errr.. Klex ah?

Can I use your laptop for awhile? I need to send out an email.

Yeah sure! Go ahead.

Thanks bro.

Erm.. What's your password ah?

Oh! Errrrr...

Why? What's wrong?

*Hesitating to answer* Errrr...

Let me just go there and type it for you!

No no no no.. It's fine. You can just stay there and tell me.

It's okay one.

Y-You sure? It will be much easier if I type it for you?

Pffff.. How hard can it be? Faster say la..

Okay.. Okay.. Erm..

It's.. *looks around for assurance*

I like the pussy..

HAH!?

I like the pussy..

Bro, can you just speak louder? I can't hear you!

It's.. kinda embarrassing..?

Tsk.. Haiya it's just you and me here..

Everyone else has gone out.. Faster say your password! FAST!

*sighs* Okay.. Okay..

Its.. I LIKE THE-

*door opens and colleagues walking in*

Haiya, chill la! It's just Tim, Chia Hou and Nick!

Aiya, faster give me your password now!

Le-let me just go and type it for you..

Klex! I need to send an email out to a client at 1pm sharp!

Give me your password ..NOW!

*sighs* Okay.. fine..

Is.. I LIKE THE-

*interrupts by Kelvin* Kelvin: Welcome to our office! Nice to meet you..

*Intensive discussion with clients*

*Discussion continues to go on at the background* There's clients here..

YAH! And I have to send an email to a client at 1pm SHARP!

Klex! Just give me your password NOW!!

*gulp* Is.. I LIKE THE-

*interrupts by Dan Khoo* Hey guys! Welcome to my live stream! Today I'm going to talk about..

*Dan continues ranting at the background* Eh! Dan Khoo! Dan Khoo! What? What?

*Dan continues ranting*

Dan is live streaming..

Klex.. Your password.. Give it to me.. NOW!!!

*Klex confuse with what he should do*

*Klex gestures 'Let me come over and type it"*

*Ernest gestures 'Don't you freaking dare!"*

*Intensive stare off between Ernest & Klex*

I LIKE THE PUSSY!!

*Everyone awkwardly stares at Klex*

*Awkward cricket sound*

*Sighs*

*Waddles to the backroom*

I always thought Klex was gay..

For more infomation >> MOST EMBARRASSING PASSWORD EVER! | Office Skit - Duration: 3:07.

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

Tom Jerry Teen Titans Go Finger Family Song | Daddy finger Teen Titans - Duration: 0:53.

Daddy finger, Daddy finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am. How do you do?

Mommy finger, Mommy finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am. How do you do?

Brother finger, Brother finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am. How do you do?

Sister finger, Sister finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am. How do you do?

Baby finger, Baby finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am. How do you do?

For more infomation >> Tom Jerry Teen Titans Go Finger Family Song | Daddy finger Teen Titans - Duration: 0:53.

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

[ENG SUB] 부산 여행잡지 추천! Busan Travel Magazine/Guidebook Reco :) - Duration: 6:06.

hi im cherry ( ^ ^ )/

today, we're going to talk about Magazines

becz i just received this package when i got home

this is a package/doc from Busan

the one who sent is it "Busan City Communication Dept"

their email address is really interesting @v@!

letmedosth@korea.kr

we should also make letmedosth@hongkong.hk (just kidding lol)

plz rmb to subscribe if you haven't~ ( ^ ^ )/

do you read magazines?

in these days, we can easily know almost everything from Internet/ social media

(in certain aspect) im quite a traditional person

im still reading magazines all the time =v=

for example...

Hong Kong local travel magazines (published weekly)

and IT magazines

(just opened it) oh @0@

this Busan travel magazine comes out really well!

the paper texture is good, and...

(sniff)

oh there isn't really any smell

really...

the pics inside looks naturally good too!

(doesn't like those who PS their pics a lot)

do you like the book smell?

when i was reading those old books

i always try to sniff for the book smell =v=

alright, this might be a bit wierd =v=''

there are a lot of places in here where i've visited~!

so, how abt doing a few recommendation for you?

erm...the first one...

Gwangali

you could go for the nightview

but personally i would recommend going in the morning

there are much less people in the morning

and you can ride/cycling along the beach >v<

and next...

Da Dae Po

if you ever go to Dadaepo,

you shouldn't miss this "Sunset Fountain of Dreams"

this is really beautiful

after this music fountain show is ended

you can get in directly and play with the water hehe

that's why it's really fun

please go with your friends ( ^ ^ )/

well, you could also go there for solo travel

(but the travelling time is quite long)

so i guess it would be much more interesting if you have a company

plz check out the music fountain in Dadaepo~!

and then...

the last recommendation

Namdaepo (wait no, i mixed up the names of diff places XD)

Nampodong

Nampodong is one of the famous tourist spots in Busan

but if you want to try out the street food

they have the widest range of variety in here

and the price is reasonable

i tried the silk worms in here =v=

do you eat/had you ever eaten silkworm?

do you like it?

for me, the taste was actually okay @-@

there's some scientific reports in the past...

if there's food shortage problem in the future

since insects/bugs like silk worm is high in protein

we might have to eat a like of insects like silkworm!

if we continue to talk about insects

i really don't know how to end this =v=''

so, that's it for today

there might not be any new video update tmr

becz we're doing our Livestream on Saturday (Q&A + Christmas Card Lucky Draw)

i have to practice with the OBS system

and prob have to do some chores as well =v=

alright, that's really the end of today

see you next time~ ( ^ ^ )/

bye bye ~ ( ^ ^ )/

For more infomation >> [ENG SUB] 부산 여행잡지 추천! Busan Travel Magazine/Guidebook Reco :) - Duration: 6:06.

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

Nanking Hoax in 1937 ① (CC Eng Sub) - Duration: 9:51.

For more infomation >> Nanking Hoax in 1937 ① (CC Eng Sub) - Duration: 9:51.

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

Sean spoils entertainment feat. JEWELTransport Evolution (parody) | JustintanTV - Duration: 1:50.

So, Wan Muhammad, your own upcoming film is about your adventures of your own?

- Yes. It's called 'Honey, I Shrunk Your... - Ah Thor: Baygonr-

Oops... sorry.

So what is it all about?

It's about our adventures with a group of ladi...

Everybody joins the scene!

Everybody loves it!

Stop spoiling the scene, ok?

Sorry!

When is it going to be released?

- November 17 on Netfli... - Bring it to the cinemas instead!

Hello?

It's going to be on Netflix as a TV movie!

Just like 'It' in 1990s.

Sean sorry Wan Muhammad!

Is there any guest stars in your film?

- No. Justin Tan Wen Cong has to be exc... - He's gonna be in the movie!

*slap*

What the hell is wrong with you?!

We want him in this movie.

Why he wants to be part of the movie?

His role is the retired fella who retired from the workforce.

Are you kidding me? He is the musician in the film!

*slap*

Ok that's it! This interview is over! Just turn the cameras off let's get out of here!

Come on!

What is wrong with you dude?!

For more infomation >> Sean spoils entertainment feat. JEWELTransport Evolution (parody) | JustintanTV - Duration: 1:50.

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

Japan to review UN recommendation on comfort women issue - Duration: 1:51.

The UN Human Rights Council called on Japan to atone, sincerely, for the sexual enslavement

of Korean women by its military during World War Two.

Tokyo responded by saying it will look closely at the recommendation..., but it's human rights

envoy says... he personally thinks his country has nothing to be ashamed of.

Cho Sung-min has the full story.

The UN Human Rights Council has urged Japan to sincerely apologize and pay compensation

to Korean women who were forced into sexual slavery in Japanese military brothels during

World War II.

Japan was also told to add fair and accurate historical facts regarding the issue to its

national education curriculum... and to include the stories of the so-called "comfort women."

Japan's wartime sexual slavery was brought up for review at the request of South Korea

and China.

The UN body made its recommendations in Geneva this week... after conducting its periodic

review of UN member states' human rights records.

The UN's Universal Periodic Review Working Group conducts its review every five years.

In reaction to the council's recommendations,... the Japanese government said Friday it will

look into the content and deal with it "appropriately."

Japan's Kyodo News agency reported that Japan's ambassador in charge of human rights, Yoshifumi

Okamura, told Japanese reporters after the meeting... that Japan will review and look

at the recommendations,... but also said Japan has nothing to be ashamed of.

Meanwhile, Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, during a news conference on

Friday, brought up the landmark agreement on the "comfort women" issue struck by Seoul

and Tokyo in 2015.

He said Japan should do more to get other nations to understand that from Japan's point

of view the issue has been resolved finally and irreversibly... and that the 2015 deal

still stands.

Cho Sung-min, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Japan to review UN recommendation on comfort women issue - Duration: 1:51.

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

50 Ideas for Youtube Channels in 2018?! - Duration: 4:16.

I'm about to give you 50 youtube niche ideas, rapid fire, coming up but

first if you are interested in learning more about YouTube and how you can grow

your channel please subscribe and hit that Bell icon until you never miss a

video drinking water here we go gathered Oh

cotton Channel have a retro gaming channel you do an arcade gaming channel

you can document your fitness journey if you give tips on entrepreneurship and

things that you've learnt running a business if you do creative things you

can create a creative education channel like a burner Blake if you're an author

make temperature about becoming an author if you know a lot about furniture

make a furniture guide channel talk about different kinds of furniture old

new you could have a movie or a few channel guess you have a TV of you

channel you can make a gaming channel about news in the gaming industry new

consoles games that kind of stuff you could have a youtube news channel talk

about new features on YouTube new things that are coming to YouTube big events

that are happening about YouTube that kind of stuff oh I'm getting tired you

can have a cooking channel where you cook this is if you teach people how use

graphic design software like Photoshop if you make an entrepreneurship journey

channel where you show your journey building your business if know about

YouTube you could have a YouTube tips channel you have a channel where you

solve puzzles speaking of puzzles you have a Rubik's

Cube channel there's tons of those out there you can make travel vlogs to be

travelling different places make a family blog if you're staying in hotels

make a hotel review chat speaking over beach make a restaurant review channel

do you really get us women make you learn this one channel tons of people

want to learn how to swim but nor can have board lessons make a channel for

them I'll learn to sing channel do really good singing give tips make a

channel teaching people how to code HTML Java that kind of stuff

make a channel teaching people how to paint make a DIY channel where you build

things and craft things make it sound about sifting and the big bargains you

catch they can check know about how to blog if you're bloggers have a live

streaming channel where you just livestream all the time

if have a good enough computer and good enough internet for it make a 24 hour

seven days a week music livestream I know I care about to

music when I'm bored have a parenting channel we show parenting tips have a

homeschooling channel if you homeschool your kids talk about how it is have a

soft worldview channel try a bunch of different software talk about what you

like to what what you hate I'm a tech movie channel where you review different

piece of tech alternatively you could have a tech news

we share big updates in the tech industry when a police new film Samsung

different deal all that stuff have a Sports News Channel hubo our teams are

winning what teams are completely crushing and what seems on if you're

really really good at a certain type of sport my tips on it it's really good

football talk about how you can get better and what you did to get better

show your training sessions and other things like that have a comedy skit

channel where you do funny little videos you in there have a stand-up comedy

channel it's usually gonna improv make people ask you for sitting in front of

the camera you keep and do the squad which is funnier if you're public

speaker have a channel we upload your speaking engagements no should help you

get more speaking engagement so that's a class if you know about any type of

alcohol and whiskey or wine have an alcohol of you channel if you have

throwing balls everywhere have a ping-pong trip short channel dude

perfect a really big off of that who knows you might - if you do it

differently make montage to be a cinematic footage like drone short

should be so our camera shot stuff like that my vision airline attendant is

planning on doing this a flat montage sound the window of cockpit or whatever

if you travel all the time if you work an interesting job and you

allowed to daily evolve your career what you doing the day-to-day basis at work

if you're in school or college make tipton what you do to study get better

grades and not lose your mind I know I need tips like that if you're fluent in

the language may tips on how you can learn the language give lessons based

tons of possibility in that area well almost there everybody if you've done it

before haven't you on how to make money online I think that publish is the

deadbeat super affiliate his channel all about how to do affiliate marketing for

the final idea boom we're finally here drum wall I'm a gaming tutorial channel

not just a regular game designer but tutorial channel did you like any of the

niches on my list let me know in the comments below

now that you know all these 50 ideas how do you choose one well lucky for you I

have another video telling you how to go through a list and find the perfect

niece just for you Island Cup in the cards bomb definitely go watch it next

if they fear he's helped you and you want to continue attacking the struggles

you face on YouTube please subscribe by hitting the circle over there and click

one of the videos below to continue learning about YouTube and the ways you

can grow your channel once again thank you for watching have an awesome day

For more infomation >> 50 Ideas for Youtube Channels in 2018?! - Duration: 4:16.

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

仲の良かった先輩が いじめられていた。 助けに入ったら次の日… - Duration: 6:01.

For more infomation >> 仲の良かった先輩が いじめられていた。 助けに入ったら次の日… - Duration: 6:01.

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

Illuminati in a nutshell - Duration: 1:09.

Hello, i am adam the wise and i am dissatisfied with the current political situation

i want to take away power from the church and give people wisdom instead

O H W O W

we like your idea

can we join you in your rebellion group?

sure but we need to keep it secret

our group is now called the ulimnotie

we just need a logo

how about the owl of minerva mcgonagall (the hogwarts professor)

how about bill cipher (from gravity falls) but in green (like his original design)

O H W O W

the illumanati is so cool

we want to join too (too bad, it's 2spooky4you)

oh no, the loomynarty is getting popular

if the government finds out about our group, we're screwed

the illmuarie is now illegal

i hate the ilimonady now

two hundred plus years later

hi, i'm cat peary (the platypys) and i'm going to use lemonade symbolism in my (dark horse) music video

we're the conspiracy theorists and we think the key club is an evil group that controls everything

all celebrities are alumni confirmed

i'm philadelphian and i make fun of loominarty conspiracy theories

THE END

You can subscribe to Star the Triple Devil by clicking the circle and watch another video by clicking the rectangle.

For more infomation >> Illuminati in a nutshell - Duration: 1:09.

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

Games for Kids Baby Learn Colors with Temple Run 2 Kids Video iGame Kids Cartoons - Duration: 13:11.

Games for Kids Baby Learn Colors with Temple Run 2 Kids Video iGame Kids Cartoons

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