Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 1, 2018

Waching daily Jan 26 2018

Now, earlier this month,

Serena Williams covered "Vogue" magazine.

(cheering and applause)

In the issue, she revealed that the delivery

of her grand-slam Gerber baby was no Crip Walk on the court.

(female reporter) Williams had a pulmonary embolism

and other blood clots which set off coughing fits

that burst her C-section incision.

Here's a woman who had had blood clots before.

She told her nurse, she told her doctors

that she needed a CT scan, and they weren't listening.

They were saying, "You're just delirious

from the pain medication."

Delirious?

Who the hell is this hatin'-ass doctor,

Maria Sharapova?

(laughter)

But Serena isn't the only one.

The nickname for black women in many doctors' contacts

appears to be "Do Not Answer."

We have this discrepancy, um, with different races

in the care that they receive.

I see a difference sometimes between the way

that black women are listened to versus the way

that white women are listened to.

See, this is just another example

of black women being right.

Even if you doubt what's coming out of our mouths,

you need to listen to our heartbeats.

(whooping and applause)

The entire situation sheds light on another important fact,

and you know I don't normally say this,

but there's one particular area where black women

are getting too much shine.

This is not just a medical crisis.

This is a social justice crisis.

In the United States, this is incredibly alarming,

but black women are three to four times more likely

to die in child birth than white women.

Four times.

That's both an alarming fact and further proof

that Beyoncé is always trying to warn us.

(laughter)

But there's a shocking twist in this crisis.

Since stress and anxiety only increase

as black women get older,

professionals have now found a concept

that wasn't even on Al Roker's radar.

Toxic weathering is essentially the accumulation of stress

that black women face over their entire lives.

Women of color have so much toxic stress from discrimination

that it physicalizes in some way

and affects them when they go into birth and pregnancy.

And that might actually be contributing

to the incredibly high rates of harm and death.

Ooh, ooh, whoo! I'm sorry.

I had to sit down because I think I'm 12 months' pregnant

with hashtag facts.

(laughter, cheering, applause)

And while countless black women are dying

from medical negligence, two D.C. hospitals

are leaving a Michael Strahan gap

between pregnant women and health care.

The two hospitals that closed were in Agoura area,

but it was also in an area

with a very large concentration of black mothers.

There were a couple controversies around it,

a couple complications.

Instead of investigating the hospitals

and investigating the obstetric wings

and looking into what went wrong and how can we make this better,

the hospitals just closed the obstetric wings.

Wow, they really think black women are dumb.

You don't think we'd notice an entire missing hospital wing?

We noticed that "Living Single"'s first living room

used to be the Winslows'.

We notice everything. (laughter and applause)

And everybody needs to notice this issue more

if we want to save black women's lives.

Just because we give everybody life

doesn't mean we have to die to do it.

Black women... (cheering and applause)

Black women are strong, but we are not superhuman.

Well, except for this woman.

It's coming! It's coming!

Aah!

For more infomation >> Serena Williams Sheds Light On Black Women + Child Birth Issues | The Rundown With Robin Thede - Duration: 3:26.

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Microsoft Bob Experience: Was It Really THAT Bad? - Duration: 17:55.

Microsoft Bob. That name always confused me, who calls their software Bob? Mid-90s

Microsoft, that's who. But the question I really want to answer today though is:

was Microsoft Bob really that bad? I mean the response I got from people even

after posting one vague tweet showing Bob kind of says it all. It's one of the

most maligned Microsoft products ever and has been the

butt of so many jokes over the years that I don't know if it's deserved or if

it's just an easy target for hyperbole. But I do wonder how many people today

that are saying these things have actually used it. Heck I've never even

used it myself. It was introduced and discontinued so quickly that I don't

even remember seeing it on store shelves. All I knew going into this video was

that Microsoft Bob was introduced in 1995 to serve as a replacement for the

Windows program manager environment, mimicking the layout of a house instead

of the more abstract desktop concept. And I'd always heard it was the origin of

some of the most notorious things in tech including Clippy and Comic Sans.

Quite the legacy if true. And now it's finally time to find out.

Welcome to the Microsoft Bob experience on LGR! First off, big thanks to Jason and

Robert for sending several of the items you'll be seeing in this video. Heh,

I wonder if Robert goes by Bob, that'd be fantastic.

Anyway I ended up with two boxed copies of Microsoft Bob over the years and it

amuses me that each of them have this sticker saying it's a "promotional sample

not for resale." Perhaps it should have stayed that way and never hit retail in

the first place. Still if the box is any indication Microsoft sure was betting on

Bob, calling it "the hard working easygoing software everyone will use."

Even underlined it for good measure. Ballsy. Microsoft were so sure this was

going to be a hit that they planned their own Bob ecosystem with its own

software. Give a nice warm greetings to Great Greetings, the one and only piece

of software released exclusively for use with Microsoft Bob. Man this has to be

one of the single lowest-selling products in Microsoft history, I can't

imagine a more surefire death knell for a program that having Microsoft Bob as

the main requirement. And they even published a book authored

by Barbara Rowley called "At Home With Microsoft Bob: Ideas and Activities For

Getting the Most From Your Home PC." It's a 200-page tome filled with all the

features and potential uses for Bob, even though the box for the program itself

proudly proclaimed the software was so helpful you didn't need a manual at all.

Which was kind of true in a self-fulfilling prophecy kind of way,

because Bob didn't come with a manual inside the box. Instead you got a bunch

of Microsoft-y paperwork like tech support cards and product license

agreements, and even a sheet of Bob stickers. Hmm curiously mine were never

used I wonder what possible reason there

could be for that. You also get, wow, a copy of the premier issue of "Bob

Magazine!" Haha, Microsoft, jumping the gun much? As if there'd ever be a second issue. So

yeah while there is not a proper manual this pseudo magazine serves the same

purpose, letting you know the core features of Bob and how to start

troubleshooting when things inevitably go wrong. Alright well enough of this

stuff let's get Bob installed with Microsoft Windows. And I'm gonna go with

version 3.1 here since that is what it was initially made to work with. And

surprisingly there are no voodoo rituals or weird sacrifices you have to make in

order to get Bob installed. It's just a standard application really, and with a

standard application installation process. You just put in your name and

install away. Once that's done you just open it like

any other application because that's really what it is: a piece of software

you install to Windows that runs like any other piece of software for Windows.

It's just this one is meant to replace Windows in terms of the look and feel.

And you get that straight away with the first screen of Bob here, this red door

to your incoming virtual house. Knock on the door and Rover there will ask you

your name. So yeah the first thing that you do is input all of your information

one by one, like your name, your hometown, birthday, y'know whatever else you want to

put in there. So it will automatically fill that out as you use Bob's

applications. Once that's done Rover will ask you what

you want your default private room to be. It doesn't actually let you see them, you

just kind of choose whichever one sounds the best.

And then the rest of the rooms in the house will become shared rooms that

anyone using Bob can access without a password. But your private room is yours.

After that's done you can waltz on inside and say hello to your brand-new

Microsoft Bob house! It's kind of garish, very yellow, but this is your house. And Rover

then asks you if you want to go on the tour, and if you do you will immediately

start to see the problems with Microsoft Bob sort of boiling to the

surface. And then it really starts with these assistants like Rover. The whole

idea is that they're supposed to make it easier and show you what to do, step by

step, but it just sort of blasts you with a bunch of text and boxes. You just click

"next, next, next" and yeah that's not a very enjoyable interactive tutorial.

What's different from this and a manual? Not a whole lot.

Once the tutorial is over with you can really see what Bob is all about, just by

looking at this first room with all the labels turned on. All sorts of objects

that are laid out here can be clicked on and interacted with to do different

things that Bob has available. For instance there is the Bob Clock ,and this

is an alarm clock. It lets you set alarms, naturally. How intuitive. The whole point

is that you don't have to find the clock application somewhere in your computer,

you can just think "Hey look there's a clock," click on it, it looks like a clock,

it's a clock. That's what the Microsoft Bob philosophy is all about. And not

everything is going to be some interactive application-y kind of

thing, there are plenty of objects in here that are just objects. Like these

flower vases, yeah, I mean you plop those in there and put them anywhere you want.

Move them, resize them, change where they are in terms of layers. It works almost

exactly the same as any contemporary paint, or print, or image manipulation

program. And it doesn't just stop with objects, you can also place completely

different rooms in the house. Inside, outside, attics, kids rooms, kitchens

mouse holes, safe rooms, all sorts of things. Each one of them with four

different design styles and aesthetics. Ya got castle, contemporary, postmodern, and

retro. And functionally every single one of these are identical but if you want

to customize the aesthetic of your Microsoft Bob house you can do that. And you

know what I really like this! And that's now, I certainly would have enjoyed this

back then. As someone who enjoys games like The Sims or pretty much

anything that lets you customize a home or a virtual space -- and even those

architectural programs that were so popular in the 90s -- I enjoy this kind of

stuff. And the fact that Microsoft Bob has so many different objects and rooms

that you can customize, I mean. I know they're all effectively the same and it

doesn't really do anything, but it just gets my imagination going and I like

this kind of thing. And look at all the chairs,

Maxis would approve! And in terms of what the Microsoft Bob competitors were doing

at the time -- and yes there were quite a few of these overlays and user

interfaces for things to make your computer not look like a computer --

Microsoft Bob does it pretty darn well. There's a lot of customization here, not

just the rooms and the objects and all that stuff, but you can even customize

your assistant, each of them with their own personalities and such. Like Blythe

the firefly, Chaos the cat, Hopper the rabbit, Java the lizard thing, Orby the

planet, Rover the rover dog. And yeah that is by the way the same Rover that is in

Windows XP search function. Microsoft held on to some of these guys for a long

time. Anyway you also got Ruby the pirate parrot, Scuzz the rabid rat -- he's pretty

much my favorite one, he's just a sarcastic jerk, not very helpful at all.

He's just like "yeah maybe I'll help you I don't know, give me five bucks." Much

more interesting than Shelly the turtle or Digger the worm. Certainly more so

than the Speaker, it's just a guide that doesn't have any personality at all. And

if you want no guide and kind of defeat half the point of Microsoft Bob then you

can just choose the invisible one and figure things out yourself. But yeah

other than the customization of all this stuff the main point of Microsoft Bob is

that it has a ton of built-in applications. We'll start here with the

Bob Household Manager and this is, well. It's really just a list program. You

choose a category of what kind of list you want to keep track of and it will

set up a bunch of different things for you in terms of whatever you've chosen.

Shopping lists, gift lists, vacation itineraries, personal growth goal lists,

it's all here and they're all pretty much the same. Next up is the Bob

Financial Guide and this one-- oh. It has an error, something's wrong with the

database, can't be opened... Yeah, blue screens of death are not

uncommon with Microsoft Bob, at least in my experience. Maybe the some of this has

to do with the systems I was running it on but yeah. I had to reinstall Bob every

time it happened, the internal database just kept corrupting itself and I had to

go through this process three or four times.

Pretty darn annoying but anyway, once I got it working again yeah, let's get back

to that Bob Financial Guide we were trying to open. And this is uh, well it's

pretty much just another list program. It gives you a bunch of ideas and it fills

in some stuff for you automatically but yeah, you're just typing in lists. Pretty

darn handy for getting out my thoughts regarding what I'm doing with my life

with this video. A much more useful program that it came with was Bob Email.

This not only let you have an @Bob.com email domain, oh my how desirable...

But it was also just a dedicated email product at a time before Microsoft

Outlook was a thing. I mean it *was* a thing, it just wasn't included in Office

yet. Unfortunately it relied on you having an MCI service ID in order to use

it so I can't do anything with it here. But yeah it's an email program and it

worked with all the other Microsoft Bob stuff so that was probably convenient.

Also quite convenient and useful is the Letter Writer for Bob. Are you seeing a

pattern here? This is pretty much all like, dumbed-down Microsoft Office,

Microsoft Works kind of stuff. But yeah anyway, the letter writer wasn't just

about writing letters but it also helps you automate a lot of the process

depending on what you want to do. Especially if you wanted to make a mass

amount of letters or stationery or cards or whatever. You select the type of thing

that you want and the basic content of it and it will fill out a whole lot of

things. In fact it will also give you a massive amount of addresses that it has

built in, for companies and services, and magazines, and politicians and all

sorts of people. So if you wanted to send out a mass letter about "the truth of

Microsoft Bob" in 1994 this was a great way to do it. And when you're done you

can print it out yourself or send it over email. Another program that it comes

with, uh, "program..." is the Microsoft Bob Balloon. It just sort of floats around

and you can pop it. That's a thing. Next up is the Bob Address Book and this is

pretty self-explanatory. You type in your addresses and it works with all of the

other programs in Bob and keeps track of the people that

you know and your contacts and whatnot. So that you can access them directly

through here or you can access them through the other built-in programs like

your letters and such. There's also the Bob Checkbook program and this is one

of those programs that gets rid of your chosen assistant and brings in a

specialist, in this case it's Lexi. Who will then do the exact same thing your

assistant would have done and help you out with writing checks and keeping

track of your finances and all that kind of stuff.

Next up here is the Bob Calendar and yep, it's a calendar. You can keep track of

birthdays and holidays and lunar phases. And set up your itinerary and set some

reminders for different things that you have to do in Microsoft Bob -- or about

Microsoft Bob, what is my life. And then lastly is the one program that is geared

towards the younger Microsoft Bob users. That is: GeoSafari. Yes, Geo-friggin

Safari, a very classic educational quiz game. These were not only those

physical Geo Safari things that you saw in the board game and toy sections back

in the day, but there was also GeoSafari for Bob right here. I'm sure I'll be

talking about other GeoSafari computer games at some point because there were

several but yeah. This one right here is just a very basic quiz program which, as

the name implies, tests your knowledge on geography. The goal here is to figure out

where this picture is located on the map, tell it the correct answer as quickly as

possible, and get the most points as you can. I mean yeah, that's it, it's just

something that you're gonna be probably bored of in two seconds. But you know

whatever, as a kid -- like a really young kid -- I might have enjoyed this. And

finally, you're not limited to the programs that Bob comes with of course.

You can add any of the programs that happen to be installed on your hard disk

such as Crystal Caves here. And this'll add another object into your environment and

then you can customize that to be some form of cube or square or whatever. Yeah,

now you can play Crystal Caves from your virtual kitchen. But wait there's more, if

you bought the optional Microsoft Great Greetings pack. Yep can't forget that, so

let's get this thing unsealed and check out the contents. Which really the main

thing that it comes with is this booklet right here, the PaperCatalog. Just a

bunch of stationery and papers and cards and things that you can print things on

using this Great Greetings program. And this comes on two floppy disks, no CD-ROM

here. In fact Microsoft Bob also came on floppy disks. Which, I've actually never

seen those disks like, show up on eBay, so I'm assuming they're pretty rare. What's

interesting about this though is that you don't install it through Windows, you

actually have to install it through Microsoft Bob itself. Because again this

is an exclusive Microsoft Bob application, it is not for Windows. So

yeah, once you're done setting it up through Bob you can add it to any room

just like you could with any other object that is linking to an application.

And yep here we go, this is Great Greetings which is very much like all of

the other applications that Bob came with by default. Except this one is about

making greeting cards. Man, greeting card applications were popular in the mid-90s!

I remember messing with a ton of them so I can totally see why this was what

they chose to not include in Bob by default and then sell separately. Because

yeah, being able to make your own greeting cards, just print them out, I

mean greeting cards are expensive man! So if you could just make your own that's

pretty sweet. And yeah you don't have a whole lot of hands-on control of what

you're doing here, it's just the Bob way of automating most of it. And there you

go, you got a greeting card that you can print out or... yeah that's it, I guess

can't email it. And with that we come to a close of the Microsoft Bob experience

as I see it. So the question remains: was Bob really as bad as everyone says it

was? Well truthfully, I don't think so. It looks better than I thought it would,

it's handily customizable, and it does exactly what it says it does on the box.

But it was a flop for a reason. Beyond the technical issues, Microsoft was

woefully misguided in terms of who Bob's audience should have been and how

important a product it actually was. The fact that Microsoft put so much time

and money into launching this thing, including input from Melinda and Bill

Gates themselves throughout development, is just mind-bogglingly strange in

hindsight. Not only were Windows graphical shells nothing new by 1995,

putting Bob's self-imposed importance on shaky ground,

but it was designed like a children's application. A children's application

that mainly dealt with keeping lists, doing your taxes, sending

business correspondence, and managing program executables. And the real kicker?

The price. Get this: when Microsoft Bob launched the suggested retail price was

$99! Yeah!

And on top of that, Bob required a 486 CPU, 32 megs of hard disk space, and 8 megabytes of RAM.

Specs that put it out of reach of a good number of families who might've actually wanted a program like Bob.

Nonetheless Bob ended up being included with computers from manufacturers like Gateway,

Micron, Packard Bell, and NEC.

Which is seemingly how most people got it considering

its abysmal retail sales. But despite all its problems and

well-deserved criticisms, Bob can't quite be blamed for two things: Comic Sans and

Clippy. Yeah, don't forget I was gonna bring those up and here it is.

While it's true that Comic Sans was developed with Microsoft Bob in mind the typeface

never actually appears in the program. According to its creator Vincent Conair,

Comic Sans was created because he thought the words of Bob's virtual

assistants looked strange in Times New Roman. Comic Sans was his response and

despite it never being used for Bob it sat around for a while at Microsoft, and

was eventually included by them with later versions of Windows. Similarly,

Clippy does not appear anywhere in Bob either. That didn't happen until Office 97,

where Microsoft introduced Bob-inspired virtual assistants in

applications like Microsoft Word. Oh and he's not called Clippy either, his

name is Clippit. Which I didn't realize until making this video. I don't know

when we all started calling him Clippy instead of Clippit but hey, the more you

know I guess. So yeah that is Microsoft Bob. A flawed, expensive, yet charming

little program that was doomed from the start.

And yet I kind of like it now that I understand it a bit more 23 years later.

If only it didn't cost a hundred bucks and fully embraced its kid-friendly

nature, it might have been more fondly remembered nowadays as a safe computing

environment for children. Instead it's Microsoft Bob

and that's is just unfortunate.

And hey, if you didn't think this video was unfortunate then awesome! Stick

around, there's always more in the works here on LGR with new videos every Monday

and Friday on technological topics, both old and not so old. And as always thank

you very much for watching!

For more infomation >> Microsoft Bob Experience: Was It Really THAT Bad? - Duration: 17:55.

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At least 37 killed in South Korea hospital fire - Duration: 1:28.

For more infomation >> At least 37 killed in South Korea hospital fire - Duration: 1:28.

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Kauai Hawaii Travel Guide - Duration: 10:16.

For more infomation >> Kauai Hawaii Travel Guide - Duration: 10:16.

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Rol•and•isms | Supercut | Schitt's Creek - Duration: 1:27.

- You're the mayor we're supposed to meet

- That's right, I'm the mayor

so if you're looking for an ass to kiss

it's mine

- Roland!

- Sure I'll come in, but just for a second

I'm the guy in charge of upholding the law

around here

so if you have any ideas

about turning me in

you'd just be turning me

in to myself!

[laughs]

[laughs]

[laughs]

[laughs]

I was thinking this morning

and I don't want to tell you

where I was thinking

but it was a small room in my house

and I was sitting down

Sorry Johnny

I just had to re-schedule my colonoscopy

So how are your bowels?

Good and tight?

- Yes

- [imitating Moira] Hello everyone

I'm Moira Rose

Ooooh

Oooh!

Brrr!

I'll just take a bite of your muffin

Mmm!

Mm!

Ohh!

Oh, oh, thanks!

Oh, sorry, we don't want any

[laughs]

I'm just joking

come on in

No I'm not!

For more infomation >> Rol•and•isms | Supercut | Schitt's Creek - Duration: 1:27.

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NH: Kesäillan Supikytis | Summer Evening Raccoon Hunt | 2017 - Duration: 4:47.

So yea, we came to visit one of our summer carrions.

Now we setup our trail camera to monitor the animals.

Hopefully the animals will find the place soon. Now let's wait for the pictures.

So, now I'm driving to the carrion.

I will go to stalk some small predators. Hopefully they will come to dinner at this night.

There has been a lot of movement in the day and night.

I really hope that this evening will be successful.

It's almost midnight.

I was leaving but I saw something at the carrion.

After a quick check, I discovered it was a little raccoon dog. It has been visited the whole summer in here.

So I decided to take a shot and it ran about 10 meter after that.

However, the evening was successful even though I was about to leave.

We will be waiting for the next ones..

For more infomation >> NH: Kesäillan Supikytis | Summer Evening Raccoon Hunt | 2017 - Duration: 4:47.

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Willie Gomez - Keep On (Acoustic Session) - Duration: 3:46.

Packed up our bags, we're leavin home Tell me mama, where are we goin?

She said don't worry We're headed to the sky

They say this new world is filled with color Full of new hope for your sister and brother

Let's go little baby wave it all goodbye

Sometimes change it come too fast And all you know is in the past

The ground then moves beneath your feet But it can't stop you if you just keep on…

Walking, keep on moving along Keep on dancing, Keep on singing your song

Keep on walking, keep on moving along Keep on dancing, keep on singing your song

Whoah oh ohhh

Whoah ohh ohh oh oh

Whoah ohhh

Whoah oh oh

Whoah ohh ohh oh oh

Whoah ohhh

I'm Holding on to every breath, every moment was only a kid, living like a grown up

Praying for some hope to come and save the day

Sometimes change it come too fast And all you know is in the past

The ground then moves beneath your feet But it can't stop you if you just keep on…

Walking, keep on moving along Keep on dancing, Keep on singing your song

Keep on walking, keep on moving along Keep on dancing, keep on singing your song

Whoah oh ohhh

Whoah ohh ohh oh oh

Whoah oh ohhh

Whoah oh oh

Whoah ohhh ohhh oh oh

Whoah ohh

Packed our bags in San' Domingo Tell me mami where do we go?

Packed out bags in San' Domingo She said baby ven conmigo

And we'll keep walking...

Keep on moving along Keep on dancing, Keep on singing your song

Walking, keep on moving along Keep on dancing, keep on singing your song

Whoah oh oh

Keep On

Singing your song

Just keep on dancing

Oh oh

Yeah yeah

Walking.

Moving.

Dancing.

Singing your song.

For more infomation >> Willie Gomez - Keep On (Acoustic Session) - Duration: 3:46.

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New Dubstep BONG MARLEY 2018 - Duration: 4:19.

For more infomation >> New Dubstep BONG MARLEY 2018 - Duration: 4:19.

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Maxime Manot' - Ma singulière - Duration: 2:07.

For more infomation >> Maxime Manot' - Ma singulière - Duration: 2:07.

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Dj Колдун Как Я Создаю Треки На FL10 (Digital Max Cinema) - Duration: 5:10.

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

Mammoths resurrected and other thoughts from a futurist | Stewart Brand and Chris Anderson - Duration: 30:32.

Chris Anderson: OK, Stewart,

in the '60s, you -- I think it was '68 -- you founded this magazine.

Stewart Brand: Bravo! It's the original one.

That's hard to find.

CA: Right. Issue One, right?

SB: Mm hmm.

CA: Why did that make so much impact?

SB: Counterculture was the main event that I was part of at the time,

and it was made up of hippies and New Left.

That was sort of my contemporaries,

the people I was just slightly older than.

And my mode is to look at where the interesting flow is

and then look in the other direction.

CA: (Laughs)

SB: Partly, I was trained to do that as an army officer,

but partly, it's just a cheap heuristic to find originalities:

don't look where everybody else is looking,

look the opposite way.

So the deal with counterculture is, the hippies were very romantic

and kind of against technology,

except very good LSD from Sandoz,

and the New Left was against technology

because they thought it was a power device.

Computers were: do not spindle, fold, or mutilate.

Fight that.

And so, the Whole Earth Catalog was kind of a counter-counterculture thing

in the sense that I bought Buckminster Fuller's idea

that tools of are of the essence.

Science and engineers basically define the world in interesting ways.

If all the politicians disappeared one week,

it would be ... a nuisance.

But if all the scientists and engineers disappeared one week,

it would be way more than a nuisance.

CA: We still believe that, I think.

SB: So focus on that.

And then the New Left was talking about power to the people.

And people like Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak

cut that and just said, power to people,

tools that actually work.

And so, where Fuller was saying don't try to change human nature,

people have been trying for a long time and it does not even bend,

but you can change tools very easily.

So the efficient thing to do if you want to make the world better

is not try to make people behave differently like the New Left was,

but just give them tools that go in the right direction.

That was the Whole Earth Catalog.

CA: And Stewart, the central image -- this is one of the first images,

the first time people had seen Earth from outer space.

That had an impact, too.

SB: It was kind of a chance that in the spring of '66,

thanks to an LSD experience on a rooftop in San Francisco,

I got thinking about, again, something that Fuller talked about,

that a lot of people assume that the Earth is flat

and kind of infinite in terms of its resources,

but once you really grasp that it's a sphere

and that there's only so much of it,

then you start husbanding your resources

and thinking about it as a finite system.

"Spaceship Earth" was his metaphor.

And I wanted that to be the case,

but on LSD I was getting higher and higher on my hundred micrograms

on the roof of San Francisco,

and noticed that the downtown buildings which were right in front of me

were not all parallel, they were sort of fanned out like this.

And that's because they are on a curved surface.

And if I were even higher, I would see that even more clearly,

higher than that, more clearly still,

higher enough, and it would close,

and you would get the circle of Earth from space.

And I thought, you know, we've been in space for 10 years --

at that time, this is '66 --

and the cameras had never looked back.

They'd always been looking out or looking at just parts of the Earth.

And so I said, why haven't we seen a photograph of the whole Earth yet?

And it went around and NASA got it and senators, secretaries got it,

and various people in the Politburo got it,

and it went around and around.

And within two and a half years,

about the time the Whole Earth Catalog came out,

these images started to appear,

and indeed, they did transform everything.

And my idea of hacking civilization

is that you try to do something lazy and ingenious

and just sort of trick the situation.

So all of these photographs that you see --

and then the march for science last week,

they were carrying these Whole Earth banners and so on --

I did that with no work.

I sold those buttons for 25 cents apiece.

So, you know, tweaking the system

is, I think, not only the most efficient way to make the system go

in interesting ways,

but in some ways, the safest way,

because when you try to horse the whole system around in a big way,

you can get into big horsing-around problems,

but if you tweak it, it will adjust to the tweak.

CA: So since then, among many other things,

you've been regarded as a leading voice in the environmental movement,

but you are also a counterculturalist,

and recently, you've been taking on a lot of,

well, you've been declaring

what a lot of environmentalists almost believe are heresies.

I kind of want to explore a couple of those.

I mean, tell me about this image here.

SB: Ha-ha!

That's a National Geographic image

of what is called the mammoth steppe,

what the far north, the sub-Arctic and Arctic region, used to look like.

In fact, the whole world used to look like that.

What we find in South Africa and the Serengeti now,

lots of big animals,

was the case in this part of Canada,

throughout the US, throughout Eurasia, throughout the world.

This was the norm

and can be again.

So in a sense,

my long-term goal at this point is to not only bring back those animals

and the grassland they made,

which could be a climate stabilization system over the long run,

but even the mammoths there in the background

that are part of the story.

And I think that's probably a 200-year goal.

Maybe in 100, by the end of this century,

we should be able to dial down the extinction rate

to sort of what it's been in the background.

Bringing back this amount of bio-abundance will take longer,

but it's worth doing.

CA: We'll come back to the mammoths,

but explain how we should think of extinctions.

Obviously, one of the huge concerns right now

is that extinction is happening at a faster rate than ever in history.

That's the meme that's out there.

How should we think of it?

SB: The story that's out there

is that we're in the middle of the Sixth Extinction

or maybe in the beginning of the Sixth Extinction.

Because we're in the de-extinction business,

the preventing-extinction business with Revive & Restore,

we started looking at what's actually going on with extinction.

And it turns out, there's a very confused set of data out there

which gets oversimplified

into the narrative of we're becoming ...

Here are five mass extinctions that are indicated by the yellow triangles,

and we're now next.

The last one there on the far right

was the meteor that struck 66 million years ago

and did in the dinosaurs.

And the story is, we're the next meteor.

Well, here's the deal.

I wound up researching this for a paper I wrote,

that a mass extinction is when 75 percent of all the species

in the world go extinct.

Well, there's on the order of five-and-a-half-million species,

of which we've identified one and a half million.

Another 14,000 are being identified every year.

There's a lot of biology going on out there.

Since 1500,

about 500 species have gone extinct,

and you'll see the term "mass extinction" kind of used in strange ways.

So there was, about a year and a half ago,

a front-page story by Carl Zimmer in the New York Times,

"Mass Extinction in the Oceans, Broad Studies Show."

And then you read into the article, and it mentions that since 1500,

15 species -- one, five -- have gone extinct in the oceans,

and, oh, by the way, none in the last 50 years.

And you read further into the story, and it's saying,

the horrifying thing that's going on

is that the fisheries are so overfishing the wild fishes,

that it is taking down the fish populations in the oceans

by 38 percent.

That's the serious thing.

None of those species are probably going to go extinct.

So you've just put, that headline writer

put a panic button

on the top of the story.

It's clickbait kind of stuff,

but it's basically saying, "Oh my God, start panicking,

we're going to lose all the species in the oceans."

Nothing like that is in prospect.

And in fact, what I then started looking into in a little more detail,

the Red List shows about 23,000 species that are considered threatened

at one level or another,

coming from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, the IUCN.

And Nature Magazine had a piece surveying the loss of wildlife,

and it said,

"If all of those 23,000 went extinct

in the next century or so,

and that rate of extinction carried on for more centuries and millennia,

then we might be at the beginning of a sixth extinction.

So the exaggeration is way out of hand.

But environmentalists always exaggerate.

That's a problem.

CA: I mean, they probably feel a moral responsibility to,

because they care so much about the thing that they are looking at,

and unless you bang the drum for it, maybe no one listens.

SB: Every time somebody says moral this or moral that --

"moral hazard," "precautionary principle" --

these are terms that are used to basically say no to things.

CA: So the problem isn't so much fish extinction, animal extinction,

it's fish flourishing, animal flourishing,

that we're crowding them to some extent?

SB: Yeah, and I think we are crowding, and there is losses going on.

The major losses are caused by agriculture,

and so anything that improves agriculture and basically makes it more condensed,

more highly productive,

including GMOs, please,

but even if you want to do vertical farms in town,

including inside farms,

all the things that have been learned about how to grow pot in basements,

is now being applied to growing vegetables inside containers --

that's great, that's all good stuff,

because land sparing is the main thing we can do for nature.

People moving to cities is good.

Making agriculture less of a destruction of the landscape is good.

CA: There people talking about bringing back species, rewilding ...

Well, first of all, rewilding species: What's the story with these guys?

SB: Ha-ha! Wolves.

Europe, connecting to the previous point,

we're now at probably peak farmland,

and, by the way, in terms of population,

we are already at peak children being alive.

Henceforth, there will be fewer and fewer children.

We are in the last doubling of human population,

and it will get to nine, maybe nine and a half billion,

and then start not just leveling off, but probably going down.

Likewise, farmland has now peaked,

and one of the ways that plays out in Europe

is there's a lot of abandoned farmland now,

which immediately reforests.

They don't do wildlife corridors in Europe.

They don't need to, because so many of these farms are connected

that they've made reforested wildlife corridors,

that the wolves are coming back, in this case, to Spain.

They've gotten all the way to the Netherlands.

There's bears coming back. There's lynx coming back.

There's the European jackal. I had no idea such a thing existed.

They're coming back from Italy to the rest of Europe.

And unlike here, these are all predators, which is kind of interesting.

They are being welcomed by Europeans. They've been missed.

CA: And counterintuitively, when you bring back the predators,

it actually increases rather than reduces

the diversity of the underlying ecosystem often.

SB: Yeah, generally predators and large animals --

large animals and large animals with sharp teeth and claws --

are turning out to be highly important for a really rich ecosystem.

CA: Which maybe brings us to this rather more dramatic rewilding project

that you've got yourself involved in.

Why would someone want to bring back these terrifying woolly mammoths?

SB: Hmm. Asian elephants are the closest relative

to the woolly mammoth,

and they're about the same size, genetically very close.

They diverged quite recently in evolutionary history.

The Asian elephants are closer to woolly mammoths

than they are to African elephants,

but they're close enough to African elephants

that they have successfully hybridized.

So we're working with George Church at Harvard,

who has already moved the genes for four major traits

from the now well-preserved, well-studied genome of the woolly mammoth,

thanks to so-called "ancient DNA analysis."

And in the lab, he has moved those genes into living Asian elephant cell lines,

where they're taking up their proper place thanks to CRISPR.

I mean, they're not shooting the genes in like you did with genetic engineering.

Now with CRISPR you're editing, basically, one allele,

and replacing it in the place of another allele.

So you're now getting basically Asian elephant germline cells

that are effectively in terms of the traits that you're going for

to be comfortable in the Arctic,

you're getting them in there.

So we go through the process

of getting that through a surrogate mother,

an Asian elephant mother.

You can get a proxy, as it's being called by conservation biologists,

of the woolly mammoth,

that is effectively a hairy, curly-trunked, Asian elephant

that is perfectly comfortable in the sub-Arctic.

Now, it's the case, so many people say,

"Well, how are you going to get them there?

And Asian elephants, they don't like snow, right?"

Well, it turns out, they do like snow.

There's some in an Ontario zoo

that have made snowballs bigger than people.

They just love -- you know, with a trunk, you can start a little thing,

roll it and make it bigger.

And then people say,

"Yeah, but it's 22 months of gestation.

This kind of cross-species cloning is tricky business, anyway.

Are you going to lose some of the surrogate Asian elephant mothers?"

And then George Church says, "That's all right.

We'll do an artificial uterus and grow them that way."

Then people say, "Yeah, next century, maybe,"

except the news came out this week in Nature

that there's now an artificial uterus in which they've grown a lamb

to four weeks.

That's halfway through its gestation period.

So this stuff is moving right along.

CA: But why should we want a world where --

Picture a world where there are thousands of these things

thundering across Siberia.

Is that a better world?

SB: Potentially. It's --

(Laughter)

There's three groups, basically, working on the woolly mammoth seriously:

Revive & Restore, we're kind of in the middle;

George Church and the group at Harvard that are doing the genetics in the lab;

and then there's an amazing old scientist named Zimov

who works in northern Siberia,

and his son Nikita, who has bought into the system,

and they are, Sergey and Nikita Zimov have been, for 25 years,

creating what they call "Pleistocene Park,"

which is a place in a really tough part of Siberia that is pure tundra.

And the research that's been done shows

that there's probably one one-hundredth of the animals on the landscape there

that there used to be.

Like that earlier image, we saw lots of animals.

Now there's almost none.

The tundra is mostly moss, and then there's the boreal forest.

And that's the way it is, folks. There's just a few animals there.

So they brought in a lot of grazing animals:

musk ox, Yakutian horses, they're bringing in some bison,

they're bringing in some more now,

and put them in at the density that they used to be.

And grasslands are made by grazers.

So these animals are there, grazing away,

and they're doing a couple of things.

First of all, they're turning the tundra, the moss, back into grassland.

Grassland fixes carbon.

Tundra, in a warming world, is thawing and releasing a lot of carbon dioxide

and also methane.

So already in their little 25 square miles,

they're doing a climate stabilization thing.

Part of that story, though,

is that the boreal forest is very absorbent to sunlight,

even in the winter when snow is on the ground.

And the way the mammoth steppe,

which used to wrap all the way around the North Pole --

there's a lot of landmass around the North Pole --

that was all this grassland.

And the steppe was magnificent,

probably one of the most productive biomes in the world,

the biggest biome in the world.

The forest part of it, right now, Sergey Zimov and Nikita

go out with this old military tank they got for nothing,

and they knock down the trees.

And that's a bore, and it's tiresome,

and as Sergey says, "... and they make no dung!"

which, by the way, these big animals do, including mammoths.

So mammoths become what conservation biologists call

an umbrella species.

It's an exciting animal -- pandas in China or wherever --

that the excitement that goes on of making life good for that animal

is making a habitat, an ecosystem,

which is good for a whole lot of creatures and plants,

and it ideally gets to the point of being self-managing,

where the conservation biologists can back off and say,

"All we have to do is keep out the destructive invasives,

and this thing can just cook."

CA: So there's many other species that you're dreaming of de-extincting

at some point,

but I think what I'd actually like to move on to

is this idea you talked about how mammoths might help

green Siberia in a sense,

or at least, I'm not talking about tropical rainforest,

but this question of greening the planet you've thought about a lot.

And the traditional story is

that deforestation is one of the most awful curses

of modern times,

and that it's a huge contributor to climate change.

And then you went and sent me this graph here, or this map.

What is this map?

SB: Global greening.

The thing to do with any narrative that you get from headlines

and from short news stories

is to look for what else is going on,

and look for what Marc Andreessen calls "narrative violation."

So the narrative -- and Al Gore is master of putting it out there --

is that there's this civilization-threatening

climate change coming on very rapidly.

We have to cease all extra production of greenhouse gases, especially CO2,

as soon as possible,

otherwise, we're in deep, deep trouble.

All of that is true, but it's not the whole story,

and the whole story is more interesting than these fragmentary stories.

Plants love CO2.

What plants are made of is CO2 plus water via sunshine.

And so in many greenhouses, industrialized greenhouses,

they add CO2 because the plants turn that into plant matter.

So the studies have been done with satellites and other things,

and what you're seeing here is a graph of, over the last 33 years or so,

there's 14 percent more leaf action going on.

There's that much more biomass.

There's that much more what ecologists call "primary production."

There's that much more life happening,

thanks to climate change,

thanks to all of our goddam coal plants.

So -- whoa, what's going on here?

By the way, crop production goes up with this.

This is a partial counter

to the increase of CO2,

because there's that much more plant that is sucking it down

into plant matter.

Some of that then decays and goes right back up,

but some of it is going down into roots

and going into the soil and staying there.

So these counter things are part of what you need to bear in mind,

and the deeper story is

that thinking about and dealing with and engineering climate

is a pretty complex process.

It's like medicine.

You're always, again, tweaking around with the system

to see what makes an improvement.

Then you do more of that, see it's still getting better,

then -- oop! -- that's enough, back off half a turn.

CA: But might some people say, "Not all green is created equal."

Possibly what we're doing is trading off the magnificence of the rainforest

and all that diversity

for, I don't know, green pond scum or grass or something like that.

SB: In this particular study, it turns out every form of plant is increasing.

Now, what's interestingly left out of this study

is what the hell is going on in the oceans.

Primary production in the oceans,

the biota of the oceans, mostly microbial,

what they're up to is probably the most important thing.

They're the ones that create the atmosphere

that we're happily breathing,

and they're not part of this study.

This is one of the things James Lovelock has been insisting;

basically, our knowledge of the oceans, especially of ocean life,

is fundamentally vapor, in this sense.

So we're in the process of finding out

by inadvertent bad geoengineering of too much CO2 in the atmosphere,

finding out, what is the ocean doing with that?

Well, the ocean, with the extra heat,

is swelling up.

That's most of where we're getting the sea level rise,

and there's a lot more coming with more global warming.

We're getting terrible harm to some of the coral reefs,

like off of Australia.

The great reef there is just a lot of bleaching from overheating.

And this is why I and Danny Hillis, in our previous session on the main stage,

was saying, "Look, geoengineering is worth experimenting with enough

to see that it works,

to see if we can buy time in the warming aspect of all of this,

tweak the system with small but usable research,

and then see if we should do more than tweak.

CA: OK, so this is what we're going to talk about

for the last few minutes here

because it's such an important discussion.

First of all, this book was just published by Yuval Harari.

He's basically saying the next evolution of humans is to become as gods.

I think he --

SB: Now, you've talked to him. And you've probably finished the book.

I haven't finished it yet.

Where does he come out on --

CA: I mean, it's a pretty radical view.

He thinks that we will completely remake ourselves

using data, using bioengineering,

to become completely new creatures

that have, kind of, superpowers,

and that there will be huge inequality.

But we're about to write a very radical, brand-new chapter of history.

That's what he believes.

SB: Is he nervous about that? I forget.

CA: He's nervous about it,

but I think he also likes provoking people.

SB: Are you nervous about that?

CA: I'm nervous about that.

But, you know, with so much at TED, I'm excited and nervous.

And the optimist in me is trying hard to lean towards

"This is awesome and really exciting,"

while the sort of responsible part of me is saying,

"But, uh, maybe we should be a little bit careful

as to how we think of it."

SB: That's your secret sauce, isn't it, for TED?

Staying nervous and excited.

CA: It's also the recipe for being a little bit schizophrenic.

But he didn't quote you.

What I thought was an astonishing statement that you made

right back in the original Whole Earth Catalog,

you ended it with this powerful phrase:

"We are as gods, and might as well get good at it."

And then more recently, you've upgraded that statement.

I want you talk about this philosophy.

SB: Well, one of the things I'm learning is that documentation

is better than memory -- by far.

And one of the things I've learned from somebody --

I actually got on Twitter.

It changed my life -- it hasn't forgiven me yet!

And I took ownership of this phrase when somebody quoted it,

and somebody else said,

"Oh by the way, that isn't what you originally wrote

in that first 1968 Whole Earth Catalog.

You wrote, 'We are as gods and might as well get used to it.'"

I'd forgotten that entirely.

The stories -- these goddam stories -- the stories we tell ourselves

become lies over time.

So, documentation helps cut through that.

It did move on to "We are as gods and might as well get good at it,"

and that was the Whole Earth Catalog.

By the time I was doing a book called "Whole Earth Discipline:

An Ecopragmatist Manifesto,"

and in light of climate change, basically saying that we are as gods

and have to get good at it.

CA: We are as gods and have to get good at it.

So talk about that, because the psychological reaction

from so many people as soon as you talk about geoengineering

is that the last thing they believe is that humans should be gods --

some of them for religious reasons,

but most just for humility reasons,

that the systems are too complex,

we should not be dabbling that way.

SB: Well, this is the Greek narrative about hubris.

And once you start getting really sure of yourself,

you wind up sleeping with your mother.

(Laughter)

CA: I did not expect you would say that.

(Laughter)

SB: That's the Oedipus story.

Hubris is a really important cautionary tale to always have at hand.

One of the guidelines I've kept for myself is:

every day I ask myself how many things I am dead wrong about.

And I'm a scientist by training

and getting to work with scientists these days,

which is pure joy.

Science is organized skepticism.

So you're always insisting

that even when something looks pretty good,

you maintain a full set of not only suspicions

about whether it's as good as it looks,

but: What else is going on?

So this "What else is going?" on query,

I think, is how you get away from fake news.

It's not necessarily real news,

but it's welcomely more complex news

that you're trying to take on.

CA: But coming back to the application of this just for the environment:

it seems like the philosophy of this is that, whether we like it or not,

we are already dominating so many aspects of what happens on planets,

and we're doing it unintentionally,

so we really should start doing it intentionally.

What would it look like to start getting good at being a god?

How should we start doing that?

Are there small-scale experiments or systems we can nudge and play with?

How on earth do we think about it?

SB: The mentor that sort of freed me

from total allegiance to Buckminster Fuller

was Gregory Bateson.

And Gregory Bateson was an epistemologist and anthropologist and biologist

and psychologist and many other things,

and he looked at how systems basically look at themselves.

And that is, I think, part of how you want to always be looking at things.

And what I like about David Keith's approach to geoengineering

is you don't just haul off and do it.

David Keith's approach --

and this is what Danny Hillis was talking about earlier --

is that you do it really, really incrementally,

you do some stuff to tweak the system, see how it responds,

that tells you something about the system.

That's responding to the fact that people say, quite rightly,

"What are we talking about here?

We don't understand how the climate system works.

You can't engineer a system you don't understand."

And David says, "Well, that certainly applies to the human body,

and yet medicine goes ahead, and we're kind of glad that it has."

The way you engineer a system that is so large and complex

that you can't completely understand it

is you tweak it,

and this is kind of an anti-hubristic approach.

This is: try a little bit here,

back the hell off if it's an issue,

expand it if it seems to go OK,

meanwhile, have other paths going forward.

This is the whole argument for diversity and dialogue and all these other things

and the things we were hearing about earlier with Sebastian [Thrun].

So the non-hubristic approach is looking for social license,

which is a terminology that I think is a good one,

of including society enough

in these interesting, problematic, deep issues

that they get to have a pretty good idea

and have people that they trust paying close attention

to the sequence of experiments as it's going forward,

the public dialogue as it's going forward --

which is more public than ever, which is fantastic --

and you feel your way,

you just ooze your way along,

and this is the muddle-through approach that has worked pretty well so far.

The reason that Sebastian and I are optimistic is we read

people like Steven Pinker, "The Better Angels of Our Nature,"

and so far, so good.

Now, that can always change,

but you can build a lot on that sense of: things are capable of getting better,

figure out the tools that made that happen and apply those further.

That's the story.

CA: Stewart, I think on that optimistic note,

we're actually going to wrap up.

I am in awe of how you always are willing to challenge yourself

and other people.

I feel like this recipe for never allowing yourself to be too certain

is so powerful.

I want to learn it more for myself,

and it's been very insightful and inspiring, actually,

listening to you today.

Stewart Brand, thank you so much.

SB: Thank you.

(Applause)

For more infomation >> Mammoths resurrected and other thoughts from a futurist | Stewart Brand and Chris Anderson - Duration: 30:32.

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

2018: A Race Odyssey (Part 2) | The Rundown With Robin Thede - Duration: 5:37.

Racism is being propagated

in ways that we're not even thinking about

in our daily lives.

(Robin) In part one, we learned

that from biased data sets to facial recognition

to soap dispensers, racism is everywhere in tech.

So now what are we gonna do about it?

A.I. doesn't have to be racist.

How can we fix it?

By getting more black folks in artificial intelligence.

Yeah. And to really mobilize scientists

around racial justice issues.

Not just exposing racism... (siren wailing)

...but using these technologies

to really make concrete and measurable change.

See, we start talking about racism,

and the cops show up. And here they go, right?

(Robin) Damn, the feds are watching us.

I gotta go shake these cops.

So, quick, Timnit, tell 'em how hard it is to get into STEM.

I experienced a lot of racism in high school.

I experienced teachers

telling me I can't take AP classes,

that I'm not gonna get into any of the colleges I applied to.

(Robin) But look at you now,

shining bright like a diamond, but also just as rare.

Is there a way to change the misconceptions

of black folks in STEM?

Yeah, I mean, we call it Afrofuturism.

I'm sorry? Afrofuturism.

I consider myself an Afrofuturist.

So there's a future where everyone has an Afro?

No, no-no-no.

(Robin) Hold on, Pierce.

I need to check with somebody who actually has an Afro

just to make sure.

Afrofuturism is a way

of looking at the future or alternate realities,

but you use a black cultural lens.

(Robin) Thanks to Afrofuturist pioneers

like musicians Sun Ra and George Clinton,

and author Octavia Butler,

black voices are being brought to the future.

The way we talk about futurism, it's default white.

(Robin) She is not lying.

So it's fun to be able to look at these stories

where we can be superheroes... in outer space,

because it just pushes the limits

that we've been socialized around.

I run a community center in Durham called Blackspace.

And we make sure black students from a younger age

have resources and networks that they can build on

so that we can start to bridge this digital divide.

And I think that's our obligation

as technologists and as future-makers.

(Robin) Afrofuturism isn't a new idea.

It's older than the Underground Railroad,

for real.

I think Harriet Tubman is the quintessential Afrofuturist

because she lived in a world where

slavery was the status quo.

And she manifested and created a new future.

Well, she had a lot of time to think about it

in her dreams 'cause she was narcoleptic.

Yeah, in this kinda dream kinda world,

she was able to envision a different future.

That's like a superpower. Absolutely.

And she had a shotgun. (gun clicking)

And she had a shotgun.

(Robin) Okay, so maybe it was more of a pistol.

I wasn't good at history.

The important thing is, kids like George

are channeling Harriet's spirit and shootin' their shot.

What we do at my company is we create social justice

mobile applications as well as websites

for local companies.

(Robin) By the way, he's only 17,

so he had to do the interview from his mama's living room.

He's so cute.

I've created the 21st century key for staying safe

from police brutality with my application Cop Stop.

I created Cop Stop because I was afraid

of being the next Trayvon Martin.

Once you click the stop sign, it sends a message

that you're about to interact with a law enforcement officer.

So that phone number would now know where you are

and that you're about to be

in a potentially volatile situation.

(Robin) Yes! Show 'em how to do it, ASAP Appy.

There's been a few articles that have called me

"the black Bill Gates,"

but I have my own separate agenda.

And that's to change the world's perspective

on race through technology.

So what does your Afrofuturist future look like?

(laughs)

Welcome to the Afrofuture, a world that values humanity.

Oh!

A place where rhythm is celebrated.

Oww!

Oh, look, Sasha and Malia are president.

("National Anthem" playing)

Do you hear that?

The "National Anthem" has bass.

Yes!

(Robin) Look, I don't want to wait

for the future to come to me.

So I'm gonna bring the Afrofuture to us.

I decided to throw an Afrofuture party.

(techno music playing)

Greetings, everyone!

(crowd murmurs)

Welcome to my Afrofuturist gala.

(cheering and applause)

What better way to welcome us into the future

than with the granddaughters

of the original Afrofuturist himself, George Clinton.

Give it up for Kandy Apple Redd.

(cheering and applause)

♪ Every girl loves a bad boy ♪

♪ 'Cause a bad boy likes to go hard ♪

♪ And every boy wants a good girl ♪

♪ To be a bad girl...

For me, being an Afrofuturist means

acknowledging some history that has been lost to us,

reclaiming it, and changing the image

so that future generations are more inspired.

♪♪

♪ No one does what I do

♪ To you

♪ So bring it home...

(woman) I love to just imagine a world

where we're not dealing with injustices

and criminal systems.

(singing continues, then ends)

(cheering and applause)

So good!

If this is the future, I'm not going back.

(cheering continues)

The foundation for Wakanda is all around us.

We can build our Afrofuture together, today.

Even if it means a body-rolling robot might try to take my job.

(electrical buzzing, mechanical whirring)

For more infomation >> 2018: A Race Odyssey (Part 2) | The Rundown With Robin Thede - Duration: 5:37.

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Сами едем по России. 10 серия. Добавление услуг. Самостоятельные путешествия по России. - Duration: 1:23.

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Patriots make a stand at Burke County Jail - 1/26/1779 - Duration: 0:59.

Today in military history, 1779,

Georgia patriots make a stand at Burke County Jail.

In December of 1778, the British captured Savannah, Georgia

as part of a strategy to control the South,

where it was believed to have

a larger population of British loyalists.

When the city fell to British control,

an amnesty proclamation was released.

If the citizens of Georgia would pledge their allegiance

to King George III,

their previous rebel activity would be pardoned.

When about 10% of the Georgian population took the oath,

a few revolutionary leaders were alarmed.

Major General John Twiggs

and Lieutenant Colonel William Few were among them,

and they gathered at the Burke County Jail

to determine the next course of action.

The details of what happened next

depend on who's telling the story,

but what's clear is that a skirmish broke out

on the banks of McIntosh Creek

between loyalists and patriots.

The so-called Battle of Burke County Jail

is considered a draw.

Savannah would continue to be held

by the British until the end of the war,

but the revolutionaries would grow in strength,

and William Few would go on to sign the Constitution

of the newly-formed United States of America.

(rousing orchestral accent)

For more infomation >> Patriots make a stand at Burke County Jail - 1/26/1779 - Duration: 0:59.

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Sarah Rips Apart Reporter Who Blames School Shooting on Trump - Duration: 4:35.

Sarah Rips Apart Reporter Who Blames School Shooting on Trump

After the Kentucky school shooting on Tuesday, one of the reporters in the White House press

room tried tacitly blaming the incident on President Trump.

It didn�t go well for him.

According to Fox News, two teenagers were dead and 18 people were wounded after a shooting

at Marshall County High School in eastern Kentucky. The suspect, a student at the school,

has been charged as an adult with murder.

In the aftermath of the incident, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders held

a news conference. According to The Daily Caller, NBC News� Peter Alexander began

to press Sanders on the incident.

�What has the president done since October to prevent any of the shootings from taking

place?� Alexander said, referring to the Las Vegas massacre.

Sanders was clearly ready for the question.

�Look, I think, first and foremost, to recognize that any loss of life is incredibly sad, and

any shooting at any school across this country is something that should never happen,�

Sanders said. �Students fearing for their lives while they�re attempting to get an

education is unacceptable, certainly in this administration and by this administration.

�The president believes that all Americans deserve to be safe in their schools and in

their communities. We�ve had two years of increased violence prior to the president

taking office. We�ve tried to crack down on crime throughout the country,� she continued.

Sanders listed concrete steps such as �(charging) more defendants with violent-crime offenses

than in any year in decades, they�ve charged the most federal firearm prosecutions in a

decade, and they�ve convicted 1,200 gang members and took down numerous drug-trafficking

organizations, all in an attempt to help create safer and better communities, and certainly

safer schools.�

�But what is the president specifically doing?� Alexander continued. �You guys

said at the time, today was not the day, but we should have these policies, you said it��

�Look, I just read off a lot of the things that he�s doing,� Sanders responded.

Alexander continued to press, claiming that school shootings weren�t part of a crime

wave and �seem to be their own category.�

�I think they�re part of a crime wave, absolutely,� Sanders said. �I don�t

think you can completely separate the two. They are a part of domestic violence, and

I think that it certainly would be part of a crime wave that we are focused on addressing.

And you can see some of the things that we�ve done since taking office.�

Alexander then asked if the �president (will) come before the nation and tell Americans

how he feels about this issue, and try to do what he can with the bully pulpit to help?�

Sanders finally lost her cool with the innuendoes.

Alexander then asked if the �president (will) come before the nation and tell Americans

how he feels about this issue, and try to do what he can with the bully pulpit to help?�

Sanders finally lost her cool with the innuendoes.

Sanders is right. The implication in these matters is, of course, that the Second Amendment

is really to blame for all of this and if there were no Second Amendment � or Republicans

defending it � that this violence would magically disappear.

The problem is much deeper than that. It�s a social disease, a cultural illness that

makes someone think that death is the answer to their problems. Removing weapons won�t

remove that sickness, nor will constantly accosting Republicans and gun owners.

The media, alas, refuses to recognize this very salient fact. The Trump administration

does, and we can only hope more headway is made.

For more infomation >> Sarah Rips Apart Reporter Who Blames School Shooting on Trump - Duration: 4:35.

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Legend Online!! İspanyol➤ Kasılmaya Devam!!➤! #5 - Duration: 10:33.

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Chocolate Banana Cookies | 4 Ingredient Healthy Oat Cookies - Duration: 2:05.

Hey everybody and welcome to the video.

This is Josh here and today we're going to be making chocolate banana cookies.

This is an adapted recipe from listotic that I just fell in love with and had to share.

Coming out to only 75 calories per cookie, these are so tasty they're sure to make

it into your meal prep rotation.

I really hope you give these a try, be sure to like the video if you enjoy this one and

subscribe if you'd like to see more, I release new recipe videos every other friday.

We're going to start off by blending our oats separately until we get an 'almost

flour' consistency.

A few pulses should do the trick.

Next, we're going to add in our cocoa powder and one banana.

The riper the banana the sweeter the cookies will be.

Pulse and blend everything together until fully combined.

Next we'll form the dough into cookies, you should be able to get about 5 in total.

This step is optional but I'm topping them with a few chocolate chips for added sweetness.

Feel free to double or triple the batch if you'd like to make a few extras very easily.

Preheat your oven to 350°F and bake for about 10-12 minutes.

Once these are done in the oven, let them rest for a minute then serve and enjoy!

These are a real treat at 75 calories, the few batches I've made have come out moist

and delicious every time.

Be sure to let me know down in the comments if you plan to give these a try but until

next time, I'll talk to you all later.

Have a good one.

For more infomation >> Chocolate Banana Cookies | 4 Ingredient Healthy Oat Cookies - Duration: 2:05.

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Tuto e-commerce - Boostez votre CA grâce à des programmes de fidélité efficaces - Market Academy - Duration: 4:01.

For more infomation >> Tuto e-commerce - Boostez votre CA grâce à des programmes de fidélité efficaces - Market Academy - Duration: 4:01.

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太鼓の達人(アジアver.)稼動四週年紀念影片 2017年海外版新增歌曲總覽 - Duration: 18:35.

Spring Don Metal Shop

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