He regards himself as a Master
of
Chinese
Martial Art
-------------------------------------------
What is Thundersnow? What Causes This Rare Winter Storm? - Duration: 1:01.
- [Narrator] Curious?
Go in depth with CSU experts on The Conversation.
First, a conversation starter.
- Thundersnow is pretty unusual.
(thunder rumbles)
Lightning is the thing that causes the sound,
causes the thunderclap.
Lightning is really just nothing but a spark.
Lightning is a static electricity spark,
just like if you scuff your feet on the carpet
and then touch the light switch or whatever,
you get a shock.
This isn't your shoes.
This is clouds moving up and down past each other.
Normally around here, we have thunder in the summer,
but if there's a really big snow storm coming in,
quite often, you'll get the cold air
actually running out over the top of the warm air,
and that cold air is heavy,
and it will literally fall down through the warm air,
and all that mixing in the vertical
will make the rubbing that is required
to make that lightning bolt,
and therefore, you get thundersnow.
- [Narrator] There's more to learn from CSU
and a world of experts at TheConversation.com.
-------------------------------------------
What Happened In 1st Match Psl 4 2019 || Performance Of Islamabad United And Lahore Qalandars | - Duration: 3:48.
What Happened In 1st Match Psl 4 2019 || Performance Of Islamabad United And Lahore Qalandars |
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What is There to Learn From Finland's Basic Income Experiment? Did It Succeed or Fail? - Duration: 23:54.
What is There to Learn From Finland's Basic Income Experiment? Did It Succeed or Fail?
Evaluating the Preliminary Results of a Partial UBI and Slightly Less Bureaucracy
After two years of experimentation within a two-year experimental design,
Finland released on February 8, 2019, preliminary results of their basic income experiment.
For anyone who reads the full report, it can be considered nothing short of both promising
and fascinating,
but what it can't be called is complete, because the results are still preliminary
and based on only the first half of the experiment.
With that said, as is also true of the experiments in the U.S. and Canada in the 1970s,
there are certainly some conclusions that can and can't be drawn within the proper
context of the experiment's design.
But to reach these conclusions, we'll first need to go over some of the nitty-gritty details
of how the experiment was designed, and what it didn't even try to measure.
Finland's experiment rocked the headlines of the world when it was announced back in
2015.
What went under the headlines was that this experiment was to be part of a new Finland
where the scientific method would be applied to public policy. It would be a landmark
in the history of policy making where instead of endlessly speculating and arguing,
potential new policies would be considered, tested, and compared to existing policies
and other alternative policies, before implementing what was found to be the best one.
Finland's goal was to become the first truly experimental nation in the world,
where policies are based on science, not ideologies or myths.
It is within this context that experimenting with basic income began its way
through a process where what was once hoped to be a grand first in finally putting the
idea
of unconditional basic income to the test at a national level became a not-so-grand
test
of slightly less conditional unemployment benefits. The question transformed from
"What would a random person do if provided an unconditional basic income instead of most
existing conditional benefits,
and what would the effect then be on both the individual and society?" to
"What would an unemployed person do if provided a partial basic income in addition to many
existing conditional benefits, and what would the effect be on only the individual?"
That may seem like a fairly small difference, but it's actually quite large.
You see, unconditional basic income is meant to be about entire communities,
not just the individuals within those communities. It's about universalism.
That's where the bulk of its effects emerge, from universal application.
It's also mostly about the employed, because most members of society are employed.
To only test the unemployed is to therefore miss out on how most of the population would
be impacted by UBI.
To be fair to the researchers, they knew this. They are scientists trained in science.
Politicians however are not, and politicians are the ones who ultimately made the decisions.
As a result, the experiment as implemented was extremely limited in design, and given
the opportunity to expand the experiment from only looking at the unemployed to looking
at
the employed as well, Finland's politicians, the same ones who claim to want an
evidence-based Finland, chose to keep the experiment limited in scope.
It was that decision which was misreported around the world
as Finland's decision to cancel their basic income experiment.
Finland of course never canceled their experiment, despite all the headlines written to the contrary.
It was a two-year experiment that took place over 2017 and 2018. Because of the way
data is available for research in Finland, there is a year gap, so the employment data
from 2017 is available in 2019, and the data from 2018 will not be available until 2020.
Thus the evaluation phase of the experiment will not be fully completed until next year.
It is within this context, that we need to understand Finland's experiment, and how
it really wasn't a test of UBI.
It was a test of slightly reducing the marginal tax rates experienced by the unemployed,
and also slightly reducing the amount of bureaucracy they experience.
Both of course are elements of UBI, and so there is still information to learn from such
an experiment,
but we must be careful with what conclusions can and should not be drawn,
and it requires some knowledge of scientific methodology to fully appreciate why.
As a quick introduction to scientific experimentation, by creating two groups that are mostly identical
to each other (preferably through random selection) by changing one variable
in one group (the treatment group) and leaving the other group unchanged (the control group),
we can determine what are the effects of manipulating that variable on other variables we're interested
in.
What we change is called the independent variable, and what is changed as a result are the dependent
variables.
In Finland's experiment, the control group was 173,222 unemployed Finns. The treatment
group was
a randomly selected group of 2,000 also unemployed Finns. You may think how the experiment was
run,
was to give them basic income instead of unemployment benefits, but you would be mostly wrong,
and only partially right. The single greatest problem with the design of the basic income
experiment,
aside from the exclusion of employed Finns, and the lack of using a saturation site
to test everyone in an entire town or city, is that
the treatment group continued receiving 83.3% of the conditional benefits as the control
group.
That fact is extremely important to understand, and it should be considered nothing short
of shocking.
If the primary goal of the experiment was to see what would happen if people stopped
losing
benefits in exchange for employment, then the treatment group should have received
as close to zero conditional benefits as possible. If you don't understand why, put yourself
in their shoes.
Imagine you are receiving 560 euros per month in basic income (or about $630).
Although true that if you accept employment you will get to keep that money
where usually you would lose it under typical unemployment benefits, in this experiment,
accepting employment would still mean losing the benefits you are receiving for your family,
losing your other benefits, and possibly even losing your housing assistance.
That's still a lot of disincentive to work isn't it?
Finland's basic income experiment didn't test the removal of the work disincentive
which conditional benefits create. It only slightly reduced them.
Again, the experimenters themselves appreciated this. It's the politicians making the decisions
who didn't.
The experimenters hands were tied. How? According the the report itself, it mostly came down
to kids…
It is more surprising to note that the amount of the unemployment benefits paid to the treatment
group
is in fact only about one-fifth smaller than the amount of the benefits paid to the control
group.
This is a direct consequence of the Act on the basic income experiment,
according to which unemployed persons must apply for unemployment benefits just as before
if they are entitled to unemployment benefits that are higher than the basic income.
In this way, especially families with children who received a basic income were forced to
apply
for unemployment benefits in order to receive child increases.
According to the research group that planned the experiment, the child increases should
have been included
in the basic income, whereby the basic income would have also been a truly unconditional
benefit
for families with children. It did not turn out this way, however.
This feature of the experiment means that a majority of individuals in the treatment
group
did not benefit from the lower bureaucracy and the fact that active labor market measures
were non-compulsory
due to choosing to apply for the standard unemployment benefit.
In other words, it was a political decision in an experiment about replacing unemployment
benefits
with basic income to require people receiving basic income to continue applying for unemployment
benefits,
because the size of unemployment benefits varies, especially according to household
size.
If politicians had any understanding of the scientific method, they'd have agreed to
the scientific recommendation to provide a basic income for kids too, paid to the parent,
so that unemployment benefits could be replaced regardless of household size.
Anyone looking to experiment with basic income should also appreciate this lesson.
Kids should be included. If they aren't, too many conditions still remain,
because existing benefits are designed mostly around families, and
we all should appreciate that parents make decisions with their kids in mind.
Few parents out there are going to take a job that has the potential of leaving their
kids worse off.
Another interesting thing to note, is that the number of conditions remaining
in the treatment group would have been even greater, if not for the higher total income
that basic income afforded by boosting employment incomes which then disqualified some
basic income recipients from some benefits. This by the way is also how UBI could effectively
replace
many existing benefit programs, by simply lifting people out of qualifying for them
anymore,
just as if they'd started receiving a paycheck of the same size.
Now that we understand just how little basic income was actually tested in this basic income
experiment,
we can better appreciate the collected data.
First and foremost, there was no discernible impact on employment,
save for a small 2% boost in the self-employed,
where the proportion of people with earnings from self-employment went from 42.85% to 43.70%.
Knowing what we know about just how many conditions the basic income group still faced,
that makes a lot of sense doesn't it? There was no observed difference
between the treatment group and control group in regards to employment,
largely because there's very little difference between the treatment group and the control
group, period.
Why would we expect a significant bump in employment, especially within
a competitive environment where the unemployment rate is varying between 7%–11%,
if people are still largely punished for employment through loss of benefits?
Aside from the typical work disincentives that thus still remained for the basic income
group,
because this experiment was only provided to 2,000 people,
and those people were spread out across Finland instead of being in a town of 2,000 people,
there was no boost to demand that would generate new jobs in a true basic income environment.
If all 2,000 people lived in the same town, someone spending their basic income would
be someone else's income,
which they in turn would spend, trading hands over and over again, heating up the local
economy,
and enabling people to find new jobs, offering wages to further increase incomes
apart from the basic income, which itself would be spent locally, and would itself circulate,
etc.
Not only do we already see this through Social Security, the Roosevelt Institute has estimated
that through this effect, a UBI would grow GDP in the U.S. by 12.56% in just eight years.
Every $1 of Social Security generates about $2 of total output for the U.S. economy — nearly
$1.4 trillion in 2012
Entrepreneurship too would be further enhanced, because just providing one person cash
may function as venture capital and risk reduction for them, but it doesn't create their customer
base.
Providing money to everyone is what creates customers, which fuels new businesses.
This is why increased entrepreneurship is such a common finding in actual experiments
of basic income
that impact entire communities. For example, in Namibia's UBI experiment, entrepreneurship
jumped 301%.
In India's UBI experiment, entrepreneurship in treatment villages was observed at three
times the rate as control villages.
These are the results of both increased capital and increased consumer buying power combined.
Economic stimulation and creation of new jobs would without a doubt exist in any full implementation
of actual UBI.
So concluding that because more employment wasn't seen in Finland in one year,
that we've learned something about a nationally implemented UBI's effect on employment,
is just a bad conclusion.
We do however already know something about UBI's effects on part-time and full-time
employment
from a statewide implementation of a small UBI elsewhere — Alaska.
Since 1982, Alaska has been distributing around one-fifth of what Finland tested,
to all residents of Alaska, regardless of employment. A study evaluating its effects
on employment determined a neutral effect on full-time employment,
just as in Finland, but with a 17% boost in part-time employment.
The boost is a result of a stimulated economy which created more part-time jobs,
and that's with a fraction of the amount Finland tested, which is itself a fraction
of a full basic income.
If Alaska had first tested its dividend on 2,000 people,
I don't expect they'd have observed a boost in part-time employment either.
Perhaps we should also be asking ourselves if boosting employment is even the point
of unconditional basic income, and if not, what is the point?
Now that's a question that the Finland experiment has shined some new additional light on,
because employment wasn't the only thing researchers measured.
In surveying the participants about aspects of their lives other than employment,
their answers suggest that basic income reduced their stress levels,
increased their senses of physical and mental health and well-being,
increased their financial stability, grew their confidence,
and even increased their levels of trust in other people and government, including politicians.
Remember that the basic income group really only saw around a 20% reduction
in their conditional benefits, so these results should be considered surprising
even if the basic income group saw a 100% reduction in the conditions imposed upon them.
That these results were seen with a relatively small decrease in bureaucratic conditions,
should be considered as nothing short of jaw-dropping.
What it seems to suggest is that even just a little bit more freedom,
dignity, and security goes a very long way.
Across measure after measure, basic income improved what was measured:
Life Satisfaction: Those provided with standard benefits in Finland rated their
satisfaction with life as a 6.76 on a scale of 0 to 10.
Those provided a partial basic income rated their life satisfaction as a 7.32.
That's an 8% improvement.
Trust: Among the unemployed in Finland, trust in others is lower than the population as
a whole
(possibly because they're unemployed), but being provided a partial basic income
instead of standard benefits increased their trust in other people by 6%,
the legal system by 5%, and politicians by 11%.
Confidence: 58% of those provided partial basic income were strongly or
quite strongly confident in their futures, compared to 46% provided standard benefits
— a 21% improvement. 42% were strongly or quite strongly confident in their financial
situation,
compared to 30% — a 28% improvement. 29% were strongly or quite strongly confident
in their ability to influence society, compared to 22% — a 22% improvement.
Physical and Mental Health: 55% of those provided partial basic income
considered their physical and mental health to be good or very good,
compared to 46% provided standard benefits — a 17% improvement.
Concentration: 67% of the partial basic income group felt they could concentrate well
or very well, compared to 56% on standard benefits — a 16% improvement.
Depression: A loss of interest in things once considered enjoyable is a key sign of the
onset of depression.
Among those provided partial basic income, only 25% felt that way during the previous
year,
compared to 34% of those provided standard benefits — a 37% improvement.
Financial Security: 39% of those receiving partial basic income felt
they were barely getting by or finding it difficult to make ends meet,
compared to 49% of those provided standard benefits — a 26% improvement.
Stress: 55% of the partial basic income group felt little to no stress at all,
compared to only 46% of those provided standard benefits — a 17% improvement.
Attitudes Toward UBI: 68% of those receiving partial basic income strongly agreed that
a nationwide UBI would make it easier to accept job offers,
compared to 42% of those provided standard benefits — a 38% increase.
51% felt a nationwide UBI would make it easier to start a business in Finland,
compared to 39% of those provided standard benefits — a 22% increase.
65% felt Finland should now adopt UBI,
compared to 49% provided only standard benefits — a 24% increase.
It's important to note that all the above results are from 586 people
who were successfully interviewed, which is of course a fraction of the 2,000 people.
It's possible that those willing to be interviewed were only those who were happier
with the results of being provided partial basic income. It's also important to note
that
all of the above is still preliminary data absent the second year of register data.
With that said, there does appear to be across-the-board improvements on a wide range of measures,
and all despite the fact that those provided partial basic income still had to
deal with bureaucracy and conditions, just a bit less of it.
An entirely fair conclusion to draw from the preliminary results is
one that involves flipping around the point of the experiment…
Imagine everyone in Finland already had UBI, and this experiment was looking at if
creating new conditions and hiring a team of bureaucrats to apply those conditions would
be a good idea.
Obviously it isn't. The results show that those conditions would not increase employment,
and would instead have across-the-board negative effects.
No one would look at such an experiment as evidence for switching
from unconditional basic income to conditional unemployment benefits.
Finally, there is one more important thing to learn from Finland's experiment with
basic income,
and that's what they didn't even bother to measure, because it's about us as a society.
In all of the headlines about the negligible effects on employment observed in
Finland's basic income experiment, one thing goes entirely assumed, that
employment is the only way of measuring one's contribution to society.
No where in the report is the word "volunteering" or "unpaid work" even mentioned.
For all we know, hours spent volunteering were increased by 50% and
hours spent caring for others increased by 35%.
Those are outcomes of more work, not more employment,
but is the goal of work to be paid for it?
Or is the goal of work to accomplish the work, paid or not?
The experiment showed a small bump in self-employment,
where the self-employed actually earned a bit less.
That seems to me like a very positive result, to see that
people are willing to earn less, to take a risk. Think about the possibilities.
What if five years from now, something just one person among Finland's 2,000
basic income recipients did in 2017 grew into a new billion dollar industry?
What if that industry improved the lives of billions of people all over the world?
Innovation takes time, often many years, and it only takes one huge success
to make many investments well worth it,
regardless of how many other investments yielded no fruit.
Paul Graham of Y-Combinator refers to this as black swan farming.
All it takes is one, just one.
Another popular assumption about employment is that
all employment is better than no employment.
Finland's experiment did not break employment down to the granularity of the nature of the
work itself.
If they had done so, and the results showed that 50 basic income recipients quit
their jobs as telemarketers to pursue their doctoral degrees in biotechnology and quantum
computing,
would that loss of employment reveal a failure of basic income, or its success?
Existing research also shows that going from unemployment into a bad
job is worse for your mental health than staying unemployed.
We need to start asking some important questions about employment.
How much employment actively hurts society?
How many people have jobs that are the opposite of contributing to society,
and instead drag society down? How many people have entirely unnecessary jobs
that don't need to exist at all? How many people have jobs that could already be done
more cheaply and with higher quality and dependability by existing technologies?
How many hours are we clocking that could be reduced without accomplishing less?
None of the above questions were investigated in this experiment, because
for the most part, these questions aren't being asked by society in general
because of a mass delusion that all employment is good. That assumption is not only wrong,
but dangerously wrong with exponential technological advancement.
So again, we need to ask the question, what is the goal of unconditional basic income?
The answer is not job creation. Yes, UBI will likely create jobs
due to the economic impact of increasing demand requiring increasing supply,
but that's not it's purpose. It's just one of many effects.
To answer the purpose of UBI requires asking another question,
and that question is "What is our purpose?"
What is our purpose as individuals? What is our purpose as a society?
I can only speak for myself, but I believe our purpose is to make life better for everyone.
Better is of course subjective, but I think Finland's experiment did show that
compared to the existing system built on distrust,
partial basic income made life better for its recipients,
by simply trusting them with the agency of making their own decisions.
It was a test of freedom, dignity, security, and more, and it adds
to the growing pile of evidence that
human beings simply thrive more in systems based upon such core principles.
Personally, what's surprising to me, is how that's surprising to anyone.
-------------------------------------------
What's In My Mouth Challenge (Boyfriend vs Girlfriend) - Duration: 15:27.
yeah
I need to tell take it down now
what's up everybody to one only yellow girl Nokkmas here with bird box davidel l
we are going to be doing the what's in your wallet. what's in your mouth
challenge so let's get ready lets get started. open your mouth lets get ready
so how many rounds are we doing in are we going like all whatever and then my
go or you go one and one we're gonna so I'm blindfolded right now I didn't you
you're giving me the best one I don't like it
over your mouth no snow smelling messed up open your mouth open your mouth
no you're cheating okay I gave you this is bad it doesn't
this is not it open your mouth bite it I
have a get away yeah yeah I know
I don't know um I know there's something spicy and ler is crunchy like a celery
some type of vegetable let me tell you
look at it you find for them
it's like spices stuff like that you know are you ready
no oh you all right oh yeah okay nervous cuz you're taking yourself on
oh my god oh my god fuck you what was it that was that be bullshit just like
vomit eggs or some shit like what the fuck it I gave you three I got you no I
got you I quit no come on I'm gonna play some what's in my mouth okay no no wait
what is that noise okay your mouth it may not be no came to Opie mouth no
I'm not eating this longer than half know if it's raw fish I mean it was
slept shit right in your face no wow I heard you what is it
open your mouth madman I'll eat one and can't get you
this can do that come on this is round two on the fact that I'm quiet you're
gently open your mouth and open your mouth hmm really good tastes like salmon
no not bad Oh miss price of rice fish take off the blindfold
I know it's something fishy because it is like fish a little is in it I swear
Nancy's disgusting it smells girl so he just said Oh bite into it isn't you just
said you done you just said nothing to bet I know it was something fishy
my hands smelling moistures and your mouth open
uh-huh I need a wider stick it turned out I need to tongue out I need
brought to you by a rock neurons and Iraqis really oh you're playing so dirty
suit up
Can I grab your wrist little ray you see that he feels a risk cause your fingers
passed away to tell she's good looking another mess are you know I know I just
need to okay not what's coming toward nose comes with my face now this is it
okay what is it what's in your mouth
what is it oh shit those soy sauce oh I can't look in there good fish nice sauce
I knew it was something like that I said a fishy bass I know my mouth you're oh
I don't wanna
do you know what are you doing I'm showing what ain't here no wrapper
where's the smell that's all its nozzle everything we spit out come on I want
you come on one no to open your mouth
it's a bubble never raw meat ground beef ground beef oh right the texture of it
fuck are you
this shit moister egg doodle it's chia seeds peanut butter and hemp seeds
actual juices you cannot waste it some Crocs Beach no you just said that's the
Clorox bleach mixed with some rage braid
all the way we're going to and a half Rho active is one I'm waiting oh yeah
being good get that code out come on check it out no idea I know I stick my
nose all the time is one before I shut it holding in it
what is it log cabin syrup
ready ready my lips are dry alcohol you pulled him
out
I need you to take it out take the boat out
I broke a down here I am the winner you do the dessert I warned the wall
the battle may have been launched but whoa not trying to hit you in the
face that is mine I won no you owe us you H it make sure
you get to the video 10,000 likes subscribe Haven check out our other
videos the broccoli challenge you don't believe me oh wait oh we watch this
again type of words never again check our broccoli challenge the shower prank
and plenty when we have another video coming up - so stay tuned and yeah like
comment share subscribe I'm gonna go kill home
ah
-------------------------------------------
Anonymous. Message From Q Anon, F-15, What was said on Nov 25th? #TrustThePlan #TheQllective - Duration: 16:10.
For more infomation >> Anonymous. Message From Q Anon, F-15, What was said on Nov 25th? #TrustThePlan #TheQllective - Duration: 16:10. -------------------------------------------
What If It Doesn't Work? - Duration: 6:13.
What am I drinking?
Well you know the answer.
I don't drink coffee.
Honey green tea, of course.
So, what if it doesn't work?
What if, whatever you're trying doesn't work?
I'll tell you a quick story.
One of the things I teach all my students,
all my high ticket closers.
Sometimes when you on the phone with a prospect
and they are asking the question,
the prospect's asking, well you know
is there guarantee if this doesn't work?
Like, how do you handle this objection?
And the way I teach it, you don't try to justify,
oh yeah, it's going to work
and we have a 30 day money back guarantee,
we have a 60 day money back guarantee
and let me tell you, all these clients that we have
all these customers that we have
and what kind of results they have gotten, no.
That's not what we say.
The way I teach them how we handle this objection, is this:
so the prospect says, well is there guarantee
if this doesn't work?
Can I get my money back?
You reply well, do I get a bonus, if this does work?
Boom!
Right there.
That's how you reply.
Now, what does that have to do,
what does closing have to do with this.
The problem with most people is,
they are thinking about, you know what,
let me have plan B, let me have plan C.
So, whatever they're doing,
let's say a business, right,
they're pursuing this business,
they're trying to, lets say, do e-commerce
or they're trying to do affiliate marketing.
Or they're trying to do Shopify.
Whatever it is that you are pursuing right?
And they ask themselves, wow, just in case that doesn't work
let me have a plan B and maybe let me also maybe learn
how to do like, you know, sparkly in Crypto Currency
or some shit like that right?
And then from there, oh in case that doesn't work,
maybe I'll also sell some shit in the flea market
or some shit like that right?
Like, you have Plan C and then Plan D, oh you know,
just in case maybe Plan D maybe let me also study some
kind of program in schools in case at least all these
things don't work, I still get a job, right?
One, two, three, four, guess what.
Heres what happens:
that expectation, the expectation of
failure, leads to failure.
You are already expecting the thing doesn't work
and then guess what, then it fucking doesn't work.
Because you're expecting it not to work.
That's why you have the plan B,
that's why you have there's a plan C.
This is like imagine, you're getting married
and you say to yourself, you know
I think my husband is nice
but just in case this husband doesn't work out,
let me get a second husband just in case, right.
Let me have a husband B
and just in case if that doesn't work,
let me make sure I have another backup,
I have a husband C and D,
in case husband A doesn't work.
See how ridiculous this sounds?
Right?
No, when you commit, you fucking make it work.
You want to make it work.
In spite, I know what you're
going to say, all the fucking issues,
oh but Dan, the divorce rate is so high in North America.
I know that.
But what I'm saying is when you commit doesn't matter,
business, relationship, in your life, career,
you gotta make it work.
You expecting it to work.
You don't give it the possibility,
that doesn't mean you're stupid.
Doesn't mean you're naive.
Doesn't mean you don't think from all angles,
it doesn't mean that you're assuming
or it doesn't mean you don't look at the downside
it just means, the expectation you have,
you expecting to work.
Meaning, here's the way I like to see it.
Expect the best, prepare for the worst.
Expect the best and prepare for the worst.
Expect that it's gonna work.
Expect it's gonna work out.
Expect it's gonna be great.
But I'm also protected.
I'm prepared for the downside.
I'm prepared, what happens if it doesn't work,
how do I pivot, what do I need to do to make it work.
But instead, when you have so many
plan C and contingency plan and all that;
all those are for wimps.
One thing.
All in.
Put all your energy into it.
Even Warren Buffett said, right,
put all your eggs in one basket
and then you watch the fucking basket closely.
It's very, very true.
Put all your eggs in one basket,
you watch it very, very closely.
Instead, jumping from one thing
and all these other things, no.
You stay focused, you stay laser beam focused.
You don't even give yourself the leeway,
what if it doesn't work?
You gotta make it fucking work.
Everything I do, it works because I fucking make it work.
Not if it doesn't work.
And heres the thing, you notice
that the question, when you say,
oh it, it, it forget this it.
I.
Use I.
It's gonna work because I fucking make it work.
It's gonna happen because I fucking make it happen.
Not somebody, not this and that.
Doesn't mean I don't get help
but because I make it work.
Don't give yourself the possibility.
That's a loser mentality.
All in.
Now, I talked a lot about this in my book, F.U. Money.
If you have not read my book, F.U. Money,
I'll put a link somewhere here,
go download the book.
It's free.
It doesn't cost you fucking anything.
You can go to Amazon,
you can go buy it if you want a physical copy.
Its like whatever 10, 20 bucks.
But I'm giving a copy for free.
Just go and download it.
I'm also gonna give you the audio version,
read by me personally.
You can also download it and also when you're driving,
when you are working out,
when you're doing something else, feed your mind.
Feed your mind and develop that mindset.
Develop the mindset of possibility.
Then you won't have this, all this small little voice,
this bullshit, oh what if it doesn't work?
What if it fails, what if, fuck that shit.
You fucking make it work.
So go read the book.
Go ahead.
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What If The Multiverse Was Real? - Duration: 7:33.
When it comes to time and space, it is easy to become mind boggled.
Down here on planet earth, we are much less than a tiny pinprick of our observable universe,
and again, that is simply what we can see.
Many contemporary scientists speculate that actually, our observable universe isn't
the entire picture, they believe our universe is part of a multiverse.
Hello and welcome back to Life's Biggest Questions, the channel that loves a good what
if ! I am your host Rebecca Felgate and today I am asking What if the Multiverse was real?
Blimey.
Before we get into the video I want to hear what you think?
Do you believe there are parallel universes out there?
Let me know in the comments section down below!
Also while you are down there please do leave a thumbs up on this video and share it with
a friend….also do stick around until the end of the video where I will be reading comments
from a previous video.
So, multiverses.
The late great Stephen Hawking's final research paper was on the Multiverse.
The multiverse is actually a name that pops up in a number of different strands of theories
that often interlope.
One theory, shared by many physicists is that when the big bang happened, our universe wasn't
the only one created, which makes up part of the bubble theory.
Others have considered multiverses when it comes to matter and antimatter.
Over the last few decades, Scientists have observed a whole bunch of Dark Matter hanging
out WITHIN our universe.
Dark matter, so to speak, are dark spots that seem to make up 26.8 percent of our universe.
No one knows what it consists of and no one has seen it, because it doesn't interact
with the matter scientists know about – visible matter, that makes up around 4.9 percent of
what we can see.
Some cosmologists think that the dark matter could be the sign of another inverse universe,
existing side by side to ours, but unseen.
My favourite multiverse theory is the theory of multiple outcomes.
This one can be summized in Schrödinger's cat paradox, or by considering the simple
electron.
Electrons can spin clockwise and anti clockwise, but quantum mechanics says that they can spin
both clockwise and counter clockwise at the same time…which…means there are two things
happening at the same time, which is hard for us to get our heads around.
This creates a paradox as we have never seen things spinning two ways at the same time,
we perceive just one outcome.
But does that mean the other outcome didn't happen.
This is the crux of the "quantum measurement paradox".
The answer here, could be the multiverse – with each possible outcome for every possible decision
creating a new strand of reality… kind of like tree branches…if you catch my drift.
So, if multiverses in this respect were real it would mean that everything that could ever
have happened from the start of time to now has happened in an infinite number of realities.
If we start small, this is easy enough to understand.
This morning I woke up at 6am, I wrote my blog, I sent an email, I had a shower, I put
make up on, I had breakfast, I slipped on ice so I was late for work… there are already
a massive number of universes that would exist where just the smallest factors were changed,
I didn't slip on ice so I wasn't late for work so instead something else happened.
On a bigger scale, there could be a universe where I didn't move to Canada, didn't
break up with that one ex… in another universe my parents didn't meet so I don't exist.
If multiverses are real, there are many many versions of you that could exist side by side
– one where you need glasses, one where you don't….
some universes may be similar but some may be different….
There would be a universe where World War 2 never ended or the Cold War did end in mutually
assured destruction.
These are all reasonably basic concepts to grasp… she says whilst discussing everything
that could ever possibly have been true to be true… but the concept gets much deeper
when we consider all of the possible outcomes created from the beginning of time, which,
so far as we can track, was 13.7 billion years ago.
Planet earth was formed 4.5 billion years ago and orbits our sun.
We have the perfect conditions on earth for life, but if the multiverse theory is true,
there are infinite other universes out there that that didn't happen, there will be universes
where time runs backwards, where gravity doesn't exist… all of the constants within our own
provable physics wouldn't be the same…which is mind boggling.
A few more things to mess with your brain before we are done.
Again, so far as we can observe… the universe keeps on expanding.
Is this constant?
This means that, with every expansion, more possible outcomes would take place…using
the earths population as a case study – if every outcome from every action exists in
a multiverse…well…does that mean the multiverse is speeding up and getting bigger?
The human population has nearly doubled in my life time, with each individual creating
more outcomes.
ARGH!
Do we really need to just accept the notion of infinity, but know that we can only live
our one truth?
Many scientists theorize that the multiverses exist but there is no way, considering our
universes rules of space time, that we can ever get there… that is, unless, the multiverses
interact without us knowing.
I want to talk about our friends the electrons again before we go.
As well as having the ability to spin forwards and back, electrons show Quantum indeterminism
– basically to keep this simple, if you fire an electron through a double slit you
would expect it to go through one slit or the other, choosing an outcome, however scientists
have observed electrons acting like waves, passing through both slits simultaneously
and interfering with itself.
It is complicated, but this could be a hint towards proving the theory that multiple outcomes
create multiple universes…and actually they are unknowingly influencing each other.
Would this mean that phenomenon like the Mandela effect – an effect where large numbers of
people remember slightly different variations of historical events, are actually interactions
of multiverses, rather than tin hat theories.
Okay, sure, yeah, I've gone cross eyed.
Ultimately, if the multiverse did exist, unless we can access it, it isn't worth losing
too much sleep over.
Physics is provable science….
Not theory or simple observation.
At the moment, we can't prove Multiverse… but if we could, it could be both a comfort
and a discomfort at the same time.
The possibilities are endless.
So thanks for sticking with me through that brain work out – do you believe in the multiverse?
Let me know in the comments section down below.
Comments from What if Scotland left the UK: Sluggy 1990 said: I'm from Scotland(Glasgow)
and I support Scottish independence.
Lewis Hussen said: I'm from Scotland this was very helpful thanks Rebecca
Dan the Science man said: The new name would be: The Joint Kingdom of England Wales and
Norther Ireland
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What Is Vsauce? - Duration: 9:15.
Hey Vsauce, Daniel here
What is Vsauce?
Vsauce is a popular educational YouTube channel helmed by Michael Stevens, or Vsauce Michael,
or that guy who's always doing the eyebrow things.
But the whole time I was there I thought a lot about video
I can do it I can do it
He looks a little like this, and a bit like this, and has a personal YouTube channel named
pooplicker888.
But he doesn't use that anymore.
It turns out that there's a lot of things that Vsauce isn't anymore.
If we assume for a second that Vsauce is what it is, then Vsauce is a show called Mind Field,
a YouTube premium edutainment show exploring pop psychology in a professional broadcast
half hour format.
In any given episode Michael will explore a scientific subject, typically in the realm
of psychology with a particular focus on the science of perception.
We learned that there's a stark difference between what people think they would do and wha they actually do
The videos are neatly structured into seasons and episodes with a clear central thesis and
tight, consistent branding.
It isn't just built like television, it looks, feels, and sounds like television,
right down to the fabrication of conflict in a build up to where the commercial breaks
would go.
This forms an interesting contrast between Vsauce and another similar channel, Vsauce.
Vsauce is a popular educational YouTube channel helmed by Michael Stevens.
In a given video Michael will pop up and for about ten minutes take the viewer on a pinball
exploration of a scientific subject, typically in the realm of psychology with a particular
focus on the science of perception, but also a fascination with math and astronomy.
A critic of Vsauce might describe the format of a Vsauce video as "unfocused" with
each video taking its subject matter less as a thesis and more as an excuse to ramble
for several minutes about vaguely related subjects.
A proponent of Vsauce might describe the format of a Vsauce video as poetic, with each video
taking its subject matter less as a thesis and more as a theme, an opportunity to create
a freeform association between ideas that share a commonality of language
or an overlap of consequences.
The video What is the Speed of Dark is less about the physics of photons and more about
a variety of subjects that all share an intersection in the idea communicated in the word "dark."
This unstructured science poetry forms an interesting contrast between Vsauce and another
similar channel, Vsauce.
Vsauce is a popular variety YouTube channel helmed by Michael Stevens.
In a given video Michael will compile a rapid-fire freeform presentation assembled around a common
seed idea, like funny or interesting images or bizarre consumer products, a format riddled
with innuendo, dick jokes, and cleavage.
The average Vsauce video will skip across a couple dozen examples in only a few minutes,
each beat connected to the next by pun or some other free-association word game with
a particular love for juvenile humour, curious facts, and optical illusions.
this is the last thing you will see before you die
can you find the cat?
But we should move on to girls, in costume, tied up, can you save them?
This collection of curiosities and innuendo forms an interesting contrast between Vsauce
and another similar channel, Vsauce.
Vsauce is a popular gaming YouTube channel helmed by Michael Stevens.
In a given video Mark, Michael, Danielle, Chad, Jeff, and/or Angie will perform stand
up comedy, list video game features, compile easter eggs, make dick jokes,
or all of the above.
Whether it's interesting places in World of Warcraft, rocks in World of Warcraft that
look like dicks, or jokes about characters in World of Warcraft posed in sexually suggestive
positions, you can find it on Vsauce.
But that's not all.
Did I mention the standup comedy?
Yes.
You as Dr. Mario are actually working at a free clinic for the members of Jersey Shore!
Yeah, each level is one of the members of Jersey Shore. The last level? Snookie.
It's covered in viruses
This is, in part, the fascinating semantic language of YouTube.
The word "channel" for YouTube is borrowed from television where a channel is synonymous
with a station, and is largely stationary.
A television station is a fixed point, a portal through which the viewer watches a flow of
content as it moves past.
A YouTube channel, on the other hand, is less like this channel and more like this channel.
The common metaphor here is flow. A channel is a means of transport, a space that things
pass through, but a YouTube channel isn't a fixed point, a bench on which you watch
the boats as they sail past, it's the whole thing.
You can go to a YouTube channel and walk along the metaphorical bank by scrolling
all the way down.
You can travel from here to here.
Ludwig Wittgenstein argued that language was representational, that there is a single factual
reality and it is the job of language to describe these facts.
Language, thus, is like taking a picture, and the better a language the stronger its
underlying logic, the clearer the picture.
This brings up an interesting contrast between the work of Ludwig Wittgenstein and the work
of Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Wittgenstein argued that the picture theory of language was entirely wrong, that words
are not facts, are not fixed points in space, but rather words are how you use them.
In other words use dictates meaning.
We have told the story backwards, and now let us tell it forwards.
Vsauce, launched in 2010, was a gaming channel that featured a broad swath of video game
based dick jokes and boob thumbnails that morphed into a variety channel compiling interesting
videos, images, and curiosities, with a particular focus on dick jokes and boob thumbnails.
As more and more videos were produced the curiosities floated to the top until Vsauce
posted its first self-contained educational video in July 2011 on the nature
of explosions.
Hey, Vsauce, Michael here and today I'm in my apartment
Okay, look, the point is that today we're going to talk about explosives.
The rapid-fire delivery remained, but the innuendo gradually took a back seat to questions
like why the earth has a moon and the existentialism of atomic physics.
In September 2012 the last of the variety shows was posted with Lüt episode 27:
Carrot Sharpener.
It is, most likely, this phase here that most people think of when they say Vsauce.
This is when they attracted most of their 14 million subscribers, this is when Bill
Nye made a guest appearance.
Flash forward to January 2017, Vsauce announced the new, premium show Mind Field available
only to YouTube Red subscribers.
While a few monologue-driven videos have been released since then, the last of them,
Which Way Is Down?, was posted in November 2017.
As we stand now in February 2019, here on the bank of Vsauce channel, it looks like
Mind Field is Vsauce.
But that's not the all of it, because that is simply from now.
There is conceivably a future snapshot of Vsauce where Mind Field is itself just a stratum,
a phase the channel went through, in the same way the Vsauce people conceptualize, the freeform
sci-poetry, is a stratum between Mind Field and the hodgepodge of nonsense and dongs that
preceded it, the same as Lüt and IMG are a stratum between existential psychology and
painfully dated jokes about Snookie having sexually transmitted infections.
The last level? Snookie. It's covered in viruses.
There is no real, essential, elemental Vsauce, because they are all Vsauce.
And as always thanks for watching.
-------------------------------------------
REVEALED: How Princess Diana 'KNEW Charles and Camilla were serious' as marriage crumbled - Today N - Duration: 3:43.
When Lady Diana Spencer walked down the aisle in a 25-foot train to marry Prince Charles in 1981, seemingly destined to become Queen, it was considered a fairytale
The marriage was doomed from the start, as the public would come to find out that Charles' heart was tied up with Camilla Parker Bowles, a woman he'd met over a decade prior in 1970
In Amazon Prime's "The Story of Diana", close friends of the Princess of Wales and royal experts reveal that Diana "knew" what was going on between Charles and Camilla, now the Duchess of Cornwall
REVEALED: How Charles went on SECRET holidays with Camilla while ST. Princess Diana's REVENGE: How Diana turned on Prince Charles with '
The documentary, released in 2017, interviews Sarah Bradford, a royal biographer who claims that by 1986, Diana "knew very well what was going on" with the affair
ABC's Chris Connolly added: "You could see it in the images. "That was the other thing that was so transfixing about her [Diana]
"You could tell in the pictures how they were getting along." He noted that, even in the very early royal photographs, there were moments when the couple looked away from each other and seemed ill at ease
While, in the later years of their marriage, the images were even more telling. One famously awkward photograph showed Diana turning away from Charles as he went to give her a kiss after a polo match in Jaipur, India, in 1992
Wayne Sleep, a friend of Princess Diana said: "When she realised it was serious [Charles' affair with Camilla], it must've been quite a jolt, you know, probably very upsetting
" Princess Diana felt that she had to give her husband's mistress a piece of her mind, according to archived recordings from National Geographic in 2018, and she did just that at a 40th birthday party for Camilla's sister
Although the Princess of Wales said that she was "terrified" of Camilla, Diana told her boldly: "I'd just like you to know that I know exactly what is going on
" Dr. James Colthurst, Diana's friend, said: "But the public view was, here was a happy lady having a great time and really enjoying her life
"And there was a big vacuum around her life. She was very unhappy." Historian Dr
Amanda Foreman said: "Throughout history, it would come as no surprise that men have often felt that they were entitled to have a mistress on the side
"But it wasn't just the men. "It was generally accepted among the wives that they had to produce an heir and a spare, and then they could take a lover themselves
That's the way it goes."
-------------------------------------------
What Alexandre Lacazette posted on social media after being sent off vs BATE - Duration: 2:54.
Alexandre Lacazette has taken to social media to apologise for being sent off late on during Arsenal's Europa League defeat against BATE Borisov
The French striker was shown a straight red card five minutes from time after lashing out with his elbow, as frustrations spilled over within the visitors' ranks
The red card capped a miserable night for Arsenal and means Lacazette will have to sit out next Thursday's crucial second leg in north London through suspension
That is far from ideal with his team chasing a 1-0 deficit and the former Lyon frontman has accepted he was in the wrong
Taking to social media, he posted an apology to the Arsenal fans, which read: "Letting the team down like that is the worst feeling
I should have stayed calm but it's not always easy. Sorry. "There are still 90 minutes to play and I believe that my teammates will make it to the next round
" Stanislav Dragun's header just before half-time settled the contest in favour of the home side in Belarus
Arsenal dominated possession, but aside for an early chance for Henrikh Mkhitaryan they failed to really trouble the BATE goalkeeper during what was a frustrating night
Unai Emery is convinced, however, his team can turn things round at the Emirates next Thursday
"It's the first match," said Arsenal's head coach. "We are going to play another 90 minutes next week and I'm sure it's going to be different
"Today the first half was a good performance for us, we had chances to score, sometimes last week we had chances and it's goal and today is not
"We worked. I am happy with players' effort, we tried. Defensively when they were 1-0 they were organised and competitive
"Our big opportunity is next week at home. Today is not the result we wanted. We deserved more but they worked for this
Next week is going to be different with our supporters." Keep up to date with the latest news, features and exclusives from football
london via the free football.london app for iPhone and Android. Available to download from the App Store and Google Play
-------------------------------------------
The Bachelor's Colton Underwood: 'I was grabbed and touched inappropriately' at charity event - Duration: 4:14.
Bachelor Colton Underwood made an early exit from a charity event after he was allegedly touched inappropriately
The reality star, 27, said on Instagram that he was attempting to take photos with fans at an event for his Legacy Foundation on Wednesday when a personal line was crossed
"I'm sorry if you didn't get a picture at the event last night, but at one point during the event I was grabbed and touched inappropriately while people were throwing cameras in my face," he wrote on his Instagram Story
"I am the type of person who would have stood in line for hours to make sure anyone who supported the event got a picture, but once that happened I had to do what was best for me as a human being
" Colton Underwood/Instagram ABC did not return PEOPLE's request for comment. The incident, which was first reported by TMZ, occurred at his foundation's Garden Party at Mavericks Beach Club in San Diego
The event was slated to run from 6-9 p.m., and all proceeds from the $25 tickets went to the Legacy Foundation
The former NFL player launched the charity in 2015 to aid people living with cystic fibrosis
"I didn't sign up to be a piece of meat or a zoo animal. I hope we run into each other at another event or on the street and I can take the time to say hello," he continued
"Thank you again for coming to support Legacy and the fight against CF." TMZ reports fellow Bachelor Nation stars Becca Kufrin, Garrett Yrigoyen, Blake Horstmann, and Tanner Tolbert were all in attendance
Underwood's season of The Bachelor has shed light on sexual assault, and drew praise for the way it handled contestant Caelynn's revelation that she was drugged and raped in college
"My life was flipped upside down," she told PEOPLE of the assault. "And even though I've moved on, it is something I will struggle with forever
" Underwood, who snagged the Bachelor role after an emotional stint on Bachelor in Paradise, shocked fans this week when he sent controversial contestant Demi home moments after she confessed she was falling in love
"I appreciate you saying that to me. There's a part of me that just doesn't know if we can get there," he said
"I just don't know right now if I can see myself with you at the end of this." The Bachelor airs Mondays at 8 p
m. ET on ABC. The Bachelor Chris Harrison hosts the veteran reality romance series
Will you accept this rose? type TV Show seasons 23 episodes 232 Genre Reality run date 03/25/02 creator Mike Fleiss Cast Arie Luyendyk Jr, Nick Viall, Ben Higgins, Chris Soules, Juan Pablo Galavis, Chris Harrison Network ABC Available For Streaming On Complete Coverage The Bachelor
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What Unai Emery said to Lacazette after he was sent off for Arsenal - News Today - Duration: 1:36.
Unai Emery spoke to Alexandre Lacazette about controlling his frustration after he was sent off for Arsenal in the Europa League
The Frenchman was shown a straight red card for an elbow on Aleksandar Filipovic late on in the Gunners' 1-0 defeat by BATE Borisov in the competition's round of 32
Lacazette took to Twitter following the fixture to apologise to the Arsenal fans, while Emery addressed the red card in his post-match press conference
The Arsenal boss said: "I didn't see the action but we spoke and [his] frustration needs controlling
It's bad news with the red card. "Next week we aren't going to play with him but now we are going to think with the players that are OK for next week
" Lacazette will miss the return leg, which Arsenal must win by at least two goals to have any chance of going through
The striker vowed to come back stronger on Twitter, writing: "Letting the team down like that is the worst feeling
I should have stayed calm but it's not always easy. Sorry. "There are still 90 minutes to play and I believe that my teammates will make it to the next round
" Read More Mirror Football's Top Stories
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