Thứ Năm, 3 tháng 8, 2017

Youtube daily we Aug 3 2017

We are happy and content

with the amount of Jesus we have in life

and that's a problem.

And that comes from a place of

a lack of desperation.

That you think you're something you're not.

I don't see people who are like

sold out going, "I just want more of him.

I'll doing anything for more of him."

This is what the story starts to tell us. It starts to go:

This is actually the call in our life.

To cry out to want more, and more and more.

It's like saying you're content in your marriage.

You're happy.

which is why a bunch of you won't go to marriage counselling.

Two reasons.

You think you don't need more out of your marriage

and your pride keeps you from going.

You think, "Oh my goodness, if I go to marriage counselling

that means I got a problem..."

And it's this taboo thing that you can't do.

Listen, my wife and I

go to marriage counselling every once in a while,

and we go in and we come out and she's like,

"Hah, I think I won that one."

And I'm like, "I don't think that's what this is for!"

"What are you talking about? This ain't a competition."

But the reality is that some of you aren't humble enough to go.

You're not desperate enough.

You don't see yourself

as a blind beggar on the side of the road going,

"My gosh, I want more out of this

and I want more God than I have right now."

And you're not humble enough to actually go,

"My ego needs to die right now

and I need to actually get more of him,

which means I got to do stuff that's humble,

which means I got to come to church and go,

'Can someone help me?',

which means I gotta go to a community group and go

'My gosh, I need people to...'"

meaning, instead of sharing your political opinions

and all your smart quotes on Facebook,

maybe you should go, "Can someone pray for me?"

The kind of humility, the kind of desperation

that two beggars have on the street to go,

"Jesus, have mercy

on me"

is implied as, "I don't have my life together."

And if your constant mode is,

"I pour into people. I'm here to lead people.

I'm here to mentor people."

And you don't have people under you

who can mentor you and speak into your life and say,

"No, no, no. You don't get to be here for everybody else.

"You're a disaster, so I'm gonna be here for you now."

If it's all lopsided,

you haven't come to the place where these two blind guys are.

"Lord have mercy on me.

I'm desperate here.

I need more of you

and I need to come to a posture where I'm not in control.

For more infomation >> "We're happy and content — and that's a problem." (2:15) - Duration: 2:16.

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We joined Mexico. Crossing channels, with "Julio KF". Special collaboration. #jandrolion - Duration: 11:12.

What's wrong, logs! ... and above all, what, Julio?

Thank you for giving me this opportunity to show in a Mexican channel

We in Spain continue with the "J" I know it's a little frowned upon there

I apologize

Well, above that, reaching an audience of another country

We must be extremely grateful

A piece of "Mexican-Spanish" brotherhood of cool Shizz

Jandro hello how are you friend? It is my pleasure to do a collaboration with you

A big hello from Mexico to Spain

For you, for all your people and your community

For what they do not know me, I am Julius KF

So ... do you think Jandro if we start with the questions

Mexico 86 ... a wink

Well ... here we go, start with the questions ... look in July

You already know that my channel is related to the national police

And with security things, so ...

Is it true that Mexico

It has its hot issue with the issue of security, while talking about drug dealers

... kidnappings and God? ... Is that true?

Tell me the truth!

As in all countries

we visit, we must be careful of who we are about more

In very dark streets

Care must be taken in very deserted streets, very lonely

Maybe Mexico is known for its

insecurity worldwide

Drug traffickers ... by Zeta

And all these criminal organizations

Not very glitzy, very quirky with jewels and ...

... and all these things, right?

Keeping a low profile to keep

And do not draw the attention of the alien lovers

In today did a poll on Facebook, in my social networks

With my friends and I asked them if in so far this year they have assaulted

And several of them told me not to ... I said two or three people

I commented that suffered mishaps that have stolen something right?

But...

But I think so far is a quiet town

Show me something I like, I finally Thursday, Friday and Saturday

and next weekend

Where people tend more

For partying and drinking, and all this

Police have implemented a system

Operating on the breathalyzer

That after 9 or 10 pm

In certain parts of the city begin to stop vehicles

If you are drunk

You see, is that's what happens, then press, television and such, everything overstate

Not to go to Mexico, eh

Someday I'll see you, Julio.

Come up with question number two

This is reflected in the quality of life, to get a reference such as the quality of life in Spain and Mexico.

It is a triple question, responds to the order you want, look ...

The average salary of a Mexican in your country.

How much does a house, an apartment, or ranch, or where more or less live there?

And above all, how much is worth a loaf of bread?

Responds with the order you want, Julio ... I am attentive.

As for the quality of life, the Mexican worker

The minimum wage handled is 80 pesos 4 cents.

And usually the worker earns

weights around 1000 or 1500 pesos a fortnight

Which it is an average salary, right?

As for the middle-class worker

As for the bread, panettone piece is priced between 3 pesos to 10 pesos

Between that ranges bread here in Mexico

There is also another piece of bread called "Bobbin" we know here in Mexico as "Bolillo"

Which is a pan of water is this, look ...

This bread was

with which to "El Chavo del 8" his famous ham cake

So this is the bread of the famous "Chavo del 8", right ?, nothing else included

open, your slice of ham and ready

Your cake for good "Chavo del 8"

Well friend, food "run" here in Mexico, is priced at 35 pesos on average

This meal includes soup

a stew

A piece of meat with vegetables, salad

and even there

And if perhaps a dessert and a small gelatin

Two tablespoons you eat it

So if we realize this friend

35 pesos food "corrida" is still half the minimum wage

So to give you an idea of ​​more or less

as things are going here in Mexico

As for housing, there is a subsidy called "Infonavit"

For the worker who gives credit

That credit for workers ranges from two hundred thousand pesos to one million pesos

Obviously you have to qualify for this credit

And it is a credit that you are going to pay in 30 years if we are either going, right?

That every month you are going to give your fee to cover that debt

And I would also like to add that not all workers have this right, right?

They need to be insured, have social insurance

And also they have this "Infonavit"

To take home

Not all workers in Mexico have this opportunity

Speak in a way to have your credit, and so is generally friend

as life is lived in Mexico

Okay, Julio ... Question 3.

What do you have in the happy box 200 subscribers? ... Come throw me even a little one track, to see what's inside. I can not hold up to 200 subscribers, it is a long wait.

Gosh, friend!

For that, the truth, I do not know, look

Here I have the box, only a very handsome boy brought me but

Look

We expect, and I would also like to reach 200 subscribers

To know that is what has this box

I already anxious, and I want to know what you have

But we have no other, nothing but wait and find out all together

You do not want, eh!

Well, then tell me where you're going to put the "Millennium Falcon" that you're doing with the fascicles?

Come on! ... Morán has another, by the way.

And the "Millennium Falcon" ... that there is no plan to display it, just in my house, I think I'll give

A very cool case

Let's See What occurs to me, but if I want it put inside a glass, something that is not there ... well ...

It is not and powdered, which is well guarded, when completed

And we must have patience to let the circle number 13

There more or less, we are waiting

So expect Friend

It would be a bad Spanish if I do not ask for boxing, eh

Although there is famous wrestling

I know that Marquez is a great fighter

Mexican. I'm a geek authentic boxing, you know?

And my gloves, look

A "Cleto Reyes"

Made in Mexico ... uh ... put it on the label

So you can see if I'm spending majete who brought you there in the country.

Well, my question is this, Julio

At any time you were in the four fights that have made Marquez and Pacquiao, you supported my favorite boxer, Pacquiao?

And be careful what you answer, we are not going to melt the face, tron

To me the box, and I like

So, what I can tell?

But clearly I was with Marquez

As I'm good Mexican

We must support the peasants, right?

It is my way, so at that time in that last fight we touched win

¡¡¿WHAT YOU DO NOT LIKE BOXING ?? !! Now that's a low blow that have never given me before, tron!

July Okay ... let the fifth question

I have to say that I am a follower and fan of "Enrique Bunbury"

Enrique Bunbury, his wife is Mexican and photographer as well

Joseph was not called ... I do not remember, but ...

I have to tell as a curiosity, that

when we went on our honeymoon

We had hired the Yucatan Peninsula

Cancun, we would not go there at typical hotel, resort hotelario milk in Mexico

And he left the bird flu which gave so much hype

So in the end we decided to change the trip to the Fjords ...

And we piramos see "Copenhagen" and "Berguen" and all the action ...

To see if we saw the Rubius and his family, but the question is ...

Look where we left your spine to know Mexico

The question is that I mess ...

What singer and singers, or is the current music you hear now there in Mexico?

Apart from Rockeros of "Metallica" like me, you have there a picture and all milk

Is not there a famous singer and music currently listen, eh?

A roll here as flamenco and sevillanas

Well, right now, what is more ringing in Mexico are several issues

It is "Maluma" is also a song called "My People"

For me in particular, all these issues I do not like my, uh, and I'm not a fan of

Much of this sort of thing

I like a little more "G Man"

And I would recommend you could hear is more Mexican, something more than "Vicente Fernández"

"By your damn love"

And songs like that you know

"And no one who understands me"

"But I'm still the king"

But personally what I like is this, listen:

There more or less these are the things that I like.

And these sounds are what I would recommend, friend.

Well, thank you for giving me this opportunity July out there on your channel

And all milk ... I have to tell you that for me has been a real piece of pleasure

This opens the possibilities, already I put there in the "Watchful eye"

In the Mendez brothers, Puerto Rico

At that echo and a wink, we could agree to make a "Puerto Rico - Spain". What do you think?

This is also a general call if anyone wants to do a collaboration here on channel "Jandro Lion" and speak a little of their country.

He may be handsome, right?

Friend me I've had amazing in this video.

I send a big hello to you, your whole community, all your friends

Dale little hand up this video, NEWSLETTER Subscribe, leave a comment and see you soon.

Xander, forgive me, I know I stole you some idea, if you want you varnish it again skate, and all arranged. I put here a card to your video so do not get angry

Especially send greetings to "David Stone", which has to be our friend since I know how much.

There always leaves us well pimps comments

"Jesús Jaramillo" Also, with its amusement machine that while I do not know you.

And I'll write later

A Fernandoreir course

And Geek-Time

"Geek Time" is a good Mexican friend you are learning all we know of Filmora

Has a pretty nice channel ... You get a card, trunk!

For you to see that we get good Spanish and Mexican

And you know trunks ... as always I say ... "The trouble you, that we are going to take a recreational vice, tron".

Talue!

For more infomation >> We joined Mexico. Crossing channels, with "Julio KF". Special collaboration. #jandrolion - Duration: 11:12.

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Miss Piggy gives Selena Gomez a new nickname at WE Day - Duration: 0:41.

- Hi, I'm Selena Gomez. - And I'm Miss Piggy!

So Sel-mez... can I call you Sel-mez?

Well I mean I'd rather...

So Sel-mez, I hear you're hosting this year!

Yeah well, I've actually been to a few WE Days, but this is my second time hosting.

It's a celebration of incredible kids changing the world.

With special guests like Alicia Keys, DJ Khaled, Seth Rogen, and many more.

And moi!

Oh, of course.

I wonder why they didn't ask moi to host...

I don't know!

Maybe they thought you would... "hog" the camera...?

I'll give you 10 seconds head-start.

Ok!

For more infomation >> Miss Piggy gives Selena Gomez a new nickname at WE Day - Duration: 0:41.

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HERE WE GO CHARLIE CHILL IN REHAB BeOurGuest CHARLIE CHILLS CONTACT PERSON AND MORE DRAMA EXPOSED - Duration: 4:51.

hey guys let me read my disclaimer and then we'll get into the video

there's no nudity or sexual content no harmful or dangerous content no violent

or graphic content no copywriting no hateful content no threats no spam

misleading tags or scams in my description tags title video or

thumbnail with further ado I would just like to stop this video now I ran across

this video here of course somebody had to make a video when it

who else better than Isaac be our guest channel to rip apart this whole thing

about where Charlie chill at when we thought we were over that you know right

now where it stands allegedly he has 20 more days to go and Rehab and allegedly

the person who reported that he was on and rehab is the contact that's all we

need to know to just keep going on and on and on

picking after dissecting it it doesn't make any sense but who better than a do

it then Isaac he's saying in this video everybody's picking on him and saying

stuff about him and video so let me um you know voice my opinion on what I

think about that last video that came out with the contact person who put a

update that Charlie chills still in rehab and he has 20 more days ago and

that he's going to upload a video when he gets out of rehab I'm just to the

point who cares if Charlie Chill in rehab or not the fact of the matter is

whenever he gets up here on YouTube we don't know what's gonna come out of

Charlie Chill mouth it could be the truth some of the truth or lie so at the end

of the to take that much energy into

continuously making videos unless you've got something that you've been

researching and you find something that is the latest update that allegedly

could be true or something that is factual

Charlie chill shouldn't be in factor right now he should be a non-factor to all of

us it's just taking too much time and energy to figure out what's really going

on because at the end of the day that's Charlie chills life and he makes the

choices of what he's gonna do in that life of his he can get up here like I

said and tell the truth tell half of the truth or lie

we won't never know if he's telling the truth or if he's lying unless we are

flies on the wall and we're there you know right now currently wherever

Charlie chill is at so to keep beating this and people in the head with this

these videos of if Charlie chill rehab if he's not in rehab just let time

tell he will surface eventually I'm quite sure he had any sense he got a

little taste of some of the YouTube money I don't I don't think that he

would start making videos at this point because I feel as though soon as he's

able to start uploading videos again and his revenue start picking back up and

it's in this subscriber count' starts growing he's gonna want to get a taste

more of that YouTube money because it's fast money for Charlie chill and he's

not gonna have to rely on being someone's friend or befriending someone

to get a handout so his far as I'm concerned

let's just wait and see you know what happens but for now we need to really

leave the Charlie chill thing alone and and and just wait to see when he uploads

the video and what he's he has to stay from there I don't want to make this

video too long I just wanted to make up just fast update video of the latest of

the Charlie chill rehab crap and I'm saying crap because that all is that's

all it is is crap it's a bunch of crap just just wasted audio being used up

talking about the same thing over and over and over again

and it's really no point by the end of the video there's no point there's

nothing you've learnt from the video or anything it's senseless

so into the next time I'll see you guys in the next video bye for now

For more infomation >> HERE WE GO CHARLIE CHILL IN REHAB BeOurGuest CHARLIE CHILLS CONTACT PERSON AND MORE DRAMA EXPOSED - Duration: 4:51.

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What We Can Learn From The Departed In Spirit - Duration: 5:17.

What We Can Learn From The Departed In Spirit

By consciousreminder

�Perhaps they are not stars in the sky, but rather openings where our loved ones shine

down to let us know they are happy.� � Eskimo Saying

When you lose a loved one it can feel like a part of you has also died.

You may not feel like yourself or you may be in a complete state of shock before you

can move through any other emotions.

You may wonder if the grief will ever go away.

You may also wonder if your loved one is okay on the other side and if he or she is still

suffering.

You may also wonder if your loved one is perhaps still around in Spirit and how you can communicate

with him or her.

These are some of the common concerns and emotions of my clients in my work as a professional

intuitive and spiritual medium.

I never dreamed that I would be a medium but when you hear the call to your purpose you

have two choices: 1.

Run or 2.

Answer.

I decided to answer and embrace my gifts as a medium.

As years have progressed in my career, most of my clients seek to connect with their loved

ones who have crossed over.

They come in seeking guidance, answers or closure.

I don�t prey on people�s vulnerabilities and always honor my work as a medium.

It is a sacred practice and experience for me and the client.

From my years of doing readings, there are some common universal messages I have noticed

spirit loved ones want to give to their family or friends.

They may communicate to simply say, �I�m proud of you� or �I love you.� Other

times if the relationship was challenging they come back asking for forgiveness and

express remorse for their behavior and actions.

A story I will never forget: A client came in once and her ex-boyfriend who passed away

came through profusely apologizing to her for how abusive he was.

Prior to our appointment she had trouble sleeping and nightmares from that relationship for

many years.

After our appointment, a year later she came back and told me that her nightmares stopped

immediately after our initial appointment and she had finally met a man who she absolutely

adored and who adored her.

I was over the moon happy for her and for the powerful work Spirit had done to bring

her the peace she needed.

You see, when we cross over to the afterlife and evolve, we change too.

We see life differently and reflect on how we lived.

Spirit will go through a life review and sometimes work through karmic scars such as in the case

with my client and her ex-boyfriend to try to fix what was done.

Your spirit loved ones will try to repair the past as best they can, guide you to fulfill

your dreams, and send you messages along the way to show they are still around.

Here are some universal signs and messages the departed want you to know:

They can absolutely hear your thoughts about them and will try to respond in a way that

will resonate most with you.

They are around helping and guiding you in your journey and want to see you happy.

They send people as angels to look out for you in their place.

Did someone come into your life shortly before or after your loved one passed?

He/she may be an angel sent from your loved one to help you in this transition.

They are okay and not suffering.

They are restored to full health and life upon transition and no longer carry the body

they once had.

They will visit you in your sleep and send you messages in your sleep.

If it felt real, it was.

They may send you reoccurring special dates or number sequences related to them such as

their birthday or anniversary to catch your attention.

They may also send you gifts through people.

For example, a client�s daughter who passed said she would send a puppy as a gift to her

brother and that would be her gift to them.

Shortly before her birthday a co-worker surprised her with a puppy that her son absolutely loves.

If you are wondering if your loved one is around, try asking.

For a few minutes before you start your day ask him or her to show you a sign or send

a message that he/she is still around.

Trust and be open to the possibilities.

You may even want to light a candle or send out your thoughts to them that you are thinking

of them.

Be open to the magic of receiving a message back.

There are no coincidences.

For more infomation >> What We Can Learn From The Departed In Spirit - Duration: 5:17.

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Supernatural - Way Down We Go(Tribute) - Duration: 3:35.

supernatural

Dean

dad

sweet dreams Sam

Mary

Sam

get your brother and run to the street

don't look back run run Dean

that the world is something that I've ever put above you

never anyone in my life

floodplains others finally

all right Dean

everything will be fine

don't worry I'm here

Dean

I have to tell you

what

I have to tell you I'm proud of us

stupid

moron

For more infomation >> Supernatural - Way Down We Go(Tribute) - Duration: 3:35.

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6 Pieces of Bad Advice We Give Kids | Conscious Reminder - Duration: 11:20.

6 Pieces of Bad Advice We Give Kids

Most parents want their kids to be successful in life — and so we teach them attitudes that we believe will help them achieve their goals.

But as I learned while researching my book The Happiness Track, many widely-held theories about what it takes to be successful are proving

to be counterproductive.

Sure, they may produce results in the short term.

But eventually, they lead to burnout and — get this — less success.

Here are a few of the most damaging things many of us are currently teaching our children about success, and what to teach them instead.

What we tell our kids: Focus on the future.

Keep your eyes on the prize.

What we should be telling them: Live (or work) in the moment.

It's hard to stay tightly focused.

Research shows our minds tend to wander 50% of the time we're awake.

And when our minds wander, we often start to brood over the past or worry about the future — thereby leading to negative emotions like

anger, regret, and stress.

A mind that is constantly trying to focus upon the future — from getting good grades to applying to colleges — will be prone to greater

anxiety and fear.

While a little bit of stress can serve as a motivator, long-term chronic stress impairs our health as well as our intellectual faculties,

such as attention and memory.

As a consequence, focusing too hard on the future can actually impair our performance.

Children do better, and feel happier, if they are learn how to stay in the present moment.

And when people feel happy, they're able to learn faster, think more creatively, and problem-solve more easily.

Studies even suggest that happiness makes you 12% more productive.

Positive emotions also make you more resilient to stress — helping you to overcome challenges and setbacks more quickly so you can get back

on track.

It's certainly good for children to have goals they're working toward.

But instead of always encouraging them to focus on what's next on their to-do list, help them stay focused on the task or conversation at

hand.

What we tell our kids: Stress is inevitable — keep pushing yourself.

What we should be telling them instead: Learn to chill out.

Children are feeling anxious at younger and younger ages, worrying about grades and feeling pressure to do better at school.

Most distressingly, we're even seeing stress-induced suicides in children — especially in high-achieving areas like Palo Alto in Silicon

Valley.

The way we conduct our lives as adults often communicates to children that stress is an unavoidable part of leading a successful life.

We down caffeine and over-schedule ourselves during the day, living in a constant state of overdrive and burning ourselves out — and at

night, we're so wired that we use alcohol, sleep medication, or Xanax to calm down.

All in all, this is not a good lifestyle to model for children.

It's no surprise that research shows that children whose parents are dealing with burnout at work are more likely than their peers to

experience burnout at school.

I recommend that parents consider teaching their children the skills they will need to be more resilient in the face of stressful events.

While we can't change the work and life demands that we face at work and at school, we can use techniques such as meditation,

yoga and breathing to better deal with the pressures we face.

These tools help children learn to tap into their parasympathetic "rest and digest" nervous system (as opposed to the "fight or flight"

stress response).

What we tell our kids: Stay busy.

What we should be telling them: Have fun doing nothing.

Even in our leisure time, people in Western societies tend to value high-intensity positive emotions like excitement,

as opposed to low-intensity emotions like calm.

(The opposite is true in East Asian countries.) This means that our kids' schedules are often packed to the brim with extracurricular

activities and family outings, leaving little downtime.

There's nothing wrong with excitement, fun, and seeking out new experiences.

But excitement, like stress, exhausts our physiology by tapping into our "fight or flight" system — and so we can unwittingly prompt our

children to burn through their energy after school or on weekends, leaving them with fewer resources for the times when they need it most.

Moreover, research shows that our brains are more likely to come up with brilliant ideas when we are not focusing (thus the proverbial a-ha

moment in the shower).

So instead of over-scheduling kids, we should be blocking out time when they can be left to their own devices.

Children can turn any situation — whether they are sitting in a waiting room or walking to school — into an opportunity for play.

They may also choose calming activities like reading a book, taking the dog for a walk, or simply lying under a tree and staring up at the

clouds — all of which will allow them to approach the rest of their lives from a more centered, peaceful place.

Giving your kids downtime will help them to be more creative and innovative.

And just as importantly, it will help them learn to relax.

The point here is not to never challenge them or deprive them of opportunities for learning,

the point is not to overschedule and overcommit them to the point where they don't have opportunities to learn independent play,

to be with themselves and daydream, to learn to be happy just being rather than always doing.

What we tell our kids: Play to your strengths.

What we should be telling them: Make mistakes and learn to fail.

Parents tend to identify their children by their strengths and the activities that come naturally to them.

They say their child is a " a math person," a "people person," or "an artist." But research by Stanford University's Carol Dweck shows that

this mindset actually boxes your child into a persona, and makes them less likely to want to try new things that they may not be good at.

When a kid receives praise primarily for being athletic, for example, they're less likely to want to leave their comfort zone and try out

for drama club.

This can make them more anxious and depressed when faced with failure or challenges.

Why?

Because they believe that, if they encounter obstacles in a given area, that make them "not good at" the activity.

But our brains are wired to learn new things.

And it can only be a good thing to learn from our mistakes while we're young.

So instead identifying your child's strengths, teach them that they actually can learn anything — as long as they try.

Research by Dweck, author of best-selling book Mindset on this topic, shows children will then be more optimistic and even enthusiastic in

the face of challenges, knowing that they just need to give it another go to improve.

And they will be less likely to feel down about themselves and their talents.

What we tell our kids: Know your weaknesses, and don't be soft.

What we should be telling them: Treat yourself well.

We also tend to think that criticism is important for self-improvement.

But while self-awareness is of course important, parents often inadvertently teach their children to be too self-critical.

If a parent tells a child that she should try to be more outgoing, for example, the child may internalize that as a criticism of her

naturally introverted personality.

But research on self-criticism shows that it is basically self-sabotage.

It keeps you focused on what's wrong with you, thereby decreasing your confidence.

It makes you afraid of failure, which hurts your performance, makes you give up more easily, and leads to poor decision-making.

And self-criticism makes you more likely to be anxious and depressed when faced with a challenge.

Instead, parents should encourage children to develop attitudes of self-compassion — which means treating yourself as you would a friend in

times of failure or pain.

This doesn't mean that your children should be self-indulgent or let themselves off the hook when they mess up.

It simply means that they learn not to beat themselves up.

A shy child with self-compassion, for example, will tell herself that it's okay to feel shy sometimes and that her personality simply isn't

as outgoing as others — and that she can set small, manageable goals to come out of her shell.

This mindset will allow her to excel in the face of challenge, develop new social skills, and learn from mistakes.

What we tell our kids: It's a dog-eat-dog world — so look out for number one.

What we should be telling them: Show compassion to others.

Research shows that, from childhood onward, our social connections are the most important predictor of health, happiness,

and even longevity.

Having positive relationships with other people is essential for our well-being, which in turn influences our intellectual abilities and

ultimate success.

Moreover, likability is one of the strongest predictors of success — regardless of actual skills.

Wharton professor Adam Grant's book Give & Take shows that you express compassion to those around you and create supportive relationships

instead of remaining focused on yourself, you will actually be more successful in the long term — as long as you don't let yourself be

taken advantage of.

Children are naturally compassionate and kind.

But as psychologist Jean Twenge has written about in her book Generation Me, young people are also becoming increasingly self-involved.

So it's important to encourage children's natural instincts to care about other people's feelings and learn to put themselves in other

people's shoes.

It's true that it's a tough world out there.

But it would be a lot less tough if we all emphasized cutthroat competition less, and put a higher premium on learning to get along.

For more infomation >> 6 Pieces of Bad Advice We Give Kids | Conscious Reminder - Duration: 11:20.

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Hyperloop One Getting Closer To Changing The Way We Travel - Duration: 0:31.

For more infomation >> Hyperloop One Getting Closer To Changing The Way We Travel - Duration: 0:31.

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T⏰ - What does 'please' really mean? Why do we say it? #Showerthoughts - Duration: 3:32.

For more infomation >> T⏰ - What does 'please' really mean? Why do we say it? #Showerthoughts - Duration: 3:32.

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What we eat in a day (vegan) #6 - Duration: 3:00.

What we eat in a day

Breakfast: tofu scramble with green beans

Tofu

Garlic

Coriander, paprika, turmeric

Black salt

Hot sauce

Tomatoes

Green beans

Snack: raspberry smoothie

Raspberries

Soy milk

Banana

Lunch: stuffed pattypan squashes

Tomatoes, spinach, coriander

Garlic

Rice

Red pepper, blue fenugreek, coriander, paprika, cumin

Salt

Olive oil

Bake until soft

Dinner: baked aubergines with greens

Bake until ready

Coriander

Basil

Garlic

Lemon juice

Tahini

Red pepper

Olive oil

Salt

Spread the sauce

Ingredients' proportions are in the description box

Subscribe to our channel for more

For more infomation >> What we eat in a day (vegan) #6 - Duration: 3:00.

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Demi Lovato and Animal make noise for WE Day - Duration: 0:26.

WE DAY! WE DAY! WE DAY!!!!!

Isn't WE Day amazing? Schools, families and all these young people

coming together to change the world?

Yeah, cool!

Hey, what do you say we make some noise together? I brought my stix!

Let's do it!

For more infomation >> Demi Lovato and Animal make noise for WE Day - Duration: 0:26.

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We're Gross!!!!! - Duration: 5:41.

Yes she is sunburned! Wear sunscreen kids.

I think its a challenge?

The paper of questions fell

MUMBLING.............

OK?

WHAT?????????

We know that our talking is off! sorry

For more infomation >> We're Gross!!!!! - Duration: 5:41.

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[CC][Engsub] 170803 Wanna One Go EP1 | We will live together now - Duration: 2:17.

The beginning of the incident 24 days before 1st day living together

Where is this place?

Woah~ So high so high

[Ttararattan~] Welcome~ It's your first time in the dorm right?

[Welcome you to Wanna One's dorm] This is our house~~~ / Oh daebak!!!

Woah super large

Woah so great

Nice Full revelation of Wanna One's dorm

[Crowded The dorm life with 11 people living together, how will it be?] There's a stair in the house / There are 2 floors!

Totally touched

It was just like a dream when I walked into the dorm. It looks just like an amusement park

[Happy] I think this is no joke

[Noisy] Ok! Good good

Hey!

So noisy!

[Niel grandpa appears] Yah! So noisy!

[Sudden situation theater] Oh~ Romeo

Oh~ Romeo~

[Violent fact] Isn't it Juliet? Juliet?

Oh~ Juliet~

I'm Romeong~ / I'm Rojisung

Why am I Romeong~

[Coldness] It's me. Juliet

[A.k.a Emperor Sanitary worker] Woah

This place would great for washing dishes.

[Shining x2] it (the face) is already working hard

[Reality's must-have item] What's this? Why are there this many cameras?

Woah there are super many cameras!

Where are the cameras? In the fridge?

If you open it, inside, on the right

[Jjajan~ We're watching you] Hello~

[My eyes are fixed on Niel] Why is this thing here?

Smiley

Try catching me~

Shocked OOOOHHHH

[Totally amazed] Yah yah yah look at this x2

[Cannot miss even just 1 minute or 1 second] It's following me x2. It's following me now

Yes x2

Camera ah You can look at me only~

[This room is also absorbed in the camera] Ok. Stand here first. Start!

Catch the ugly one!

Drum rolls

Jisung ah... Sorry we can't protect you...

The camera... hyung hyung...

The camera doesn't lie

Why can't I acknowledge this?

[Say-whatever festival] Korean machinery (?) is extremely precise

[His face is working hard Minhyunie has come] Come. You try standing here too

[Try again] All 3 stand here x2

Starlight is falling Syalalala

I cannot miss handsome boy Catch the handsome one~

[Did you call me? Wanna One's visual is NAYANA] Hello~

For more infomation >> [CC][Engsub] 170803 Wanna One Go EP1 | We will live together now - Duration: 2:17.

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

We were related, until you gave THAT answer! | Family Feud - Duration: 0:33.

STEVE: JOEL,

NAME SOMETHING THAT WOULD

BE HARD TO EAT IF YOU ONLY HAD

ONE TOOTH.

JOEL: PEANUTS.

PATRICK: GOOD ANSWER.

STEVE: APPRECIATE IT.

APPRECIATE YOU. IS THAT YOUR

FAMILY BACK THERE?

>> NO.

JOEL: [LAUGHS] NO.

STEVE: OH, OH, OH, OH, OH, NOW,

OH, OH--NOW YOU WANT TO DISOWN

HIM? OH, RIGHT AFTER THE PEANUT

ANSWER, YOU DON'T WANT TO HAVE

NOTHING TO DO WITH HIM NO MORE?

WELL, LET'S GO SEE. PEANUT.

For more infomation >> We were related, until you gave THAT answer! | Family Feud - Duration: 0:33.

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We are running out of effective antibiotics fast - Duration: 9:04.

JUDY WOODRUFF: But, first, we are beginning a special series on the growing concerns around

antibiotics, why there is more resistance to the drugs from so-called superbugs that

can be dangerous and even fatal, and why it has been difficult to create a newer class

of drugs to solve this problem.

It is a story that involves the worlds of science, medicine, business and economics.

So, we asked our science and economics correspondents, Miles O'Brien and Paul Solman, to team up.

Their coverage will continue over the next couple of weeks.

We start with Miles' report.

It's part of our weekly series on the Leading Edge of science and technology.

Every Sunday night, I put up the pills for a week at a time.

MILES O'BRIEN: Thirty times a day.

JANE TECCE, Patient: Amlodipine, that's a blood pressure medicine.

MILES O'BRIEN: Each and every day.

JANE TECCE: Prednisone for rejection.

MILES O'BRIEN: Jane Tecce takes a pill.

JANE TECCE: This is hydralazine.

That's another blood pressure medicine.

MILES O'BRIEN: No complaints from her.

She's just grateful to be alive.

JANE TECCE: I'm grateful.

I wouldn't have gotten to see my grandkids being born and, you know, just see life.

So you sacrifice things.

So that's how I look at it.

It's a tradeoff.

MILES O'BRIEN: In 2011, after years of battling a rare genetic disease, Jane received the

heart and kidney of an 18-year-old man at Tufts Medical Center in Boston.

Her daily pill regimen is designed to stop her body from rejecting the organs, but it

was another drug, an antibiotic, that fueled an infection that nearly killed her.

A month after her transplants, she contracted pneumonia.

JANE TECCE: They put me back in, and I was very sick.

I knew I wasn't doing well at all, and a lot of pain.

I had pain as if the ribs were affected and things like that, so they started pumping

me through the I.V. with a lot of the antibiotics, and I think that was the beginning.

By February, I had been diagnosed with the C. Diff.

MILES O'BRIEN: C. Diff, clostridium difficile, is a so-called superbug, meaning a bacteria

that is not easily stemmed by antibiotics.

In fact, it thrives in people taking the drugs.

Each year, superbugs infect more than 2.25 million Americans, killing at least 38,000.

WOMAN: The first thing you do is, you put on your yellow gown.

MILES O'BRIEN: At Tufts, doctors who come in contact with patients infected with superbugs

like C. Diff must take great precautions.

As the list of antibiotic-resistant bacteria grows, this has become a much more common

routine.

So have some extraordinary efforts to prevent the spread of infection from patient to patient.

Here, they bombard rooms with ultraviolet light, which causes genetic damage to bacteria,

rendering them unable to reproduce.

Shira Doron is the physician director of the anti-microbial stewardship program at Tufts.

DR.

SHIRA DORON, Tufts Medical Center: We are seeing patients with infections that cannot

be treated by any antibiotic on the market.

And we're having to tell patients, we don't have anything for you.

And so that makes it really scary and really concerning.

MILES O'BRIEN: Antibiotics are organic compounds that attack and kill bacteria.

They are often derived from microbes found in soil and from mold.

That's where Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming discovered the first true antibiotic,

penicillin, in 1928.

It, and a host of others developed in the decades that followed, revolutionized medicine.

But it WAS no surprise that these miracle drugs would eventually lose their potency.

In fact, when Dr. Fleming received the Nobel Prize, he warned of the danger that the ignorant

man may easily underdose himself, and by exposing his microbes to non-lethal quantities of the

drug, make them resistant.

Doctors began using penicillin to treat patients in 1942.

Only three years later, they encountered the first resistant bacteria.

Helen Boucher is a professor of medicine in the division of infectious diseases at Tufts.

DR.

HELEN BOUCHER, Tufts Medical Center: Resistance happens naturally.

So, bacteria have various mechanisms to survive.

MILES O'BRIEN: It is survival of the fittest, evolution at warp speed.

Bacteria adapt very quickly in the face of the assault.

They can learn to strengthen their cell walls to repel the antibiotics.

They can develop pumps to expel them.

Or they can make enzymes that destroy them.

DR.

HELEN BOUCHER: So, they figure out ways to evade the effect of the antibiotic.

And this happens in nature, and it happens faster in the presence of antibiotics.

MILES O'BRIEN: You sort of make it sound like bacteria are smart.

DR.

HELEN BOUCHER: They're very smart.

MILES O'BRIEN: And they are adapting very fast, creating a big public health crisis.

KIRTHANA BEAULAC, Tufts Medical Center: Unfortunately, these bugs mutate faster than we can come

up with new drugs.

So, the only realistic strategy is to use the antibiotics that we have better.

MILES O'BRIEN: Kirthana Beaulac is the pharmacist director of the Anti-Microbial Stewardship

Program at Tufts.

We met in the central pharmacy, where they store the vast majority of their medications

for patients.

Here, they see themselves as a last line of defense.

Prescriptions for antibiotics are carefully scrutinized, particularly the drugs that attack

a broad spectrum of bacteria.

KIRTHANA BEAULAC: It requires constant evaluation of the way we do things, and constant reminders,

and really a critical assessment of everything we do every single day to make this -- to

really make any headway on this battle.

MILES O'BRIEN: You sound like you're at war.

KIRTHANA BEAULAC: Kind of.

Yes, this is.

This is -- we call it the arms race.

MILES O'BRIEN: In her laboratory, Dr. Boucher and her team are constantly analyzing cultures

of bacteria from patients in the hospital, always on the lookout for another mutation,

another superbug.

DR.

HELEN BOUCHER: The infection preventionists come to our meetings every day at 11:30.

And they are tuned in to be looking for anything, any one case that's new that requires them

to go do investigation.

And that's how we prevent anything from becoming a bigger problem.

MILES O'BRIEN: The longer bacteria see an antibiotic, the more likely they are to develop

resistance.

It poses a conundrum for doctors as they weigh the health of an individual patient vs. society

as a whole.

DR.

�MD-BO�SHIRA DORON: I think there has been a general feeling that it's better to

err on the side of caution, and that caution equals prescribe.

And I am trying to impart the message that caution might actually be not prescribing.

MILES O'BRIEN: The hunt for new drugs to prescribe is not easy.

Scientists say they have already picked the low-hanging fruit.

New microbes that lead to new antibiotics are no longer easy to find.

So, we are running out of antibiotics quickly.

My colleague Paul Solman met with a woman in London who could be the poster child for

a post-antibiotic world.

Eight years ago, Emily Morris was hospitalized with a E. coli superbug, the first of eight

serious bouts with resistant bacteria.

EMILY MORRIS, Battled Resistant Bacteria: So, I could have had antibiotics when I didn't

need them, and also because I had so many.

MILES O'BRIEN: When she was young, she was prescribed antibiotics frequently because

of a hereditary condition that makes her prone to urinary tract infections.

EMILY MORRIS: I was just very lucky, very lucky that a last-resort antibiotic did work.

A lot of the time, it doesn't work.

It kills thousands of people a year.

And these superbugs, I have been told, they are going to kill more than cancer by 2050.

MILES O'BRIEN: After we finished shooting, I sat down with Paul Solman to compare notes.

Emily's story, that's a tough one.

And I think our heart goes out to her, anybody watching that, thinking this could happen

to any one of us.

And as I was shooting the story, I was thinking an awful lot about how close I was getting

to these nasty bugs.

Were you thinking the same thing?

PAUL SOLMAN: Yes, I'm a little hypochondriacal to begin with.

I was now becoming germophobic, washing my hands all the time.

I mean seriously.

MILES O'BRIEN: As a good American, I assumed going into this series that there had to be

some kind of silver bullet solution that will get us out of this.

But it's not as simple as that.

The drugs just aren't there, are they?

PAUL SOLMAN: You would think there's enormous, essentially insatiable demand for the product,

so, obviously, the market is going to provide it.

But it turns out, it's not anywhere near that simple.

And that's what the next installment of this series is about.

MILES O'BRIEN: All right, we will go to the dismal science next time.

For the "PBS NewsHour," I am science correspondent Miles O'Brien.

PAUL SOLMAN: And I'm economics correspondent Paul Solman.

For more infomation >> We are running out of effective antibiotics fast - Duration: 9:04.

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

Back to School | Camper Van Life - Duration: 12:51.

This week…we go back to school at YouTube Space LA, introduce a friend to a local favorite and Leo gets a visitor in the camper van.

Alright, we're off to YouTube Space LA, let's get going.

It's going to be hot in the Valley, I think it's going to be a lot cooler on that side of the hill.

[Joe] So what are you looking forward to in the class?

I'd really like to see the live streaming in action and have them show us exactly how to do it.

[Joe] Look at the little pony!

They're going to talk about live streaming on mobile.

and also how to do it on desktop.

But I think there is more of a push for mobile live streaming.

And the parking lot begins.

We're going about 5 miles per hour.

We've got 20 miles to go.

Kait and I both used to commute in this every single day.

It's one of the big things that prompted us to consider a lifestyle like this

and actually get out of Los Angeles, get on the road and live life for ourselves rather than being stuck in a parking lot for 3 hours a day.

I figured in the 10 years I was at my last job,

I had spent over a year of my life sitting in traffic.

When I came to that realization, it was like a light bulb had gone off that something had to change.

We couldn't afford property down by where we worked so it was either we move and find something

Or we do something else.

And this is something else.

[Kait] We became nomads. Yep, we became nomads. [Kait] and now we live the van life.

And we're much happier for it.

[Kait] Are you backing in? Backing it in.

Gotta make sure the step comes in.

[Kait] Back to school.

Yes, back to school like Rodney Dangerfield.

I love that movie!

[Joe] What are you going for?

I'm going for the YouTube teddy bear.

I have a good feeling.

Come on teddy bear!!!

I got one! I got one!

Don't fall, don't fall!

Ah I'm so excited!

I can't believe I got a teddy bear!

This just made my day!

Now that was a good class and maybe we should do some more live streaming?

[Kait] I think we should definitely do, maybe once a month?

Yeah, once a month, once a week.

[Kait] Well let's not get ahead of ourselves. Once a month to start.

What I thought was crazy is when they were talking about people who are live streaming 24/7.

[Kait] Well I definitely want to check out those channels.

[Kait] That's pretty impressive.

[Kait] Alright, to the Venice office.

That's why they call it the binocular building.

Hi, my name is Sarah Pittman.

I'm here with the Russos in their awesome campervan.

That now I'm going to go shop for because this is my new obsession.

We were fortunate enough to connect with them.

We've been following them on YouTube forever.

We want to do the whole van life, RV life.

We're kind of making the move, saving up to make the transition.

So being able to experience this, and see, you know where the movies happen, where the magic happens, everything like that.

Is fantastic and I'm obsessed with this van and I think need one.

They've just changed my life, I love it!

They're actually looking to transition to RV life but now that they've seen our camper van, they think they could actually do a camper van instead of a larger RV.

I'm really excited to see where their journey takes them.

With all the road grime on this thing, it's time to wash the camper van.

This is a lot easier and a lot quicker than trying to wash the Class A.

Plus it's a lot safer.

Being up on that roof, washing the top was a bit sketchy.

[Kait] Well I did it most of the time.

I was worried for you.

[Kait] I'm sure you were.

Having the sky light is pretty convenient.

We're head back to YouTube SpaceLA.

Today, it's a class on audio.

I know our audio needs a little bit of work, hopefully we're going to learn a few things.

And make it that much better.

Alright, let's go get to class.

It's back to school, part 2!

And I have my coffee.

With Leo hair on top of it.

We're not the only camper van.

[Kait] I think that's more of a production van.

I don't think so.

No, it looks like somebody is living out of that.

That, is a production truck.

That is a camper van.

[Kait] What kind is it?

It's a VW, how do you now recognize this?

[Kait] I'm not used to see that rooftop.

[Kait] Big stretch!

[Joe] It's nice and cool in there.

Well you had the fan on high.

That was actually a great class.

A lot to kind of take back and digest. Figure out how can we make our sound better .

I think every situation is different.

We're not in a studio recording this stuff, we're always running and gunning pulling the phone out.

How do we make that the best possible.

[Kait] And it's not cheap to upgrade audio equipment. [Joe] Oh no!

[Kait] That one mic I couldn't believe was $1,000!

Yes, and I don't think that's on the spectrum of being expensive.

[Kait] No, that's what's crazy!

What do you think Leo?

We might have to take some of your food money.

[Kait] He says, I like to pant in the background of your audio.

We need the pant filter on our editing software.

[Kait] Alright, off to see some friends?

The VW bus we saw,

belongs to Fun for Louis.

He has a YouTube channel, I've seen some of his videos.

But I didn't recognize the van

As soon as I saw him drive by, he had that...his dreadlocks and looks exactly like he does in his videos and I was like "Ah it's Louis!"

[Kait] Who knew the whole time we were admiring Louis's van.

I would have liked to have met the guy, he seems like a very cool person.

[Kait] Well we missed him by a few seconds.

[Kait] What do you think of the camper van Shelton?

Pretty cool man!

[Kait] Could you live in here full time?

Ummmm I don't know.

I don't know if I would survive the bathroom.

[Kait] What about weekend trips?

Yeah, definitely weekend trips.

I don't know about full time though.

I could do the beach, or Yosemite or something like that.

I mean the bed is huge enough.

The only thing would be showering and if I fit on the cassette cause I'm a big guy.

The tonnage rule, I love it.

[Kait] Thank you!

Hi guys, how are you doing.

[Kait] Tomas! Hola, como esta?

[Kait] You weren't here yesterday!

No, I was at my house.

[Kait] What are you going to get?

Prosciutto and fresh mozzarella.

Large please, thank you.

[Kait] It was so weird to be here yesterday and not see you.

[Thomas] No, because I leave early today, I mean yesterday.

Basil, a little bit of olive oil.

Look at that, beautiful.

[Kait] This is their famous panzerotti.

[Kait] Tell us what you think.

Mmmm man.

[Kait] Cheesy, doughy, gooey.

I will tell you what, I'm glad I don't live that close to this place...I would never survive.

[Joe] Leo, you're getting a bath buddy.

[Kait] He thinks he's going for a walk.

[Kait] Poor guy.

[Kait] He doesn't know what's coming.

[Kait] Good boy!

[Joe] Leo, how's it feel to be clean bud?

You certainly look a lot better.

It's just going to take a couple days to get you dry now.

[Kait] Lucy! Hi!

Welcome to our humble abode.

[Kait] You ready for camper van life?

What do you think Leo, we might have a new hitchhiker.

[Kait] She's louder than Leo!

[Kait] I can't tell if he's happy or upset about this situation.

He likes it.

Ooooopa!

[Kait] Uncle Joe...uh, here comes Leo.

[Kait] Leo's like, I don't get to be on the dinette, what's happening?

I'd put Leo up here but he refuses...so.

Do you like coffee?

Lucy, can I have a kiss?

[Kait] Oh my God!

Next time, we are hosting a Live Stream where we answer your questions on Camper Van Life.

Join us here, Wednesday August 9th, 2pm Pacific.

If you can't make it, it will be on VOD.

For any of you Patrons out there, make sure to submit your questions beforehand and we will see you then.

If you enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up.

Subscribe if you haven't already.

And if you want to start the camper van series from the beginning, check it out up here.

See you next time, bye!

For more infomation >> Back to School | Camper Van Life - Duration: 12:51.

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

Declassified Nuclear Films Prove We Were Wrong About Their Explosive Power - Duration: 5:30.

In July 1945, scientists detonated Trinity, the world's first nuclear bomb.

At the time, no one was sure what was going to happen.

But the test was a terrifying success, and it led to an international arms race.

The United States conducted over 200 atmospheric weapons tests for two key reasons: grandstanding

and fine tuning.

They wanted to prove their military might, and make better, more powerful nuclear weapons.

So, they tested out new designs in the air, on the ground, and at sea.

All of these massive fireballs were captured by strategically placed cameras around a test

site, and then analyzed by scientists.

The big number they were all after?

The yield, or the amount of energy released.

These films hold the best scientific data we have of our nuclear potential.

That is, until a weapons physicist decades later found out the data from these films

might be off a bit.

About 10 years ago, I was asked by my boss to write this computer code that would predict

nuclear fallout, and I couldn't seem to get the answer to agree no matter what I did.

That's Greg Spriggs, a weapons physicist with the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

I kept saying, "I'm not doing anything wrong in my computer code."

Typical scientific answer right, it's always somebody else's fault, not yours."

For weapons physicists like Greg, computer codes are everything.

They're used to verify the thousands of thermonuclear warheads on standby all across

the country.

And the original data for those codes came in part from these films.

That's the benefit of the data.

It provides ground truth to us , the reality, and it gives everybody a warm fuzzy feeling

back in Washington.

If it ever comes to a point that we have to use a nuke, it better work.

So Greg is working on a special project to scan and reanalyze all of the old films, and

make sure the data is up to snuff.

To do that, he had to track down thousands of Cold War era film canisters.

They'd been sitting in high security vaults for decades and hadn't been seen by the

public.

Some of the films had decomposed to the point where they had turned to dust.

The only way to accurately study these films is to digitally scan them.

And Greg needed an expert in film preservation.

So he brought in Jim Moye.

For Jim, each film is a mini time capsule.

It's kind of cool to be opening something and having no idea what's there.

Jim processes each nuclear film with this Hollywood-style scanner.

So far, they've digitally scanned over 4,000 films.

Then came the work of analyzing them.

There are four major effects.The first one I'll call prop radiation.

Greg spends a lot of time watching bombs explode.

These are the prop neutrons or the prop gammas that are coming off of the fission process.

We're looking at Housatonic 120256, the last nuclear shot before all atmospheric testing

came to a complete stop in 1962.

The next major effect is what's called the shockwave//a big, high-density air region

that is moving through the atmosphere at very high speed.

Measuring the size of a shock wave over time can reveal how much energy a bomb releases.

So this shockwave is moving very, very fast. and when it hits something ... You could imagine

standing in a hurricane, having that wind blowing at you at 200 miles an hour, well

this is much higher speed.

Back in the 1950s though, the shockwave was calculated by hand using a device called a

kodagraph.

They projected the film onto a grid and advanced it frame by frame.

Scientists we're doing this manually and very quickly, a process prone to human error.

we found that some of those yields could be off by as much as 20% or 30%.

But now, with these films digitized, Greg can analyze every single pixel in the fireball's

edge.

This means for the very first time, we're able to get a more accurate sense of a bomb's

yield.

The next effect was the thermal blast.

When the shock wave moves through the atmosphere it also heats the air, and that hot air then

starts to radiate thermal energy.

Two pulses emerge from a fireball.

The first pulse happens within 81 milliseconds and has 0.6% of thermal radiation.

The second carries about 99% of total thermal radiation energy from the blast.

Then the fourth major effect, of course, is nuclear fallout.The films can't measure

nuclear fallout, but measuring the cloud height can give experts a sense of the extent of

the damage.

I found that those cloud heights could be off by as much as 10% or 15%, which makes

a big difference in nuclear fallout.

By pinpointing more precise yields, Greg can update computer models to estimate the damage

from a bomb in different scenarios.

Ultimately, they're perfecting data for nuclear weapons that will hopefully never

be used.

Still, the pursuit is worth it.This is something new, this is what scientists live for, is

to kind of push the frontier forward just a little bit.

There's something unnerving about watching these mushroom clouds.

And while we aren't testing nuclear weapons anymore, these films stand as a terrifying

reminder of our nuclear past and potential.

For more infomation >> Declassified Nuclear Films Prove We Were Wrong About Their Explosive Power - Duration: 5:30.

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

(Liberian Music 2017) Z.WE - YOUNG ONES Official Music Video - Duration: 3:23.

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