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Kinsella on Liberty - KOL236 | Intellectual Nonsense: Fallacious Arguments for IP (Libertopia 2012)
Kinsella—Libertopia 2012: Intellectual Nonsense STEPHAN KINSELLA: Ready to start now? M: Yeah.
00:07 - STEPHAN KINSELLA: Okay, let’s get started. Good morning everybody. My name is Stephan Kinsella.
00:11 - I’m a patent attorney in Houston, and I’m a long-time libertarian, writer, thinker, etc. And I am a strong opponent of intellectual property, which some of you may know, even though it’s what I do for a living.
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Poetry Event on 4/22
–questionnaire question. When she answered a student questionnaire question about what she was interested in and she specifically said angel wing begonias, and particularly her particular favorite [? Matilde, ?] and that struck me because my dad had grown angel wing begonias.
00:25 - You can’t buy them in stores anymore. If you want an angel wing begonia plant you’re going to have to talk to Jen or me afterwards.
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Audit Committee Meeting May 12, 2021
all right. Good morning. I called to order the audit committee meeting for Conroe independent school district is 7:30 AM on may the 12th, 2021.
00:16 - First item on our agenda is citizens participation for anyone who has registered, you’ll be allowed to address the board only on the items posted on this agenda in accordance with board policy bed.
00:27 - Is there anyone that wishes to address the board?
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Faces of DiEM with Davide Castro and Claire Delstanche | DiEM25
[Music] [Davide] Hi there. Welcome to another episode of Faces of DiEM, our DiEM TV segment that brings you our members, so you get to know a little bit more about their stories and what it is that got them involved in our movement.
00:41 - Essentially, it’s about the stories of those that came across DiEM25, that were inspired by the movement’s message and got engaged with the project as activists on the ground.
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Debugging without debugger - investigating SQL Servers internal structures
Hello everyone. My name is Hugo Kornelis and in the next hour or so I am going to take you on a journey where we’re going to investigate some of the internals within SQL Server that we were probably not supposed to see, using tools that were not really intended for that specific purpose. Welcome to: Debugging without debugger: Investigating SQL Server’s internal structures. My name is Hugo Kornelis, and I make SQLServerFast.
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18 killed in WWII Sabotage, the sinking of the railroad ferry "SF Hydro" - Sail Mermaid - S4 E20
hey how do you doodly do my name is roger and since i’m not able to go sailing in the mediterranean right now like i’m supposed to do i would like to show you some of my home country norway in previous episodes i’ve been north in lofoten and westerol now i have returned to the southern norway in telmark today i will show you some war history from world war ii that is not only important in norway but to the world as we know it in the next episode i will take you to ryukan a valley so narrow with mountains so steep that they actually placed a mirror on a mountaintop to reflect the sunshine down into the valley this was where the fertilizer was made and thereby the heavy water later used to make the nuclear bump was discovered but in this episode we will cover the sinking of the railway ferry going out from this valley transporting the heavy water on its way to nazi germany so come along yes i’m on my way to yukon and this ferry named ammonia is the sister ship of the ferry that was sunk by the allied when it was transporting heavy water for germany that was gonna be used for making nuclear weapons so this is a piece of history not this boat were sunk but won’t exactly like it now i’m gonna go see if they have any guides available so maybe i can come on board and have a closer look this is this is ammonia and it’s the sister ship fairy of the hydro indeed the sister of hydro who was sunk during the war ammonia is the world’s biggest steam train ferry in fact oh really of this type and there are only four left in the world so this was this was not transporting cars at all it’s just trains only trains we have in fact transported cars on the other boat uh storygood uh at one point but she’s a diesel fairy so it’s you know yeah okay yeah whatever so when you’re coming aboard now you can see it’s a pretty big boat yes considering it can in fact carry 16 train carriages yeah and uh right now we don’t have the rails on because we are restoring to boat okay because we do hope to be able to drive trips with tourists yeah on this boat oh cool it is kind of cool yeah and of course she’s just a part in a longer story of transport history which spans from 1907 until today yeah because that’s when the rail railway was built and ammonia is the third boat that we got because the first one we got in 1901 nine and her name was rue confus same kind of boat but half the size just about but she wasn’t enough so already in 1914 we got the second one and that’s the slightly more familiar df hydro which person which was sunk indeed yeah and um uh once we got ammonia in 1929 quite a bit later it was ammonia and hydro who took the trip back and forth from this end to the other end of the lake what’s in the other end of the lake well it’s the other end of the railway yeah and that’s a town called newton there is also a town called norton although you need to take the train from tinoset all the way out to northumberland yeah okay yeah so it’s uh it’s about 30 kilometers on the lake and then 30 kilometers on railway then you’ll reach north yeah uh and uh of course the ferris also ran back and forth during the war normal transport the biggest difference was that they didn’t have any coal so they used normal firewood for for heating the steam engines um but of course what kind of goods were they transporting back then they were transporting uh transporting fertiliser yeah for the most part because that is what was being made at yeah it was synthetic fertilizer the first synthetic fertilizer in the world which was quite nice to have because everyone was dying of hunger at the time yeah and then suddenly they discovered something named heavy water they did indeed because they switched the way they made the synthetic fertilizer and when they did that they needed they needed the hydro hydrogen gas so they made a hydrogen gas factory that word so difficult to say correctly um and what they did was electrolysis of water which means you just send a lot of electricity into water so you split h2o into h and o separately but heavy water is more tightly bound which means you technically need more electricity to split it so with the normal amount of electricity being used heavy water remained because it is in fact in all water just in very very small amounts oh really yes and so it was discovered well there is water that isn’t doing what it’s supposed to that’s strange let’s use it to make coffee how did they discover this do you know that no it just remained a bit from the electrolysis because technically everything was supposed to turn into gas but some strange water remained and that was the heavy water they took a couple of years of trying and testing out but an american scientist by the name of harold yuri is the one who discovered called it deuterium oxide or heavy water obviously because it’s about 10 percent heavier than normal water and this was used for a variety of things sciencey things and then someone got the idea to make an atomic bomb with it which was an ideal because this was the only place it was being made so nazi germany took over the entire place and they started yes because this was in the 1940s yeah in the in the 1940s and so they took over the entire place and started producing a lot of heavy water and some of the allies heard what was going on and so there were several sabotage operations going on and the third one the american bombing scared the nazi germans a lot so then they decided they wanted to move their entire production to germany but to do that they needed to bring the heavy water and some of the equipment this transport route which meant it needed to be moved by the bets and so the savages that have been in the area got a new task you need to stop that transport and the most efficient way to do that would be to sink the boat because they knew that the lake is more than 400 meters deep and so the evening before the ship was set to sail the sabotages snuck aboard and it wasn’t very difficult because it was quite normal for people to sleep over on the deck if they were going with the morning ferry so they just pulled their hats a bit low and said good good night good evening and once everything was silent they snuck down into the front of the boat there they planted an explosive and the mechanism that was set to make it go off was in fact the alarm clock of the grandmother of one of the savages one of these old ones with the bells yeah so that was set to ring about an hour after the boat had set out so it was not a suicide action no no it was uh cleverly planned yeah even if they were not entirely happy about it because there were going to be passengers on the boat and they were told by london you need to sink this boat so they did so they stayed they remained on the boat once they had planted everything and was sure it was going to work they fled and the next day the ferry went off as planned and had a reasonable trip until they reached rutsgren which is about an hour by the by the boat at that point they heard a humongous booming noise and the captain and his crew they were looking around what was that did we did we hit some ice because it was february so it could have been ice but they couldn’t see anything and of course they couldn’t see anything because the hole was under the water line but one thing that also had happened with that hole was that it had destroyed one of the steam um pipes so hot hot steam streamed into the passenger place under the deck um the people under there didn’t drown to say like that they burnt to death yeah how many people died all together 14 civilians and four german soldiers nobody made it alive they did yeah because what happened was that the boat it started rocking dangerously it took in water very quickly and they realized something’s terribly terribly wrong you all need to jump into the lake in february in february and if you jump into that cold water you can get shock and just stop yeah but um what also happened was that there were farmers living along the sides of the lake and they heard and saw something going on so they tossed themselves out into their row boats to pick up as many people as possible from the freezing water and by doing that they saved 28 people 28 yeah so more people did in fact survive then they’d die 2028 died 14 survived all the way around the other way around two thirds survived yes yes matt was not my uh i don’t like maths much either like there’s a reason i do history yeah good but uh but yeah the the ferry itself just slipped under the waterline and disappeared and it sunk uh in 10 minutes which is very quickly for that bigger boat but it’s uh it’s reasonable uh because it was placed so that it would take in as much water as possible as quickly as possible because they didn’t want to risk it lying in the waterline and being able to be towed to land because then it would have been for nothing i read on wikipedia that they actually went down and got up a barrel of heavy water a few years ago is that right they did yeah because in 1993 someone got the idea to look for the boat because we had no idea where it was other than somewhere over there so they used an rov remote operated vehicle and found the boat at 430 meters deep uh and using more of these remote operated things they picked up two barrels to test if this was really heavy water because after the war someone had said no no no there wasn’t heavy water on the boat that entire thing wasn’t necessary but we tested it and it was heavy water yeah good yeah otherwise it would have been kind of not good yeah yeah the savages were given a cold shoulder up in town the rest of their lives by the people that knew they had been involved in this okay and that was naturally because people from this area died they did yeah and you know it’s it’s one thing to know that intellectually you have to you have to do this mathematics of how many human lives might might die if i do or if i don’t and something else to know it’s your fault i’ve lost someone yeah that’s not so easy to accept it’s i can imagine that must be hard but they also say that this sabotage action was maybe one of the most important during all of world war ii it was one of them and the operation the operation that happened earlier the the february in 1943 was also quite important in slowing everything down yeah and that operation being named gunnerside which was with the savages climbing down the mountainside to get to them and that one is also very well known because uh it was extremely successful with no loss of life and not even a single shot fired that’s amazing it is pretty amazing yes so they they knew what they were doing and the craziest thing is they were so young these people were in their young 20s yes they i do believe the youngest one was 23.
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FOLIO Sprint Review 112-113
So before we get started with the sprint review, I want to give Khalilah some time to go over a couple changes that happened last week.
00:14 - Thanks, Ann-Marie. Hey everybody, welcome to the sprint review.
00:24 - Many of you guys may know or may not know, Kelly Drake typically lead these sprint reviews, and she was the FOLIO Lead PO.
00:35 - Late last week, Kelly due to to personal reasons decided to leave the FOLIO project.
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Sub👄젤리 키스 챌린지│Jelly Kiss Challenge👨❤️💋👨
I would think that I’m quite smart if I get everything right I mean we went to Daiso to buy things for our contents today We spent like 60,000 won? I don’t have money and bought only few jelly, but it cost 60,000 won I’ve never seen this many snacks in my life Yeah me too cuz I don’t really like snacks If someone buys sweets, I eat it.
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The Pentagon Wars.(Movie with accurate subtitles)
i think it might be useful to clarify a few things right off the bat by simple definition we are in the business of winning wars what else do you need an army for take the cold war we won without firing a single shot why number one we just flat out outspent them the russians couldn’t shovel money into the fire as fast as we could number two and this is where my command comes in technology nobody shapes nature the way we do we take atoms and molecules and before we’re finished with them they’re everything from combat boots to bombs the kind of bombs that nobody from the other side will ever see until the damn thing’s plowing down their chimney like santa claus from hell general uh what this is not the first time you’ve been here we’ve been down this road before that is correct several times in fact i haven’t been keeping count let me refresh your memory you have before you a document i do the sensor fused anti-tank missile i’ll be the first to admit that this program did have its share of difficulties we did experience a glitch or two with the thing and that much is certain but even a heat seeking missile can miss a target general i see here that you taped electric hot plates to the surface of the vehicle to help your heat-seeking missile find its target and that the temperature of the vehicle was so high that it could have fried an egg at 20 feet there was a verifiable deviation from the standard test data accumulation there were other deviations were there not what about the paveway bomb i’m not going to sit here and tell you the paveway never missed it missed by a mean distance of five miles and nearly 50 percent of the time you know in baseball a guy who hits 400 is considered pretty damn great in baseball the losing team isn’t killed by their opponents be that as it may the paveway is one hell of a bomb laser guided state of the art and it proved what that we have an effective weapon as long as the enemy allows us to build a two-story crane directly above their tanks we have had some spectacular successes such as that’s classified information general please uh let’s move on to the next item on our list the bradley fighting vehicle what would you say the batting average is for the bradley general it takes people with sophisticated knowledge and expertise to conduct these tests and to interpret the results if the us army acted on the advice of every tom dick and harry who had an opinion on these matters we’d wind up with a bunch of b-52s powered by outboard motors i failed to see your point my point is that a lot of things have to come together to create a new weapon and it takes teamwork good old-fashioned teamwork colonel james burton was he part of your team general more or less tell me how to get to two four forward and to the escalator your left two flights up to four your left e ring your right proceed past corridor nine face left thank you so it’s no secret that colonel burton had a rocky tenure that we didn’t see eye to eye but it didn’t start out that way no no no no no i spoke to general hall general hall spoke to general jones general jones spoke to admiral watts well then write it down that takes karispina in rhode island to maze from nebraska any democrats no forget him because he’s a scum-sucking judas he’d sell his own mother for a handful of votes how about the senate that son of a [ __ ] after we papered his state with contracts all right then let’s just make the fuselage of michigan and the landing gear in mississippi oh by all means let’s keep congressman groves and his blood-sucking buddies happy welcome colonel thank you general thought you and i ought to get to know one another i welcome the opportunity sir the fact is i’d like to help you thank you sir i don’t mean to alarm you colonel but this new job of yours under certain circumstances could turn into a real [ __ ] burning detail you’re gonna need as many friends as you can get i’d like you to count me as one of them well i appreciate that sir air force academy strategic air command mba from auburn you’re commanding officer general degrasso and i are old friends he says as far as you’re concerned the sky is the limit but then you draw the short straw that was a sign sir ah hell it’s a bum deal whoever made it every other year somebody decides we’re spending too much money so a bunch of pencil necks put their pointy little heads together and come up with a plan this year it’s the joint live fire test program staffed with officers from every branch of the service so now we got the army navy air force and marines doing a circle jerk over weapons testing and you get to hold the big dick i mean who thinks of this nonsense congress sir and so it should that’s its job you’ll never hear me criticize the hill although you think congress has enough of their own [ __ ] to shovel without wondering what’s going on over here well i’m not anticipating any problems with the posting sir neither am i man doesn’t come as far in his career as you have without knowing how to walk a minefield howard matheson came here two rotations ago that marlin is not the only thing he caught i got him in the sin commonly left here now he’s the head of their missile testing blake gilmore you know blake no sir man wasn’t even a full bird colonel when he left here for the private sector that was four years ago field frequency gained modulator contracts later and look at him man could buy and sell both of us a thousand times over lucky man smart man first-rate soldier just like you colonel knew how to make the best of a difficult situation now this new job of yours it’s too tough for any one man to go it alone it’s gonna require teamwork here you go these are a couple of your projects undergoing testing the uh-60 helicopter the av-8b jump jet and the bradley fighting vehicle all outstanding programs all organized and ready to go i did a little homework for you give your leg up well i appreciate that general you know you could return the favor by giving the bradley there just a little extra attention attention we need it in the field the sooner the better just make sure it goes on top of all the things in your inbox so that it’ll get into your outbox as soon as possible as a personal favorite of me best of luck to you colonel thank you sir colonel sir next time you’re told to report to this office be on time yes sir sir colonel james burton i’m here to take a look at the bradley fighting vehicle test straight ahead sir thank you there he is that’s the guy that’s him supposed to be real smart squadron officers school air command and staff college first tour at the pentagon he was at the air force lab in albuquerque when congress called he’s a soldier not just a manager what do you mean he’s put in his fair share of flying time it’s like a [ __ ] choir boy to me maybe but nothing gets ordered into production until he signs off good to see you this is major sayers our chief tester army weapons research lab so have an air force guy end up overseeing tests run by the army well could have been worse how’s that congress could have appointed someone from the navy tension on the firing line attention on the firing line you’re ready on the right ready on the left firing line is ready firing damn impressive armor congratulations all right great showing me gentlemen joining us colonel burton congratulations thanks for your help on that one you know we couldn’t have done it with that thanks for your help on that one thank you hey colonel are you going to join all us shouldn’t we take a closer look no no actually safety precautions gee the fire team goes out there first and then no one else is allowed near the vehicle for at least another hour well why is that with any anti-armor test involving a live round there’s always a freak chance that something might blow after the fact plus we don’t want to lose your first day on the job colonel so how about that drink sounds good there’ll be a phone call for you in your office at exactly 100 hours it’s important you’ll be there good morning morning sergeant good morning sir i took the liberty of unpacking a few of your things thank you sergeant family sir what’s that family oh that’s my uncle he was a flyer in world war ii huh what’s that this is the plane i learned to fly in t28 used to take her up slide the canopy back fly for hours just me in the sky personally sir i like the sky right where it is with me on the ground looking up at it so where you from sir just outside of chicago hmm and where would that be normal normal illinois is that on a map yes sergeant it is is it normal and normal i think the word is uneventful you getting paid by the owl colonel no no i um got an appointment i’ll um take this sergeant thank you fine colonel burton hello the test on the bradley i hear you wanted to take a closer look how did you hear that when it comes to the bradley follow your instincts colonel who is this i can’t tell you that right now well whoever you are i don’t take unsolicited advice from people i don’t know just make sure you read the fine print colonel you’re up early sir well i thought i’d drop by on my way to the office sergeant check out the bradley sir isn’t your office 40 miles that way sir yes sergeant yes it is has anything been altered on this vehicle since the test no sir are you looking for something sir just reading the fine print sergeant just reading the fine print stinger missiles 50 cal tracers 7.
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Ramaiya Vastavaiya full movie
Hello. Hello. Okay, sir. Okay.
02:30 - Raghuveer, You’re still awake. Surprisingly, For the first time in seven years, lam seeing you smile.
02:47 - You will be released tomorrow That’s why you are happy, isn’t it? I’ll be seeing my sister after a long time.
02:56 - Can’t explain how happy I am. You really love your sister, Don’t you? - Yes! In all these years, you never met your family Neither did you speak to them, You’re a good man How you landed up here?