Mamo Pedro Juan and Santos Sauna: The Kogi Success Story in Colombia | Talks at Google
Traditional rainforest healer and Kogi Shaman Mamo Pedro Juan and Kogi political leader Santos Sana comes to speak at Google from Colombia. The Kogi Indians of northern Colombia have been called The Dalai Lamas of South America because of their wisdom, their pacifism and their unequalled respect for tradition. Living on or near the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, their traditional lands range from the snow fields atop the mountain down to the coral reefs of the Caribbean, meaning that they are one of the few indigenous cultures in the Americas managing highland, lowland and marine ecosystems. In fact, it was the Kogi who, in calling attention to melting glaciers over twenty years ago, served as some of the first harbingers of climate change.
Now the Kogis have joined forces with the Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) and the government of Colombia to protect and manage their sacred sites, protect their culture and resist climate change. This talk, presented by the Kogi's extremely eloquent political leader and one of their Paramount Shamans, will share details of their inspiring progress to date, their uniquely intertwined vision of conservation and spirituality, and the special significance of the lands and reefs that they seek to permanently protect.
Additional information at Mongabay:
The photos of the Kogi were taken by Richie Rey, Liliana Madrigal, and Brian Hettler.
U.S. Senate: Impeachment Trial (Day 9)
The Senate impeachment trial of President Trump continues as Senators ask House impeachment managers and the President’s defense team questions.
Abandoned $10,000,000 Mansion of Pablo Escobar (paint balled inside!)
The best gift you can buy for christmas:
So while in Medellin Colombia, we couldn't resist going to explore Pablo Escobar's abandoned mansion. He's a very controversial figure in the country, so we're obviously not trying to glorify him or his history simply documenting his ruins.. and taking the chance to have some fun paint-balling.
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Yes Theory are four friends from four different countries who constantly seek discomfort in order to grow. Ammar, Thomas, Matt and Derin met in Montreal, Canada in the summer of 2015 and bonded over their shared desire to live a life that challenged and excited them. Fast forward to a year later, the team is now based out of Los Angeles, making a show on Snapchat Discover.
Snapchat handle: yestheory
Camera: Sony A7S Mark ii
Hosts: Thomas Brag, Ammar Kandil, Matt Dajer, Derin Emre
Editors: Thomas Brag and Thomas Dajer
The Head of a Satanic Temple Explains Satanism
VICE asks the Head of the Satanic Temple in the UK the all important questions. Do they drink blood? Do they sacrifice babies? Can they connect people to the Illuminati? Is it all just a sex cult?
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Kern County Board of Supervisors 2:00 p.m. meeting for Tuesday, Tuesday, January 14, 2020
Official meeting agenda is available here:
The 10 Best Places To Live In Missouri - USA
Missouri’s geography is highly diverse, ranging from the Ozark Mountains to the Missouri River and the beginning of the Northern Plains.
Living in Missouri puts residents near the center of the United States.
This state has a natural beauty that would put most states to shame.
The best places to live in Missouri are Glendale, Town and Country, Creve Coeur, Ballwin,...
Beyond the natural appeal, a thriving economy and low cost of living are more reason to pack up and make a move to America’s Heartland.
Major industries in Missouri include food processing, aerospace, transportation equipment and beer making.
Missouri’s overall crime rate hovers just above the national average by just a few percentage points. But the major cities across the state are what pull the numbers higher.
Missouri’s cost of living is nine percent cheaper than the national average and housing is one of expenses where you’ll find the biggest savings.
There are plenty of great towns in Missouri that boast low crime rates and safe neighborhoods.
Here are the 10 best places to live in Missouri in 2019:
1. Columbia. (best place for overall)
2. Chesterfield. (best place to retire)
3. West Plains.
4. Wildwood. (best place to raise a family)
5. Kirkwood. (best place to retire)
6. Town and Country. (best place to retire)
7. Ballwin. (safest place)
8. Bonne Terre. (cheapest place)
9. Clayton. (best place to raise a family)
10. Ozark.
Thanks for watching this video. I hope it's useful for you.
(This article is an opinion based on facts and is meant as infotainment)
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Visit the University of Southern California
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USC's beautiful and historic University Park campus is a great destination for visitors to Los Angeles. This video offers a preview of what's in store when you come to campus -- classic architecture, park-like grounds, museums, cafés, entertainment and more.
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Geographic Information Science (GIS) Day 2019
Join us as we celebrate GIS (Geographic Information Science) Day on Nov. 13 with an all-day series of talks on the use of GIS technology and 3D mapping in cultural heritage preservation and disaster response.
GIS Day — held during Geography Awareness Week (Nov. 12-18) — is an annual, global celebration of GIS and mapping technology, with events held by organizations around the world. Formally started in 1999, GIS Day aims to provide a forum to promote the benefits of GIS research, demonstrate real-world applications of GIS and foster open idea sharing and growth in the GIS community.
The Library’s morning session will open with a keynote address by Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas, co-chair of the Congressional French Caucus focusing on Cultural Heritage Preservation Mapping and Congressional Policy. The morning also will feature talks on the aftermath of the Notre Dame Cathedral fire and the use of GIS and computer vision in disaster response planning and cultural heritage preservation.
The afternoon session will concentrate on applications of the technology with case studies on historic building and engineering archives in cultural preservation, advanced spatial analysis and 3D mapping of UNESCO World Heritage sites
Schedule
Welcome and Introduction of Librarian
Paulette Hasier, Chief, Geography and Map Division
Opening Remarks
Carla Hayden, Librarian of Congress
Cultural Heritage Preservation, Mapping and Congressional Policy Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas
Notre Dame, Computer Vision and the Future of GIS in Cultural Heritage Preservation
John Hessler, Library of Congress & Topology Lab for Virtual Geographic Environments
Documenting Cultural Resources Through GIS
Diedre McCarthy and Catherine Lavoie, Historic American Buildings Survey,
National Park Service
Afternoon: 1-3:30 p.m.
Architectural Archives in Cultural Preservation
Mari Nakahara, Curator of Architecture, Prints and Photographs Division
The Evolution of Data Driven 3D GIS at the National Capital Planning Commission
Kenneth Walton, National Capital Planning Commission, Policy & Research Division
Lhasa VR - Documenting the Historic Tibetan Capital Through 3D GIS
Will Rourk and Guoping Huang, Scholars Lab, University of Virginia.
Questions and Closing Remarks
All Speakers
Universities and the First Amendment
The fourth panel of the 2017 National Student Symposium at Columbia Law School. The topic of the Symposium is The First Amendment in Contemporary Society. March 3-4, 2017.
Universities have long been thought of, and cherished, as places for the free exchange of ideas. This idea has, however, come under pressure. Student groups have now routinely exercised pressure to keep people who they disagree with off campus. And safe spaces and trigger warnings—which limit speech that some have deemed offensive—have become regular features at universities across the nation.
Many see the climate of shouting down or protesting the expression of others' viewpoints as the symbolic beginning of an era limiting the freedom of speech on college campuses. While surveys seem to show a majority of students disagree with universities curtailing speech, even when it is offensive, vocal minorities with opposing views have been the ones capturing news headlines and the attention of the public at large.
With the accessibility to speech provided by the internet and viral sharing of information, expression and speech spread with more ease than ever, but this same technology creates opportunities for back-lash on social media and gives a larger stage to those who would threaten the free market of ideas at our nation's universities.
The First Amendment protects principles which have always required vigilance to maintain, and today's world makes no exception. This panel will explore how these developments have affected intellectual discourse on campus and if they are conducive to a meaningful learning experience at our universities.
Panelists:
- Prof. Robert Post, Dean and Sol & Lillian Goldman Professor of Law, Yale Law School
- Prof. Phillip Hamburger, Maurice and Hilda Friedman Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
- Prof. Suzanne Goldberg, Executive Vice President for University Life, Columbia University; Herbert and Doris Wechsler Clinical Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
- Prof. Michael McConnell, Richard and Frances Mallery Professor of Law; Director, Constitutional Law Center; Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution
- Moderator: Hon. Thomas Hardiman, U.S. Court of Appeals, Third Circuit
The Bozeman Trail: A Rush to Montana's Gold
The Bozeman Trail was an offshoot of the Oregon Trail, a shortcut to the newly discovered gold fields of Montana Territory. Cutting through the heart of Indian country. It became a flash point for a clash of cultures that would explode into warfare, destruction and tragedy. First telecast March, 2019.
The Oregon Eagle Creek Fire | Topic
When a fire began at Oregon's Eagle Creek last fall, more than 150 hikers found themselves trapped by fast-moving flames that would eventually burn more than 3,000 acres of the historic Columbia River Gorge. It was a traumatic fire, both for those who evacuated and those who stayed - and it was all started by a lit firework, thrown by a careless teenager.
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About Topic:
Topic is an ambitious new entertainment & storytelling studio from First Look Media, dedicated to working with creators at the forefront of culture. From Academy Award®-winning films (Spotlight) to television, audio and digital, we explore a wide range of subject matter, both fiction and nonfiction, with an emphasis on stories of consequence. On Topic.com we focus our efforts on visual and audio stories programmed around monthly themes. Our approach – challenging, compelling and unconventional – reflects our commitment to discovering and amplifying independent new voices, and supporting established ones.
The Oregon Eagle Creek Fire | Topic
#Topic #EagleCreekFire
McDonald's Pylon Installation - Albert Smith Signs
Albert Smith Signs - We design, manufacture & install signs Australia wide: High-Level, Way Finding, Pylon, Building, Electronic LED, and 3D Lettering.
The Boilermakers: Gus Grissom
Inspired as a boy by the fantastic comic-strip fiction of Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon, Virgil I. Gus Grissom forged a high-flying reality as a man — becoming one of America's first astronauts and the first man to go into space twice in a capsule vessel.
Although Grissom died at age 40 in 1967, he cut an integral path through several seminal moments of the 20th century, including 100 fighter-pilot missions in the Korean War and test-pilot duty in California.
The Indiana native and Purdue University graduate's life, legacy and motivations are recalled in the latest episode of The Boilermakers — an ITaP-produced documentary series chronicling famous Purdue graduates that airs on the Big Ten Network.
Joy James: The Architects of Abolitionism
The Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice's Carceral State Reading Group presents, The Architects of Abolitionism: George Jackson, Angela Davis, and the Deradicalization of Prison Struggles, a lecture and conversation with Joy James.
Joy James is the F.C. Oakley 3rd C. Professor at Williams College where she teaches in political science, humanities, africana studies, women and gender studies and American studies.
James's anthologies critiquing incarceration and policing include: The New Abolitionists, Imprisoned Intellectuals, The Angela Y. Davis Reader, States of Confinement, and Warfare in the American Homeland—all works that engage critical writings from the perspectives of social justice activists, human rights advocates, and revolutionary political prisoners. Co-editor of the 2016 Abolition Collective Elections Blog, James's most recent book is Seeking the Beloved Community. Author of The Womb of Western Theory, she has completed draft monographs on The Eclipse of the Revolutionary Era and Abolitionist Architects Angela Y. Davis and George Jackson and Fulcrum: The Captive Maternal Leverages Democracy.
Introductory Remarks by Sophie Kupetz and Kristen Maye and Q & A facilitated by Arya Serenity and Kristen Maye.
Monday, April 8, 2019
Brown University
Canada Votes 2019: Election Night Special
Watch our federal election night special as we bring you live riding-by-riding results from across the country. You can also watch this special in American Sign Language on CBC Gem:
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LIVE: Confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh (Day 1)
Confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh. Full video here:
Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford face Senate panel
Live coverage and analysis from The Washington Post as senators question Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford, who says Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when they were teenagers. Follow our coverage: Read the story Ford shared exclusively with the Post: Subscribe to The Washington Post on YouTube:
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LIVE: Confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh (Day 3)
Confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett #Kavanaugh (Day 3) - LIVE at 9:30am ET on C-SPAN3, C-SPAN Radio & online here:
The Third Industrial Revolution: A Radical New Sharing Economy
The global economy is in crisis. The exponential exhaustion of natural resources, declining productivity, slow growth, rising unemployment, and steep inequality, forces us to rethink our economic models. Where do we go from here? In this feature-length documentary, social and economic theorist Jeremy Rifkin lays out a road map to usher in a new economic system.
A Third Industrial Revolution is unfolding with the convergence of three pivotal technologies: an ultra-fast 5G communication internet, a renewable energy internet, and a driverless mobility internet, all connected to the Internet of Things embedded across society and the environment.
This 21st century smart digital infrastructure is giving rise to a radical new sharing economy that is transforming the way we manage, power and move economic life. But with climate change now ravaging the planet, it needs to happen fast. Change of this magnitude requires political will and a profound ideological shift.
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Psilocybin Mushrooms and the Mycology of Consciousness: Immersion into the MycoVerse
Welcome every body! I present you Paul Stamets came to speak at the Newmark Theatre in Portland Oregon on 9/20/2018. I was lucky enough to stand on stage and record his lecture. But the bad news is I do not have any of the material he was displaying on the screen.
The bright note is that I fully transcribed this video and I believe I have every proper noun and latin name correct. If I'm wrong leave a comment I will correct it! But Im pretty sure I'm right.
Thank you every body.
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