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10 Mysterious Things Science CANNOT Explain - Duration: 8:02.
10 Amazing Mysteries Science Cannot Explain
You don't know everything you don't know.
If you haven't accepted that by now, by the time you finish this video... you will.
Somethings just are; we're not sure how they got here, what created them, or what
purpose they serve.
They're origins – they're mysteries — never solved.
Maybe that's alright.
It's okay to leave a stone unturned or a door unopened.
So sit back, don't ask, and prepare to have your mind blown by 10 Amazing Mysteries Science
Cannot Explain.
After the video, be sure to subscribe to our channel so you don't miss our next video.
What's Right is What's Left
While no exact number is known, scientific estimates put the amount of right-handed people
between 88 and 92%.
Leaving roughly 10% left-handed, with ambidextrous, or mixed-handess, less than 1%.
Recent studies have presented the theory that a very slight starvation of oxygen to the
area controlling the hands occurs during birth, resulting in one hands dominance.
There are also a set of genes associated with language, that could assist in determining
what digits we hold our fork with.
All of that may prove how we get to be right or left-handed, but why such a vast majority
are right-handed is still unknown.
No known advantage exists between the two, though if you ask a lefty, they're sure
to pontificate on the virtues of being the left thumb wrestling champion at every office
party.
Effin Magnets
Even the most hardcore Juggalos raised a pierced eyebrow, when Shaggy 2 Dope, one face-painted
half of Insane Clown Posse, drop the infamous lyric Fucking magnets, how do they work? during
the song Miracles.
Science, duh… fans of Faygo soda, and the internet, replied mockingly to his rhetorical
question.
Yet, the reality is no one can truly explain why magnetism exists.
We understand HOW it works.
North poles, south poles and magnetic flux density vector fields; information people
have learned since the discovery of lodestones over 2,500 years ago.
But why magnetic properties are they way they are on our giant round rock?
That's a giant shrug emoji.
It's a force since forever is the best explanation given.
Next time ICP spits knowledge your way, maybe you should give it a second look...
Or not…
Placebo Effect
Something else you're just going to have to accept; the placebo effect.
Most often associated with medical testing, it is not easily summed up, but we're going
to try: if your brain believes the treatment you're getting will help you, it just might.
It could be a pill you think will work, or an exercise routine given for rehab therapy.
Even if the medical aspects might be helping… it could be because you're brain thinks
it going fix you.
The process is also used in medical studies on new medicines, with a portion of test patients
receiving actual treatment, while others patients only get expectations.
A controversial practice for over a century, treating some patients with medicine and giving
others lip-service and seems like a douche move.
Yet.. sometimes it works.
And no one can truly explain why.
Cocaine Mummies
Over three-quarters of the world's cocaine supply comes from Columbia.
Mostly because the coca plant is indigenous to South America, the soil perfectly cultivated
to grow the leaf that creates the illegal drug.
Given it's native location and combined with no known cross-continental travel at
the time, it explains why researchers are still stunned over the discovery of the alt-rock-band-name-sounding
Cocaine Mummies.
In 1992, archaeologists were testing the remains of mummified corpses from Egypt, when traces
of cocaine and tobacco particles.
The vegetation containing the chemical components necessary to make this happen should not be
found in Africa during the time the former people roamed Earth.
The scientists making the discovery have fought against accusations of faking the data, or
botched results, insisting their findings are accurate.
To this day, no one has been able to determine exactly who's was the mummies dealer.
WOW Signal
Tom DeLonge, of Blink-182 fame, is a big fan of searching for the existence of extra-terrestrial
life.
Chances are, during his journey to prove aliens exist, he came across the discovery made by
Jerry Ehman on the campus of Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware, Ohio.
In August of 1977, the Big Ear telescope located at Perkins Observatory on the campus of Oh
Woo, picked up a 72 second transmission that is considered the most likely reception of
alien transmissions the planet has ever received.
While reviewing the recorded information, Ehman was so impressed by the findings that
he wrote the word WOW, next to it.
Since then, the finding has been commonly referred to as the Wow Signal.
Despite numerous attempts to locate another incident of the transmission, it has never
been found again, leaving astrologists, and rock stars, baffled.
The Bloop
Twenty years after the Wow Signal, another one-time anomaly occurred.
A loud, ultra-low frequency sound was heard at the same time, at two different underwater
listening stations – over 3,000 miles apart.
The sound has been dubbed The Bloop.
The recorded noise appeared to be animalistic, but given the distance between the stations
and the volume of the sound, it would require the aquatic animal to several times larger
than any known underwater creature currently known.
In 2012, a report was published claiming the sound was made by icequakes., or the cracking
and melting of ice falling off glaciers into the ocean.
That explanation makes sense, but it's still only an educated guess.
We'd like to believe there's an alien force living under the Earth's crust.
One that will require we build giant robots and un-emoting pilots to defend ourselves
against their invasion.
And, of course, Idris Elba.
Hum-Dinger
Sounding like the least scariest movie monster ever, The Hum is a phenomenon that no one
can explain, and only a portion of the population can hear.
Those unlucky enough to notice the almost constant, invasive low-frequency humming or
droning noise can't find a way to make it stop.
While people everywhere have claimed to have superior listening skills, the largest groups
of people occur in Taos, New Mexico, Bristol, London and Zug Island, Michigan.
Reported loosely by the media, scientists have visited the areas with high amounts of
complaints, but are unable to determine the exact source.
Especially since only some of the researches were even able to hear the hum.
While people have recreated the sound, no actual recording exists, leaving many people
to claim the hum is a hoax.
A claim refuted by those always asking can you hear it now?
Some Like it Hot
The Sun is over 93 million miles away from Earth, and it can still fry and egg on the
sidewalk.
Even with that heat, most people feel safe knowing how far away they are from the source.
One that reaches 6,ooo Kelvin, or over 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit on the surface.
In fact, more people fear the sun exploding, leaving the world in permanent, frozen darkness.
If you are one of those, you might not like to hear that less than 4,000 miles under your
feet is a solid iron core that scientist think reaches temperatures comparable to the sun's
surface.
While that is supes hot, comparing the Earths core to the Sun's core isn't even close,
as the center of the sun is approximately a balmy 27 million degrees Fahrenheit.
Better bring your shades and sunscreen when you go to the stars.
Easter Island
Located in the southeastern Pacific Ocean is the Chilean island, Rapu Nui, more commonly
known as Easter Island.
Or that place with the giant heads.
The 887 large statues, known as Moai (Mo'ai – long "i"), were believed to be carved
by the native people of the island between 1,200 and 1,500 AD.
The statues are believed to be the ancestors of the islanders, as they aim inwards, towards
the land the statue's subject once owned.
Though, archaeologists recently let the public at large know the heads had another giant
surprise… a body.
While the most common images only show a tiny amount of the nearly 1,000 carved rocks, hundreds
of torsos have been discovered, some all the way to the knees.
Leaving some to believe that they were praying towards the sky.
Perhaps to a god, perhaps to the visitors that assisted in creating the monoliths.
How Are We Still Alone?
One of the biggest mysteries is one for a moment that has never actually happened.
Proof of extraterrestrial life, of alien anything in the vastness of space.
Astrologists have estimated the length, or age, of the universe at 13.8 billion light
years old.
Mostly because that's all they can observe.
Assuming the possibility of a never-ending blackness, it seems scientifically unlikely
that not one strand of actual proof exists that we are not alone.
Given how much unknown is out there, it would seem likely that even a lost little ET would
have stumbled upon the third rock from the Sun by now.
Or, if you think we already have been visited, and the men in black or hiding the evidence,
then another life form knows WE exist.
Which could mean eventually, when we do discover evidence, we're going to wish we were still
alone.
There are so many more mysteries out there that even the smartest minds on the planet
can't explain.
Unexplained phenomenons, enigmas or paradoxes.
We should never stop in our quest to learn as much as can about our planet, but be confident
in knowing that we may never learn what truths are really out there.
What crazy conspiracies or magical moments have you perplexed.
Be sure to let us know if the comments below and like our video.
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Pyrodox Adventures #4 - Chaos, Gigs, Christmas, New Years Eve & more! - Duration: 7:20.
Entering the new year with a bang!
It's monday December 26th
2nd day of Christmas
Tonight we will be going to "De Kroon" in Markelo
Party, Carlos are you ready?
Guys, we have to go!
Take it easy, we made it!
After a very fast ride we arrived on time in Markelo
to party with so many amazing people
The police is already waiting for us
Good evening gentlemen, welcome
Kelvin, do you have a drink for me?
yea, grab some
Kelvin?
Yea?
How was the tennis match?
Yea great!
Is it time for the show?
Yeah!
What are we going to do today?
Making pictures!
With...
Yung Wolf
A quick meal
Can you go stand over there to see now it looks?
That's hot!
Yes we can again!
Who?
Lighting fireworks!
Pieter, light it up!
What are we going to do today?
Eating "Oliebollen" and shooting "Carbid"
And after that?
Performing!
Entering the new year with a bang!
That was frightening!
This isn't normal...
Thank you, thank you
Tastes good!
What are you eating?
One bite, one bite...
What a great afternoon with the friends
Absolutely, and now it's time to get ready for tonight
Three shows
In five hours
There we go!
It's now 24:00
Happy new year, happy new year!
On the road to Deventer
For the first show of today
After that we will go to Hedon
And after that our own party, Santé!
Hey Elmar
We are almost there, show one
Deventer, Club Paris
After that we have to leave immediately
But first, a nice show!
Dancing!
Excited!
Club Paris in Deventer was amazing
Now it's time to go to Hedon - Zwolle
Kelvin, what are we going to do?!
We are going to Hedon now!
You wanna go directly to the stage?
Yes!
After a loaded Hedon it was time for "Santé"!
The last party of tonight,
to close this awesome night and begin the new year fantastic!
We are at ZINiN now
"Santé", we are going to stage directly!
Thank you!
Pyrodox this is the last one!
Santé Nijverdal, thank you for tonight!
Let's jump!
What a legendary month
Month? What a year!
That's right!
Thank you guys for watching
Share the video,
Like the video,
Do something with the video which makes you happy!
And see you next time!
Byebye!
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Why Cities Are Where They Are - Duration: 15:44.
This is a Wendover Productions video made possible by Squarespace.
Make your next move with a beautiful website from Squarespace.
The Cumberland valley is home to six towns lying between Hagerstown, Maryland and Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania— Greencastle, Chambersburg, Shippensburg, Newville, Carlisle, and Mecanicsburg.
What's exceptional about these small Pennsylvania towns is that they're each almost exactly
10 miles from each other.
The distances deviate by no more than a mile from this rule.
This isn't a coincidence and this isn't planned.
Drawing equal sized radii around each town shows you their spheres of influence.
Assuming each town has the exact same shops and services, rational people will just go
to whichever town is closest to buy or sell goods.
Towns ten miles apart mean that nobody has to travel more than five miles to reach a
town.
Each one of these towns was founded before the formation of the United States, so that
means that, of course, nobody had cars and pretty much everybody walked everywhere.
10 miles, or 5 miles each way, is about the distance a person can comfortably walk in
a day with enough time to buy or sell goods at a central market.
Back in this era before cars, a 5 mile radius was essentially the largest possible commuter
zone to small agricultural towns and therefore having towns ten miles apart was the most
efficient possible use of rural land.
When you get a chance, take a look at map of a rural area that existed before cars.
You'll see that the distance between medium-sized towns is almost always somewhere between about
10 to 15 miles.
Because the Cumberland valley is a valley, towns really could only develop in a line,
but in most cases towns develop in all directions.
This is what the ten mile rule looks like going out in all directions.
Each of these points is a town and the hexagon around it is the area from which people will
go to the town.
In the real world, each of these towns probably has a small grocery store, a pharmacy, a bank,
and maybe a restaurant.
Since everybody uses these services, there doesn't have to be many people in a towns
sphere of influence in order to sustain these shops.
But where do you put something more specialized, like a mechanic.
People only need to go the mechanic every once in a while so you need more people to
sustain one mechanics shop than one grocery store.
Well, some of these small towns develop into larger towns with more people that can support
more specialized shops and services.
Putting these larger towns with more specialized shops closer together would be unsustainable
since there wouldn't be enough people going to those shops but putting them farther apart
would be inefficient since there's land that people would not go to a city from.
This happens once or twice more until you have cities.
These cities have the largest spheres of influence and the most specialized shops.
You of course still have grocery stores and pharmacies in cities, but you also have things
like luxury car dealerships, brain surgery centers, and airports.
The city's sphere of influence is enormous because people will travel hundreds of miles
to buy an expensive car or get brain surgery or fly from an airport.
Think about it within a city.
How far would you walk to buy a latte.
Probably only a few blocks and that's why you see Starbucks or other coffee shops on
almost every block.
Since almost everyone buys coffee, you only need a few blocks of people to sustain one
coffee shop.
But how far would you walk to buy a MacBook?
Probably quite far since its a infrequent and substantial purchase.
That's why Apple stores are rather rare even in cities.
You need an enormous amount of people to sustain one Apple store and we can actually figure
out roughly how many.
In Connecticut, the Trumbull Apple Store is about 20 miles away from the New Haven store
to the north-east and the Stamford store to the south-west.
In the 10 mile radius around the Trumbull Apple Store there are about half a million
inhabitants which tells us that you need about half a million people to sustain one Apple
store.
We can compare that to the Starbucks' of lower Manhattan which are spread out at an
average distance of about 600 feet.
Drawing a 300 foot radius around one Starbucks in lower Manhattan covers around 6,000 people
which means that one Starbucks needs 6,000 people to sustain it.
Of course both Connecticut and New York are places with higher than average incomes which
means less people are needed to sustain one Starbucks or Apple Store.
The numbers would be very different in, say, rural Kansas, but since each store generally
only builds in areas with higher-than-average incomes this gives a good sense of how many
people Apple and Starbucks looks for in an area before opening up a store.
So, our model shows where cities should be, but its not like this in reality.
This is the most efficient spread of cities if you're assuming that the cities are on
a perfectly flat plane with no geographic features, no social influences, no variability
of income, equal distribution of resources—essentially assuming the world is one homogeneous place…
which its not.
In reality, of course, our world has an enormous effect on where and why cities develop.
To start out, let's cut this down to one city on a flat, featureless plane for simplicity.
What affects the location of cities more than anything is water.
If we put an ocean on one side of our isotropic plane, our city will almost certainly locate
near it.
Oceans have always been and still are what connects the world.
There's no other means of transport that can move such enormous amounts of cargo for
so little.
Any city needs to be economically efficient to grow and it will cost more to bring goods
to a city that's 1000 miles inland than one right by the ocean.
Just look at Europe.
6 of the 10 largest European cities are within 100 miles of the coast.
But oceans aren't the only bodies of water to affect cities.
Rivers are just as or perhaps even more influential.
Milan, the 19th largest European city, is the largest to not be either directly on the
ocean or on a river, and even then its only 15 miles from a river and 75 miles from the
ocean.
Until the last century or so, cities could not survive without direct water access.
If you need more proof, 14 of the 15 largest cities in the world are within a few dozen
miles of the ocean.
Perhaps the most obvious attractor for cities is resources, so going back to our isotropic
plane, putting natural resources anywhere on this map will draw cities near it.
Cities that existed before the last century or so generally sprung up right near the resources,
much like Pittsburgh, since they acted as manufacturing and transportation hubs for
those resources, but more recently new resource dependent cities don't need to be as close
to the resources themselves.
New transportation technologies can bring the resources from their source.
Just look at Dubai.
Of course the UAE has enormous oil deposits, but they're much closer to Abu Dhabi and
the South-West than Dubai.
In 1900, Dubai had 10,000 residents, less than half that of Carlisle, Pennsylvania—one
of the farming towns we talked about at the beginning.
That only grew to 40,000 by 1960, but today its known worldwide and has more than 2.5
million residents.
It was able to grow at this enormous rate—even faster than Abu Dhabi—since it cemented
itself as the economic and administrative hub for the oil industries of the region.
Another geographic feature that we can add to the plane is mountains.
Now, mountains don't always have a uniform affect on cities.
Mexico City, Bogota, and Addis Ababa are all enormous cities at elevations above 7,000
feet.
Mountains do make transport and trade difficult, but they also provide protection.
Many ancient cities grew in these locations since they were easy to protect, which left
more time to focus on growing the city, but mountains can also hinder development.
For quite a while, the United States could not develop west of the Appalachian mountains.
They just served as an enormous barrier.
In 1800, the average center of population for the entire United States was here even
though the US had sovereignty over this entire area.
Of course technology eventually conquered this barrier and moved the mean population
center all the way out to Missouri today, but if the Appalachian mountains didn't
exist American history and geography would be completely different.
We would have seen urban development much earlier in the mid-west.
But mountains can have another effect.
You see, coal, silver, gold, and other mineral deposits are all often located in mountainous
regions, and, just like Dubai, cities can develop in less hospitable and easy places
due to resources.
The economic advantage of exploiting the resources overpowers the economic disadvantage of being
in an inhospitable location.
Denver, Colorado grew 650% between 1870 and 1880 with the opening of a railroad branch
connecting with the transcontinental railroad.
It served as an access point to transportation to the gold miners in the rockies.
So mountains can either push cities away or bring them nearer—it really just depends
on the circumstance.
Let's exchange our isotropic plane for a world map.
Where should cities be on here?
Well, our world's cities are not necessarily all in the most geographically efficient locations.
While there is a certain level of natural selection that grows the efficiently placed
cities and shrinks the inefficiently placed cities, humans are not always able to put
cities in the most efficient locations.
Let's put up the 224 cities in the world with a population over 2 million.
You can immediately see some patterns.
Putting up the equator, you can see a clear divide.
Only 32 of these cities lie in the southern hemisphere.
One might think this is because there is so much more land in the northern hemisphere,
but that's not entirely true.
You see, the southern hemisphere still has 32% of the world's land, but only has 14%
of the world's large cities.
There's clearly a higher density of cities in the northern hemisphere.
You can pretty much trace this all back to Europe and Asia.
The first large civilizations and empires were on these two continents even though the
human race likely originated in Africa.
There's hundreds of different theories on why civilizations succeeded in some places
and failed in others, but one of the more plausible and interesting theories is that
Europe and Asia succeeded because they're wide instead of tall.
The very shape of the continents may have changed the course of human history.
You see, when a continent is wide, you have a ton of land with roughly the same climate.
Climate tends to change when you go north and south rather than east and west as a nature
of how the earth rotates around the sun.
Much of the success of early civilizations had to do with the domestication of plants
and animals and the corresponding technology.
When expanding horizontally, the climate is similar enough that an empire can use the
same successful plants and animals, while expanding vertically requires the domestication
of new plants and animals.
If a civilization started in central-america, for example, there would be very little land
on the continent with a similar climate and their expansion would be severely limited.
In Europe and Asia, on the other hand, theres thousands upon thousands and miles of similar
climate that can be reached just by traveling east or west.
There's evidence to back this up.
Just look at the maps of the four largest early empires—the Qing Dynasty, the Abbasid
Caliphate, the Umayyad Caliphate, and the Mongol empire.
They were all in Eurasia and they all expanded horizontally.
When some of the more modern empires expanded, they had the technology to do so overseas.
The three major modern empires were the British, Spanish, and French empires—each of which
came from relatively similar climates.
A major reason why America was able to succeed is because all the agriculture from Europe
worked there.
Climatically, Europe and America are nearly identical.
The majority of developed colonized countries are in the northern hemisphere just because
they were closest to Europe, but formerly British countries like South Africa, Australia,
and New Zealand are all highly developed and in the Southern Hemisphere.
Their success over more northern countries in the southern hemisphere can also be partially
attributed to their greater climate similarity to Europe.
Let's ask one more question.
If our world only had one city, where would it logically be?
Well if you take the location of every person in the world and average it out, you come
to south-central Asia.
That means that this general region is the optimum place to live on the planet, but where
more specifically should our world city go.
Well, this region is already in the Northern Hemisphere and in Eurasia, so we've already
covered those two criteria.
We want a place within a hundred of so miles of the ocean, on a navigable river, near mountains
with rich mineral deposits—the single best place for a city on earth just might be…
Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Every geographic model and theory says that there is no better place on earth to put a
city than here.
There's evidence to back this up: Dhaka is between the 4th and 18th largest metropolitan
area on earth depending on how you define metropolitan area, and Bangladesh is the sixth
densest country on earth—there are 161 million people living in an area about the size of
England.
History has affected geography enough that the largest and most advanced civilizations
are not all in South-Central Asia, but if we started all over again, did humanity a
second time, every geographic model says that this region could be the origin and central
point of human civilization.
I hope you enjoyed this Wendover Productions video.
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使 6 敏 捷 極 或 你 的 生 活 變 化 - Duration: 15:58.
For more infomation >> 使 6 敏 捷 極 或 你 的 生 活 變 化 - Duration: 15:58. -------------------------------------------
Vlog #14: Important Dates and Deadlines for January - Duration: 3:01.
Happy new year everybody!
Welcome back so my name is Vanessa Demello and I am the VP University Affairs and Academics
of your students union, as i said Happy 2017!!!
We are now in the month of January, and I come to you with the vlog for the important
dates and deadlines for this wonderful month so lets get started, take out your agenda,
your pen and paper, alright.
So most of the stuff begins on January 15th so that is for students that are paying course
fees: Last day to drop an S course (jan-april) on ACORN and receive 100% course fee refund
back, as long as you are still registered in other courses for this session so that
is jan 15.
Also on Jan 15th, For students paying deregulated program fees it is the Last day to drop from
a full- to part-time status and receive 50% program fee refund.
After this date, if these students drop from full- to part-time, there is no refund is
received for your folks, so make sure that you get on that.
Also the course waiting list close, and last day to add or change a section for S courses
on Jan 15th, ok?
So then on January 22, for students paying course fees it is the Last day to drop an
S course and receive a 75% course fee refund so that's if you're not sure about a course
yet, you still get 75% of your course fee back.
On Jan 22 as well, it is the Last day to confirm or withdraw June 2017 graduation request on
ACORN so if you're planning to graduate make sure you check out ACORN for that.
On Jan 31, For students that are registered in the Fall/Winter session or just the winter
session, it is the : Deadline to pay fees for Winter term to avoid any service charges.
So thats pretty much it for the important dates and deadlines for the month of January,
but as for UTMSU related things, make sure you check out the latest Squad TV episode,
I'll have the link down below, it has alot of information on some really amazing things
that are going on with UTMSU like the Welcome Back Pub that is in collaboration with ICCIT
council and Rhythm, we also have a talent show coming up so make sure you get some more
info on that if you want to participate.
We also have the muliticultural week happening in January, and if you are interested in the
Montreal Reading Week trip, that is going to be happening in february, we'll have some
information for you down there as well.
So make sure you check that out.
That's all from me, so if you have any questions for us you can always drop by the office,
we're like always here, or you can send us an email at info@utmsu.ca and if you have
any questions for me personally you can email me at vpua@utmsu.ca.
Alright, thanks everyone, have a wonderful january and enjoy your classes!
Byeeeee!
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Life hacks that will change your life || Simple Life Hacks & DIY Ideas 2017 - Duration: 5:01.
Life hacks that will change your life, Simple Life Hacks & DIY Ideas 2017,
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LOVE AND FIRST SIGHT BY JOSH SUNDQUIST | SPOILER FREE REVIEW [CC] - Duration: 6:50.
Hello all, I hope you are having a fabulous day
my name is Reggie and today i'll be
sharing with you a review of Love and First
sight by Josh Sundquist. If you saw my
most anticipated Winter releases you'll
know love at first sight by Josh
Sundquist was one of my most anticipated
releases of this winter season so I was
super excited when I got an eARC of this
book in exchange for an honest review
from the publisher. And this book does
come out today
January 3rd. If you don't know the
author, Josh Sundquist, is a youtuber
His channel is one of my favorites and one
of the first youtube channels i
discovered the story follows our main
character will Porter who is blind and
currently going through the transition
going from an all visually impaired
school to a normal public high school
and so our book in the beginning heavily deals
on his transition and his character and
what it's like for him going through
this and about halfway through the book
which is a huge plot point of the book
which is why I'm telling you about it
it's not a spoiler is part of the
synopsis but the opportunity comes to
will in order to have a experimental
surgery that could give him sight. I had
high hopes for this book and so it
breaks my heart to say I did give it 2...
2.5 out of 5 stars
it just really fell a little flat for me
Will Porter is a great character, though
I don't know how well his visual
impairment representation is as i am not
visually impaired and have not heard
reviews from those in the community
I can tell that the research Josh did
was insane. He went through a lot of
research and you can see that, though
again this is one of those instances
where I think an own voices story is
important though I'm still glad Josh is
telling this story. But while i was reading
it, the entire time coming to the
forefront of my mind was "is this really
how the situation would be?" I don't know I
don't know that it's not, i don't know
that it is. i would love to hear from
those in the visual impaired community what
they thought of this book. One thing I
really enjoyed about this book was that
Will was not a one-tone character he had
huge aspirations in the reason he went
to a public high school because he
wanted to be a journalist and he had
really high interest in journalism and
he was
really excited and passionate about
that and unfortunately that was something that
really fell to the wayside really early
on in the book and it was really
disappointing to see that this trait
that fleshed out this character was just
kind of throwing aside in lieu of other
plot points that seemed more important I
didn't like that because that was one of
the things that made Will feel like a
real character so let's talk a little
bit about the surgery I think it's no
surprise to say that Will does decide to
go through the surgery and I don't
believe that is a spoiler and me saying
that i'm pretty sure that in the
synopsis the ramifications of the
surgery were very interesting everyone's
reaction to getting the surgery was very
interesting and Will's process of post
surgery was very interesting I really
liked how he had to go through a very
difficult process to figure out shapes
and to figure out colors and I really
found that to be very well done and
that's the biggest part where you can
see Josh's research really going into
play i found no problematic aspects with
this section of the book because as you
can expect a week there's not a ton of
situations where this kind of surgery
has actually taken place in terms of
that there's not really much of an
opportunity even have an own voices narrative
and it was a very well-researched like i
said and i found it very compelling very
interesting and that's another thing
that I can say to sing praises of this
book it it was very quick read
well I had questions about a lot of
things as the story progressed I did
want to keep reading and i was reading a
very quick pace basically read it in one
sitting and that is something that
doesn't happen too often for me so I
really appreciate what happens. However,
compelling story telling nature did not
make up for just the entire situation
and the world and mostly the characters
not feeling super fleshed out to me that
is something you guys probably know I value heavily
in stories is a very
well-developed character, character
development and
characters you fall in love with. And I just found these
characters to be not well developed. Will was
decently developed again like I said
that part of his development fell off
when the surgery became the prominent
plot point but the side characters, his
friends, his romantic love interest just
work fleshed out very well they have
their interests they have their own
personalities
I never felt connected to any of them I
just had this huge disconnect from them
not really enjoyed the story for me also
found the writing to be pretty cheesy
and a lot of the store telling
components to be pretty predictable
this is josh's debut novel so that's not
the end of the world that's totally fine
he's written books before but this
debut fiction novel and so those are things
that are hard to develop and I don't
blame him for it but they did again
take away from the story for me
especially when you got to the end of
paragraphs or the end of chapters things
just help really super cheesy like he
was trying a little too hard to make a
point or make you want to read the next
chapter a lot of the situation's didn't
feel like they needed to be that awkward
or silly or cheesy necessarily it wasn't
the situations that make them cheesy, I feel
like it was actually the word choice and
the way Josh was writing the scenes that
made them cheesy, so that was a little
unnecessary in my opinion and a little
sad because I felt like a much more
serious tone could have made this a
little more impactful however i think
this is worth trying to read one because
it's super quick. Two, because you might love
it. Three, because like i said i do not
know how the representation is going to
be perceived by the visually impaired
and i would love to hear their thoughts
so if anyone knows of any visually
impaired people who have read this book
let me know also because while it's not
own voices, Josh is a person with a
disability and he does know
under-representation well and he did
talk about those aspects pretty well and
it is still a diverse read, which is
super important and a lot of it is
really interesting especially that
surgery component of the story so I
definitely think if you're interested in it's
still worth their time I just was a
little disappointed and I did not want
to bash Josh by any means I still
absolutely adore him and will still
read books he's written and will write i
also didn't
want to bash this book too much especially
without hearing the voices of the
visually impaired have read this so if
you know anyone who has read this book
who is visually impaired and what they
thought of it i would love for you to
direct me to those reviews in that
community. like I said that there's just a
couple things that detracted from the
story for me and that was enough to give
me a little 2.. 2.5 rating but that is all
for today's video I hope you enjoyed it
if you did you should give this video a
thumbs up subscribe if you haven't
already and I will see you in my next
video. Byeeee
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The Importance of Proper Legal Planning - Duration: 3:34.
You know we don't actually provide
estate planning services.
Not lawyers, I guess you could say though
that we're the biggest cheerleaders for
lawyers. And for estate planning
and again this goes to when
we're looking at things holistically and
looking at what can really damage
someone's plan the lack of estate planning
is one that can really mess up
your financial situation.
Estate planning is really a fancy way to
say legal planning, and we probably have
to change the way we talk about it
because a lot of people when they hear
that word think that it doesn't apply to
them. Right, like they think that they
have to have a lot of money they got to
be a millionaire. But everybody needs to
do some basic legal planning everybody
does.
So from here from our perspective it's
things like you know planning for if you
become incapacitated. Say when I lose my
marbles and i'm not able to do things on
my own now who I want to help me?
So you do things like limited trading
authorization somebody who can act on
your account on your behalf which we can
do here you don't need a lawyer for that.
I like to think of it this way
because I get this question a lot what's
the difference between will and Trust
right so the simplest way to answer that
is a wheel controls what happens when
you die a trust can control things for
years upon years after you die. And
there's a lot of reasons why somebody
might want that control. Maybe the kids
are young and or maybe there's a
family member that's not responsible and
you want to have that money metered out
over time so it's not all spent in one shot
The other thing that I like to remind
people of is that if you don't have a
will you actually have one. It's written
by the state that you live in.
So for example here in Wisconsin if you
think that Wisconsin had your specific
situation in mind and your best
interests at heart, then feel free to do
nothing and you're goods with your items
will be distributed per the laws of the
state of Wisconsin. I can't tell you how
many widows I sit across the table from
husband's did everything, and now
they've passed away and this spouse now
has to pick up the pieces and start
doing something that they have no
experience doing. Proper legal planning
can really help. We talk about estate
planning because we know it's so important
and because we work with people when
they get older and we know how hard it
is to do things if that person has not
done properly legal planning. And then we
can say hey you might want to look at
this you might want to get this document
you might want to revisit this with your
with your lawyer. Or hey you haven't
redone
your wills or your trust or your
power ofattorney since your kids were five
years old. Maybe you want to have those
things revisited. For me personally I
really care about my clients, I'd like to
think of my clients as friends and my
friends as clients. We really want what's
best for them and it doesn't really
matter that much
not everything we do has to
have a dollar bill attached to it coming
towards us right.
We want them to get successfully across
the finish line and the goal line and we
want them to have good family relations
for example when they're going through
going through the death of a
family member. I can tell you from
many examples and in my own in
particular. Where my mom has ten brothers
and sisters and there was some conflict
they're settling things back and forth.
A lot of people have different opinions
and so family harmonies is, I would say
good estate planning, is almost as much
about family harmony as it is about the
money.
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Philosophy of Investing - Duration: 2:59.
At the core of what we do here, it has a
lot to do with obviously investing or
helping our clients invest their money.
And we have obviously a lot to do with
that. There's some things that we think
are very important.
The reason that I think it's important
to know about your philosophy investing
before you philosophy of investing
before you actually go out and invest, is
that people a lot of people don't,
actually have a philosophy on how
to invest in what they think is
important. We value things like not
having too much risk in a portfolio
means that we don't have all our eggs in
one basket right and that means not just
one stock or not just one bond, but also
not just one sector or part of the world.
You know that's asset allocation and
then those investments change in value
that system, that's rebalancing
right if something goes up really high,
and this is low you gotta bring that
into rebalancing we think there's value in that.
I think you really need to look
at and decide
are you an investor are you a gambler.
Or are you a little bit of each
and if you are, then maybe take a little
bit to the side and put in some online
trading firm and play with it and gamble
with it to scratch the itch and that's
fine. But for the money that's truly
invested you want to have it
professionally managed in at least a
reasonably conservative manner and have
it match your goals. If you decide that
you're do-it-yourselfer that's okay,
and for some people it's perfectly
reasonable and ok, but you just have to
realize that there are people that wake
up every day and all day long and all they
do is manage money and they've done it for 25 years.
And then there is a lot of
stuff that needs to change as people
near retirement, as they near some of their
goals in life. We really look at you know
what's your whole picture,
what is your risk level what can you do
and then we gear plan towards that.
We really value qualitative metrics as well
right?
Like we're really concerned about how
those managers are making those
decisions or are they getting all that
excess return because they're taking a
bunch of excess risk? Well that's not
good either.
That's why most investors, actually are
more concerned about getting there
safely. Which means some people may
go faster than you and other people may
go slower than you.
But you're gonna get there safely and
it's just having that conversation that
philosophy and how you're going to
invest in how you're going to get to
your destination.
Raymond James is what I like to call I
like to think of them as our back office.
We lean very heavily on them they've
got an awful lot of resources that are
available to us and in some ways you can
look at the Raymond James personnel as
almost a member of our office.
We like to emphasize relationships and we can
provide that because we are small but at
the same time we have all those things
in the background working for us and
working towards the client.
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