The Tamarack Institute
The Tamarack Institute
  • 693
  • 289 274
Communautés bâtissant l’avenir des jeunes : Un mouvement transformateur dirigé par des jeunes
Prenez part à un mouvement transformateur dirigé par des jeunes!
Les initiatives des Communautés bâtissant l’avenir des jeunes (CBAJ) www.tamarackcommunity.ca/fr-ca/networks-for-change/youth-futures ont un objectif ambitieux : soutenir les jeunes leaders âgés de 15 à 30 ans partout au Canada pour transformer l’avenir de l’éducation, du travail et du bien-être pour les jeunes dans leurs communautés rurales, éloignées et autochtones.
Grâce à une collaboration multisectorielle entre l’Institut Tamarack, les organismes communautaires, les jeunes leaders et les allié.e.s de la communauté, l’initative des CBAJ a appuyé près de 70 000 jeunes au cours des cinq premières années (2019-2024) pour reprendre leurs études, obtenir un emploi stable et devenir des leaders et des mentors au sein de leurs communautés.
Pour en savoir plus sur les stratégies novatrices de l’initiative des CBAJ et découvrir comment y participer, visitez le site Web www.tamarackcommunity.ca/fr-ca/.
มุมมอง: 11

วีดีโอ

Communities Building Youth Futures: A Transformational Youth-Led Movement
มุมมอง 64 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Join a Transformational Youth-Led Movement! Communities Building Youth Futures (CBYF) www.tamarackcommunity.ca/networks-for-change/youth-futures has an ambitious goal: support youth leaders aged 15-30 across Canada to revolutionize the future of youth education, work, and wellness in their rural, remote and Indigenous communities. Through multi-sectoral collaboration between the Tamarack Instit...
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society Conference 2024: Rob Fennell Closing Remarks
มุมมอง 37 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Closing Remarks: Rob Fennell, University of Theology
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society Conference 2024: A Human Picture Screening & Discussion
มุมมอง 77 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
A Human Picture movie screening and discussion with filmmaker, Jessie Golem If you are interested in organizing a screening of 'A Human Picture' please contact info@hamiltonpoverty.ca
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society Conference 2024: PEI Demonstration Project
มุมมอง 47 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Barbara Boraks and Trish Altass present the PEI Basic Income Demonstration Proposal
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society Conference 2024: Government Panel
มุมมอง 387 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Moderator: Mayor Mike Savage, City of Halifax Panelists: -Honourable Senator Kim Pate -Sean Casey, Member of Parliament for Charlottetown, PEI -Councillor Waye Mason, City of Halifax - Anthony Edmonds, Leader of the Nova Scotia Green Party - Lisa Roberts, Former Halifax-Needham MLA
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society Conference 2024: Dr. Gary Bloch Keynote
มุมมอง 79 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Keynote: Dr. Gary Bloch
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society Conference 2024: Basic Income NOW Atlantic Canada Panel
มุมมอง 69 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Panel presentation of movements towards Basic Income in each of the four Atlantic provinces and as a collective. Moderator: Joanne Tompkins, St Francis Xavier University Panelists: -Laurel Huget (NL) -Olivia Pattison (NS) -Marie Burge (PEI) -Rose-Hannah (NB) (absent)
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society 2024 Conference: Housing, Food and Basic Income Panel
มุมมอง 119 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Moderator: Jeff Karabanow, Dalhousie U., co-founder Out of the Cold Shelter, co-Director Dalhousie U. Social Work Clinic Panelists: -Jim Gunn, Beacon House Shelter -Eric Levitan-Reid, New Dawn Enterprises -Kristen Lowitt, Queen's University, School of Environmental Studies -Dr. Gary Bloch, University of Toronto, St. Michael’s Hospital, and Inner City Health Associates
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society 2024 Conference: Niigaan Sinclair
มุมมอง 259 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Morning Keynote: Niigaan Sinclair
Basic Income Nova Scotia Society 2024 Conference: Opening Remarks
มุมมอง 1314 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Jeff Ward and Anna Quon provide opening remarks at Basic Income Nova Scotia's annual 2024 conference in Halifax.
Webinaire de l’Institut Tamarack : La Francophonie canadienne hors Québec (2024)
มุมมอง 170วันที่ผ่านมา
Titre : Développer l'appartenance à la Francophonie canadienne hors Québec Présenté par l’Institut Tamarack Date : 11 septembre 2024 Cet enregistrement du webinaire présente une conversation portant sur les questions : Quels sont les moyens pour créer un sentiment d’appartenance dans la francophonie canadienne ? et Comment définissons-nous une communauté à travers la langue ? Intervenantes : Ch...
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Belonging Through Foodways and Community Economies (2024)
มุมมอง 23วันที่ผ่านมา
Title: Belonging Through Foodways and Community Economies Organizer: The Tamarack Institute Date: September 4, 2024 This webinar recording features a conversation about how we can activate the strengths, passions, and knowledge of a place to find community and economic belonging. Speakers: Astrid Arumae, Tamarack Institute (www.tamarackcommunity.ca/) Lori McCarthy, Cultural Food Ambassador (www...
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Transformative Strategies to Rebuild Community Relationships (2024)
มุมมอง 59วันที่ผ่านมา
Title: Transformative Strategies to Rebuild Community Relationships Organizer: The Tamarack Institute Date: August 28, 2024 This webinar recording features a conversation about the power of building meaningful relationships through themes such as intergenerational exchange, using play as a practice, and learning from those with lived experiences. Speakers: • Yas Hassen, Tamarack Institute (www....
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Advancing Climate Equity Through Place-Based Collaboration (2024)
มุมมอง 70หลายเดือนก่อน
Title: Advancing Climate Equity Through Place-Based Collaboration Organizer: The Tamarack Institute Date: August 7, 2024 This webinar recording features a conversation about the principles covered in the 2024 publication titled 10: Advancing Climate Equity Through Place-Based Collaboration www.tamarackcommunity.ca/guides/10-a-guide-for-advancing-climate-equity-through-place-based-collaboration,...
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Transforming Charitable Donations via Impact Evaluation (2024)
มุมมอง 71หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Transforming Charitable Donations via Impact Evaluation (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: The Role of Communities in Advancing Quality of Life (2024)
มุมมอง 1802 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: The Role of Communities in Advancing Quality of Life (2024)
Tamarack Institute Tool Demonstration: Collaboration Ownership and Accountability (2024)
มุมมอง 942 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Tool Demonstration: Collaboration Ownership and Accountability (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Black Ancestries and Relations for a Just Climate Future (2024)
มุมมอง 482 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Black Ancestries and Relations for a Just Climate Future (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Co-Designing Employment Journeys with Refugee Youth (2024)
มุมมอง 763 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Co-Designing Employment Journeys with Refugee Youth (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Building Authentic Connections for a More Equitable Future (2024)
มุมมอง 974 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Building Authentic Connections for a More Equitable Future (2024)
Tamarack Institute: Youth Perspectives on Belonging
มุมมอง 624 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute: Youth Perspectives on Belonging
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Systems-Level Impact: Lessons from Building Youth Futures (2024)
มุมมอง 434 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Systems-Level Impact: Lessons from Building Youth Futures (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Municipal-Community Collaboration on Extreme Weather Preparedness (2024)
มุมมอง 835 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Municipal-Community Collaboration on Extreme Weather Preparedness (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Community Empowerment Through Self-Mastery (2024)
มุมมอง 1275 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Community Empowerment Through Self-Mastery (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: A Roadmap to Move Equity-Related Talk to Equitable Action (2024)
มุมมอง 815 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: A Roadmap to Move Equity-Related Talk to Equitable Action (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Creating a Mission-Aligned Social Enterprise (2024)
มุมมอง 905 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Creating a Mission-Aligned Social Enterprise (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Bridging Community and Data for Climate Action (2024)
มุมมอง 1076 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Bridging Community and Data for Climate Action (2024)
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Collaboration - Beginnings and Endings (2024)
มุมมอง 2316 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tamarack Institute Webinar: Collaboration - Beginnings and Endings (2024)
Webinaire de lʼInstitut Tamarack : Le rôle de la médiation systémique pour un changement durable
มุมมอง 476 หลายเดือนก่อน
Webinaire de lʼInstitut Tamarack : Le rôle de la médiation systémique pour un changement durable

ความคิดเห็น

  • @oppxx6150
    @oppxx6150 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Susanne Methot is a PRETENDIAN!! SHE IS GRIFTING REAL INDIGENOUS PEOPLE'S!!! THIS IS GROSS!!

  • @chandrasenaegodage1318
    @chandrasenaegodage1318 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    exselant

  • @magicskyfairy69
    @magicskyfairy69 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Interesting. I always thought "vibrant community" was a term leftists used as code for a crime ridden S-hole filled with impoverished minorities, except they want to describe it in a nice way.

  • @delenefalcon2915
    @delenefalcon2915 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wow amazing presentation loved every minute of it. People place purpose says it all. People living with mental Illness sometimes are almost never given purpose to make a difference!

  • @TheLoloCynthiaShow
    @TheLoloCynthiaShow 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Brilliant 👏

  • @NonhlanhlaSthabileMkhize29
    @NonhlanhlaSthabileMkhize29 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is an interesting discussion, just to ride on the wave of the question of infrastructure - I also believe that in the setting of a more rural community in Africa, development of road network infrastructure is crucial as this enables movement and livelihood creation (on this the community/ locals come in in the form of social/ local labour or even subcontracting in such infrastructure projects).

  • @KennethWestervelt
    @KennethWestervelt 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I am surprised that a lecture based on asset mapping does not define what an asset is. There's a lot of context surrounding what an asset could mean. But I'm half an hour in, and I still don't know much more than I did coming in. Very unfortunate.

    • @ElizabethHassler-d9i
      @ElizabethHassler-d9i 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      An asset is something valuable, in this case especially something valuable someone has or does. "Asset-based" means focused on strengths, gifts and shared resources that people have, and how they belong to the people.

  • @KennethWestervelt
    @KennethWestervelt 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Really unfortunate typo in the 6 Assets slide there. "Raiding our children"? Big OOF.

  • @nunoalexandre6408
    @nunoalexandre6408 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Love it!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @eustaciagreiner739
    @eustaciagreiner739 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    'PromoSM'

  • @workstationmark4103
    @workstationmark4103 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    For Citzens born in Canada only, Or Industry would take advantage of this

  • @dm95422
    @dm95422 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The $12k basic exemption in Canada (assuming a new lowest income 25% tax rate) means $3000 in UBI funding from making it a refundable tax credit. Currently, tax rates on every other income need to be higher in order to provide this tax subsidy. Unemployment insurance and public pension system charge 16% in employer + employee pay that applies only to middle class and lower employees. Public pension systems are pyramid schemes dependent on population growth, and unemployment systems reduce productivity by paying people who stay unemployed for the longest possible time relative to benefit period. Punishing employees encourages more automation and contractors that don't have the employer penalty. Replacing with a 16%point income tax would capture investor/landlord class who would also be eligible for UBI. Welfare, disability, income-based housing also punish earning income through conditionality. Housing in Toronto has 10 year waiting list. Services for the homeless make a city a destination for the homeless until services need expansion. Including more police and emergency health services. Massive Provincial and City budget savings are available through UBI. It has to be part of the funding scheme for UBI. The obvious cure for homelessness should include reducing the budget conditionally assisting the homeless. Taxing the investor/landlord class the same as ordinary workers is huge revenue boost potential. Surtaxes on the highest incomes is appropriate because UBI makes the rich richer. There is more income/spending at the bottom which all flows up to savers. UBI reduces government budgets. Credits and debits shifted among tax payers is always affordable, and shouldn't be considered "taxes" in that government discretion is not being funded. Disemploying useless government functions, means more people available to do useful work.

  • @dm95422
    @dm95422 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Trying to equate UBI to CERB payments is far beyond disingenuous. A good UBI system would stream line ALL social services that support citizens. Instead of a ton of different paperwork for E.I, disability, cpp, cpp disability, old age etc etc; they would all fall under UBI and would reduce paperwork and more importantly, reduce staff! Taxes would also be streamlined not only for the CRA but citizens as well. I'm not opposed to a UBI, IF it's done correctly!

  • @janetpeters8248
    @janetpeters8248 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    agree with Dave below!

  • @kathrynoneill81
    @kathrynoneill81 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sound like Kindergarten teachers. Another globalist organization claiming to hep reduce poverty while poverty is growing by leaps and bounds. Apparently the DEI agenda does not work, it's just part of the phony global narrative.

  • @Dave183
    @Dave183 ปีที่แล้ว

    E ki atu te whakatauki nei:- Ka tagi te komako, ka tu. Nothing about us without us.

  • @Dave183
    @Dave183 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great seminar- I have been a community volunteer for 50 years- and have always been self-funding, or resourcing, in effect .I also belong to two self help groups for family members- which are entirely self funding. One of the drawbacks of this approach, is that some agencies will not take us seriously- because there are no financial stakeholders. In recent times i studied Dr Brene Brown, and developed a strategy to do my own qualitative research- including work in Fiji. There has to be 100% ethic here, of course. Tapping into the wider issues, and doing regular short courses, is essential. I live in New Zealand.

  • @Skidkid
    @Skidkid ปีที่แล้ว

    24:05 it’s the people that are stupid… yeah.. it sure looks that way doesn’t it. We’re not stupid in the way you are saying. We are stupid for feeding ourselves metal, emotionally and spiritual poison through fox news snd msnbc and all the rest of the people who make money on you staying tuned in. The facts can be stated once a day in 10 minutes so they make up storylines that are preposterous and completely antithetical to what the other channels storyline is and they start a fight and make money on it. Remember Don King? Mike Tyson’s fight promoter back in the late 80’s and early ‘90’s? He was shameless. Dude trump was the first dude that said I’m in for the show though. The first in our generation. We aren’t as stupid as you suggest we are just being fed poison, we aren’t even stupid.. we are addicted. Addiction makes a person from the outside look stupid. You might say, “that person is so stupid to spend their rent money on meth and heroin?! Don’t they know they won’t have a place to live anymore!?? How stupid..” when emotions get that overwhelming, when the fear of reality sets in you need to escape some more and then you do and further down the road you go and that hook sinks deeper. This is similar to the feeling of safety you get from the same happy well dressed friendly intelligent people come into your living room night after night to remind you of how smart you are for listening to them and how much better you are than your neighbors that don’t get it, but we’ll show them and hopefully they come around. Now have you heard the latest???! You’ll never believe it.. it’s the same old crap with some new flys buzzing around..” there’s a sense of something that’s lasting, people grow up listening to these things, they grow old listening to these things and there’s a hit of dopamine every time they turn on the tv and see their old friends there, and they escape their troubled day and strained relationships, their divorce, or whatever it might be. It’s an unhealthy coping mechanism. If people really wanted to see a difference they need to get involved and if we’d all turn off the news pundits permanently and cut back on the news in general to once a week at most and get to work we’d find that we have a lot more in common than the pundits would tell you. We are not stupid we are hurting and lost and trying to find something to hold onto and these news pundits know the way that’s definitely being communicated when you turn on Hannity or Beck or that one girl on msnbc? I forget but I really liked her.. she really seemed like an amazing person full of the best intentions in her personal life “and here she is to fill you in on what’s really going on.” It seems perfectly reasonable, everything she’s saying, it must be true.. and?! She’s got the facts right. Generally they are using the same facts and it’s just that spin that this is critical that you know how bad it is so you keep watching. Bad things have solutions.. there are plenty solutions and well meaning people out there willing and trying to help. Go help too. Get involved and do something good and if we all did that, shoot if half of us did that it would do so much. But again, we are addicted and hurting and stuck. But if those producers down at those news stations would choose to go positive, never name call, apologize and try and find common ground on everything they can and agree to disagree with gratitude that we live in a free country with laws and there’s peaceful ways to make change. If they did that the whole world would change.

  • @rippleventures4466
    @rippleventures4466 ปีที่แล้ว

    Amen 😅😅

  • @alanblanes2876
    @alanblanes2876 ปีที่แล้ว

    I just found this terrific webinar. It is so important that we figure out how to make the most of the rest of the @SDG2030 decade.

  • @Dinero9x
    @Dinero9x ปีที่แล้ว

    wow, so much information in a 1hour conversation. Thank you for sharing.

  • @Bianca-zb4od
    @Bianca-zb4od ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you

  • @tuforu4
    @tuforu4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Why i learning now..

  • @shelleywister1187
    @shelleywister1187 ปีที่แล้ว

    The elephant in the room is the fact that the Liberal gov't has added 1 million immigrants last year (not counting illegal immigration) and we do not have the infrastructure and vacancy rates to accomodate these ridiculous numbers. Trudeau is pushing huge waves of immigration with no clue of how to accommodate them. Our standard of living will continue to fall until we will look like a third world country or we vote this incompetent leader out. Our farmland, wild spaces and wetlands will be gobbled up by development to provide housing as a result of these terrible policies.

  • @shelleywister1187
    @shelleywister1187 ปีที่แล้ว

    The biggest problem causing food insecurity is our Federal Liberal government destroying our oil and gas industry in Canada over the last 8 years. There is a direct causation between rising energy prices and the cost of everything including food. The other problem that adds to inflationary prices is the Federal government spending us into oblivion and the Bank of Canada printing excessive money we shouldn't have. Green energy is not only significantly more expensive but it is unreliable and has negative consequences for wildlife. We should be selling liquified natural gas to countries that burn dirty coal and that would significantly reduce green house gases in the world. Canada only produces 1.6% of the world's emissions even without factoring in our forest cover that recycles CO2 into oxygen. We are creating poverty in Canada because of virtue signaling.

  • @a2b716
    @a2b716 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for this! Was so excited to see a new ABCD video!

  • @clairaandherpurpleboots2282
    @clairaandherpurpleboots2282 ปีที่แล้ว

    Would you be able to share those rural ABCD resources you referenced in the video?

    • @TheTamarackInstitute
      @TheTamarackInstitute ปีที่แล้ว

      Absolutely, Claira. Here are the ones that we shared with registrants in the follow-up email after the webinar. Some are from us and some are from other organizations: PAPER | Evolving the Competitive Edge: Rural Community Engagement www.tamarackcommunity.ca/library/evolving-the-competitive-edge-rural-community-engagement CASE STUDY | Reimagining Rural Communities Using ABCD www.tamarackcommunity.ca/library/case-study-reimagining-rural-communities-using-abcd, summarized in the blog post titled Five Steps For Implementing ABCD in Rural Communities www.tamarackcommunity.ca/latest/five-steps-for-implementing-abcd-in-rural-communities Examples of Asset-Based Community Approaches (scroll down on the page) from the Rural Health Information Hub www.ruralhealthinfo.org/toolkits/sdoh/2/social-and-community-context/asset-based The Organization of Hope: A Workbook for Rural Asset-Based Community Development resources.depaul.edu/abcd-institute/publications/Documents/The%20Organization%20of%20Hope.pdf

    • @clairaandherpurpleboots2282
      @clairaandherpurpleboots2282 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheTamarackInstitute thank you!

  • @karleytanner2432
    @karleytanner2432 ปีที่แล้ว

    🄿🅁🄾🄼🄾🅂🄼

  • @jennifersmart1550
    @jennifersmart1550 ปีที่แล้ว

    Urban planning -- parks have benches which invite people to relax and socialize. However in some cities, benches are removed, so that people do not gather...

  • @lancedingmanrisingstar
    @lancedingmanrisingstar ปีที่แล้ว

    Love this tallk

  • @lancedingmanrisingstar
    @lancedingmanrisingstar ปีที่แล้ว

    Ñou44³

  • @CedricWabha
    @CedricWabha ปีที่แล้ว

    Publics cibles variés à impliquer

  • @lysechrist1947
    @lysechrist1947 ปีที่แล้ว

    What a good webinar to present during these tumultuous times . I got some great ideas for our organization.

  • @zainabbangura8274
    @zainabbangura8274 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Wow thanks 😊

  • @aditiroy4693
    @aditiroy4693 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Musts for sustainable planning for cities 1.__ with mandatory 50% urban forestry with indigenous plants only. 2. ___ cars for police, fire & medical personnel (ambulances) only, trucks only for food,water , sewage maintenance. 3. ___Zero waste & 100 % rainwater harvested office/institutions & housing complexes.

  • @frankstared
    @frankstared 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Your narrative is both thought provoking and and graceful. I would only suggest that you do away with concepts like strength/weakness. Also, instead of saying you will pass on a better world to your children," perhaps consider that many in the present and future will not have the privilege of having children and so as a more inclusive call instead I would suggest to merely "pass on a better (or less sick) world?"

  • @vanessawiltshire6813
    @vanessawiltshire6813 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Love this

  • @KeyserTheRedBeard
    @KeyserTheRedBeard 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    amazing content The Tamarack Institute. I smashed that thumbs up on your video. Continue to keep up the superior work.

  • @nxgrs74
    @nxgrs74 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The Earth is cooler with the atmos/GHGs/albedo not warmer. To perform as advertised the GHGs require “extra” energy upwelling from the surface radiating as a black body. (th-cam.com/video/0Jijw7-YG-U/w-d-xo.html) The kinetic heat transfer processes of the contiguous atmos molecules render that scenario impossible. No greenhouse effect, no GHG warming, no man/CO2 driven climate change or Gorebal warming.

  • @DavidAlao_GeoEngineer
    @DavidAlao_GeoEngineer 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I find this quite reassuring.I used ethnography for field data collection for my research in graduate school.

  • @straygameplaywalkthroughps6480
    @straygameplaywalkthroughps6480 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    #UBI 10000%

  • @aditiroy4693
    @aditiroy4693 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The acutely created disruption of economy, through laboratory manufactured pandemic has clearly divided youth of all first, second, third , fourth worlds into two groups. While one group indulged in online business promoting disposable income and, the other facing empty stomacks forcing many to migrate.The virtual world’s webiner speakers must focus on distributional impact of decisions and choices made today about ways to reduce inequalities of youth through gainful work and educational opportunities.

  • @TammyTangoToes
    @TammyTangoToes 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Terrific presentation!

  • @Voluptas86
    @Voluptas86 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Fantastic Presentation. Thanks for sharing.

  • @charlieosko4151
    @charlieosko4151 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Really great presentation and very helpful, thanks!

  • @bleach4038
    @bleach4038 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    A Mogus

  • @Fortheloveofbooks1
    @Fortheloveofbooks1 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    A short audio summary of this book th-cam.com/video/fTghlNvdUWg/w-d-xo.html