Jan Rajnoch
Jan Rajnoch
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  • 54 439
Sumatra Trip 2024 (Siberut Island & Gunung Leuser N.P.)
This wasn’t Bali or Japan..
The Sumatra trip included 5 days with the Mentawai tribe on Siberut Island and 3 days in the Gunung Leuser National Park.
The only regret I have is not coming here sooner!
Indonesia is my favourite country in the region :O
Terima kasih.
Jan from Sustainable Butterflies
www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/
มุมมอง: 71

วีดีโอ

Behaviourizer: Get Your Team On Board With Sustainability (ECCs | OOSH | Schools) Australia-Wide
มุมมอง 32 หลายเดือนก่อน
#climatechange BEHAVIOURIZER COURSE shows you how to get your team on board with sustainability (ECCs | OOSH | Schools) More info: www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/behaviourizer Jan from Sustainable Butterflies
The Green Holy Trinity (video overview)
มุมมอง 183 หลายเดือนก่อน
#climatechange SYNOPSIS: Everything depends on the health of our planet. This basic truth, in the face of climate change and environmental degradation, should be immediately graspable. Unfortunately, today, it isn’t. What we have instead is confusion, with a narrow, linear, and reductive doctrine of decarbonization on the one hand, and an all-inclusive buffet of 17 Sustainable Development Goals...
Heatwave Adaptation & Yard Naturalization (specific to ECCs/OOSH/Schools)
มุมมอง 2011 หลายเดือนก่อน
Welcome to the Heatwave Adapter and Yard Naturalizer! This is a hands-on sustainability mini-course with 20 actionable tips on how to cool down hot yards in ECCs, OOSH, and schools and make them more natural. Head here for more info and course access: www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/heatwaveyardadaptation Jan from Sustainable Butterflies
Today’s Nature Worship = Return to Paganism?
มุมมอง 173ปีที่แล้ว
Are we reverting to nature worship, as in, history repeating itself, a circle coming 'full circle'? No, it's not a circle but a SPIRAL, as explained in the video.. Jan from Sustainable Butterflies www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/
My 2 Conflicting Voices About the VOICE (Upcoming Referendum)
มุมมอง 521ปีที่แล้ว
These are my two conflicting voices about the upcoming compulsory VOICE referendum. I’m on the fence and have never voted in a referendum. The VOICE is a big deal and deserves careful consideration. Jan from Sustainable Butterflies www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/
WASTERMINATOR - Reduce Waste That Matters at Your ECC, School, OOSH, or Home
มุมมอง 15ปีที่แล้ว
Here's the link to the WASTERMINATOR course: www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/wasterminator Jan from Sustainable Butterflies
The Protestant Reformation & Circular Economy
มุมมอง 43ปีที่แล้ว
#climatechange #sustainability #reformation #circulareconomy Almost exactly 500 years ago, Luther led a movement that split away from then dominant institution - the Catholic Church. There are parallels between what happened then and our current attempt to bring our economy “back to nature” (away from the linear and towards the circular). This video builds on the previous one when we contrasted...
Martin Luther, the Protestant Reformation & Carbon Offsets
มุมมอง 158ปีที่แล้ว
#climatechange #sustainability #reformation Almost exactly 500 years ago, Luther led a movement that split away from then dominant institution - the Catholic Church. As explained in the video, there are parallels between what happened then and our current (mal)practice of offsetting greenhouse gas emissions and trading carbon credits. Jan from Sustainable Butterflies www.sustainablebutterflies....
Carbon Neutral Certified Fossil Fuels (Petrol & Diesel) - What the ..!?
มุมมอง 40ปีที่แล้ว
#climatechange #sustainability Yes, and it’s all legit, certified under the Australian Federal Government’s scheme (Climate Active) The slippery and dubious terms - ‘carbon neutral’ and ‘net zero’ - aren’t what they seem… Not only you don’t have to do anything to reduce your emissions, but you can even keep increasing them and still be ‘carbon neutral’ and ‘net zero’! The petrol and diesel exam...
What Is a NATURAL Disaster In the Age of Anthropocene?
มุมมอง 28ปีที่แล้ว
#climatechange #sustainability We know that climate change is human-caused. We know that there’s a link between climate change and extreme weather events and natural disasters. Does this understanding mark the end of the human/nature division that exists since Descartes? To what extent are such events even “natural”? Article link: www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/post/what-is-a-natural-disaste...
Amazon Scam That Cost Me $4.6k | Don’t Make This Mistake!
มุมมอง 56ปีที่แล้ว
Article link: www.sustainablebutterflies.com.au/post/amazon-scam-that-cost-me-4-6k don-t-make-this-mistake Jan from Sustainable Butterflies
Digital Thinking VS Creative Thinking
มุมมอง 41ปีที่แล้ว
#climatechange #sustainability #education #creativity In our technologically advancing society, are computers becoming more human? Or, is it the opposite - are humans becoming more like computers and rewarding more computer-like behaviour? What about the impact of digital thinking on children’s brain development and their ways of attending to the world? Podcast link (as mentioned in the video):...
The End of Greenwashing?
มุมมอง 26ปีที่แล้ว
#climatechange #sustainability #ESG #greenwashing I’m convinced that greenwashing - exaggerating or fabricating environmental credentials - is on a way out. It’s becoming, in 2023, a vanishing concern. But there’s something more dangerous than greenwashing … something elusive and indistinct in its causes but obvious and detrimental in its effects. What is it? PARTICULARIZATION Article link: www...
This Is Worse Than Greenwashing
มุมมอง 93ปีที่แล้ว
#climatechange #sustainability #ESG #greenwashing When communicating your organization’s sustainability journey … what could be possibly worse than greenwashing? It’s PARTICULARIZATION - breaking your org. down into small, detailed, explicit parts, like a puzzle, then picking one or two parts ("green" puzzle pieces) and shoving them down your audiences’ throats (customers, shareholders, prospec...
COP27 Through the Lens of Paris Agreement & Montreal Protocol
มุมมอง 116ปีที่แล้ว
COP27 Through the Lens of Paris Agreement & Montreal Protocol
Sizzling Your Steak … Without Sizzling the Planet?
มุมมอง 51ปีที่แล้ว
Sizzling Your Steak … Without Sizzling the Planet?
Indoor Vertical Farming: Growing Food on Our Climate-Changed Planet
มุมมอง 84ปีที่แล้ว
Indoor Vertical Farming: Growing Food on Our Climate-Changed Planet
Welcome to the JUNGLEFIER Sustainable Horticulture Course
มุมมอง 35ปีที่แล้ว
Welcome to the JUNGLEFIER Sustainable Horticulture Course
The Doctrine of Decarbonization - What About Biodiversity?
มุมมอง 32ปีที่แล้ว
The Doctrine of Decarbonization - What About Biodiversity?
Keeping Forests Or Mining EV-Minerals Beneath? The Green Invisible Hand Castrates
มุมมอง 17ปีที่แล้ว
Keeping Forests Or Mining EV-Minerals Beneath? The Green Invisible Hand Castrates
Adam Smith, the “Green Invisible Hand” & Carbon Markets
มุมมอง 842 ปีที่แล้ว
Adam Smith, the “Green Invisible Hand” & Carbon Markets
From Dark Ages To Green Ages? Carbon Markets & Environmental Sins
มุมมอง 1002 ปีที่แล้ว
From Dark Ages To Green Ages? Carbon Markets & Environmental Sins
Sustainability in Early Childhood / Childcare / Daycare / Schools: Your Opportunity To Make Change
มุมมอง 2242 ปีที่แล้ว
Sustainability in Early Childhood / Childcare / Daycare / Schools: Your Opportunity To Make Change
Islam As a Vehicle For Sustainability in Muslim Countries - Through This Horticultural Technique
มุมมอง 412 ปีที่แล้ว
Islam As a Vehicle For Sustainability in Muslim Countries - Through This Horticultural Technique
Islam & Sustainability | Islamic Finance & the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
มุมมอง 3022 ปีที่แล้ว
Islam & Sustainability | Islamic Finance & the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
The Curse of Ham (Genesis) & Aboriginal People in Australia
มุมมอง 19K2 ปีที่แล้ว
The Curse of Ham (Genesis) & Aboriginal People in Australia
Christian Missions & Aboriginal Australia - a Story of Survival
มุมมอง 6532 ปีที่แล้ว
Christian Missions & Aboriginal Australia - a Story of Survival
Circular vs Linear TIME - Not Just Resource Use & Circular Economy
มุมมอง 1152 ปีที่แล้ว
Circular vs Linear TIME - Not Just Resource Use & Circular Economy
Become a Green LIGHTHOUSE Instead of Climate Emergency
มุมมอง 952 ปีที่แล้ว
Become a Green LIGHTHOUSE Instead of Climate Emergency

ความคิดเห็น

  • @KingBeyu
    @KingBeyu 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Hello Instructor We're reaching out to discuss strategies to promote your Udemy course. With your expertise and the course's value, we see impactful ways to boost visibility and expand your audience.

  • @Henryfrylargalrr
    @Henryfrylargalrr 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Bs

  • @KINGPHANTOMw85
    @KINGPHANTOMw85 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The people aboriginals of australia are not hamites they are shemites just like the aeta people of the philipines, the indian elamites and the bantus. European colonialism literally fulfilled prophecy that japheth shall dwell in the tents of shem. Every place that the european japhetite colonized is where the descendants of shem dwelled.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Very interesting, thx!

  • @billyscenic5610
    @billyscenic5610 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is the answer. Material conditions not ideas move "history"

  • @i_drop_babiesi_drop_babies1673
    @i_drop_babiesi_drop_babies1673 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks mate ❤ i cant wait to get my cert 3 🌴🌿🪴🌱🌳

  • @kanu4239
    @kanu4239 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is there is pr in this course ?

  • @ROSELLERLim-xn3vv
    @ROSELLERLim-xn3vv 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hello! How can I apply for a mastered degree, I finished diploma in Environment and Natural Resources Management here in the Philippines.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I believe that info would be on the UNSW website.

  • @creativevibes4490
    @creativevibes4490 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hey..this is really informative....I wanted to know if I will be able to enroll in course.. without have science and mathematics in my bachelor's

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You should be able to, I had BBA and it was fine. But check with them on their current enrollment criteria.

  • @eyesonmyside
    @eyesonmyside 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Your thoughts align with mine!!

  • @eyesonmyside
    @eyesonmyside 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video

  • @Tgfccyb
    @Tgfccyb 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    British empire

  • @Tgfccyb
    @Tgfccyb 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    First Nations People Fit the Curses in Deuteronomy 28. they where put in chain and had iron yoke around there neck. there children was taking from them. there land and food was taking. they was give diseases to kill them. they where massacred. they where put into slavery and there is alot more but its alot more violent to write here. they where classed as the lowest form of human BUT THE FIRST WILL BE LAST AND THE LAST WILL BE FIRST. WE ARE THE SEED OF ABRAHAM JACOB AND ISAAC SO NO WE ARE FROM SHEM

  • @user-lh9uw1nt4y
    @user-lh9uw1nt4y 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    thank you for asking all those questions and interviewees. It was helpful. When I visited CHerburg in Queensland many years ago as a Uni student to do a study on indigenous culture CHristianity came up as a positive point. At a retirement village a very black man, considered fully initated etc. answered the question of my friend. He asked, "How did Cherburg becoming a mission change your community?" He answered honestly. He said, "The one thing we are grateful for when the Europeans came is this, they brought us the bible. You know before Europeans came to Cherburg we used to expose ANY babies that were slightly white or pale. We didn't want them. Mother's were to leave their babies to die in the dry river bed. This changed when we received the bible." This cultural practice changed because we found out it was wrong!

  • @ebenezerjoseph586
    @ebenezerjoseph586 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I wan to apply for masters I want to be guided in environmental management

  • @ebenezerjoseph586
    @ebenezerjoseph586 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I wan to apply for masters I want to be guided in environmental management

  • @mosescharles5534
    @mosescharles5534 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So Israel was curse read it yourself so how can you tell which is which

  • @mosescharles5534
    @mosescharles5534 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Egypt is from Ham and was the most powerful nation in its time not a slave to any nation

  • @mosescharles5534
    @mosescharles5534 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ham was never curse it was his son canaan

  • @supernovaaust
    @supernovaaust 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You just answered your own dilema without realising it bro. Your yes side acknowledged this is about cultural traditions your no side said it was about race. There are aboriginal people who dont care for their traditions, they wont be involved in the voice. This is just a pathway for indiginouse people to be legally allowed to practice their culture and traditions which currently Australian law does not allow them to do. 👍👍👍 people who see it as race will remain that way regardless of the voice.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks, great points! Your (and others') comments help me navigate this deep, not-at-all-black-and-white rabbit hole :O

    • @supernovaaust
      @supernovaaust 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@janrajnoch2676 you already have great intuition, just follow it👍

  • @samcash6131
    @samcash6131 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Adam and Eve were probably brown skinned people and hence Noah and his family were quite likely different shades of brown, some light, some dark, having passed down through the 2,000 years or so from Adam. We don't know for certain what the skin color of Ham and Canaan were, quite possibly they were the dark skinned members of the family, but that would also depend on what colour skin Ham's wife was. Darwin was the father of modern racism and he classified Europeans as superior, Asians down the evolutionary ladder and black skinned people as still evolving. Clearly he believed the fallacy of men evolving from monkeys. The Christian missionaries believed all men to be descended from Adam and Eve and all men (and women) were entitled to be saved and ultimately know God. And yes you are probably correct that it is likely there would have been almost no aboriginal people in Australia had Europeans not arrived when they did. They were devolving from the highly intelligent, socially advanced people of the Middle East, Asia and northern Africa who migrated this way probably about 2,000 years ago. In small family groups they lost knowledge, skills and building ability, and hence like any isolated group, they devolved. But they remain children of God, made in his image.

  • @gregm9433
    @gregm9433 ปีที่แล้ว

    Also, consider this, Australia and New Zealand are the least racist countries in the whole Asia/Pacific part of the planet. And we have a huge number of laws and policies in place which are for the exclusive benefit of Aborigines and to a lesser extent, other non white races. Try to name another country on this half of the planet that has such laws and policies?

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Interesting point. I've never thought of that, but I guess you're right - there's probably no other country in the sth. hemisphere (bar NZ) with a robust "architecture" surrounding Indigenous ppl :O

  • @gregm9433
    @gregm9433 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Jan, i feel sure that you are a wonderfull person, but i have to disagtree with your first point. I am a retired national parks senior ranger in the top end of the Northern Territory. I worked with Abkriginal people on land for decades. Unfortunately they may claim that the land is a second skin, but they sure dont treat it that way. These days, because of modern conveniences they dont need to care for land. These days it is much more common for them to be very destructive of land. Especially when they start fires on total fire ban days and hunt and kill full protected animals. Unless under supervision of others they throw rubbish everywhere and do nothing about invading weeds. In recent years they have destroyed what was a beautiful beach vegetation at Casuarina beach in Darwin. I am a white guy but have complete Aboriginal kinship status from my long history with tribal people going back to the early 1970s. But i am voting No, for a whole range of reasons.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks Greg. It must've been interesting working in that part of the world for so long, in those landscapes, among indigenous people. You've seen it first hand! (I haven't)

    • @puffin51
      @puffin51 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Just one more point. The most recent finds put the first human arrivals in Australia at over 65000 years ago. This dating coincides with the relatively sudden disappearance of the Australian megafauna and also with the very great contraction of the subtropical and temperate softwood forests and their partial replacement with fire-tolerant eucalypts. This loss of forest cover in turn caused desiccation and desertification. It might have been the result of general climate change, but it was certainly not helped by the Aboriginal practice of firing the bush to drive game and to reduce ground cover. Perhaps it is fair to reconsider Aboriginal claims to be the custodians of the land, in the light of this information.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It would be interesting to have a time machine and "go" 60 thousand or so years back to see how sustainable pre-modern societies were!

  • @kevinsmith3671
    @kevinsmith3671 ปีที่แล้ว

    Simply write NO it's RACIST and DIVISIVE it's against the Anti Discrimination Act. It must be DEFEATED and then BURIED VERY VERY VERY DEEP never ever to resurface again and they can do the same with the welcome to my country. If in doubt look at what's happening in Canada New Zealand Redlands Brisbane Sydney N.S.W and what was introduced into Western Australia and then withdrawn. Far too many unanswered questions and UNTRUTHS IT must be DEFEATED and then BURIED VERY VERY VERY DEEP never ever to resurface again. NO NO NO HELL NO

  • @user-cv4bi7we7j
    @user-cv4bi7we7j ปีที่แล้ว

    Makes no sense. Aboriginal People were unashamed of their nakedness

  • @SymbolsPatternsGnosis
    @SymbolsPatternsGnosis ปีที่แล้ว

    Jesus is the rainbow serpent. Be wise like serpents and harmless like doves. I am the light and the way. The Ark.

  • @platonkarataev550
    @platonkarataev550 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think you're right. Environmentalists are worshipping wind generators and solar panels. No doubt one day there will be a 50 foot high statue of Dale Vince. All worship JSO and other religions.

  • @youbigtubership
    @youbigtubership ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for posting this. Many Australians love indigenous culture, but this Voice thing isn't the way to recognise it. Put it this way: the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination Article 1(4) says it's fine to make laws to help a given race enjoy their human rights, so long as it doesn't make a permanent racial division. Whether or not you care about the UN Convention is not as important as the principle this expresses. The rest of us would be excluded permanently based on our ancestry. There are many pragmatic reasons to reject this proposal too, chief of which in my mind at tye moment is the comparative standing that an independent indigenous lobby group forced to go through Parliament to have its views opposing a 'Voice's' advice to the Executive might have. A Voice to the Executive would have the 'inside track' as it were, and an unfair advantage over all other Australians.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks heaps! You're making great points, I like the UN Convention principle :O

  • @nspacemonkey
    @nspacemonkey ปีที่แล้ว

    Elite politicians and unelected bureaucracy make billions while the real Aboriginals continue to live in poverty. The sheep are more so divided.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Fair enough - does it mean you're for or against it?

  • @daniellebcooper7160
    @daniellebcooper7160 ปีที่แล้ว

    Jan, youre missing the most important part of the voice debate....most Australians want to better the lives of the indigenous, but it doesent need our constitution tampered with to do it. One of the architects of the voice, Thomas Mayo, has said that the voice will be used as a tool for undermining western society. Hes a marxist that praises communism.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks, "the voice will be used as a tool for undermining western society" - that's a real concern, given the clouds of Marxism hovering over the entire West these days/years.

  • @barryford1482
    @barryford1482 ปีที่แล้ว

    This sustainable Aboriginal Idea is just bull. The Aboriginals are just like you or I they do deals with mining Co to make money for themselves and there is a joke that they use a geiger counter to find traditional lands. The Aboriginals destroyed the mega fauna when they first came to Australia. I will be voting NO in the referendum because the Yes vote will divide Australia by race which is wrong in principle . Also the activists promoting the voice have little contact with the Aboriginal people that need support living in remote areas. The activists will try to alter Australia's democratic system of government both Marcia Langdon and Thomas Mayo have stated there plans to change Australia into a communist state. I believe Thomas Mayo is not even an Aboriginal his father is a Philipino Borneo and his mother is a white women.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks, I might be a bit idealistic in my views. You're spot on, I also worry about this - being divided by race (or gender, sex. orientation or anything of that sort).

  • @barryjulianwaldron3656
    @barryjulianwaldron3656 ปีที่แล้ว

    Finally the Senator who continues to show disrespect towards emigrant non indigenous culture by continually wearing a hat inside parliamentary buildings- speaks. Senator Pat Dobson’s claim that if the Voice Referendum is defeated it will undermine Australia’s standing on the world stage is rubbish. If the voice referendum is defeated it will prove to the world that Australia is not a racist country and Australians will not tolerate the seed of racism being planted into the Australian Constitution. The essence of the Voice to Parliament concept is clearly about enshrining a permanent constitutional separation between the Australian peoples who are already all participating in a racially inclusive society. Keep the Aussie family together. Vote “NO”. 🇦🇺💯%

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks, good points.

    • @falseprofit4u
      @falseprofit4u ปีที่แล้ว

      The USFTH is a gift wrapped with good intent and sentiment, it's the content and detail within the gift nobody has yet revealed, guaranteed it's got one eyed activists and more bureaucrats on six figure salaries in Can'tberra.Where is the planning draft, the nuts, and bolts? How will it work more honestly, effectively, and efficiently than ATSIC, for example?? The only nuts I see are the haters and extremists wanting more and more without a single practical plan for a solution for all disadvantaged Australians, not just aboriginals. Albanese has swallowed the red pill, he's not a leader of the people, a true leader doesn't divide citizens or belittle them, there are too many warning signs this is all a big con. It's not two separate issues we are voting on. it's all bundled into the one boat, and it's tragic and lucky that they will likely sink together if the polls are on track for the majority of Australians who are voting against division and race inequality.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Interesting perspective! I've never heard of "Can'tberra" - very clever :O @@falseprofit4u

  • @Atlantis2227
    @Atlantis2227 ปีที่แล้ว

    They are not Hamites they are Hybrid Japhethites that mixed with Neanderthals and Denisovans. Australia was promised to Japheth not Ham.

  • @paralellosll3849
    @paralellosll3849 ปีที่แล้ว

    We already use circular. There are 24hrs in a day and then the cycle repeats. Each year progresses with the four pepeating seasons etc...

  • @bettysteve322716
    @bettysteve322716 ปีที่แล้ว

    "their" long term goal is revegetating large areas of the planet to erase the foot print of humanity for when THEY "rule" the remaining 500,000,000 of us after they have removed the 6 billion "CO2 producers" that they no longer want to share the planet with. Welcome to "the great reset".

  • @nish7886
    @nish7886 ปีที่แล้ว

    What do you think about bsc. in environmental conservation and management, Is it usefull for get a good job??

  • @yellendhargoud3329
    @yellendhargoud3329 ปีที่แล้ว

    How much pte score is required to do ms evns ?

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      I can't remember. Better check with them, coz I graduated in 2014.

    • @Aqsavlogs605
      @Aqsavlogs605 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      At least 6.5 in each

  • @Tommytoolsqueezer
    @Tommytoolsqueezer ปีที่แล้ว

    Mate, I just started cert 3 horticulture online through TAFE digital and I feel super overwhelmed! There’s heaps of online tests etc

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yep, it can be overwhelming - especially in the beginning. But once you knock off a few units, you'll get a hang of it!

    • @Tommytoolsqueezer
      @Tommytoolsqueezer ปีที่แล้ว

      @@janrajnoch2676 thank you!! I also workfull time. Is it a super hard course?

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Tommytoolsqueezer no, but you need to be consistent with it as some units are pretty time-consuming. It's manageable though, even while working FT.

    • @Tommytoolsqueezer
      @Tommytoolsqueezer ปีที่แล้ว

      @@janrajnoch2676 thank you mate 🙏🏻

  • @jorjab4134
    @jorjab4134 ปีที่แล้ว

    There is false and misleading information in this video.

  • @MrRoboticeyes
    @MrRoboticeyes ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for this video. This give more insight about the course i'm currently interested in.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks but pls note that I graduated in 2014, so not all the info is likely that accurate in 2023 :O

  • @lavectech
    @lavectech ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video. Wonder if they will turn the unused freight train bridge near Dulwich Hill Hercules Street Jack Shanahan park into a greenway path that goes next to The Parade where people often dump rubbish.

    • @janrajnoch2676
      @janrajnoch2676 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks Philip. I hope they will!

  • @verlania7539
    @verlania7539 ปีที่แล้ว

    All 3 boys of Noah were indigenous black people

  • @jamesmorgan-mx4mc
    @jamesmorgan-mx4mc ปีที่แล้ว

    There was no curse on black people, and even if that lie was true, the curse should have ended a1000; years ago

  • @nostrildamusellerbe5354
    @nostrildamusellerbe5354 ปีที่แล้ว

    Francis Champollion was the scholar credited with deciphering the hieroglyphs (Medu Netar which meaning language of the Gods) with the Rosetta Stone. The information that he was said to have unraveled about the origins and true history of the "Tamahu" (which literally translate into the words "created White people") devastated him and he wrote about what he found in the letter to his brother below. Champollion affirmed this in his letter to his brother and wrote: "...Right in the valley of Biban-el-Moluk we admired, like all previous visitors, the astonishing freshness of the paintings and the fine sculptures on several tombs. I had a copy made of the peoples represented on the bas-reliefs. At first I had thought from the copies of these bas-reliefs published in England, that these peoples of different races led by the god Horus holding his shepherd's staff, were indeed nations subject to the rule of the Pharaohs. A study of the legends informed me that this tableau has a more general meaning. It portrays the third hour of the day, when the sun is beginning to turn on its burning rays, warming all the inhabited countries of our hemisphere. According to the legend itself, they wished to represent the inhabitants of Egypt and those of foreign lands. Thus we have before our eyes the image of the various races of man known to the Egyptians. And we learn at the same time the great geographical or ethnographica divisions established during that early epoch. Men led by Horus, the shepherd of the peoples, belong to four distinct families. The first, the one closest to the god, has a dark red colour, a well-proportioned body, kind face, nose slightly aquiline, long braided hair, and is dressed in white. The legends designate this species as Rt-en-ne-Rme, the race of men par excellence i.e. the Egyptians. They can be no uncertainty about the racial identity of the man who comes next: he belongs to the Black race, designated under the general term, Nahasi. The third presents a very different aspect; his skin colour borders on yellow or tan, he has a strongly aquiline nose, thick, black pointed beard and wears a short garment of varied colours; these are called, Namou. Finally, the last one is what we call flesh-coloured, a white skin of the most delicate shade, a nose straight or slightly arched, blue eyes, blond or reddish beard, tall stature and very slender clad in a hairy ox-skin, a veritable savage tattooed [see my article on European Goths] on various parts of his body, he is called, Tamahou. I hasten to seek the tableau corresponding to this one in the other royal tombs and, as a matter of fact, I found it in several. The variations I observed fully convinced me that they had tried to represent here the inhabitants of the four corners of the earth, according to the Egyptian system, namely; The inhabitants of Egypt which, by itself formed one part of the world The inhabitants of Africa proper: Blacks Asians Finally [and I am ashamed to say so, since our race is the last and the most savage in the series]. Europeans who, in those remote epochs, frankly did not cut too fine a figure in the world. In this category we must include all blonds and white-skinned people living not only in Europe, but Asia as well, their starting point. This manner of viewing the tableau is all the more accurate because, on the other tombs, the same generic names appear, always in the same order. We find there, Egyptians and Africans represented in the same way, which could not be otherwise; but the Namou [the Asians] and the Tamahou [Europeans] present significant and curious variants. Instead of the Arab or the Jew, dressed simply and represented on one tomb, Asian's representatives on other tombs [those of Ramases 11 ect] are three individuals, tanned complexion, aquiline nose, black eyes, and thick beard but clad in rare splendour. In one, they are evidently Assyrians, their costume, down to the smallest detail, is identical with that of personages engraved on Assyrian cylinders. In the other, are Medes or early inhabitants of some part of Persia. Their physiognomy and dress resemble, feature for feature, those found on monuments called, Persepolitan. Thus, Asia was represented indiscriminately by any one of the peoples who inhabited it. The same is true of our good old ancestors, the Tamahou. Their attire is sometimes different; their heads are more or less hairy and adorned with various ornaments; their savage dress varies somewhat in form, but their white complexion, their eyes and beard all preserve the character of a race apart. I had this strange ethnographical series copied and coloured. I certainly did not expect, on arriving at Biban-el-Moluk, to find sculptures that could serve as vignettes for the history of the primitive Europeans, if ever one has the courage to attempt it, nevertheless, there is something flattering and consoling in seeming them, since they make us appreciate the progress we have subsequently achieved..." - Champollion More information.

  • @nostrildamusellerbe5354
    @nostrildamusellerbe5354 ปีที่แล้ว

    THIS IS BULLSHIT RELIGION IS A HELL OF A DRUG THAT CAUSES STRONG DELUSIONS THE TAMAHU WILL TELL YOU LIES THAT. NUBIAN AND KHAMITES ARE THE SAME PEOPLE AND WAS ENSLAVED IN THERE OWN LAND TRUSTIMG OUTSIDERS

  • @caryrobinson7358
    @caryrobinson7358 ปีที่แล้ว

    Noah did not have three races by three soons,that makes no sense. If it was so God would have said it. Far as this curse that was ended tens of thousands of years ago. Let the conquer tell it, you know it's shit.

  • @colinpratt9533
    @colinpratt9533 ปีที่แล้ว

    Why are we still being lie to in this day and age how will I know how to cover my father's boby if I didn't see were to cover

  • @thiagozequim
    @thiagozequim ปีที่แล้ว

    Very interesting

  • @hey.hombre
    @hey.hombre ปีที่แล้ว

    Descendants of Ham: Ethiopians Egyptians Sumerians Babylonians Arvadites Arabians Zemarites Assyrians Hamathites Philistines Phoenicians Sabeans Jebusites Amorites Girgasites Hivites Arkites Sinites

  • @eastafrika728
    @eastafrika728 ปีที่แล้ว

    Just throw away everything the European taught you about this existence

  • @Rafael-zl7fh
    @Rafael-zl7fh ปีที่แล้ว

    ABORIGLNALS ARE OF ALL THE NOACHIAN NATIONS, Shama, Hama and Yopotians.