38:00
LIFE BEYOND II: The Museum of Alien Life (4K)
Soundtrack: https://bit.ly/3lo7cnH Support me on Patreon: http://patreon.com/melodysheep
What if there was a museum that contained every type of life form in ...
Soundtrack: https://bit.ly/3lo7cnH Support me on Patreon: http://patreon.com/melodysheep
What if there was a museum that contained every type of life form in the universe? This experience takes you on a tour through the possible forms alien life might take, from the eerily familiar to the utterly exotic, ranging from the inside of the Earth to the most hostile corners of the universe.
New research is upending our idea of life and where it could be hiding: not just on Earth-like planets, where beings could mimic what our planet has produced, but in far flung places like the hearts of dead stars and the rings of gas giant planets. Nowhere in the universe is off limits.
Only when we know what else is out there will we truly know ourselves. This thought experiment will give us a glimpse into what could be out there, how we might find it, and just how far nature’s imagination might stretch.
Big thanks to Protocol Labs for their continued support of this series: https://protocol.ai.
Concept, visuals, and score by melodysheep, aka John D. Boswell. Narrated by Will Crowley. Additional visuals by Lynn Huberty, Tim Stupak, NASA, and Evolve. Featuring soundbites from Nick Lane, Jonathan Losos, Caleb Scharf, Shawn Domagal-Goldman, Chris Crowe, Jack Cohen, and Jill Tarter.
Featuring clips from Lynn Huberty’s amazing film “SHYAMA”: https://bit.ly/3d6xtUF
3D models by:
Andrey Gritsuk (https://www.artstation.com/aizekg), Alex Albinyana, Alexander Tobler, Andrey Shinkov, Millionth Vector, Jazz-Cousins, Nick Govacko, DCA Tabletop, Dimitar Grozev, Maynardd, Bernhard van der Horst, Alexandr Ivlev, 3DRTcom, AssetKit, Tebogo, Igor Puškarić, The French Monkey
Thanks especially to:
Lynn Huberty
Juan Benet
Rowdy Jansen
Eddy Adams: http://www.eddyadams.com
Kimi Ushida: http://eff.org
Gregory Cohen: http://www.designfirebrand.com
Eric Capuano: http://reconinfosec.com
John Maier
Logan
Ali Aljumayd: https://www.instagram.com/iallawy
Caleb Levesque
Eric Malette
Brandon Sanders
Tim Stupak
And to all my supporters on Patreon: Ada Cerna, Adam Orand, Ajish Balakrishnan, Aksel Tjønn, Ali Akın Kurnaz, Andrew Edwards, Andrew Valenti, Antoine C, Antoni Simelio, Augustas Babelis, Bhisham Mahtani, Bradley Gallant, Brant Stokes, Daniel Saltzman, Caleb Levesque, Case K., Cheshire 2e du nom, Chinmay Kumar, Chris Wilken, Christian Oehne, Christina Winikoff, Christopher Heald, Chung Tran, Colin Glover, Corentin Kerisit, Cozza38, Crystal, Dan Alvesved, Danaos Christopoulos, Dave LeCompte, Davee Hallinan, David Lyneham, david p boswell, David Southpaw, denise frey, Derick Yan, Dexter, dixon1829, Don Loristo, Dylan Webb, Eico Neumann, Eyubed Balcha, Ezri Dax, Gaétan Marras, Gary Wei, geekiskhan, Genesplicer, Giulia C., Håkon A. Hjortland, Hans Husurianto, Henry R. Seymour, Heribert Breidsamer, ilkercan Kaya, Iota Katari, is8ac, Jackie Pham, James O'Connor, Jayson Hale, Jean Neyrial, Jessica Turner, Jimpy, JM_Borg, Jordan Swickard, Jose Contreras, Joshua Oram, JousterL, Julian Büttner, Julio Hernández Camero, kaynen brown, Kristin & Alan Cameron, Laine Boswell, Lars Støttrup Nielsen, Laura, Laura Liddington, Layne Burnett, LemonHead, Lennart Klootwijk, Leo Botinelly, Leonard van Vliet, lloll887, Manu Galán García, Maraiu, Marco Cardamone, Mark Christopher, Mark T., Markus Oinonen, Marlin Balzer, Martin Majernik, Matthew Jacoby, Matthew Ullrich, Maxime Marois, Mehdi Bennani, Michael Li, Michelle Wilcox, Mike Norkus, Mind Wave, Mitchel Humpherys, Mohammed Aldaabil, Nathan, Nicholas Martin, Nikita Temryazansky, Nina Atesh, Nina Barton, Ninel, Patrick Keim, Patrick Schouten, Peycho Ivanov, PonWer, Preston Maness, Radu Turcan, Ramsey Elbasheer, Randall Bollig, Raz, RedOptics, Reg Reyes, Richard Sundvall, Richard Williams, Rob Phillips, Robin Kuenkel, Runi Winther Johnsen, Samih Fadli, Sandra, Sandro Heinimann, Scarlet Fortuna, Silas Rech, SilverFolfy, Smoka_Lad, SpartanLegends, Stefan, SunaScorpion, SymeSynth, The Cleaner, The Fellowship of Doge, TheHumungus, Timothé Wegiersky, Timothy E Plum, Trevor Robertson, Verissimus, Vinh Vo, Virgile Coulot, Whitney Champion, William Ronholm, Wise Doane, Wolfgang Bernecker, Yannic, ZAB, Алексей Козловский
Research Sources: See https://www.melodysheep.com/life-beyond (bottom of page)
Peace and love,
melodysheeep
http://melodysheep.com
twitter: @musicalscience
instagram: @melodysheep_
Help us caption & translate this video!
https://amara.org/v/C2rbr/
https://wn.com/Life_Beyond_Ii_The_Museum_Of_Alien_Life_(4K)
Soundtrack: https://bit.ly/3lo7cnH Support me on Patreon: http://patreon.com/melodysheep
What if there was a museum that contained every type of life form in the universe? This experience takes you on a tour through the possible forms alien life might take, from the eerily familiar to the utterly exotic, ranging from the inside of the Earth to the most hostile corners of the universe.
New research is upending our idea of life and where it could be hiding: not just on Earth-like planets, where beings could mimic what our planet has produced, but in far flung places like the hearts of dead stars and the rings of gas giant planets. Nowhere in the universe is off limits.
Only when we know what else is out there will we truly know ourselves. This thought experiment will give us a glimpse into what could be out there, how we might find it, and just how far nature’s imagination might stretch.
Big thanks to Protocol Labs for their continued support of this series: https://protocol.ai.
Concept, visuals, and score by melodysheep, aka John D. Boswell. Narrated by Will Crowley. Additional visuals by Lynn Huberty, Tim Stupak, NASA, and Evolve. Featuring soundbites from Nick Lane, Jonathan Losos, Caleb Scharf, Shawn Domagal-Goldman, Chris Crowe, Jack Cohen, and Jill Tarter.
Featuring clips from Lynn Huberty’s amazing film “SHYAMA”: https://bit.ly/3d6xtUF
3D models by:
Andrey Gritsuk (https://www.artstation.com/aizekg), Alex Albinyana, Alexander Tobler, Andrey Shinkov, Millionth Vector, Jazz-Cousins, Nick Govacko, DCA Tabletop, Dimitar Grozev, Maynardd, Bernhard van der Horst, Alexandr Ivlev, 3DRTcom, AssetKit, Tebogo, Igor Puškarić, The French Monkey
Thanks especially to:
Lynn Huberty
Juan Benet
Rowdy Jansen
Eddy Adams: http://www.eddyadams.com
Kimi Ushida: http://eff.org
Gregory Cohen: http://www.designfirebrand.com
Eric Capuano: http://reconinfosec.com
John Maier
Logan
Ali Aljumayd: https://www.instagram.com/iallawy
Caleb Levesque
Eric Malette
Brandon Sanders
Tim Stupak
And to all my supporters on Patreon: Ada Cerna, Adam Orand, Ajish Balakrishnan, Aksel Tjønn, Ali Akın Kurnaz, Andrew Edwards, Andrew Valenti, Antoine C, Antoni Simelio, Augustas Babelis, Bhisham Mahtani, Bradley Gallant, Brant Stokes, Daniel Saltzman, Caleb Levesque, Case K., Cheshire 2e du nom, Chinmay Kumar, Chris Wilken, Christian Oehne, Christina Winikoff, Christopher Heald, Chung Tran, Colin Glover, Corentin Kerisit, Cozza38, Crystal, Dan Alvesved, Danaos Christopoulos, Dave LeCompte, Davee Hallinan, David Lyneham, david p boswell, David Southpaw, denise frey, Derick Yan, Dexter, dixon1829, Don Loristo, Dylan Webb, Eico Neumann, Eyubed Balcha, Ezri Dax, Gaétan Marras, Gary Wei, geekiskhan, Genesplicer, Giulia C., Håkon A. Hjortland, Hans Husurianto, Henry R. Seymour, Heribert Breidsamer, ilkercan Kaya, Iota Katari, is8ac, Jackie Pham, James O'Connor, Jayson Hale, Jean Neyrial, Jessica Turner, Jimpy, JM_Borg, Jordan Swickard, Jose Contreras, Joshua Oram, JousterL, Julian Büttner, Julio Hernández Camero, kaynen brown, Kristin & Alan Cameron, Laine Boswell, Lars Støttrup Nielsen, Laura, Laura Liddington, Layne Burnett, LemonHead, Lennart Klootwijk, Leo Botinelly, Leonard van Vliet, lloll887, Manu Galán García, Maraiu, Marco Cardamone, Mark Christopher, Mark T., Markus Oinonen, Marlin Balzer, Martin Majernik, Matthew Jacoby, Matthew Ullrich, Maxime Marois, Mehdi Bennani, Michael Li, Michelle Wilcox, Mike Norkus, Mind Wave, Mitchel Humpherys, Mohammed Aldaabil, Nathan, Nicholas Martin, Nikita Temryazansky, Nina Atesh, Nina Barton, Ninel, Patrick Keim, Patrick Schouten, Peycho Ivanov, PonWer, Preston Maness, Radu Turcan, Ramsey Elbasheer, Randall Bollig, Raz, RedOptics, Reg Reyes, Richard Sundvall, Richard Williams, Rob Phillips, Robin Kuenkel, Runi Winther Johnsen, Samih Fadli, Sandra, Sandro Heinimann, Scarlet Fortuna, Silas Rech, SilverFolfy, Smoka_Lad, SpartanLegends, Stefan, SunaScorpion, SymeSynth, The Cleaner, The Fellowship of Doge, TheHumungus, Timothé Wegiersky, Timothy E Plum, Trevor Robertson, Verissimus, Vinh Vo, Virgile Coulot, Whitney Champion, William Ronholm, Wise Doane, Wolfgang Bernecker, Yannic, ZAB, Алексей Козловский
Research Sources: See https://www.melodysheep.com/life-beyond (bottom of page)
Peace and love,
melodysheeep
http://melodysheep.com
twitter: @musicalscience
instagram: @melodysheep_
Help us caption & translate this video!
https://amara.org/v/C2rbr/
- published: 07 Oct 2020
- views: 18878545
3:44
Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798
The Daily Dose provides microlearning history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosenow.com
Learn more: https://dailydose...
The Daily Dose provides microlearning history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosenow.com
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#Documentary #History #1798
Today's Daily Dose short history film covers the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, which proved to be the downfall of John Adams' presidency. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding: Today on The Daily Dose, The Alien and Sedition Acts.
In 1794, when Federalist President George Washington signed a proclamation of neutrality during a war between England and France, the Jay Treaty would improve relations with England while angering the French. When James Monroe and two other diplomats sailed to France to negotiate for peace, French politicians known as XYZ demanded a bribe before negotiations could begin, which infuriated the young American republic to no end. By the time John Adams was sworn in as the second U.S. president in 1796, France had seized more than 300 American ships, leading many to believe or insist that war with France was eminent and unavoidable. Amid mounting fears of enemy spies infiltrating American society, the majority Federalist Party, who supported a strong central government, prevailed over the minority Republican or Jeffersonian Party in passing four new laws, which collectively became known as the Alien and Sedition Acts.
Since many recent immigrants and new citizens favored the Republicans and their insistence that power remain with the individual states, Congress passed the Naturalization Act, which increased residency requirements for U.S. citizenship from five years to fourteen. The Alien Enemies Act went on to permit the government to arrest and deport all males citizens of enemy nations in the event of war, while the Alien Friends Act allowed the president to deport any non-citizen suspected of plotting against the government, even if the country was not at war. The Sedition Act, on the other hand, took direct aim at anyone who spoke ill against President Adams or the Federalist-dominated government, effectively muzzling descent from the Republican side of the aisle. While Republican lawmakers complained that the Sedition Act violated the First Amendment freedom of speech clause in the Constitution, the Federalist pushed the bill through Congress, which was signed into law by Adams on July 14th, 1798, with an expiration date set for March 3, 1801, which was the last day of his term of office.
By the law’s expiration, U.S. federal courts prosecuted no less than 26 individuals under the Sedition Act—nearly all of them editors of Republican newspapers who opposed the Adams administration. The prosecutions fueled fierce debate over the definition and meaning of a free press, as well as the rights that should be afforded to political opposition parties in the United States. In the end, widespread anger over the Alien and Sedition Acts fueled Jefferson’s victory over Adams in the bitterly contested presidential election of 1800, while their passage would go down in history as one of the biggest mistakes of the Adams presidency. By 1802, all of the Alien and Sedition Acts had either expired or been repealed, save for the Alien Enemies Act, which was amended by Congress in 1918 to include women.
And there you have it, the Alien and Sedition Acts, today on The Daily Dose. We strive for accuracy and unbiased fairness, but if you spot something that doesn’t look right please submit a correction here: https://forms.gle/UtRUTvgMK3HZsyDJA
https://wn.com/Alien_And_Sedition_Acts_Of_1798
The Daily Dose provides microlearning history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosenow.com
Learn more: https://dailydosenow.com/alien-sedition-acts/
Subscribe for daily emails: https://subscribe.dailydosenow.com/
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheDailyDose18
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Click to subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuYZAnKoZYXAKKpsi_-90Tg?sub_confirmation=1
#Documentary #History #1798
Today's Daily Dose short history film covers the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, which proved to be the downfall of John Adams' presidency. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding: Today on The Daily Dose, The Alien and Sedition Acts.
In 1794, when Federalist President George Washington signed a proclamation of neutrality during a war between England and France, the Jay Treaty would improve relations with England while angering the French. When James Monroe and two other diplomats sailed to France to negotiate for peace, French politicians known as XYZ demanded a bribe before negotiations could begin, which infuriated the young American republic to no end. By the time John Adams was sworn in as the second U.S. president in 1796, France had seized more than 300 American ships, leading many to believe or insist that war with France was eminent and unavoidable. Amid mounting fears of enemy spies infiltrating American society, the majority Federalist Party, who supported a strong central government, prevailed over the minority Republican or Jeffersonian Party in passing four new laws, which collectively became known as the Alien and Sedition Acts.
Since many recent immigrants and new citizens favored the Republicans and their insistence that power remain with the individual states, Congress passed the Naturalization Act, which increased residency requirements for U.S. citizenship from five years to fourteen. The Alien Enemies Act went on to permit the government to arrest and deport all males citizens of enemy nations in the event of war, while the Alien Friends Act allowed the president to deport any non-citizen suspected of plotting against the government, even if the country was not at war. The Sedition Act, on the other hand, took direct aim at anyone who spoke ill against President Adams or the Federalist-dominated government, effectively muzzling descent from the Republican side of the aisle. While Republican lawmakers complained that the Sedition Act violated the First Amendment freedom of speech clause in the Constitution, the Federalist pushed the bill through Congress, which was signed into law by Adams on July 14th, 1798, with an expiration date set for March 3, 1801, which was the last day of his term of office.
By the law’s expiration, U.S. federal courts prosecuted no less than 26 individuals under the Sedition Act—nearly all of them editors of Republican newspapers who opposed the Adams administration. The prosecutions fueled fierce debate over the definition and meaning of a free press, as well as the rights that should be afforded to political opposition parties in the United States. In the end, widespread anger over the Alien and Sedition Acts fueled Jefferson’s victory over Adams in the bitterly contested presidential election of 1800, while their passage would go down in history as one of the biggest mistakes of the Adams presidency. By 1802, all of the Alien and Sedition Acts had either expired or been repealed, save for the Alien Enemies Act, which was amended by Congress in 1918 to include women.
And there you have it, the Alien and Sedition Acts, today on The Daily Dose. We strive for accuracy and unbiased fairness, but if you spot something that doesn’t look right please submit a correction here: https://forms.gle/UtRUTvgMK3HZsyDJA
- published: 09 Feb 2021
- views: 28794