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For more infomation >> Indian Visa Free Countries Updates 2018 - Duration: 5:16.

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100+ Best Indoor Succulents Part 2 - Duration: 16:38.

For more infomation >> 100+ Best Indoor Succulents Part 2 - Duration: 16:38.

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Learn British English Free: how to say long words - Duration: 7:32.

Hello! My name is Chris. This is a free lesson on Learn British English Free on

YouTube. Welcome. In this lesson I'm going to help you say some long words in

English. I have examples to show you and to talk about. An important thing to know

is syllables - this means like how many sounds in each word. For example: party

party: two sounds; two syllables 'party' This is important to understand how to

say these longer words. They're difficult when you learn English so please don't

worry - I will help you. Please look at the list by the video: you can read the

subtitles or captions to understand more. I feel comfortable? Comfortable? No thank

you - comfortable, please it looks like four

sounds - four syllables - but when we speak like natural speakers we often use only

three: comfortable I write the phonetic transcription by the word as well; it can

help you if you know about that. Please watch: /ˈkʌm.ftə.bəl/

It's difficult - 'f' and 't' together - /ftə/ in the middle - /ftə/ - /ˈkʌm.ftə.bəl/ I feel comfortable

I feel comfortable. Next one memory it's possible quicker is memory /ˈmem.ri/ I have

a good memory. Do you have a good memory for English vocabulary?

Number three is a very good one. In fact, it's marvellous marvellous two

sounds listen again /ˈmɑː.vləs/ That's marvellous; /ˈmɑː.vləs/ The weather

today is simply marvellous. A really important one: chocolate chocolate

chocolate

/ˈtʃɒ.klət/

I love chocolate

Number five: temperature? Temperature?

Temperature, please.

/ˈtem.prə.tʃər/ The temperature drops in winter. Six is like Harry Potter:

magically - no thank you. Magically /ˈmæ.dʒɪ.kli/ He did that

magically. '-cally' = /.kli/ Magically. The next one is similar actually actually no

thank you. Actually please /ˈæk.tʃə.li/ Actually, saying

'actually''s not so hard.

The last two examples are the same theme: it's to do with the endings of regular

verbs in the past simple or past participle. Please watch the other lesson

I did about these endings and how to pronounce them - I'll put it on here for

you. Collapsed - no, thank you. Attached - no, thank you; we don't need

three sounds 'collapse-it'; 'attach-it'; we just need two: collapsed /kəˈlæpst/

attached

/əˈtætʃt/

I sent you an email and I attached a copy of the letter. Collapsed. Attached.

One more time for the whole list: comfortable; memory; marvellous; chocolate;

temperature;

magically;

actually;

collapsed;

attached

Finished. How to say many long words in English. Please write a comment if you

want to tell me: was it good or bad? Easy or difficult? it will be interesting. This

is for Learn British English Free on YouTube; also the British English page on

Facebook and the web site www.learnbritishenglish.co.uk/

Email Chris for private lessons: cjworkman17@yahoo.com

You can write to me, we can have some lessons together. Please look on YouYube

,under the video, for links to other sites like Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr; we're

everywhere. Thank you very much for your time; I will make another lesson soon. I

will see you then. Goodbye.

For more infomation >> Learn British English Free: how to say long words - Duration: 7:32.

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Ka Bar Dozier Review. A Great $20 Compact Every Day Carry Knife. - Duration: 7:59.

Hey, what's up guys.

Got a cool video for you today.

We're gonna be reading the winter Filson catalog page by page, talking about product

specs and talking about the pros and cons of buying work wear marketed to yacht owners

who've made their millions mucking horseshit on clam ranch for a living.

Look this guy's gonna blow the mountain.

No that wasn't a game of thrones reference.

Here's white jesus, he scored this sweet Jac Shirt off a limp vendor after the cleansing

of the temple.

Ok no we aren't.

Figured I'd try to start the video normally for a change.

I saw on Instagram last week Ben and Matt from Blade HQ talking about how a video should

start?

With what's up guys.

No one else saw that?

It was funny to me.

Today's video is about another knife fortunately, or maybe unfortunately- I'm trying to read

the room.

What's this channel about?

The Ka-Bar Dozier, dossier, dozer, gozer.

A knife made for the average not in a Filson catalog bro, the guy that's said AUS-8 ain't

too bad a time or two in his life.

But before we get into any of that.

And while you're trying to figure out if there's literally any connection between

a $20- Ka-Bar pocket knife and a clothing catalog for assholes wearing our iconic heavyweight

brushed flannel that's been providing warmth in the field for men for decades, let's

take a look at the dimensions like the overall length and weight.

I bought a jacket, a belt and wallet on sale from them a few years ago.

And I guess they think I have a trust fund now because they send me maybe 6 beautifully

shot catalogs a year.

Blade size and cutting edge.

Gotta charge $400 for a mackinaw cruiser to hire the sexy rugged models.

Handle Size grip area.

Shooting them with Hasselblads.

Spine Thickness and Handle Thickness.

I wish I had a hassleblad.

Err a red.

Tallness Closed.

Thoughout the decades I've been doing this channel the Dozier comes up, and a follower

on Instagram was asking about it recently so I decided what the hell and bought it.

The Dozier is a sorta compact, lightweight knife- that's designed to be an affordable

functional pocket knife, but not impress dudes into knives.

It features a right about 3 inch drop point hollow ground blade made from Aus-8 steel.

It's that steel everyone wishes was the marginally better Sanvik.

I say that because recently I was browsing Cedric and Adas steel test spreadsheet, and

while Aus-8 ranked lower in steel tests than a few of the Sandviks, calling Sandvik good

and Aus-8 bad doesn't make sense.

Here Aus-8 is an ok steel, and sandvik is like Okay Okay (slightly more enthusiastic).

I link those below.

The blade is deployed by a thumb stud, and is configured for right handed deployment

out of the box.

But you can swap the thumb stud if you have a star key, and flip the pocket clip for easier

ickier left handed deployment.

It's not a quick deployment, just a gentle thumb motion, and it opens, as a bird softly

tweets.

You can even use two hands if you'd rather take it slower.

Lockup is handled by a lockback mechanism, kinda stiff, but solid.

You can close it one handed if you flick downward when pressing the lock, but be careful to

have a finger forward so the tang hits your finger.

Then close it the rest of the way.

You can always close it two handed though- ain't no one in a hurry.

The handle is kept light by a linerless zytel, which is a form of hard wearing plastic.

It gives plenty of texture in the wet, even though I have mainly used it indoors the past

few weeks.

There is plenty of room for my hand- and it doesn't feel small in my grip.

Pocket clip is not deep carry, and youre looking at about 8 tenths of an inch sticking out

of your pocket.

The clip is tight and snappy, and it looks to be a painted stainless steel.

I would expect flakage as you carry it for a while.

It can be swapped to the right or left side in a tip up configuration.

Comparisons.

First the Dozier.

A good buy for only $20.

Great for every day carry, or as a backup in a tackle box, or as yet a footnote in your

knife addiction.

I own a few Japanese made, and chinese made spydercos, and this feels on par with those.

There's no up and down or side to side blade play.

Now the Buck 110 Select… if you want a little bigger, and made in USA, this is a good choice.

Not possible to close 1 handed though.

I reviewed this about two weeks ago, and people are still mad about how I pointed out the

Buck 110 original has always been a heavy knife for it's size.

Moral of the story is for some people the worst thing for another man to say on the

internet is they'd prefer knives with pocket clips that aren't 7 ounces.

Now the Spyderco Delica 4, they made this is a regular drop point too, but I'm not

gonna buy this knife again.

This is about $70, has a steel slightly better then Sandvik and it's a little smaller and

easier to close one handed.

If someone wanted a good knife with more of an emphasis on price I'd go with the Buck

or Dozier.

Now the Spyderco Tenacious.

This one has a similar steel to the dozier, but it's larger, and has an easier quick

deployment with one handed opening and closing… it's a larger knife though so it's heavier

and about $40.

I wish I had the Ontario Rat 2, but I couldn't find it for the review, so if you could imagine

that knife for a second, and also have you seen it laying around? and last but not least

the Chris Reeve Sebenza.

Ok just fucking with ya.

That was for the Filson crowd.

Although spending $400 on a mackinaw cruiser- buying 2 or 3 kabar dozier may actually make

more sense- unless you're this guy.

So if you don't have a ton of money and need something light weight, it's hard to

go wrong with a $20 knife.

The Dozier is made in Taiwan feels on par with a spyderco, a good every day carry knife

that won't impress assholes who own Chris Reeve knives, but will get a nice thank you

from a person who asks if you have a knife they could borrow for a quick second to pry

open a paint can, then cut their tuna fish sandwich in half and immediately close it

without wiping down the blade.

If you like this sort of review, subscribe to the channel, give the video a thumbs, up,

patreon, you know the usual.

And as of right now, I am probably only capable of putting out a video a week, so in the mean

time if you could just either watch this twice, or watch a beer review in the mean time that

would be great.

Thanks for watching.

Steel tests: https://www.patreon.com/posts/full-steel-table-17366331

For more infomation >> Ka Bar Dozier Review. A Great $20 Compact Every Day Carry Knife. - Duration: 7:59.

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VIDEO PODCAST: Download It! It's Free. Well...Not Really. - Duration: 27:28.

(upbeat music)

Greetings, and welcome to Boston Public Schools Technology

video podcast on, "Download It! It's Free, Well...Not Really"

video podcast on internet privacy.

This is episode three of our "Digital Citizenship and Safety" series.

We have three guests with us today,

two educators and one industry leader.

My name is Nick Gonzales,

and I am a digital learning specialist for BPSTech,

and I will have our guests introduce themselves as well.

We'll start with Nilufer.

- My name is Nilufer Johnson, and I teach at Snowden.

I teach ESL and Computer Science Classes.

- Ingrid Skoog, I've been in the security and privacy world

for 15 years now moving from government to academia,

to now the for-profit world.

- I'm Cynthia Soo Hoo.

I'm the Principal of the Quincy Elementary School.

- Great, great to have you all here.

Thank you for joining us.

So, let's get down to the nitty gritty.

We're gonna talk about internet privacy,

and what it actually is

and the different ways it impacts schools,

and impacts students, and our teachers, and parents as well.

First thing I'd like to talk about is privacy.

What role do educators have

in talking about internet privacy with students?

Phones, permissions, different types of devices, Alexa,

Siri in your room, in your house, data?

How much infringement on privacy is too much?

Will it significantly change

by the time our students become adults?

And we'll go ahead and we'll start with Nilufer.

What do you think?

- When I was a little girl,

I heard the same advice from my mother

or maybe you all have heard,

never take candy from strangers.

She was nervous about all the risks out there.

But today as a mother and an educator,

I feel like it's our job to teach our students

to be internet smart as well as being street smart.

Because the social medias have become our neighborhoods,

but even though there were risks outside,

my mother never pulled me back indoors saying

that you can't go.

I think it's our-- we were just told to be careful.

And we learned how to be careful,

and I think it's now our mission to teach our students

how to be sensible using technology and social media,

and let them enjoy their time, you know,

have a healthy experiences in their time.

And maybe our kids, their generation,

will be hearing never click a link

from a stranger instead of a candy from stranger.

- Right, very true.

- I'd say, absolutely there's a rule

that we should be playing with the educators

to teach students about this.

We're saying before that security's

been on our minds for a while now.

Privacy is really gaining steam that we care about this.

I think it's a myth that I hear that a lot of young people

don't care about privacy, or that privacy is dead.

This notion that we can claw it back is,

the horse is out of the barn.

I don't agree with that.

I think that students are very smart about what's going on

in many ways are coming up and taking ownership

of a lot of issues.

They're seeing the world and privacy

is just another one on that list

that I think they're very successful at once

they understand what it is

that they need to be concerned about,

they can articulate really well.

Here's the line where it works for me of, yes,

companies I'm okay with you doing this, but not that.

And it's our job to inform them

and from an industry perspective,

I would love to partner with the schools more

where I can to lend my expertise

and I know my colleagues feel that way too.

One of my friends does an old lady's group

that she goes to retirement homes

and talks to them about privacy.

So we're here to partner

and help the students learn some more.

- [Nick] Awesome.

- Great. Yeah, so first I want to thank Nick

and OIIT for having this conversation.

I think it's a very important conversation

to have around downloading.

So I'm at the elementary level,

and many of our students work with technology

throughout the day in their classrooms

and teachers can put some blocks on there.

We're on a secure network and other things like that.

However, many of them have their own devices at home,

and they're at free range to download or to communicate,

and use those devices however they want.

And even though my students are at the elementary level,

many of them do have their own telephones, cell phones.

And some applications may ask, you know,

check this box if you're 13 years or older,

and they may still be just checking it off.

- [Nick] Exactly.

- There's no way to really prove that, and they're going in,

downloading all different types of apps.

Some are social, because their classmates have it

and they want it too.

Which, you know, can bring some concern.

So as educators, even at the elementary level,

I think it's very important

to try to help them gain habits of understanding

what is being asked of them

when they're going to download an app.

What is the purpose of the app?

What is their intention for using the app?

What type of permissions are they asking for, right?

I think that's very important,

especially when there's free apps out there.

- We were talking about this a little earlier,

in terms of permissions.

Some of these apps, you turn them on, you accept them,

and they're free, and some students

and some kids who are well below sometimes 10 years old,

will just say yes because it's free,

but they don't understand that

when they say yes to the terms

and agreement that it'll have access to their microphone,

or it'll have access to their GPS, or whatnot.

This begins-- I mean again this goes back to privacy.

20, 30 years ago, the idea of privacy

was you have your domicile, right?

You have your house and within your house,

that's your domain and that was your area of privacy.

But now with our computers, and with our devices,

with our tablets, with our phones,

now it's coming inside of our house now.

So, what exactly is privacy?

Because the notion of it has changed

even within the last 10 years with all the advancements

that have been made with mobile technology, and with tech.

So I wonder, just like Cynthia was saying,

as teachers and as educators, and even as industry,

what is our responsibility in relaying this to our students?

Is it of the utmost importance

to let them know what's happening?

And to give them an idea of they have a choice.

They can download certain apps that they want,

and this is what's gonna happen.

I think Ingrid touched on this a little.

- I'd say privacy-- it's an interesting thing

that we've talked about everyone's line for privacy

is different so that's important for people to understand.

But also, there's a difference between

if you have my information, you're targeting me,

'cause you know I want to buy a particular pair of shoes.

Well, that might be okay.

I don't mind if you're trying

to show me products I'm interested in,

but privacy in terms of self-autonomy, in that,

I am choosing and making decisions for myself

and corporations and companies don't have enough information

that they're manipulating me or coercing me

because of information they've gotten.

I think that's the really powerful thing around privacy

that we want to have autonomy over our decisions.

We don't want social media to be nudging us

and knowing enough about us to steer us

toward political decisions or how we interact

with our friends and colleagues.

So that's the important thing I'd love

to see our students know more about.

- Yeah, and I would also say, I think it's in tandem.

I think it's educating students what habits,

but also reaching out to families,

and letting them know that

if you're choosing to allow your children to have devices,

what are some things you can put on it?

You know, can you block certain things?

Are there security things that you can,

what are they called, like you know,

parental blocks and other things,

controls that they can have.

- Agreed. I totally agree,

because I think it's important

to definitely go after parents

and go after just educators in general.

A lot of adults do not know what's happening.

And so I think it's going to be

a multi-pronged administrations, teachers, and parents.

And I think eventually, hopefully if we cross our fingers,

it gets down to the students at the younger level,

at the younger ages, because I think that's where

it's gonna need to start.

Especially you get the younger kids who are in 2nd

and 3rd grade when they start typing,

when they start getting onto their Chromebooks,

and especially around 2nd, 3rd grade

where they start to learn,

develop these habits of good privacy

and good digital citizenship measures.

So let's get into our second question.

Now we're gonna talk about passwords

and password protection practices.

And Ingrid, I'm sure you can,

well I'm sure everyone can back this up.

You get a new password, and I've done it myself,

when I didn't know all the stuff

that could be done with my password.

Sometimes I put it on a Post-it,

and sometimes I'd stick it right on my computer.

This was like five, 10 years ago, but hey, little did I know

that was probably the worst thing I did

considering what could've been done with my password.

So, let's talk about why they're important for our kids

and why they need to password protection practices

need to be taught at all levels, right?

And why are they important to faculty and staff as well?

And, let's discuss longer more elaborate passwords

and some of the practices that might impact

how strong your password is.

- Of course we hear everywhere having longer passwords

with combinations of letters, capital, lowercase,

and change them periodically.

It's so overwhelming for myself, and I know, for many of us.

It's just like we are visiting hundreds of pages everyday.

Trying to have a single password is like trying

to carry a single key for each door we open.

It is definitely, you know, we forget them.

They're getting too complicated.

However, we need to be very cautious about it,

because of the privacy and security issues.

Everyone can have, I think, of course,

big companies are doing big password management systems

they're using, but as an individual, as a child, or mother,

or you know educator, what we can do, is try to come up

with our own homemade password management system

which could be something really personal to you,

something difficult to guess,

and something you can't change periodically,

but you can remember.

I don't know, what we should do

is people have good intentions,

write down their passwords on an Excel sheet, keep in Drive,

might not be the best idea,

but definitely following some best strategies out there.

But I agree with you with the previous question.

As educators, as teachers we feel so nervous

and not knowledgeable enough,

so I think we should start with the educators,

make sure they feel comfortable with the technology,

and then pass all these knowledge to kids.

- I have so many thoughts on passwords,

and how much I hate them, and how much we all hate them.

But they're not going away.

I mean, there are a lot of things that industry

is trying to improve on them, but when it comes down to it,

we all just have a ton of passwords.

For me, password managers are a key to helping us,

because we just can't remember

all the different passwords we have.

We have hundreds of them.

And so, in order to have unique strong passwords,

I think that there are free

and affordable password managers out there,

and you only have to remember one password

to be able to store all your passwords in there.

That is something we've been telling folks

all over the place.

And even writing them down, sometimes that can make sense

if it's kept in a safe at home.

If that model works for you,

what's the likelihood that someone's going to get

into that list that you keep at home.

The problem is if you carry it with you.

If you have it in that sticky note on your computer,

right where you're gonna use it.

That's the problem, but there are things

that we can do, share with the students

and with educators and ourselves that we can do better

than what we're doing now.

- What I found helpful around passwords

is finding some sort of a system that you can use.

Maybe there is like one combination that you're always using

but changing up a little bit depending on what,

you know, what you're logging into.

So that would change a little bit.

I love the idea of having a password manager,

because I find myself writing on stickies,

or having a book somewhere.

I started going online, but I was like,

well, what if someone can get into my documents and stuff,

and then they'll find that, right?

So just figuring out a system that works for you

and also understanding that sometimes

when you're working on-- your signing into things,

there are administrators and depending on

what program it is that you're working on,

they may actually be able to see your passwords.

And so that's why it's important to have different passwords

for different programs you're using.

- So yeah.

So I guess it comes down to both.

I mean I think if you're more heavily involved

in the internet and you have a ton of passwords.

You have 30 or 40 that you use.

I think a password management system would be great.

But then you also have people who don't.

They have three or four, you know,

they could use Nilufer's methods as well,

where if they know they have a safe place

that they can store their passwords,

that's a better choice to use.

That's a better choice to go with.

But in terms-- how about of making passwords?

Because sometimes we have students

that'll just, they'll use, you know,

if it's a 3rd or 4th grader, they'll use the word "leg"

for a password, l-e-g, right?

And sometimes it'll accept.

How do we instill within our students,

the idea of password encryption and how, you know,

if you have a longer password, right?

Versus if you have like a nine character password

versus a 13 character password.

Being able to brute force get into,

which means essentially trying to enter as many words

as you can within a password field.

It's much likely, more likely, for it not to be

hacked or decrypted by having a longer password

versus a shorter password.

The only thing is, when you have longer passwords

they're more difficult to remember.

So, you know, how do we instill this practice

within students and educators of having longer passwords

and having more difficult passwords to hack.

- I think Nilufer brought up a great point

of having numbers, and letters, and symbols,

and upper, and lowercase.

But those symbols can actually help, right?

You know, where you have to shift and put the and sign

or exclamation points.

I think that also adds, or makes it more difficult

to kind of figure out.

- I don't worry about the brute force,

the guessing over and over so much

as I worry about the pet's name.

Oh, well my cat's name is a great password,

or "RedSox34," that's a great password,

and I bet someone watching will have that password,

and go, oh.

The commonality of things that someone could guess

that if I knew a little about you

that I would think, oh, I bet your password's

this pet name or this sports team.

Those I would love to see people get away from.

- A lot of our students just go with date of birth,

because that's officially assigned to them at the beginning.

- [Ingrid] Yeah, or anniversary or something.

Moving away from that would be a big--

every year there's a top ten list

of most common passwords and it doesn't change much

year to year.

Things like, password 1234, or I love you.

- I had heard this Facebook or other social media sometimes

send this questionnaires.

What's your favorite movie?

Where did you meet your boyfriend, girlfriend?

And what's your pet's name?

And then these questions,

because you feel like you're taking a questionnaire

and then they're used to hack into your accounts,

because they are usually the passwords.

- One of the tricks we've taught folks

when we've worked with them is a line from a song.

That can be pretty long and it's easy to remember.

If you pick out a lyric, a line from a song

that could be a great password.

- And the use the spaces too.

I mean that's one that we took away

from a citizenship training we had here for the district

where people don't usually use spaces in their password.

- [Cynthia] I didn't know you could, wow.

- But you can, you can use spaces sometimes.

Well, most of the time I believe.

- Sometimes, the rules are all different

which makes it hard too.

Sometimes you need those special characters,

sometimes you need upper, lower, little drop of blood,

all these different special, do three turns.

- Moving on from passwords,

this is gonna actually come back into sensitive information.

Let's talk about phishing, and what phishing is,

and how important it is for our faculties and students

in our schools to know what phishing is

and the scams that are out there.

So first, can I have someone-- Ingrid can you explain

what phishing is?

- Sure, so phishing is most often

when someone is trying to get your login, your username,

and your password so that they can get

into your bank account,

or get into your social media account,

and it's this way of trying to trick you

into giving that information up.

- Is this important for schools to know?

Is it important for our students and teachers to know?

Thoughts?!

- Oh, absolutely.

We are working with confidential information,

we are working with students on IEPs,

very confidential information.

We have to be very alert.

Luckily, I think it is managed by the center

that our emails go to spam if there's any phishing emails,

and sometimes if there are risky activities going on,

we get notifications which is great.

But as individuals, I think it is important to be,

you know, like street smart, internet smart.

We have to be smart.

When we see a person out on the street

that doesn't make us feel comfortable,

maybe something he says doesn't sound right

or the way he looks, the way he dresses,

and we say, you know what, I should be cautious

about this person.

And it's the same thing about phishing.

Usually they come with emails and just to be careful.

Does this email sound right to me?

Is it from someone I know?

Usually we don't know the people,

the address looks like something we could trust.

Like instead of "bostonpublicschools.org,"

it's from dot com "BostonPublicSchools.com."

It's sounds almost right, but it's not right,

and sometimes they're using our human feelings.

Like hey, this is time sensitive you need to help.

And as default, we want to help people, right?

So clicking one thing could be very dangerous,

so just to be cautious and pay attention

to these little things could help.

- Yeah, I absolutely agree.

You brought up something earlier, too,

around strangers, and stuff like that, right?

It's knowing who's sending it to you,

checking for those little things like,

is it the exact address, or is one letter off?

Did they change the order of the name?

And what information are they asking for?

If you feel like it's anything private,

that could lead to giving away your password

or most of them are asking you to change your password.

Just being very, very clear in what they're asking for.

And figuring out why they're asking for it.

At BPS we can always just forward

that email to someone and just say,

is this legit, what's happening here?

- A lot of students can spot phishing,

because they're born in, they're digital citizens,

they're born into tech, I guess you can say.

And a lot of them think

that they can spot phishing scams right off the bat,

but some phishing scams are so good,

it takes five sometimes 10 minutes

to actually analyze the entire page and say,

oh, this isn't the actual page.

There are really good phishing scams out there.

So I think a lot of students think they know more

than they do.

Especially high school students,

but I've seen the case where that's not actually true.

- Someone will fall-- we'll all at some point,

have a weak moment, be in a hurry, fall for something.

And that's okay, it doesn't make us stupid,

or anything, but it's important that when you know

if you have that realization,

I've put in my credentials where I shouldn't have,

that you reach out to get help.

It's not embarrassing to say, I did something wrong

and let's fix this quickly.

And also if you do have that,

stop and think, and pause, and this seems

like it has a sense of urgency, or it doesn't seem right.

Check out a band, don't rely on the email,

call the person, or text them,

or take some out of way of saying, hey,

Nick, did you send me this thing

that's asking to change my password?

And that can sometimes really help you.

- So the last topic I'd like to talk about is data breaches.

And we're gonna focus specifically on schools

throughout the country that have students

who many times, well most all the schools I've worked with,

have a lot of students that know a lot more

than the faculties do about technology.

And a lot of times I see these students

help in some way or another the faculties

and administrations within schools.

And some schools around the country too,

we have these formations of tech teams.

These teams that are being educated on how to use tech,

and they're going out and helping the administrations

and the faculties within these schools

navigate their technology.

And so, many times these students are given information

that is really sensitive.

Sometimes it's the case that this information

is given over to students unbeknownst to the people

who gave it to them.

And so, how do we mitigate this?

How do we send the message out that it's great to have,

this is a great idea, this is a great concept

to have students actually help teachers and administrators,

but also there's a positive side to it,

but there also could be a negative side to it.

What to do in this situation?

Cynthia, do you want to start?

- Sure.

So-- I wanna go back and say,

so when we're logged onto things, right?

We share many devices as well.

So there could be breaching in that way too,

where we're not logging off and so when others

are getting on to that same device

they may automatically be able to get into your information.

But around breaching, and yes, many of our students

are definitely in the digital age,

and we have these tech teams and we may think it's harmless

to give them login information

so that they can help us complete something

or organize all of our student's presentations

or something like that, and not realize

that with that one password, they're able to get access

to all of our other information.

So I think that's very important to think about

when you're giving students these responsibilities.

Is there a way that we can give them a separate access

to complete the same thing that you're hoping for.

- That really drives to what I'm focused on privacy now

is the views and the access you have.

You only want people to be able to look at

what it is they need to do.

And so maybe you do have a case

where you need to have a student help you,

but you could change your password after.

So you've seen them use it and help you,

but then they can't get back in later.

Or have a different kind of log in,

depending on the technology you're using,

understanding with your support folks,

hey is there an account that this student could use

to only see this material and help me,

but not have that broader, wide view.

- Sometimes it's not even that sophisticated,

we take attendance, stay logged in,

walk out of the classroom for a second,

it's vulnerable, right?

Data is vulnerable to student or anyone's action.

You know, we grew up with this phrase of time is money,

time is money, time is money, but now,

what I observe is the data is money.

So the data is so important, information, any information

about you could be very important for other parties,

for their benefit.

It could be your location, your interests, your school,

your medical records, everything.

Since the data has become so valuable and so important,

we need to be more cautious about how to protect,

how to handle it.

Not only people who provide the data needs to be educated,

such as, you know, if the parents provide us data,

students themselves, teachers, us,

and people who handle the administrators, the teachers,

and in your case, you know,

example students sometimes handle this data.

It's very, very vital, because it's no game anymore.

It is so important.

People are paying you for your data.

We have to be very alert and smart about it.

- Right, right.

People are paying for data,

and people can sell social security numbers online,

you can sell birthdays online.

There's a lot of things you can do with it,

that sensitive data that some students can get,

and not to say that that's happening,

but it's just as a potential.

And so, yeah.

- Even surveys now, right?

We don't take surveys anymore without any, you know,

like if you're not giving me a gift card,

I'm not completing, sorry.

Because it's my data, right?

It's my information.

The times are changing so we have to catch up.

- And they're changing fast, right?

So that's gonna do it for our,

"Download It! It's Free... Well, Not Really" video podcast

by the Digital Learning Team at Boston Public Schools.

I'd like to thank Nilufer Johnson of Snowden High School

for joining us.

- Thank you.

- And Ingrid Skoog, Industry Leader

in Information Security and Cynthia Soo Hoo,

Principal of the Quincy Lower.

And Nikolas Gonzales of the Digital Learning Team,

Digital Learning Specialist here at BPS.

Thank you so much for joining and watching.

(upbeat music)

For more infomation >> VIDEO PODCAST: Download It! It's Free. Well...Not Really. - Duration: 27:28.

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10 Most Powerful World's Best and Worst Passports 2018 - Duration: 4:29.

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For more infomation >> 10 Most Powerful World's Best and Worst Passports 2018 - Duration: 4:29.

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免费翻墙!只要一个电子邮件,免费SEED.ME VPN使用一年,26个国家/地区节点让你真正免费畅游互联网 - Duration: 6:28.

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Play Store Download : How To Download Play Store in 2 Steps - Helping Mind - Duration: 6:46.

For more infomation >> Play Store Download : How To Download Play Store in 2 Steps - Helping Mind - Duration: 6:46.

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Prince Charles is 70 and Ready for the Gift of Popularity | British Royal Family - Duration: 10:04.

Prince Charles is 70 and Ready for the Gift of Popularity.. The queen gave Prince Charles a rousingly complimentary speech at his 70th birthday

Now Britain's future king just needs to win a suspicious public over.. Twenty-one years ago, on Prince Charles' 49th birthday, few would have betted the crown jewels on the most hated man in Britain becoming king.

Indeed, the very future of the monarchy seemed at times to be at stake, as public revulsion to the royals swelled in direct proportion to the posthumous adoration doled out to the memory and legend of Princess Diana.

I had just started working in British newspapers that year, and my first job was at the London newspaper, the Evening Standard

Our fancy offices in Kensington were just a few hundred yards away from the sea of flowers which, even two and a half months after Diana's death, lapped against the wrought iron gates of Kensington Palace

The flow of pilgrims clogged the subway at Kensington High Street and impeded our way to work until after Christmas.

Charles as king? After what he had done? The very notion seemed preposterous. . This week, as a 62-gun salute rang out from London's Tower Bridge to mark his 70th birthday, only a fool would bet against Charles being the next king

His mother is already handing many significant jobs to her son, and there is mounting speculation that she may formally retire from public life in less than three years, handing the reins to Charles.

At his birthday party on Thursday night, the queen reportedly gave a speech in which she said, "Over his 70 years, Philip and I have seen Charles become a champion of conservation and the arts, a great charitable leader, a dedicated and respected heir to the throne to stand comparison with any in history, and a wonderful father.

"Most of all, sustained by his wife Camilla, he is his own man, passionate and creative

So this toast is to wish a happy birthday to my son, in every respect a Duchy original

To you Charles. To the Prince of Wales".. It was a tremendous tribute from a mother who, 20 years ago, was about as convinced as the rest of us that Charles would be a good king and refused to attend his marriage to Camilla in protest at the relationship.

There's little doubt that were Charles to announce tomorrow that he had actually decided to pass the crown directly to his son, it would be a wildly popular move.

But that's not going to happen, and while it would be a push to say he is a much-loved figure in British society, there is a (admittedly sometimes grudging) acceptance that he will be the next king.

A recent survey on the popularity of the royals found that Charles was the seventh most popular royal.

It's not, at first glance, a great ranking for a king-in-waiting. But you have to take account of the exceptionally strong field; the six spots above Charles are filled by his glamorous sons, his mother and their respective spouses.

At least he is far more popular than his brothers Andrew (15th) or Edward (12th); in fact, some 48 percent of the populace say they like him

It's not a bad result when you consider where he was two decades ago (and that around 20 percent of the population want to do away with the monarchy altogether and replace it with a republic).

"The media engaged in an orgy of nostalgia, and the public were taken, emotionally, right back to where they were 20 years ago

People started to blame him again, and it did knock him".. The writer Penny Junor, a confidante of Prince Charles' camp in the 1990s and 2000s who wrote an influential post-Diana biography of the prince, Charles: Victim or Villain, told the Daily Beast that were it not for the outpouring of emotion and which marked the 20th anniversary of Diana's death last year, he'd be doing even better in the court of public opinion.

"The media engaged in an orgy of nostalgia, and the public were taken, emotionally, right back to where they were 20 years ago

People started to blame him again, and it did knock him," Junor said.. "He is a very sensitive man, a very emotional man, and he was devastated by the failure of his marriage

He didn't go into it intending anything other than it to be for life. When the relationship disintegrated, he blamed himself and felt terrible and the anniversary brought a lot of that back.

"But things really have changed in past year. Harry seems to have become much closer to him, and I think Charles really was delighted to be asked to walk Meghan down the aisle

All of that has helped him enormously.. "Ultimately, however, his happiness is all down to Camilla and the fact they are now happily married

Having spent all those years being the wicked other woman, once she became his wife, most people stopped sniping.

"Charles' problem was always that the story about his private life undermined his work

But once they married, all that was gone. There is no story there anymore. The story has to be his work".

While it is true, as Junor says, that Charles was hammered by the media around Diana's anniversary, he wasn't helped by his sons, who steadfastly declined to make even the mildest of conciliatory noises about their dad's role in the Diana story.

Harry, naturally, went the furthest, launching an extraordinary attack on his father (although he didn't identify him specifically) for having him walk behind Diana's coffin at the funeral.

Now, however, his sons have said their pieces, and although there is tension between them, they appear ready once again to toe the official line and make support for the institution of monarchy their first priority; witness Harry's warm tributes to his hardworking father who falls asleep at his desk and awakens with bits of paper stuck to his forehead, or William saying how great he is with his grandchildren.

The ghost of Diana has defined Charles for so long, and it will likely be an issue he has to contend with every five and ten year anniversary of her death, but it is also true that the media have gone a lot easier on the royals in general since the Leveson inquiry into phone hacking revealed that all the royals' mobile phones had been routinely hacked by journalists.

Several journalists and shady private eyes had obtained the palace's 'green book'—a complete directory of phone numbers of the household and staff—and used them to access voicemails.

Partly in penance for that shameful period, partly due to the fact that most papers now have just one royal reporter rather than a team of them, the media have gone along with the palace's efforts to portray Charles as an avuncular, slightly eccentric, grandfatherly presence.

Just this week, British headlines were dominated by Prince William's stories of how his dad allows wild red squirrels to run around his house in Scotland where they find nuts and seeds sequestered in his coat pockets.

This is almost certainly a gross exaggeration. Red squirrels are among the most timid and shy creatures in the British Isles, but that went unmentioned, as did the biological fact that they are notorious transmitters of the deadly disease Leptospirosis.

Maybe it really did happen once, but regularly having red squirrels dancing around your kitchen and going through your pockets for nuts is pure fantasy.

But it suits the new narrative of the prince, a narrative that the public appear ready to at least half believe.

There are areas where the media has not given up attacking Charles.. One of these is his undoubted extravagance

Tom Bower's recent biography of the prince was seized upon by the press for its description of a prince so pampered that he had his own bed and several favorite watercolors sent ahead of him to a friend's house he was staying at.

Undoubtedly Bower's book landed several painful contact blows on Charles, but the other favorite criticism of him for being a 'meddler' who gets overly involved in unsuitably political causes no longer really hits home, not least because Charles' concerns have become mainstream.

It was interesting to note that William received no criticism for 'meddling' when he waded into the debate about the wickedness of tech companies this week, certainly a more controversial act than quietly talking to one's plants in the privacy of one's extensive gardens.

All the evidence is that the general public are rather keen on the same things Prince Charles is rather keen on; can anyone really object to organic food, taking care of the environment and keeping the countryside pretty?

"He is not the kind of character to say, 'I told you so,' but there is a sense now that he had foresight, and people respect that".

Robert Jobson, the veteran royal journalist and author of a new biography of Charles, Charles at Seventy - Thoughts, Hopes & Dreams, which authoritatively claimed his mother will step aside for him in three years time, told The Daily Beast that Charles' rehabilitation is at least in part down to the fact that public opinion has belatedly caught up with his views.

"He was labelled the potty prince for so long, because no one cared about these issues, like plastic and gas guzzlers

He is not the kind of character to say, 'I told you so', but there is a sense now that he had foresight, and people respect that

He is seen as somebody with credibility".. And, Jobson says, the way he communicates his messages has changed dramatically in the last two decades: "He has mellowed

The language is less aggressive. And the press are fairer to him now as well. He was ruthlessly caricatured by the media taking snippets of what he said and making him look ridiculous, and there is less of that now

Maybe we have mellowed too".. While there will always be a hardcore base of Diana fans who will protest his rehabilitation, and whose long memories will never forgive the prince the sins of his younger self, what is undeniable is that Prince Charles' 70th birthday is his happiest birthday in many decades, maybe ever—and also marks his most successful year yet.

Thank you for watching the video! Please leave your thoughts in the comment section below.

And don't forget Like and Share the video with everyone if you feel this video is useful.

For more infomation >> Prince Charles is 70 and Ready for the Gift of Popularity | British Royal Family - Duration: 10:04.

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VideoCast #42: Spiritual Warfare for the Phlegmatic Temperament - Duration: 27:44.

This is Deliverance Ministry.FM video cast number 42.

Hello, everyone.

Welcome to another episode of Deliverance Ministry.FM, where we give you proven insights,

both the demonic realm into deliverance ministry so that you can wait spiritual warfare more

effectively.

This is Dr. Don Ibbitson, here once again with my colleague and cohost Dr Phyllis Tarbox.

Good to have you here.

As always, we enjoy doing these and, uh, we're actually coming into the last episode of a

six part series that we have been doing on spiritual warfare and the different temperament

types encourage you to listen to the first episode of the series, which is episode 37

where we give an overview about the five different temperament types, choleric, melancholy, supine

sanguine, phlegmatic.

We talk about the different aspects of the temperament.

Listen to that episode.

Also go to our website because we got a lot more information there that we can cover in

these podcasts because as you understand the temperaments and the purpose of them, you're

going to get a lot more out of this podcast.

Today.

We're going to focus on the temperament type that is characterized by being kind of a peacemaker

low energy type, and that's the phlegmatic temperament.

We'll get into that in a moment, but let me just say the reason that we're doing this

is because every temperament type, uh, each of the five different temperament types has

different strengths and weaknesses in the demonic realm, which knows a lot about us,

sees us, what we do.

Here's what we say.

They know a lot about how we're wired, they and how we're created and the different strategies

and tactics they will use on different temperament types.

Not Everything's going to be successful for one on one or particular temperament type.

So as you understand your God given temperament, then you can be better equipped at really

on several levels to do better in your relationships with your family if you're married or your

children.

And that's important.

And that's where we use temperamental analysis a lot, but also in the realm of spiritual

warfare.

And this is an area we're moving into more and more.

That as you understand your specific temperament, the strengths and the weaknesses of it.

You will be better tuned to see how the demonic kingdom is going to work in your particular

case where you're most vulnerable.

So we're going to talk about the the main elements, if you like, of the flood manic

temperament type.

Today we're going to talk about some of the strengths of that temperament, and then we'll

move quickly into what are the weaknesses, where are the areas where we're most vulnerable,

and where we have temporary weaknesses.

That's where we need the Lord, but grace, the promises, thank praise God, he will change

us and transform us into his likeness.

And so where you've got weaknesses, God can work on those so we, but we want to tell you

what the weaknesses are for that temperament.

And then based on that, you will see the most, uh, we'll talk about the most common demonic

strongholds that we see in the phlegmatic temperament for people that we ministered

to here in our center.

And it's worth emphasizing that there's very few people who are one pure temperament, like

purely phlegmatic.

They might be phlegmatic and inclusion, Melancholia and control, and supine and affection.

Okay?

So what we're focusing on here is the elements of the phlegmatic temperament in a person

can, as they say, it could be phlegmatic and inclusion, social orientation, if you like,

or controller or fiction, and that's the areas that we're focusing on here.

And, and really the only way to know your temperament is to get a temperament profile

done and Redo those at the counseling center.

We're happy to do those for you.

It's, we, there's, we, we run the programs, run the reports that we do a counseling session

to go over that profile with you.

We do it over the office, we do a worldwide, so it.

And so that's something you might want to consider.

But with that kind of preamble and background, let's jump in and talk today in some more

depth about the phlegmatic temperament.

Phyllis, tell us about that temperament type.

Well, this temperament is, is a real peace keeper.

I think that's the big thing about this one.

They, they don't seem to get their feathers ruffled at all.

They're just very peaceful.

They can function very well in a very hostile environment and they can take on tedious tasks

when they relate to both tasks and peaceful.

But, you know, I think the overwhelming thing with this one is they're very calm.

They're very easy going, they're efficient, but they can be very perfectionistic as well.

Um, the, the practical people, they're generally fairly conservative.

Um, but like I said before, they can be a very good piece maker or an arbitrator.

The love piece, right?

The piece at all for.

Yeah, they hate confrontations.

They're very, very even balanced there.

They're not demanding.

And so they, they, they don't demand a lot of love.

They don't have to be a lot of attention.

They just have very, like middle of the road needs, needs and wants, are very centered.

Go with the flow.

Yeah.

Avoid the conflict.

Can Be indecisive.

They tend to procrastinate as we'll see.

Difficult to motivate, but, but I think you hit on it.

They're generally just well balanced.

People just kinda go.

None demanding, easy, calm.

Just don't typically get themselves all at a joint very, uh, very much.

They're very good.

Typically they're, they're observers, I think many times are observers of life, like to

sit on the sidelines of kind of watch life go by, don't typically get involved a lot

in a lot in deep relationships of deep things of life and so, and, but, but I think, you

know, summarize the, the real strengths of um, they're, they're very, um, they, they,

they can to people, they can do tasks.

They're very comfortable doing tedious tasks.

They're comfortable doing the same job over and over again, can be calm going

fishing professionally.

I had a boss like this, I loved it.

He was just the easiest guy to in the whole wide world to work with.

He never got angry with you.

You could really blow it and he never got upset, but he would, he and he was a fairly

decent delegator, but I tell you what, he just never got involved.

He just stayed on the outside, just refuse to get involved with.

So I ended up being his, the front man, you know, he was happy to let me go.

He'd go out and do the.

Yep.

And he sat behind and just to credit for just about everything, but

well, there can be strength in your hair all the time.

So yeah, that was worth it.

I think that's important.

Or they can, you know, any of these people, they can be good managers, they can be in

that realm in terms of, you know, in areas that they're comfortable with.

So those are some of the main elements, if you like, or of the, uh, of the, of the carrot

of the.

I'm phlegmatic temperament.

So let's look at now before we get into the stronghold side of it, that the demonic realm

will try to exploit from a template, from a, from a temperament standpoint, you, what

are the major weaknesses that we see with the temperance?

We touched on them a little bit, but we want to highlight them for you so that they're

very, very clear.

Major weaknesses of the phlegmatic temperament.

I think the biggest one is that they're very an uninvolved in life.

They, they're like on their own island and they really liked it there.

So they, they don't, they have.

No, they're not.

They're not motivated to be, um, to change their ways.

They don't, they don't want to be involved with people.

They, they, they.

And it's very difficult.

I think with that and involvement, it's very difficult to motivate them.

So they, they're uninvolved.

Then they're unmotivated, you know,

not motivated by threat or punishment or reward or just kind of.

Yeah, that's, that's.

So, that's a challenge if you can imagine if here in relationships, especially

our parents too, there's just no way.

I mean, I've, I've had plenty of parents come in with these children that are phlegmatic

and they'd tell me they've, they've tried all the charts, they've had the stars that

they do this.

If they do that, you know, and they've done everything but they just can't seem to motivate

them.

It doesn't, it doesn't look like they have any desire for themselves to get ahead and

they don't really care what anybody else thinks.

And I think those are the two big things.

They're pretty big.

And you could summarize the, use the word stubborn, very stubborn people.

Just difficult to get off the dime, decided something and want to do something or not.

Do something, it's just, that's just where you are.

So, so that's a weakness obviously in the course, the things of God, I mean, we're called

to be involved in life.

I mean, God's got a plan for our life.

Prosperous not to harm us, but we got to cooperate.

We got to move with him, you know, and, and be part of that.

So that definitely can be a, can be a real is the funny thing.

I think as we said, there's no, there's no temperament matchups that are, that are not

of God, but you know what, if you put this temperament with a cleric, I have never seen

a clear get more frustrated than when they're married to a phlegmatic [inaudible] the cleric,

you know, they're the motivators there.

The shakers, they want to take charge and you cannot make this one move.

And it just, that's what brings an awful lot of frustration into relationships.

Well it is, and it's probably a good place to interject.

A quick plug is the right word, or at least a note of hope.

I mean, different temperaments doesn't relate to.

Well, you certainly, if you're a cleric, you should only mary afflict phlegmatic or melancholy.

Different temperament types can have very happy marriages in successful marriages.

Marrying somebody that's different themselves.

Temperament has its own challenges, right?

Strengths and weaknesses, and you can be.

But once again, if you know your partner's temperament and they know yours and they're

motivated, each ideally is motivated to serve and meet the other's needs, then that can

be a positive.

But yeah, there's some, you know, fire, what do they say?

Matching, no fire, fire and gasoline.

So this one, when it hits the cleric temperament does that, does have a little bit of fire

that goes along with it.

That will be good point.

So all right, so those, so they're difficult to motivate, tend to be uninvolved in life.

Those are the weaknesses.

And then then, then I'd say there's the, the, you know, because they're the tenant generally

characterize.

I'd say it's my weight discern by kind of low energy, low energy types.

They sit back.

So it's Kinda like, um, I don't know.

I'm trying to think of when the animal example, an animal who's not aggressive and attack,

it needs something to defend themselves with their attacked and the manics will generally

use their tongue.

They will use their mouth as a self defense mechanism.

They will use sarcasm or critical spirit to kind of a wry sense of humor to keep others

at bay and so you know, that's just part of the defense mechanism.

I believe that the phlegmatic have, they will use sarcasm, critical.

They can be critical of others just to kind of keep that personal will.

Well you're on my in my space here, so that definitely is self defending.

They'll drop a little sarcastic bomb and then they just keep right on moving in it and it

usually has the other person just sitting there, Whoa, what was that and where did that

come from?

And that gets them off the hook and they can just move right on.

They don't like to get involved in deep conversations with people.

Well, exactly.

And of course other temperament types can use sarcasm and be critical too.

It's not like fleetmatics have a lock on that sarcasm thing, but that for them it's just,

yeah, they just sit back and like, I guess you could say like a porcupine.

I'm trying to think my analogy example that, that porcupine quill, tufts that, such, that,

you know, you're going to hurt while a porcupine man that phlegmatic we'll just toss out that

barb tongue or then and woo, you know, just to kind of keep personhood based.

So it's kinda surprising coming from them because

they're usually pretty peaceful.

So when you get that sarcasm coming your way, you can generally, if they're not directly

aiming it at you, there's truth in what they're saying so that you catch it.

They may not confront directly because they don't confront, but you don't see them getting

angry too much.

We just drop that little drop bomb with the sarcasm and then key part of

coming on, I guess that's how it gets manifested is things that they're saying.

So that certainly can be a weakness of that temperament.

So with those weaknesses that we've talked about, and there are others were just hitting

on the top three here.

Um, are ones major ones we see difficult to motivate an involved in life and using the

tongue is kind of a verbal weapon, if you like, or a weapon to disarm others.

What are the, some of the most common strong holes that we see operating in phlegmatic?

So people who are primarily phlegmatic, what do you think?

The major one that we see,

I think slumber, I would have to stay slumber just because of the apathetic approach in

indifference to life.

Um, because they're not involved, you know, they just, I think one of the things they'd

probably say the Moses, I don't really care, you know, that's fine.

I don't really care.

So that, that would lend to itself with apathy.

I was going to say apathy and indifference kind of would be under that strong man of

apathy.

So just a big one.

You just stat I, yeah, apathy.

That's, that's tough, right?

That's a, that's a, that's a spirit of that person's life.

It's helps keep them on the sidelines.

I think isolated isolation is under slumber to.

And I think that would kind of go along with this temperament because they, they kinda,

like I said before, that uninvolved piece, they, they, they're their own island, they,

they, they can be happy on their own island.

Like Tom Hanks.

Maybe it wasn't so happy on that island, but they would survive on that island.

Well

that's probably true.

It may not have tried to get office as hard as.

Tom, did you see you looking at.

I'm going to submit to you that Tom was not a, was not a melancholy and he wasn't a, probably

a fleet manager.

He had to have a friend, right?

Wilson Wilson invented Wilson.

So, you know, that's given the job he had there, the Fedex and you know, it probably

wasn't a CEO.

It's interesting because we've talked about temperament types being very helpful, indicating

what kind of job that you, that you would be in.

So he would very likely as sanguine.

Eric, Eric.

So he needed a buddy.

Okay.

Wilson.

So anyways, we digress.

Sidebar, sidebar.

So this, um, so we talked about, okay, so slumber, slender, under that storm in a slumber,

you would see the apathy and indifference.

But I think there's another one too that, that we need to talk about that that's under

the realm of, of hardiness and pride and probably two majors, spirits under that, that we see

a lot what we talked about, his stubbornness look at it's good to persevere.

That spirit of stubbornness.

There's a spirit behind that and that needs to go.

We need to be yielded.

It keeps us from yielding to the Lord in our life.

It keeps us from entering into deepness, relationships with our, with our significant others and

family where we're not willing to yield our position.

And so that spirit of stubbornness, we see that a lot, don't we

[inaudible] [inaudible], and I think sarcasm would fall under that, that type of thing.

Running under hottie to.

And then think about this one, um, perfectionism because they are.

So I'm efficient and detail oriented.

I bet there's some perfectionism in the, in the, in this temperament as well.

So

a lot of things are in our ministry in how we approach things.

We have strong Lynn and ruling spirits in any other industries too as well, but are

under our group of hardy is where we would.

We would see that spirit of sarcasm.

We would see stubbornness under there as well.

And critical spirits and certainly yeah, sarcasm and perfectionism will be under that.

So.

But certainly under that haughty spirit we would definitely see things like this.

Stubbornness and sarcasm or certainly two of the major ones.

So we talked about slumber and then the third area that we see a lot of when we deal with

fleetmatics is here

because they're great procrastinators.

And by that I mean you know, if, if they don't know how to conquer a task, if they are given

something that they don't know how to do a because they are usually quite efficient and

perfectionistic.

They will put it off.

It gets sent to the side of the desk because of fear of failure, fear of the unknown which

comes across as procrastination.

They won't tackle it.

So they'll just put it off and put it off and put it off.

And you know, this, this speaks to you parents who have children that are just procrastinating,

um, and you can't motivate them to do what it is that you want them to do.

It could be just think about, it could be fear of failure, could be fear of the unknown

that they don't know how to do it or they won't do it well enough, but that it just

doesn't matter to them too.

They'll just put it off.

And procrastination is a big one under that spirit of fear that stronghold.

The fear.

Yeah, I think it is.

And we see that a lot in there under fear.

There's other spirits as well.

I mean, there any temperament can be dealing with, you know, insecurity and inadequacy

and inferiority and in some, in some measuring and you know, like I say, they just, uh, but

I definitely think that that fear of making mistake that because they're so timid in so

many ways, they pulled back so much that just that fear making decision for you're getting

it wrong and coupled with the low energy at sometimes it just takes effort to do things,

to do research and to get involved in and keeps them at bay.

So it hinders them from all aspects of getting too deeply into things, whether it's analysis

or getting it too deeply and with their relationships, they're just, man, they're just happier to

sit back on the sidelines.

So

you said low energy.

They're always so concerned about how much, how much energy they're going to have to expend

or how late are they going to be out at night.

You know, I think about this work, you know, in different social settings, but even when

I was young, I have a few friends that are phlegmatic and inclusion and even at 18 and

19 years old, you would hear them say, well, how far away is it from our house and how

long do you think we're going to be out?

Because I've got to get my rest.

I need to get my sleep there.

They have an inordinate price on that.

It's a very high need for them to get their rest, which, which, you know, at 18 and 19

years old, I always used to think that was so odd.

But they're very much like that still today.

Yeah, there you go.

Not, not in that.

Not In that magic quadrant at that.

So No.

Absolutely.

So yeah, I think once again, you know, the common theme is just stubbornness, low energy

peacemakers, and so the strongholds that can be associated with that are, you know, there

is 10 percent, the devil's will try to work in those areas and those are the things many

times that people, the strongholds that we see in fleetmatics.

And of course the answer is if there's demonic strongholds that we've talked about this in

other podcasts and of course all our articles that like if you, if you got a demonic stronghold

in the stuff that you're doing to counter this isn't working, then you need deliver

it.

So there's no other way that won't experience or work in your life in this, in they're soulless

realm.

They got to come out and wherever they are in.

And there are other spirits of course associated, you know, we talked, you know, we did these

devils could open the door for others, like, you know, pornography addictions and whatnot.

But these seems to be the one of the main ones that the fleet madics deal with.

And so, um, you know, guest get deliverance, that's important.

But apart from deliverance and even after deliverance and aside from deliverance that

when the spirits try to come back to the house of the battlefield is the mind.

And so, you know, sometimes it's a matter of discerning the spirits when they come back.

And then there's an element of just say, well, I'm going to do in the flesh, I'm going to

step out in the natural and do some things to, to counter these weaknesses.

And we've talked about, you know, there's some of these weaknesses that we've talked

about being stubborn and uninvolved in and using the tongue wisely.

I mean, that's not an excuse for bad behavior.

Now people flip.

You're not going to be the life of the party and you're not going to be out.

You're to want to go home or go.

And that's okay.

You know, there's no condemnation in that and, but, but some of these areas we, you

know, in areas of our life especially where we need to be engaged and involved.

So from a, I guess a specific tactical takeaways that people should be involved in in terms

of spiritual warfare, Rome is we would say, man, just look at you in some parts of your

life.

You just need to be engaged, right?

You can't be an observer

every.

I know you have families, you have children, you have relationships around you at work.

You can't just island off and ship, float, float away

in part by your computer or your phone all the time.

Right.

And look at everybody doesn't have to measure.

I get that, but others will set it aside and engage in it for the medics, they have to

make more of a focused effort because it's not a natural thing, right?

Yeah.

They got to come out of their little backstory.

The batcave get engaged and especially if you're a spouse, it takes effort.

I've talked to many meaning marriage counseling situations.

You know, if the person's a melancholy and one's a loader or melons or ones a phlegmatic

and the other medical and they don't talk, they just.

They just drift along until there's an explosion and usually the melancholy annex explode.

They get angry and they can't take anymore.

He just sits there like a deer in the headlights and you know, they just, it is not engaged

and it takes effort and so I don't know how you do that other than to say, Lord, what's

your will for me?

What are you calling me to do?

You know, learn, learn, do the things you need to get books on, boundaries, how to set

boundaries.

Do you need some parenting?

Start to do that, but just say I need to do some of these things and being engaged, whether

it's in life, being engaged in church fleetmatics will sit at home and watch tv or watch her

evangelists on TV is like, no, not good enough.

You know, and I, I, I liked some of the online ministries a lot and I watch them, but I'll

tell you what, the idea of being one body is coming together for corporate worship.

So it kind of dispels that sitting alone behind your computer thing.

You need to be.

You need to be in a place where you can worship the lord together as one body.

Exactly.

So being engaged, engage, engage, engage in life, and then we'll see a second specific

suggestion that we have.

You know, we talked about the tongue, how people like mannix can use the tongue, is

a verbal defense and others, you know, we've done a podcast, we've got a whole slew of

articles about the tongue is a, is a spiritual force in the tongue, has the power of life

and death.

We can speak curses over others.

Word curses and we can use the tongue as a creative force for good.

So for you, for Mannix out there, if you're speaking, curses, word curses or you know,

ask the Lord to forgive you and break the word curses that you've spoken over people.

If you spoken over yourself or I'm so stupid or you're stupid or you're this or that.

If you've used your tongue as a weapon, confess it, repent of it.

Turn away.

Maybe seek forgiveness from the person that you spoke to them, to you smoke and stuff

over yourself.

Break those word curses and then and then turn the Dow.

Repentance is to turn towards God and choose to start speaking life over your situations,

you know, catch yourself sarcastic, so forgive me for being sarcastic.

Forgive me for saying that, and it's a learned skill.

It's like anything in the Kingdom of God, you learn how to do it.

It may not be natural for frog.

Managed is not natural and it's like just learn to start speaking life, not death, you

know, in the Tower Leighton, learn how to speak blessings thanking the Lord for what

he's done.

Speak life over the situation and just learning how to turn that around that you're not your

rider.

Dry Sense of humor to hurt people and that's a counseling thing, but it's if you just recognize

the tongue is a spiritual force, you've used it for evil.

Receive God's forgiveness and turning in a new direction.

Amen.

Amen.

Does that make sense to me?

I think so.

I think those are, I guess probably two of the major things we would encourage fleetmatics

to do.

So fellas, anything else you want to add about that?

No, I don't think so.

I think the phlegmatic have just got to take a look at some of their relationships and

see how they're going and listened to some of the complaints that maybe they've heard

from their spouses in light of what we've gone over today and see if it lines up because

you know, if you are disengaged, if you.

If you're not very involved and these are things that you've heard over and over and

over again, then it's time to rise up and make some changes.

Like Don said, so good thing.

This is a blessed temperament of a God.

The peace maker, the detail, the nothing ruffles their feathers.

But again, there's some places where you need to make some changes in your life and move

closer in.

And I would say as a counselor, you know, when we come in and we meet with people or

we'd get their profiles, see the phlegmatic a lot of times even before we've done the

profiles, the flagman x, when they come in sometimes, or just your hardest ones to get

information out of, they will.

You know, if you ask them to submit questions that you might get, you may get a specific

answer, you may get some waffling around, but they're not wanting to talk.

And so just getting them to talk and open up and share and you know, nothing, not too

passionate about anything.

Even when they're, you know, I don't get too mad, you know, I don't like this or I don't

like that.

And it's like, you know, it's, it's, they're challenged.

Sometimes very short answers, short.

You don't see the passion, you don't see them crying and breaking down or you know, and

I'm not saying that's necessary, but a boy, you'd love to see them passionate about something.

I'm sad or angry or motivated to change.

And sometimes if it's not there, it's, it's, it's, it's so there are channels to council

to.

So God bless them, God made fleetmatics, he loves him in the.

And like I say, there's great strengths and weaknesses to them and they can be wonderful

parents and teachers and spouses and everything else.

But just like every temperament, lord use my use my things.

You've given me the blessings, a peacemaker, the calmness that's good, the faithfulness,

the persistence, but Lord, the weaknesses change me and transform me.

So hope this has been helpful for you.

This is the last of the series.

We've, we've covered all of the, um, of the five temperaments in this podcast series.

Next time we'll be doing will be on a different topic.

I encourage you to listen to all of them.

Share them with somebody that you think might benefit from them.

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We thank you for listening to this podcast.

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Thank you.

And God bless.

For more infomation >> VideoCast #42: Spiritual Warfare for the Phlegmatic Temperament - Duration: 27:44.

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Service Above Self Award details - Duration: 1:03.

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For more infomation >> Service Above Self Award details - Duration: 1:03.

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