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Foto: Mattis Folkestad, NRK P3.

The roll cage and its jig.

Mars Hill University's winter commencement ceremony was livestreamed by the MHU athletics department through its Ustream channel. — at Mars Hill University.

Hey guys, just starting up my twitch, hope ya'll can give me some support. It would be much appreciated!

 

www.twitch.tv/09wgames/profile

  

Streamed for 3.5 hours today, got a lot done!

 

Interior is mostly done, with fully adjustable front seats, working steering wheel, and opening console box. Also started work on the front end, with temporary gray panels (will order red ones). The hood opens with a realistic linkage, like those found on real cars. Minor details include a hood prop rod and some wheel caps.

Livestream @U18 Damen Eishockey WM in Spittal an der Drau - Jänner 2016

for May 22nd Student March in Montreal. Watch it live: www.livestream.com/cutvmontreal. This is the 100th day of the student protest.

 

Featured messages:

1. WOU HOU (the response to my favorite chant which is:

 

Call: 'Charest' -the current Quebec prime minister seen here wearing a hat: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jean_Charest.jpg-

Response: 'wou hou' -which when you hear it feels something like 'were still out here'-)

 

2. DANS LA RUE (in the street) & AVEC NOUS (with us)

 

3. 78 calisse/ NO to 78 (opposing the current emergency law 78 which criminalizes student protests, wearing red squares, and saying things like 'dans la rue avec nous')

 

4. some CUTV support and hashtag (for their excellent live coverage www.livestream.com/cutvmontreal also follow #manifencours which was too long for stenciling)

   

****for out-of-town friends and family interested in the back story:

 

100 days ago Quebec students started striking in opposition to a 75% increase in university tuition.

 

If you've heard anything about this you've probably heard the total cost will still remain below the national average; that is the main counterpoint to the student strike movement which opposes a shift to the debt-slave-style tuition scheme of the rest of the country (even if Quebecers would be the most fortunate debt-slaves).

 

When the movement is well-articulated it focuses on wider class issues and a corrupt economic system threatening the hard-won low-tuition here in Quebec. See: this dude from UQAM (www.youtube.com/watch?v=74JQQf4zfg4&feature=player_em...)

 

With my american student debt (which totals almost twice that of my parents first mortgage), I for one am with the students here who insist just because thats what the rest of the country (and Americans) have accepted, Quebec shouldn't. I hope the students succeed to keep education costs here low enough that they (and their future economy) don't run into the same problems we have back home. (And while were hoping... that this will spark students worldwide to demand accessible tuition and refuse student debt.)

 

There is a serious and radical history of student struggle for accessible tuition which wasn't always non-violent; people (and institutions) remember this wearily. You can read more about it through wikipedia in particular 1968 where students first won a 22 year tuition freeze: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Quebec_student_protests

 

I've heard public opinion on the current student strike range from:

-supporting students and low tuition

-supporting students right to protest (especially in the case of savvy bar owners)

-opposing to police-state response to students

-thinking times are hard/the economy isn't working out for anyone & students should share the burden

-think tuition increases are inevitable and are comfortable thinking of a 75%-82% increase over 5-7 years as 'like inflation' or atleast 'fair'

-overt contempt for 'the youth thesedays and their iphones' (especially people who get interviewed by government-owned media outlets)

 

In the last 100 days there have been a couple big (6-digit) protests, one towards the end of March and one again at the end of April with some non-violent metro-meddling and office-vandalizing involving smoke and paint going on here and there during April.

 

At the end of April the government responded to the student strike with and offer of 82% increase over 7 years instead of the previous 75% over 5 years. The students rejected it and took again to the streets.

 

In response, last week they passed an emergency law (loi 78) called "An Act to enable students to receive instruction from the postsecondary institutions they attend" which among other things* made protests of more than 50 people illegal and pissed off a whole lot of people.

 

(*like fines of $1,000-35,000 for protesters and student leaders. I've also heard that this law was being used to back-up a policy of refusing service to anyone wearing a red square on public transportation. ) more info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_78

 

It took a night to turn from festive to tactical but this weekend there were hundreds of arrests and fines and riot gear and running in formation and posturing and kettling and noise assaults etc; the consensus as I best heard it expressed went something like: 'this is not the force of law but the force of disorder'

 

There is also a history of excessive police force in Montreal (not just smashing up protesters were talking about opening fire on homeless people and shooting off duty nurses with stray bullets kind of overkill) which should be given as context here. (In March the mayor of Montreal asked for 35-million dollars for police back-up/overtime because of the student actions and police overtime has become an issue in the past few days.)

 

Monday night (perhaps because it was a national holiday-Patriot's Day-) there was a much more laid back police presence. Today there is a major march planned (Tues May 22nd) to mark the 100th day of protest. Here are some of the creative resistance tactics being developed to help protesters remain legal despite the (unjust) restrictions: www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1uYLQQhazs&feature=player_em...

 

CUTV (one of the too few gems of Concordia) has been running impressive multi-lingual live coverage which my roomate and I have been using to gauge when to head out and where to catch up with them in the evenings : www.livestream.com/cutvmontreal Check it out if you want to see what is going on on the streets here.

Livestreaming today at noon (Pacific Time). Event page is here.

Foto: Mattis Folkestad, NRK P3.

Pic of part of my computer screen, livestream from Hershey PA. She's there, I'm here, wishing I could see all of her. Soon, she'll be home late Sunday night or Monday morning.

Session "Where Did the 3D Printing Revolution Go?" im Livestream der re:publica 2021

 

Livestream session sunday from the Global Shapers Annual Summit 2023 in Geneva, Switzerland 18 June 2023. World Economic Forum Headquarters, production studio. Copyright: World Economic Forum/Thibaut Bouvier

Foto: Mattis Folkestad, NRK P3.

Rock Your Wednesday with @streoapp

onelink.to/7gjuf2

Foto: Mattis Folkestad, NRK P3.

The tire carrier can swing open to either side and reveals two pins currently holding the roll cage on the chassis.

Donald J. Trump, President of the United States of America seen during the livestream of the "Special Address by Donald J. Trump, President of the United States" in the room Sanada at the Annual Meeting 2018 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, January 26, 2018.

Copyright by World Economic Forum / Manuel Lopez

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