A short film for the Basingstoke and District Disability Forum raising awareness of physical and mobility disabilities. For more information email us at info...
A beautiful association with Radio is just like falling into a ‘relationship’. She had her ‘first love’, ‘flings’,...
A beautiful association with Radio is just like falling into a ‘relationship’. She had her ‘first love’, ‘flings’, break up’, all with the radio. A woman who...
Josh Tetrick is the CEO of Hampton Creek, a food technology company selected by Bill Gates as one of three companies...
Josh Tetrick is the CEO of Hampton Creek, a food technology company selected by Bill Gates as one of three companies shaping the future of food. He has led a...
Silicone oil droplets provide a physical realization of pilot wave theories. Check out Smarter Every Day:...
Silicone oil droplets provide a physical realization of pilot wave theories. Check out Smarter Every Day: http://bit.ly/VeSmarter Support Veritasium on Patre...
What ever happened to letting "boys be boys?" Take these two cases: In one, a seven-year-old boy was sent home for...
What ever happened to letting "boys be boys?" Take these two cases: In one, a seven-year-old boy was sent home for nibbling a Pop Tart into a gun. In another, a teacher was so alarmed by a picture drawn by a student (of a sword fight), that the boy's parents were summoned in for a conference. In short, boys in America's schools are routinely punished for being active, competitive, and restless. In other words, boys can no longer be boys. Christina Hoff Sommers, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, explains how we can change this.
Sale of Goods Act - What are your Rights? Get advice on your rights under the Sale of Good Act at...
Sale of Goods Act - What are your Rights? Get advice on your rights under the Sale of Good Act at https://www.expertanswers.co.uk/ So you've just bought a br...
A million refugees arrived in Europe this year, says Alexander Betts, and "our response, frankly, has been...
A million refugees arrived in Europe this year, says Alexander Betts, and "our response, frankly, has been pathetic." Betts studies forced migration, the impossible choice for families between the camps, urban poverty and dangerous illegal journeys to safety. In this insightful talk, he offers four ways to change the way we treat refugees, so they can make an immediate contribution to their new homes. "There's nothing inevitable about refugees being a cost," Betts says. "They're human beings with skills, talents, aspirations, with the ability to make contributions — if we let them."
The largest generation of young people the world has ever known is too often associated with violent conflict. With...
The largest generation of young people the world has ever known is too often associated with violent conflict. With the December 2015 passage of Security Cou...