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The speaker discusses the challenges of performing the Israeli prayer due to the high cost of having children. They mention the difficulty of affording children and the importance of prayers. The transcript is in Indonesian.

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I'm a chicken farmer, and here's the truth about egg prices. We eat over 9 billion chickens a year, and in 2023, we had over 382 million egg-laying hens in the US alone. The story about bird flu causing high prices doesn't add up, especially when only 300 million birds have been lost worldwide. These big facilities often neglect their birds. They skip essential vitamins and supplements, leading to disease and death. But instead of admitting neglect, they blame bird flu every time a bird dies. They're not telling you the whole story.

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I am Brian Delalo, an economics teacher in Pittsburgh. Financial well-being means being able to do what I love and give back to the community. I hope to be remembered for making a positive impact on my school and community when I retire.

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I'm a chicken farmer, and here's the truth about egg prices. We consume billions of chickens annually. In 2023 alone, there were over 382 million egg-laying hens in the US. The bird flu is not the only issue. Large facilities often neglect their chickens. They don't provide essential vitamins and supplements, leading to disease and death. Instead of admitting neglect, every bird that dies is blamed on the bird flu. They're using it as an excuse to inflate prices. Don't be fooled.

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Speaker 0: You trust Costco with your family's dinner, but their meat undergoes a controversial process that's banned in several countries. Speaker 1: Everyone loves Costco chicken or even that rotisserie chicken from Walmart or your favorite grocery store. But what if that label on that rotisserie bird isn't telling you the whole story? What you're about to learn could change the way that you buy protein forever. Costco chicken is beloved and seen as a great deal. I know this. But recent discussions about preservatives, labeling accuracy, and contamination has put that belief at risk. Guys, look. Speaker 2: Costco is facing a lawsuit over its popular rotisserie chickens. A group of shareholders filed the lawsuit against the company over its treatment in raising chickens. Speaker 0: You trust Costco with your family's dinner, but their meat undergoes a controversial process that's banned in several countries. Most shoppers have no idea this is happening right under their noses. The real question isn't what they're doing. It's why they're allowed to do it. You know that famous $5 rotisserie chicken at Costco? The one that's been the same price since Obama was president? Well, there's a juicy secret they don't want you knowing about. Speaker 1: They label it as no preservatives, guys. And this goes hand in hand with Walmart and your probably your favorite grocery store. This is what I would call a huge scandal. There's a reason why those chickens have been four ninety nine since 2009. It's to get you in the store. It's to get you to spend a ton of money, and they've cut a lot of corners to make sure that it's cheap and easy to produce for you. Welcome, guys. My name's Cohen from Riverside Homestead. What I do is I give you guys value. I do the digging so you don't have to do it. So if you appreciate that, hit the thumbs up right now. Let the community know where you're chiming in from, what state, and let me crush your dreams on rotisserie chicken like ugh. Trust me. I know. So watch. This chicken is labeled as no preservatives, guys. And this goes hand in hand with Walmart and your probably your favorite grocery store. This is what I would call a huge scandal. There's a reason why those chickens have been four ninety nine since 2009. It's to get you in the store. It's to get you to spend a ton of money, and they've cut a lot of corners to make sure that it's cheap and easy to produce for you. Welcome, guys. My name's Cohen from Riverside Homestead. What I do is I give you guys value. I do the digging so you don't have to do it. So if you appreciate that, hit the thumbs up right now. Let the community know where you're chiming in from, what state, and let me crush your dreams on rotisserie chicken like ugh. Trust me. I know. So watch. This chicken is labeled as no preservatives, organic, healthy as it gets. We've talked about this before on this channel. Loopholes. Speaker 0: Costco injects every single rotisserie chicken with a phosphate solution before it hits those warming lights. Think you're buying pure chicken? Think again. You're paying for water with a side of poultry. This liquid injection makes each bird weigh significantly more, So you're essentially buying a sponge that's been soaked in chemical juice. Speaker 1: Did you guys know that these chickens are only about six weeks old because of everything that they pump into them? It's a marketing ploy to get you through the door for the cheap chicken and buy everything else. And there's active lawsuits right now. This is especially bred chicken in horrible conditions. Speaker 3: Grown and fattened on likely corn and soy that's GMO to create this chicken in six weeks that you're eating. They take it to a mass slaughter house where they dip it in chlorine and other toxins to make it safe, and it's leaving those residues on the chicken. And this bird isn't just seasoned with normal herbs and spices. They have preservatives in here like sodium phosphate that's linked to liver and kidney damage and carrageenan, which can degrade into polygenin, which is a known inflammatory agent and possible carcinogen. Speaker 1: Yeah. I found information on that from another doctor. Speaker 4: Doctor Tanya, what's one thing you never buy from the grocery store? Rotisserie chicken. Why? The bag the chicken is stored in is plastic, and it leaches chemicals that get into the food when it's sitting under the heat. Most stores inject the chickens with additives so that they can last on the shelf longer. Chickens are often marinated in a preservative solution. We opt for preservative free cosmetics, and then we're eating preservative infested chicken. And carrageenan. This is a chemical that precooked poultry is injected with to make it tender and juicy, but guess what? It can also inflame the gut. Carrageenan is banned in Europe, but not in The United States. Speaker 1: Yet again, another ingredient item banned in other countries, but allowed in The US. I know we love it because it's such a good deal. It's cheap. It's easy. It's taste great. I'm on the struggle bus with you guys on this one, but I'm reading countless articles, discussion about preservatives, labeling accuracy and contamination that has put all this belief at risk. Now I recently was at a Costco filming this right here. I was there. I saw it. It says no added hormones or steroids in a chicken that is fully developed in six weeks. Right there at the bottom, you can see it says no added preservatives. And have you ever wondered why it's in a plastic bag that you can put in your microwave? Microwave safe, plastic bag, put the two and two together. Speaker 3: Right out of the oven stored in a plastic bag. Nobody really knows what type of plastic bag this is, but it's likely a mix of polyethylene terephthalate. Remember that word phthalate? It's a known hormone disruptor, and this is microwave safe. So you're putting hot food into a plastic bag that can leach these hormone disrupting chemicals, and a 117,000,000 of these are eaten each year in The US. So share this video with your friends. Speaker 1: This is what I'm talking about. Hundreds of thousand millions of these chickens are sold in The US a year. This is why you need to share this out. Sorry folks, but they're just cutting too many corners these days. And it comes down to us. And who's gonna suffer? Us. They're gonna make a ton of money. So if you dive into the legal term no preservatives, they found loopholes to where they can actually put this legally. This is where the class action lawsuit or the lawsuit from a couple people in California are like, hold up. Wait a minute, you guys are using this stuff and this is preservatives, but you guys are saying it's no preservatives. In short, the processing agents that they're using can be deemed not to be called preservatives. Oh yeah, you're getting something with no preservatives, organic as it gets. Yet at the end of the day, you and I would look at that cross eyed and be like, Yeah, what they're using works the same way. It's not what you think it is. That's just what it is. I'm not sure if you guys have seen what these large scale poultry processing facilities look like, but it's not happy chickens walking around a field eating green grass and bugs. Think about the cross contamination that occurs and what safeguards exist and where they fail. For certain that these huge plants they fail. Great thing for Costco is they can scale. They can pump out millions of birds in six weeks and give it to us for a low price even with them losing money. That's right. Like I said, scammedemic kind of they will take a loss on this because they're producing at such a large scale and cutting corners just to get you through the door for that $4 and 99 rotisserie chicken so that you put hundreds of dollars of their stuff in your cart and check out. Other stores, Walmart, other grocery stores, they have caught on to this. They know what Costco found out. They're all doing the same thing. This is information that you need to consider. Speaker 5: Alright, guys. Here are three scary facts about Costco chicken that'll hopefully make you never buy this shit ever again. Alright. So I had to move on over to Lowe's to show you part two of this video. So they start by bathing the chicken in chlorine. They actually put it in a chlorine bath, and it soaks in this chlorine for about thirty minutes. Why does that and should that matter to you? I'm gonna tell you. Next thing they do is they inject the chicken with a chemical compound called TSP. It's trisodium phosphate. Guys, I'm just at Lowe's pulling this stuff off the shelves. This is crazy. I mean, this is the shit that you're allowing into your body. Read the warning label on this and tell me that this is a good idea to ingest in the human body. And then the last thing, which is I don't know if it's scarier than the other two things. They're all really bad. But they they let the chicken sit in these plastic bags, and they sit there for days on end, hours, days, whatever. It's sitting in your fridge for probably a long time. There are microplastics being released into the chicken from the plastic bags that are getting into your body, and it is unbelievably bad for you. Mean, there's microplastics showing up in human hearts, in in in men's testicles. Like, it's really, really bad, guys. So here's the deal. Everyone's gonna ask me, what do I do? Buy your chickens local. Go to your local farmer's market. Go to your local farms. They are a little bit more expensive, so just eat less or go or or just be resourceful and find deals. But stop buying this shit because it's literally killing you. Speaker 1: When I go to Home Depot and I pull TSP off the shelves, what kind of chemical is that? Speaker 6: So when you grab TSP at Home Depot, you're holding trisodium phosphate. It's a heavy duty cleaner, often used to degrease and prep surfaces before painting. Powerful stuff. Just use it with care. Speaker 1: What's the caution label say? Speaker 6: The caution label on TSP usually warns about skin and eye irritation. So gloves and goggles are a must. It'll also say not to inhale the dust and to keep it away from kids. Basically, respect the power and you'll be good. Speaker 1: What if you eat it? Speaker 6: If you ingest TSP, it's no joke. It can cause serious irritation. Think burns in your mouth, throat and stomach. The label will tell you to seek medical help immediately. No waiting. Speaker 1: So yeah, definitely not a seasoning. Speaker 1: But if you go down the rabbit hole on that one, it's gonna say that it's a different type and it's the safe version and the FDA would never allow that specific one in your food. Just a different one. So when they put it in like rotisserie chicken, they're probably just putting safe amounts of it. Speaker 6: Oh no, don't worry. They're not putting TSP in your rotisserie chicken. That'd be a disaster. Some food safe phosphates might be used in processing, totally different and regulated, but the cleaning product TSP strictly for walls, not wings. Speaker 1: Are you sure it's not the same thing? Because a lot of reels say it's the same thing. Speaker 6: Yeah. I get why those reels pop up, but trust me, food grade phosphates and TSP cleaner are not the same. The food versions are heavily regulated for safety. If they try tossing the Home Depot stuff in your chicken, the FDA would have a feel day. So no worries. Speaker 1: I'm telling you guys, it's a deep dive in half. Make informed decisions. Realize that these big companies are all about making the money, not about bringing you the safest product. And trust me, it's a little bit of a stab to me too because I like easy, I like tasty and we need that sometimes. But in this case, they may have jumped through too many hoops too many times, and it's putting Us consumers possibly in a bad position. Speaker 1: I've got two other great videos. If you guys didn't see these videos, you gotta watch these. These will blow your mind equally as much. Please let me know what you think down in the comments. Thumbs up. Share this out and subscribe because I've got a lot more coming down the pipe. Keep prepping, keep learning, keep doing. We'll see you guys on the next one.

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As Carmelon ages, he reflects on life and death. People often ask him if there's life after death. He’s unsure but prefers the idea of going to heaven. Some believe in reincarnation, but Carmelon definitely doesn’t want to come back as a chicken. Chickens have a tough life, confined and often cooked for meals. He loves hot wings but wouldn’t want to live in a coop with wings that could be chopped off. Carmelon hopes for a better afterlife, as reincarnation seems undesirable to him. Until next time, he signs off with a light-hearted note.

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The speaker cooks various birds, starting with a gamey dove and quail, which tasted similar to chicken. A partridge stuffed with compound butter tasted like pork, while squab (pigeon) was prepared Hong Kong style and tasted like duck. Silky (black chicken) was used in an herbal soup said to have health benefits. Pheasant, cooked in clay using an ancient Chinese technique, had amazing flavor but was dry. A Poularouche chicken was beer-can chickened, resulting in incredible skin. Guinea fowl had a gamey skin flavor. Bricked duck was a new favorite. A $100 Bluefoot chicken was made into the best fried chicken ever. Goose, roasted with an orange glaze, was gamey and tough. Emu tasted exactly like beef. Finally, an ostrich leg injected with buffalo sauce and deep-fried was a bit tough but elevated by the flavors.

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I am Brian DiLalo, an economics teacher in Pittsburgh. Financial well-being means being able to do what I love and give back to the community. My goal is to leave a positive impact on my school and help others.

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The speaker explains that they wanted to see what would happen if they sent their pet lizard DNA to 23andMe. With the help of their wife, they extracted enough saliva to mail the sample. After about three months, they were shocked to learn that the lizard was 51% Ashkenazi Jewish and 48% West Asian. The results also provided a little background and history, including what the lizard liked to eat. The speaker mentions that this information was interesting and asks which animal DNA they should send in next.

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I'm Christian Cooper, a passionate birder. Birds shape my perspective and love for the world. I'm traveling globally to discover more about them. Birding is about observing birds in their natural habitats. We have the power to improve the lives of the creatures we share this planet with. It's all about putting our minds to it. Seeing birds brings pure joy.

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I am Brian DiLalo, an economics teacher in Pittsburgh. Financial well-being means freedom to pursue my passions. I aim to leave a positive impact on my school and community before retiring.

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My name is Alexis Wilkins. I'm a Gen Z musician and a truth warrior. I was born in the US, and moved with my family to England and Switzerland before returning to the US and settling in Fayetteville, Arkansas. I grew up as an only child in a Christian home. My parents instilled in me the importance of God in our lives, which has significantly shaped who I am today. Having a sense of a larger purpose is very important to me.

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The Canadian government is allegedly trying to kill 400 ostriches on a British Columbia farm, which is suspected to be linked to big pharma corruption. These ostriches are part of a medical research farm working with a Japanese scientist to extract antibodies from ostrich egg yolks, which have insane health benefits. These benefits include antiviral properties against diseases like H1N1, bird flu, MERS, Zika, and Ebola. The antibodies can treat skin disorders, promote anti-aging and hair regrowth, and offer preventative healthcare due to their stability at high temperatures. They are all-natural, nontoxic, and don't cause antibody resistance. The antibodies are a broad-spectrum pathogen killer, cheap to produce, and have high yields. The speaker believes big pharma is behind the planned culling to suppress these natural treatments, including potential cancer treatments and prevention.

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I'm Christian Cooper, and I’m passionate about birding. Look up! Birds are all around us, like the vibrant red and blue ones flying by. The thrill of birding lies in the surprises you encounter. Just look at those owls! Birding brings you up close to nature and offers extraordinary experiences. Join me for "Extraordinary Birder with Christian Cooper," premiering Saturday, June 17th on Nat Geo Wild.

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Speaker 0 explains that the time from hatched egg to market for chickens has dramatically shortened over the years. He notes it was four months when he started fifteen years ago, then eighteen weeks, then sixteen, fourteen, and twelve weeks, and recently reads that organically raised chickens are going to market in eight weeks. He questions how the industry can claim there are no hormones, given these rapid changes. He asserts that the key lies “in the field” and describes the practice of modern farming: a farmer buys fertilized eggs and signs a contract to buy food only from that egg supplier, with big multinational companies involved. He adds that the farmer also signs a contract prohibiting any attempt to find out what is in the food, stating that it is proprietary. He asserts that this lack of disclosure is accepted and enforced by the government. He emphasizes, “We don’t use hormones, but we won’t tell you what we give them,” highlighting a lack of transparency. The overall claim is that the industry maintains there are no hormones, while underlying contracts and proprietary practices control information about the feed, and government support reinforces this arrangement.

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I love the Chinese community and I'm proud of my heritage. Unfortunately, I lost my ability to speak Chinese at a young age due to lack of practice. However, I still engage in Chinese traditions like making mooncakes during the Lunar Festival and following Chinese media. Although I'm not as connected to the community as I'd like to be, I hope that will change in the future. The language barrier has always been a challenge for me, and I feel ashamed about it. Nevertheless, I remain hopeful that I can contribute to the Chinese community.

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I'm Christian Cooper, a passionate birder. Look up! The vibrant world of birds surrounds us. The excitement of birding lies in the surprises; you never know what you'll encounter. Just look at those owls! Birding offers a unique opportunity to experience nature up close and personal. Join me for "Extraordinary Birder with Christian Cooper," premiering Saturday, June 17th on Nat Geo Wild.

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I sent my pet lizard's DNA to 23andMe with my wife's help. After waiting for three months, we were surprised to find out that my lizard was 51% Ashkenazi Jewish and 48% West Asian. We also received some information about his background and preferences. We're curious to know which animal's DNA we should send in next.

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I am Brian Delalo, an economics teacher in Pittsburgh. Financial well-being means being able to do what I love. I want to be remembered for making a positive impact on my school and community when I retire.

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I found my 5 hens and rooster dead in their cage, all in the same position with no signs of a predator. I'm upset because they're like family. The chickens were fine before a train carrying chemicals derailed nearby, causing a strong smell. My video shows they started dying after the chemical burn. If this can happen to chickens in one night, what will it do to us in 20 years?

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Fifteen years ago, organically grown chickens went to market in four months instead of a year. Now, they go to market in eight weeks. The poultry industry insists there are no hormones used. Farmers buy fertilized eggs and sign a contract to buy food only from the egg supplier, which are big multinational companies. They also sign a contract not to find out what's in the food. Farmers are not allowed to know because it's proprietary. The government accepts and enforces this.

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We're at Huginstone Farm in Southern Ontario, where we milk around 260 cows. Currently, we're producing more milk than we should. We want to show the public the challenges our growers face every day. Growing up on a dairy farm, we learned the value of hard work, and now we're experiencing the consequences.

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We're at Hidden Rose Farm in Southern Ontario, where we milk 260 cows. Canadian milk costs $7 a liter. I want to show the public the daily struggles our growers face. As a little boy, I grew up on a dairy farm in Europe, working tirelessly. And now, here we are.

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I am Brian Delalo, an economics teacher in Pittsburgh. Financial well-being means being able to do what I love. I want to be remembered for making my school a special place and giving back to the community.

TED

The power of diversity within yourself | Rebeca Hwang
Guests: Rebeca Hwang
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Rebeca Hwang reflects on her identity journey after her grandmother's death, revealing the struggle of feeling neither fully Korean nor Argentinean. Embracing her diverse backgrounds, she reinvented herself through various roles, including entrepreneur and mother. Hwang hopes her children will celebrate their multiplicity and use it to foster connection in a globalized world.
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