ARMC Playlist
1:02ARMC EMS Day 2024Comment Policy Thank you for being a fan of Arrowhead Regional Medical Center’s YouTube channel. ARMC participates in YouTube in order to engage individuals and organizations to help promote the Department's mission. Disclaimer Posted comments and images do not necessarily represent the views of ARMC. External, non-sbcounty.gov links do not constitute official endorsement on behalf of ARMC. ARMC does not agree with or endorse every comment that individuals post on our pages. Our goal is to share ideas and information with as many individuals as possible and our policy is to accept the majority of comments made to our profile. Therefore, a comment will be deleted if it contains: • Hate Speech • Profanity, obscenity or vulgarity • Nudity in profile pictures • Defamation to a person or people • Defamation to an organization • Name calling and/or personal attacks • Comments whose main purpose is to sell a product • Comments that infringe on copyrights • Spam comments, such as the same comment posted repeatedly on a profile • Links to non-County of San Bernardino sites • Other comments that the ARMC Marketing team deems inappropriate. All links posted as comments on ARMC posts will be reviewed and may be deleted. “Users warrant that they own or have permission to post the information contained in their postings, including but not limited to video, photos, or digital reproductions and that no copyright or trademark infringement has taken place due to posting on this site. Further, the County of San Bernardino’s ARMC, does not guarantee or warrant that any information posted by users on this site is correct, and disclaims any liability whatsoever for any loss or damage resulting from any reliance on such information. Users of this site do not retain any rights over their postings. Postings are intended for public view and any personal information posted constitutes a waiver of any rights to privacy or confidentiality.” Repeated violations of the comment policy may cause the author to be blocked from the ARMC YouTube page. We understand that social media is a 24/7 medium; however, our moderation capabilities are not. We may not see every inappropriate comment right away, and we are trusting in the maturity of our community to ignore personal attacks and negative speech or respond politely.
1:22LifeStream joins National Blood Emergency Readiness CorpsComment Policy Thank you for being a fan of Arrowhead Regional Medical Center’s YouTube channel. ARMC participates in YouTube in order to engage individuals and organizations to help promote the Department's mission. Disclaimer Posted comments and images do not necessarily represent the views of ARMC. External, non-sbcounty.gov links do not constitute official endorsement on behalf of ARMC. ARMC does not agree with or endorse every comment that individuals post on our pages. Our goal is to share ideas and information with as many individuals as possible and our policy is to accept the majority of comments made to our profile. Therefore, a comment will be deleted if it contains: • Hate Speech • Profanity, obscenity or vulgarity • Nudity in profile pictures • Defamation to a person or people • Defamation to an organization • Name calling and/or personal attacks • Comments whose main purpose is to sell a product • Comments that infringe on copyrights • Spam comments, such as the same comment posted repeatedly on a profile • Links to non-County of San Bernardino sites • Other comments that the ARMC Marketing team deems inappropriate. All links posted as comments on ARMC posts will be reviewed and may be deleted. “Users warrant that they own or have permission to post the information contained in their postings, including but not limited to video, photos, or digital reproductions and that no copyright or trademark infringement has taken place due to posting on this site. Further, the County of San Bernardino’s ARMC, does not guarantee or warrant that any information posted by users on this site is correct, and disclaims any liability whatsoever for any loss or damage resulting from any reliance on such information. Users of this site do not retain any rights over their postings. Postings are intended for public view and any personal information posted constitutes a waiver of any rights to privacy or confidentiality.” Repeated violations of the comment policy may cause the author to be blocked from the ARMC YouTube page. We understand that social media is a 24/7 medium; however, our moderation capabilities are not. We may not see every inappropriate comment right away, and we are trusting in the maturity of our community to ignore personal attacks and negative speech or respond politely.
TED
13:49How cryptocurrency creates risks for everyone | Tonantzin Carmona | TEDxMidAtlanticIn 2008, Tonantzin Carmona's family lost their home — one foreclosure notice among millions. She took two lessons from that wreckage: a financial system can collapse on people who had no hand in building it, and when it does, the people who did build it rarely pay. She's hearing the same warning signals now, in crypto.Her argument isn't that crypto is a bad bet. It's that you're already exposed whether or not you ever touch it. Pension funds and 401(k)s, your energy bill, scams clustered in working-class neighborhoods — the risk has quietly crossed from Wall Street to Main Street. And the newest weak link, stablecoins, ties this volatile market back to ordinary banks and Treasury bonds, so the next panic might not spread one foreclosure at a time. It could spread at the speed of code.Underneath the finance is a harder question about who gets to write the rules. With crypto money now bankrolling a huge share of our politics and regulators loosening the guardrails, Carmona asks whether our institutions are even strong enough to stop the next crisis — and what it means that we may be setting up 2008 all over again, on purpose.Her challenge: if the powerful can rewrite the rules for themselves, can the rest of us rewrite them for everyone? Tonantzin Carmona is a fellow at Brookings Metro who focuses on wealth and inequality, financial and emerging technologies, and state and local policy implementation. She has been featured in Bloomberg, The Washington Post, CNN, Politico, Los Angeles Times, Axios, Fortune, Bloomberg Tax, Associated Press, NPR Marketplace, Quartz, TechCrunch, Tech Monitor, and Crain’s Chicago Business.Carmona’s professional background spans roles in public policy, communications, politics, and philanthropy. She previously served as special assistant to the president for economic policy at the White House National Economic Council, as well as senior advisor at the Department of the Treasury’s Inflation Reduction Act Implementation Office. She has also championed federal policies as the Illinois political director for the 2020 presidential campaign of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and as Sen. Warren’s deputy press secretary on Capitol Hill.At the local level, Carmona spearheaded several citywide initiatives. As chief of policy for the Chicago City Clerk, Carmona led the Chicago Fines, Fees, and Access Collaborative, which culminated in significant reforms of the city’s regressive public finance policies. Additionally, she launched Chicago’s municipal ID card, which simultaneously serves as a government-issued ID, transit pass, and library card, while ensuring substantial data privacy protections for applicants. As director of the Office of New Americans at the Chicago mayor’s office, she led the development of several immigrant integration policies, including the city’s first language access ordinance. Furthermore, in her role as deputy policy director at the mayor’s office, she led the City-County Collaboration, which identified $70 million in savings and new revenue sources. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
8:02The Right to Be Forgotten: Why the Internet Should Let People Change | Emma Dutta | TEDxKCISLK YouthWhat happens when one online mistake follows someone for the rest of their life? In this talk, Emma Dutta argues for the Right to Be Forgotten, a legal idea that allows people to request the removal of outdated, irrelevant, or harmful personal data. Through examples of digital permanence, online misinformation, and reputation damage, she explains why privacy laws such as the GDPR matter in giving people the chance to grow beyond their past. Highschool student at Kang Chiao International School Linkou Campus. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx


