►
From YouTube: Global Perspectives, December 2021
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
A
I'm
excited
to
have
you.
I
have
never
had
a
guest
and
a
friend
from
argentina
in
our
show,
so
I'm
excited
and
I
look
forward
to
getting
to
know
you
a
little
bit
more
and
for
our
viewers
to
also
learn
about
your
background
education
and
your
perspective
growing
up
in
argentina,
but
also
now
living
here
in
anne
arundel
county.
So
as
a
resident
of
around
the
county
and
working
for
the
city
of
annapolis,
I
came
excited.
I
am
so
excited
for
you
to
share
with
everybody
more
about
you.
B
So
I'm
from
gilmes
argentina,
it's
a
city
right
outside
of
buenos
aires,
it's
the
big,
the
capital
of
argentina
and
I'm
not
sure
if
everybody
knows
where
argentina
is,
but
it's
in
south
america
right
next
to
chile,
underneath
brazil
and
uruguay
and
sort
of,
if
you
think
of
south
america,
sort
of
a
lopsided
ice
cream
cone.
I'm
on
that
cone
to
the
right
side
right
in
the
middle
is
buenos
aires
and
quilmes
is
right
to
the
east
of
that.
So
that's
where
I'm
from
I
am.
I
speak
spanish!
That's
what
we
speak
there!
B
English,
since
my
mom
is
from
here
from
the
us,
and
so
I
also
speak
english
since
I'm
you
know
was
very
little
and
portuguese,
which
is
what
I
studied
in
college.
So.
A
A
A
So
if
you
think
back
when
you
were
in
argentina,
for
your
friends
or
or
family
members
who
went
to
public
schools,
whether.
A
B
So
I'm
not
exactly
sure
if
it's
part
of
the
law,
I'm
pretty
sure,
there's
a
lot
of
incentives
to
get
kids
to
school
like
the
signacion
universal,
which
is
a
monetary,
economic
incentive
and
there's
you
know
the
school
supplies
that
are
provided
and
based
all
on
incentives
of
whether
your
child
is
getting
their
vaccinations
and
if
they're
actually
going
to
school.
So
I'm
pretty
sure
it's
required.
A
B
Kids,
yeah,
you
can
send
kids
to
the
there's,
there's
daycares
that
are
public,
and
so
you
can
send
your
kids
to
the
daycare
already
from
very,
very
young
ages
and
then
at
four
five.
They
start
pre-k.
A
Okay,
good
good,
and
so
this
pre-k
kindergarten,
elementary
middle
and
high
school
for
the
most
part,
is
public.
It's
offered
by
by
the
federal
government
all
right.
So
now
growing
up,
you
were
like,
as
you
said,
you're
you're
part
of
the
private
education,
but
I
am
sure
your
parents
were
very
involved
in
your
education
growing
up.
How
did
they
feel
that.
B
So
my
mom
was
very
involved
and
you
know
full
credit
to
her.
She
was
really
pushing
for
our
education
a
lot
of
times
you
know.
Even
when
I
had,
we
had
moved
back
to
the
states
when
I
was
in
high
school,
I
went
back
to
argentina.
I
wanted
to
go
back
to
high
school
there
and-
and
she
said
no-
I
want
you
to
get
this
education
here
at
this
place.
She
was
very
adamant
about
her
education
being
the
very
best
that
she
could
find
for
us
and
that
she
could
provide
for
us.
B
So
you
know
and
my
dad
he
didn't
he.
He
also
really
values
education,
but
he
also
values
life
experiences.
So
so
he
was
more
about
pushing
us
to
be
more
engaged
every
time.
I
would
visit
him.
You
know
we
would.
We
would
go
to
different
soup
kitchens
and
and
provide
support
or
go
to.
You
know
factories
and
and
organize
events
for
the
kids,
the
and
and
the
families
that
were
from
the
factory.
So
you
know
it's.
B
A
Interesting,
and
so
do
you
feel
that
it
was
a
it
had
a
positive
impact
in
your
personal
life
when
it
came
to
having
the
support
from
mom
and
dad
different
perspectives
right,
but.
B
A
Good
good,
so
as
we
as
everybody
agree
that
parent
involvement
in
our
schools
is
very
important,
in
spite
of
where
you
grew
up
when
you
grow
up
in
writing
in
central
america,
southern
south
america
on
europe,
asia,
south
asia,
it's
important
for
the
parent
to
be
involved.
B
Yeah
and
family
in
general
right,
it's
you
know.
Sometimes
we
don't
have
parents,
my,
I
have
three
cousins
who
their
their
mom
and
dad
died.
So
my
dad
adopted
them,
and-
and
so
he
was
the
parent
figure
for
them,
and
he
took
them
in
and
supported
them
and
helped
them
go
to
school
and
and
got
them
through
different
systems
and
they
went
to
public
school.
B
But
I'd
say
family
in
general
is
is
crucial
for
us
getting
through
and
just
general
support
systems
having
friends,
family
caregivers
that
can
help
us
and
and
push
us
and
and
motivate
us
to
continue,
especially
when
things
get
hard
in
school
is,
is
really
important.
A
B
So
if
that's
it's
a
complicated
question,
believe
it
or
not.
So
I
officially
moved
back
two
years
ago,
but
when
I
was
about
eight
or
nine,
we
moved
back
to
the
states
and
then
we
I
went
to
school
until
high
school.
B
So
you
know
like
that,
like
I
just
said
my
mom
is
here
and
my
family,
my
mom's
side
is
from
here
from
anne
arundel
county,
so
it
was
when
we
decided
to
come
back
to
the
u.s,
which
was
basically
because
there
was
a
lot
of
inflation
going
on
in
argentina,
and
it
was
getting
a
lot
harder
to
be
able
to
sustain
our
family
there.
B
And
you
know
my
mom
said
why?
Don't
you
guys
try
coming
here
and
you
guys
can
live
with
me
and
and-
and
so
you
know
until
you
guys
can
get
on
your
own
two
feet.
So
my
husband,
my
daughter
and
I
came
to
sort
of
coming
for
the
american
dream
right,
trying
to
find
a
better,
better
opportunities
for
ourselves
for
our
child
and
make
sure
that
we
can
really
give
her
the
best
of
life.
A
So
what
was
your
first,
your
first
initial
reaction
when
you,
even
though
you
were
here
before
as
a
child
and
you
went
back
and
forth,
but
what
was
your
first
initial
reaction
when
you
permanently
move
here
a
few
years
ago,
you
know
in
a
cultural,
cultural
shock
or
experiences
that
you
were
into
that.
I
would
like
for
you
to
share.
A
B
When
I,
when
we
moved
here,
I
was,
I
think
I
was
nine,
and
so
I
was
joining
the
third
grade
and
my
mom
says
I
can't
really
remember
this.
My
mom
says
I
didn't
speak
at
all
for
three
months
that
I
just
stopped
speaking
to
anybody,
because
I
didn't
know
how
to
speak
english
perfectly
and
I
was
really
nervous
about
it,
and
so
I
didn't
want
to
speak
to
anybody,
so
I
just
was
silently
working
my
way
through.
B
I
remember
one
of
my
first
memories
of
school
here
I
I
was
at
a
new
school.
They
had
a
these,
these
trains
in
the
in
the
outside
in
the
playground,
and
so
I
sat
in
one
of
the
little
train
spaces
and
this
girl,
ariel
brown,
came
up
to
me
and
and
she
started,
you
know
wanting
to
be
my
friend
and
talking
to
me
in
english,
and
I
and
I
could
I
couldn't
reply
to
her.
B
So
I
started
speaking
in
spanish
and
you
know,
and
and
so
it
was
just
sort
of
my
natural
response-
was
in
spanish
and
and
and
she
didn't
understand
what
I
was
saying
and
then
I
was
like.
B
Oh
I'm
just
joking,
I'm
just
trying
to
see
if
you
guys
know
what
I'm
saying
and
so,
and
it
happened
to
me
a
lot
that
I'd
always
feel
really
embarrassed
that
I
couldn't
or
that
might
I
naturally
would
start
speaking
spanish
and
I
wouldn't
be
able
to
quite
communicate
the
way
I
was
hoping
to,
but
you
know
that
I
was
lucky
and
that
I
had
really
great
friends
that
also
were
really
excited
and
interested
in
in
my
life
and
and
the
fact
that
I
was
from
argentina
was
something
that
was
that
was
interesting
to
them.
B
So
so
they
were
curious
about
it
and
would
ask
me
questions,
and
you
know
if
I
spoke
spanish,
they
would
actually
ask
me
what
I
was
saying
and
want
to
try
to
learn
it.
So
that
was
one
of
my
first
things.
That
I
remember
is
that
the
fact
the
language
was
really
hard.
It
was
really
hard
to
just
sort
of
navigate
having
to
basically
speak
a
whole
new
set.
You
know
whole
new
language
and
and
with
a
whole
new
set
of
different
people.
B
B
You
know
I'd
say
it
was
not
as
easy
as
we
thought
it
was
going
to
be
for
sure,
and
but
also
you
know
it's
just
this
county
has
a
lot
to
offer,
and
I
you
know
I
didn't
even
know
we
had
a
beach
here
in
the
county
that
we
could
go
to.
I
just
parts
of
of
of
this,
this
area
that
I
hadn't
explored
and
now
I'm
really
getting
to
explore
the
area,
and
it's
really
beautiful
and
and
I
can
enjoy
it
in
a
different
way
right.
A
Honestly,
I
forgot
about
the
beach
in
the
county
that
we
have
here
in
a
beautiful
park
that
is
also
by
the
chesapeake
bay
area
great.
So
that
was
interesting
to
to
hear
your
perspective
and
also
your
cultural
shock.
A
When
you
were
a
child
and
the
language
barrier
that
you
experienced
and
also
as
a
as
an
adult,
you
know
what
you
have
experience
as
well,
very
interesting,
and
I
really
enjoy
hearing
that
from
different
people,
or
you
know
different
guests
that
we
have
had
in
the
show
that
they
share
different
perspectives
and
also
different
cultural
shocks
that
they
live
through
their
lives
in
the
united
states,
moving
to
the
united
states.
A
So,
overall,
what
do
you
think
are
some
of
the
biggest
cultural
differences
between
your
country,
argentina
and
the
united
states.
B
What
a
question
I
don't
want
to
say
anything
too
sticky
here
so
I'd
say
in
argentina.
People
really
live
day
to
day
in
a
way
that
doesn't
happen
here.
I
think
people
here
have
a
lot
more
planning
and
structure
and
career
building,
even
in
argentina.
It's
it's
very
different.
It's
very
horizontal!
B
It's
about
building
together
and
it's
about
sort
of
making
sure
we
make
it
through
day
to
day
and-
and
I
feel
like
that's-
that's
sort
of
the
lifestyle
that
I
see
in
my
dad
and
the
way
that
he's
he's
raised
us
and
then-
and
what
I
see
in
my
american
side
is-
is
that
that
was
it's
a
lot
more
career
driven?
It's
a
lot
more.
B
You
know,
planning
and
getting
organized
for
for
a
whole
life
and
preparing
and
making
objectives
and
and
goals,
and
and
and
things
like
that,
whereas
you
can't
really
balance
that
life
out
that
way
in
argentina,
there's
a
lot
of
sort
of
disruptions
that
are
from
you
know
from
much
higher
than
than
at
the
local
level
right.
So
it's
just
it!
It
can
disrupt
one
day
to
the
next.
B
You
know
you
might
not
be
able
to
go
to
the
bank
and
get
your
savings
out
or
something
like
that,
so
it
the
the
planning
in
the
way
that
and
the
relying
on
government
structure
is
the
way
that
you
can
do
that
here
is
is
not
something
that
is
as
stable
in
argentina.
A
All
right
so
very
interesting
also.
I
would
like
for
you
to
tell
us
that
you
know
you
grew
up
in
argentina.
You
were
educated
in
argentina
for
the
most
part,
but
now
you
have
a
child
who
is
in
daycare
for
what
you
shared
earlier.
A
What
is
your
perspective
or
an
expectation
of
the
day
care
provider
and
also,
eventually,
your
child
will
join
our
schools,
a
pre-k
and
a
wonderful
pre-k
and
kindergarten
so
based
on
what
you
lived
through?
A
What
is
it
that
has
given
you
the
tools
as
a
multilingual
person,
but
also
as
a
a
a
person
who
is
driven?
You
know
from
coming
from
a
very
relaxed
country.
You
know
we're,
like
you
said
it's
day-to-day
living
and
now
you're
here
and
you're
goal-driven
and
everything
is
scheduled
and
structured.
A
B
Well,
I
mean
the
I
mean.
99
of
the
reason
we
moved
here
was
for
our
daughter
to
have
great
education
and
and
better
opportunities,
and
you
know
I
I
think,
even
at
her
daycare
they,
I
I
see
how
they're
learning
the
seasons
and
the
days
and
counting
numbers
and
quanah
comes
back.
B
You
know
she
can
count
to
20
and
she's,
only
three,
and
so
already
I
see
how
much
she's
advancing
here
and
and
how
there's
so
much
that
that
any
any
system
of
education
can
really
provide
for
her
and
and
I'm
not
sure,
what's
going
to
happen
with
her
as
she
gets
older
and
what
she
decides
to
do
with
her
life.
B
But
I
think
I
I
fully
expect
our
system
to
be
our
school
system
to
be
able
to
guide
her
in
that
in
that
direction
for
and
to
really
help
her
find
her
passions
and
and
be
the
best
version
of
herself
that
she
can
be
and
yeah
I'm
I
mean
I'm
I'm
excited
to
get
to
that
point.
B
In
her
life,
we
haven't
quite
gotten
to
our
public
school
system,
but
I
do
know
that
it's
you
know
we
have
a
great
school
nearby,
our
house
and
and
our
her
cousins
went
there
and
my
cousins
went
there,
and
so
I
know
that
it's
a
great
school
and
and
she'll
be
doing
she'll
have
a
place
where
she
can
really
grow
and
and
and
yeah.
B
I
so
that's
a
question,
so
I
think
that's
one
of
the
things
that
a
lot
of
parents
that
are
latino
here
have
a
hard
time
around.
She's
understands
everything
in
spanish.
She
just
will
not
speak.
It
is
is
where
we're
at
right
now
she
used
to
speak
only
spanish,
and
then
she
did
this
switch
when
she
started
daycare
where
she
now
speaks
english
and
no
spanish,
so
it
actually
reminds
me
of
when
I
was
little
that
I
would
only
speak
english
or
only
speak
spanish,
but
I
really
didn't
like
mixing
it.
B
It
just
really
confused
me
and
she
she's
she's.
Definitely
she
has
a
couple
of
words
that
she'll
bring
in
that
are
in
spanish
she's,
not
fully
bilingual,
I
would
say
she's
she's.
She
still
has
to
learn
how
to
speak
it
and
and
and
be
more
comfortable
speaking
it
even
though
she
does
know
she
can
understand
everything.
A
Very
interesting
that
you
see
your
daughter,
a
reflection
of
you
when
you
were
younger
yeah
exactly
but
in
a
different
scenario.
You
know
now
we're
talking
about.
She
is
here
in
her
playmates
at
the
daycare.
Are
I'm
sure,
mostly
american
and
or
not
bilingual.
Like
your
daughter,
I'm
sure
your
doctor,
I
mean
sure
your
daughter
is
bilingual,
because
she's
understanding,
spanish
yeah
she's
not
able
to
express
it,
but
her
brain
is
bilingual.
It's
develop
developing
into
a
bilingual
yeah.
A
A
B
So
her
dad
doesn't
speak
english,
so
we
only
speak
spanish
to
each
other,
but
then
he
tries
to
you
know
he.
He
practices
english
with
her
and
and
so
a
lot
of
our
conversation
is
in
english,
but
we
definitely
also
speak
to
her
in
spanish
and
make
sure
that
she
knows
and
understands
and-
and
we
have
expectations
of
going
back
to
argentina
and
visiting
and
and
she
doesn't
speak
spanish.
She
won't
be
able
to
speak
to
her
grandparents
right
or
her
uncles.
B
A
Heritage,
yep
good
good,
so
so
you
and
I
have
worked
closely
together
for
the
past
couple
of
years,
and
I
know
about
you,
but
I
would
like
for
our
audience
to
to
know
about
you,
your
role
for
the
city
of
annapolis
and
beyond
the
city
of
annapolis,
because
there's
so
much
that
you
you
do
in
your
role,
supporting
our
hispanic
community
and
beyond.
I
think
you
do
more
than
the
hispanic
community.
So
yeah,
please
tell
us:
how
do
you
get
started
for
the
city
of
annapolis?
A
What
is
it
that
you
do
for
the
city
of
annapolis,
the
things
that
you
do
for
the
skill
of
annapolis
and
all
the
extra
activities
that
you
have
that
you
have
been
able
to
bring
into
life
in
collaboration
with
the
android
accounting
office
as
well?
Yeah.
B
So
I'll
start
by
saying
in
argentina
I
was
working
for
the
ministry
of
social
development
so
and
I
was
working
in
workforce
development
working
with
co-ops,
creating
different
training
programs
and
and
a
lot
of
my
work
was
organizing
and
I
loved
that,
and
I
really
got
to
travel
the
country
in
argentina
with
that
work.
You
know
I
would
go
three
days
to
the
northern
part.
Then
I'd
go
to
the
southern.
B
So
when
I
came
back
to
the
states,
that's
something
I
really
have
feel
like.
That's
that's
where
my
passions
lie.
That's
where
I
want
my
career
to
go.
I
love
organizing.
I
love
working
with
people,
especially
with
families,
and
so
I
started
central
heritage.
B
The
center
for
migrant
rights
in
baltimore,
with
rachel
micah
jones,
who
gave
me
an
opportunity
there
to
to
get
started
again
in
the
us,
and
I
started
going
to
events
that
were
in
the
county
and
I
went
to
a
fundraiser
that
was
for
centro
de
chula
center
of
help.
B
That
was
local
and
I
was
looking
to
get
more
involved
and
looking
to
support
and
help
out
in
the
community
and
at
that
fundraiser.
I
actually
met
adriana
lee,
who
was
the
current
hispanic
community
services
specialist
for
the
city
of
annapolis,
and
she
mentioned
that
she
was
leaving
her
job
or
that
she
had
just
left
her
job.
And
you
know
that
the
city
was
going
to
be
looking
for
somebody
to
hire
to
be
the
hispanic
community
services
specialist-
and,
I
said
wow.
B
That's
just
like
a
total
dream
job,
because
that
gets
to
pull
in
organizing
working
with
community
and
not
only
that,
but
it
pulls
in
my
roots.
It
pulls
in.
You
know
the
fact
that
I
am
also
latina
and
I
get
to
speak,
spanish
and
and
and
work
with
other
families
that
sort
of
have
similar
histories
and
stories
that
are
close
to
my
families
right.
B
So
I
you
know
luckily
got
that
job
and
I've
been
here
ever
since
that
was
you
know
not
too
long
ago,
though
two
years
ago,
I
guess
now,
no
not
even
two
years
ago,
sorry,
I
was
like
a
year
and
a
couple
months,
a
year
and
a
half
maybe
max,
and
I
basically
organized
events,
so
we
just
did
the
videos
festival
in
maryland
hall.
B
It
depends,
you
know
I
also
arrived
in
as
the
pandemic
was
in
its
peak,
so
it
was
right
when
we
had
all
of
these
cases
that
were
majority
of
the
cases
were
hispanic
in
annapolis.
So
there
was
a
lot
of
work
to
be
done
around
organizing
around
covid,
so
we
created
a
program
called
take
care
annapolis.
We
have
annapolis
where
we
basically
went
into
our
communities.
We
did
needs
assessments
and
developed
programs
based
on
those
needs.
B
We
spoke
to
our
neighbors.
We
we
listened
essentially
in
a
moment
where
there
was
a
lot
of
people
who
were
withdrawing
and
and
businesses
that
were
closing
and
and
and
organizations
that
were
moving
to
a
virtual
world.
We
were
making
sure
that
we
were
in
neighborhoods
talking
to
our
neighbors
and
making
sure
that
that
whatever
they
needed,
we
could
provide.
B
You
know
you
remember,
probably
at
the
very
beginning
of
the
pandemic,
we
couldn't
even
get
toilet
paper
face,
masks,
let
alone
us
sanitizers,
clorox,
and
things
like
that,
so
we
actually
started
taking
those
to
neighborhoods
and
and
to
houses
and
and
to
our
latino
neighbors
and
and
making
sure
that
they
had
all
of
those
ppe
all
the
essential
materials
to
make
sure
that
they
were
staying.
You
know
protecting
themselves
from
code,
since
we
knew
that
the
highest
rate
of
contagion
was
in
the
latino
community
and
and
from
the
work
we
were
doing
there.
B
We
were
able
to
create
data
in
a
space
where
we
really
didn't
have
data
about
the
hispanic
community
of
annapolis.
We
now
have
a
big
database.
We
we
also
asked
you
know
how
do
we
get
information
to
you
guys?
Because
one
of
the
things
we
didn't
know
was
how
to
create
a
good
communications
channel
so
that
we
were
able
to
continue
to
share
information
share
resources.
B
A
So
laura
you
mentioned
data.
Can
you
give
us
a
nice
statement
of
based
on
this
last
census,
yeah,
how
many
hispanic.
B
County
had
around
six
percent
of
its
population
was
hispanic
in
the
last
census,
and
now
it's
grown
to
10
percent.
I
can't
remember
the
exact
number,
but
in
the
city
we
have
22.8
percent
of
the
population
is
hispanic,
so
almost
a
quarter.
One
in
four
is.
B
And
it's
growing
and
you
know
it's:
it's
really
interesting
to
see
the
actual
data
you
know
on
a
map
on
the
annapolis
map.
So
when
you
look
at
it,
a
lot
of
sort
of
the
southern
area
of
annapolis
has
really
grown
in
its
latino
community
and
we
see
also
with
the
amount
of
businesses,
hispanic
businesses,
restaurants,.
A
A
Well,
thank
you.
I
mean
I
would
love
to
see
you
again
and
have
you
back
and
continue
to
talk
about
data
and
specific
supports
that
we
are
providing
in
city,
but
also
in
the
county
for
our
hispanic
community.
So
it
really
is:
it's
been
an
honor
having
you
joining
us
and
it's
really
an
honor
to
work
with
you
supporting
our
community,
a
wonderful
community.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you
for
being
with
us
and
before
you
go,
I
would
love
to
share
the
next
quote
from
ella's
fiscal.
A
Just
don't
give
up
trying
to
do
what
you
really
want
to
do
where
there
is
love
and
inspiration,
I
don't
think
you
can
go
wrong
again
by
ella
fitzgerald.
Thank
you
for
watching.