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Question:

Who does this funny korean music video?

I saw a music video of this artist sort of reminded me of PSY type of music and in the video even has a funny new sort hip gyration dance. In the video he sort of like an awkward staring at people are doing something wrong. For instance in one situation a pretty girl is riding a stationary bike and the guys on the treadmill in front are ogling her then she sees the guy staring at her and he gives her a big coat to cover up. Haha the guys of course didn't like that. Other times its like a guy struggling with the police and he simply stares the guy into cooperating with the cops. I think there is a guest group of kpop stars who in the beginning of the video are all texting and on their phones then he throws a rampage spilling there drinks smashing their phones till they all start paying attention to him. It was on the SBS MTV channel. I tried searching myself but all I could find were PSY videos -_- I think its pretty new the song

Answer:

I feel balanced I guess because every day I go through my mental list of things I am happy for and about, things I am grateful for and I go over what I am still hoping to achieve and accomplish in life. I talk to Allah about both sets of things each day.
I agree with MidAtlantian2. The more fundamental reason why matter can't exceed the speed of light is that space and time are tied together, in such a way that movement through space always implies a certain minimum movement through time as well. Specifically, space and time are so connected that if you move a space-distance x according to some observer, then you will also move a time-distance of at least x/c, according to that same observer. And so when the observer measures your speed, he gets: speeed x/Δt ≤ x/(x/c) ≤ c
You are missing a fundamental concept in physics that many people seem to miss, and underlies why we no longer speak of the increase of mass of a moving object. the underlying problem is the implicit assumption that velocity is absolute. It is sort of a legacy of the flat earth/we are the center of everything idea that has plagued science since the beginning. If you, from a vantage point on Earth,. imagine that I am travelling at very near to the speed of light, you can calculate my 'relativistic mass' using the Lorentz transformation. But my speed is relative to what? to the earth. Now, my attention is drawn to another planet - in another galaxy that happens to be moving at .4c relative to you. From their perspective, I will have an increased 'relativistic mass', but not nearly as much. What is 'really' happening? Is my mass changing? Do I have both masses at once? Or is this 'change of mass' not actually a change in my rest mass, just as my length contraction is not an objective change in my length. The whole point of relativity is that there IS no objective velocity or time or length. And certainly, there is no objective kinetic energy, that too is related to relative motion only. Since there are no velocity related 'objective' changes to space-time, it is difficult to map these changes as objective changes to the fabric of space-time.

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