POPULARITY
數位轉型不再是選項,而是生存的關鍵。 企業若未能適應快速變化的數位環境,將難以競爭,甚至面臨淘汰。文章連結:https://www.isuperman.tw/%E7%95%B6%E5%89%8D%E8%B6%A8%E5%8B%A2%EF%BC%9A%E7%82%BA%E4%BD%95%E6%82%A8%E6%87%89%E8%A9%B2%E9%87%8D%E8%A6%96%E6%95%B8%E4%BD%8D%E8%BD%89%E5%9E%8B%E7%9A%84%E5%BF%85%E8%A6%81%E6%80%A7/想要學習更多?1. 請造訪超人行銷免費索取十堂網路行銷課程:https://www.isuperman.tw2. 加LINE官方帳號好友:https://line.me/R/ti/p/%40gyx7886l
ACL knowledge bites, because there's so much more to the ACL In the picturesque Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, an artist who never sleeps is capturing candid moments of unsuspecting drivers day and night. But don't worry, this isn't about an avant garde street photographer. It's the ever watchful speed and red light cameras making sure our roads stay safe and you too. Luxembourg's roads are closely monitored by 20 fixed speed cameras scattered across the country. On top of that, there are seven mobile radar units known locally as Radar transom. These units track a vehicle's average speed over long distances, making sure drivers don't just slow down near fixed cameras and then speed up again. In 2023, these combined forces flashed more than 350,000 times, handing out over €15 million in fines. That is about 965 reminders per day. So yeah, quite a lot. With fines ranging from €49 for minor infractions to several hundred euros for serious offences, ignoring cameras can be pretty expensive. And where are they? If you're driving through the tunnels on the A7 motorway, keep an eye on your speed. Speed cameras are set up in tunnels. The speed limit is 90km/h, and the cameras are there to ensure that drivers don't turn the thrill of tunnel driving into costly mistakes. In the heart of Luxembourg City, traffic enforcement is stepping up. Three red light cameras have been installed at key locations in the Hollerich district, while an additional one keeps watch at Place de l'Étoile. So specifically, you'll find those in the rue d' Esch and the Boulevard Doctor Charles Marks a spot where drivers often rush through out of impatience, especially in the boulevard Doctor Charles Marks a section where stepping on the gas a bit too hard can quickly become a problem. Do you have some? Also, in the intersection of the A4 motorway and the Boulevard Pierre du Pont There is a tricky, tricky conjecture where the yellow light often tempts drivers to push their luck. Place de l'Étoile located at one of the city's major transport hubs, this red light cameras ensures drivers stay alert during rush hour. It helps prevent cars from blocking tram railways, keeping traffic flowing smoothly and avoiding potential hazards. During their test phase, these cameras detected an average of over 800 violations per day. Clearly, they're not just there for decoration. Sure, nobody likes speed cameras, but it's hard to argue with the results. The markusbierg Tunnel, for example, on the A13, caught 74,000 speeding drivers in one year, making it the most effective camera in the country. So the next time you're driving through Luxembourg's scenic roads or urban streets, remember to smile. And if you want to avoid traffic, or at least be prepared for it. Tune in to Radio Ara during morning rush hour twice a morning. ACL will give you the latest traffic updates to help you steer clear of any unpleasant surprises on the road.
Op een deel van de Afsluitdijk mag vanaf vandaag ook overdag 130 kilometer per uur worden gereden. Het is het eerste van vier trajecten waar nog dit jaar de maximumsnelheid omhoog zal gaan. Behalve op de Afsluitdijk mag binnenkort ook harder worden gereden op de A7 tussen de aansluiting Winschoten en de grens met Duitsland, en de A6 tussen Lelystad-Noord en de Ketelbrug. Verkeersminister Madlener kijkt naar meer trajecten en wil daar voor de zomer meer over bekendmaken. Verder in de auto-update: Mercedes stopt met de kleine bestelauto's die het met Renault ontwikkelt. Volvo heeft twee jaar nodig om zijn productie in Amerika te vergoten. MG onthult later deze maand de CyberX, een soort elektrische G-Klasse.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Johannes Höök, grundare av Hook Digital, gästar podden Framtidens E-Handel och pratar om mental uthållighet, att bygga bolag från grunden, och hur man tänker kring flöden och marketing automation för att verkligen skala sin verksamhet. 04:47 – Likheterna mellan entreprenörskap och elitidrott10:45 – Johannes bakgrund och hur han tog klivet till att starta eget13:13 – Vad är marketing automation – och varför spelar det roll?15:00 – Vad kan rätt flöden bidra med i ett bolags tillväxt?18:40 – Vilka flows ska man börja med? De 3 mest högpresterande24:51 – Så anpassar du flows till olika typer av varumärken och målgrupper32:04 – Den nya avregistrerings-funktionen – vad gör man när listan tappar?42:27 – Så bygger du köpresan från grunden, steg för steg50:06 – Vilka KPI:er är viktiga att följa – och vilka är bara brus?55:49 – AI & framtiden för automation – vad kommer förändras?57:27 – Vad blir den nya konkurrenskraften när allt blir automatiserat?Här hittar du Johannes & Hook Digital:https://www.linkedin.com/in/johannes-h%C3%B6%C3%B6k-%F0%9F%93%A7-217627121/ https://hookdigital.se Sponsor:https://www.svea.com/payments Följ Björn på LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/bjornspenger/ Följ Framtidens E-handel på LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/company/framtidens-e-handel/ Besök vår hemsida, YouTube & Instagram:https://www.framtidensehandel.se/ https://www.instagram.com/framtidens.ehandel/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEYywBFgOr34TN8NtXeL5HQPoddproducent och klippare Michaela Dorch & Videoproducent Fredrik Ankarsköld:https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaela-dorch/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/ankarskold/ Tusen tack för att du lyssnar!Support till showen http://supporter.acast.com/framtidens-e-handel. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode 163 Chapter 24, Electronic Music in Latin America. Works Recommended from my book, Electronic and Experimental Music Welcome to the Archive of Electronic Music. This is Thom Holmes. This podcast is produced as a companion to my book, Electronic and Experimental Music, published by Routledge. Each of these episodes corresponds to a chapter in the text and an associated list of recommended works, also called Listen in the text. They provide listening examples of vintage electronic works featured in the text. The works themselves can be enjoyed without the book and I hope that they stand as a chronological survey of important works in the history of electronic music. Be sure to tune-in to other episodes of the podcast where we explore a wide range of electronic music in many styles and genres, all drawn from my archive of vintage recordings. There is a complete playlist for this episode on the website for the podcast. Let's get started with the listening guide to Chapter 24, Electronic Music in Latin America from my book Electronic and Experimental music. Playlist: ELECTRONIC MUSIC IN LATIN AMERICA Time Track Time Start Introduction –Thom Holmes 01:34 00:00 1. Reginaldo Carvalho “Sibemol” (1956). Early electroacoustic work from Brazil. Composed in his home studio. 01:33 01:40 2. Mauricio Kagel “Transicion” (1958). Realized at the WDR studio, Cologne, Germany by this Argentinean composer.. 13:12 03:16 3. Hilda Dianda, “Dos Estudios en Oposición” (1959). An Argentinean composer and early experimenter with electronic music. The tape part for this early work likely composed in her home studio. 06:14 16:26 4. Mario Davidovsky, “Electronic Study No. 1” (1961). Realized at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center by this Argentinean composer. 05:44 22:40 5. Jorge Antunes, “Pequena Peça para mi Bequadro e Harmônicos” (1961). Realized by this Brazilian composer in his private studio. 03:47 28:24 6. César Bolaños, "Intensidad Y Altura" (1964). Electroacoustic work realized in CLAEM, Instituto T. di Tella, Buenos Aires by this Peruvian composer. 05:13 32:10 7. Hilda Dianda, “A7” (1964). Electroacoustic work for cello and tape from Argentina. Her electronic music work was associated with CICMAT, Buenos Aires. 15:04 37:24 8. Jacqueline Nova, “Oposición – Fusión” (1968). Realized by this Colombian composer in the Studio of fonologia de la Universidad nacionál de Buenos Aires. 10:28 52:28 9. Alcides Lanza, “Penetrations II” (1969). Realized at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center by this Argentinean composer. 09:58 01:02:56 10. Jorge Antunes, “Cinta Cita” (1969). Realized at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center by this Argentinean composer. 04:46 01:13:05 11. Jacqueline Nova, “Creación De La Tierra” (1969). Realized by this Colombian composer in the Studio of fonologia de la Universidad nacionál de Buenos Aires. 18:21 01:17:50 12. Eduardo Kusnir, "La Panadería Versión Electrónica" (1970). Electroacoustic work realized in CLAEM, Instituto T. di Tella, Buenos Aires by this Argentinean composer. 09:20 01:36:04 13. José Maria Neves, "Un-X-2” (1971). Electroacoustic work realized in the "Centre Americain," Paris by this Brazilian composer. 08:54 01:45:22 14. Oscar Bazán, "Parca" (1974). Electroacoustic work realized in CICMAT, Buenos Aires by this Argentinean composer. 08:49 01:54:12 15. Jacqueline Nova, “Montaje Electroacústico A Partir De Materiales” De La Música Original De La Película Camilo El Cura Guerrillero (1974). Realized by this Colombian composer in the Studio of fonologia de la Universidad nacionálde Buenos Aires. 08:14 02:03:00 16. Juan Blanco, “Tañidos” (1983). Realized by this Cuban composer at the Estudio Electroacústico Del Instituto Cubano De Amistad Con Los Pueblos (ICAP). 12:53 02:11:14 17. Syntoma, “No Me Puedo Controlar” (1983). Produced by this Mexican synth-pop band at Estudios Rack. 04:06 02:24:06 18. Juan Blanco, “Espacios II” (1984). Realized by this Cuban composer at the Estudio Electroacústico Del Instituto Cubano De Amistad Con Los Pueblos (ICAP). 08:45 02:28:12 Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes. My Books/eBooks: Electronic and Experimental Music, sixth edition, Routledge 2020. Also, Sound Art: Concepts and Practices, first edition, Routledge 2022. See my companion blog that I write for the Bob Moog Foundation. For a transcript, please see my blog, Noise and Notations. Original music by Thom Holmes can be found on iTunes and Bandcamp.
Styleto était l'invitée du Double Expresso RTL2 ce vendredi 14 mars. La chanteuse a échangé avec Grégory Ascher et Justine Salmon sur la sortie de son tout premier album "Fille Lacrymale", dévoilé le 7 mars dernier, et sur sa tournée avec RTL2, qui passera notamment par le Zénith de Paris le 5 décembre. En live, elle a interprété en direct des studios de la station Pop-Rock son nouveau single "Amour Cyclone" ainsi son tube "Faut que tu m'aimes". L'info du matin - Grégory Ascher et Justine Salmon ont parlé d'un bon plan pour faire des économies : une peinture magique qui change de couleurs en fonction des saisons et permet de réduire les coûts énergétiques de 20 à 30 %. Le winner du jour - Trois jeunes de 17 à 28 ans originaires de Carcassonne ont envoyé par erreur un colis de drogue dans la cour de la gendarmerie au lieu de celle de la prison. - Un voyageur dont le car est parti sans lui sur une aire d'autoroute a décidé de poursuivre sa route à pied sur l'autoroute A7, valise à la main, sur le terre-plein central. Le flashback de juin 1989 - L'album "Street Fighting Years" de Simple Minds est numéro 1 des ventes en France, avec le titre "Mandela Day". - La série "Top Models" débarque en France sur Antenne 2 avant de devenir "Amour, Gloire et Beauté". Les savoirs inutiles - Léonard de Vinci a imaginé le concept des lentilles de contact en 1508, mais elles n'ont été présentées à l'Académie de Médecine qu'en 1888 par l'ophtalmologue français Eugène Kalt. À l'époque, elles étaient en verre soufflé et mesuraient entre 18 et 21 mm de diamètre. Le jeu surprise Cédric de Reims gagne un bon d'achat de 1 500 € chez H&H. La banque RTL2 - Jérémy de Loublande près de Cholet gagne 500 €. - Candice de Le Ronssoy près de Cambrai gagne 200 €.
Schrecklicher Fund: Autobahnmeisterei entdeckt toten Mann an der A7 bei Toppenstedt // Idee gegen Leerstand: "Spielerei" hat in der Lüneburger Innenstadt großen Zulauf
Einige Menschen auch in Osthessen haben am frühen Morgen ein seltsames Himmelsphänomen beobachten könnten: Weltraumschrott? Ein Asteroid? Auf der A7 bei Neuenstein hat's gestern gekracht. Und: Platzanweiser und Platzanweiserinnen werden für die Bad Hersfelder Festspiele gesucht.
* Palestine awaits freedom of 369 citizens from Israeli jails Israel is set to free 369 Palestinians as part of the sixth exchange since the Gaza ceasefire, often breached by Tel Aviv, that took effect on January 19. In a statement, the Palestinian Prisoners' Media Office, affiliated with Hamas resistance group, said the released will include 36 Palestinians serving life sentences and 333 from Gaza who were abducted by Israel after October 7, 2023. Twenty-four of the released will be sent abroad. In return, Al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, announced the names of three Israeli captives scheduled for release as part of the swap deal. * Erdogan warns of US 'miscalculation' on Gaza Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called the approval of forced displacement completely unacceptable and described it as pure brutality, referring to US President Donald Trump's proposal for the future of Palestine's Gaza. Discussing the United States' approach to the Middle East, Erdogan criticised its miscalculations, remarking, "One should not disregard the region's history, values, and heritage." "We expect Trump to fulfil the promise he made before the election. He should take steps to build peace, not start a new war," Erdogan said * Jewish People Say No to Ethnic Cleansing' — 350+ rabbis sign NYT ad More than 350 rabbis, alongside Jewish creatives and activists, have signed a full-page ad in The New York Times condemning President Donald Trump's controversial proposal for the forced expulsion of over 2 million Palestinians from Gaza. The ad features signatories from diverse Jewish denominations and notable figures such as Tony Kushner, Ilana Glazer, Joaquin Phoenix and Peter Beinart. The text of the ad on NYT's page A7 reads: "Trump has called for the removal of all Palestinians from Gaza. Jewish people say NO to ethnic cleansing!" * M23 rebels enter eastern DRC's Bukavu city M23 rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have entered the region's second-largest city of Bukavu, the latest ground gained since a major escalation of their yearslong fighting with government forces. The M23 rebels entered the city's Kazingu and Bagira zone and were advancing towards the centre of the city of about 1.3 million people. Videos posted online appeared to show rebels marching toward the Bagira area. * Roadside bomb kills multiple mine workers in Pakistan's Balochistan A bomb targeting a vehicle carrying coal miners in southwestern Pakistan killed at least 11 people and wounded six others. The truck had brought the workers to a mine in the Harnai area of Balochistan province, where Pakistan is battling insurgency. A military official has said that an improvised explosive device was planted at the roadside which exploded when truck carting coal miners reached the site.
Il 2025 per Toschi Vignola inizia con Sigep. Dal 18 al 22 gennaio, infatti, l'azienda fondata a Vignola (MO) nel 1945, specializzata nella lavorazione della frutta e nella produzione di ingredienti per gelateria e pasticceria, sarà tra i protagonisti della fiera internazionale, da oltre 40 anni punto di riferimento per le innovazioni nel settore Food Service. Presso lo stand 122 al padiglione A7, confermerà il suo impegno verso l'innovazione e il benessere per rispondere ad un trend in costante crescita: la ricerca di uno stile di vita salutare senza rinunciare al gusto
Le Truand De La Semaine : il paie le péage de son A3 sur l'A7 en petits mots doux et monnaie de singe, le tribunal apprécie peu son imagination Mix #1Miel De Montagne - Nouveau départCheb Bakr - Samh almea'adOmri Smadar - Muftak dansiIvica Surjak - Julija Le Fond Du Sac : cette fois c'est officiel, ce 45 tours a bien tourné sur les platines de Radio Dijon CampusBidaide - Batua Mix #2Airu - El solLes Pommes De Lune - Le plus fortGolden Bug - Toupie (Get A Room remix)DJ Lycox - Yaaahh L'Info De 20H : Lily Allen gagne plus de blé en exhibant ses pieds qu'en exhibant ses chansons, ce monde formidable offre décidément des belles opportunités de reconversionLily Allen - Fuck you (Doc Fritz Fossa Nova remix) Mix #3The Bamboos - The bells of Holly HillDJ Koze feat. Damon Albarn - Pure loveTony Lavrutz - Lesaurele La Founetrack : elle aurait pu prendre froid, son sein est sorti sans réfléchirSusana Estrada - Acariciame Mix #4Ennio Morricone - Il viziettoTodh Teri - Sampadan 9Henri-Pierre Noël - The fifth of Beethoven (The Reflex Revision)La Compagnie Créole - La nuit des requins (The Reflex Revision)
Heute geht es um eine erneute Sperrung der A7. Weitere Themen: Das Konzert der Goldkehlchen in der Barclays Arena war in Höchstgeschwindigkeit ausverkauft, der Flughafen will die Gepäckabfertigung verbessern – und der beste Schachspieler aller Zeiten spielt für den FC St. Pauli.
La circulation est très perturbée autour de Lyon depuis ce matin : quelques 2.000 taxis manifestent contre les nouvelles règles qu'entend mettre en place le gouvernement pour encadrer le transport des malades assis. La convention en cours de négociation avec l'Assurance maladie prévoit à la fois de baisser les tarifs du transport médical, et une obligation de faire du taxi partagé. Écoutez le sentiment de Benoît Galliou, le président de l'Union syndicale des taxis de la Loire, en direct du blocage de Saint-Fons, sur l'autoroute A7.
La circulation est très perturbée autour de Lyon depuis ce matin : quelques 2.000 taxis manifestent contre les nouvelles règles qu'entend mettre en place le gouvernement pour encadrer le transport des malades assis. La convention en cours de négociation avec l'Assurance maladie prévoit à la fois de baisser les tarifs du transport médical, et une obligation de faire du taxi partagé. Écoutez le sentiment de Benoît Galliou, le président de l'Union syndicale des taxis de la Loire, en direct du blocage de Saint-Fons, sur l'autoroute A7.
「ユベントス、今夏に大金投じたドウグラス・ルイスをわずか半年で放出?」 今夏に中盤の補強の目玉としてアストン・ビラ(イングランド1部)からユベントス(イタリア1部)に加入したブラジル代表MFドウグラス・ルイス(26)だが、わずか半年で退団の可能性が浮上しているようだ。 2019年夏にアストン・ビラへ活躍の場を移したドウグラス・ルイスは豊富な運動量と球際の強さを武器にプレミアリーグ屈指のセントラルMFに成長。今夏に推定移籍金5000万ユーロ(約80億6000万円)でユベントス入りすると、ここまでセリエA7試合に出場している。 しかし、今季からチアゴ・モッタ監督からの信頼を掴み取れておらず、公式戦でのプレータイムは312分のみ。現在は負傷離脱している同選手だが、2試合連続でPKのチャンスを献上するなどチームの足を引っ張っている状況で、サポーターからも反感を買っているようだ。 イタリア『ガゼッタ・デッロ・スポルト』によれば、ドウグラス・ルイスのパフォーマンスが期待以下であることから冬の移籍市場で売却を検討している模様。今夏に同選手のほかにフランス代表MFケフラン・テュラムやオランダ代表MFトゥーン・コープマイネルスなど大金を投じたこともあり、一部の資金回収に動く可能性があるようだ。 ブラジル代表DFグレイソン・ブレーメルとコロンビア人DFフアン・カバルが負傷離脱していることから1月の移籍市場では守備の強化がマストとなっているユベントスだが、資金を捻出するためにわずか半年で同選手を放出することはあるのだろうか。
You can find our Libertatia tool rolls, stickers and prints here: https://www.thelibertatia.com ______________ Please do leave a comment and share your thoughts. If you've got a story, insight or pictures to share, you can also email hi@tuesdayatdobbs.com Instagram: www.instagram.com/@tuesday_at_dobbs My other YouTube channel: @FreddieDobbs ______________ Time Stamps: 0:00: Intro 0:57: The New Royal Enfield (Royal Enfield Classic 650, Royal Enfield Bear 650, Royal Enfield Flying Flea 9:59: How Young Riders Can Hugely Reduce Insurance Premiums 17:47: Suzuki RG250 WE 18:45: Motorcycles as Ornaments (1952 BSA 500cc A7) 22:45: Bike of the Week: BMW R80GS Dakar
La AEMET ha decretado alerta naranja para las Islas Baleares y Cataluña por la entrada de una nueva DANA que, según la previsión, también pondrá a la Comunitat Valenciana con aviso naranja desde las 21:00 de hoy hasta la mañana del jueves. Lloverá también en otros puntos de la península, pero es en estas zonas donde se espera que lo haga con más intensidad. Anoche, sin embargo, lo peor lo vimos en Andalucía. En Almería se inundó la A7. En esa provincia los equipos de emergencia rescataron a varias personas que se habían quedado aisladas por una riada de agua y barro.
La AEMET ha decretado alerta naranja para las Islas Baleares y Cataluña por la entrada de una nueva DANA que, según la previsión, también pondrá a la Comunitat Valenciana con aviso naranja desde las 21:00 de hoy hasta la mañana del jueves. Lloverá también en otros puntos de la península, pero es en estas zonas donde se espera que lo haga con más intensidad. Anoche, sin embargo, lo peor lo vimos en Andalucía. En Almería se inundó la A7. En esa provincia los equipos de emergencia rescataron a varias personas que se habían quedado aisladas por una riada de agua y barro.
HAMBURG AKTUELL - Der Stadtnachrichten Podcast von Radio Hamburg und HAMBURG ZWEI
Montags ist wie immer Mathias Adler, der Herausgeber des Hamburger Tagesjournals zu Gast. Gemeinsam sprechen wir über die Hamburg-Themen, die gerade anliegen: Seit gestern können Fans und Unterstützer erstmals Genossenschaftsanteile am FC St. Pauli erwerben – ein Novum im deutschen Profifußball! Im Gespräch werfen wir einen Blick darauf, wie der Verkaufsstart gelaufen ist und welche Resonanz die Aktion gefunden hat. Darüber hinaus sprechen wir über die Auswirkungen der Sperrung der Auffahrt Bahrenfeld auf die A7 und über die Reaktionen aus Hamburg zu den anvisierten Neuwahlen in Deutschland. Und: Hamburgs Kult-Weihnachtsmarkt "Santa Pauli" öffnet seine Tore.
Am Landgericht in Fulda muss sich ab heute ein Mann Mitte 40 verantworten. Er soll im Januar auf der A7 bei Niederaula auf einen fahrenden Lkw geschossen haben. Reporter Daniel Käthner war für uns beim Prozessauftakt dabei
Heute im Fokus: Florian Sprenger ist als Polizeireporter täglich in Hamburg und Schleswig-Holstein unterwegs. Immer entlang der A23 und A7, berichtet er seit sieben Jahren über die Rettungseinsätze der Polizei und Feuerwehr. Doch wie schafft er es, seine Arbeit nicht zu nah an sich heranzulassen?
In der aktuellen Folge unseres täglichen Nachrichtenüberblicks „HH News“ erfahren Sie alles Wichtige zum Wochenende: Steigende Gaspreise treffen Hamburgs Haushalte, Investorengruppen richten verstärkt den Fokus auf den Elbtower und die Bauarbeiten an der S-Bahn-Brücke auf der A7 sorgen ab Bahrenfeld bis zum Elbtunnel mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit für Staus. Hören Sie rein und starten Sie informiert ins Wochenende! #HamburgNews #A7Stau #Gaspreise #Elbtower
Een overzicht van het belangrijkste mobiliteitsnieuws! De Tesla Semi wordt wereldwijd verkrijgbaar, de topman van Uber wil samenwerken met Tesla op autonoom rijden, de trein is geen alternatief voor vliegen en de werkzaamheden aan de brug bij de A7 zijn klaar. Elon Musk zegt op X dat de Semi, de futuristische vrachtwagen van Tesla, wereldwijd verkrijgbaar zal zijn. Musk reposte een video van een presentatie van de Semi bij de Gigafabriek in Berlijn. De vrachtwagen was eerder al te zien op vakbeurs IAA in Duitsland. Wanneer het voertuig op de markt komt in Europa is nog niet bekend. Verder in deze update: De topman van Uber ziet een samenwerking met Tesla op het gebied van autonoom rijden wel zitten. De internationale trein dreigt niet van de grond te komen, concludeert de ANVR. De werkzaamheden aan de brug op de A7 bij Purmerend zijn klaar, al het verkeer kan er weer overheen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"Sie wollten schon immer wissen, warum Ryanair Hamburg verlässt und wie das die Flugpreise beeinflusst? Wir haben die Antworten! Außerdem: Stau-Alarm auf der A7 und ein neuer Gigant in der HafenCity. Das und mehr in unserem heutigen Podcast." #HafenCity #Einkaufszentrum #Immobilien #Hamburg #HamburgNews #HamburgPodcast #News #Podcast #Aktuell #Heute#RyanAir #Flugverkehr #HamburgAirport
This week's episode was recorded just a stone's throw from East Village Radio's 1st avenue storefront though I don't understand why anyone would be throwing stones at the station's HQ. Surely it would be more efficient just to bang on the gate? Despite a multitude of changes, this can still be a pretty tough neighborhood - for instance, I was scheduled yesterday to meet with Bobby Steele in order to launch a competitor to John Joseph's “Fear City” walking tour and it turns out the person I'd been sending money to on CashApp is not actually Bobby Steele but rather someone operating out of a boiler room on the other side of the world. Which I suppose is a good learning lesson for all of us (but especially me) — if you're going head to head with the cadillac of walking tours, you'd better bring more to the table than the Yugo of walking tours (particularly if it turns out the Yugo is really named Hugo and couldn't tell A7 apart from A24).
Enjoy charts and tables below, with transcript…If you play an A Major chord like most people, you're missing out. I'll show you why, and what to do about it.I encourage you to catch the video version of this article while it's available so you can watch me demonstrate these concepts. You can find the video right here:Chords exist in context. Am I right? We typically won't play a song that consists of a single chord, because that would be…boring.So, if we want to play chords well in context, this begs the question – do guitar chord fingerings really matter? Let's find out.I'm going to list three Major keys that are pretty common with guitar players: the keys of A, E and D Major. Which chord do all of these keys have in common? The A Major chord.In the key of A, the A chord is the Tonic, the I chord.In the key of E, the A chord is the Subdominant, the Major IV chord. And in the key of D, the A chord is the Dominant, the Major V chord.It's a pretty widely-used chord. And yet… a lot of guitar players are really making more work for themselves with the fingering they use. Now, when we fret a note, it's best to press down as close to the fret as we can, for a clean articulation.Unfortunately, some of the guitar educational materials I've come across teach the A chord with fingers 1, 2, and 3 in a row. Even if we slightly adjust to fingers 2, 3, and 4, the situation is not improved by much, because there's not quite enough room for our adjacent fingers to be well-situated on the second fret in these configurations.So, what do we do? For almost 30 years, I have taken the approach I'm about to show you, and it is truly a game-changer. And it's actually really simple. Check it out.I use fingers 2, 1 and then 3. A better way to get situated is to place 2 and 3 on the 2nd fret, like you're voicing an open A7 chord and then drop in the 1st finger, wedging it right between those other two fingers.Again, not all three notes will be right up next to the fret, but this is still a vast improvement to what we had before. Remember, even if a finger is not right next to the fret, it can still sound clean; it just needs to press harder, the further it is away from the fret. So now that you've been exposed to this new fingering for the open A Major chord, what can I do to validate its usefulness?That's right – I'm going to place it in context.Remember how we talked about the keys of A, E and D? Let's say I wanted to move from A to E and back, whether that's in the key of A or the key of E. Both scenarios apply here.Watch what happens if I use the “old” way of fretting the A chord. If I start with the less optimal fingering, I have to lift all three fingers to move to the E chord. Then when I go back, I again have to lift all three fingers. Doable, but not ideal. (The accompanying video demonstrates this clearly.)What if I tried our new and improved fingering?The first finger stays on the 3rd string and provides an anchor point because although it slides down a single fret, it doesn't have to be lifted from the string. Way better. (Watch the video for the economy of movement.)Ok, how about the transition from A to D and back? Even though I do have something of an anchor note on the 2nd string with my 3rd finger, the other two fingers have to re-locate entirely both ways.It works, but is there a better way? Yep. Our new way.Try it, and then watch with delight as only one finger needs to lift up to relocate as the other two fingers provide anchor points both directions.So, not only is it a cleaner articulation to play A Major this way, we have a much cleaner transition to and from a couple very closely-related chords. So yes, I believe guitar chord fingerings do matter.This may be significant to you, or it may not.But if we're going to play this chord a few thousand times in our lifetime, wouldn't it be better to play it more effectively? And wouldn't it be nice to gain even more visual independence from this chord in context?Hopefully this gave you a window into my approach to teaching the guitar, and how I like to zoom in for more precision and artistry, which enhances our musicianship and just helps us PLAY better.Side note: here at GuitarSerious Fun, I published an article/video called “Do Guitar Chord Voicings Matter?” I encourage you to check that out as well.You can find us on social media with GuitarSuccess4U on YouTube, Instagram and Facebook. But if you want the real experience, join GuitarSuccess4U. We have a 30-day money-back guarantee.See you there!Thanks for reading Guitar Serious Fun! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit guitarseriousfun.substack.com
[Paroles de "Bande organisée 2" ft. SCH, Kofs, JuL, Alonzo, Naps, Soso Maness, Elams, Solda & Houari] [Intro : JuL] 1.3 Marseille Bande organisée C'est la bande organisée 13 Organisé [Couplet 1 : SCH] Et m'serre pas la (Ah), j'prends pas la (Ah) J'gare le fer devant l'pala' (Ah), hier, j''tais en garde à Ça sort avec les cabas du placard, treize ocho sur la gabardine J'suis vers Cannes dans l'Huracán, avec mon pare-balle et ma copine C'est la Formula Sigue, j'suis en Dior mais c'est la cité (Han) J'traverse la porte au bélier, j'traverse la fosse comme Hallyday (C'est lе S enculé, mathafack) Avec ma poupée ritalе sur la pointe du soleil dans la bulle Tu fais l'malin, on t'annule, j'suis plus nia comme une IA (Ah) Ch'val noir sur fond jaune, taureau jaune sur fond noir Serre-moi la main de la gauche à la haba (Scélérat), bébé, escroc notoire (Escroc notoire) [Couplet 2 : Kofs] J'fais pas crédit, donne les sous, chéri Coco fait bisou Que des calvities comme Zizou, c'est la Bande organizou Marseille, 6.9, Aulnay-sous, s'te plaît, casse-toi, tu me saoules Merci papa pour la force, merci maman pour l'bezoul Oh Lampedusa, j'fais la fête en Andalousie Elle est belle, elle s'appelle Louisa, ma gadji, elle est jalouse "1.3" floqué sur le dos, oui, ma gâté On n'a jamais boycott McDo', nous, on les a braqués You might also like Bande organisée 13 Organisé Die With A Smile Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars Nightcall Kavinsky [Couplet 3 : JuL] Aux BDH, j'fais d'l'allergie, j'les monte en l'air comme Balerdi Un prévenu vaut deux avertis, j'fais tout seul donc va leur dire Moi, c'est DP, pas Kalenji, m'appelle pas "Ju", on n'est pas intime Ça m'rend fou dans les bouchons, j'suis au tronçon à la Valentine 1.3, AK, brr, charbon, story, placard Rap game, streaming, bat les couilles, on prend des coups, on s'bagarre J'arrive en tiki-taka, j'te jure, j'leur fais tous la joga bonito En mode Lamine Yamal, chez moi les p'tits, ils tabassent Que ça grr, grr, 1.3 grr, grr Le game, j'le grr, grr et j'repars en brr, brr [Refrain : JuL & Solda] En bande organisée, c'est chaud par ici Faut la mentalité, charbonne comme à l'usine En bande organisée, c'est chaud par ici Faut la mentalité, charbonne comme à l'usine Oh, khapta, oh wow, oh woh oh J'entends les ouin, oh ouin oh Dolce Fada, oh wow oh woh oh Marseille tout là-haut, là-haut [Couplet 4 : Alonzo] C'est quoi les bails-là ? J'touche pas la baida Sers-moi d'la menthe comme les yeux d'Locatelli Paola En pétard, j'rentre en Harley, cheveux crépus comme les Marley Du sud au nord, j'survole le game, j'ai mis le harnais, allez, allez Tu parles pour rien, qu'est-ce t'as toi, wesh ? Tu parles pour rien Tu sais qu'tu parles pour rien donc tu n'partiras pas pour rien On va quitter la calle pour le p'tit cœur de la mama Le p'tit cœur de la mama, pour le p'tit cœur de la mama Avec mes potes sur un voilier, à danser la lambada À faire le tour del mundo, le cigare de Maradona [Couplet 5 : Naps] Ça frappe fort comme au Bellator, bella, bella, viens, on sort Sans faire exprès, troisième rappeur à avoir le plus de disques d'or (Gamberge) On a mis tout l'monde d'accord (Ouh, ouh), toujours full quand on sort En bande organisée, on a fait danser les Pussycat Dolls J'fais danser les mamans, les maisons d'arrêt (Okay) Ça m'fait des manières, j'les ai fait se garer (Gamberge) On a fait cinq fois diamant, le game est choqué (Ouh, ouh) Dis-leur, on n'a pas l'temps, les crocs rayent le parquet (Okay, okay) [Couplet 6 : Soso Maness] J'checke le gérant à l'entrée du tieks, vise la tête pour dix-mille-cinq-cents eu' (Pah, pah) Marseillais va à Phuket, et la Bangla road, c'est pas la L2 B.S.T, B.A.C, go fast, j'suis sur la Provence dans les faits divers (Ah) Cinéma, rap, podcast, j'suis sur la Provence en couv' de première Camp marseillais de la French, dans les rues d'Harlem, ici tout l'monde qui me gench J'offre le Ricard à Poutine et même la bouteille, parce que ça sent les problèmes (Ah, ah) Et lève-moi ta cagoule (Ah), t'es dans une épicerie (Ah, ah) T'en prends une pour walou (Ah) par un p'tit d'la té-ci (Ah, ah) Et lève-moi ta cagoule (Ah), t'es dans une épicerie (Ah, ah) T'en prends une pour walou (Ah) par un p'tit d'la té-ci (Ah, ah) [Refrain : JuL & Solda] En bande organisée, c'est chaud par ici Faut la mentalité, charbonne comme à l'usine En bande organisée, c'est chaud par ici Faut la mentalité, charbonne comme à l'usine Oh, khapta, oh wow, oh woh oh J'entends les ouin, oh ouin oh Dolce Fada, oh wow oh woh oh Marseille tout là-haut, là-haut [Couplet 7 : Elams] Petit j'rêvais d'oseille, j'ai jamais joué les Van Damme J'voulais une bouche che-fraî tassée comme la belle Bianca On est dedans, dedans, poto, on est là pour renta' On est dedans, dedans, poto, on est là pour renta' J'suis dans ma folie, dans mon bolide, ma maman, j'l'aime à la folie J'ai d'la rage en moi comme Broly, j'suis avec le J aka la machine, aka l'ovni Appelle si y a 100k, on est là que pour renta' On esquivait les gendarmes, au quartier y a d'la vente d'armes [Couplet 8 : Solda] On est vrais, jamais on s'vante (Hey), on descend, on remonte la pente (Hey) On vient rechoquer des tantes, en [?] sur la A7, benéf' de vente (Hey) À balle dans le Golf 7R (Hey), on met les gaz, on les fait taire (Hey) Pas loin d'mon quartier Felix Pyat, depuis minot sur le ter-ter (Hey) À six dans la [?], ça sent les rixes, la dinguerie, oh Nous, on reste les mêmes, Clio 2 ou Lamborghini Codo, [?], ça sent le fin d'stream, envoie les warri, warri Demande au S et à Houari, demande au S et à Houari [Couplet 9 : Houari] ¿ Holà, qué tal ? Muy bien y tu ? J'ai pas d'pare-balles, j'ai mon métal, c'est tout Tu connais, c'est uno très (Ta-ra-ta-ta-ta-ta) Cagoulé, ganté, ça tire sur les 13 Y a du soleil, j'pose la caisse, RDV avec une déesse Roue arrière, j'sors de la tess, son cul dépasse d'la GS Au quartier, y a l'hélico, c'est loco, electrico Ça l'accoste si elle est cool, RDV ce soir à huit-clos Tout ça, ça m'a saoulé, j'ai mis deux points sur Mbappé Tout l'Euro, il a pas marqué, y a zebi [Refrain : JuL & Solda] En bande organisée, c'est chaud par ici Faut la mentalité, charbonne comme à l'usine En bande organisée, c'est chaud par ici Faut la mentalité, charbonne comme à l'usine Oh, khapta, oh wow, oh woh oh J'entends les ouin, oh ouin oh Dolce Fada, oh wow oh woh oh Marseille tout là-haut, là-haut [Outro : JuL] 1.3 Marseille Bande organisée C'est la bande organisée 13 Organisé
-Klage gegen Schließung der Blauen Moschee -Die Asklepios Kliniken erwarten für die kommenden Tage mehr Hitze bedingte Notfälle -Bundesverkehrsminister Volker Wissing hat sich für eine Sanierung der Trasse und gegen einen baldigen Neubau entlang der A7 ausgesprochen
In April 2016, eight members of the Rhoden family were found shot and killed in cold blood in the small community of Piketon, Ohio. The killings were targeted and methodically carried out at four different crime scenes, leaving behind very little evidence. It would become one of the most complicated and lengthy investigations in Ohio history. The question on everyone's mind: Who would mercilessly kill an entire family in cold blood?Today's snack: Skyline ChiliJoin us on Patreon to hear both parts now, ad-free.Sources:The Pike County Murders: A Family Massacre, Peacock TVThe Piketon Massacre podcasthttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ7bVwytJTc Knight, Cameron. “911 calls help reveal horror of family tragedy.” The Marion Star, Apr 24, 2016, p. A1.https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2016/04/25/exclusive-we-aint-no-revenge-our-hearts-pike-co-family-says/83517330/Sweigart, Josh and Bennish, Steve. “So many ‘whys': Ohio authorities begin work to find out who is responsible for largest mass killing in U.S. this year.” Dayton Daily News, May 1, 2016, p. 1.BieryGolick, Keith and Fugleberg, Jeremy. “Mourners' wish: ‘Fly high Rhodens'.” Cincinnati Enquirer, May 3, 2016, p. A5.BieryGolick, Keith and Fugleberg, Jeremy. “‘Beyond devastation': Six victims of April 22 shootings remembered at funeral.” Chillicothe Gazette, May 4, 2016, p. A1.Zachariah, Holly. “Rhoden family is tired of waiting in the dark after Pike County murders.” The Journal News, Hamilton, Ohio, Jun 27, 2016, p. 14.Zachariah, Holly and Smola, Jennifer. “Pain still fresh year after killings.” Akron Beacon Journal, Apr 18, 2017, p. B3.Ison, Jona and Londberg, Max. “Jake Wagner pleads not guilty: Ordered held without bond on 23 charges related to 2016 Rhoden family killings.” Cincinnati Enquirer, Nov 28, 2018, p. A4.https://www.wcpo.com/news/crime/charges-against-fredericka-wagner-dismissed-in-rhoden-family-massacre Londberg, Max and Brookbank, Sarah. “Pike Co. sheriff pleads not guilty in 16 criminal charges.” Chillicothe Gazette, Jul 3, 2019, p. A1.https://www.wlwt.com/article/rita-newcomb-charged-in-pike-county-homicide-case-avoids-returning-to-jail/28849160Zachariah, Holly. “Grandmother in Rhoden coverup takes plea deal: Felony charges against Newcomb were dropped.” Cincinnati Enquirer, Dec 4, 2019, p. A8.Mitchell, Madeline. “Rhoden massacre at 4 years and counting: Coronavirus may further delay fall murder trials.” Cincinnati Enquirer, Apr 22, 2020, p. A4.Reutter, Justin. “Suspended Pike County sheriff pleads guilty to theft in office.” The Newark Advocate, Sep 25, 2020, p. A3.https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/state/2021/04/22/jake-wagner-rhoden-family-homicides-pike-county-ohio-pleads-guilty/7333052002/https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2021/09/10/legal-analyst-30-year-sentence-conspirator-pike-county-slayings-fair/8281747002/https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/crime/2021/09/16/rhoden-family-murders-billy-wagner-appear-court-thursday/8351330002/ Zachariah, Holly. “Will the Rhoden family finally see a resolution?” Chillicothe Gazette, Jan 2, 2022, p. A3.https://www.wcpo.com/news/pike-county-massacre/pike-county-murder-trial-opening-statements-start-first-trial-for-2016-massacrehttps://sciotovalleyguardian.com/2022/09/12/day-1-what-you-need-to-know-about-the-first-day-of-the-rhoden-homicide-trial/https://www.fox19.com/2022/10/26/pike-county-jury-sees-photos-murder-weapons-hidden-cement-filled-buckets/?outputType=ampNewberry, Patricia Gallagher. “‘Snipers on a hill': In Pike County, Jake Wagner admits to 5 of 8 Rhoden family killings.” Cincinnati Enquirer, Oct 26, 2022, p. A1.Newberry, Patricia Gallagher. “Wagners distrusted the justice system, George Wagner IV's mother testifies.” Cincinnati Enquirer, Nov 3, 2022, p. A4.Gambrell, Mandy. “Pike County trial defendant George Wagner IV testifies.” Dayton Daily News, Nov 17, 2022, p. B4.Bischoff, Laura. “DeWine: Truth is found in Pike County massacre.” Cincinnati Enquirer, Dec 2, 2022, p. A4.https://www.wlwt.com/article/ohio-pike-county-rhoden-massacre-breakdown/41521453 Newberry, Patricia Gallagher. “Wagner IV gets life without parole for Pike County murders.” The Times Recorder, Zanesville, Ohio, Dec 21, 2022, p. A1.Newberry, Patricia Gallagher. “Survivors of family massacre seek the Wagners' riches: Pike wrongful death suit likely to target land.” Akron Beacon Journal, Aug 9, 2023, p. A7.
A7 gesperrt, Motorradgottesdienst und Sternfahrt legen City lahm. Und: Ehrung für Neubauer
Judgment comes easily to most of us - at best, it can help us survive. At worst, it can leave us so triggered we can't function. Listen in to explore a real moment, and how to use Nonjudgmental Stance as a tool that can turn hard conversations into teachable moments. Post-Note: This episode uses the term "intersex", defined by isna.org as "a general term used for a variety of conditions in which a person is born with a reproductive or sexual anatomy that doesn't seem to fit the typical definitions of female or male. For example, a person might be born appearing to be female on the outside, but having mostly male-typical anatomy on the inside. Or a person may be born with genitals that seem to be in-between the usual male and female types. Listen in to this episode to:
We gaan naar Vlieland, zo veel is duidelijk. Maar voordat we daar zijn maken we traditiegetrouw een tussenstop. Het gaat per slot van rekening om de reis en niet het doel. ja toch? niet dan?! Het is begin april en de vogeltrek vanuit het zuiden begint langzaam opgang te komen. Begroet door vijftig schapen staan we naast de A7 om hopelijk een 'steki' (steppekiekendief) uit de lucht te vissen. Gisbert heeft door zijn zelf ontdekte soorten van vorige aflevering in ieder geval een boost in zijn zelfvertrouwen gekregen. Arjan is weer als een kind zo blij nu de trek weer langzaam opgang komt. Dus kom maar op met die steki of wvttk...Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Es ist ein heißer Sommertag. Tagelang hat es nicht geregnet. Auf der Autobahn 7 im Heidekreis in Niedersachsen hat ein Lastwagen eine Panne, Funken fliegen und setzen die Böschung in Brand. Doch dabei bleibt es nicht. Das Feuer breitet sich schnell aus, setzt zunächst eine angrenzende Blaubeerplantage in Brand. Ingo Harmrolfs ist bei der Freiwilligen Feuerwehr Schwarmstedt. Er sieht die Rauchwolken schon, bevor er alarmiert wird und macht sich auf zum Feuerwehrhaus. Vor Ort versucht er mit einem Kameraden den Flächenbrand in der Blaubeerplantage einzudämmen, doch der starke Wind treibt das Feuer in den benachbarten Wald. Mit einem explosionsartigen Rauschen stehen plötzlich die Kiefern in Flammen. Die Lage wird ernst: Ein Wochenendhausgebiet muss geräumt werden. Unterdessen stehen hunderte Autofahrerinnen und Autofahrer bei 30 Grad auf der gesperrten A7 im Stau. Wie arbeiten Feuerwehren? Welche Momente bleiben Feuerwehrfrauen- und männern bei ihren Einsätzen besonders im Gedächtnis? Davon handelt der Podcast "Mein Einsatz" von NDR Niedersachsen und der Walsroder Zeitung. Die beiden Hosts Torben Hildebrandt, NDR Reporter, und Märit Heuer, Redakteurin der Walsroder Zeitung und selbst Feuerwehrfrau, empfangen alle zwei Wochen Feuerwehr-Aktive, die von ihren prägendsten Erlebnissen erzählen. Erzählen Sie uns von Ihrem spannenden Einsatz: Bewerbungen über meineinsatz@ndr.de. Alle Folgen zum Nachhören: https://www.ardaudiothek.de/sendung/mein-einsatz-der-feuerwehr-podcast-von-ndr-niedersachsen/12859235/ https://www.ndr.de/ndr1niedersachsen/podcast5774.html Unser Podcast-Tipp: "11 KM – der tagesschau-Podcast“ https://www.ardaudiothek.de/sendung/11km-der-tagesschau-podcast/12200383/
Heute geht es um neue Zahlen zu den Gehältern, die große Hamburger Firmen ihren Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeitern zahlen. Weitere Themen: Erneut lange Staus auf der A7, 100 Orte, an denen man in Hamburg geblitzt werden kann – und am Wochenende ist Coffee-Festival.
The ZENERGY Podcast: Climate Leadership, Finance and Technology
Because buildings run on guesswork, and energy analysis is hard, there is so much waste. While buildings themselves and the complexity of their electrical load have significantly changed over the past two decades, the tools and processes to manage them haven't evolved to keep up. Verdigris has developed advanced sensor technology that can be quickly and easily installed into any building's electrical panels to get granular data down to the circuit level. Their proprietary AI algorithms enrich the data streams, and analytics reveal clear actions to take to increase the efficiency and reliability of the electrically-run equipment in the building. Adaptive automation takes those insights one step further, saving money effortlessly. In today's episode, I'm joined by Mark Chung, Co-Founder and CEO of Verdigris. Mark is a seasoned engineer with more than 25 years of experience. In his career, Mark has served as principal engineer at a number of famed Silicon Valley startups including NexGen, Pasemi, RMI, and NetLogic. Mark has also co-developed some of the world's most successful chips such as Opteron, XLP, and A7, among others. Mark is an advisor to several startups and was recognized as one of the “40 under 40” in 2017 by Silicon Valley Business Journal. Mark holds BS and MS degrees in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University. Show Notes: [1:13] - Mark shares the inspiration for founding Verdigris and the mission behind his work. [2:48] - Verdigris is a leader in AI based energy management. Mark explains what that means and what sets the company apart. [4:19] - Verdigris has the most sophisticated enterprise quality tools. [5:41] - Algorithms improve as you provide more and more data. This led Verdigris, in the early days, to race to this network effect more quickly. [8:22] - One of the biggest challenges a business faces is managing the reliability of their electrical data and making sure it is reliable, accessible, and accurate. [10:32] - Mark explains the trend around data centers and cryptocurrency driving demand. [12:42] - There's a growing awareness around two particular things that make huge differences on carbon impact. [14:30] - We're starting to see the benefit of scaled data and transforming an environment. [15:51] - We need to grow the capability of business processes and electricity footprint in a way that becomes carbon-neutral. [17:40] - Mark discusses some of the valuable lessons he learned from his time as an engineer that he was able to take with him as an entrepreneur in this space. Links and Resources: Verdigris Website
Heute geht es um neue Zahlen zu den Gehältern, die große Hamburger Firmen ihren Mitarbeitern bezahlen. Weitere Themen: erneut lange Staus auf der A7 und 100 Orte, an denen man in Hamburg geblitzt werden kann.
In deze aflevering hoor je alles over de oorlog tussen Israël en Hamas. Israël gaat onder druk van de Verenigde Staten weer meer humanitaire hulp toelaten in Gaza, correspondent Ralph Dekkers praat je bij. Ook spreken we met Rijkswaterstaat, want in Purmerend beginnen morgen werkzaamheden aan een brug. En dat kan voor grote hinder en veel extra reistijd zorgen op de A7. En we hebben het over het aantal oldtimers dat in de afgelopen vijf jaar met een kwart is toegenomen. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Crew is here to give their thoughts on the latest David Fincher film on Netflix, The Killer. HOUSEKEEPINGWATCH US ON YOUTUBE: WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/PLUS63HPFOLLOW US ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM: @PLUS63HPLISTEN TO THE PODCAST: APPLE PODCAST, SPOTIFY OR AMAZONSTREAMING LIVE ON TWITCH.COM/PLUS63HPUP NEXTGodzilla Legacy of Monsters E101-E103THIS WEEKRATING RUBRICGOOD: 10 - MASTERPIECE, 9 - EXCELLENT, 8 - GREAT, 5-7 - LEVELS OF GOODBAD: 2-4 - LEVELS OF BAD, 1 - LOLMAIN TOPICThe Killer (J7, A7, C7)Hosts: Jong Clemente and Chubax Chuidian with Raymond Villanueva and Arnold Valentino.
In this podcast I am joined by my good friend AnishInstagram: @Parrsitivity94YouTube: The parrsitivity podcast Twitter/x adamparrLTiktok: @Parrsitivity94Email: theparrsitivitypodcast@gmail.comLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/%F0%9F%8E%99%EF%B8%8Fadam-parr%F0%9F%87%AC%F0%9F%87%A7-b240b6110?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=android_appDonations: buymeacoffee.com/parrsitivitypodI appreciate your support over the years, you are what makes this possible! If you would like to be a guest please shoot me an email or for collaborations, articles.
Vandaag het gesprek met Astrid Poot. Astrid Poot is denker en maker. In haar eigen werk en projecten met klanten werkt ze vastberaden aan een mooie wereld.Haar huidige onderzoek naar praktische ethiek leidde haar naar de punk beweging en Hannah Arendt. Haar visie: het goede doen is niet moeilijk. Je mag jezelf zijn, je mag boos zijn, als je maar handelt. Laten we beginnen… Wat ik zoal leerde van Astrid: 00:00 intro 02:05 De vragen aan het begin van haar carrière. 03:57 Twijfelen aan of de kennis bij professionals zit. 04:25 Steeds meer het besef dat ik niet heel veel weet. 05:20 Het idee wat goed is kan veranderen. 06:40 Groot fan van Hannah Arendt - Uit liefde voor de wereld handelen. 08:45 Ethiek uitbesteden aan de afdeling Legal. 10:00 Als makers is de ethische verantwoordelijkheid groter. 13:20 Het Anglo Amerikaanse model is niet onze cultuur. 17:05 Je kunt de zachte waarden niet zien. De geluksresultaten staan niet op de agenda. 19:40 De bezorgdheid over genAi. Je kunt genAi met drie redenen inzetten: Uit liefde voor de wereld, Uit zuinigheid en luiheid, Met slechte bedoelingen. 23:35 Dit is wat er nu is, wat als we het niet inzetten? 27:30 Het sprookje van de voortschrijdende technologie. 29:35 Probleem oplossen vs over de situatie oordelen. 31:05 Burgerlijke ongehoorzaamheid is belangrijk. 32:15 De combinatie van technologie en kapitalisme is het gevaarlijke stuk. 34:30 Maken is een dialoog. 39:05 Alle grote denkers waren ook makers. 40:15 De rijkdom van taal uit het oog verloren zijn, en dat dit met genAi erger wordt. 44:10 Verschil tussen uitingen op Mastodon en LinkedIn. 46:50 Dit betekent Hannah Arendt voor haar, zoals, je moet handelen, nataliteit en pluraliteit. 50:55 Als mens mag functioneren in een professionele omgeving. 54:25 Het effect van de natuur op onze ontwikkeling. 57:00 Kijken hoe het probleem zich manifesteert in de wereld van de mensen waar we iets van vragen. Vanuit de liefde de gesprekken aan kunnen gaan. 59:40 De zeggingskracht van de punk. 01:01:10 We zouden allemaal punk moeten zijn en daarmee de instituties bevragen. 01:02:05 We hoeven niet altijd netjes te zijn. Meer professionele ongehoorzaamheid. Meer over Astrid Poot: https://www.linkedin.com/in/astridpoot/ https://astridpoot.nl/ https://goedmaken.org/ https://lekkersamenklooien.nl mastodon.social/@astridpoot Boeken: Anger as a Force for Good Ontdekken zonder te verdwalen Maken in de klas Maakazine #2 De dag dat de aarde omhoog kwam Het thuisnatuurklooiboek Het grote zomerthuisblijfklooiboek Avonturen in het heelal Het grote boek van Max en Ro Bo Bouwt een boot DIY ethiek handboek: A7, 48 pagina's, 7 hoofdstukken Andere bronnen: Documentaire NPO - De aarde beeft Hannah Arendt Victor Papanek - Design for the Real World: Human Ecology and Social Change Denkkaart Ethiek en Ondernemen Rijnlandse model - Nieuw Europees Organiseren 7 AI-trends om in 2024 rekening mee te houden Alexandra van Huffelen - verbod ChatGPT en andere generatieve AI voor ambtenaren. Miriam Rasch - Frictie. Ethiek in tijden van dataïsme (boek) Hans Schnitzler - Wij Nihilisten (boek) Met inner development naar detech technologie – Jan Willem de Graaf Martha Nussbaum Inner Development Goals Video van het gesprek met Astrid Poot https://youtu.be/_OC5OIyMTBY Kijk hier https://youtu.be/_OC5OIyMTBY
Ein Mittwoch im Jahr 2014. Auf der A7 bei Walsrode sorgt eine Baustelle regelmäßig für Staus und damit auch für Unfälle. Doch an diesem Mittwoch kommt es besonders schlimm: Es ereignen sich drei schwere Unfälle kurz hintereinander. Eine junge Mutter stirbt - vier weitere Personen werden schwer verletzt. Mehr als 100 Feuerwehrleute aus den Freiwilligen Feuerwehren Walsrode, Krelingen, Bad Fallingbostel, Hodenhagen, Schwarmstedt, der Wedemark und Verden sind den Tag über im Einsatz. Die Kräfte geben dem Tag einen Namen: "Schwarzer Mittwoch". Obwohl dieser Tag schon zehn Jahre zurückliegt, ist er nicht vergessen. Jens Führer von der Feuerwehr Walsrode ist einer der ersten Einsatzkräfte vor Ort. Machen Sie mit bei der "Mein Einsatz" Umfrage. Wir möchten noch besser werden und deswegen gibt es jetzt die "Mein Einsatz" Umfrage. Beantworten Sie kurz die Fragen und teilen Sie uns Ihre Wünsche zum Podcast mit. Vielen Dank, dass Sie mitmachen. https://www.ndr.de/ndr1niedersachsen/Feuerwehrpodcast-Mein-Einsatz-Ihre-Meinung,umfragemeineinsatz100.html Wie arbeiten Feuerwehren? Welche Momente bleiben Feuerwehrfrauen- und männern bei ihren Einsätzen besonders im Gedächtnis? Davon handelt der Podcast "Mein Einsatz" von NDR Niedersachsen und der Walsroder Zeitung. Die beiden Hosts Torben Hildebrandt, NDR Reporter, und Märit Heuer, Redakteurin der Walsroder Zeitung und selbst Feuerwehrfrau, empfangen alle zwei Wochen Feuerwehr-Aktive, die von ihren prägendsten Erlebnissen erzählen. Erzählen Sie uns von Ihrem spannenden Einsatz: Bewerbungen über meineinsatz@ndr.de. Alle Folgen zum Nachhören: https://www.ardaudiothek.de/sendung/mein-einsatz-der-feuerwehr-podcast-von-ndr-niedersachsen/12859235/ https://www.ndr.de/ndr1niedersachsen/podcast5774.html Podcast-Tipp: "Feuer und Flamme": Die Feuerwehrleute aus Bochum erzählen von Krisensituationen und rettenden Brandschutztipps. https://www.ardaudiothek.de/sendung/wdr-2-feuer-und-flamme-der-podcast/96496014/
Heute geht es um das Gedenken an die Opfer des Attentats von Brokstedt. Weitere Themen: Hamburgs Unternehmen sollen mehr Flüchtlinge einstellen, E-Roller sollen feste Abstellflächen bekommen – und die nächste Vollsperrung de A7 steht an.
WARBIRD RADIO - Warbird Radio Downunder Hosts Dave and Grant speak with Matt Henderson, who with his wife Kaz moved to Tocumwal airport's airpark in New South Wales in 2017, and then in 2019 they set up the Tocumwal Aviation Museum there. Matt has researched the fascinating history of Tocumwal, which was one of he biggest aerodromes in the world when it was built by the Australian Government for the US Forces in WWII. By the time the construction was completed the war situation had changed, and the USAAF no longer required it. It was therefore handed over to the Royal Australian Air Force who made it into a massive repair and maintenance base for the RAAF Consolidated B-24 Liberators and other aircraft, as well as a paratroop training school, and more.As well as the museum, and the popular cafe, Matt and Kaz also run airshows at Tocumwal, their third such event having just taken place in September 2023.And they have just taken possession of a new addition to the museum, an ex-RAAF Macchi 326, A7-083, handed over by the Air Force on the 20th of October 2023. This episode was recorded two weeks earlier but was embargoed till the handover had happened. #warbirdradio #tocumwal #warbirds #aviation #airmuseums
In this episode I'm joined by my good friend Tanya pluckroseHelps business owners to create a rich result mindset.Tanya is a mindset coach, speaker, mindset vlogger, mentor, bob proctor menteeLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tanyapluckrose?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=android_appInstagram@Tanyapluckrose-Instagram@Parrsitivity94YouTube: the parrsitivity podcastEmail: theparrsitivitypodcast@gmail.comTiktok:@parrsitivity94Twitter/X: AdamparrLLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/%F0%9F%8E%99%EF%B8%8Fadam-parr%F0%9F%87%AC%F0%9F%87%A7-b240b6110?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=android_app
Listen to this episode on Spotify or Apple Podcasts Have you ever read miracle stories in the bible and asked yourself, "I wonder if this happens today?" My guests today are Josh and Daisy Jones of the UK who share their testimonies of God intervening in and through their lives. Hear about Josh's miraculous healing from asthma, Daisy's baptism when a Muslim spoke in tongues, and various adventures walking with God both at home and abroad, especially in Israel. They also talk about their interesting journey to unitarianism as well as their plans to organize the first UCA (Unitarian Christian Alliance) conference in the London area in the summer of 2024. —— Links —— For more about the Unitarian Christian Alliance (UCA) see unitarianchristianalliance.org. Check out episode 500 The Gifts of the Spirit in Early Christianity See also our 7-part series on the Holy Spirit, covering various major views of the manifestations of the spirit, especially speaking in tongues. Take a listen to episode 310 Are Gifts of the Spirit Available Today? with Sam Storms Lastly, check out these previous episodes on healing Support Restitutio by donating here Join our Restitutio Facebook Group and follow Sean Finnegan on Twitter @RestitutioSF Leave a voice message via SpeakPipe with questions or comments and we may play them out on the air Intro music: Good Vibes by MBB Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) Free Download / Stream: Music promoted by Audio Library. Who is Sean Finnegan? Read his bio here —— Transcript —— This transcript was auto-generated and only approximates the contents of this episode. Sean Finnegan: So Josh and Daisy Jones, so great to have you on the show today. Thanks for joining me. Josh Jones: It's our pleasure. Wonderful to be here. Daisy Jones: Yeah. Thanks for asking us. Sean Finnegan: Yeah, yeah. To begin with, I thought you could just introduce yourselves a little bit and tell a little bit about who you are and then we could get into your story a little bit and your background. So who who are you? Who are the Joneses? Josh Jones: An unconventional couple presently living in in north London. I'm a serving officer in the Parish regiment being served for 20 years in one capacity or. And we have got two wonderful children, joy and Isaac, five and three respectively. Days. Do you wanna talk about yourself? Daisy Jones: OK. Well, I guess my my first role is is mummy at the moment cause I've got a 5. And a three-year old and they are an absolute joy. In fact, they're both called joy because one is called joy. And the other one is called. Isaac, which means join laughter. So we're in the stage of still sleepless nights a little bit. I'm still nursing my youngest. So if you hear a cry in the background, I might have to disappear. But such is life. But we didn't want to miss this opportunity to speak with you because we listen to you a lot and you know we wanted to share our story. Sean Finnegan: Let's hear about how you came to faith. I don't know who would like to go first, but I've heard that in the UK in general and London in particular, there are a lot of secular minded people. So how is it that you two are Christians? Really, I guess. Would be my first question. Who would? Josh Jones: So yeah, so I was actually born in Australia. I grew up there in New Zealand, the Solomon Islands, Portugal, before moving to England at the age of 12. And as a young kid, I was, you know, forced to go to church. My, my parents did have a faith. It is like live and vibrant today, very much so. But thinking in the younger days was very much just trying to instill in me some good behaviour and some. Good Bible stories. At the age of 12, moved to a place called Orpington in Kent. Again, just outside London up to the South East this time as opposed to the NW where we are presently and went to a really good Baptist Church, I very quickly fell in love with the word of God. There were some really godly men there who used to run the Bible study week by week, would go and just really enjoy studying the Bible as I got into my. Kind of later teens 1 by 1. My friends would leave as the lure of of teenage life just became too strong for. And but I just kind of fell more and. More in love. With the word. So I remember coming home from school and just like going. Into my other. Garage that we had converted and just like reading, reading the Bible and kind of got to age like 1617 or it's like, you know, this is real. Then if I pray something should happen because you know, this book is a story of men and women. And having supernatural encounters with a divine God, you know, every character is almost like a Marvel superhero in the sense that something extraordinary is happening in their lives. It's not just a blind faith, it's it's a living faith. And so I just started kind of praying where I was asking questions to understand what this particular passage. And or personal events in my life answers just started to arrive through all interesting and peculiar. News. There's a big move of God. Some Americans were probably aware of it in 1994. It was kind of aptly named the Toronto blessing. You know, I I. Did sense a change in the atmosphere in the churches? I saw people kind of leading what I'd more say, more spirit filled lives, passionate prayer activity, sharing their faith. And I knew that's what I wanted to do. And and in that period of time, you know, I saw miracles personally in my own life. I was healed, miraculously, of asthma that I had been suffering from from about 7:00. And right to the extent where I got prayed for in church and then completely forgot about it because there was a word that, you know, God wanted to hear someone ask for. And I had that since I was 7 and like my dad, he was like a fantastic rugby player. You know, I once made the B team at the age of seven. And on my glorious attendance on the pitch. I promptly had a a desperate attack within 10 minutes and got rushed to hospital, so my dad's hopes for a rugby player. You know, wearing the Kiwi jersey, we were cool, he. Crushed. Ohh man and. Sean Finnegan: Those those guys are epic. Those Kiwi rugby guys? Incredible. Josh Jones: And my dad was he was a fantastic rugby player and so there I was with my little inhalers, you know, and I was 19 at the time, 18 or 19. 18 I would. Have been a few. Weeks later, I went for my check up and my local doctor's surgery and I completely forgotten about the prayer and there was a new Doctor and I went through the test, et cetera. Then I went into her kind of office and sat down. And and she just started telling me off. I was like, what are you doing in here like. When the really aggressive. Voice, why are you wasting my time? And I'm just. Like what are you talking? About I'm here for my annual asthma check. Up and she said to. Me, there is nothing on these records to indicate. You've ever had asthma? In terms of the tests that I did in terms of all the scans and whatever they what they did for that for that check. Up so that. Was an astonishing thing for me. And you know, never, ever looked back. So I went the, the inhalers and all that stuff. Sean Finnegan: And how? How old are you now? You don't look 19 to me. Josh Jones: No, no, I'm 47 now. Sean Finnegan: 47 OK, so that's that's a long track record of not having asthma. Wow. That's incredible. Josh Jones: Yeah, yeah. Oh, absolutely, yeah. Yeah. And so, you know, I got baptized. I led my best friend to to faith, baptized him in the local swimming pool, cause his family were Buddhists. And if they if they knew that. He had come. To faith they would have kicked him out of the house. And and you know, I was kind of that term on fire. Now the interesting thing is is. That I was clearly part of the Trinitarian Church and through all my study of Scripture, I never believed Jesus was God and I always knew that my understanding of who God was and. Who Jesus was was. Different from my Bible teachers from the. Pastors and this type of thing. But I never knew there was a name for it. I was completely oblivious to what is. Unitarianism and the history of the church, that council creeds. And stuff like this I. Was just like for me, Scripture is clear, but the outworking of my faith was sharing the gospel and I felt I could do that without having to confront this issue. Because it was just. I was young, I was energetic, and this type of. Thing. So I took a year out in. In that time I felt that the reason why God was was going to do this and my father, in good kind of Kiwi fashion because at the age of 15 he was given 500 bucks and told to go make his way in. The world you know. I I was 18 is like right. If if you don't. Get a job within within one week. You're out of the house. And that was me. You know, on my knees, praying and like, literally that day get a random phone call from a friend of mine who. Just thought he would call me to offer me a job in the local Silver Spoon Cafe and I was like, thank you Lord. So I was living in this kind of vibrant spirit filled love of being in relation with God went to university. I then set up running something called the alpha course. Do you know what the. Alpha course is. Uh, nothing. Do you know its? Sean Finnegan: No, I'm not familiar. Josh Jones: Yeah, it's basically an Anglican introductory course to God. The meaning of life. It's meant to be for beginner Christians and also people inquiring. So it's a very popular course here. Run by the kind of. I say conservative, evangelical Anglican wing, but it's hugely popular. Josh Jones: Yeah. So the catch phrase is who is Jesus essentially and it's. Basically questions. Daisy Jones: That was the original catch phrase slogan. Josh Jones: Yeah, yeah. And it's a 12 week course and the unique thing about it is introduced this bit. Who is the? Holy Spirit so. It kind of jumped on the back of. Kind of. The outpouring or whatever term people would like to use in 1994, and it gave people to kind of transition from a a reading about stuff to kind of stepping forward in terms of an in filling. Of the spirit. Now the the intriguing thing is that clearly it's a Trinitarian course and. And the and one of the key catchphrases of it was based on. CS Lewis's most famous phrases. Which was either Jesus. Was either Mad Bad or God. Now, clearly, I never believed that and, but I couldn't tell anyone that because here I was running this and. I always said you. Know Jesus is mad, bad God or. Who? He said he was. And because he was running, because I was able to just slightly amend certain parts. Sean Finnegan: You got away with that, huh? Daisy Jones: I got away with it. Josh Jones: I mean, I knew the book. I knew the book back. I literally memorized the entire book. But what I was able to do was present Jesus as he declared he was. Now, I didn't have the same knowledge as I do now in terms of Messianic prophecy is. But what I just didn't do was just present Jesus as God Almighty. And the the amazing thing is, as I recall, genuinely everyone who completed that course came to an independent, genuine faith. And from this little church grew this really vibrant community, you know, from there, I was involved in setting up a youth group, taking a whole bunch of young kids to church. I mean things. You could never do today. You know, with another kind of friend. We took a. 3 year old A5 year old A7 year old a nine year old and 12 year. Old to church. Really met their parents once you know. You could never do. Things like that in this morning. Yeah. Yeah, end up. Joining a a pretty vibrant rock band. Sean Finnegan: And what? What did you play? Josh Jones: So I played bass. Yeah. So I I recall one day it was my coming to the end because I studied law at university. Yeah, I'd always in the careers office had always been Paris marines or submarines. But with this explosion of faith, I always kind of joked that. I'm in God's army now, so. You know, this is this is where. I'm going to serve. And so I decided to do law. I remember praying in my room that I really wanted to have the opportunity to share my faith with kids in school and. Stuff like this. The next day, my Rd. from Hertfordshire. I was up to Saint Albans and on route. Halfway through I met this bloke called Mark James, who is now quite a famous worship leader in the Vineyard Worship movement and wasn't well. He wasn't then I had seen his band play. A month or so before, we'd only kind of shook hands. I said hi. But anyway, we got chatting on the zebra crossing and he goes. What you doing on Friday? It's like nothing. And he goes well, we're going into. The local school. With the band. We would like you to to play bass. To come and. Share your faith. And I wasn't really a musician by any stretch of imagination I can. I can. I'm maturing. I can play a rhythm and I can move. These guys were proper musicians. You know I'm the fool who can who can move around the stage. But that was me, you know, on the Friday there. I am in a school sharing. My faith, not four days after, you know, getting my knees and prayers saying, Lord, I'd really love to, to share my faith in schools with. Young people and then from. There joined something called our nation and spent the rest of the year basically touring around different schools doing that exact same thing, whilst somehow managing to do my law degree at the same time. I never let on. That my understanding of. Who God was was was different. To Michael, there are there are a few things that I used to kind of. Day, but again, it was before the age of the Internet. From what I recall, I hadn't met anyone with any of the knowledge that you or who's the who's the chat that we met? The yeah. Fancy Buzzard. You know, I just wasn't exposed to to any of this stuff. And and to me it's not wasn't important. Because I was seeing God move, you know, people's lives were being. Daisy Jones: Changed. Can I add an interesting detail? A little factoid. OK. Josh was in two bands that were unrelated. The secular one was called dusk and the. The Christian one was called dust. So yeah, that's a fact. So yeah, the one with Mark James's dust, isn't it? Yeah. Josh Jones: Yeah, yeah, does. Now I'll kind of just bring. This particular part to a close and then we can go over to Daisy and then and then. Maybe back to me. In this period of time where I was, I felt very close to God. You know, I spent lots of time just out on the streets. Share my faith and many, many dark hours and that an incident occurred in the spirit that shook my faith in a way that I just. Was not expecting. It created like a kind of a a darkness, and it wasn't that my faith in God was shook, but it was my. Love for God? In, in the sense that I couldn't understand what had happened and you know, I struggled with this thing for almost five years. And I went to kind of senior leaders, people who I trusted. But because I was always kind of on the fringe of the church as I. Was a part of. Not so much because of my understanding who God was, but because I. Was out there living, sharing, preaching. I never really had that deep mentorship, and when I finally got to speak to the past, who I really respected, the advice he gave me was terrible, he said. Basically, if you can't understand why this happened, you will never trust God. It culminated with me at the age of 2526, walking away from everything that I was doing. I remained faithful in season and out of season as best as I. Good. And reconciling what had happened, what had got to a stage where I just was broken inside. And so I decided to step back and. Walk my own. Path, which I regret doing, and in that time I did get married. Not please Daisy and during up the Army, the parish regiment. There's a amazing verse that you. Know if we are faithless. God is still faithful and you know, slowly and surely he called me. Back and I've got many miraculous testimonies of extraordinary protection and provision and guidance, particularly whilst on operations and stuff like this, and and my son. Has really made a tremendous difference, but the kind of summary statement so I can break clean and that my beautiful wife speak is looking back. Whilst I was aware of what success looked like potentially in the spirit using kind of military terminology, what I wasn't aware of was my enemy and I didn't have the maturity and understanding of of. That's quite what it meant. When you know when Jesus said, you know, Satan is the father of lies, and that when he speaks deception, it comes out. As truth you. Know we live and fight this battle daily. We see how effective Satan's lives have been in terms of the corruption. Some of the. Most simple statements in the history of mankind, you. Know you're over God is. One and how they can turn 1 into a a purity you know. It's just but. How Satan can make but not just truth in the in terms of words and. Corrupt stuff, but actually in the spirit. As well, and I lacked the maturity of understanding just how deceptive. He can be and the absolute requirement to go back to the scriptures and test everything against the scriptures. Fast forward a number of years till about seven years ago, six years. Yeah, you always. Daisy Jones: Yeah, yeah, 6 1/2 years. Josh Jones: Well, that's marriages. And we met before then. Daisy Jones: Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, yes. Josh Jones: In the February, yeah. Yeah. So do you. So do you spend some time on on young Daisy? Daisy Jones: Completely different background, so I'm a born and bred Londoner. My father is British, fiercely Welsh, and my mother's Argentinian, and so she's very Catholic. And my mother's side of the family are. Very Catholic. And so I grew up Catholic. I was baptized Catholic. I then flew over to Argentina for my Holy Communion. And. Yeah. Yeah. And it was actually quite embarrassing because they they handed me the cup of wine and basically I drank all of it because. Daisy Jones: I thought. That's what I was meant to do. You're supposed to. Sean Finnegan: Take a sip and. You can't. Daisy Jones: I was supposed to take a sip and I took the whole thing and I could hear all my family. The background. Goats up her like this, but anyway so but. It was still a good experience. And but sadly, that's where my official faith journey ended. Formally so my mom, I kind of see her as a Catholic marvel superhero. So she's she's worked for the Catholic Church for many years now. Well, now she works for a Christian charity that work with persecuted Christians in. The Middle East. But she's worked for the Catholic Church for many years, and so. Catholic highlights include going to Rome for the Catholic Great Jubilee in 2000 and sharing bread broken by John Paul the 2nd and sharing that with my. Mum, that was pretty cool. Even though I didn't identify as a Catholic at the time, but I still believed very strongly in God. Sean Finnegan: And and were you in Saint Peters Square, Vatican for that? What? What an amazing. Daisy Jones: Yes, yes. Sean Finnegan: Spot that is. Daisy Jones: It's just amazing it it it really is amazing. It's really amazing. Thing. And then my mom also organized Pope Benedict the 16th, who to my Protestant friends is Pope Ratzinger. I guess to come over. And that was around 2010. So she organised a big event in Hyde Park. And so I went to see him there, which was an amazing experience. Again, and because she'd organised it, obviously we were kind of in the front and I had all these bishops and Cardinals behind me. And I remember turning round and apologising to them, saying, oh, I'm you're far more pious than me and. I shouldn't really. Be here and I'm not. I'm not even Catholic. And I remember a nun who was next to this quite important cardinal. She said to me. Oh, you're right where God wants you to be. And I thought, OK. I'll roll with that. Another notable moment in my Catholic history with a bit of a Latin American flavour. Is a few years ago I went to the hills in northern Argentina in a place called Salba La Linda, which means Salta the beautiful. And there's a lady there who claims she says she sees apparitions of. The Virgin Mary. Thousands of people come from all over the world. Every Saturday they come to see her. So even though I was very non Catholic at the time and but still a very strong believer at that time and wanting to honour my mum who'd invited me, I went there and that was a pretty mad experience if you've experienced. The South American Catholicism, I don't remember seeing a branch on the way up to the hill Slash Mountain that didn't have hundreds of plastic rosaries on, you know, and and then when you got there, she prayed over you with a rosary in one hand and then she put her hand on your your head. And there were loads of people falling over and stuff, but very silently in a very Catholic way, not a Pentecost. The way. Sean Finnegan: I do want to hear, I guess I'm curious about the Unitarianism a little bit more because what, Daisy, what you said is that you, you never believed in the. Trinity at all. Daisy Jones: No, I know, I know. I mean don't. Sean Finnegan: You have like the Catholic. Daisy Jones: No. Yeah, I mean, I definitely did the sign, but I didn't know. What I was doing but. My heads, God and Jesus, were always distinguishable, distinct. Sean Finnegan: So then you're an example of a Catholic Unitarian. Right. Daisy Jones: No, no, I I don't. I I I cause I didn't even know the word Unitarian. It was just my it was just my understanding of it. I I never shared it. There was no real forum to share it. Sean Finnegan: Right, but here. Here's. Here's what I'm thinking. About is my own mother. She was a Baptist, I think a Southern Baptist. And she said she never believed in the Trinity and she was always, you know, she would never use EU word Unitarian. But she would she, but that that did describe what she believed. She believed that there was a father. Daisy Jones: 100%. Sean Finnegan: And then there's Jesus, OK. So I wonder how many people are in that category even now in Orthodox Christianity and Catholic Christianity and Anglican Christianity among evangelicals of all different stripes, you know? I I bet. There are lots of Unitarians that you know that it's not. Organized in their mind behind a word or a theology, it's just sort of like it's just sort of fuzzy. Daisy Jones: Yeah. So yeah, so those are my kind of highlights of my Catherine Catherine. Oh, gosh, sorry. Catholic, Unitarian. And then on my dad's side. So I'll go into a bit of my dad's family history, cause it's quite interesting from a non conformist Unitarian. Angle I come from about 5 generations of very non conformist Christian thinkers who wanted the disestablishment. Of the church. So they were a mixture of Welsh and from the Isle of Man. I don't know if you've heard of the Isle of Man. It's a kind of small island. Just off the coast of Britain, obviously, and so my ancestors were big on. Trying to well, they wanted freedom from worship. They didn't want to send taxes to the Church of England. They wanted the freedom to worship and for everything to be decentralised from Westminster, which is still why the Welsh and the Scottish hate the English because they think that it's still very centralised around Westminster. So my ancestors are kind of. Famous for rejecting the Affination Creed for not noticing Lent and not observing Ash Wednesday and things like this. So I like to think well, we I've just had an update from ancestry.com. I've still got 60% of Welsh blood flowing through my veins. So I like to think I've got a drop of that non conformist blood in my veins, definitely. Sean Finnegan: Well, at least you don't have the accent. To us, we need a translator. Daisy Jones: Ohh yeah, no. Well, she's well, she's very strong. Sean Finnegan: We Americans have no idea what they're saying. I yeah, I really. Daisy Jones: That's my dad's side, but unfortunately my dad is agnostic. I I checked in with him last week. He's 85 and I said daddy. You know, you still don't believe in God, and he said no, but I respect your, you know, beliefs and I love you and blah blah as you've mentioned before the UK. Is quite a. Secular landscape Brits tend to be just quite cynical about everything and just miserable sometimes. Maybe it's the weather. I don't. I went to university, I went to Durham University where Harry Potter was filmed. There I met my best friend, who is a evangelical Protestant, and I think she was the first person I'd ever met who was like an evangelical who actually believed in God and was Protestant, I guess. Thinking back through my faith journey, one of the things that really impacted me was. Meeting her parents and her parents, inviting me to pray with them all out loud around the table. It really had an effect on me about how powerful prayer was because prayer for me was always at night and to myself, and obviously always praying for other people, but very silent and very solemn. In the Catholic way, whereas this was very dynamic and I felt really moved by it, it moved me to tears actually. And I thought this is what I really like. This kind of charismatic expression of faith after university. I also took a year out in Spain and then I moved to Argentina. I went to Argentina for a bit. And then when I came back, I did a series of jobs, completely wild, different jobs. I've always talked for the last 20 years, but I also did a bit of modelling very badly. And then I also did just other things. Other work. I had a shop I was designing things. It was quite a hectic life. But because I didn't have that kind of firm biblical church foundation thing, I think I kind of drifted off and got very attracted by the esoteric things new agey kind of things. I kind of got lured into reading esoteric books. Reading about the new age and stuff like this. And also made friends with people who were kind of in that environment. I guess I was craving the spiritual. But again, I didn't really have that firm Biblical Foundation to realize that it's not what God wanted and it's not what I should have been doing. God really convicted me. That I should leave the new Agey world slowly, slowly, I started to kind of remove certain items like the Buddha on my on my wall and stuff like this, and to get rid of my esoteric books and stuff. I started listening to Derek Prince, who's a very famous Pentecostal preacher. He's died now. He's he was at Cambridge and he was a philosopher, originally had no interest in religion, and God hit him one night and suddenly he had this. Big healing and deliverance ministry. And so I started listening to. It's really powerful sermons, and they really. Really impacted me and I remember him saying about his healing and deliverance ministry that he felt. Really ill equipped to do it but he just did it anyway because he thought that. God would equip him. At the time, so that really stuck in my mind. Sure enough, in a very cliched way, I kind of everything was going wrong in my life and I guess I hit rock bottom. Them and it's a very cliched story and sometimes I think, God, you know, despairing at some of us going ohh, you know, another one who had, who was so stubborn and had to like, you know, get to a certain place in order to accept. So, yeah. So. So that's basically what happened is that I text a friend of mine who I I could see. Salt and lighten him and I asked him, could you take me to your church? And so, yeah, so I drove for four hours on Sunday and arrived at his church. And I arrived just in time for the pastor to. You say that there was someone there and then he went on to describe everything I'd done in my life and everything. I wanted to kind of clear out of my life. And so my legs just took me to the altar. It's never happened since it had never happened before. And there then I gave my life to Jesus in a full and whole way there and then. And. Yeah. And then my life changed quite dramatically after that in a very good way. After that, I decided to do an alpha course. And the alpha course. Is a very Anglican introductory course to God or to Jesus, as they'd say, and the meaning of life, basically. But it's a very, very popular course here. Millions of people do it. It's for those. It's inquiring, people who want to do it basically. And there's a focus on the Holy Spirit. Holy Spirit Weekend at the end of it. So I decided I wanted. To do that. And at the same time, I continued going to this very charismatic Pentecostal church where I had been born again, and I had. A love for. Jews, Muslims and the gay community, and I felt like. Like I was going to do something, helping them, serving them, loving them in some way. That's what God had impacted on me at this conservative, very white middle class church. I met a friend who is the interfaith minister, was the interfaith minister at Lambda. Alice's Lambeth Palace is kind of our this is a really weak comparison, but it's like our Rome. It's the head of the Anglican. Church in the world? Yeah, but it's like a pauper's palace compared to Saint Peters Square. But anyway, so he worked there, but he was working with Muslims, and he invited me to this party with. Lots of. I guess the Christian Anglican movers and shakers I went there, I was just kind of chatting at this party and he pulled me aside and he said Ohh, would you pray with me and my friend for my friend and I said, yeah, OK. So I went with him and it was him. Who I obviously he's an established Christian. It was his friend who was a leader at Holy Trinity, Brompton. HB is the biggest church in the UK and the biggest Anglican and the biggest church. I think in of any denomination. It's it's a very big. Like big branch of. And they asked me to pray for their friend. And I thought, Oh my gosh, I'm a baby Christian. What am I doing here? I'm totally not qualified to be praying for these people. But anyway, I prayed for their friend and normally in that situation, I would definitely let the men lead the prayer. And especially because they were more. Qualified than I was in many ways. But I started just leading the prayer and the Holy Spirit just gave me words of knowledge about their friend, about his upbringing. It obviously chimed A chord with their friend. Anyway, the prayer went well and afterwards I pulled my friend to one side and I said, why did you ask like little old me? To pray and he said. Well, he said. I could tell you were good in dark places, he said, and he left it at that. And I thought. OK. So that was a kind. Of signpost for me, one of the first signposts. That I maybe was going to go into some kind of healing and deliverance ministry. Then when I got baptized. I actually ended up doing healing and deliverance on a lady who was there. So when I got baptised, I decided I didn't want to go the church route because all the baptisms I'd seen in church were very fast and furious, and it was like dunk towel, dunk towel, dunk towel. And I thought, look, if I'm gonna be completely born again. I need serious prayer and I. Want it to be intimate? That and so I reached out to a pastor and I said, look, would you baptize me not in a church? And he said, yeah, sure. I can baptize you anywhere. He's like, I can baptize you in the 10s, which is like, I don't know, the Hudson River, which is pretty gross or the sea, which I thought was cold. And and it. Or or your. Bath and I felt great. It can be nice and warm and I'm really happy with that. So we planned a date when obviously Josh could attend and his sister, who's a big worship leader in in a in a big church in South London. Unbeknownst to everyone he brought along last minute, two people and one of those people was an enquiring Muslim, but she didn't announce herself to be a Muslim. She didn't say anything and she was totally dressed as a Westerner. There was no indication she wasn't hijabi, she she was completely westernized. So when I got dunked in the privacy of my bathroom, she broke out into tongues and she didn't know what was happening. She didn't understand it at all. But when that happened. And as soon as I got out. And got dressed. There was a lot of commotion going on and then she asked. Me to baptise her. So at my baptism I ended up baptising a Muslim into the Christian faith, and that was pretty wild too, because, well, I've never baptized. Anyone. And secondly, just before I was about to put her in the water, I had a word of knowledge basically. That she was. Here for something really bad that had happened to her, and God was showing me what had happened and the people involved, and that she was gonna completely. Be set free from that, so I whispered to her what I could see. She was very shocked and she said that's exactly why I came today. Because I want to be. Free from this and then Josh's sister who's amazing. She said to her. I see you in white robes before the throne of God, and you are so precious to him and she her eyes just totally. She just just totally popped out of her head and she. Said I've had that recurring dream for a very long time. And you've just confirmed again why I'm here. So that was pretty crazy. And again, it was confirmation I had like. Confirmation that one I maybe had. A ministry with Muslims and two, that healing and deliverance is obviously for today. So then then out of the blue, I got asked to teach English to Arab Orthodox coptics and apostates out of the blue, my friends asked me, she said, would you teach English to all these people? And I said yes, I would, and turns out. The location was the church that I had become born again in. Yeah, that was actually a real privilege. That was about a year and a half and I heard some amazing stories about when Jesus visits Muslims. He really visits them in a really powerful way. So, like, at the end of their beds, speaking to them on the motorway, in dreams, in visions, I I heard the most amazing things. And they really left everything. They left their families, their countries and. Thing. Now I'm gonna say something super controversial. Obviously I'm already heretic in the Trinitarian world, but I'm likely to be a heretic in every world now, but I don't actually like the word apostate and the only reason I'm using. It is because. In the Koran, Jesus is the Messiah. He is. Marcia he is Al Masir, which is the Messiah. He is Marcia. He said. Jesus Christ, the Messiah. He's the word, you know. He's the healer. He's the mender of bones. And so for me. Dems love Jesus Christ. They just don't understand him in his fullness, and obviously they've got the one God part right. I'm gonna get a lot of haters. What I'm saying here, but I've just gotta. Say it, but obviously. We think Trinitarianism is the stumbling block for Jews and Muslims. That's just a fact they can't understand that God. Die. And so for me, I was just talking to them about the Jesus I love and also teaching them. English, which was which was really. Then I did a term in in prison. Not because I was arrested and went to prison, but I did prison Alpha, which is the alpha course in prison. So it's introducing the prisoners to faith. And that was pretty amazing because obviously I broke all the rules. We weren't meant to hog the prisoners. I hug the prisoners. What was weird was I I ended up getting Facebook requests from them in prison I was like. Hang on, he's. That has he got a mobile phone, but that was really amazing and that definitely impacted me massively on my face journey. I was always naturally Unitarian, but I'd never really thought that clearly. Obviously, I never thought that Jesus and God were one person. I always saw them separately. Ironically, yeah, all the Catholic iconography does portray them as completely different anyway, so for me there was always a distinction between. God the father and Jesus. And so when Josh and I started dating, I just came out with it and just said you don't believe Jesus is God, do you? And and yeah, he paused. And I thought, ohh, that's the end of our relationship. Short lived relationship and and no. And then he confirmed that he never. Taught Jesus as. God, when he was running out. The courses at university. And then I was like and then and and then after that I was driving with Josh and we were off to see his atheist, Pagan druid friends who live with loads of lizards. It's, and that's another story. But anyway. And we were off to see them. And I feel the Holy Spirit prompted me. To speak to a friend of mine who is the most knowledgeable person with the biggest encyclopedic brain I know on the scriptures and everything else he was learning Latin and Greek from too. He speaks multiple multiple languages, and he's very, very. Right. And I met him doing some. I was hosting some politics events. I thought, OK, I'll text him to see what he thinks about the Trinity. So I I sent him a message and I said, hey, I know you're on the board of a very ancient Trinitarian society, but you don't really believe in the Trinity. He and he responded almost instantly and said thank you so much for contacting me, Daisy, he said. Actually, no, I don't. And my parents run a Unitarian Bible study group, so. We went to this Bible study group and we met loads of cool people which introduced us to the very exclusive Unitarian community. Then we got invited to David Seaborn Jones, who's lovely and absolutely lovely. And we got invited to his house. Umm. And for a fellowship with Santoni Bozard because he was in the. And when we prayed, I I confess that our dream is to maybe open a. Hmm. Yeah, well, no. Open the church here. And it was Anthony Buzzard who said I see you may be opening a church, a Unitarian church in Israel. Josh Jones: I'm sorry. That's that's the point in. Sean Finnegan: Israel. Yeah, yeah. Josh Jones: That's before we realize that we celebrate Sabbath and stuff like that. So. I'm often like. Arguing with little Carlos on the thing going. Carlos like... Josh Jones: Although I've a I love the respect. For a lot of the stuff that Carlos. So yeah, so Daisy introduced us. Sean Finnegan: So when when did? You meet Anthony. Josh Jones: Maybe 3-4 years ago. 4 favored and. Daisy Jones: Before it was 20, joy Joy was one, so it must. Sean Finnegan: Yeah, yeah. Four years ago, OK. Daisy Jones: Have been four years. Josh Jones: Ago, yeah. So from so I took up this really unique job here in Northwood bays and I, you know, we got married, we moved in together, we started to develop this kind of little community of Unitarian Christians. I started to understand more about the history and this type of thing. And my my vision still was to look. It was almost like to infiltrate. Into the Church of England, a bit like a Nicodemus type of character in a way to try and bring about positive change because you know, I'd been part of Trinitarian churches or no Unitarian churches at all. Wear off and so I kind of again still discretely I was because still developing my understanding and started going for the the Bishop's advisory process, whatever that, that that was it because our, our, our real aim actually my real aim in the first instance was trying to build unity through community and not doctrine and 1st instance. So it was trying to bring about the love and. Daisy Jones: Now versus. Josh Jones: What about working of our faith? To then demonstrate and bring influence in communities, really to show the love and and the positive effects that people who follow you sure can bring to a community. And because that's what I've always seen in my younger days and it's like my sister, you know, you can break into the hard landscape here in the UK if you go out and preach the. Word and spirit and faith. Because God will be there and people's hearts will be changed, people's lives will be moved. Well, we had this vision to try and unite churches, to get churches to look outside their purview. Of their four walls, to get people to pull resources. To pull ideas. You know, a church full of old people helping. Maybe the church with like the young kids, you know, get a few churches together so that young people can form a good youth group thing. But basically all my ideas and work were just poo pooed, you know, the passing it back to me and don't look, having grown up in churches, I've got thick skinned Germaine. I'm not. I'm not taking it super personally, but when the guy in charge of the bat, I transpired, was the guy who was promoting the transgender liturgy in the Church of England. I was just like. There is no way in our good Lord sweet Earth I'm letting latch app determine whether I suitable. So we withdrew ourselves from that one of the offshoots of the church we were attending was gonna be shut down. And The thing is, it was full of very beautiful old faithful Christians. A lot of them quite set in their ways, but. They did outreach in the school, so sharing the gospel, you know, they did work with old people and stuff. Like this so we. Just thought it's wrong just to shut this down so days and another couple stepped up to and we ended up Co leading this church about a year and. 1/2 and you know. I was able to do that. You know, we were preaching. Regularly so just preaching. Daisy Jones: You're preaching Unitarianism in a Trinitarian church. Josh Jones: Yeah, basically. Daisy Jones: Totally undetected because we were just preaching the word. Josh Jones: And most people don't. They're blinking bibles. Do you know what I mean? So. Daisy Jones: Yeah, yeah, yeah, it does help when you're preaching from the. Old Testament and the. Arms you you can go under the radar, but it wasn't in an underhand way or anything. It's just we we just preached what was spilled and. What was written? And and that was it. And it wasn't anything under housing. Josh Jones: Yeah, we, you. Know with the hope of changing hearts and minds and developing people and introducing people to God's name. You know what it meant to be the Messiah. You know what? Were the prophecies in the Hebrew Bible that were then actually fulfilled in Yeshua? Well, I didn't, you know, these are terms probably still using the word Christ and stuff like this. But then it just got to a point where you know every now and again there'll be a. Like a a focus on the. Trinity and it. Will just infuriate me massively and we just got the points like where we actually wanna step outside of this. Now we want to have the freedom to really share what's on our hearts. So in the early stages about community, it was about just showing the word the. Passport that we we used to do lots of stuff on the on the military base where we are here. So running kind of messy church for kids and this time. The thing but the the kind of division changed to like I really now want to counter the Trinitarian narrative and. Take that head on. Daisy Jones: And also our love for juice and Muslims. You know, when we were in Israel, we're gonna have to do another show on on the miracles that happen in Israel, not least an Orthodox rabbi running after me and grabbing my arm and asking me what my secret was because I had joy. So I got to tell him about Yeshua and say, you know, I love Yeshua and I love Israel and had a good joke with him because then he prophecy. Died and I said wait, you're not meant to do that. You just think that old prophets did that. Anyway, he has been wishing me a happy Shabbat every Friday for the last five years. And we had other amazing encounters where we just had Jews on their way to synagogue and just come up to us out of the blue. Stop us in. The street and say. And in Galilee and and the sky just stopped us. And he was all in black with his little briefcase on his way to synagogue. And he stopped, and he wouldn't stop staring. And he was about to walk into a lamp post. So I was like, hey. Josh Jones: In in. Daisy Jones: Hey, so anyway he he. Just can't he? He didn't even say hello. He said I want you to know, I believe that Jesus walked on water here. And and then he. Josh Jones: Asked us to share. Jesus with him. Tell him about Jesus. This is a random bloke. Who literally just walked up to us as. We were walking from our. Hotel down to this. To the wherever the town centre is in in the the base. Of Galilee. Literally. Daisy Jones: I would really say it was hotel. It was a. Shed, but anyway. Josh Jones: Yeah. Well, yeah, I mean. It was astonishing, I mean, absolutely astonishing. Daisy Jones: Yeah, it was amazing. Josh Jones: Yeah. So we, we we met this a Muslim kind of evangelist who'd met a a French guy, was it who was gonna basically convert to Islam. He was all happy. And he showed this little photo of him. Anyway, the next day we'd arranged to go and meet this guy, but we were running late. Not that this was the imam guy, just to again speak about. Stuff and we're in the proper. You know what The streets are like in Jerusalem, completely crowded and. And then David just says. Stop that, man. I look around and I and she's pointing towards like a backpack and. Like a bloke with. A massive brown. Hair like uh. And so I just went out. To this guy and I just. Stopped him and I said I do. Do you mind? Stopping my wife would just. Want to speak to you? I have no idea. Why? Anyway, Daisy comes up. Daisy says you're the guy who's gonna convert to us, aren't you? And he goes, yeah. Why? And it's like I'm like, oh, my goodness, this is like one random bloke in thousands. How did Daisy know? Anyway, I said, look, I think we can give him a word and we'd like to just share our faith with you and speak to you. Give your story this type of thing. And so we end up going to the where's the beautiful, the beautiful cafe at Christchurch in near Saint? There David's gate and. Daisy Jones: Yeah, the concern. They're the only Protestant church within the walls. Josh Jones: Yes, that's the one. Have you been there? Sean Finnegan: Are you talking about the old city? Yeah. Nails. Yeah. Which gate is it? Josh Jones: So David's gate it's. The oldest Methodist Church in. Sean Finnegan: Yes, I I had. Yes, I do remember. Seeing that, yeah. Josh Jones: Best place to stay, I'd say. And best food anyway. So it was getting late and we sat down. We got coffee. I remember going into the toilet and just praying that God would give me the words to say, you know, help me witness. But. But I just pray for God to. To help us. You know, witness to this guy. Here we go outside. There's no one. Around except this old woman kind of sitting maybe 10 meters away from us. You know when you know that, someone can hear what you're talking about and they're. But they're trying not to be too obvious that they know that they. Kind of almost want to get. Involved in the conversation. And so she's rattling a little chair. And so I just went over this and just kind of introduce. Myself, but I can't remember quite how it happened. Daisy Jones: I told you invite. Josh Jones: Her over? Yeah. And basically walks as kind of 80 year old Palestinian Catholic woman who takes over the conversation with this young French guy. And gives him the most amazing testimonies of God's healing of God's speaking to her. Of this vibrant. Faith of this. Old Palestinian Catholic woman and we were just blown away. It was just like, wow. Sean Finnegan: And she spoke English. Josh Jones: Yeah, yeah. She spoke English. Yeah, yeah. Daisy Jones: And the reason why she was there was. Because she was. Waiting for a friend. She never turned up. I saw her on her own. I felt. Sorry for her. I was like come. On come over and then she did. She did all the evangelizing for us. And then that was it that. With him back to being a Christian again. Sean Finnegan: Yeah, well, that's great. It's great to hear that God is at work today and that that's really the message that's shining through from the two of you. Your testimony, your, your experiences, that's so great. So tell us about this conference that's coming up. You guys have a a plan and you have Co conspirators. And your hope. Daisy Jones: We've hooked up with. The Christadelphians it's a miracle I'm checking. No, we love. Sean Finnegan: Charismatics and Christadelphians working. Together it is a miracle, absolutely. Josh Jones: The UCA. I think it's a wonderful resource. I I use a lot of it and I do hope to become a more active participant in. In videos and and debates as we go. Forward, but I. There is this real. Sense of, you know, opportunity to try and build a community of Unitarian believe it's here in the UK. And actually I think and aim for a conference is a fantastic idea. The vision very much aligns with what the UA wants to do. You know, Daisy and I represent a I think was our background. We we are quite comfortable speaking with Unitarians and Christians from all different flavours. And so therefore perhaps. On call us. Honest brokers in every respect because we do have our own particular kind of where we learn issues. But. The unifying call really was saying it's Romans 15 five to seven, you know. May the God of patient endurance and encouragement grant you all to be in agreement with one another. So that was one mouth and one mind. You might glorify the father of our Lord Jesus, the anointed one, therefore accept one another just as the anointed one has accepted you. Daisy Jones: Although that's not the official strap line of. Josh Jones: The IT is. Not but. That that's the vision, really, one mind, one mouth, you know, come together to and unify in, in to kind of learn about and share our faith in God. The father, the ones we. God and but also to reach out across Europe because you know Europe, there are a number of, you know, little strongholds of Unitarian Christians across Europe. And so it's an opportunity to, to pull people together. The great challenge, how we're is finding a location and the Trinitarian churches basically were turning around saying, no, no, no. So my plan was and hopefully no one from it was to find a a church that has perhaps become more liberal in their meanings. And there's a particular denomination where, sadly they've sold off more than 5060% of their churches in the last four or five years they've made amalgamate. They're very much fall under the liberal banner, but actually the nice thing is that presents a freedom and an opportunity. So we found a a wonderful location now where they've agreed that we can host it. I'm not gonna say where it is at the moment, so I need. To go down and. Do the the wrecking, but everything seems seems fine. Sean Finnegan: Is it near? Josh Jones: London. Yep. Yep, it's near London. OK. Yeah, it's. Yeah. Sean Finnegan: Well, that, that. Gives people a a rough idea of where, where. Josh Jones: Ohh yeah, and it's a beautiful. Daisy Jones: Historic location. Josh Jones: Sorry, historic location. So everyone would love. To go there. Daisy Jones: And I think that's the angle we want. We want to entice the Americans here with the historic. Your perspective, I know you know well we we want the whole board to come. I think that that I think the whole board have said they'd like to come, but no, we we want to focus it on the kind of restorative aspect, restoring the faith back to what we believe is the original 1st century Christianity. And this is our little. Sean Finnegan: You are Americans. Daisy Jones: Historical bit, but it you know, I mean it is pretty historical to have a UCA conference in Great Britain and the United Kingdom, you know, and and and that's why we want to incorporate. Great. The other activities like a day at Speakers Corner where we've met lots of Unitarians and you know and we we'd love to also organise a debate with Dell as we're discussing and planning. So it has been tricky, as Josh said, because we always get initial. Yes. Yes, of course. And then I'll and then I've always had. To ask them. Can you just check with your board that this is OK? They check with the board. It's like, sorry your theology. Sucks. You're not welcome. And and so this has happened like I don't know 20 plus Times Now we've just been asking, asking. Anyway I think we do have a location and to be disclosed soon, very picturesque, very beautiful and I think. Sean Finnegan: Do you? Have a time when it will happen. Josh Jones: Yes, Sir. Was it the last? Daisy Jones: We're thinking July next year, aren't we? Josh Jones: Weekend in July. Daisy Jones: It's July next year. Let's not pinpoint it. Josh Jones: What? Yeah, yeah, yeah, just so we would like to maximise it, cause July, August, September. Is holidays for Europe as well. Is if we can link it in also with maximize your opportunity for the. Americans to come and. Daisy Jones: And good weather because we've. Sean Finnegan: Well, yeah. I was gonna ask about that. Is it the case that in July there might be like a day or two without? Daisy Jones: Had three. Sean Finnegan: Without rain? Yeah. Daisy Jones: No, I I think. I think London gets a bad. I think in the 80s and 90s it rained more than it did now. But I mean we, we've had I say I'd say three weeks of of a. Josh Jones: Yeah, definitely. Daisy Jones: Summer of of. Great. And now it's back to like blankets. Sadly, but no, we would like we would like to do it. Josh Jones: In the summer and yeah, we've reached out to different, you know, through this process, you know, developing relationships with Unitarians in more European countries that I was unaware of. So, you know, one individual in Copenhagen knows some people in Norway, people in Norway. For people in Denmark so that that that is developing and and also here in the UK, we're really developing our our understanding of you know there are different large Unitarian communities. Daisy Jones: Big messianic one. Yeah. And we're kind of quasi messianic. Josh Jones: Aspiring messianic. Yeah. And so, you know, winning. It'll be an opportunity for for people to come and meet and also new, you know, those newly out of the Trinitarian. Faith because. And by next year, there's gonna be a lot more of them, you know? And so it's that chance, that sense of belonging and some. Some good teaching. Sean Finnegan: When you are persecuted or an isolated minority, you know you can put aside a lot of these other issues to to meet together and you know, I think if if the conference can be a place where people. Don't feel pressured to conform to 1 doctrinal package other than Unitarianism can really spur on a camaraderie rather than a competition between groups. Yeah, that's what it's done in the US, and so many of the groups in the US, especially people from my background. Daisy Jones: Yeah, definitely. Sean Finnegan: Not I was never really. In the way but my. Parents were but. They all built these kingdoms. And they built these. Walls as high as high as they. Could and they and it. Was all loyalty based on Ohh are you with this person or? Are you with that? Person and that was my parents generation in my generation. What I've seen overwhelmingly is the tearing down of these walls and overwhelmingly people saying well. Maybe we have some disagreements, but that's OK. I'm not intimidated by you. You're not. Intimidated by me so. Let's work together as much as we can. This is really a period of of building in the unitary movement because we're not persecuted, we're excluded. I can't attend certain conferences. I can't attend certain universities. I can't get published by certain publishers, right, so I'm excluded. But I'm not actively persecuted. OK. And so we have. An opportunity to build, to build coalitions and you know, the UCA is an alliance. Doesn't mean you're free. Churchill and Stalin were an alliance, right? They weren't friends. They didn't even like each other, but they they they were. They were allies in World War 2. So that's really a starting point. Hopefully it goes beyond just sort of like putting up with the other person. So I'd love to see that soft thing happen. Where there's banding together and pooling of resources and and and you know marketing and getting the. Message out because. I think there are, I think you're. Right. There are all these sleep. Others in the churches that are just like, yeah, that never really made sense to me. They just didn't have a word for it. And I think we can agitate for a truth revolution within Christianity. Josh Jones: That's it. Daisy Jones: Yeah, yeah, yeah, 100%. And I think another interesting thing is that the Christadelphian church here have incorporated 1000 Iranians. So not for this conference, because they're English. They've just come and their English isn't. Josh Jones: That you 100. Daisy Jones: Great. We we're not going to spend the whole conference, you know, finding translators, falsely translators. But maybe in the subsequent conferences, you know, we could have a whole bunch of Iranians and Iraqis and people who who found us. Josh Jones: It is wonderful that we have this opportunity to branch out and and and share ideas and stuff like this. Sean Finnegan: Well, let me come back on the the Iranian comment. It's interesting because I did an interview with Sam Tiedeman on africat the Persian. And Afriat is a little known Christian from the 4th century who was a Unitarian. Living in the land of Persia, which is the land of the Iranians who speak Farsi, sounds like the word Persia, right? So you can say to the Iranians when they're at this conference that they can have ethnic pride in Unitarian Christianity going all the way back to the three. Three 20s and three 30s and three 40s, right about the time that Constantine died and Athanasius was agitating in the West. In the East offer how? It was writing his demonstration, so you have to check out that interview there. But there there might be some coming full circle with these Iranians, you. Know they took. A little detour to Islam for, you know, 13 centuries, 15th century. But now they're back, you know. And so I'm so excited about this. Conference. How can people hear more about it? I suppose we'll post it on Unitarian Christian alliance.org. Or or do you have other ways people can find out? Daisy Jones: Yeah, we need to square away the venue officially. So we're in the final stages of that, and then we need a bit more back and forth with the board. Just confirming everything's cool and then we're going to push, push, push. Josh Jones: Yeah, as I. Said so, we're lining up some, some hopefully. Some really some high profile debate. Some practical activities and some activities left and right at the conference that people want to attend that are not bespoke as part of the conference. So you know visits to the British Museum where they've got. This great book Biblical history for. Sean Finnegan: Ohh yeah, I've always. Wanted to go to the British. Daisy Jones: Museum amazing. It's amazing. Josh Jones: Yeah, yeah, you know, and you need. Sean Finnegan: You need about a week, right is. Isn't it just so big? Josh Jones: So yeah, and then we'll do, we'll do you know, we'll get stuff out on Facebook on YouTube, we'll pass you around. All the Unitarian commentators so they can put it on their different podcasts and stuff like this. Sean Finnegan: Facebook groups and. Twitter or ex whatever we call this. Josh Jones: Yeah, yeah. Sean Finnegan: This social media now. That sounds really great and is it? Is it? Mainly targeted at. Academics. Or is it more practical or inspirational? Or how would you characterize? Josh Jones: It's gonna be all. Yeah. Yeah. So we would like it to. We're gonna, we're going to model it on the US model. So combination of academic, theological, practical, personal, the whole smorgasbord of of Unitarian. Daisy Jones: And we're and. We're trying to make it as affordable as possible. So initially I think we did want the big grand venue until we got the invoice. And then we were like, oh, actually you. Know what we do? Want students coming and also we want everyone to be able to afford to get both a plane ticket from Europe and to be able to afford to to come. So I think we're we're also looking at catering and house cater all that kind of stuff. So I think we're moving for the first conference, it won't be residential. Which is what we were hoping for at the beginning, but it will be more affordable overall. We hope. Yeah, exactly. Sean Finnegan: It is near London, so we can't. You can't think it's going. Oh yeah. To be too inexpensive, right? It's a big city. Josh Jones: Yeah. Well, you'll be surprised. I said I've I've hopefully applied a bit of my my military planning to this to this little conundrum and a bit of spiritual cunning and wisdom in terms of. And because, you know, we're not blessed with America, we're all your joint. Super churches everywhere. We just we just. Which is which is. Sean Finnegan: Well, anything else you guys wanna share real briefly or say before we close. Josh Jones: Now I just say thank you once again, Sean, you're an inspiration. You know you've made a real difference in people's lives, you know, fulfilling your mission in, in, in, you know, in love and kindness and and with a good dash of humour. So yeah. Which is brilliant. Daisy Jones: Yeah, nothing apart from gifts for today. And we love Christadelphians and we're really excited to be all working together. That's. Josh Jones: It, yeah. Sean Finnegan: Awesome. Awesome. Well, thanks so much.
In this podcast I am joined by Chris SherwinChris Sherwin is the host of the podcast 3copstalk Instagram@3copstalkLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christophersherwin?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=android_appInstagram:@Parrsitivity94YouTube: The parrsitivity podcastX/twitter: AdamparrLFacebook: The parrsitivity podcast newTiktok: @Parrsitivity94If you would like to donate to the parrsitivity podcast you can via this link!Donations: PayPal@parrsitivitypodcastLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/%F0%9F%8E%99%EF%B8%8Fadam-parr%F0%9F%87%AC%F0%9F%87%A7-b240b6110?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=android_app
Hello, spooky humans! Here it is! Your very first bonus episode available only to our amazing Patrons! Beth & Holly continue our LGBTQ+ centric episodes with the cases of Amanda Milan and Daniel Zamudio.*Content warning: Misgendering, transphobic language, extreme violence, death*Watershed of mourning at the border of genderThe crying gameTransgriot BlogBronx man guilty in slaying of transsexualChileans express outrage after gay man brutally beatenChilean gay man dies after brutal attackDaniel Zamudio: The homophobic murder that changed ChileChilean men carved swastikas into body of gay man they killed“Attack on gay man denounced in Chile.” The Record [Hackensack, New Jersey], 7 Mar. 2012, p. A7. Newspapers.com.Quilodran, Federico. “Gay man's death sparks debate.” The Miami Herald, 29 Mar. 2012, p. A8. Newspapers.com.“Chile's president signs hate-crime law after gay man brutally murdered.” The Gazette [Montreal, Quebec, Canada], 13 Jul. 2012, p. 15. Newspapers.com.Support the show
A former serviceman and member of a notorious biker gang has been jailed for eight years for attempting to murder another motorcyclist. Barry Smith - a member of the Satans Slaves - drove his van into a motorcycle being driven by Andrew Lamb, a member of the Tribe Motorcycle Club. The horror assault took place on July 24 2021 on the A7 road close to the junction of the A6699 road at Selkirk, in the Scottish Borders. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/motorcyclemadhouse/message
Ahead of trips to London and Berlin, Markus SChulz checks in from Bucharest for another fresh Global DJ Broadcast studio session. On the show, he features three Coldharbour world premieres from Ronski Speed, Freak E Beatz and Joris Turenhout; as well as showcases from Marsh, Matt Fax, Ferry Corsten, BT and more. In the second hour, Markus is joined by fellow Follow Me collaborator KhoMha, ahead of both playing at Ministry of Sound in London this Friday, along with Daxson. Markus also takes his all night Down the Rabbit Hole experience to A7 in Berlin on Saturday, before heading back to the US for shows in Tempe, Montreal and Miami. Hope you enjoy the show, and thanks for supporting the podcast. The Essentials with Markus Schulz 01. Marsh - Hymn 02. Miss Nine & Ollie Read featuring Amanda Darling - Supernova 03. Boris Brejcha - Black Unicorn 04. Kolonie - Distant Dreams [Global Selection] 05. PROFF - Nibbana (Volen Sentir's Pink Sky Retouch) [Deeper Shades] 06. MEDUZA x Eli & Fur - Pegasus [In Bloom] 07. Grooveyard - Mary Go Wild (Hel:sløwed Remix) 08. Kyan - Lonely River [P.O.S & aname Remix) 09. Kamaya Painters - Summerbreeze (Matt Fax In Search of Sunrise Remix) [A Moment of Sunrise] 10. Envotion - Eidos (Jerome Isma-Ae Remix) 11. Vimana - Dreamtime (Daniel Wanrooy Remix) 12. Charles D - Traction [Down the Rabbit Hole] 13. Ferry Corsten - Reborn (Jonas Saalbach Remix) 14. Ronski Speed - Pano [World Premiere] 15. BT - Confunktion (Anis Hachemi & Alex Kaspersky Remix) 16. Motehra - Remember Us (DJ Tarkan & V-Sag Mix) [Hall of Fame | In Memory of Turkey & Syria Earthquake Victims] KhoMha 01. KhoMha - ID 02. BLR & aname featuring Robbie Rise - Influencer 03. KhoMha - ID 04. Boris Brejcha - I Want You 05. Sasha Carassi & Husa & Zeyada - Bad Wrongs 06. Markus Schulz x KhoMha - Take Me 07. KhoMha - Oblique 08. KhoMha - T.D.K. Back with Markus Schulz 17. Gaia - Tuvan (AVIRA Remix) 18. Indifferent Guy - Apollo 19. Kyau & Albert - Chimera 20. Freak E Beatz - The Journey [World Premiere] 21. Floormagnet - Space Age (Tiger Stripes Remix) 22. AKKI - You & Me 23. HI-LO - Pura Vida 24. Joris Turenhout - Lost Voices [World Premiere]
翻电和其他podcast有明显的区别,首先体现在翻电不是一个单集独立结构的电台,而是一个专题化的电台。不仅如此,翻电也可能是唯一提供keynote配合收听的电台,那么翻电有哪些专题呢?我们就来做个大梳理! 翻电keynote和地图的下载:flipradio.3adisk.com 以下专题最方便都可以在网易云找到播单收听。 内容包括: A 翻电SPECIAL&翻电问答合集 05:09 A1 参与公共的勇气和能力 08:35 翻电问答 • 35 | 公共正义中的“重要性感受” 翻电问答‧55 | 致郁性环境如何做好内心自我建设? 翻电 Special 三年后,公共舆论在谣言潮一败涂地 VOL.107 翻电 Special 为了更有效的讨论,练习对 “尺度” 的熟练 VOL.101 翻电 Special 俄乌的撕裂及因此国内舆论的再次撕裂 VOL.82 翻电 Special 言论对立纷繁,你怎么知道你相信的是对的? VOL.76 翻电 Special 婚外情索要分手费是敲诈勒索吗? VOL.46 翻电问答‧76 | 为什么 “良好生活不再可能”? A2 商业资本的理性和情操 21:10 翻电问答‧59 | 企业与社会碰撞,企业责任为何?为何负责? 翻电问答‧69 | 哈耶克逝世 30 周年谈电商是否比芯片贡献低 翻电问答‧6 | 商业需要遵循道德吗?商业必然违背道德吗? 翻电问答‧2 | 如何看待外卖行业和我们的责任? 翻电 Special 996: 不仅是道德问题 VOL.04 翻电 Special 腾讯 99 公益:技术、社会、政治的交汇 VOL.66 翻电问答‧53 | 翻电不就是事后付费吗?也是知识付费啊 翻电 2.0Special 在恐惧年代聚焦概念 “自由主义” VOL.25 A3 亲密关系的疑惧和信望 31:40 翻电问答‧8 | 来吧,你们最关心的那个问题,亲密关系 翻电问答‧51 | 婚姻制度必然消亡吗?它是一种父权制工具吗? 翻电问答‧52 | 亲密关系为何如此脆弱?这是一种不可解决的脆弱吗? 翻电问答‧42 | 网络劝分,对生活崩溃的想象力 翻电问答‧12 | 春节将临,再谈源生家庭 翻电问答‧38 | 父母子女关系必然是利益关系吗? 翻电问答‧63 | 性可以脱离道德判断自由交换吗? 翻电问答‧23 | 追求一个人还值得吗? A4 志业选择的意义和实现 37:12 翻电问答‧47 | 择业中屈服于现实,我们是否得偿所愿? 翻电问答 • 20 | 个人选择从来不仅仅关乎自己 翻电问答‧19 | 应该成为多才多艺的人吗? 翻电问答‧61 | 请不断轻看 “精神探索” 和 “精神世界 “的价值 翻电问答‧62 | 不困于生活需要 “方向” 的隐喻,生活需要平滑改变 翻电问答‧62 续 | 重要补充:做事的真正挑战和视角转变 翻电问答‧33 | 教育体系与丛林法则三观 翻电问答‧57 | 后精英教育时代的方向思考 翻电问答‧37 | 如何开始属于自己的项目 (podcast、公众号、小组…) 翻电 Special 获得人生意义:一个拼图游戏的比喻 VOL.39 A5 平等公正的狂热和歧途 44:30 翻电 Special 永居权与 AO3 风波,我们与时事的关系 VOL.19 翻电 Special 人格平权,还是实际的功利 | 一次关于平权的调查 VOL.28 翻电 Special 清华学姐事件,正义的语境和难度 VOL.36 翻电问答‧68 | 如何对待法律以外难以惩罚的罪 翻电问答‧3 | 如何看待圣母和政治正确讽刺? 翻电 Special KanyeWest 的疯言疯语投入我们精疲力竭的生活 VOL.102 翻电 Special 如何应对观网式网络暴力 VOL.55 翻电 Special 请想一个不可饶恕必须重罚的人(群) VOL.67 翻电问答‧13 | 关于死刑的道理和直觉 翻电问答‧70 | 同理心可以解释致郁的舆论吗?面对一个难问题 A6 真实世界的翻电式演绎 49:56 翻电 Special 美国最高院禁止堕胎?到底发生了什么? VOL.88 翻电 Special 反 A 不反 B?帝国主义与战争 VOL.83 翻电 Special 从盲山到怒江,同理心与正义感的事实根基 VOL.81 翻电 Special 重刑不绝,商议罗翔主张提高收买被拐妇女儿童刑罚文章 VOL.80 翻电 Special 江歌案再起进展,我们对受害人的残忍还要多久? VOL.74 翻电 Special 流浪地球现象与文化霸权(葛兰西) VOL.02 翻电问答‧60 | 动物虐待,动物保护立法难?一个社会共识的动力探究 翻电问答‧72 | 养猫养狗这事儿能严肃到什么地步? 翻电问答‧73 | 动保激进主义,回复创纪录 4 万字评论区 A7 知识理论的偏狭与暴力 53:57 翻电 Special 暴力,语言的暴力,思考的暴力 VOL.40 翻电问答‧41 | 我的困境是因为我道德水平太高或别人道德水平太低吗? 翻电问答‧27 | 翻电是哲学电台吗?反思的危险和懒惰 翻电 Special 从农民工读哲学,看我们对哲学的期待 VOL.69 翻电 Special 相对主义的贫困 VOL.14 翻电问答‧43 | PETA、百度戒色吧... 极端主张为何能被人接受 翻电问答‧74 | 翻电为何 25 禁?理解的身体与经验门槛 翻电 Special 互联网道理争辩的面相学 VOL.37 A8 城市机器的铁幕与缝隙 01:00:00 翻电问答‧30 | 道理能解决消费主义和死的欲望? 翻电问答‧50 | 城市人情淡漠,就靠契约和个人自足不行吗? 翻电问答 • 56 | 生育与躺平,群己界限如何划定? 翻电问答‧34 | 人是注定孤独的吗? 翻电问答‧11 | 为何很难真正融入一座城市? 翻电Special 如果春节迎来大结局,我们的精神如何安放? feat.雍福会•碎片谈 VOL.108 翻电 Special 手机:私领域的消失及其所有意义 feat. 雍福会‧碎片谈 VOL.106 翻电问答‧17 | 专业信赖与反智的社会? 翻电 Special 旅行(壮游)、流动和主体性,再谈知识愚蠢 VOL.09 B 三巨头专题 01:04:09 B1 翻电2.0 - 第一章 现代世界开始 18期 - 第二章 语言何以可能 23期 - 第三章 我们如何不同 36期 - 马上第四章要开始了 现代精神危机 B2 FF30 9期 B3 个人主义与平民社会 31期 C 翻电小专题 01:15:10 十大哉问/精神工作在现代/将中国历史还给世界/《会饮篇》/欧洲近代历史与思想/神话与religious/复杂性/行为经济学/媒介与传播/翻电语文课/ 均可用 关键词搜索 找到 希望今天的内容能够让你更方便地收听翻转电台。 [ 欢迎在Patreon和爱发电支持翻转电台 ] 如果你过去有在Patreon支持其他项目的经验,优先推荐使用Patreon,因为其有按月订阅的制度: https://www.patreon.com/flipradio 如果你从来没有在Patreon支持其他项目的经验,可以在爱发电: https://afdian.net/@flipradio 感谢大家对翻转电台的支持。大家要记得敢于去相信。并敢于分享你的相信。