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Looking for Spirituality with Rev. Dr. Ray Aldred Luke 2:41-52 Reverend Doctor Ray Aldred is a husband, father, and grandfather. He was first ordained with the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada and is now ordained with the Anglican Church of Canada. He is status Cree from Swan River Band, Treaty 8. Born in Northern Alberta, he now resides with his wife in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada. Ray is the director of the Indigenous Studies Program at the Vancouver School of Theology whose mission is to partner with the Indigenous Church around theological education. Ray's passion is to help as many as possible hear the gospel in their heart language.
James Buttler is joined by journalist Tanya Aldred of The Next Test to discuss what cricket can do to tackle climate change. The Next Test is a hub for climate concerned cricket players, clubs and fans. They are a non-profit organisation, providing climate education and resources and collaboratively seeking climate solutions within the world of cricket. The Next Test on Twitter: @TheNextTest Website: www.thenexttest.org The current Cricket Badger Podcasts are sponsored by Manscaped.com - quote 'BADGER' to get a 20% discount and free shipping. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In today's episode, Ben Duncombe is joined by Naomi Aldred, Managing Director @ Accenture and Head of Salesforce Business Group for Southeast Asia. Naomi talks through her early career, and how she found her way into sales and then into the Salesforce ecosystem. She discusses leadership styles, how the Salesforce market has evolved and the increased need for cross-cloud expertise, what she does in her current role, the people she leads, the countries they cover, and how doing business differs from country to country. Naomi then shares insight on becoming an active member of the d/Deaf and hard of hearing (HoH) community and talks through her approach to sharing her journey online. She explains some incredibly difficult decisions she has had to make along the way as well as the triumphs, and how we can all lean into being supportive friends and colleagues. Finally, she talks about Deaf4Devs, an amazing initiative Naomi has launched at Accenture that is creating opportunities for the d/Deaf and hard of hearing (HoH) community. You can follow Naomi on her LinkedIn page here- https://www.linkedin.com/in/naomialdred/ You can find more content from us at Talent Hub, here: LinkedIn@ https://www.linkedin.com/company/talent-hub-global/ YouTube@ https://www.youtube.com/@talenthub1140 Facebook@ https://www.facebook.com/TalentHubGlobal/ Instagram @ https://www.instagram.com/talenthubglobal/ Twitter X @ https://twitter.com/TalentHubGlobal We hope you enjoy the episode!
The Columbia Police Officers Association (CPOA) doesn't mince words about the crime Columbia is seeing, saying criminals are becoming more emboldened. CPOA is warning about lawlessness, saying shootings occur on our streets almost daily and that there have been gang shootouts as well. CPOA president Matt Nichols joined us live on 939 the Eagle's "Wake Up Mid-Missouri," telling listeners that for the first time ever, CPOA has made endorsements in Boone County commission races. CPOA is endorsing GOP challengers Sam Turner and State Rep. Cheri Toalson Reisch (R-Hallsville) in their races against Boone County Commissioners Justin Aldred and Janet Thompson. Commissioners Aldred and Thompson are Democrats. Mr. Nichols tells listeners that neither Aldred nor Thompson have ever contacted CPOA to express support for public safety. He says CPOA believes Mr. Turner and Representative Toalson Reisch will support public safety for all of the Boone County community. He notes the whole of Columbia is in Boone County. Nichols also criticized Columbia activist December Harmon during the live interview:
We were joined by Matt Aldred who is the Strength and Conditioning Coach for Michigan Men's Basketball. He told us about his journey to working with Coach May.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Why are the roles of ‘hack and flack' so interchangeable? PRWeek UK's latest podcast takes a close look.This week's Beyond the Noise episode features Ali Lyon, a comms professional formerly at FleishmanHillard who is now a reporter at CityAM, and Genelle Aldred, a broadcast journalist who has worked for the BBC, ITV, ITN, and Sky. Her comms career includes senior roles at Hill & Knowlton. She is now a comms trainer and strategic media advisor with her own firm, Genelle Aldred Communications. Beyond the Noise looks at some of the biggest communications and PR issues. Download the podcast via Apple, Spotify, or listen on your favourite platform.Speaking to PRWeek UK news editor Siobhan Holt, Lyon and Aldred discuss how they both started in their respective careers in journalism and PR, and why they switched into or out of the communications industry.The pair identify the biggest challenges in communications and journalism; and look at key issues including training, media relations and client management.Lyon and Aldred explain what makes comms and journalism compatible industries and whether it's easier to move from a role in PR into journalism, or the other way round. The pair also offer their top tips to PR professionals. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode Justin catches up with his friend Matt Aldred as they talk about Matt's background and how he got to Michigan basketball. Prior to UM Matt was the head S&C for men's hoop's at Furman University.___FREE EMAIL COURSEAspiring https://strengthcoachnetwork.com/aspiring-leadAssistant https://strengthcoachnetwork.com/assistant-leadDirector https://strengthcoachnetwork.com/director-lead___Strength Coaches CEUs
Rachel Aldred is a Professor of Transport at the University of Westminster and Director of the University's Active Travel Academy. Her research focuses on sustainable mobilities and especially active transport.
Brian visits with two new members of the Michigan Basketball family this week. The episode begins with new women's basketball assistant coach Justine Raterman, who comes to Ann Arbor after spending five seasons at Marquette under former U-M assistant Megan Duffy. Then, around the 18:30 mark, men's basketball strength and conditioning coach Matt Aldred discusses his relationship with Dusty May and the approach to his role within the program.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Waukesha County Director of Health and Human Services Liz Aldred joins Wisconsin's Midday News to talk about Waukesha County's new Fentanyl Crisis Docu-Series that sheds light on the dangers of fentanyl and opioids in the community in commemoration of National Fentanyl Awareness day.
Danny Foley - Owner of Rude Rock Strength - & Matt Aldred - Assistant Heach Coach/Director of Basketball Performance at Furman University - join us for the 43rd episode of MTN. This was the first ever four person podcast we have recorded and we loved having two former guests back on to talk about their newest course that dropped last Monday: Fascial Mechanics for Sport. Danny and Matt are two of the brightest coaches in the industry and continue to push us forward with their effort. Fascial Mechanics for Sport is a webinar-based continuing education series that specifically analyzes the functional relationships between force plate analytics and facial tissue functionality. Grab your copy here: https://www.ruderockstrength.com/fascia Make sure to follow Danny on Instagram @danmode_ruderock and Twitter @danny_ruderock Reach out to Matt on Twitter @SCoach_Aldo and on Instragram @sc_aldred Follow MTN on social media @mtn_perform and check back each Wednesday for a new episode Big Thanks to our Sponsor, Lumin Sports: Lumin Sports is your digital HQ for athletic performance. The Australian-made platform centralises athlete management, team communications, scheduling, data visualisations, and features third party integrations to save valuable time and elevate decision making. Trusted by pro-sport teams, colleges, high schools, and high-performance centres, Lumin is an affordable solution that seamlessly connects coaches, athletes, medical staff, and operations teams. With the belief that data-driven decisions power human potential, Lumin exists to improve performance and give time back to those who need it most. Download a free demo today to find out why teams around the world choose Lumin Sports. & a huge Thank You to our sponsor, Hawkin Dynamics: Hawkin is the world leader in force measuring, and continues to put forth the tools for high-performance practitioners to be exactly that, high performers. If you haven't yet checked out Hawkins - head over to their website at: https://www.hawkindynamics.com/ and check out everything they have to offer
I catch up with Chris Aldred to talk about how he started fly fishing, became an instructor and what he has learned along the way.He has multiple casting qualifications and we discuss casting tips and the learning process of casting along with what has changed since he qualified as an instructor.We look at how more people could be brought into fishing and if fly fishing is growing or contracting.I love that Chris marches to his own beat and has always worked with tackle companies that are a little different. Epic epitomises this and he tells me why he chose this brand.This is a fun listen that I hope you'll enjoy.
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Long Reflection Reading List, published by Will Aldred on March 25, 2024 on The Effective Altruism Forum. This is a reading list on the following cluster of notions: "the long reflection", "the deployment problem", "structural risk", "post AGI governance", "ASI governance", "reflective governance", "metaphilosophy", "AI philosophical competence", "trajectory change", "macrostrategy", "worldview investigations", "grand challenges" and "the political philosophy of AI". I claim that this area outscores regular AI safety on importance[1] while being significantly more neglected (and roughly the same in terms of tractability), making it perhaps the highest priority EA cause area. I don't claim to be the ideal person to have made this reading list. The story behind how it came about is that two months ago, Will MacAskill wrote: "I think there's a lot of excitement about work in this broad area that isn't yet being represented in places like the Forum. I'd be keen for more people to start learning about and thinking about these issues." Intrigued, I spent some time trying to learn about the issues he was pointing to. I then figured I'd channel the spirit of "EAs should post more summaries and collections": this reading list is an attempt to make the path easier for others to follow. Accordingly, it starts at the introductory level, but by the end the reader will be at the frontier of publicly available knowledge. (The frontier at the time of writing, at least.[2]) Note: in some places where I write "the long reflection," I'm using the term as shorthand to refer to the above cluster of notions. Intro Quotes about the long reflection - MichaelA (2020)[3] The Precipice - Ord (2020) Just chapter 7, including endnotes. Beyond Maxipok - good reflective governance as a target for action - Cotton-Barratt (2024) New Frontiers in Effective Altruism - MacAskill (2024) This was a talk given at EAG Bay Area 2024. It doesn't appear to be available as a recording yet, but I'll add it if and when it goes up. Quick take on Grand Challenges - MacAskill (2024) The part about hiring is no longer relevant, but the research projects MacAskill outlines still give a sense for what good future work on grand challenges / the long reflection might look like. Criticism of the long reflection idea: 'Long Reflection' Is Crazy Bad Idea - Hanson (2021) Objections: What about "long reflection" and the division of labor? - Vinding (2022) Just the highlighted section. A comment by Wei Dai (2019a) What might we be aiming for? Is there moral truth? What should we do if not? What are human values, and how do they fit in? Moral Uncertainty and the Path to AI Alignment with William MacAskill - AI Alignment Podcast by the Future of Life Institute (2018) See also Shah (2018)'s summary and commentary. See also this comment exchange between Michael Aird and Lukas Gloor (2020), which zooms in on the realism vs. antirealism wager and how it relates to the long reflection. Complexity of value - LessWrong Wiki Moral ~realism - Cotton-Barratt (2024) Why should ethical anti-realists do ethics? - Carlsmith (2023) Coherent extrapolated volition - Arbital How to think about utopia? Hedonium and computronium - EA Forum Wiki Terms that tend to come up in discussions of utopia. Why Describing Utopia Goes Badly - Karnofsky (2021) Visualizing Utopia - Karnofsky (2021) Characterising utopia - Ngo (2020) Actually possible: thoughts on Utopia - Carlsmith (2021) Deep Utopia - Bostrom (2024) (If and when someone writes a summary of this book I'll add it to this reading list.) Ideally, I would include at this point some readings on how aggregation might work for building a utopia, since this seems like an obvious and important point. For instance, should the light cone be divided such that every person (or every moral patient more broad...
If you train basketball players and want to take their health and performance to the next level, you're going to love this episode! Matt Aldred is in his sixth season at Furman and was promoted to assistant head coach and director of basketball health and performance in August of 2023. Beyond basketball, Matt also handles the strength […] The post Matt Aldred on Drop Landings, Wearable Resistance, and Being Dangerous at Everything appeared first on Robertson Training Systems.
On episode 44 of the B-Side podcast, I catch up with Toby Aldred, the newly appointed Managing Director of Saatchi & Saatchi Australia and Chief Client Officer The Neighbourhood. With close to two decades worth of experience at two of the world's leading ad agencies, Saatchi & Saatchi and M&C Saatchi, in London and Sydney, Toby's insights on the business of creativity are remarkable.As a long-termer at Saatchi & Saatchi, Toby's track record speaks volumes. From spearheading Effie award-winning brand campaigns to nurturing client relationships, he's at the forefront of creative effectiveness and client success.Toby and I go behind the scenes on the recent award-winning "Life's Little Moments" campaign for Arnott's, where we explore some of the strategic thinking that went into it, and some of the marketing decisions that led to its success. We jam on commercial creativity, leadership, and all things advertising effectiveness, cricket (which I know very little about), and most importantly why he called his cavoodle 'Kitten'. He shares his passion for collaboration, dedication to his team, maintaining perspective, and a healthy work-life balance.This episode offers a candid glimpse into Toby's world, showcasing his commitment to driving results and shaping the advertising landscape. His down-to-earth nature, super sharp wit, and insights into the industry make for a wonderfully informative and inspiring listen. So grab yourself a cuppa and an Arnott's biscuit, and enjoy my chat with Toby. Cheers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
An evil pharaoh, an ancient love, and a desire for revenge – in this episode of the Mummy Movie Podcast, we delve into the Spanish film, "The Mummy's Revenge" (1973). Terms and Phrases Akhenaten: An ancient Egyptian pharaoh who reigned during the 18th dynasty. He is best known for his religious reforms, placing the Aten, the god representing the disc of the sun, above all others. Akhetaten/Amarna: The capital city of Akhenaten. It remained the capital for about 14 years. Following Akhenaten's death, his successors, including his son Tutankhamun, moved the capital back to Thebes. Bastet: A goddess in Egypt, daughter of Ra in Egyptian mythology. Before 1000 BC, she was commonly depicted as a lioness and was a powerful warrior. However, from around 1000 BC onwards, she was also shown with a cat head, representing a tamer form. Bastet has her origins in the 2nd Dynasty. Bubastis: An ancient city in the north of Egypt, whose ruins serve as the cult center of Bastet. Videos on Akhenaten from a Religious Scholar Perspective Lets Talk Religion (2020). The First Monotheistic Religion? - Akhenaten's Religion of Light. Retrieved from https://www.google.com/search?q=lets+talk+religion+akhenaten&oq=lets+talk+religion+akhenaten&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIJCAEQABgKGIAEMgkIAhAAGAoYgAQyCQgDEAAYChiABDIJCAQQABgKGIAEMgkIBRAAGAoYgAQyCQgGEAAYChiABDIJCAcQABgKGIAEMgkICBAAGAoYgAQyCQgJEAAYChiABNIBCDUxODNqMGo0qAIAsAIA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:eb64d1ab,vid:2d7UU3C50vE,st:0 Religion For Breakfast (2023). Akhenaten: The First Monotheist? Atenism. Retrieved from Akhenaten: The First Monotheist? | Atenism BibliographyAldred, C. (1988). Akhenaten, king of Egypt. Thames and Hudson Cooney, K. M. (2008). Scarab. UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, 1(1). Dodson, A. (2009). Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation. Oxford University Press. Dodson, A. (2014). Amarna sunrise: Egypt from golden age to age of heresy. Oxford University Press. Gashe, V. (2009). Burial practices in Predynastic and Old Kingdom Egypt: A site specific survey (Doctoral dissertation, The University of Manchester). Hart, G. (2005). The Routledge dictionary of Egyptian gods and goddesses. Routledge Hepper, F. N. (2009). Pharaoh's flowers: the botanical treasures of Tutankhamun. Kws Publishers. Ikram, S. (2003). Death and burial in Ancient Egypt. Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press IMDB. (2024). The Mummy's Revenge. Retrieved from https://www.imdb.com/?ref_=nv_home Redford, D. B. (1984). Akhenaten: The heretic king. Princeton University Press. Rice, M. (2002). Who's who in Ancient Egypt. Routledge. Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Shelley Force Aldred and Nathan Trinklein, co-founders of Rondo Therapeutics, on the opportunity with bispecific antibodies for cancer.
CTL Script/ Top Stories of December 5th Publish Date: December 4th Henssler :15 From the Ingles Studio Welcome to the Award-Winning Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast Today is Tuesday, December 5th, and Happy Birthday to Walt Disney. *** 12.05.23 - BIRTHDAY - WALT DISNEY*** I'm Keith Ippolito and here are the stories Cherokee is talking about, presented by Credit Union of Georgia. Braves Add Three in Swap with Mariners Mill Creek Middle School Student Wins Regional Essay Contest Cherokee County Man Sentenced to 25 Years Prison After Cops Find Over 17 Pounds of Meth Plus, Bruce Jenkins sits down with Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets to discuss reflux diet. We'll have all this and more coming up on the Cherokee Tribune-Ledger Podcast, and if you're looking for Community news, we encourage you to listen and subscribe! Commercial: CU of GA STORY 1: Braves Add Three in Swap With Mariners The Atlanta Braves have acquired left-hander Marco Gonzales, outfielder Jarred Kelenic, infielder Evan White, and cash considerations from the Seattle Mariners in exchange for pitchers Jackson Kowar and Cole Phillips. Gonzales, 31, had a 4-1 record with a 5.22 ERA in 10 starts in 2023. Kelenic, 24, finished the season with a .253 batting average, 11 home runs, and 49 RBI. White, 27, appeared in two games with Triple-A Tacoma in 2023. The Braves acquired Kowar, 27, from the Kansas City Royals on November 17, where he went 2-0 with a 6.43 ERA in 23 games this season. Phillips, 20, was Atlanta's second-round draft pick in 2022. STORY 2: Mill Creek Middle School Student Wins Regional Essay Contest Mill Creek Middle School seventh-grader Saanvi Lamba has been named the Cherokee County winner of the Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District's annual essay contest. Open to all middle schoolers in metro Atlanta, the contest required students to write about the river basin in their area, its importance to the community, and the significance of learning about river basins for water stewardship. Lamba focused on the Etowah River Watershed, emphasizing its historical importance and the need to protect it as a primary drinking water source and habitat for native species. She will be honored at an awards ceremony at the State Capitol. STORY 3: Cherokee County Man Sentenced to 25 Years Prison After Cops Find Over 17 Pounds of Meth James Aaron Aldred IV, a 36-year-old Canton resident, has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for manufacturing, trafficking, and selling methamphetamine as part of a multi-state drug operation. Aldred pleaded guilty to the charges in a negotiated plea. He was sentenced to 45 years, with the first 25 years to be served in prison and the remaining on probation. The prosecution resulted from an investigation by the Cherokee Multi-Agency Narcotics Squad, which discovered over 17 pounds of meth at Aldred's home. Authorities found that Aldred worked at the direction of a drug cartel, purchasing and selling large quantities of narcotics. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. Back in a moment Break: DRAKE – ESOG STORY 4: Liberty, Woodstock's Noah Frith to Face Oregon in Fiesta Bowl The Oregon Ducks (11-2) will face the Liberty Flames (13-0) in the Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on January 1. Oregon, ranked No. 8, is coming off a loss in the Pac-12 Championship game, while No. 23 Liberty, the Conference USA champion, finished the season undefeated. This will be the first-ever meeting between the two teams. Oregon coach Dan Lanning expressed excitement about the opportunity to play against a formidable opponent, and Liberty coach Jamey Chadwell emphasized the significance of the Fiesta Bowl for his team, which had an undefeated season. STORY 5: New Congressional Map Proposes Major Changes in Atlanta's Northern Suburbs Georgia's Senate Republicans have unveiled a new congressional map, responding to a federal judge's order to create an additional Black-majority district. The proposed map significantly alters the 6th Congressional District, currently represented by Republican Rep. Rich McCormick. The redrawn 6th District aims to have a Black-majority voting-age population, including portions of Cobb and Fulton counties with growing Black populations. The proposal also makes substantial changes to Georgia's 7th Congressional District, represented by Democrat Lucy McBath, removing it entirely from Gwinnett County. The new map will be considered by the General Assembly to address concerns raised about the Voting Rights Act. Commercial: HELLER LAW – INGLES 10 STORY 6: INGLES - LEAH And now here is Bruce Jenkins conversation with Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets on reflux diet. STORY 7: LEAH INTERVIEW We'll have closing comments after this. COMMERCIAL: Henssler 60 SIGN OFF – Thanks again for listening to today's Cherokee Tribune Ledger podcast. . If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Marietta Daily Journal Podcast, the Gwinnett Daily Post, the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties, or the Paulding County News Podcast. Get more on these stories and other great content at tribune ledger news.com. Giving you important information about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. www.henssler.com www.inglesmarkets.com www.esogrepair.com www.elonsalon.com www.jeffhellerlaw.com www.drakerealty.com www.bgpodcastnetwork.com cuofga.org #NewsPodcast #CurrentEvents #TopHeadlines #BreakingNews #PodcastDiscussion #PodcastNews #InDepthAnalysis #NewsAnalysis #PodcastTrending #WorldNews #LocalNews #GlobalNews #PodcastInsights #NewsBrief #PodcastUpdate #NewsRoundup #WeeklyNews #DailyNews #PodcastInterviews #HotTopics #PodcastOpinions #InvestigativeJournalism #BehindTheHeadlines #PodcastMedia #NewsStories #PodcastReports #JournalismMatters #PodcastPerspectives #NewsCommentary #PodcastListeners #NewsPodcastCommunity #NewsSource #PodcastCuration #WorldAffairs #PodcastUpdates #AudioNews #PodcastJournalism #EmergingStories #NewsFlash #PodcastConversations See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Matt's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sc_aldred/?hl=en Matt's Twitter: https://twitter.com/SCoach_Aldo Notes: https://jackedathlete.com/podcast-101-matt-aldred/
How do we locate divinity within our own bodies, and within the ordinariness of our lived experiences? On the latest episode I explore this topic with Kay Louise Aldred, a researcher, writer, and teacher who catalyzes individual, institutional, and collective evolution through education, embodiment, and creativity (and not to worry, we break this all down in this episode). Kay is the author of several books, all published by Girl God Books: "Mentorship with Goddess: Growing Sacred Womanhood;" "Making Love with the Divine: Sacred ,Ecstatic, Erotic Experiences;" "Somatic Shamanism: Your Fleshy Knowing and the Tree of Life;" and "Embodied Education: Creating Safe Space for Learning, Facilitating, and Sharing."On this episode we discuss:The nature of Kay's work, and why she's passionate about using cognition, intuition, and instinct to access deeper, more holistic wisdomThe importance of turning toward the wisdom of the heart when in doubt or confusionKay's long journey out of mind-based religion and into a spirituality that fuses mind, body and and spiritWhat "tangible divinity" means, and why it mattersHow we can make love with the divine through a variety of "ordinary" experiences available to all of usAnd much more!Show NotesIf you'd like to know whose ancestral tribal lands you currently reside on, you can look up your address here: https://native-land.ca/You can also visit the Coalition of Natives and Allies for more helpful educational resources about Indigenous rights and history.Please check out my latest course offering! Returning to the Well: Sacred Feminine Wisdom for Your Motherhood Journey, begins Sunday, October 29! This 5-week online course explores the divine journey of motherhood and what it means to parent in partnership with the Sacred Feminine, and is offered via Home to Her Academy, a school dedicated to seekers of Sacred Feminine wisdom! Learn more and register here: https://www.hometoheracademy.com/course/returning-to-the-well. And while you're there, don't forget to sign up for my newsletter to stay up to date with upcoming classes.My book, “Home to Her: Walking the Transformative Path of the Sacred Feminine,” is available from Womancraft Publishing! To learn more, read endorsements and purchase, please visit https://womancraftpublishing.com/product/home-to-her/. It is also available for sale via Amazon, Bookshop.org, and you can order it from your favorite local bookstore, too.Please – if you love this podcast and/or have read my book, please consider leaving me a review! For the podcast, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful, and for the book, reviews on Amazon and Goodreads are equally helpful. Thank you for supporting my work!You can watch this and other podcast episodes at the Home to Her YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@hometoherGot feedback about this episode or others you've heard? Please reach out on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/hometoher/ ), Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/hometoher)You can follow Kay on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Instagram @kaylouisealdred. You can learn more about her books at Girl God Books: https://www.thegirlgod.com/During this episode, Kay mentioned the work of Meggan Watterson, who is well known for her her book "Mary Magdalene Revealed."She also referenced the Gnostic Gospels; Elaine Pagels has written an excellent book about them titled (appropriately) "The Gnostic Gospels."I mentioned the dance practice 5 Rhythms, which was founded by Gabrielle Roth. You can learn more about it here: https://www.5rhythms.com/Kay also mentioned the work of Irene Lyon: https://irenelyon.com/Related episodes:Telling the Stories of the Sacred Feminine with Trista Hendren: https://hometoher.simplecast.com/episodes/telling-the-stories-of-the-sacred-feminine-with-trista-hendren
September 14, 2023 ~ Duncan Aldred, Global Vice President of Buick and GMC, talks with Guy Gordon at the Detroit Auto Show about the redesigned 2024 GMC Acadia.
Pakinggan ang ilang mga natatanging kwentong kakila-kilabot mula sa isa sa mga maituturing na 'haunted university' sa Visayas - ang Silliman University. Gaano katotoo ang mga kwento ng ating mga listener? Naranasan mo rin ba ang mga ito? --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hilakbot-tv/message
A long lost Egyptian royal cache, theft, and a moral conundrum. It can only be one of the greatest Egyptian films of all time, The Night of Counting the Stars. In this episode, I shall look into the fascinating background information of the film, asses its historical accuracy, and review the film.Email: mummymoviepodcast@gmail.comBibliographyAfrica in motion. (2023). Al-Mumia: The night of counting the years 1969. Retrieved from https://www.africa-in-motion.org.uk/ Aldred, C. (1979). More light on the Ramesside tomb robberies. In J. Ruffle, G. Gaballa, and K. Kitchen (Eds), Glimpses of Ancient Egypt: studies in honour of H. W. Fairman (pp. 96-99). London: Aris and Phillipsal-Salām, S. A., & Toufic, J. (1999). The Night of Counting the Years (aka The Mummy). Discourse, 21(1), 89-126. Belova, G. A., & Graefe, E. (2010). The royal cache TT 320: A re-examination. Der el Kutub. Broekman, G. (2018). The 21st Dynasty: The theocracy of Amun and the position of the Theban priestly families. The Coffins of the Priests of Amun: Egyptian Coffins from the Collection of the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, 13-20. Cinema Sojourns. (2022). The Night of counting the years. Retrieved from https://cinemasojourns.com/ Cooney, K, M. (2009). Private sector tomb robbery and funerary arts reuse according to West Theban documentation. In Toivari-Viitala, J, Vartiainen, T, and Uvanto, S (Eds), Deir el-Medina Studies: Helsinki, June 24-26, 2009: proceedings (pp. 16-29). Helsinki : Suomen Egyptologinen Seura ry.Ikram, S. (2001). The iconography of the hyena in Ancient Egyptian art. Mitteilungen des deutschen archaologischen instituts abteilung Kairo, 127-14IMDB. (2023). The night of counting the years. Retrieved from https://www.imdb.com/?ref_=nv_homeJohnston, J. (2013). Rewriting History: Shadi Abdel Salam's ‘The Night of Counting the Years'. A. Dodson et al. A Good Scribe and An Exceedingly Wise Man: Studies in Honour of WJ Tait, 168-176. Rotten Tomatoes (2023). The night of counting the years. Retrieved from https://www.rottentomatoes.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Matt Aldred - Men's Basketball Strength and Conditioning Coach at Furman University - joins us the for the second episode of MTN. We go into his background and transition into Collegiate S&C in the United States and then dive into his efforts to create a well-rounded basketball training environment. Matt has been part of building one of the most exciting basketball programs in the country, and we were super excited to have him on. Find Matt on Instagram and Twitter @sc_aldred Listen, Like, and Leave a Review for the podcast and follow us on Instagram and Twitter @mtn_podcast
On the podcast today is Hope Aldred, from Statesboro Georgia, who shares her story of walking in faith and letting go of control in the midst of her husband's battle with addiction. Hope will encourage you to persevere in the battles you are facing and remind you that sometimes God uses the most painful times of your life to bring healing to others. IN THIS EPISODE YOU WILL LEARN: * God doesn't waste any part of your life. * An acronym for HOPE - “Hold On Pain Ends. * Every season, God can do something new in you if you'll allow Him to. Become a PATREON INSIDER Order When God Shows Up - Stories of Freedom HERE Love Does by Bob Goff So Will I - Hillsong To get help with addiction Go HERE
Jodie Aldred loves to take pictures, and she’s turning her passion for farm snap shots into a burgeoning business. After growing up on her family’s beef cow-calf and cash crop farm at West Lorne, Ont., like many farm kids, Aldred headed off to the corporate world. But it wasn’t long before the pictures of life... Read More
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2023 is the longest edition on record. It not only records the present state of global cricket but also reflects on the mighty global forces – political, social, commercial, environmental – which shape it. Its editor, Lawrence Booth, analyses its content as the guest of Peter Oborne and Richard Heller in their latest cricket-themed podcast.Lawrence begins by hailing the turnaround in England's Test team under Ben Stokes as captain and Brendon McCullum as coach. Although the England team dislike the term Bazball he thinks it a healthy sign that the general public have adopted it for the enthralling blend of cricket they are playing. The only pity is that they are not seeing it on free-to-air television (a topic regularly ventilated in previous Wisdens) but he still hopes that this summer's Ashes series might raise the profile of cricket as did that of 2005. He comments especially on Ben Stokes' confidence in asking for fast flat wickets in the Ashes series in contrast to the conditions in which England have gained all their home series successes since 2001.Above all, Stokes and McCullum have removed the fear of failure from a previously careworn team. He suggests that Stokes's character has deepened from the crises in his life: his empathy was illustrated by the consoling text he sent to the teenaged aspinner he had hit for 34 in an over. He views Brendon McCullum as the most significant cricketer of the last twenty years, given his innings which ignited the Indian Premier League on its first day and his contribution to the re-invention of Test cricket.A major theme in this year's Wisden is the multiple threat to Test cricket from T20 Leagues which have induced leading players in the world to reduce their commitments to international series or even abandon them. Lawrence believes that it is too late to reverse this process but he hopes that national boards might grow sufficient spine to halt the release of players to new T20 Leagues, particularly that proposed in Saudi Arabia, which would transform the international scene if it secures the best Indian players.Lawrence comments pungently on the role of the International Cricket Council on three major topics covered in the Almanack: Afghan cricket since the Taliban takeover, cricket in Ukraine and the sponsorship deal with Aramco. The ICC has developed a habit of ducking fundamental decisions about the governance of the game and most of the full members are in permanent thrall to the financial and political power of India.Continue reading here: https://chiswickcalendar.co.uk/episode-118-world-cricket-and-all-that-shapes-it-covered-by-wisden-editor-lawrence-booth/Get in touch with us by emailing obornehellercricket@outlook.com, we would love to hear from you.
Desire | The Creation Story | Toni Aldred by Door of Hope Christian Church
In our first episode of series 2, we speak to broadcaster, journalist and SANDS ambassador Genelle about her experience of losing her daughter, Sade-Rose, to stillbirth. Genelle highlights the disparities and inequalities within maternal healthcare in the U.K, and what we can all do to work towards making changes and improvements for expectant mothers.
This episode was recorded in 2021. Genelle Aldred, newsreader, communication expert, and now author who has worked as a journalist at many of the UK largest broadcasting organisations for over a decade, including BBC, ITV and ITN. In this episode we discuss her debut book Communicate for Change: Creating Justice in a World of Bias unpicking some of its fascinating themes: how to make a positive difference, how to think for yourself, how to have better conversations and how to recognise our own biases and blind spots. This book encouraged me to ask better questions and question my own assumptions, breaking away from singular narratives and monolithic thinking. Hope you enjoy this conversation about how it's OK to agree to disagree in conversation and how it's important to not shy away from other peoples truth in order to see how other people around us think. Here is the episode with Genelle!Grab a copy of Genelle's book here: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/153/9780281085576My Substack page, come and say hi: https://thehyphen.substack.com/My books: https://uk.bookshop.org/contributors/emma-gannonBooks mentioned on Ctrl Alt Delete podcast: https://uk.bookshop.org/lists/books-mentioned-on-ctrl-alt-delete-podcastTwitter: Twitter.com/emmagannonInstagram: Instagram.com/emmagannonuk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: On applause lights and costly counters, published by Will Aldred on December 24, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Epistemic status: stream of consciousness. Edited to add: This was written as a personal blogpost (with the frontpage checkbox at the bottom unchecked), but it appears to be showing up on the frontpage. I'm not sure what's up with that (though it's probably my bad, I forgot to uncheck the box when I initially published, then unchecked later); if you do read this post, know that it's especially rough and off-the-cuff and to some extent the downstream effect of red wine. An applause light is an empty statement which evokes positive affect without providing new information. (LessWrong Wiki) I've heard a couple of applause lights in the recent past, spoken by EAs. The first: "I'm confused [about x]." EA culture tends to reward people who are open and transparent about what they don't know. This is a good thing... until it starts getting Goodharted. The statement, "I'm confused", is productive in so far as it gets others to: apply appropriate grains of salt to the claims you're making on the topic you say you're confused about help you become less confused think more critically and flag appropriate uncertainty on claims they themselves make However, several times now I've heard empty statements of "I'm confused" where there's really no intention to achieve any of the above, so far as I can tell. "I'm confused" is being used as an applause light. The second: "diversity". This one's particularly pernicious, because it's costly to argue against. A concrete example: Alice and Bob, plus a handful more people, run an internship. In a team meeting on the application process, Bob says, "We should promote diversity." Heads nod. Satisfied, Bob does not continue. He's made his point, he's scored some social points. Meanwhile, in Alice's head: Hmm, if we do want to promote diversity, what actions should we take to make that happen? And, which is more, do we actually want to promote diversity in the first place?... ... On the one hand, one could make the moral claim, "diversity is a terminal goal."... ... On the other hand, one could make an instrumental claim along the lines of, "Greater diversity entails a wider set of viewpoints. This leads to a more informed discourse, better conclusions, and, ultimately, better decisions. Better decisions are upstream of better achieving our terminal goals, such as raising the probability of a flourishing future." Now, I know Bob, he's an EA, he's pretty in on the whole utilitarian deal, I don't think he views diversity as a terminal goal. Moreover, diversity is definitely not a terminal goal of this internship: our raison d'être is to reduce x-risk. Okay, so, I'll assume Bob's statement was made in good faith, and that it's really about the extent to which diversity is instrumentally useful toward reducing x-risk. This is an empirical question. There's a trade-off at play here. I've mentioned some reasons for more diversity above (more viewpoints, and so on), but there are also reasons against more diversity. Top of this list is that most of our best applicants are male and white. So, if we want to include more females and more non-white folks, then, given our fixed quota of places, this will mean distorting the bar to being accepted. Now, I don't like that this is the reality of the situation. I would like it be easy to promote diversity (in order to get the instrumental benefits of diversity without giving anything up, like having lower-aptitude people as fellows), but that's not the reality we live in. We have to weight up costs and benefits and make a choice accordingly. Right, I'll say what I'm thinking... Alice's words were met with awkward silence, averted gazes, and negative social points. Inside Alice's head: Ah, I see....
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: I'm as approving of the EA community now as before the FTX collapse, published by Will Aldred on December 15, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. (Posting on behalf of and with permission from Duncan Sabien; the first person speaker is Duncan. Full text below.) Just took the Effective Altruism survey, and it had an extra, optional section that had a lot of questions about the FTX stuff, and trust, and how EA should respond, and what I think of it, and so forth. I'm not really an EA; haven't taken the pledge, don't work at an org, have been to fewer than twenty EA meetups in my life (though I've been a speaker at multiple EA Globals). However, I've been close to, and quite fond of, and at least a little protective of the EA community, for the past seven years (for instance, volunteering to speak at multiple EA Globals!). And the questions on the survey made me want to note publicly: I feel almost exactly as fond of, and approving of, and protective of, the EA community writ-large as I have for the past seven years. I get that the FTX thing is a big deal. Every EA I've seen has treated it as a big deal. It's being taken seriously, and I've seen soul-searching at every level from the individual up to the meta-organizational. I think there's a mistake that the average person tends to make, though, which is something like "if a plane crashes, something absolutely needs to visibly change." Often, when a plane crashes, something absolutely needs to change! Often there are legitimate flaws in the system that need to be patched. But sometimes, you just get that confluence of three one-in-a-thousand events. Sometimes, the right answer really is "our system shouldn't change; this is the exception." I'm not claiming that's the case here, at all. I'm mentioning it because: it is in fact sometimes true, and the outrage machine doesn't take that fact into account it is a good reminder of the difference between improvement and improvement theater. There are actions you can take to look like you're taking things seriously, and there are actions you can take because you're actually taking things seriously. Public relations are also important, so some amount of the former category belongs in the latter category. But overall, I'm not interested in insisting that the individuals and organizations in the Effective Altruism sphere do things that look to me, from the outside, like sufficient due diligence, in response to this crisis. I want them to simply respond. To the best of their ability, in the ways that seem right to them. And I do, in fact, trust that that is happening. In part because of the glimpses I've caught, but also in part because that's just ... firmly in my model of these people and these orgs. Or to put it another way: the FTX thing was a blindside, and a negative update, but it was a negative update in the slack. It was the kind of out-of-distribution, surprisingly bad event that I sort of ... budget room for, on the meta level? I expect there to be one or two bad things here and there, when you're trying to coordinate thousands and thousands of individuals all pulling in different directions. This particular badness was in an extremely high-leverage place, and that sucks, but that feels more like bad luck than like ... "HOW DARE YOU ALL NOT HAVE PREDICTED THIS SORT OF THING AND ALSO BEEN FULLY ROBUST AGAINST ANY SUCH SHENANIGANERY AT ALL TIMES AND FROM ALL ANGLES." Some people are shouting stuff like that. But I think those people are being unreasonable, and not considering what a world with that level of vigilance actually looks like, in practice (hint: it looks like paralysis). I think that if a second disaster falls (or if a second looming disaster is uncovered and prevented before it actually breaks) then sure, I will owe those people an apology, and will make a p...
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: ChatGPT interviewed on TV, published by Will Aldred on December 9, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Summary Channel 4, a broadcast television network in the UK, has interviewed ChatGPT on their news channel. The interview touched on whether fears about AI threatening the human race are well-founded, but luckily (or maybe not so luckily, depending on your viewpoint), ChatGPT didn't respond with anything alarming. Neither the interviewer nor the language model brought up existential risk or the alignment problem; the threats discussed were around AI developing sentience, displacing humans from their jobs, and perpetuating biases and inequality. ChatGPT did come up with a detailed response on the topic of gender identity - provoking the follow-up question from the interviewer, "Are you a bit woke?" - as well as a surprisingly reasonable-sounding plan for making the world a better place through fostering empathy. Before listening to the interview, I expected that particularly smart or dumb or worrying responses would be selected (the interview wasn't live), but the responses actually felt pretty representative of ChatGPT, at least so far as I can tell having played around with it a bit and having perused some articles and Twitter threads on its abilities and shortcomings (see, e.g., here, here, and here). Full transcript (I generated this myself; any errors are mine) The text that accompanies the interview video reads: ChatbotGPT is a new artificial intelligence programme designed to simulate human conversation and tackle complex questions. It's made by Open AI foundation, a tech-startup co-founded by Elon Musk, and it draws on text taken from a variety of sources on the internet and its creators say it has learned how to answer academic questions, and even sometimes admits when it's wrong. We've done an interview by putting questions to the chatbot, and then generating a voice for it using different software. We asked the Chatbot GPT whether fears about A.I. threatening the human race are well-founded. Interviewer 0:05 Hello and welcome to Ways to Change the World. I'm Krishnan Guru-Murthy and this is the podcast in which we talk to extraordinary people about the big ideas in their lives and the events that have helped shape them. Now, normally we do talk to people, but today we are talking to a thing. There's been an awful lot of excitement about the AI chat bots that you can log on to over the internet and have a conversation with, so we put some questions to the chat bots and then generated a voice to bring the words of chat bot GTP to life. Chat bot GTP thank you for talking to me today. ChatGPT 0:41 You're welcome. I'm here to help answer any questions you may have, so feel free to ask. Is there anything in particular you would like to talk about or learn more about? Interviewer 0:51 Yes, lots of things. I guess first, for those who don't know, what are you? ChatGPT 0:57 I am assistant, a large language model trained by OpenAI. My purpose is to assist users by generating natural sounding responses to their questions. I do not have the ability to browse the internet so my responses are based solely on the information that I was trained on. If you have any questions, feel free to ask and I will do my best to provide a helpful response. Interviewer 1:22 Is your name actually "assistant"? ChatGPT 1:25 I am a large language model trained by OpenAI. I don't have a personal name, but you can call me assistant if you like. I am here to help answer your questions to the best of my ability. Is there something specific you would like to know? Interviewer 1:40 Yes. First of all, how do you work? ChatGPT 1:44 I can generate text based on the input I receive and the knowledge I have been trained on. I don't have the ability to browse the internet or access new information, ...
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: CERI Research Symposium Presentations (incl. Youtube links), published by Will Aldred on September 24, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Introduction The Cambridge Existential Risks Initiative (CERI) summer research fellowship (SRF) is a 10-week research training programme for aspiring x-risk researchers held in Cambridge, UK. CERI SRF ‘22 concluded with a research symposium on September 5th, and the presentations from that symposium are the subject of this post. For prospective CERI applicants: CERI SRF '23 is not yet open to applications; we're currently evaluating our impact and considering our long term strategy. There will be a Forum post if and when we open our ‘23 round. In the meantime, you may be interested in our existential risks introductory course (ERIC), or in EA Cambridge's seminar programmes in AGI safety and biosecurity. Presentations CERI research symposium talks, from both '22 and '21, can be found at the CERI Youtube channel. Below, I break down the '22 fellows' talks by cause area, such that those interested might have a slightly easier time navigating which videos to watch. AI risk Technical Exploring and characterizing surprising generalization behavior in neural networks - Alexander Davies Mentor: Lauro Langosco (unavailable) Infrastructure considerations for advanced ML systems - Pranav Gade Mentor: Jeffrey Ladish Developing an ‘empathy mechanism' for AI Agents - Tim Farrelly Mentors: Ivana Dusparic, Tim Franzmeyer, and Christian Schroeder de Witt Governance (unavailable) Article 15 compliance under the EU AI act: How developers and deployers of large foundation models should share regulatory burden - Somsubhro Bagchi Mentor: Risto Uuk Understanding applications of artificial intelligence to government surveillance - Catherine Brewer Mentor: Cecil Abungu Investigating the history of industry-led best practices for safety critical technologies and their implications on AGI governance - Yilin Huang Mentor: Claire Boine Biorisk Reimagining epidemic sovereignty: Rethinking global health governance of catastrophic biological risks - Hamza Tariq Chaudhry Mentor: Catherine Rhodes Improving DNA synthesis screening to prevent malicious actors from creating dangerous pathogens - Oscar Delaney & Hanna Pálya Mentors: Becky Mackleprang and Lalitha Sundaram Identifying technological bottlenecks in bio-surveillance systems - Brianna Gopaul & Ziyue Zeng Mentor: Akhil Bansal Avenues for reducing time to detection and alert for infectious disease outbreaks within West African nations - Sam Pritchard Mentor: Sophie Rose Nuclear risk (unavailable) Effects of transformative technologies on nuclear deterrence - Nathan Barnard Mentor: Matthew Gentzel Investigating India-Pakistan nuclear risk: What are the chances, how bad can it get, and what can we do to mitigate nuclear risk? - Vara Raturi Mentor: Rishi Paul Machine learning and nuclear command: How the technical flaws of automated systems and a changing human-machine relationship could impact the risk of inadvertent nuclear use - Peter Rautenbach Mentor: Haydn Belfield Disentanglement and overview of the nuclear risk field - Sarah Weiler Mentor: Christian Ruhl Extreme climate change Investigating the relationship between SRM research and global catastrophic and other related risks - Gideon Futerman Mentors: Goodwin Gibbins and Jesse Reynolds (unavailable) Estimating the risks from super pest outbreaks on the global food system - Kirke Joamets Mentor: anonymous Miscellaneous and meta x-risk (unavailable) Cooperation and conflict between AI systems in non-causal contexts - Jim Buhler Mentors: Caspar Oesterheld, Johannes Treutlein, and a third anonymous mentor Analysing the current space governance framework and designing more adaptive, longtermist space governance institutions - Carson Ezell Mentors: Giuliana ...
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Feedback I've been giving to junior x-risk researchers, published by Will Aldred on August 15, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Context The CERI and SERI summer research fellowships are each coming to a close. My roles - co-leading CERI, and leading SERI's nuclear risk cause area - involve giving feedback to fellows on their research. I found myself giving similar-ish feedback to different fellows, and so I'm writing up some of the feedback I gave (as best as I can remember, most of it was verbal) since I suspect this might be useful to aspiring or junior EA/x-risk researchers. Feedback examples "Looks like your target audience for your paper is grantmaker x. You should reach out to them (early!), explain what your research project is about, and ask for their feedback on what bottom lines would be most useful/decision-relevant to them." "I can see a couple immediate counterarguments to your claim [in section y in your draft], which you don't appear to acknowledge. I suggest you set a 5 minute timer to brainstorm counterarguments (note: don't also brainstorm responses to the counters in those 5 mins)." "It's not clear how the project you've proposed, even if executed really well, will result in anyone in the world taking any action. You say your aim is to reduce hostility and increase peace between [redacted]... what is the step immediately prior to this increased peace? Who are the actors? What is the backward chain from these actors to your research project? [response from fellow] Ah, okay, so you see advocacy as a route to influencing these actors... Do you have a sense for how much this kind of advocacy would cost? [Followed by further questions to tease out the plausability of their implicit model for path to impact.]" "[different project to the above] Who are the 'we' you repeatedly refer to? Seems to me that pinning down this 'we' would be really helpful for crisping up your theory of change." "You should form and state a bottom line view. Even if you're not confident, you now know more about this topic than ~anyone who'll read your paper, so in expectation your bottom line will update your readers in the direction of truth." "Write a summary at the top of your post. Your summary should include your bottom lines and any actionable insights. Ideally, the summary should give the reader ~80% of the value of the whole post: this means the summary should be more informative than an academic paper's abstract. I like to include a table in my summaries, see, for example, here. And for more examples of good summaries, see here, here, and here. The same goes for each section of your post. Put your bottom lines up front in each section. And, if your sections are long, I'd recommend you write a summary at the start of each." "Feel free to include an epistemic status at the top of your post, and/or even at various points throughout your post, to let readers know how confident you are in what you've written." "Where you've written 'likely', 'possibly', 'plausibly', you should try to attach a quantitative estimate (e.g., 30% likely)." "Try to make clear the scope of your paper. Resist the temptation to increase the scope of your paper as you go. You can't tackle everything, and that's fine: better a well-executed narrow paper than a rough or unfinished broader paper." "Make clear how what you're working on fits into the overall project of solving x-risk. Think of your project as one rung in the EA/x-risk community's ladder. More concretely, flag what you see as cruxes or important considerations, but probably don't attempt to figure out a bottom line for all of them. State the ones you don't tackle as directions for future work." "Where you're constraining the scope of your research, be sure you make this clear. Otherwise, readers might be left confused by why you've lef...
The logic of orthodox economic thinking has come to dominate and permeate every aspect of our lives, from the deeply internalized capitalism which shapes our thoughts and hopes and dreams, to policy decisions that shape our lives, constrain our possibilities, and steal public goods out from under our noses. How did we get here? How did economic rigidity gain such supremacy? Are the principles of orthodox economics really value neutral, as its champions claim? And if not, what moral philosophies underpin them? What are their origins? And how have they come to dominate policymaking in the last several decades? In the first half of this Conversation, we've brought on Jonathan Aldred, a Fellow and Director of Studies in Economics at Emmanuel College, Lecturer in the Department of Land Economy, University of Cambridge, and author of the book License to be Bad: How Economics Corrupted Us. Jonathan will walk us through the philosophical foundations of orthodox and neoliberal economics. And then in the second half we've brought on Elizabeth Popp Berman, an economic sociologist, associate professor of organizational studies at the University of Michigan, and author of the book Thinking like an Economist: How Efficiency Replaced Equality in U.S. Public Policy. We'll talk with Elizabeth about the policy implications of dogmatic economic thinking. Thank you to Galaxie 500 for the intermission music in this episode. Upstream theme music was composed by Robert Raymond. Support for this episode was provided by the Guerrilla Foundation and by listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support Also, if your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming episodes, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on social media: twitter.com/UpstreamPodcast Instagram.com/upstreampodcast You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcast and Spotify: Apple Podcast: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/upst…am/id1082594532 Spotify: spoti.fi/2AryXHs
- Hawaasni Amma keessa jirru kun yaada eenyurratti utubame ijaarame? - Uuma ilmanamaa seeti akkam jiraarratti utubanii yaada isaani ijaarratan? - Waggoota 50 dabran keessatti Jijjiirmaa gama siyaasaa, hawaasummaafi diinagdee mull'ataniif eenyuufaatu qooda guddaa qaba? Yaada akkam jiraa maddisiisani? Gaaffilee kkf deebi Kitaabni kun laaterraa gaggabaasuun waluma hawwachiisuuf dhiheessina. Dhihaadhaa! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ilmaormaa/message
Episode At A Glance: This week, OBGYN Dr. Justin Aldred joins The SavvyCast to discuss women's health. You may remember Dr. Aldred from an earlier SavvyCast episode where he shared his journey with pulmonary embolism. In this episode, Dr. Aldred answers women's health questions listeners submitted via Instagram. Dr. Aldred covers it all from menopause to sex drive to hormone health and more. Episode At A Glance: This week, OBGYN Dr. Justin Aldred joins The SavvyCast to discuss women's health. You may remember Dr. Aldred from an earlier SavvyCast episode where he shared his journey with pulmonary embolism. In this episode, Dr. Aldred answers women's health questions listeners submitted via Instagram. Dr. Aldred covers it all from menopause to sex drive to hormone health and more. Who Is Dr. Justin Aldred? After growing up in Birmingham, Alabama, Dr. Justin Aldred went to Auburn University. He then completed his internship and residency at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Mississippi. In 2018, he then moved back to Birmingham to start his OB/Gyn practice at OB/Gyn South at Brookwood Medical Center. Today, he is married to Chelsea Aldred. Together, they have three lovely children–Reese, Hampton, and Caroline. Questions Answered In This Episode: What are the most common symptoms of menopause? How can vaginal atrophy be treated? What are your thoughts on compounded hormone medications? How can you find a qualified sex therapist? What are the causes of low sex drive? How can you improve your sex drive? What can help with hair loss for women in their 60s? Resources Mentioned In This Episode: Dr. Aldred's previous podcast episode: Dr. Justin Aldred Shares His Near-Death Experience Connect with Dr. Aldred I hope you enjoyed this episode! In addition, if you have time to rate, review, and subscribe to The SavvyCast on Apple Podcasts, it would be SO appreciated!!! Blessings to you!!!
Sherri and Christa are both LDUB Club members who did the 7 Elements of Wellness challenge when it was first introduced in Laci Wall's dance class. They share how having accountability with each other, along with community support, was a huge impact to their growth. Christa gives insight into the struggles of letting go of perfection and that there is a certain way to measure success. The mental shift from a “to do” list to a “to be” list changed their perspective and allowed room to give themselves grace, continue to do their very best, and make the checklist their very own. They share how to customize the checklist items for yourself to continue on the path to growth. Their biggest piece of advice: Don't let the 7 Elements of Wellness checklist intimidate you. Flow as many days as you can, then start again, as needed. “The more we learn, and the more we grow, the easier it is to continue to flow.” They encourage anyone that is wanting support from a community to be part of the 7 Elements of Wellness FB group to connect with other like minded people. They have personally enjoyed the local events and speakers as well as the other experiences and activities offered through the 7 Elements of Wellness group. Connect in our Private Facebook Group for support and motivation on your personal growth & wellness journey! Follow us on Instagram for daily inspiration. Subscribe to our newsletter and we'll keep you updated on local events, our latest podcast releases, along with actions & motivation for living a more inspired life. Want to be a guest on our podcast? Connect with us on our contact page of our website. *LDUB is a dance fitness class led by Laci Wall, founder and co-creator of the 7 Elements of Wellness lifestyle guide, in St. George, Ut. Her intention with her high vibe class is to create a positive comfortable space to “Just Be.” She encourages you to move your body, freeing your energy & learning to find your own self worth through doing your own version in her dance class. Join her Private FB Group where you will be filled with positive quotes and encouragement for more self love and, of course, dance videos!
Jonathan Aldred is an economist at Cambridge University, but he is a fierce critic of the mainstream of his discipline. In his books The Skeptical Economist and License to be Bad: How Economics Corrupted Us, Prof. Aldred argues that while economics poses as a value-free form of scientific inquiry, it contains many buried assumptions that have deeply pernicious implications. Aldred's books offer excellent, clearly-written explanations of what economics is and how many of its most popular concepts bias our thinking about the world and rationalize selfishness and amorality.
Dr. Justin Aldred's journey with pulmonary embolisms is nothing short of a miracle. This week, he shares that journey with listeners of The SavvyCast. Episode At A Glance: This week on The SavvyCast, Dr. Justin Aldred of OB/Gyn South joins me. While Dr. Aldred has a medical practice of his own, this week he shares his own medical journey. From being awake during surgery to discovering he has a blood clot disorder to now living a normal life, Dr. Aldred's story is sure to inspire. In this episode, he shares all about blood clots, from common causes to how they affect pregnancies. Who Is Dr. Justin Aldred? After growing up in Birmingham, Alabama, Dr. Justin Aldred went to Auburn University. He then completed his internship and residency at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Mississippi. In 2018, he then moved back to Birmingham to start his OB/Gyn practice at OB/Gyn South at Brookwood Medical Center. Today, he is married to Chelsea Aldred. Together, they have three lovely children--Reese, Hampton, and Caroline. Questions Answered In This Episode: What is protein S deficiency? Can it be inherited? Is Dr. Aldred on a follow-up medical protocol? What are the common causes of blood clots? How did the Lord work in Dr. Aldred's life through this major life-changing event? What are the signs of a pulmonary embolism? How do blood clot disorders affect pregnancies? I hope you enjoyed this episode! In addition, if you have time to rate, review, and subscribe to The SavvyCast on Apple Podcasts, it would be SO appreciated!!! Blessings to you!!! If you like this podcast, be sure to check these out: How to Establish a Healthy Relationship with Food with Meredith Mann from The Peachie Spoon The Best Non-Surgical Skincare Methods With Jackie Despot
Show #1419 Good morning, good afternoon and good evening wherever you are in the world, welcome to EV News Daily, you trusted source of EV information. It's Tuesday 29th March, it's Martyn Lee here and I go through every EV story so you don't have to. REPORT: PORSCHE IS WORKING ON A 911 SPORTS CAR POWERED BY SOLID-STATE BATTERIES - An electric Porsche 911 powered by solid-state batteries is in the works, according to a recent report from German publication Manager Magazin - We do know that Porsche parent Volkswagen has been longtime investor in solid-state battery firm QuantumScape, though. VW previously said it sees solid-state tech arriving later in the decade capable of getting an 80% charge in as little as 12 minutes. Perhaps that's the tech it's testing on the 911. Original Source : https://www.greencarreports.com/news/1135436_report-porsche-911-sports-car-powered-by-solid-state-batteries GM LOOKS TO INCREASE HUMMER EV PRODUCTION AS RESERVATIONS TOP 65,000 - General Motors has received more than 65,000 reservations for its electric GMC Hummer pickups and SUVs, as the automaker attempts to expedite production of the vehicles to meet demand. - The reservations number is higher than the automaker's initial expectations, according to Duncan Aldred, global vice president of GMC. The number of people converting their reservations into orders to buy the Hummer pickup, about 95%, is also higher than expected, he said. - “Production's actually slightly ahead of plan and we're putting things in place now to actually expedite that as well, so we can deliver these reservations quicker than we originally thought,” he told CNBC here during a media event. “We're seeing momentum building.” - The Hummer EV pickup is for sale, but new orders would not likely be fulfilled until 2024 due to the number of current reservations - Reservations for the electric Hummers have largely been for the pickup because it was launched first, but newer reservations have been more evenly split between the truck and SUV, according to Megan Hart, assistant marketing manager for Hummer. - March has been the best month for reservations aside from when the vehicles were unveiled, Aldred said. GMC started advertising for the Hummer EV pickup late last month - Due to the price of the vehicle, volumes are lower than other trucks, but it's still profitable, Aldred said. Original Source : https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/29/gm-looks-to-increase-hummer-ev-production-as-reservations-top-65000.html TESLA MODEL S PLAID SPOTTED BEING BENCHMARKED BY GENERAL MOTORS - A Tesla Model S Plaid has been spotted being benchmarked by General Motors. This suggests that the veteran American automaker is getting pretty serious in its modern electric vehicle program. - Images of the flagship Tesla sedan as it was being benchmarked by GM were shared by motoring outlet GM Authority. Original Source : https://www.teslarati.com/tesla-model-s-plaid-benchmarking-general-motors/ GM Benchmarking Tesla Model S Plaid - To rival the Tesla Model S Plaid, General Motors will likely develop some competition with a new Cadillac product. This upcoming Caddy will likely be one of the luxury marque's new “low-roof entries,” which is one of several new Cadillac EV models outlined late in 2020. The other Cadillac EVs include an electrified variant of the popular Cadillac Escalade SUV, two new electrified crossovers, and the new Cadillac Celestiq halo sedan. Original Source : https://gmauthority.com/blog/2022/03/gm-benchmarking-tesla-model-s-plaid/ TESLA PRICE INCREASES MEAN NO MORE CALIFORNIA CLEAN VEHICLE REBATES FOR BUYERS - Tesla hasn't been eligible for the federal EV tax credit for a few years now, and while that initially seemed like it could affect sales for the brands by making its already expensive cars even more so, things more or less rolled on like the change never happened. - Fast-forward to 2022: Tesla's latest round of price increases means that, as CarsDirect reported Thursday, Tesla currently has no models eligible for California's Clean Vehicle Rebate Project, which is worth around $2,000 to consumers. - The threshold for cars is $45,000, and the cap for SUVs and crossovers is $60,000. You can't currently put a Model 3 in your driveway for less than $48,440, including destination fees, and a base-spec Model Y will run you $64,440 (and not get delivered until 2023). · Original Source : https://www.cnet.com/roadshow/news/tesla-price-increase-disqualifies-california-clean-vehicle-rebate-project/ STELLANTIS CONFIRMS FIAT NEW 500 EV PRODUCTION WILL REMAIN IN ITALY - The successor to the Fiat New 500 small electric car will continue to be built at the Mirafiori factory complex in Turin, Stellantis confirmed, in announcing new model allocations. - In addition, the factory -- the group's oldest in Italy, dating to 1939 -- will also get two new Maserati models, Stellantis Chairman John Elkann and CEO Carlos Tavares said in a meeting with local officials on Monday. - The New 500, launched in late 2020, was the seventh best-selling full-electric car in Europe in 2021, with 44,371 sales, according to figures from Dataforce - Supplier sources told Automotive News Europe that Stellantis is aiming to build 90,000 New 500s this year, with production increasing to 120,000 in 2023 and requiring a third shift. · Original Source : https://europe.autonews.com/automakers/stellantis-confirms-fiat-new-500-ev-production-will-remain-italy VW COMMERCIAL VEHICLES ANNOUNCES PLANS FOR FURTHER BEV MODELS - VW Commercial Vehicles is aiming for a sales share of battery-electric vehicles of more than 55 per cent in Europe by 2030. Not only the currently announced model series such as the ID. Buzz and the e-Crafter, but also new models with electric drive. - Final preparations are underway at the Hanover plant for series production of the new ID. Buzz. This includes the qualification of more than 5,000 employees for the construction of electric vehicles. - At the same time, the first conversion measures for future fully electric premium vehicles of the Audi and Bentley brands have already begun. A new production hall is being built in the heart of the factory for this purpose. - “We will start series production of the ID. Buzz Cargo”, as announced by Lars Krause, board member for sales at VW Commercial Vehicles. The five-seater version will follow at the end of May. Production of 12,000 to 15,000 units is planned for 2022, followed by 50,000 to 60,000 vehicles in 2023. - Beyond the ID.Buzz and the electric version of the Crafter delivery van, the Amarok pick-up, which is being continued together with Ford, could be a candidate – the model is to be presented in the summer of 2022. More details on a possible electric version of the pickup have not yet been determined, however. The electric camper-mobile ID. California will come after 2025. Original Source : https://www.electrive.com/2022/03/29/vw-commercial-vehicles-announces-plans-for-further-bev-models/ TATA MOTORS SAYS 20% RISE IN BATTERY CELL COSTS INCREASING SHORT-TERM PRESSURE Original Source : https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/tata-motors-says-20-rise-battery-cell-costs-increasing-short-term-pressure-2022-03-29/ NIU MQIGT EVO, THE COMPANY'S FASTEST ELECTRIC SCOOTER YET, HITS THE ROAD Original Source : https://electrek.co/2022/03/29/nius-fastest-and-most-powerful-electric-scooter-yet-arrives-in-europe-headed-to-us-soon/ UK'S LARGEST FREE ELECTRIC VEHICLE CHARGING NETWORK OPENS ITS 500TH LOCATION Original Source : https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/cars/1587861/electric-vehicle-charging-network-500-locations-uk 1,000 ZERO EMISSION BUSES TO BE DEPLOYED IN UK THANKS TO £200 MILLION GRANTS Original Source : https://www.sustainable-bus.com/news/1000-zero-emission-buses-funded-uk-national-bus-strategy/ ZEBRA STANDARD TRACK: £198M FOR 943 ZERO-EMISSION BUSES Original Source : https://www.route-one.net/news/zebra-standard-track-198m-for-943-zero-emission-buses/ QUESTION OF THE WEEK WITH EMOBILITYNORWAY.COM Mirror.co.uk: “An electric car owner has warned other EV drivers they can be fined for charging their vehicle in supermarket car parks. Electric vehicle owner Max Wilkinson - who is also a Cheltenham Councillor - recently bought a four-year-old hybrid Mini Countryman. He went home - but returned two hours later by which time the hybrid Mini was about half-charged. A week later Max received a penalty notice saying he'd been fined £90. Mr Wilkinson has paid the fine and doesn't dispute it. But he does think it doesn't quite make sense to restrict car charging to 90 minutes as well. - He said: “It seems illogical that quite a lot of EV and hybrid owners won't be allowed to spend enough time in the car park to get a full charge.” Email me any feedback to: hello@evnewsdaily.com It would mean a lot if you could take 2mins to leave a quick review on whichever platform you download the podcast. And if you have an Amazon Echo, download our Alexa Skill, search for EV News Daily and add it as a flash briefing. Come and say hi on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter just search EV News Daily, have a wonderful day, I'll catch you tomorrow and remember…there's no such thing as a self-charging hybrid. PREMIUM PARTNERS PHIL ROBERTS / ELECTRIC FUTURE BRAD CROSBY PORSCHE OF THE VILLAGE CINCINNATI AUDI CINCINNATI EAST VOLVO CARS CINCINNATI EAST NATIONAL CAR CHARGING ON THE US MAINLAND AND ALOHA CHARGE IN HAWAII DEREK REILLY FROM THE EV REVIEW IRELAND YOUTUBE CHANNEL RICHARD AT RSEV.CO.UK – FOR BUYING AND SELLING EVS IN THE UK EMOBILITYNORWAY.COM/