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On today's newscast: An Apache County wildfire has forced mandatory evacuations and destroyed several buildings, Gov. Katie Hobbs has signed a bill to create an alert system for missing Native Americans, two eastern Arizona communities have issued emergency declarations with high wildfire risk, and more.
Today's West Coast Cookbook & Speakeasy Podcast for our especially special Daily Special, Smothered Benedict Wednesdays, is now available on the Spreaker Player!Starting off in the Bistro Cafe, a bipartisan lineup of Canada's leaders blasted Trump as his tactics backfire.Then, on the rest of the menu, Grubhub will pay $25 million dollars in a deceptive practices settlement with the Illinois attorney general and the Federal Trade Commission; Jasmine Blackwater-Nygren is the first Navajo woman to be named top prosecutor in Arizona's Apache County; and, federal agencies have opened at least three reviews of Musk and SpaceX for repeatedly failing to comply with federal reporting protocols aimed at protecting state secrets, by not providing details of his meetings with foreign leaders.After the break, we move to the Chef's Table where Mexico's anti-monopoly regulators imposed special conditions for a period of ten years on Walmart's Mexico subsidiary; and, prominent anti-whaling activist Paul Watson was released from prison in Greenland, after Danish officials rejected a request by Japan to extradite him.All that and more, on West Coast Cookbook & Speakeasy with Chef de Cuisine Justice Putnam.Bon Appétit!The Netroots Radio Live PlayerKeep Your Resistance Radio Beaming 24/7/365!“It may be safely averred that good cookery is the best and truest economy, turning to full account every wholesome article of food, and converting into palatable meals what the ignorant either render uneatable or throw away in disdain.” - Eliza Acton ‘Modern Cookery for Private Families' (1845)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/west-coast-cookbook-speakeasy--2802999/support.
On today's newscast: Black-footed ferrets are reintroduced, Navajo Nation Council removed Navajo Attorney General Ethel Branch from her post after she said President Buu Nygren didn't harass his vice president last year, Apache County has a new county attorney, prescribed burns continue, and much more.
On today's newscast: A judge dismissed a lawsuit from the Navajo Nation against Apache County over delays in processing early ballots, three Utah children were found with members of a polygamous sect in Fredonia, state wildlife officials reintroduced endangered black-footed ferrets near Seligman, Thanksgiving travel in Arizona will be higher than last year, Flagstaff's Lowell Observatory recently opened the Marley Foundation Astronomy Discovery Center, and more.
On today's newscast: The Navajo Nation Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit against Apache County over delays in processing early ballots, Grand Canyon National Park officials want to increase campsite fees on the South or North Rim, the Coconino County Board of Supervisors allocated $2 million to thin thousands of acres on the west side of the San Francisco Peaks, the Hopi Tribe connected the public water systems to a new regional system after elevated arsenic levels were found in drinking water, and more.
On today's newscast: Tourists with plans to stay at Grand Canyon National Park over Labor Day weekend were forced to move to accommodations outside the park yesterday, the Apache County attorney and superintendent of schools pleaded not guilty to public corruption charges, the Supai Village campground and lodge will remain closed through September after last week's flash flood, two athletes with connections to NAU will compete at the Paris Paralympic Games, polls show Democrat Ruben Gallego leads Republican Kari Lake in the U.S. Senate race, and more...
There's a massive hoarding problem of animals in Apache County. Heather Hutchison is one of those trying to solve the horrific problem.
On today's newscast: Grand Canyon National Park says most BASE jumpers stay below the radar after a recent fatality, the Apache County attorney and superintendent of schools have been indicted on public corruption charges, Arizona voters will officially get to decide on the constitutional right to abortion, state health officials warn of a statewide rise in Hantavirus cases, and more...
Denise Lever was a firefighter turned homeschooling mom who launched a Prenda microschool in August 2020 in the rural town of Eager, Arizona in Apache County, which is one of the poorest counties in the US and one of only 3 counties in the entire country where neither English nor Spanish is the primary language spoke at home. In Apache County, that language is Navajo. Denise is also an administrator of 5 other independently operated Prenda microschools in her town of Eager. *** Sign up for Kerry's free, weekly email newsletter on education trends at fee.org/liberated.
True Crime Podcast 2024 - REAL Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, True Police Stories and True Crime
Willy Inmon's Shocking Confessions: Murder and Self-Defense? Ep 1 - The police in Apache County suspected Willy Inmon of murdering a boy called Ricky Flores. In the course of a nine-hour interview, Inmon confessed to three murders. Ep 2 - The police in Apache County suspected Willy Inmon of murdering a boy called Ricky Flores. In the course of a nine-hour interview, Inmon confessed to three murders.
I will be doing a full length tribute to Milton William Cooper. This is an introduction, an announcement of what's to come. Bill was murdered 21 years ago on November 5th, 2001. There's that date, again. He was murdered by sneaky cops in plain clothes from Apache County. They killed him right on his own property where they had trespassed and started a fire to get him to come out of his home to inspect. He was marked for execution. What the police did was completely unlawful, excessive, and criminal. Doyel wasn't there. No one was there for him when he could have used it. He had organized militias to stand before police in other raids, and he saved the lives of those people targeted for a replay of Ruby Ridge. But when he needed it, he didn't have the same support.
Arizona - Fort Verde is an almost forgotten military fortification east of the town of Cape Verde in Yavapai County. Fort Verde's heyday was in the 1870s, when it was used as a primary base for cavalry units under General George Cook. Despite its age, many of its stone structures still stand today. Montezuma's Castle can also be found in Yavapai County, near the town of Rimrock just off I-17. Montezuma's Castle is one of the most intact relics of the past from Native American civilization in the Southwest USA. Its defining features are the prominent houses carved into the sheer cliff during the 13th century. This site is also surrounded by a number of other places of archeological interest. Canyon de Chelly, near Chinle, Apache County, comprises hundreds of dwellings similar to those that could be found at Montezuma's Castle. These dwellings were carved at the base of steep red sandstone cliffs, and are said to have been built by the Pueblo Indians between the 8th and 14th centuries AD. In the 1700s, a community of Navajos conquered and settled the dwellings. These Navajos would harass colonizers for much of the next few centuries. A particularly bloody example occurred in 1805, when a troop of Spanish soldiers engaged a band of Navajos who ambushed them at a place called Massacre Cave. Another engagement was recorded in 1864, when a man named Kit Carson routed a large force of Navajos in the Canyon. Other ruins built by the Pueblo Indians lie nearby, at places named Canyon del Muerte, Monument Canyon, and Black Rock. Casa Grande Monument is located around two miles to the north of the town of Coolidge in Pinal County, near State Route 87. The Casa Grande is a spectacular tower made up of packed walls stacked four stories high. It is believed to have been constructed by the Hohokam people for ceremonial purposes. The Hohokam first arrived in the area around 400 BC and would leave in the middle of the 15th century. The monument stands in the middle of nearly 90 mud buildings. Tonto National Monument can be found approximately 28 miles off SR 88, due northwest of the town of Globe in Gila County. This landmark is also dominated by cliff dwellings. Over 100 of these homes were carved out of the cliff by the Salado Indians during the 14th century, and would be abandoned roughly a century later. The Salados were proficient at mining gold and silver in the area, and thus many artifacts made from these precious metals have been found here. The Mission of San Xavier del Bac stands about 9 miles south of Tucson, just by Mission Road. First built by Jesuit missionaries in 1692 amidst a village of Pima natives, it would fall under siege when the natives revolted in 1751. It was said to house a considerable collection of treasure, which the missionaries were said to have successfully hidden before they were all massacred. San Xavier del Bac was burnt to the ground, but was rebuilt in 1767 by a group of Franciscan missionaries, and still stands. The Tubac Presidio Ruins lie 45 miles to the south of Tucson in Santa Cruz County. Tubac Presidio was a military outpost made up of over 50 brick fortifications, built by the Spanish in the 1750s, and abandoned in 1776. Some time after this, Mexican forces would occupy and rebuild the post in order to protect their miners, who had found plentiful deposits of silver in the area. In the early 1850s, Mormons who were traveling to California used the outpost as a stopover shelter. In 1856, a group of Texan miners used it as a base of operations.. The Fort Yuma Ruins are the remains of an old fortified town built on the banks of the Colorado River, near the modern town of Yuma in Yuma County. Fort Yuma began as a Spanish mission in 1700, until its destruction at the hands of belligerent natives. The catalyst for what would ultimately become Fort Yuma was the beginning of the Gold Rush in California. In 1850, the fortified town was built and became a crucial focal point, and later it became a --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/treasure-revealed/support
Arizona Farm Bureau's Julie Murphree guest is Hayley Andrus of Andrus Cattle Company. After moving from Idaho to Apache County, she discusses ranch operations and family life in the northeast corner of Arizona. The standards and production for their beef. The challenges from weather to wolves. And the life lessons learned around the farm.
This week's Arizona White Mountain Podcast Community Shout. This week's guest: Allison Hephner - CPMSAZ Fundraising Event - March 17th on St. Patrick's Day Pat's Place Authentic Recipe!! $12/plate with a purchase of a ticket Do you work with the Homeless in Navajo or Apache County??? Navajo and Apache County Alliance to End Homelessness Navajo & Apache County Alliance to End Homelessness PIT COUNT TRAINING February 23 - 28, 2022 We are in need of agency and community volunteers to assists us in our Annual Point in Time Count for homelessness in Navajo and Apache Counties. Please watch the 45 - minute training video and sign up below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vOmy6NIlB-Q If you have any further questions, please contact Allison Hephner - ah@cpmsaz.com for Navajo County Marilyn Johnson - mjj@frontiernet.net for Apache County #AZWM #ARIZONAWHITEMOUNTAINS #AZWHITEMOUNTAINS #ARIZONASBACKYARD Recorded at the Birdman Media Studios. The Community Shout is how you the listener can come in and share anything from charity events, to fundraisers and even just to comment on how cool your neighbor is at no cost! Just stop by on Tuesday morning at 10:00 am in the Birdman Media Studios, have a seat and tell everyone what's going on. The following are the sponsors of the ARIZONA WHITE MOUNTAINS Podcast show, please visit them and give them your support when you can, as they make this show possible. Premier Sponsors: Summit Healthcare Town of Pinetop-Lakeside The Hub Arizona's Mountain Home Hunters Buffalo Bill's Tavern and Grill Darbi's Cafe Edward Jones - Jason DiCamillo Elevate Athletics Firehouse Subs The House Restaurant J&T Wild-Life Outdoors La Casita Cafe The Lion's Den The Lodge Sports Bar & Grill The Maverick Magazine Mountain Poop Scoop Nexus Coalition for Drug Prevention PersNIKKIty's Pour Station - White Mountain Purified Water Solterra Senior Living St. Anthony's School Sutton Weed & Pest Control Vinnedge Signworks White Mountain Tees WME Theaters
This week's Arizona White Mountain Podcast Community Shout. Events and Activities in Show Low - Pinetop - Lakeside Arizona This week's guests: Special Guest! - Sir Earl Toon (Kool and the Gang) Allison Hephner - AZCPMS Navajo Apache County Alliance to End Homelessness Survey: Free Online Survey Software by SurveyMonkey: Survey Taken #AZWM #ARIZONAWHITEMOUNTAINS #AZWHITEMOUNTAINS #ARIZONASBACKYARD The following are the sponsors of the ARIZONA WHITE MOUNTAINS Podcast show, please visit them and give them your support when you can, as they make this show possible. Premier Sponsors: Summit Healthcare Town of Pinetop-Lakeside The Hub Buffalo Bill's Tavern and Grill Darbi's Cafe Edward Jones - Jason DiCamillo Elevate Athletics Firehouse Subs Haven of Lakeside The House Restaurant J&T Wild-Life Outdoors La Casita Cafe The Lion's Den The Lodge Sports Bar & Grill The Maverick Magazine Nexus Coalition for Drug Prevention PersNIKKIty's Pour Station - White Mountain Purified Water Solterra Senior Living St. Anthony's School Sutton Weed & Pest Control Vinnedge Signworks Visiting Angels - Flagstaff White Mountain Tees WME Theaters
Photo: No known restrictions on publication.1940.Late afternoon clouds over the desert. Apache County near Springerville, Arizona The New John Batchelor ShowRepresented by CBS News Radio/CBS Audio Network@BatchelorshowFair weather clouds on Mars. Bob Zimmerman BehindtheBlack.comhttps://behindtheblack.com/behind-the-black/points-of-information/clouds-over-gale-crater/
We are living in a time of unprecedented distrust in America… Faith in the government is at an all-time low, and political groups on both sides of the aisle are able to tout preposterous conspiracy theories as gospel, without much opposition. “Fake news” is the order of the day. This book is about a man to whom all of it points, the greatest conspiracist of this generation and a man you may not have heard of. A former U.S. naval intelligence worker, Milton William Cooper published his manifesto Behold a Pale Horse in 1991. Since then it has gone on to sell hundreds of thousands of copies, becoming the number-one bestseller in the American prison system. According to Behold a Pale Horse, JFK was assassinated—because he was about to reveal that extraterrestrials were about to take over the earth—by his driver, an alien himself; AIDS is a government conspiracy to decrease the population of blacks, Hispanics, and homosexuals; and the Illuminati are secretly involved with the U.S. government to manage relationships with extraterrestrials. Cooper died in a shootout with Apache County police in 2001, one month after September 11, in the year in which he had predicted catastrophe. In Pale Horse Rider, journalist Mark Jacobson not only tells the story of Cooper's fascinating life but also provides the social and political context for American paranoia. Indeed, with the present NSA situation and countless other shadowy government dealings often in the news, aren't we right to suspect that things may not be as they seem? Mark Jacobson on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/palehorseriderbook/ Pale Horse Rider music video by William Cooper (the rapper): https://youtu.be/Mp5pSU5jYC0 Joseph L. Flatley website: https://www.lennyflatley.net Joseph L. Flatley twitter: https://twitter.com/lennyflatley Coming soon! My latest book, New Age Grifter. Available for pre-order from BOOKSHOP.ORG: https://bookshop.org/books/new-age-grifter-the-true-story-of-gabriel-of-urantia-and-his-cosmic-family/9781627311106 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/failedstateupdate/message
Scraping Data for Mailer Pricing Pros and Cons (LA 1399) Transcript: Jack Butala: Steve and Jill here. Jill DeWit: Ho, ho, ho. Jack Butala: Welcome to the Land Academy Show, entertaining land investment talk. I'm Steven Jack Butala. Jill DeWit: And I'm Jill De Wit, coming to you this Christmas week from sunny Southern California. Jack Butala: Today. Jill and I talk about scraping data for mailer, for your mailers, the pros and cons. Jill DeWit: You're all business and I'm all into the holidays. Jack Butala: Yep. For the last decade, that's how it's been. Jill DeWit: Yep. Jack Butala: I think holidays- Jill DeWit: Careful. Jack Butala: ... disrupt- Jill DeWit: Oh. Jack Butala: ... revenue streams. Jill DeWit: Well, in the old days, this would be a high retail year and it would make revenue streams. Jack Butala: There's something about this holiday at the end of the year, it just becomes a two week thing. Versus, I don't know, whatever other holidays that you're into, Easter or Thanksgiving. It's that day, and maybe if you're a cool employer like us, it's you take the day off after that so it becomes a long weekend. But this just, it's a two week thing. Jill's right, it starts right about now. Jill DeWit: You know the good thing is? If you haven't experienced before in our business flipping land, when people are home on their computers with nothing to do and they're tired of their family, sometimes they spend money on dirt. Just saying. Jack Butala: Yeah, well. Jill DeWit: It has happened. Jack Butala: Okay. Jill DeWit: It has happened. Jack Butala: December is not historically our best month by any stretch. Jill DeWit: It has done okay. Jack Butala: Today's topic. Oh, we already talked about it. Before we get into it, let's take a question posted by one of our members on the landinvestors.com online community. It's free. Jill DeWit: Ellen S. "Hello, everyone. On a recent episode of the land Academy podcast, Jack mentioned something about how investors shouldn't be buying land in Apache County, Arizona. Would he or anyone else be able to give some more information about why? I'm a virtual assistant, one of my clients is a land investor." Jack Butala: Okay, hold on. Jill DeWit: This is funny. Do you want me to keep going? Jack Butala: She, Ellen, is a virtual assistant for one of the land investor or Land Academy members. Jill DeWit: Right. Jack Butala: She handles sales and ... Go ahead. Jill DeWit: Okay. Okay. "I handle sales and marketing for him. I've been doing this for almost a year and a half [inaudible 00:02:16] success selling his properties in another state, but I struggled with selling these in Apache County." Jack Butala: Okay, one second. Jill DeWit: Okay. Jack Butala: Ellen has success selling properties for the person that she works for. So if you need a virtual assistance that's successful at selling property, why not contact Ellen? She's right there in landinvestors.com. Jill DeWit: May I continue? Jack Butala: This is how you use land investors. It's not just like a newspaper. Jill DeWit: Okay. Jack Butala: It's huge resourcing. Jill DeWit: Listen, Captain Obvious. Okay. "They're in Holbrook, right by the Petrified Forest National Park. I've never been to the area." Jack Butala: Good for you. Jill DeWit: I would appreciate any tips on how to sell these properties here, and I would love to know why Jack doesn't like it. Any help is appreciated. Also, I love the podcast." That's funny and cool and sweet. Jack Butala: If you apply the red, green, yellow test, like we talk about in our education programs, and you look up Apache County or Navajo County, you will see that it doesn't in any way pass the red, green, yellow test. There's three components to it and it doesn't pass any of them. Jill DeWit: And once upon a time it did. Jack Butala: Yes. Jill DeWit: So that's a point here, so there's still leftover properties. I probably have some leftover properties.
Scraping Data for Mailer Pricing Pros and Cons (LA 1399) Transcript: Jack Butala: Steve and Jill here. Jill DeWit: Ho, ho, ho. Jack Butala: Welcome to the Land Academy Show, entertaining land investment talk. I'm Steven Jack Butala. Jill DeWit: And I'm Jill De Wit, coming to you this Christmas week from sunny Southern California. Jack Butala: Today. Jill and I talk about scraping data for mailer, for your mailers, the pros and cons. Jill DeWit: You're all business and I'm all into the holidays. Jack Butala: Yep. For the last decade, that's how it's been. Jill DeWit: Yep. Jack Butala: I think holidays- Jill DeWit: Careful. Jack Butala: ... disrupt- Jill DeWit: Oh. Jack Butala: ... revenue streams. Jill DeWit: Well, in the old days, this would be a high retail year and it would make revenue streams. Jack Butala: There's something about this holiday at the end of the year, it just becomes a two week thing. Versus, I don't know, whatever other holidays that you're into, Easter or Thanksgiving. It's that day, and maybe if you're a cool employer like us, it's you take the day off after that so it becomes a long weekend. But this just, it's a two week thing. Jill's right, it starts right about now. Jill DeWit: You know the good thing is? If you haven't experienced before in our business flipping land, when people are home on their computers with nothing to do and they're tired of their family, sometimes they spend money on dirt. Just saying. Jack Butala: Yeah, well. Jill DeWit: It has happened. Jack Butala: Okay. Jill DeWit: It has happened. Jack Butala: December is not historically our best month by any stretch. Jill DeWit: It has done okay. Jack Butala: Today's topic. Oh, we already talked about it. Before we get into it, let's take a question posted by one of our members on the landinvestors.com online community. It's free. Jill DeWit: Ellen S. "Hello, everyone. On a recent episode of the land Academy podcast, Jack mentioned something about how investors shouldn't be buying land in Apache County, Arizona. Would he or anyone else be able to give some more information about why? I'm a virtual assistant, one of my clients is a land investor." Jack Butala: Okay, hold on. Jill DeWit: This is funny. Do you want me to keep going? Jack Butala: She, Ellen, is a virtual assistant for one of the land investor or Land Academy members. Jill DeWit: Right. Jack Butala: She handles sales and ... Go ahead. Jill DeWit: Okay. Okay. "I handle sales and marketing for him. I've been doing this for almost a year and a half [inaudible 00:02:16] success selling his properties in another state, but I struggled with selling these in Apache County." Jack Butala: Okay, one second. Jill DeWit: Okay. Jack Butala: Ellen has success selling properties for the person that she works for. So if you need a virtual assistance that's successful at selling property, why not contact Ellen? She's right there in landinvestors.com. Jill DeWit: May I continue? Jack Butala: This is how you use land investors. It's not just like a newspaper. Jill DeWit: Okay. Jack Butala: It's huge resourcing. Jill DeWit: Listen, Captain Obvious. Okay. "They're in Holbrook, right by the Petrified Forest National Park. I've never been to the area." Jack Butala: Good for you. Jill DeWit: I would appreciate any tips on how to sell these properties here, and I would love to know why Jack doesn't like it. Any help is appreciated. Also, I love the podcast." That's funny and cool and sweet. Jack Butala: If you apply the red, green, yellow test, like we talk about in our education programs, and you look up Apache County or Navajo County, you will see that it doesn't in any way pass the red, green, yellow test. There's three components to it and it doesn't pass any of them. Jill DeWit: And once upon a time it did. Jack Butala: Yes. Jill DeWit: So that's a point here, so there's still leftover properties. I probably have some leftover properties.
Land Stories Live--- Episode 42! Today we are going to continue to have special guests on the show that sell land in different areas than where I normally do. Our guest today is a man that has been in the land business about as long as I have. I’ve mostly watched him from afar growing his business and trying new things. I admire him for not only the land he is selling, but also for the real and raw business acumen that he brings to the table. I am really excited to have him on to discuss his journey and land in an area that we’ve never owned land before--- Apache County, AZ! Please help me welcome Clint Turner of Away Land Co! Resources Mentioned: https://www.facebook.com/groups/awaylanddeals https://www.bing.com/search?q=average%20temperature%20st%20johns%20arizona&qs=n&form=QBRE&sp=-1&pq=average%20temperature%20st%20johns%20arizona&sc=1-36&sk=&cvid=91EA81E82B9B4E308894AE1992D90B1C https://www.thecrazytourist.com/14-best-things-to-do-in-st-johns-az/ featured property- https://www.awaylandco.com/listings/KfHmLLwdGH38zD6yJpzj?fbclid=IwAR1DXgFCsJbcs2VjZTJFgdoQcl8fc1eg4-0SKXo-Ap3BI8Y7LHx--CzjgxU
Special Guest- Candidate for Apache County Arizona Sheriff and owner of SW Shooting Authority, Cope Reynolds. (Your segment can go from 30-60 minutes its up to the Gues)! Cope thanks for taking the time with us tonight! How long have you been in the Firearms business? I know your doing your Radio show Turned Podcast for some time, how many years/episodes? Tell us about you Anti-Potus 44 sign in your store front from 2012! (one of the first 2A news stories i saw here that made me want to switch from Football Podcasting to 2A/Self Defense podcasting!) Lets talk defensive and counter offensive Guns for a short while. I know the CAG(formerly Delta) SF’s and the Rangers are using The G19 yet the 101st and my old outfit the 160th SOAR speak high praise for the M17’s and M18’s based off off the SIG P320 Modular system, and many Carried M9A2’s Purchased with their own dime until about 2015….and Army CID’s were still carrying SIG P228’s like Marine Aviators and MARSOC Marines when not crying the Colt 1911 CQB model…(BTW, my first cousin is deputy commander of Army SOCOM and refused a G19, so a SIG P320/M18 with his name on the Box found its way to him a few months back, he convinced me to get an M18 ahead of a 2022 as my 4th SIG…since he made it a gift after i told him about my new P365XL,the M18 is at my FFL as we speak) Your favorite Defensive pistol? Defensive Rifle? Shotgun? How do you advise first time handgun owners who come into SWSA? Especially seniors or folks with arthritis or carpal Tunnel/Neuropathy? Lets talk more about your show for a minute, how did you choose the title? So in the remaining time we have left, lets discuss your run for Apache county Sheriff! I’m about 2-2-1/2 counties away from you, your county starts somewhere off Rt 260/Rt 87, but I had to find your county seat on a Map. I’m involved with trying to Get 2A sanctuary status for Yavapai County. how would you feel about that status for Apache County? Are you in favor of increasing the size of your department? More modern Equipment? Since you have a firearms and preparedness background, would you integrate rescue and support efforts if a group like mine existed in Apache county? Will you Join one of the LEO associations In Arizona or Nationally? Do you Belong to any Firearms/self defense rights groups? Please talk about your platform? Finally, Please promote your Podcast and Blog Articles for Us? Thanks for joining us tonight Cope, maybe you can comeback before Moving into our news Segment: More attacks on Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx just Yesterday evening as Jewish children were leaving a Chanukah Party in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. the Parents of 2 siblings at the Party are Both NYPD and stopped the attack as it begun, saving many kids lives! why is this not reported by any News outlet except the NY Post? (owned by the same family that owns FOX news!) because it doesn’t fit the Left Liberal Narrative!(discuss -6=10 mins) A Gun You TUBER SPOKE WITH A OPERATIONS CENTER SGT at The VA NG who basically told them Gov Northam’s Orders are Third in priority to the CONUS and VA Con laws!! And they state they are already conflicted as the State senator who shot off his mouth did so without proper briefing on the Use of NG troops versus the Posse Comatatus act! (discuss 5~6 Minutes) According to our friend Dave Workman Of SAF and CCRKBA writing g at his Website Liberty Park Press on the 20th, he states an Everytown Official states that”the Sanctuary 2A movement” could “short Circuit the Process!” (discuss 5-6) We now have positive proof that Soros is behind the Bloomberg campaign. As Jews, they should both be ashamed of themselves. I am a Jew who is ashamed that they are JEWS!! Another Dave workman PENNED ARTICLE states that If trump is Impeached by trial in the Senate, Gun owners won’t forget in 2020!! Child Gun deaths Mostly Gang Bangers shooting at each other! Should 2A supporters address Mass shootings? IN Industry news: Brownells Introduces a new Modern AR line benefitting SpOps Wounded Warriors! they taped a Yellow AR MAG to a Pic frame on a wall, and they are selling for $1200, they say the Actual Guns will be less then that and will be in the channel the second half of 2020! Nighthawk intros new Custom 70 series 1911 More SIG news, the new P320 XCompact!(Cap 15 rd mags+1 2 Steel mags supplied!) SCCY intros 380 with a RED DOT! Taurus gives 37 T4 AR15s to LEO’s Around their new Georgia Plant! Emails and What we got for the Holidays and what you can get yourself on sale now!t
Episode 45 is with Kristen L. Orton! Kristen is a Kindergarten teacher at Vernon Elementary School in Vernon Arizona. Vernon is a very rural community in Apache County, in the White Mountains area of Northern Arizona. She was recently hired last year to teach Kindergarten and if she wasn't busy enough finishing her Masters, she had the vision that the K-8 school she was just hired at, also needed a preschool classroom. After a in-depth proposal, several school board meetings and community buy in, her vision to have a preschool classroom came true. Listen to the conversation as we break down how it went down with host Marissa Calderón.Resources Mentioned:Perry Preschool ProjectTeaching Strategies GOLDVernon Elementary School DistrictConnect and follow Kristen's Preschool programs journey through her Blog at EdublogsEmail Kristen.Connect with host, Marissa and the Early Childhood Journeys podcast at: earlychildhoodjourneys.comMusic track is called Lemon Tea from GYVUS provided by Chillhop Music, a platform dedicated to finding and sharing the best chilled hiphop, jazzhop and triphop music and connecting people.Used with permission and creative commons.More by Chillhop:http://chillhop.com/listenGYVUS - Weekend:http://soundcloud.com/gyvusListen on Spotify:http://bit.ly/ChillhopSpotify See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We are living in a time of unprecedented distrust in America: Faith in the government is at an all-time low, and political groups on both sides of the aisle are able to tout preposterous conspiracy theories as gospel, without much opposition. “Fake news” is the order of the day. This book is about a man to whom all of it points, the greatest conspiracist of this generation and a man you may not have heard of. A former U.S. naval intelligence worker, Milton William Cooper published his manifesto Behold a Pale Horse in 1991. Since then it has gone on to sell hundreds of thousands of copies, becoming the number-one bestseller in the American prison system. (Bookscan lists sales at 289,000 since 2005.) According to Behold a Pale Horse, JFK was assassinated—because he was about to reveal that extraterrestrials were about to take over the earth—by his driver, an alien himself; AIDS is a government conspiracy to decrease the population of blacks, Hispanics, and homosexuals; and the Illuminati are secretly involved with the U.S. government to manage relationships with extraterrestrials. Cooper died in a shootout with Apache County police in 2001, one month after September 11, in the year in which he had predicted catastrophe. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We are living in a time of unprecedented distrust in America: Faith in the government is at an all-time low, and political groups on both sides of the aisle are able to tout preposterous conspiracy theories as gospel, without much opposition. “Fake news” is the order of the day. This book is about a man to whom all of it points, the greatest conspiracist of this generation and a man you may not have heard of.A former U.S. naval intelligence worker, Milton William Cooper published his manifesto Behold a Pale Horse in 1991. Since then it has gone on to sell hundreds of thousands of copies, becoming the number-one bestseller in the American prison system. (Bookscan lists sales at 289,000 since 2005.) According to Behold a Pale Horse, JFK was assassinated—because he was about to reveal that extraterrestrials were about to take over the earth—by his driver, an alien himself; AIDS is a government conspiracy to decrease the population of blacks, Hispanics, and homosexuals; and the Illuminati are secretly involved with the U.S. government to manage relationships with extraterrestrials. Cooper died in a shootout with Apache County police in 2001, one month after September 11, in the year in which he had predicted catastrophe.Many of Cooper’s conclusions were driven by personal demons and a highly creative connection of dots, and yet they have shaped much of the fabric of American life in the past few decades. Terry Nichols, Timothy McVeigh’s cohort in the Oklahoma City bombing, was a fan, and Behold a Pale Horse has great appeal among right-wing radicals. On the other hand, the book transcends class and race barriers: It is read primarily by poor blacks in prison and appeals to people who acutely feel that society is fixed against them. It has inspired numerous hip-hop groups and continues to do so. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
How Long Does it Take to Become a Pro (CFFL 508) Transcript: Jack Butala: Jack Butala with Jill DeWit. Jill DeWit: Hi. Jack Butala: Welcome to our show today. In this episode Jill and I talk about How Long Does it Take to Become a Pro? Great show today. Before we get into it, let's take a question posted by one of our members on landinvestors.com, our online community. It's free. Jill DeWit: Okay. Rod asks, "I'm looking at a bulk deal purchase in [Apache 00:00:20] County. Seller wants $22,500 for eight properties totalling 150 acres or about $150 an acre. I do not have the money. Any advice appreciated. Thanks." Jack Butala: Rod's a member, right Jill? Jill DeWit: Mm-hmm (affirmative). Jack Butala: I think yesterday's show was about this. Jill DeWit: I know. I was- Jack Butala: How to raise capital. Jill DeWit: Exactly. Jack Butala: It's real simple on a deal like this. 150 bucks an acre. If the properties have pretty good access and they're within reason, you can sell them for three hundred an acre, which I'm not sure there's a part of Apache County that you can't do this. Just go on a deal board on landinvestors.com. There's a deal board. Because you're a member you have access to it. Post it there. Then also post it on the pro level area in Land Investors as well as the non-pro level area. Jill DeWit: If you post it, they will come. Jack Butala: Yes. 22 thousand is a really low amount of money, small amount of money, to raise for a deal like this. I think you're gonna turn it cash in, cash out in less than 30 days. You should just consider wholesaling it or optioning it also. But whatever you do, tie it up because that's a good deal. Jill DeWit: Yeah. That's really, really good. Jack Butala: Anything around a hundred bucks an acre up there is good. Jill DeWit: I love it up there. It is pretty. Jack Butala: If I wasn't so busy ... We used to do deals with members all the time and it just ends up being a one-on-one education scenario that Jill and I ... I love doing real estate deals, but it's just not an efficient use of our time with other people. Jill and I do a lot of real estate deals, but we make 100 thousand bucks a unit. That's our rule right now. If you have a question or you want to be one the show ... Oh. I'm sorry, Jill. [crosstalk 00:02:08] Jill DeWit: No. It's good. No. I'm over here. It's all good. I'll pipe in. Jack Butala: Do you have a question? Okay, Robin. You want to be on the show, reach out to either one of us on landinvestors.com. Jill DeWit: Thank you, Batman. Jack Butala: It's more like the other Robin. Jill DeWit: Oh. Who? Jack Butala: Howard Stern's Robin. Jill DeWit: Oh. Jack Butala: Not that I think I'm Howard Stern, even want to be- Jill DeWit: Oh. Him. Jack Butala: ... or aspire or care about- Jill DeWit: Batman and Robin. Jack Butala: ... Howard Stern. Jill DeWit: You know what's funny? I never really watched Howard Stern, so I'm not there. Jack Butala: That's funny because it's a radio show. Jill DeWit: I know. Jack Butala: If you have a question ...
How Long Does it Take to Become a Pro (CFFL 508) Transcript: Jack Butala: Jack Butala with Jill DeWit. Jill DeWit: Hi. Jack Butala: Welcome to our show today. In this episode Jill and I talk about How Long Does it Take to Become a Pro? Great show today. Before we get into it, let's take a question posted by one of our members on landinvestors.com, our online community. It's free. Jill DeWit: Okay. Rod asks, "I'm looking at a bulk deal purchase in [Apache 00:00:20] County. Seller wants $22,500 for eight properties totalling 150 acres or about $150 an acre. I do not have the money. Any advice appreciated. Thanks." Jack Butala: Rod's a member, right Jill? Jill DeWit: Mm-hmm (affirmative). Jack Butala: I think yesterday's show was about this. Jill DeWit: I know. I was- Jack Butala: How to raise capital. Jill DeWit: Exactly. Jack Butala: It's real simple on a deal like this. 150 bucks an acre. If the properties have pretty good access and they're within reason, you can sell them for three hundred an acre, which I'm not sure there's a part of Apache County that you can't do this. Just go on a deal board on landinvestors.com. There's a deal board. Because you're a member you have access to it. Post it there. Then also post it on the pro level area in Land Investors as well as the non-pro level area. Jill DeWit: If you post it, they will come. Jack Butala: Yes. 22 thousand is a really low amount of money, small amount of money, to raise for a deal like this. I think you're gonna turn it cash in, cash out in less than 30 days. You should just consider wholesaling it or optioning it also. But whatever you do, tie it up because that's a good deal. Jill DeWit: Yeah. That's really, really good. Jack Butala: Anything around a hundred bucks an acre up there is good. Jill DeWit: I love it up there. It is pretty. Jack Butala: If I wasn't so busy ... We used to do deals with members all the time and it just ends up being a one-on-one education scenario that Jill and I ... I love doing real estate deals, but it's just not an efficient use of our time with other people. Jill and I do a lot of real estate deals, but we make 100 thousand bucks a unit. That's our rule right now. If you have a question or you want to be one the show ... Oh. I'm sorry, Jill. [crosstalk 00:02:08] Jill DeWit: No. It's good. No. I'm over here. It's all good. I'll pipe in. Jack Butala: Do you have a question? Okay, Robin. You want to be on the show, reach out to either one of us on landinvestors.com. Jill DeWit: Thank you, Batman. Jack Butala: It's more like the other Robin. Jill DeWit: Oh. Who? Jack Butala: Howard Stern's Robin. Jill DeWit: Oh. Jack Butala: Not that I think I'm Howard Stern, even want to be- Jill DeWit: Oh. Him. Jack Butala: ... or aspire or care about- Jill DeWit: Batman and Robin. Jack Butala: ... Howard Stern. Jill DeWit: You know what's funny? I never really watched Howard Stern, so I'm not there. Jack Butala: That's funny because it's a radio show. Jill DeWit: I know. Jack Butala: If you have a question ...
Unofficial UFOlogists/comedians Sam Rose and Brian Bahe talk with comedian Kenice Mobley (@kfmawesomeness, Person About Town Podcast) about six hovering UFOs with beams of light beneath them over Apache County, Arizona; a reptile shaped UFO photographed over the city of Oshawa in Ontario, Canada; and a video of a disc UFO floating over Sas van … Continue reading Ep 48 (w/ Kenice Mobley): We Will All Be Planets… Or Stars →
Why the Concept of Data is Difficult to Explain (CFFL 504) Transcript: Jack Butala: Jack Butala and Jill DeWitt. Jill DeWit: Hi. Jack Butala: Welcome to our show today. In this episode, Jill and I talk about why the concept of data is sometimes difficult to explain, especially if somebody's new at this. Before you get into it ... Before we get into it ... Before you get into it, a freudian slip. Let's take a question posted by one of our members on the landinvestors.com online community, it's free. Jill DeWit: Okay. Rod asked, "I'm looking at a bulk deal purchase in Apache County, Arizona. Seller wants $22,500 for eight properties totalling 150 acres or about $150 per acre. I do not have the money. Any advice is appreciated." Jack Butala: We have all been where you are, Rod. Jill DeWit: Yep. Jack Butala: And here's my blanket statement to everyone in real estate, every time I meet them. No good acquisition should be left undone, especially because of money. So if it's a great deal, you're going to find it. Jill DeWit: There's money. Jack Butala: There's way more money out there than sense. And you've come to the right place because I can see here you're a member. Jill DeWit: We have money and not a lot of sense. I had to say that, you know it was coming. Jack Butala: We don't do deals directly any longer with members because quite honestly it takes too long. That's the real reason. Not because they're not good deals. It just takes too long. We have bigger fish to fry from a money standpoint. Not because they're bad deals, just because, well let's just say it. We're doing it with people who are new and there's a lot of stuff that goes on. But anyway, what you want to do is go on a deal board, if you're not there already. We have a thing called deal board, it's a hootsuite, picture a bulletin board, old school bulletin board for jobs and stuff. It's kind of like that, but it's online. And that's where all of our members, it's a members-only access scenario on landinvestors.com. They go in there and access the thing and do this kind of deal. So you would, in theory, you would post all the ... Post the properties, post the deal, probably include the GPS coordinates so everybody can look at it, or pictures. Pictures would be even better. As much information as you possibly can and then what you really want to do if you want to get this thing done fast, is find a buyer. Because chances are somebody on deal board is going to already have a buyer anyway, so you're going to be left with a lot of possibilities. Maybe you mark the properties up from $22,500 to $30,000 and then that person goes and sells them to the end user for 40. There's lots of possibilities. This is a great question. We have all been standing right where you are, all of us. Jill DeWit: Exactly. Jack Butala: Even at this place in our career, Jill and I where we are. We do deals that I do not want to ... I don't want to write a $4.3 Million check for. We get a money partner, but we do the courtesy of pretty much having the property sold before we even do the deal. It's an easier sell. At $150 an acre, you're going to do just fine. Jill DeWit: Exactly. Good stuff. Jack Butala: You have a question or you want to be on the show, reach out to either one of us on landinvestors.com. Today's topic, why the concept of data is difficult to explain sometimes. It's the meat of the show. Jill DeWit: I love this. Jack Butala: You know, again we come back to this co-birthday party you ...
Why the Concept of Data is Difficult to Explain (CFFL 504) Transcript: Jack Butala: Jack Butala and Jill DeWitt. Jill DeWit: Hi. Jack Butala: Welcome to our show today. In this episode, Jill and I talk about why the concept of data is sometimes difficult to explain, especially if somebody's new at this. Before you get into it ... Before we get into it ... Before you get into it, a freudian slip. Let's take a question posted by one of our members on the landinvestors.com online community, it's free. Jill DeWit: Okay. Rod asked, "I'm looking at a bulk deal purchase in Apache County, Arizona. Seller wants $22,500 for eight properties totalling 150 acres or about $150 per acre. I do not have the money. Any advice is appreciated." Jack Butala: We have all been where you are, Rod. Jill DeWit: Yep. Jack Butala: And here's my blanket statement to everyone in real estate, every time I meet them. No good acquisition should be left undone, especially because of money. So if it's a great deal, you're going to find it. Jill DeWit: There's money. Jack Butala: There's way more money out there than sense. And you've come to the right place because I can see here you're a member. Jill DeWit: We have money and not a lot of sense. I had to say that, you know it was coming. Jack Butala: We don't do deals directly any longer with members because quite honestly it takes too long. That's the real reason. Not because they're not good deals. It just takes too long. We have bigger fish to fry from a money standpoint. Not because they're bad deals, just because, well let's just say it. We're doing it with people who are new and there's a lot of stuff that goes on. But anyway, what you want to do is go on a deal board, if you're not there already. We have a thing called deal board, it's a hootsuite, picture a bulletin board, old school bulletin board for jobs and stuff. It's kind of like that, but it's online. And that's where all of our members, it's a members-only access scenario on landinvestors.com. They go in there and access the thing and do this kind of deal. So you would, in theory, you would post all the ... Post the properties, post the deal, probably include the GPS coordinates so everybody can look at it, or pictures. Pictures would be even better. As much information as you possibly can and then what you really want to do if you want to get this thing done fast, is find a buyer. Because chances are somebody on deal board is going to already have a buyer anyway, so you're going to be left with a lot of possibilities. Maybe you mark the properties up from $22,500 to $30,000 and then that person goes and sells them to the end user for 40. There's lots of possibilities. This is a great question. We have all been standing right where you are, all of us. Jill DeWit: Exactly. Jack Butala: Even at this place in our career, Jill and I where we are. We do deals that I do not want to ... I don't want to write a $4.3 Million check for. We get a money partner, but we do the courtesy of pretty much having the property sold before we even do the deal. It's an easier sell. At $150 an acre, you're going to do just fine. Jill DeWit: Exactly. Good stuff. Jack Butala: You have a question or you want to be on the show, reach out to either one of us on landinvestors.com. Today's topic, why the concept of data is difficult to explain sometimes. It's the meat of the show. Jill DeWit: I love this. Jack Butala: You know, again we come back to this co-birthday party you ...
Article 1 - UFO Disappears Into Portal Above Colorado? A video that has been viewed millions of times on social media appears to be fake and originally indicated as originating from the state of Colorado. According to Gabe Hash, a Spanish-language YouTube personality who delves into unexplained phenomena, the video is a hoax and he used local kids skilled in Adobe After Effects to debunk the video. http://www.snopes.com/ufo-portal-colorado/ Article 2 - Train passenger says six 'mothership UFOs' were beaming light down to earth UFO investigators are looking into claims that a train passenger saw six huge objects in the sky beaming light down to the ground. Traveling by train through Apache County in the Arizona desert, the witness allegedly saw "six hovering, two-story objects beaming light to the ground level". A child of the woman who reported the astonishing sight filed the account to the US-based Mutual UFO Network (MUFON), the world's biggest organisation dedicated to alien research and investigation. The report said: "My mother was traveling through the Arizona desert via train, on her way to Texas. “She was unable to sleep due to movement of the train. She said she was looking out of the cabin window and saw a very bright light that became brighter as the train approached. http://www.express.co.uk/news/weird/816104/Six-UFOs-train-passenger-Arizona-MUFON The Show Stuff Checkout our new UFO BUSTER RADIO GOODIES!! https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio/ Facebook Pages Manny Moonraker: https://www.facebook.com/MannyMoonraker/ UFO Buster Radio: https://www.facebook.com/UFOBusterRadio UFO Buster Radio Merch T-Shirts and stuff: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio Patreon: Become a patron of the show and help us gear up with technology worthy of investigating UFO sightings both historical and new. www.patreon.com/ufobusterradio UFO Buster Radio YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCggl8-aPBDo7wXJQ43TiluA To contact Manny: manny@ufobusterradio.com, or on Twitter @ufobusterradio Call the show anytime at (972) 290-1329 and leave us a message with your point of view, UFO sighting, and ghostly experiences or join the discussion on www.ufobusterradio.com For Skype Users: bosscrawler
Article 1 - UFO Disappears Into Portal Above Colorado? A video that has been viewed millions of times on social media appears to be fake and originally indicated as originating from the state of Colorado. According to Gabe Hash, a Spanish-language YouTube personality who delves into unexplained phenomena, the video is a hoax and he used local kids skilled in Adobe After Effects to debunk the video. http://www.snopes.com/ufo-portal-colorado/ Article 2 - Train passenger says six 'mothership UFOs' were beaming light down to earth UFO investigators are looking into claims that a train passenger saw six huge objects in the sky beaming light down to the ground. Traveling by train through Apache County in the Arizona desert, the witness allegedly saw "six hovering, two-story objects beaming light to the ground level". A child of the woman who reported the astonishing sight filed the account to the US-based Mutual UFO Network (MUFON), the world's biggest organisation dedicated to alien research and investigation. The report said: "My mother was traveling through the Arizona desert via train, on her way to Texas. “She was unable to sleep due to movement of the train. She said she was looking out of the cabin window and saw a very bright light that became brighter as the train approached. http://www.express.co.uk/news/weird/816104/Six-UFOs-train-passenger-Arizona-MUFON The Show Stuff Checkout our new UFO BUSTER RADIO GOODIES!! https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio/ Facebook Pages Manny Moonraker: https://www.facebook.com/MannyMoonraker/ UFO Buster Radio: https://www.facebook.com/UFOBusterRadio UFO Buster Radio Merch T-Shirts and stuff: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio Patreon: Become a patron of the show and help us gear up with technology worthy of investigating UFO sightings both historical and new. www.patreon.com/ufobusterradio UFO Buster Radio YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCggl8-aPBDo7wXJQ43TiluA To contact Manny: manny@ufobusterradio.com, or on Twitter @ufobusterradio Call the show anytime at (972) 290-1329 and leave us a message with your point of view, UFO sighting, and ghostly experiences or join the discussion on www.ufobusterradio.com For Skype Users: bosscrawler
On this weeks episode of Expanded Perspectives the guys start the show off talking about how bee populations around the world have been in decline for years due to a number of reasons that make it extremely difficult to fix the problem. Urban development, insecticides, fungicides, illness, climate change, and many other factors have been determined to be responsible for the decline in bee populations. This week, the nonprofit Bee Informed Partnership and the Apiary Inspectors of America published their annual survey of 4,963 beekeepers in the United States and it seems that we still have a problem. But it was a slightly better year for our vital pollinating friends. Then, millions of Americans say they engage in extreme binge drinking — or downing at least eight to 10 drinks containing alcohol on a single occasion — and the behavior appears to be on the rise in the U.S., according to a new report. The findings are concerning because this high level of drinking is linked with health and safety risks, including an increased risk of injury or even death, according to the researchers, from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). The study "reveals that a large number of people in the United States drink at very high levels and underscores the dangers associated with such 'extreme' binge drinking," George F. Koob, director of the NIAAA, said in a statement. The researchers analyzed information from more than 36,000 Americans ages 18 and older who completed a survey about their alcohol consumption in 2012 to 2013. The researchers asked the participants to report the maximum number of alcoholic drinks they consumed on a single day in the past year. Binge drinking was defined as consuming four or more drinks on a single occasion (for women), or five or more drinks on a single occasion (for men), while extreme binge drinking was defined as consuming double those amounts, or more. Then, for years, scientists have debated whether heavy inland snowfall on the vast East Antarctic Ice Sheet — Earth’s largest — balances out the rapid melting in West Antarctica. Given enough snowfall, the continent might not yet be contributing to sea level rise. Most research shows the melt rate is so high that the continent is indeed losing ice. But in 2015, a group of NASA scientists published a controversial study that found Antarctica was instead gaining ice. The NASA team combined space- and land-based measurements and found so much snow dropping in East Antarctica that even with drastic melting elsewhere, the continent was adding some 80 billion tons of ice annually. It contradicted prominent previous findings — including reports from the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The result drew global headlines and excited climate change skeptics. That’s despite warnings from the study’s lead author, NASA Goddard’s chief cryospheric scientist Jay Zwally, who predicted that melting would outpace increased snowfall in a decade or two. Then, An Arizona witness traveling by train through Apache County reported watching and photographing six hovering, “two-story” objects beaming light to the ground level. After the break Cam brings up the incredible tale of "The Black Flash". Shadowy figures have long haunted the pages of history. From ghosts to goblins to things less mentionable, the human psyche has a habit of inventing monsters to inhabit the dark reaches of the unknown. Several such figures have been chronicled: the Halifax Slasher, the London Monster, and Spring-Heeled Jack, to name a few. Today, we’ll be adding another cloaked and hooded terror to the rogue’s gallery, this one known by a name straight out of a comic book: the Black Flash. All of this and more on this weeks episode of Expanded Perspectives! Show Notes: A Third of America's Bee Colonies Died Last Year and That's Good News Extreme Binge Drinking Is On the Rise in the US Is Antarctica Gaining or Losing Ice? Nature May Have Just Settled the Debate Arizona Witness Sees 6 Hovering Disk The Black Flash Sponsors: GAIA Dollar Shave Club Music: All music for Expanded Perspectives is provided by Pretty Lights. Purchase, Download and Donate at www.prettylightsmusic.com. Songs Used: Pretty Lights vs. Led Zeppelin Cold Feeling At Last I Am Free My Other Love
On this weeks episode of Expanded Perspectives the guys start the show off talking about how bee populations around the world have been in decline for years due to a number of reasons that make it extremely difficult to fix the problem. Urban development, insecticides, fungicides, illness, climate change, and many other factors have been determined to be responsible for the decline in bee populations. This week, the nonprofit Bee Informed Partnership and the Apiary Inspectors of America published their annual survey of 4,963 beekeepers in the United States and it seems that we still have a problem. But it was a slightly better year for our vital pollinating friends. Then, millions of Americans say they engage in extreme binge drinking — or downing at least eight to 10 drinks containing alcohol on a single occasion — and the behavior appears to be on the rise in the U.S., according to a new report. The findings are concerning because this high level of drinking is linked with health and safety risks, including an increased risk of injury or even death, according to the researchers, from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). The study "reveals that a large number of people in the United States drink at very high levels and underscores the dangers associated with such 'extreme' binge drinking," George F. Koob, director of the NIAAA, said in a statement. The researchers analyzed information from more than 36,000 Americans ages 18 and older who completed a survey about their alcohol consumption in 2012 to 2013. The researchers asked the participants to report the maximum number of alcoholic drinks they consumed on a single day in the past year. Binge drinking was defined as consuming four or more drinks on a single occasion (for women), or five or more drinks on a single occasion (for men), while extreme binge drinking was defined as consuming double those amounts, or more. Then, for years, scientists have debated whether heavy inland snowfall on the vast East Antarctic Ice Sheet — Earth’s largest — balances out the rapid melting in West Antarctica. Given enough snowfall, the continent might not yet be contributing to sea level rise. Most research shows the melt rate is so high that the continent is indeed losing ice. But in 2015, a group of NASA scientists published a controversial study that found Antarctica was instead gaining ice. The NASA team combined space- and land-based measurements and found so much snow dropping in East Antarctica that even with drastic melting elsewhere, the continent was adding some 80 billion tons of ice annually. It contradicted prominent previous findings — including reports from the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The result drew global headlines and excited climate change skeptics. That’s despite warnings from the study’s lead author, NASA Goddard’s chief cryospheric scientist Jay Zwally, who predicted that melting would outpace increased snowfall in a decade or two. Then, An Arizona witness traveling by train through Apache County reported watching and photographing six hovering, “two-story” objects beaming light to the ground level. After the break Cam brings up the incredible tale of "The Black Flash". Shadowy figures have long haunted the pages of history. From ghosts to goblins to things less mentionable, the human psyche has a habit of inventing monsters to inhabit the dark reaches of the unknown. Several such figures have been chronicled: the Halifax Slasher, the London Monster, and Spring-Heeled Jack, to name a few. Today, we’ll be adding another cloaked and hooded terror to the rogue’s gallery, this one known by a name straight out of a comic book: the Black Flash. All of this and more on this weeks episode of Expanded Perspectives! Show Notes: A Third of America's Bee Colonies Died Last Year and That's Good News Extreme Binge Drinking Is On the Rise in the US Is Antarctica Gaining or Losing Ice?