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Naoki Hiroshima さんをゲストに迎えて、MacBook Pro, 近況、Gmail, Wordle, 将棋、パンデミックなどについて話しました。 スポンサー: Linode Show Notes C Programming Language 2nd Ed. CalCare Learn C the Hard Way 'G Suite legacy free edition users' have to pay for Workspace Fastmail Use Custom Email Domain with iCloud Mail Pobox Forward Email David Sirota Linode ★ Wordle - A daily word game The Wordle clones have disappeared from the App Store 浅草キッド 新聞記者 ザ・ファブル 殺さない殺し屋 Number 1044号 将棋特集 Novak Djokovic leaves Australia COVIDtests.gov - Free at-home COVID-19 tests analytics.usa.gov My first impressions of web3 YouTube's Attempts to Curb Misinformation Benefited Fox News The Speed Cubers
It was called the “Economic Miracle," and Italy's economic expansion after World War II was so rapid -- and her climb from war and poverty to wealth and prosperity so drastic -- that one might be tempted to believe that God had in fact deigned to bless Italia with La Dolce Vita… the Sweet Life! But this “miracle” also triggered unprecedented social, cultural, and religious changes, so this week we're unpacking those changes with Dr. Roy Domenico, the author of “The Devil and the Dolce Vita: Catholic Attempts to Save Italy's Soul, 1948-1973.” This book tells the story of how the Catholic Church of Popes Pius XII, John XXIII and Paul VI, the lay Catholic Action association, and Italy's near-monolithic Christian Democratic Party, worked in a series of culture wars to preserve a traditional way of life and to engage and tame the challenges of a rapidly modernizing society. We discuss the April 1948 Christian Democratic electoral triumph and how their nearly thirty-year political hegemony ended when pro-divorce forces dealt the Catholics a defeat in the referendum of May 1974. We'll examine the Lateran Accords of 1929 and how the Vatican city-state's relationship with Italy has evolved over the years, as well as the battles over what was considered proper decorum affected Catholic and Italian society during the 1960s and 1970s. And, ultimately, we'll explore how Catholicism is a driving force in Italian culture -- even today -- and how it has affected Italian and Italian American life. If you're a student of Italian history, practice the Catholic faith, or just love a great tale, you won't want to miss this fascinating episode!
Erik Cason Joins me for an in-depth conversation exploring some of his written works and Kantian philosophy related to the nature of truth and power in the context of Bitcoin's emergence.Be sure to check out NYDIG, one of the most important companies in Bitcoin: https://nydig.com/GUESTErik's Twitter: https://twitter.com/ErikcasonErik's Website: http://cryptosovereignty.org/PODCASTPodcast Website: https://whatismoneypodcast.com/Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-what-is-money-show/id1541404400Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/25LPvm8EewBGyfQQ1abIsE?si=wgVuY16XR0io4NLNo0A11A&nd=1RSS Feed: https://feeds.simplecast.com/MLdpYXYITranscript:OUTLINE00:00:00 “What is Money?” Intro00:00:08 The Military Value of Cryptoassets00:05:09 Bitcoin as a Refusal of the Praxis of Violence00:08:40 Physical Power vs. Political Power00:11:58 The Nature of True Crypto-Sovereignty00:16:00 Encountering Truth and Emergence of the Cyphernet00:21:00 Money as the Prime Mover; Organizations are Applications of Money00:25:07 The Incentives Underlying Statism00:29:21 Satoshi as Homo Sacer00:35:54 Satoshi as a Pioneer of a New Digital Continent00:43:01 Bitcoin Kicking Off the “Knife Fight Between Nation-States”00:48:37 Agape and the Encounter with the “Perfect Other”00:57:48 Human Nature: A Core Component of Bitcoin01:01:04 NYDIG01:02:12 An Economic Machine of Truth Requires Proof-of-Work01:07:54 Bitcoin is Parasiticide to Bureaucracy01:17:05 Reimagining the Meta-Structures Superimposed on Power Relations01:21:31 The Inversion of Politics: “Truth, Not Authority, Makes Legitimacy”01:32:06 Physics-Rooted Encryption Bringing Humans Nearer to Natural Law?01:40:23 Enlightenment as the Emergence of Nonage01:47:24 All Human Decrees by Fiat are Attempts at Playing God01:58:22 A Hopeful Vision for the Adaptation of Statism to Bitcoin02:02:02 Enlightenment Requires the Free Use of Human Reason02:11:11 Bitcoin as the Only Antidote to the Self-Deception of Fiat02:16:09 3% Global Adoption as a Catalyst to Hyperbitcoinization?02:21:21 “Righteous Anger is that which is Directed at Resolution”02:27:11 The Risk of a Core Error in Bitcoin02:29:20 The Paradoxical Concourse of Human PoliticsSOCIALBreedlove Twitter: https://twitter.com/Breedlove22WiM? Twitter: https://twitter.com/WhatisMoneyShowLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/breedlove22/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/breedlove_22/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@breedlove22?lang=enAll My Current Work: https://linktr.ee/breedlove22WRITTEN WORKMedium: https://breedlove22.medium.com/Substack: https://breedlove22.substack.com/WAYS TO CONTRIBUTEBitcoin: 3D1gfxKZKMtfWaD1bkwiR6JsDzu6e9bZQ7Sats via Strike: https://strike.me/breedlove22Sats via Tippin.me: https://tippin.me/@Breedlove22Dollars via Paypal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/RBreedloveDollars via Venmo: https://venmo.com/code?user_id=1784359925317632528The "What is Money?" Show Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=32843101&fan_landing=trueRECOMMENDED BUSINESSESWorldclass Bitcoin Financial Services: https://nydig.com/Join Me At Bitcoin 2022 (10% off if paying with fiat, or discount code BREEDLOVE for Bitcoin): https://www.tixr.com/groups/bitcoinconference/events/bitcoin-2022-26217Automatic Recurring Bitcoin Buying: https://www.swanbitcoin.com/breedlove/Buy Bitcoin in a Tax-Advantaged Account: https://www.daim.io/robert-breedlove/Home Delivered Organic Grass-Fed Beef (Spend $159+ for 4 lbs. free): https://truorganicbeef.com/discount/BREEDLOVE22Buy Your Dream Home without Selling Your Bitcoin with Ledn: https://ledn.io/en/?utm_source=breedlove&utm_medium=email+&utm_campaign=substack
This week on Marketing O'Clock, you won't BILLieve the new name elected officials gave performance advertising in proposed legislation. Plus, is Google Analytics illegal in Austria? Then, we tell you everything you need to know (and what you should forget) from the Google Ads Expert Series and we 100% subscribe to Instagram's latest test. All this and a whole lot more digital marketing news on a very fast news week! --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Intro - 00:00
Diamond & Silk Chit Chat Live Talk About Democrat Attempts to Take Over Elections SHARE, SHARE, SHARE Visit https://MyPillow.com Save up to 66%, use Code: TrumpWon Follow Diamond and Silk at https://ChatDit.com Follow Diamond and Silk on https://Gettr.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Two issues are addressed on this edition.- Attempts to impose a modern ethic over Scripture results in a whacked translation of 1 Corinthians 6-9 for the New RSV. Here is how worldview impact language and translations of the Bible. Bottom line. . . human languages must bend to the biblical worldview, and better translations should follow. But, what happens when the Bible and its translations are made subject to the worldviews of post-Christian or anti-Christian cultures- Then, we ask the question, to what extent should we deal with arguments and polemics-- When conservatives are marked more by what they hate, than what they love, we have the problem of Ephesus.- We are called to hate. . .the deeds of the Nicolaitans, whoever they were.- But, more importantly, we are called too love. . . Jesus. --This program includes---1. The World View in 5 Minutes with Adam McManus -4,000 pastors joined MacArthur - preached on Biblical sexuality, Supreme Court takes Coach Kennedy's football prayer case, Sudanese Muslims killed 28 Christians, burned down 57 homes---2. Generations with Kevin Swanson
To start the show we read some reviews from our listeners, then we get into this weeks 'Of The Weeks, including 'But it feels better like this moment of the week (10:37), Realtor.ca commercial moment of the week (14:35), and Caught in 4k moment of the week (20:55). We then get into our Backpage News including headlines like; 'Supply shortages mean Norwegian conscripts must return their used underwear at the end of their military services' (22:57), 'Maryland Firefighters Rescue Man Stuck in Chimney: ‘He Was Not Authorized to Be There'' (28:14), ''I was bad wrong': Tennessee state lawmaker apologizes after trying to pants referee at basketball game' (31:57), and 'Woman Who Earned $200,000 Selling Fart Jars Hospitalized By Her Work' (39:01). In Sports Racco talks Jimmy G's legendary performance and question why Bulldogs are a common mascot. Follow our NEW Instagram @dttwpod we're going to be having a merch giveaway SOON. Also check out our website and YouTube Channel for more content
Thanks for listening! Support: www.conspiracyorjustacoincidence.com Venmo: @conspiracyorjac Twitter@cojacpodcast instagram @conspiracyorjac Leave a review, thanks everyone! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jackallen1/support
DISCUSSED: Memories of Super Dave; KEYnote by LockPickingLawyer; Dan gets conspiracy theory-curious; the tapestry of entertainment by cults; Dan helps Merlin understand Git; and Merlin gets a new hub.
DISCUSSED: Memories of Super Dave; KEYnote by LockPickingLawyer; Dan gets conspiracy theory-curious; the tapestry of entertainment by cults; Dan helps Merlin understand Git; and Merlin gets a new hub.
DISCUSSED: Memories of Super Dave; KEYnote by LockPickingLawyer; Dan gets conspiracy theory-curious; the tapestry of entertainment by cults; Dan helps Merlin understand Git; and Merlin gets a new hub.
DISCUSSED: Memories of Super Dave; KEYnote by LockPickingLawyer; Dan gets conspiracy theory-curious; the tapestry of entertainment by cults; Dan helps Merlin understand Git; and Merlin gets a new hub.
DISCUSSED: Memories of Super Dave; KEYnote by LockPickingLawyer; Dan gets conspiracy theory-curious; the tapestry of entertainment by cults; Dan helps Merlin understand Git; and Merlin gets a new hub.
The US prison in Cuba has been beset by allegations of torture since it was set up 20 years ago. But despite all the promises to close it down, it remains operational with no end in sight, says Julian Borger. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/infocus
Salazar is interrogated by Isabel and the coven find themselves in a moral dilemma on how to handle him and the bandits he leads.Join us live on Twitch, Friday nights at 7pm EDT:http://twitch.tv/OccultistsAnonymousSupport the show by joining our Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/OccultistsAnonymousGet your own Occultists Anonymous, Rookery, and Into The West Merch:http://occultanon.threadless.comFollow us on Twitter:https://twitter.com/OccultistsAJoin us on Discord:http://www.yeetointo.spaceGet the Book. Play the Game:https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/181754/Mage-the-Awakening-2nd-Edition?affiliate_id=723048View the Chronicle's Wiki:https://kanka.io/en-US/campaign/54701Character Art by Brenna Goche: https://twitter.com/CloudBoundCorgiTheodosia Character Design by Elijah Vardo:https://linktr.ee/elijahvardoMusic: LuIzA - Chrono Trigger "...And in Her Self-Loathing and Despair, She Found Wrath" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR01989Chimpazilla, Emunator - The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild "Torchlight" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR04224Eladar - Golden Sun "Riding the Desert Winds" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR04096RebeccaETripp - Final Fantasy X "Macalania Shaman" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR04116Forest Elves - Final Fantasy VIII "Wings of Freedom" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR04009Jeff Ball, Jillian Aversa, XPRTNovice, zircon - Final Fantasy VI "A Fistful of Nickels" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR02687MkVaff - Kid Icarus: Uprising "Black Feathers in the Sky" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR04200Brandon Strader, Chickenwarlord, Lemonectric, Tuberz McGee - The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons "No Rain in the Desert" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR03099Jorito, Aster, Furilas, Lauren the Flute - Skies of Arcadia "Il buono, il brutto, il pirata dell'aria" https://ocremix.org/remix/OCR03901
On this Bob & Tom Extra: We have turkey, Willie G attempting sports, and Donnie Baker! Support the show: https://members.bobandtom.com/pcd/document?iid=99001I**GTZ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thursday will mark the one-year anniversary of the attack on the US Capitol and insurrection. A vigil is planned this year, and President Biden says he will address the nation. Former President Trump, whose supporters attacked the Capitol, is also expected to hold a news conference - and he may be planning another run for office in 2024. Special Correspondent Jeff Greenfield joins to discuss the history of presidential re-runs. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Thursday will mark the one-year anniversary of the attack on the US Capitol and insurrection. A vigil is planned this year, and President Biden says he will address the nation. Former President Trump, whose supporters attacked the Capitol, is also expected to hold a news conference - and he may be planning another run for office in 2024. Special Correspondent Jeff Greenfield joins to discuss the history of presidential re-runs. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
The lawyers for Jane Doe have accused the estate for Epstein of stonewalling their attempts to get crucial documentation and are attempting to force their hand.(Commercial at 16:58)To contact me:Bobbycapucci@protonmail.comSource:https://abcnews.go.com/US/victims-attorney-accuses-epstein-estate-attempts-stonewall-lawsuit/story?id=71830202
An Israeli hospital administered fourth Covid-19 vaccine doses to a test group, as the country considers approving the measure for vulnerable populations in a bid to outpace a surge in infections fueled by the Omicron variant. In a now-viral tweet on Sunday, Kristin Livdahl said that when her 10-year-old daughter asked the Alexa voice assistant on their Amazon Echo for a “challenge,” it suggested the child do something lethal. Gov. Gavin Newsom has until sometime next month to allow or block the parole recommendation for Robert F. Kennedy assassin Sirhan Sirhan. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It has been observed that job seekers with expertise in some subjects or trades face exams with far more confidence than those who bank solely on clearing the competition tests. ----more---- https://theprint.in/opinion/multiple-attempts-waste-productive-yrs-of-aspirants-pick-subjects-you-like-ex-upsc-chairman/788109/
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to those who are celebrating! Today we are on a new subreddit r/entitledparents and listening to Christmas stories. Enjoy!www.redditreadings.com https://audiobookkraken.com/
Football Writer for The Athletic Ben Baldwin joined Game Play earlier to discuss all things NFL including what teams to "trust" in the NFL, the old age debate on whether or not to go for 4th downs in certain situations and much more!
Episode 50: Uthman Bin Mazh'un Returns to Makkah & Abu Bakr Attempts to Leave Welcome to Seerah Pearls, which aims to highlight some tantalising learning points from each episode of the Seerah- Life of the Prophet (sallallahu alayhi wasallam). The Uprising against the Boycott There were a few people who opposed the boycott. Gradually, opposition grew and the people gathered together to speak out against it. Hisham went to Zuhair bin Abi Umayyah bin Mughirah. Hisham questioned his acceptance of the boycott, whilst his family suffered. Zuhair said he was unhappy, but felt helpless. He felt they needed a third person to oppose the boycott. Mu'tim bin Adi was approached and they discussed the same issue. Mu'tim also disagreed with the boycott. These three influential people approached Abul Bukhtari and they go together to Zama bin al-Aswad, who also joins the opposition. They all agreed to gather together and make a stand at the Haram. This is the start of the abolition of the boycott discussed in the previous episode. Uthman bin Mazh'un Returns to Makkah Scholars say that the first return of the companions from Abyssinia occurred after the boycott. They heard rumours that the Makkans had accepted Islam and thought it was safe to return, but the harsh reality was that things were just as dangerous for the Muslims. It was the tradition at the time that if a respectable man would grant his protection to someone, that person would be saved from violence or harm. Uthman bin Mazh'un, an early companion of the Prophet (sallallahu alayhi wasallam), was looking for protection. Walid bin al-Mughirah granted this to him and announced it to the community at the Ka'ba. However, Uthman could not reconcile that he was being protected by someone who did shirk, but his fellow Muslim brethren were suffering. Thus, he publicly returned the protection, saying he was happy with Allah as his protector. A heated conversation ensued between Uthman and a poet from the Quraysh, resulting in Uthman being struck and suffering injury to his eye. Walid commented that if he maintained his protection, Uthman's eye would have been fine, but Uthman retorted that the sacrifice was worth it if it was for the sake of Allah, and the other healthy eye was in need of injury for this cause. Uthman felt he needed no greater protection than the Almighty Allah.
Joy Reid Attempts to Cancel Elon Musk Thank you to our Top Patreon Supporters! Andrew and Connie, Christine, Gary, ETW, Chuck, Dee, Pamela, Jacklyn,Rick, Rich, Nick. Support the show and become a Patreon Supporter! https://www.patreon.com/realbriancraigshow Huge Deals and Savings on MyPillow products with our ProMo Code KANE at Checkout! https://www.mypillow.com/kane Big Fat Real Estate Checks https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/big-fat-real-estate-checks/id1532517616 Warriors 4 Christ https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/warriors4christ https://www.stellarshop.org https://exoticexpansion.com https://www.shopdelboca.com/ All my LINKS https://linktr.ee/briancraigshow
Wednesday, December 16, 1835 was a bitterly cold day, known as ”cold Wednesday”. Hanover, NH only reached a high temperature of -17 degrees. It was -12 degrees at Boston by sunset. But it was in New York City that the cold did it's most damage. It was so cold that the East River was frozen: Fire fighter couldn't access the water, The Great NYC Fire of 1835 leveled 17 blocks that night, including most of Wall Street. The fire began on the evening of December 16, 1835, in a five-story warehouse at 25 Merchant Street, now known as Beaver Street at the intersection of Hanover Square and Wall Street. As it spread, gale-forces winds blowing from the northwest toward the East River spread the fire. The conflagration was visible from Philadelphia, approximately 80 miles away. At the time of the fire, major water sources including the East River and the Hudson Rover were frozen in temperatures as low as −17 °F . Firefighters were forced to drill holes through ice to access water, which later re-froze around the hoses and pipes. Attempts were made to deprive the fire of fuel by demolishing surrounding buildings, but at first there was insufficient gunpowder in Manhattan. Finally a detachment of U. S. Marines and sailors arrived at 3 o'clock in the morning, with gunpowder from the Brooklyn Navy Yard and began to blow up buildings in the fire's path. An investigation found that a burst gas pipe, ignited by a coal stove, was the initial source; no blame was assigned. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Many of us consider our lives a balancing act, but 74-year-old British strongman John Evans takes balancing to a whole new level. Corin Dann spoke to John before he broke his 99th world record - balancing a chimney on his head while dressed as Santa Clause.
What's up guys?! Today go over our Week 14 Recap for the 2021 NFL Season! We hope you enjoy the episode. Follow us on social media @SparkTalk2 for Twitter and @SparkTalk for Instagram. Follow Houston @VarsityGinger55 and Wyatt @_Sparky_4 on Instagram. Thank you for listening and enjoy!
Natural springs are a thing of beauty and also of mystery. Attempts to find the source of this spring have led divers to incredible depths...
Strategic reserves -- everything from Canadian maple syrup to seeds -- are intended to stabilize prices or to help us survive, in both the short and long term. So what are we keeping and why? (and what happens if someone steals it?!) Like what you hear? Become a patron of the arts for as little as $2 a month! Or buy the book or some merch. Hang out with your fellow Brainiacs. Reach out and touch Moxie on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Music: Kevin MacLeod, David Fesliyan. Reach out and touch Moxie on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Links to all the research resources are on the website. In the latter half of the 20th century, American wines finally began to come into their own on the global scene. It was no longer a social faux pas to be seen drinking California chardonnay. Hastened by a global recession, consumption of European wines by Europeans dropped precipitously, by nearly 1/2 in France and by almost ⅔ in Italy. What's a vineyard to do if they've produced more wine than the public is buying? Put it in the wine lake, of course. My name's… A strategic reserve is the reserve of a commodity or items that is held back from normal use by governments, organisations, or businesses in pursuance of a particular strategy or to cope with unexpected events. Your mind may go immediately to the 35 million barrels or so of crude oil that the US has in storage, but there are all kinds of strategic reserves, sometimes called stockpiles, throughout the world. Most of those stockpiles are intended to guard against price fluctuations. Today will trend more toward survival necessities, but if you've ever done any kind of research, you know that start off thinking you're going down one road and wind up goodness knows where. The rationing, deprivation, and economic collapse that were part and parcel to WWII affected the lives of Europeans so profoundly that the European Economic Community, a precursor to the European Union, began subsidizing farmers. Farmers have never been raking in the big bucks, even when the are outstanding in their field [rimshot], but they were no longer able to rely on it to support their families, especially on land pock-marked with those pesky bomb craters. Under-production was endemic to the 1950's. The Common Agricultural Policy was created in 1962 to pay guaranteed, artificially high prices to dairy farmers for surplus products. These products were then sold the European public for higher prices, causing a drop in sales. Attempts by non-EU dairies to get in on these high sale prices were kiboshed by heavy taxes. A certain portion of products were stockpiled, to guard against crop failures, natural disasters, or in case someone got a wild hair and started WWIII. In 1986 alone, the EU bought 1.23 million tons of leftover butter. That's 9,840,000,000 sticks of creamy saturated fat goodness. While this may sound like a dairy-lover's dream, the general public was not so enthusiastic when word got out of what was termed the “butter mountain,” nor were they keen to learn they were paying inflated prices for their dairy goods. This program actually cost a lot of taxpayer money, almost 90% of the European Economic Communities entire budget. Even as recently as 2003, these payments are approximately half of the EU budget, even though farming is only 3% of the overall economy. It still took until the ‘90s for something to be done about it, however. Instead of paying farmers for their unwanted butter, the EEC switched to paying them to not produce it. To move away from paying farmers guaranteed minimum prices for surplus goods, the government has shifted to paying to farmers so they won't produce as much. While it seems counter-intuitive, it's not uncommon for governments to pay farmers not farm. It's been done here in the US since the 1930's. Some of the prohibitively high import taxes were rescinded as well. In 2007, the butter surplus was liquidated, figuratively speaking. In 2009, however, the global recession did require some of the old policies to be reinstated. The EU claimed it was only a temporary measure that would result in a smaller butter reserve than before, a butter hill rather than a mountain. A grass-fed knoll, if you will. This was no magic butter, of course. Critics argue that farming subsidies in first-world nations hurt developing countries whose farmers can't compete with the artificial prices. The 300,000 tons of butter the government bought cost taxpayers a whopping €280,000,000, or about a third of a billion dollars, and public pressure quickly rose to get rid of it again. As of 2011, a portion of the butter had been donated to the worldwide Food Aid for the Needy program. They don't have this down pat, though. Changing medical views about fat are leading people to return to butter rather than vegetable oils or margarine, at a rate that's outpacing production. Oh, Canada, the great white north, full of polite people, ice hockey, geese, and maple syrup. There are worse reputations for a country to have. What a pleasant and wholesome thing maple syrup is, drizzled on pancakes on a sunny Sunday morning. It lands strangely on the brain to learn that there is a Global Strategic Maple Syrup Reserve. The Canadian maple syrup industry produces approximately 80% of the world's pure maple syrup and is the leading global producer of maple products. The province of Quebec alone has almost 8,000 farms, fulfilling 72% of the worlds sticky sweet needs. Maple syrup is harvested from the sap of maple trees, shockingly, but the process is even more fickle than your average crop. Maple trees require nights below freezing and days that are in the low thirties but above freezing to relinquish their sap in useful quantities. If the nights are too warm or the days are too cold, production levels can vary wildly based on the weather. That isn't good news if you're trying to maintain a large-scale industry. It takes 40 units of sap to get one unit of syrup, though a long boiling process called sugaring off. Corporate buyers depend on a consist supply. Since 2000, the Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup Producers has been squirreling away barrels of surplus syrup in rich times, in preparation for poor harvests. The Federation's warehouses have a capacity of 10 million kilos / 22.2 million pounds of syrup, or about two million gallons. Each barrel weighs about 620 pounds and commands a price of $1,650, almost 20 times the cost of crude oil. Speaking of oil, some producers claim the Federation runs their operation like OPEC. Those producers who don't cooperate with the quota system, those with the temerity to find their own buyers, are dealt with harshly. Small producer Angèle Grenier told reporter Leyland Cecco she will face criminal charges if she doesn't stop selling to a private broker after the courts ordered her to hand her syrup over. She has three choices: give the Federation her syrup crop, face jail time, or shut down. “The federation's goal by taking our maple syrup is that by taking our income, we cannot pay our lawyers,” says Grenier. “If one year we make 45 barrels, and the next year is a very good year and we make 60, we want to get paid for the 60,” she says. Once a producer fills the quota, the surplus, no matter how large, is retained until it is sold. That lag-time can run into years. According to Grenier, a neighboring producer is owed almost 100,000 Canadian dollars in unsold syrup. According to Al Jazeera America, a small Quebec producer described what happened to his family's business: “The agent who came here to seize our syrup said, ‘If you were growing pot, we wouldn't be giving you as much trouble.' When an accountant went to inventory the barrels in the warehouse in Saint-Louis-de-Blanford, he was alarms to find a number of the barrels filled with water, while others were plain empty. Because of the sheer volume of syrup, it would take two months to even determine how much was missing. About 60 percent of the reserve, worth about $18 million at that time, had been stolen. The thieves had rented space in the same warehouse and when the security guards were out of sight, siphoned the syrup from the barrels over the course of 11 months. A multi-agency search began. Hundreds of people were questioned and dozens of search warrants were issued. It took a year for the 26 people believed to be involved in the robbery to be arrested. About ⅓ of the syrup would never be recovered. The mastermind, Richard Vallieres, received an eight-year prison sentence, which will be increased to 14 years if he doesn't pay $9.4 million in fines, the CBC reports. Vallières was found guilty of theft, fraud and trafficking stolen goods. His father, Raymond, and syrup reseller Etienne St-Pierre, have also been found guilty. Speaking of Canada, I'm 100% serious about a virtual watch-party for the Letterkenny season 10 premier, soc med. To quote the show to make a clunky segue, what's a Mennonite's favorite kind of raisin? Barn-raisin'. Yes, Virginia, there is a national raisin reserve. That's right, raisins, those polarizing wrinkly former grapes. While most stockpiles are created to protect against shortage, the National Raisin Reserve came to be for the opposite reason. We were up to our epaulets in raisins, apparently. During World War II, both the government and civilians bought raisins en masse to send to soldiers overseas, as a sweet, shelf stable taste of home. Increased demand led to increased production, but when the war ended and the care packages stopped, the raisin market was flooded. In 1949, Marketing Order 989 was passed which created the reserve and the Raisin Administrative Committee to oversee it, under the supervision of the USDA. The Committee was empowered to take a varying percentage of American raisin farmers' produce, sometimes almost half, in an effort to create a raisin shortage and artificially drive up the market price. The reserved raisins didn't go to waste. Much of it was used in school lunches, fed to livestock, or sold to other countries. If the raisins were sold, the profit was supposed to be shared with the farmers, but those monies could easily be eaten up by operating expenses, leaving nothing for the people who actually grew the grapes. This program stayed in place, business as usual, for 53 years, until 2002. That's when farmer Marvin Horne decided that he would rather sell the product he had grown and processed instead of giving it away to the government. The government took exception to this idea. Private detectives were dispatched to put his farm under surveillance, then trucks were sent to collect the raisins. When Horne refused to let the trucks on his property, he was slapped with a bill for about $680,000, the value of the raisins plus a penalty. Not one to roll over that easily, Horne sued the government, claiming the forced forfeiture of his crop was unconstitutional. For years, the case was volleyed from one court to another. Eventually, it appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court, not once but twice. The first time was to settle the issue of jurisdiction. Justice Elena Kagan suggested that the question was “whether the marketing order is a Taking or it's just the world's most outdated law.” The second time was the core issue - was the seizure of raisins a violation of the Fifth Amendment, which prohibits the government taking personal property without just compensation? In 2015, thirteen years after the farce began, the court ruled 8:1 in favor of Horne: For seizures to continue, compensation would have to be paid, that the confiscation of a portion of a farmer's crops without market price compensation was unconstitutional. While many growers supports Horne in his efforts, even contributing to his legal fees, not everyone thinks of him as a champion of the little guy. Some who followed the government's orders while Horne defied them resent him for it. “I lost a lot of my land, following the rules,” said Eddie Wayne Albrecht, a raisin grower in nearby Del Rey, Calif. He lost so much money in turning in as much as 47% of his crop that his farm, once 1,700 acres strong, is now only 100 acres. “He got 100 percent, while I was getting 53 percent,” Albrecht said. “The criminal is winning right now.” What's happening with the raisin reserve now? The Agriculture Department could abolish it, but they have only hit pause on it, saying “Due to a recent United States Supreme Court decision, [the Volume Control] provisions are currently suspended, being reviewed, and will be amended.” At least that means that in the meantime, no more raisins should be put into the reserve and farmers are free to sell what's theirs. Bonus fact the first: Golden raisins aren't dried white grapes. Both regular and golden raisins are made from the same kind of grapes, but with slightly different processes. MIDROLL Do you remember how, after like the third time Futurama got cancelled, they did a quartet of movies, which went back and forth in quality like the Star Trek films. The one, Into the Wild Green Yonder, featured a creature called the Encyclopod, who preserved the DNA of all endangered species. It's not news that animal species are disappearing at an increasing rate, with a quarter of all known mammals and a tenth of all birds facing possible extinction within the next generation. Global biodiversity is declining at an overwhelming speed. With each species that disappears, vast amounts of information about their biology, ecology and evolutionary history is irreplaceably lost. In 2004, three British organizations decided to join forces and combat the issue. The Natural History Museum, the Zoological Society of London, and Nottingham University joined forces, like highly-educated Planeteers, to create the Frozen Ark Project. To do this, they gathered and preserved DNA and living tissue samples from all the endangered species they could get their hands on (literally), so that future generations can study the genetic material far into the future. No, not like Jurassic Park. I think it's been established that that's a bad idea. So far, the Frozen Ark has over 700 samples stored at the University of Nottingham in England and participating consortium members in the U.S., Germany, Australia,India, South Africa, Norway, and others. DNA donations come from museums, university laboratories, and zoos. Their mission has four component: to coordinating global efforts in animal biobanking; to share expertise; to help to organisations and governments set up biobanks in their own countries; and to provide the physical and informatics infrastructure that will allow conservationists and researchers to search for, locate, and use this material wherever possible without having to resample from wild populations. The Frozen Ark Project was founded in 2004 by Professor Bryan Clarke, a geneticist at the University of Nottingham, his wife Dr Ann Clarke, an immunologist with experience in reproductive biology, and their friend Dame Anne McLaren, a leading figure in developmental biology. Starting in the 1960's, Clarke carried out comprehensive studies on land snails of the genus Partula, which are endemic to the volcanic islands of French Polynesia. Almost all Partula species disappeared within just 15 years, because of a governmental biological control plan that went horribly wrong. In the late '60s, the giant African land snail, a mollusk the size of a puppy, was introduced to the islands as a delicacy, but soon turned into a serious agricultural pest, because, as seems to happen 100% of the time humans think they know better, the giant snail had no natural predators. To control the African land snails, the carnivorous Florida rosy wolfsnail was introduced in the '70s, but it annihilated the native snails instead. As a last resort, Clarke's team managed to collect live specimens of the remaining 12 Partula species and bring them back to Britain. Tissue samples were frozen to preserve their DNA and an international captive breeding program was established. Currently, there are Partula species, including some that later became extinct in the wild, in a dozen zoos and a there few been a few promising reintroductions. The extinction story of the Partula snails resonated with the Clarkes, who realised that systematic collection and preservation of tissue, DNA, and viable cells of endangered species should become standard practice, ultimately inspiring the birth of Frozen Ark. The Frozen Ark Project operates as a federated model, building partnerships with organisations worldwide that share the same vision and goals. The Frozen Ark consortium has grown steadily since the project's launch, with new national and international organisations joining every year. There are now 27 partners, distributed across five continents. Biological samples like tissue or blood from animals in zoos and aquariums can be taken from live animals during routine veterinary work or from dead animals. Bonus fact: more of a nitpick, the post-mortem examination of an animal is a necropsy. Autopsy means examining the self. The biobanks can provide a safe storage for many types of biological material, particularly the highly valuable germ cells (sperm and eggs). Their work isn't merely theoretical for some distant day in the future. One success story of the Frozen Ark, which illustrates the benefits of combining cryobanked material, effective management, and a captive breeding program, is the alarmingly adorable black-footed ferret. The species was listed as “extinct in the wild” in 1996, but has since been reintroduced back to its habitat and is now gradually recovering. More recently, researchers were able to improve the genetic diversity to the wild population by using 20-year-old cryopreserved sperm and artificial insemination. There are many organizations around the world who have taken up the banner of seed preservation, nearly 2,000 in fact. Most of us have heard of the seed vault at Svalbard, the cool-looking tower sticking out of a Norwegian mountain, where the permafrost ensures the seeds are preserved without need for electricity. But that's not the seed vault I want to talk about today and fair warning, this one's gonna get heavy, but it's one of those stories I find endlessly fascinating and in a strange way, uplifting. In September 1941, German forces began to push into Leningrad, before and since called St Petersburg. They laid siege to the city, choking off the supply of food and other necessities to the city's two million residents. The siege of Leningrad didn't last a month, or two, or even six. The siege lasted nearly 900 days. Among the two million Soviet citizens struggling to survive were a group of scientists ready to make the ultimate sacrifice for the good of mankind. While they did, their leader, Nikolay Vavilov, Russian geneticist and plant geographer, lay dying in a Soviet prison a thousand miles away. Vavilov had travelled the world on what he called “a mission for all humanity.” Vavilov led 115 expeditions to 64 countries, to collect seeds of crop varieties and their wild ancestors. Based on his notes, modern biologists following in Vavilov's footsteps are able to document changes in the cultural and physical landscapes and the crop patterns in these places. To study the global food ecosystem, he conducted experiments in genetics to improve productivity for farmers. “He was one of the first scientists to really listen to farmers – traditional farmers, peasant farmers around the world – and why they felt seed diversity was important in their fields,” says Gary Paul Nabhan, ethnobiologist and author of ‘Where Our Food Comes From: Retracing Nikolay Vavilov's Quest to End Famine', continues: “All of our notions about biological diversity and needing diversity of foods on our plates to keep us healthy sprung from his work 80 years ago.” His hope was that one day science could work with agriculture to increase each farm's productivity and to create plants that would grow in any environment and bring an end to hunger. As Russia fought to find its way through undergoing revolutions, anarchy, and, most importantly to Vavilov, famines, he went about storing seeds at the Institute of Plant Industry, also known as the Pavlovsk Experimental Station. The scientists there collected thousands of varieties of fruits, vegetables, grains, and tubers. Unlike Svalbard and Kew Garden, the seeds a Pavlovsk weren't just stored as seeds, but some were perpetuated as plants in the field. This is because some varieties do not breed true from seeds, so can't be stored as seeds to get those plants in the future. There was one obstacle in Vavilo's way. Two, really, but one was much greater a threat, that being Joseph Stalin. The other threat was Stalin's favorite scientist, Trofim Lysenkoly. Lysenko was a dangerously mis-informed scientist. Rather than survival of the fittest, where the genes that help an organism survive long enough to reproduce are the ones that are passed on, Lysenko believed that organisms could inherit traits the parent acquired during its lifespan. Instead of believing that the giraffe with the longest neck was able to reach the food and live to have babies, he believed that the giraffe stretched its neck up and its baby would have a longer neck because of that. He also believed that if you grafted a branch from a desirable tree onto a less desirable tree, the base tree would improve. His theories about seeds and flowers were equally backwards. It was garbage science at best. At worst, well, we don't need to speculate on that. We saw it happen. Crops failed under his now-mandatory systems on the new collectivized farms, which themselves reduced productivity. Lysenko's policies brought on a famine. But he was in Stalin's favor and in the Soviet Union, that was all that mattered. In August 1948 when the Politburo outlawed the teaching of and research into classical Mendelian genetics, the pea plant-based genetics we learn about in middle school. This disastrous government interference in the face of widely-accepted science and its outcomes are called the Lysenko Effect. There was no way Stalin's favorite scientist was going to take the fall, so Stalin singled out Vavilov, who had been openly critical of Lysenko. He claimed Vavilov was responsible for the famines because his process of carefully selecting the best specimens of plants took too long to produce results. Vavilov was collecting seeds near Russia's border when he was arrested and subjected to 1700 hours of savage interrogation. World War II was in full swing and it was impossible for his family to find out what had happened to him. Vavilov, who spent his life trying to end famine, starved to death in the gulag. Back in Leningrad, some scientists from the Institute of Plant Industry were able to get the bulk of the tuber collection, and themselves, to another location within the city. A dozen of Vavilov's scientists stayed behind to safeguard the seed collection. At first, it seemed as though they'd only have to contend with marauding enemy troops breeching the city, seeking to steal the seeds or simply destroy the building. The red army pushed the Germans back as long as they could. Nothing moved in or out of the city. “Leningrad must die of starvation”, Hitler declared in a speech at Munich on November 8, 1941. As the siege dragged on, the scientists then had to contend with protecting the seeds from their own countrymen. Food was rationed, but once it ran out, people ate anything they could to survive--vermin, dogs, leather, sawdust, and as so often happens in such dark hours, some at the dead. The scientists barricaded themselves inside with hundreds of thousands of seeds, a quarter of which were edible just as they were, along with rice and grains. But they did not eat them. They took turns guarding the store room in shifts, even as they grew weaker, even as they heard the Germans looting and destroying out in the streets. The only thing that mattered was guarding the collection, safeguarding both the botanical past and future for mankind, and the work of their fallen Vavilov. One by one, the scientist began to die of starvation. One man died at his desk; another died surrounded by bags of rice. In the end, nine of the twelve scientists did not live to see the end of the siege. But not a single grain, seed, or tuber was eaten. According to Nabhan, “One of them said it was hard to wake up, it was hard to get on your feet and put on your clothes in the morning, but no, it was not hard to protect the seeds once you had your wits about you. Saving those seeds for future generations and helping the world recover after war was more important than a single person's comfort.” Unlike many of the 85 million deaths in WWII, those nine scientists' lives were not wasted. Today, many of the crops that we eat came from cross-breeding with varieties the scientists saved from destruction. As much as 80% of all the pre-collapse Soviet Union's fields were sown with varieties that originated in Vavilov's collection. It's a sad tale, I know, but also an amazing one that so few of us hear. Which is odd when you consider the thousands of hours of WWII documentaries out there. The world nearly lost Vavilov's collection a second time, though. In 2010, the land it sits on was being sold to a developer who planned to build private homes on the site. The collection can't just be moved; there are all sorts of complex legal and technical issues, including quarantines. The public called for the site to be preserved and in 2012, the Russian government took formal action to prevent the land from being conveyed to private buyers. As far as I can find, it stands safely still. Much to my lasting disappointment, the wine lake was not a physical lake of wine, like Willy Wonka's chocolate river for women with Live, Laugh, Love decor. In addition to subsidies equivalent to $1.7 billion per year, the EU purchased the vineyards' lower-quality grapes for what it called “crisis distillation,” turning the grapes into industrial alcohol and biofuels, rather than for drinking. This unfortunately encouraged some growers to produce more inferior grapes, so in 2008, the government just paid growers to dig up vines and abandon fields of surplus grapes. In 2015, all of the previously enacted programs were phased out, meaning wineries would once again be responsible for their own excesses. Remember…Thanks… https://listverse.com/2015/12/14/10-of-the-strangest-items-governments-are-stockpiling/ http://theweek.com/articles/454970/logic-behind-worlds-4-weirdest-strategic-reserves https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2012/12/20/why-maple-syrup-is-controlled-by-a-quebec-cartel/?utm_term=.8628802d4fe2 http://mentalfloss.com/article/87144/15-strategic-reserves-unusual-products https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butter_mountain https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-27/europeans-eat-into-butter-mountain-in-sign-high-prices-to-linger https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omBxXzdBR2Y https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiZ75XbG7YA https://verdict.justia.com/2015/07/15/raisins-regulations-and-politics-in-the-supreme-court https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Raisin_Reserve https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/one-growers-grapes-of-wrath/2013/07/07/ebebcfd8-e380-11e2-80eb-3145e2994a55_story.html?utm_term=.74d6dccd2110 http://www.agr.gc.ca/eng/industry-markets-and-trade/market-information-by-sector/horticulture/horticulture-sector-reports/statistical-overview-of-the-canadian-maple-industry-2015/?id=1475692913659 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-01-02/the-great-canadian-maple-syrup-heist https://explorepartsunknown.com/quebec/canadas-maple-syrup-cartel-puts-the-squeeze-on-small-producers/ https://modernfarmer.com/2014/01/illustrated-account-great-maple-syrup-heist/ http://time.com/4760432/maple-syrup-heist-prison-fine/ http://www.ediblegeography.com/syrup-stockpiles-wine-lakes-butter-mountains-and-other-strategic-food-reserves/ http://www.ediblegeography.com/syrup-stockpiles-wine-lakes-butter-mountains-and-other-strategic-food-reserves/ https://www.ft.com/content/982ed0e4-8a1d-11e4-9b5f-00144feabdc0 https://www.guildsomm.com/public_content/features/articles/b/guest_blog/posts/confeusion-a-quick-summary-of-the-eu-wine-reforms http://mentalfloss.com/article/87144/15-strategic-reserves-unusual-products https://listverse.com/2015/12/14/10-of-the-strangest-items-governments-are-stockpiling/ http://www.nww2m.com/2015/06/scitech-tuesday-when-the-rubber-meets-the-road/ https://insideecology.com/2018/01/12/the-frozen-ark-project-biobanking-endangered-animal-samples-for-conservation-and-research/ https://www.researchitaly.it/en/news/the-ice-memory-project-is-underway/#null https://www.arctictoday.com/ice-cores-best-link-ancient-climates-scientists-racing-preserve-still-can/ https://www.rbth.com/blogs/2014/05/12/the_men_who_starved_to_death_to_save_the_worlds_seeds_35135 https://www.amusingplanet.com/2018/08/the-scientists-who-starved-to-death.html
Water speculation purely for profit is already illegal in Colorado. But water users and some lawmakers are worried about a new potential threat: investors and out-of-state private equity buying up water rights to wait for an opportune time to sell. Attempts by two private companies to buy up water rights in Grand Valley and the San Luis Valley have prompted lawmakers to look at tightening up laws against water profiteering. They've drafted legislation to do so, but nobody — not even the bill's sponsors — are wholeheartedly behind the measure. a Reporter Michael Booth explains the water speculation fight that's being teed up for the 2022 legislative session. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Records recently obtained by WGN Investigates shed new light on the final hours in the life of Treasure Hendrix — a woman who was found dead of a drug overdose last August inside an RV owned by a Chicago Police officer. The records, obtained from the Cook County Medical Examiner's office via the Freedom of Information Act, also raise new questions about the relationship between the officer and Hendrix, who had a felony conviction for aggravated battery. The CPD's personnel rules forbid officers from associating with persons convicted of crimes. Hendrix, 35, was found dead on Aug. 19. Her family has said that, while she did drink, Hendrix did not use drugs. They've also called on the FBI to investigate her death. WGN is not naming the officer, as he has not been charged with any crimes. Attempts to reach him for comment were not successful. The CPD, meanwhile, is continuing to investigate the officer even though he quit the CPD a week after Hendrix was found dead. The officer resigned from the CPD on Aug. 26 — seven days after Hendrix, 35, was found dead in the officer's RV that was parked in a lot at 15th and Western, according to records from the CPD and Cook County Medical Examiner's office. An autopsy found that Hendrix died of a drug overdose involving alcohol, cocaine, fentanyl, meth and ecstasy. The medical examiner's office ruled her death an accident. A spokesman for the Civilian Office of Police Accountability said investigators initially responded to the case, but later referred it to the CPD's Bureau of Internal Affairs. A CPD spokesman on Thursday said both the department's internal investigation and the investigation into Hendrix's death remained open and active. Source: wgntv --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/leah-gordone/support
Around the country, school librarians are reporting an increasing number of requests from parents and politicians to ban or censor books available to children. Nadra Nittle, a reporter for The 19th, a non-profit newsroom covering politics, gender and policy, documented these complaints - and how librarians are pushing back. She joins Hari Sreenivasan for more. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Judge denies attempts to dismiss lawsuits over Georgia voting law; Third omicron case found in Georgia; Atlanta school board chair announces state Senate run; Family of 18-year-old crushed to death by elevator sues apartment complex, prep school
Anticipation of the birth of Carl's first grandchild has her thinking about the need for good prenatal care. Not everyone has access in this country. Attacks on Planned Parenthood and the Affordable Care Act make adequate medical care out of reach for too many Americans. Attempts to get to the bottom of the causes and responsibility for the January 6 insurrection continue, with Mark Meadows doing all he can to frustrate the process. Alec Baldwin's explanation for the accidental death of Halyna Hutchins raises yet more questions. The celebration of a birthday gets Ken and Carla thinking about aging - aging with energy, purpose, and meaning. Become a Patron: www.patreon.com/beachedwhitemaleSupport the show (http://thebeachedwhitemale.com)
Rob Paul and AJ Marchese talk all the best and worst rookie performances from Week 13 in the NFL! They start with the QB rundown where they go through another lame Trevor Lawrence game, an ok performance from Zach Wilson, and Mac Jones' three pass attempts. Then they breakdown Javonte Williams huge day against the Chiefs, Micah Parsons thriving once again, the Dolphins strong rookie class, Najee Harris' struggles, and much more!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
0:00 NE vs BUF14:00 Minshew Madness18:30 The Tua Conundrum27:00 Lamar Jackson Continues to Struggle31:30 Lions get off the schneid!38:00 Joey Bosa Held out Due to Concussion after being cleared41:00 Fines on Unavoidable Hits50:00 NFL Coach you would hate to play for (Minus Urban)55:00 Fantasy Tip of the Week1:01:00 Week 14 PreviewThanks as always to Side Hustle for providing our intro music, you can find out more about them at facebook.com/Sidehustletheband or on Instagram @sidehustletheband Don't forget to follow us on all social media (Instagram, Twitter & Facebook) at @anygivenpod & make sure to give @WillieBeamanDFF & @JoshGoldbergAGP a follow on TwitterMake sure you give our other podcast Dynasty Underdog (@DynastyUnderdog), which we co-host with @JustUriahFF, a listen and follow
Larry and Andrew get into it on the MNF game in Buffalo, the college football playoffs, the Oregon coach moves to the U, horse racing scandal and curling stream banned in US and Japan.
Gerald Horne, professor of history at the University of Houston, author, historian, and researcher, joins us to discuss Ethiopia. The US empire is moving to destabilize the African nation and many suspect that the move is another proxy attack on China. The US seems to be moving to destabilize and overthrow a number of African governments in an overt attempt to decrease Chinese influence on the resource-rich continent.
The Patriots won a crazy game in Buffalo by only passing the ball 3 times. JMI enters the Sports Arena bidding. Alex Morgan to join the San Diego Wave. John Clayton on NFL Week 14. Support the show: http://Kaplanandcrew.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Patriots won a crazy game in Buffalo by only passing the ball 3 times. JMI enters the Sports Arena bidding. Alex Morgan to join the San Diego Wave. John Clayton on NFL Week 14. Support the show: http://Kaplanandcrew.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
M&F - Ben Volin thinks the Patriots low pass attempts vs Bills shows a lack of confidence in Mac Jones 12-7-21 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1:05:07 – Welcome to Tape Land! On each episode, I’ll present the audio of a cassette tape or historic material from my personal archives. Thursday, September 2, 2010, a day where I tried to record a lot of stuff but nothing seemed to work. Starting at 9:36 AM walking to work from the Port Authority […]
On today's 12-3-21 Friday show: We learn what "fartlek" is, a woman was caught doing something crazy on a flight, we talk to Chelsea from Santacon Hayward, MGK stabbed his hand trying to impress Megan Fox, a surgeon was fined for amputating a patient's wrong leg, Alec Baldwin gives his first interview since the deadly shooting, mushroom leather is coming to the world of fashion, and Tristan busted cheating again!
Jeffrey is doing his annual walk to work to raise awareness of pre-diabetes. Portland teachers union proposes one day per week where high school students work remotely and are self taught. Alec Baldwin did an interview about the film shooting. Snitzer is going to NYC. Ghislaine Maxwell trial. Jeffrey arrives from his 11 mile walk. Dieter played an adult video game with his 9 year old nephew. Duji's mom taught Gia how to french kiss. Rover tested positive for Covid in Ireland.
0:00 Intro 1:20 BIG News For more updates, visit: http://www.brighteon.com/channel/hrreport NaturalNews videos would not be possible without you, as always we remain passionately dedicated to our mission of educating people all over the world on the subject of natural healing remedies and personal liberty (food freedom, medical freedom, the freedom of speech, etc.). Together, we're helping create a better world, with more honest food labeling, reduced chemical contamination, the avoidance of toxic heavy metals and vastly increased scientific transparency. ▶️ Every dollar you spend at the Health Ranger Store goes toward helping us achieve important science and content goals for humanity: https://www.healthrangerstore.com/ ▶️ Sign Up For Our Newsletter: https://www.naturalnews.com/Readerregistration.html ▶️ Brighteon: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/hrreport ▶️ Join Our Social Network: https://brighteon.social/@HealthRanger ▶️ Check In Stock Products at: https://PrepWithMike.com
President Biden taps into our oil reserve in an effort to combat the increasing gas prices. Is that really the best way to go about this issue though? Australia's Northern Territory Chief Minister Michael Gunner says they are transferring people who test positive for COVID to quarantine camps. Despite the man who hit over 50 people with his car in Waukesha out on bail, AOC argues about the problem of "excessive bails." Maybe not the best time to bring that up. And lastly, Colorado drops the term "sex offender" to avoid hurting the feelings of... sex offenders. Disclaimer: The content of this episode does not provide medical advice. Please seek the advice of local health officials for any COVID-19 and/or COVID vaccine related questions & concerns. Today's Sponsors: Using its proprietary app and laser bullet, iTarget Pro will allow you to safely practice with your actual firearm in the convenience, privacy, and safety of your own home. Right now, get 10% off PLUS FREE SHIPPING with the offer code NEWS at https://www.itargetpro.com/ If you're trying to stay fit and healthy, Built Bar is the answer. Go to https://built.com/ and use promo code NEWS15 to save 15% off your next order. There's a new documentary film out right now called “Enemies Within the Church”, a film that the compromised Evangelical establishment does not want you to see. It exposes the people who are selling out the Church to postmodernism – and, of course, all the money behind it! Buy the DVD or purchase the PPV streaming at https://enemieswithinthechurch.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Rep. Gosar Censured over Meme | Man who KICKED Kyle Rittenhouse Identified as Woman Beater | OK Governor Caves to Pressure from Kim Kardashian and Grants Clemency to Julius Jones Subscribe to the Podcast Here https://apple.co/2ZAGmU1 Please Support me here https://www.patreon.com/join/JoeySalads https://joeysaladinoshow.locals.com/ This is the Joey Saladino show where Joey goes over everything in the news. This is a Republican / Conservative News Commentary show. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Iran attempts to assassinate Iraqi PM with drones. Malcolm Hoenlein @Conf_of_pres @mhoenlein1 @ThadMcCotter @theamgreatness https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/iran-backed-militia-behind-attack-iraqi-pm-sources-2021-11-08/
A man in Luton learns his identity was stolen -- and someone sold his house. In Shinjuku, a man dressed as the Joker unsuccessfully attempts mass murder. Despite Project CETI's puntastic name, AI may genuinely allow human beings to speak with sperm whales -- and no one knows what they'll say (perhaps "so long, and thanks for all the fish"). All this and more in this week's Strange News. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com