Zoroastrian compendium of sacred literature
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Durante más de ocho siglos, los pensadores más rigurosos del mundo grecolatino —Hesíodo, Píndaro, Heródoto, Hecateo de Abdera, Diodoro Sículo, Plinio el Viejo— documentaron con una consistencia perturbadora la existencia de una civilización polar: una raza sin enfermedad ni vejez, gobernada por sacerdotes-reyes de estatura sobrehumana, ubicada en una isla al norte de los celtas con un templo circular dedicado a Apolo que registraba ciclos astronómicos con una precisión que la ciencia moderna apenas comprende. Lo que resulta difícil de comprender es que el Avesta zoroástrico describía ese mismo territorio con proporciones estacionales que solo existen en latitudes circumpolares, el Rig Veda preservaba fenómenos astronómicos árticos imposibles de observar desde la India, y la tradición nórdica, védica y celta convergía en los mismos detalles geográficos, climáticos y espirituales desde culturas separadas por océanos y milenios.En este episodio rastreamos el hilo desde las fuentes primarias griegas hasta los personajes que cruzaron la frontera entre el mito y el mundo real: los emisarios hiperbóreos que curaron epidemias, predijeron terremotos y transmitieron doctrinas que cambiaron la filosofía occidental para siempre. Revisamos también la cadena de pensadores que en el siglo XX convirtieron este mito en sistema filosófico, en ideología política y en programa de búsqueda activa —con consecuencias que el mundo todavía no ha terminado de procesar. Al final queda una pregunta que las fuentes académicas prefieren no formular: ¿por qué el registro humano, en todas sus ramas y en todos sus períodos, converge en el mismo punto del planeta? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
US wind PPA prices climb to $79.40/MWh as the IRA sunsets. Plus GE Vernova ordered to stay at Vineyard Wind, lessons from Spain’s blackout, and data centers straining the US grid. Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us! The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast brought to you by Strike Tape protecting thousands of wind turbines from lightning damage worldwide. Visit strike tape.com and now your hosts. Allen Hall: Welcome to the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. I’m your host, Allen Hall here with Nikki Briggs, who is in North Carolina this week, and Yolanda Padron who is back from the exciting wedding and weekend in Mexico. Welcome back, Yolanda. Yolanda Padron: Thank you. Excited to be here, Allen Hall: uh, this week there’s a, there’s a lot going on and we’re gonna touch upon some of it. Uh, Rosemary is over in China this week and Matthew is actually at Wind Europe in Madrid. And so this is gonna be an American focused episode mostly, but it’s gonna have global implications. One of the key items is PPA prices in the United States and with the on sunsetting of the [00:01:00] IRA Bills, uh, tax credits, and the whole infrastructure there with the one big beautiful bill when it crushed the IRA bill. PPA Prices needed to come up well. That’s happening, right? So developers, uh, can’t live without some money to compensate for the roughly 26, 26 7 20 $7 in PPA prices that were compensated by the tax credits. But, uh, when purchase price agreements have hit the highest level since they begin tracking it at Wood Mac. The average wind PPA now stands at $79 and 40 cents per megawatt hour up 24% from just one year ago now, Yolanda, you and I were talking before we started recording today about how low some of those PPA prices were two years ago, three years ago. Some of them were almost single digits. Yolanda Padron: Yeah, yeah. Some of them were pretty low. I [00:02:00] remember 16, $19 EPA prices and then a couple years ago we were looking at those and thinking, oh no, I can’t believe we, we kept those prices and they’re so low and everything’s changed so much, and the prices grown so much, and that was two years ago and now it’s, it’s, it’s, it’s almost four times as much as, as what we had originally thought, which is. Not super great for those older projects, Allen Hall: obviously, uh, when they, if they do repower, the extent they’re gonna have to renegotiate the PPAs. Right. The, the landscape has changed quite a bit. So the, the question really is now are they gonna be able to renegotiate new PPAs when the existing PPA hopefully ends? You can’t, you can’t run turbines for free and will they repower. Or will they just try to extend the lifetime? I think it’s a lot of operators trying to figure that out right now. And that’s in light of installations. So Whim Mac also says that US wind installations are [00:03:00] on track to nearly double in 2026, uh, building towards 48 gigawatts of new capacity through 2030, which all makes sense, right? That the, the. Uh, everybody’s trying to get all their assets in the ground so they, they qualify for the, the tax credits. So there’s a big push. So 2026 and 2027 are gonna be pretty busy years. Uh, but the, the negotiations are still going on and we’re talking to operators. Nikki and I have been talking to operators this past week or the last couple of weeks, honestly. There is all kinds of negotiations going on for turbines right now and who can get turbines? Can they get ’em in time? Can they get ’em planted fast enough? Nikki, it is causing a lot of operators to spend a great deal of time doing planning that they otherwise wouldn’t have been working on two years ago. Nikki Briggs: Definitely. I mean, it seems kind of weird to me because it’s like a weird spot. It’s like, um, you know, we want more power and we need to do all these projects, [00:04:00] but then. The permitting process is just like a brick wall or something, you know? Um, like it just takes them so much more to get through, um, and get it moving. Allen Hall: Well, I, I think if you have an existing site, you’re gonna repower it. I mean, that’s probably the easiest thing to do if, if you can pull it off. The, the question is how big of a turbine are you gonna purchase? A lot of those turbines that are gonna get repowered are probably 1.5. To two megawatt machines. They’re going to move up to five or six megawatt machines, generally speaking. So they’re reducing the amount of turbines that are gonna be on site. But the, the amount of power that’s delivered usually is about the same, maybe a little bit more. Which, which, which strives the, which drives the, the equation of, Hey, what’s everybody gonna do in the next couple of years with the data centers. Having listened to the GE Renova financial report for Q1 that just came out as we’re earlier today. GE is trying to sell gas turbines like there’s no tomorrow. However, the weird thing about it was that they were [00:05:00] very nervous about locking in firm orders that a lot of the deposits they had for like 2029 or moving into 2030. So they had a, a discussion about GE Renova building gas turbines. They could do about 20 gigawatts a year, but they had like a 10 gigawatt hole. In 20 29, 20 30 of orders because the data centers are realizing, like to get a contractor to put a hole in the ground so you can put a data center in is taking more time than they thought. It’s not Silicon Valley where you can just type some software. And Yolanda, you’re kind of in the middle of this right now, being in Austin, Texas. Is the, the drive for data centers and the drive for power, what it was six months ago, is that landscape changed? Has everybody come back to reality? Like building physical projects takes time. Yolanda Padron: I think people are starting to get, get back to reality from the little bit that, that I’ve been, that. I privy to, uh, I do think that you mentioned the GE renova and [00:06:00] just kind of all the changes and everything. And I know in the past we’ve talked about, um, the fact that, you know, a lot of blade manufacturers have changed hands for wind and a lot of things are uncertain in general. Um, I think right now with the boom of people trying to repower and doing everything as quickly as possible and as safely as possible, it’s really important that everybody should. Try to get as much documentation on everything as possible, not just to, to protect yourselves, right? I mean, if there’s some sort of, I mean, you’re, you’re, you’re checking that the foundation on your turbine is perfect still, um, doing all the civil engineering studies that you need to do and making sure that, that everything’s fine, um, for, for the long term, right? If you’re not, you’re not planning on repowering again in five years. Um. But just to track everything. There’s so much movement right now and so much uncertainty that at the very least, so you know, what you’re dealing with, if and when you have an issue, [00:07:00] you know, five years down the line, like, oh, this is what happened and this is why, this is who I need to talk to, or this is how I’m going to solve this. Or, you know, it’s not a new problem. Um, because it’s just, there’s just so many, so many factors changing. All at once that it’s, it’s a little bit, it’s a little bit daunting for everyone in this space. I don’t know if you guys feel the same way. Nikki Briggs: I have a separate question, um, which is, you know about these PPA pricing, if it’s going up, it continues to go up. Is the old adage about like green energy is the, is is the cheapest? Is that like out of the wind now? I mean, that’s not even. You can’t even apply that. Allen Hall: No, I think renewable energy, solar and wind are the lowest cost, fastest way to get power onto the grid. The, the, the question is, uh, will state and federal governments prohibit it? Because if you’re talking about the gas turbines, [00:08:00] which is not cheap, and you’re talking maybe the earliest is 20 30, 20 32. Uh, as when you be able to, to get something scale there. What else did there that you’re gonna build? Nuclear. Nuclear GE iss. Talking about nuclear small modular reactors again today. And they got a project going up in Canada, it sounded like that’s not vast either. So if you’re talking about speed and deployment, solar’s quick, right? You can just put ’em up and you can get wind turbines up pretty fast too. But anything that’s uh, gas turbine or god forbid, we start burning oil again to make electricity. Uh, I, I just don’t see it. This has implications obviously over in Europe too, right? So Wind Europe is this week, and it’s in Madrid, of course. And the Vesta, CEO, Henrik Anderson’s, uh, told the audience over in Europe that, uh, hey, there’s a lot of choices to be made [00:09:00] here the next couple of years, and it’s more important now than ever, uh, to. Think about renewables with the problems in the ous, straight of ous, sending prices higher. Does Europe want to be connected to a petroleum future? I think Europe has been struggling with that since obviously the Ukraine war started. So the, the problems in Iran are just gonna double down on that. The EU Energy Commissioner, uh, Dan Jorgenson, uh, called it out. Earlier this week and said it’s, this is not an energy crisis, it’s a fossil fuel crisis. So if we don’t have to rely on fossil fuel so much, then the energy crisis will hopefully come down in Europe. Uh, but one of the weird things about what’s happening and where Europe is, although Vestas and the EU energy Minister Commissioner are talking about fossil fuels and moving to electricity into more renewables, when [00:10:00] Europe is talking about, uh. Unfettered media posts that are, that there’s misinformation happening and, and how they’re going to deal with misinformation. That’s not their, to me it’s not their problem. Misinformation is not slowing down projects you, you have to deal with. Uh, obviously people are gonna oppose power plants, Tesla facilities, whatever’s going on in their neighborhood. The, there’s gonna be opposition to it. You have to learn how to deal with it. And I, I’m always shocked when, when a, a large organization, be it American Clean Power or, or Wind Europe or one of the many others, or complaining about misinformation, they’re in their information business. They need to be doing more work, laying the groundwork locally to deal with some of these issues. But it does feel like. Yolanda have seen this up close, uh, where there’s been sort of local disputes about, particularly wind, uh, that you, you need a little bit of help, right? [00:11:00] You can’t rely on the, the operator, owner operator to provide all the ammunition to, to, to fight off. Uh, you know, the, the generic Facebook posts about wind turbines killing birds or whatever they’re gonna post. Is, is there a, a, a future here where a a, a Wind Europe does a, an American clean power for that matter, do a better job of communicating why you would wanna have renewable energy in your backyard? Yolanda Padron: I think we just all need to just agree in general about what our approach is here. Right? Because we, I know there’s, we’ve talked about companies that really, really wanna do, you know, if, if you can. Produce X amount of money by creating wind power, then you’re, I’m gonna charge you X minus one. Right? Like, I’m gonna maximize my profits as much as possible. Um, and then there’s other people who are just really, really trying to, [00:12:00] to do with, deal with what they can. You know, they, you have 25-year-old projects that have been going on forever and ever. No one’s manufacturing them anymore. And people are still finding solutions to keep those alive. And then there’s, I know we talked about, I think it was Japan that was doing that really crazy work with these smaller turbines that, I mean, they already know what the issues with those turbines are. So just, just removing a lot of the factors going into something very experimental for, you know. We could all talk about the greater good, which is making sure that renewable energy is something that’s financially accessible. Right. I, I know we have a friend who’s been talking about it for a really long time and he said, you know, it shouldn’t be a thing of this is the right thing to do, should be a thing. This is the most cost effective thing to do, and I think he’s right. I think we should all just really try [00:13:00] to make sure that we work together. To make it the most cost effective way of producing energy, um, of solving all the problems that we can and not just, I mean, we can focus about competition later, right? If we really, really want to. Allen Hall: Let’s talk about the, the power demand for a minute. So, a number of states in the US have prohibited data centers altogether. I think the number I saw last was like 30 states have prohibited. Data centers main being the most recent one that I recall, where they just prohibited ’em in the state. That has to do with electricity prices. That the concern is if I have a couple of gigawatts being devoted to any, you know, uh, ai, Facebook, Google, uh, x, ai, any of those that my electricity rates are gonna go up and, and a lot of the states are putting blockades in essentially to prevent that from happening. That changes the landscape dramatically, right? [00:14:00] Where now, uh, if they were gonna put renewable energy in, in advance of ai, those projects are gonna die, obviously. Is there, is there a, a place where data centers, ai, electricity demand being increased, is met with renewables and some logic? Will that ever come to a place where everybody will be happy? Yolanda Padron: I mean, I think it can, in that case, I guess when Europe is correct in saying, you know, we need to stop the misinformation spread, right? But it’s also, I think it’s, it’s, it’s like one of those things where it’s like, it’s such a small part of the equation to make sure that the people who don’t exactly have a lot to do with the decisions that are being made. Legally, um, are on the same page. I think it’s more of, you know, the people who [00:15:00] are making these decisions need to come to an agreement on what’s, what’s best and what’s fiscally responsible for the area. Allen Hall: Would you wanna turn away? I, I think the thing about AI data centers and the issues that’s driving it, it’s once you have a AI data center up and running, there’s hardly anybody working there, so it doesn’t create jobs. A lot of times they don’t even have lights. Right? Why do you need lights? The computers don’t need lights. They’re just gonna sit there and run that. If it was bringing jobs, I think everybody would think differently about data centers. But because data centers don’t bring jobs, except in the power generation side, there’s not a big incentive for states to allow them. So I don’t see how this works. Right. At some point, somebody somewhere is gonna figure it out. That I’m gonna have to have a lot of excess electricity. Maybe it’s Norway and it has to be pretty cold again, Norway or Sweden, where I could put data centers and it, it may not even happen in the us. Is that what we’re, is [00:16:00] that what we’re gonna see? Nikki Briggs: I don’t know what we’re gonna see, but I’ve, I’ve heard that, um, aren’t they putting data centers in the, in the water now too underwater and like in the ocean and there’s talk about putting data centers in space and, you know, all kinds of things to, to find these different environments. But I think, um, with the. Increased demand and power that it’s gonna be all these data centers are gonna be taking. And as, um, we know AI is very exponential, right? So it’s, it’s growing exponentially in the use and, um, the adoption of it and the models are getting stronger and so it’s consuming a lot more energy, right? And so I feel like the switch back around to sustainability as, as, uh, like a core need of. Of the Earth is gonna have to, it’s gonna have to come back around for sustainability. I mean, because you can’t, you can’t just keep doing that. Allen Hall: I think the thing is, in, in Europe, they [00:17:00] obviously are interested in having some AI data centers, and that will be the, the growth plan of course, because they want to be able to compete with the rest of the world. So Europe will be in this mode of we need to create more electricity. But they want, at the same time, decouple from the Middle East and maybe even from the United States in terms of using, uh, petroleum based products to, to power their grid. I think that’s, that’s inevitable. So they’re gonna have to make a huge change in Europe. We’re, we’re looking at massive changes in the US who knows about China right now. Uh, what they’re planning to do besides pour money into everything, all the above strategy is what China seems to be doing. Does that then. If, especially, let’s just talk about the GE and over thing. So, Yolanda, I think this touches your point, which is GE and over win business is really not healthy. They lost about 300 plus million dollars in the first quarter, EBITDA wise, uh, compared to, uh, roughly a [00:18:00] year ago. It was like a hundred million dollars they lost. So the, the continued pain at GE Renova Wind. Uh, is maybe, which I thought was gonna flatline, it seems to be getting worse. All of a sudden. They think it’s gonna be better in the second half of the year. And maybe that’s true. Hopefully it is. But if you’re, if you’re talking about putting on more data centers, more electricity demand, just ’cause of population growth and your wind companies maybe besides vestus or not doing that well. Do we get there? Does, can we, can we do this? Can we actually turn this corner, make that turn, get onto, uh, more electricity, be able to compete against the world in AI and everything else, electricity wise. Is this gonna happen or is everybody gonna. Take a five year pause while they figure it out. Yolanda Padron: I just think that everybody’s just kind of running with their shoes untied, right? Like we’re all trying to race. Allen Hall: They’re running with scissors and the shoes untied. Yolanda Padron: Yeah, it is like it. I mean, eventually someone’s gonna have to [00:19:00] pause or trip Allen Hall: because you always wonder how serious some of these data center projects are because you hear the names like who? Uh, and the one that always gets me is, no, no offense to Stanford University, but. Lately, I’m hearing a lot of Stanford University graduates that are planning some massive power generation source of some sun type and just go, okay, no. Can we stop? Can we stop for a minute? No. Having a master’s degree from Stanford doesn’t know. You probably don’t know how to build a data center. Sorry. And you probably don’t know how to do distributed energy. You don’t. It’s just those are complicated and industrial things that take a lot of money and time and resources, so, no. So the, the reality of what is. Real that will be built, that’s gonna come due. I think there’s a lot of projects that were theoretical and grand and, uh, six months ago even are going to go kapoof, like pets.com. In 2001, it’s gonna be the same thing. Nikki Briggs: You’re dating yourself, Alan. Allen Hall: There was a time when. [00:20:00] When everybody was gonna be, be a internet billionaire, and one of ’em was pets.com, right? So pets.com was this pet store thing, and, and it was, they had a great URL of course, but as soon as, you know, there was any e you know, the, the, the, the, uh, planes hit the towers in New York City, poof, that thing was gone and they could sustain the, the economics of, um. The US at the moment, and when I think of Austin, I think all the tech bros are in Austin. Like you drive around Austin, you just see it. There’s a lot of smart people on the ground trying to do these grandiose things. Electricity generation is a hundred and twenty five, a hundred forty years old. That is an industrial process that is really hard to break into and you can’t AI your way into creating data centers. Does somebody realize that? And was the GE talk today? I’m gonna be the GE talk today, Yolanda, on the gas turbines. Obviously [00:21:00] they wanna take as many orders as they can or get place placeholder deposits in one of the GEs competitors is not even taking orders past 2030 ’cause they don’t think they’re real if they were real. I think everybody taking orders and I think they’re, they’re seeing the quality of that individual walking in the door trying to place, place that deposit and realize. They don’t know how to work EPC. Yolanda Padron: Have you seen, I know there’s, there’s been a lot of like memes right now about how the use of electricity in AI and data centers and it’s like, you know, we’ve increased exponentially, so we will continue increasing exponentially until the end of time. Allen Hall: Till the world explodes. Yolanda Padron: Yeah, exactly. And it’s like, I don’t think, I mean, to your point, like I, is it real like it. It could, it was sort of, um, it did grow a lot and it’s continuing to grow a lot. I just don’t know that it’s gonna be something where like everybody has a data center in their backyard, or everyone’s connected to a data center within a mile. You [00:22:00] know, Allen Hall: I think you’re a hundred percent right about that. So the realism is hitting the market, right? So as PPA prices increase and the realities of construction projects hits everybody, this is gonna slow down. Quite a bit. Yolanda Padron: I’m curious to see how long that’ll be before we overshoot it for the PPA prices. Allen Hall: Oh, you think, okay. That’s a, that’s a really good point because I, I was wondering that today, I’ve been telling people for two years now, as soon as they, uh, the tax credits sunset that PPA prices necessarily have to go up, they just have to go up the, the, the offshore wind PPA prices, were in the $150, uh, megawatt hour. Ballpark, uh, for a couple of projects off the coast in New York. I don’t know what they are in Europe at the minute. I, I should go look. I do actually do know. I should go back and look though. But the onshore prices are obviously much less, right? If you’re in the $80 per megawatt hour, although it does seem high, it is relatively [00:23:00] low compared to everything else you’re gonna be able to do. What, what are the choices you’re gonna do? What other, what other choices can you make? Yolanda Padron: What kind of structure are you gonna. Work with is if you’re increasing, increasing, increasing, and then eventually we’re gonna hit a plateau eventually, or like an almost plateau. But I highly doubt everyone’s gonna be able to forecast exactly when that is without overshooting it. Allen Hall: Yeah. I guess the question is how much is the overshoot. Is it a hundred dollars? Is it $120? Is it $150? Nikki Briggs: I have a question though, because are these AI data centers, are they meant to be running completely on wind power? Allen Hall: They in theory can’t. Right? Nikki Briggs: They need power 24 7. So Yolanda Padron: yeah, they need to have some sort of backup thing, so maybe even backup in the grid or something if it’s not something directly hitting it. A lot of projects are like co-located, so you might have wind and battery or wind solar battery or something. All together, Allen Hall: the XAI effort in Memphis, right? There’s, it is gas turbines, a bunch of gas turbines they’ve bought from [00:24:00] all over, but it has a pretty good best backup to provide stability to that. I think you’d have to do that, right? Nikki Briggs: You’d have to have a a, a failover plan or something. Yeah. Allen Hall: Having watched the internet and at different times of day, there’s nothing happening between like us time midnight and 6:00 AM. There is zero going on, and I always think does 24 7 AI data center need is so not gonna happen because when people are, if, if the data center is providing roughly national, or say it’s Europe, there’s, there’s, people are awake as a certain time of day and then they’re not. Right? So unless your data center’s gonna feed China, which it won’t, and Europe at the same time, or the US and Europe, it’s still, there’s just blocks of time where the. You just don’t need a lot of power. You just don’t need it. So the 24 7 demand, I think is not real Nikki Briggs: well, but they have to keep them cool. And you [00:25:00] know, I mean there’s like the environment inside of the data center has to be a certain, uh. Uh, specification, I guess. Right? One question that I, that I had come up here on the side, Alan, had you heard about the, uh, CEO from Vestas talking about the need for an energy union? Allen Hall: Yes, but this is not the first time it’s come up, uh, to, to try to, to gather everybody together. Ideally, if you’re thinking about the eu. Working together, and rarely does that happen, but if it were to happen, Vestas would be a huge winner in that. So would Siemens esa Honestly, the, the weird thing about all what’s happening in Madrid and at, when Europe at the moment is that sizzle’s back and they’re talking about doing projects in Europe and uh, I think a Donny is also talking about doing projects in Europe or providing turbines, right? So there’s. [00:26:00] Once Ming Yang was rejected in Scotland, which I thought was inevitable, I’ve always thought that the second place to go to get turbines that would compete with Avesta and Siemens is in India, and I do, because it’s an English speaking country, it does break down a lot of barriers. That’s for sure. And because obviously it was a, a, a British colony for a long time, there’s the relationship there. That would be it. It, I think something that makes, makes sense. So Vestus, who would obviously be the winner of all the offshore and maybe even some of the onshore projects in the UK may have competition. So although Vestas may be hoping for more of a energy block, which. Uh, could work, honestly. It could work and you could see a lot of wind and solar and batteries and hydro in, in Europe and obviously France with nuclear. I think [00:27:00] India has a really good shot at penetrating that market that would change the dynamics quite a bit. That would put pressure on Vestas to lower prices, no doubt. And so the, the, the dream scenario of Vestas is the only. OM standing in this huge demand market, which is all local to them. Uh, that may not actually turn out there. There could be some really rough patches here. If, uh, the so salons, a Donnies of the world, they can produce a five megawatt, six megawatt turbine. God knows if they could make a a 15 megawatt offshore turbine, that would put a tremendous amount of pressure on Vestus. Tremendous, and that would be harder to stop. I think from a a UK standpoint, very interesting times. Vestus is well suited to, to gain market share and is rapidly in the United States and a number of other countries, Australia being another, and Europe, but woo. Huh. The dream scenario never works out like you think it [00:28:00] will. It never does. As wind energy professionals, staying informed is crucial, and let’s face it difficult. That’s why the Uptime podcast recommends PES Wind Magazine. PES Wind offers a diverse range of in-depth articles and expert insights that dive into the most pressing issues facing our energy future. Whether you’re an industry veteran or a new. Wind, PES Wind has the high quality content you need. Don’t miss out. Visit PES wind.com today. So there’s been more information come out about the, this Iberian blackout that happened about a year ago. And as the, the details are, uh, published and everybody has a chance to review them, uh, one, one person to check out is, um. Howard Pinrose at Motor Dock and his chaos in Caffeine podcast, which happens on the weekends because he provides some good summaries about some of the latest news from the Iberian Peninsula and the reports that are being published. [00:29:00] The Iberian blackout and the role of renewables is very interesting. The, the problem that they had was, uh. Instability. So it, the grid was just generally unstable and they had a transformer fail and that just cascaded where, uh, they were disconnected from the rest of Europe. So the Liberian peninsula was just automatically disconnected and that happened relatively quickly. One of the things that could have supported the grid, and I think you’re gonna see changes happening, and Howard Pinrose was just in Washington DC with American clean power pushing for this, which is. As Yolanda knows, solar and wind have sort of two moats. They can follow the grid and produce power and just kind of follow along. Or better yet, they can form the grid and support the grid and be a resource when things get wobbly on the grid. And Spain learn that lesson really [00:30:00] well about a year ago, and I think we’re gonna find that all those solar panels that disconnected and because you’re in a following mode, protect mode. If they had had ’em in a, a more, uh, command role into managing the grid, that maybe the Iberian peninsula may not have blacked out. Maybe parts of it had because they lost a transformer, but there may be a role for renewables in terms of grid stability. Doesn’t that seem odd? Because the story and the mis, maybe the misinformation that’s happening around the world is, well, if the wind turbine isn’t turning, it can’t help monitor the grid. It actually can, same thing for solar. Those inverters that sit on the grid are actually thinking and working and reacting. So they can actually provide a lot more, uh, stability to the grid than maybe be some other resources at, at a lot less cost. Is there a scenario where we start changing the rules about wind and solar where we, instead of them playing dumb, that they become smart [00:31:00] and provide more stability? Yolanda Padron: Well, it happens a lot I think in Texas, right? We have, like you, you dispatch wind when you need it and you dispatch solar when you need it. And there’s a whole, I mean, the whole market. Behind the scenes that it’s for people a lot smarter than I am. But, uh, but yeah, I mean, you, you get, like, you’ll see sometimes wind turbines that are pitched slightly so they won’t generate electricity when it’s not needed, or they’re just free flowing when, I mean, it’s, it’s not necessarily to produce a lot of electricity or, you know, sometimes you’ll say, oh, you know what, I need this much. Energy from you at this moment, and so Sure. Switch. I mean, it’s, it’s literally a click of a computer. You turn it on, make sure the, that it’s dispatching energy, and then once you need it to be cut off, it’s cut off. Especially if it’s a co-located site, it’s a lot easier to make sure that you are [00:32:00] actually giving all the energy that you need to give in any given moment. Allen Hall: Because a grid reacts very quickly when things go wrong in the grid. It happens in seconds, and the only thing they can respond in seconds. Is renewables, inverter based resources. That’s the only thing you can respond. You can’t spool up a synchronous condenser to stabilize your grid in a couple of seconds. You may need a couple of hours typically to get that going. Isn’t this where we’re going? It because of the digital age and everything is on off so fast. If I had a data center that, you know, it collapses pulling a gigawatt, man, you need to be react almost instantaneously to that. The only thing that can do it today if they chose to do it is wind, solar, and battery. That’s it. In the digital age, Yolanda Padron: I think it’s great. There was this one time, uh, a few years ago where, um, uh, a, a buddy who’s, who was a, a traitor for, you know, the, the, uh, energy markets in the [00:33:00] states. Um, he, he saw what was happening and he knew that he could. You know, he was controlling like wind, solar, and, and battery. And it was a co-located solar and battery site. And so he let them dispatch the solar for a bit and then he held off on the battery. And then the moment that he dispatched it was like he. Within like five minutes, it was $3,000. Something crazy like that. ’cause it was just like the mo, like he was just, everybody was amazed. Just the moment that he was like, amazing. Just like, well this is, this is why you do what, what you do. You know? Um, but yeah. Yeah, it’s, I mean, it’s a really, it’s a really interesting, interesting, for anybody that wants to read up on it. Like the, the market for that is really, really interesting. Nikki Briggs: It does sound really interesting and like, I’ve been thinking a little bit about, um. The, the role of wind and, and you know, in Colorado we have a lot of high wind and then we have this [00:34:00] wildfire danger as well because of the drought. And so what happens when it gets really, really windy is they turn off the power ’cause they don’t wanna start a fire, a wildfire. So, um, so you know, here you want the wind so that you can generate the power, but then you can’t give it. So how do you store that and how do you, you know, like how do you manage that, you know? It’s a, it’s a tricky situation. Yolanda Padron: Yeah. That’s where they’re co-locating. I think a lot of sites, there’s a lot of, I know there’s a wind farm in Arizona that’s really huge and they have a, a whole, they have a certain perimeter around it where they just really make sure that there’s nothing that can spread there. Like it’s, it’s just. Kind of barren land, so in case there is a wildfire or anything, ’cause it’s in a very dry area. Um, nothing will really happen to that in theory, you know, that has all the systems for the battery. Nikki Briggs: What if the, what if the electric transmission lines are what, you know, causes the fire [00:35:00] because of the wind? The wind is causing those to break or to fall down. The poles fall down and then they cause a spark. And then they cause a fire. That’s what happened in Colorado a long time ago, a couple years ago. Allen Hall: Same thing in California. Nikki Briggs: So in order to protect from that, there’s like, it’s super windy. So they turn off the power. Allen Hall: Does it make it right? Right. Well this, this comes back to the infrastructure of the United States and how old that it is, and if you pay attention as you drive across the US you’ll realize that some of the. Towers and some of the infrastructure that you see on the side of the road. Dang, you’re a hundred years old and it doesn’t get replaced. It was never meant to be replaced. Or maybe they thought we were gonna be living on Mars in a hundred years, but basically it’s the same. Technology. It’s a wire on a kind of suspended up there in the air, and the wind moves around and it’ll burn and it wears out. It just wears out, right? Eventually you’ll just wear through that stuff, and we’re seeing that [00:36:00] across the United States. You’re seeing it in Europe, you see it in Spain, in other places where the infrastructure has just has a lot of age on it until we decide to do something new and refurbish it, like we refurbish the roads all the time. Uh, we’re gonna have trouble. We just are gonna have trouble in the states. Yolanda Padron: Alan, as an electrical engineer, I do have a question. So would the forecasted generation needed by all these data centers and stuff, like with our current system, would we be okay with that? Or what kind of changes would we need to make just as a country in general? Allen Hall: I think the problem with. A large data center as you’re seeing some of them being built on the east coast right now is one, trying to keep them up and running. Two, the infrastructure that are feeding and it’s old, right? So the transformers and all that. The things that don’t move, that are just planted on a concrete pad [00:37:00] that’s seem like they, they would never age, age, had fail. Eventually. So when you put a big demand on existing infrastructure that’s kind of powering old light bulbs and um, motors and things that are old and that have very well-known patterns, and you start putting these, uh, basically big digital power sinks that go up and down in in power usage. The grid can’t take that. It just won’t be able to take it at scale. It’ll take it for a while and we’ll figure out a way because electrical engineers tend to be pretty sy um, at how to make miracles out of, uh, uh, uh, of questionable things. That’s how we, how we do that, that’s why we get paid so much. But the, the, the problem is, is that at some point it’s gonna break, right? And, and the, the electrical grid in the US and the people that support that. Internally, I think we’re getting a little bit worried about it [00:38:00] and trying to figure out what we can do to keep the grid up and running. It’s a huge problem, huge problem, because when the grid was built back in the late 18 hundreds, early 19 hundreds, there were a lot less people, and somehow we managed to get to about 350 million people. All with the mobile phones and big screen TVs, and now electric vehicles and laptops, and blahdy, blahdy, blah. How this thing is still running is a miracle. It really is it. It obviously is Yolanda Padron: delamination and bottom line. Failures and blades are Allen Hall: difficult problems to detect early. These hidden issues can cost you millions in repairs and lost energy production. C-I-C-N-D-T are specialists to detect these critical flaws before they become expensive burdens. Their non-destructive test technology penetrates deep into the label materials. To find voids and cracks. Traditional inspections completely. Miss [00:39:00] C-I-C-N-D-T Maps. Every critical defect delivers actionable reports and provides support to get your blades back in service. So visit cic ndt.com because catching blade problems early will save you millions. So G Renova was ordered by the courts just recently to stay at Vineyard Wind. Vineyard. Wind had. Filed a complaint that, um, GE was gonna leave the site, uh, off the coast of Massachusetts at the end of April. That obviously caused some concern with vineyard winds, so they went to court, sort of bypass the arbitration process. According GE went straight to court to get an injunction to prevent GE from moving on. Well, they have that injunction now, and GE has to stay on at least for about the next 60 days. If I read this right. Then there’s gonna be more court proceedings. GE is trying to get it back into arbitration where they can do some negotiation, but it’s all about big, big dollars.[00:40:00] The one thing that came out with Scott Straza, uh, Q1 discussion, which was uh, a phone call today, had to do with the completion of GE Ver Nova’s offshore wind projects, and when they could be complete. That includes sort of the doer bank projects in the uk, which I think are gonna wrap up sometime in 2027 to try to get those finished and vineyard wind, which they said was gonna be finished at the end of April. So from a GE Renova standpoint, I think they’re considering vineyard wind to be done at the end of the month and that’s gonna be their position. It was very odd. To hear the CEO of GE Renova talk about something that’s in litigation. ’cause usually that doesn’t happen. But if the company position is, Hey, we’re leaving at the end of April, we’ll see you a vineyard wind. That’s a problem. And let me explain a little bit of the details of this. GE Renova is based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, not that far away from vineyard wind, which [00:41:00] is also based in Massachusetts. So you have this corporate entity, which just. Opened an office in Cambridge. It’s really swanky place, not very far from where MIT and Harvard and all the, the elite universities are just outside of Boston. And then you have this vineyard wind project, which is important to the state of Massachusetts where they need that power to happen and they need it to be sustained and needed to run properly inside the state of Massachusetts. There must be huge discussions about this in the state government. Massive discussions about how these two entities have to work together for the next 20 years, and they are really at each other’s throats. That’s not the way you wanna start an offshore project. And Yolanda, you’ve been around some of these offshore projects. Is it always this tense between the OEM and the operator? Is, is this where all these projects end in some sort of disagreement and [00:42:00] separation? Yolanda Padron: No, I think, I mean, from my experience. There’s usually someone at some point, and it’s usually, I think, I mean the. The owner, but you’ll stop and say, okay, I need to work with this person. I need to work with this company for the next X amount of years. I need to make sure that they give me the proper documentation once I need it. I need to make sure that they’re doing things in good faith. You know, I mean, if I can’t, it’s not like the technicians have like a camera strapped onto them to, so you can monitor every single blade repair, right? Like you need to make sure that they’re doing things right. Um, and not just patching things up because. Because they’re mad at you. Uh, so, so, no, I think it’s, it’s a little bit crazy to me that no one’s yielding as much. Allen Hall: I think GEs position is we’re gonna give vineyard all the manuals and the equipment would be up and running. You can find somebody to run it. You, you, you think that’s possible On a brand new turbine that [00:43:00] is only one other places on the planet that’s being run, which is over in the uk. Are you gonna be able to find people if GE walks off? Yolanda Padron: I mean, even if you can find people, once GE walks off, it’s like you, you need to be able to train your technicians. You know, like all of these, all of these projects are you, you need to have them in constant supervision. You need to make sure that everything’s working smoothly and you can’t just afford, I don’t know if we’re being really optimistic, like a month of no one touching those turbines. That’s crazy. Like anybody in the wind world is even onshore. Could you imagine if we just walked off a site and just let the wind turbines just be for a month? Like that’s, I mean, I don’t know, I, I’m not super, super well versed in exactly what they’re getting, but are they getting any sort of, at least like technical support? Allen Hall: I don’t think so. No. Yeah, Yolanda Padron: no rock system, no. Nothing. Allen Hall: If it all works out like GE wants it to, [00:44:00] no. You get the manuals. You get a, a, a nice, uh. Card in the mail saying Thank you for your business. And that’s it. It, that’s, I think that’s where it’s going. Nikki Briggs: Doesn’t seem like a good way to, like, doesn’t seem like they’re stand standing behind their product or what they sold. Um, I mean, and it seems like there would be some downstream ramifications for other, other companies that want to buy ge. Allen Hall: They don’t wanna be in that business. I, I think that’s one of the discussion points that never comes up when the quarterly calls is. Is GE gonna remain in the wind business? Because I think the answer to it is maybe how could a lot, I mean, you said on the financial side of some of these, uh, wind farms and paid attention to the details. If you were losing a billion dollars a year, how long would you be in that business? Yolanda Padron: I mean, not very long. I think you’d have to change things to make it work. Um, yeah. I mean, I don’t know. I think, [00:45:00] I think it’s one of those things where they’re trying to. Find exactly where they fit into this business, if they still fit in at all. Uh, I really hope they don’t fully back out because of everyone that’s in operations that has GE products out there that’s really gonna need that support. Uh, I think especially for a vineyard’s sake, at the very least that they’ve are doing, that vineyard is doing a better job than a lot of the operators I know at making sure that. Everything you need within operations has been asked for since development and construction. Um, I’m not super, super optimistic about that. Just because like everyone has so many things to do that you don’t like if you’re in development, you don’t always have time to think about. Oh yeah, I really hope they give me the repair manuals in case there’s a lightning strike on the blade at R 20. You know, like it’s just, um, so it’s just. It’s, [00:46:00] it’s just gonna, it’s gonna be a very interesting case study. Whatever they end up doing, I think it’s gonna be something that will be worth following a bit more closely. We’ve seen, there’s been projects where, you know, day one, the OEM just backs off, but that was at least. They knew that, you know, the, the owner knew it two years in advance, and so they tried to get as many people as possible. There were to, to get on those turbines. There were of course mishaps and stuff, um, and it was more of a financial than an engineering decision. Um, but when the decision was made, people knew about it and people had time to act. I mean, people having a week to find, I. Someone to, to, to take care of every single aspect of their site is a little bit insane. Especially, I mean, [00:47:00]with the history of veneer, right? Like, come on, they had a, they had a blade break, Allen Hall: right? There’s gotta be a lot of questions about the durability. There has to be Right. Even if, even if GEs figured it out, and I think they probably have, and then they’ve put a, a lot of money and time into resolving the issue. You still have to wonder. Is it right? And if you’re vineyard, I think that’s one of the questions is, is it right and could we operate it by ourselves without needing a lot of handholding from ge? Or paying GE more money than we already agreed to, which is probably what’s likely to happen, right? That GE iss gonna ask for more money if they can break the contract legally and renegotiate, that would be a smart move. I think they will try to do it. It’s unfortunate and it causes a lot of grief for a lot of people, but I think GE probably needs to renegotiate and probably Vineyard wants to renegotiate it too ’cause they both feel disgruntled at this point. Yolanda Padron: Yeah, and I think it’s really interesting ’cause we focus a lot on vineyard and just the [00:48:00] way that the OEM and the owner operated with each other just because it gets, it’s so close to such an important part of the country that gets so much PR all the time. It’s just, it kind of sets the mood for a lot of things that go on. So it’s, I mean, it’s not that we’re just picking a lot of vineyards, it’s just really, it’s a really important site just in general from where it is, right? It’s not like it’s in the middle of nowhere. It’s a very important place that gets a lot of attention Allen Hall: that writes up another episode or the Uptime Wind Energy Podcasts. If today’s discussion sparked any questions or ideas, we’d love to hear from you. Reach out to us on LinkedIn and don’t forget to subscribe. So if you never miss an episode, if you found any value in today’s conversation, I mean any value, please leave us a review. And those reviews, we actually. Take and use to help create the next episode. So send us your notes, send us your comments. Send us what you would like us to discuss. Because the wind energy marketplace and [00:49:00] development are changing so rapidly, it sometimes it’s, it’s faster than we can keep up with. So please send us your ideas. Uh, and anytime you have a chance, please like and subscribe because it really helps other wind energy professionals discover the show. So for Nikki and Yolanda, I’m Alan Hall, and we’ll see you here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.
Magnus åker till Avesta och pratar traditionsenligt med Emil Lantz om årets upplaga av Krylbo Mangel. Det pratas om 5-årsjubileet, hur det har gått genom åren, utvecklingen av festivalen, varför den är viktig och naturligtvis går vi igenom hela listan av band som spelar på årets festival. Plåtar till en av de trevligaste endagarsfestivalerna vi har i det här landet köper du här: https://www.tickster.com/se/sv/events/tggwvt24ke5j2z1/2026-06-27/krylbo-mangel-2026 Förköp är kärlek!
Blinkist Podcast - Interviews | Personal Development | Productivity | Business | Psychology
Episode Notes What if the stories running your life aren't really yours? This week on Simplify, Caitlin talks with Angela Natividad: a mythologist, writer, and advertising veteran—a trifecta that turns out to be the perfect preparation for the argument she makes in her book Remember His Name: Unmasking the Faceless God of the West. That argument, put simply: capitalism isn't an economic system. It's a religious one. We get into what that actually means—the hidden god at the center of it all, the ancient mythologies that laid the groundwork, and a concept called the egregore that might be as unsettling as it is useful. Angela also makes a case for why the stories we tell ourselves about productivity, laziness, and whether we're doing enough aren't pointing to personal failings. They're architecture that someone built, and understanding that is the first step to not being entirely at their mercy. Resources Remember His Name: Unmasking the Faceless God of the West by Angela Natividad Midwifing The Mother, Angela's Substack The Dawn of Everything by Davids Graeber and Wengrow How to Re-Enchant the World by Serge Latouche Caitlin's rec: The Science of Storytelling by Will Storr Ben's recs: The Kingdom by Emmanuel Carrère / The primary texts (the Bible, the Quran, the Avesta — just dip in!) / Bad Cousins podcast Let us know what you thought of this episode! Find us on Instagram at @simplifypod. Subscribe to our newsletter here. You can email us at info@kollomedia.com This episode of Simplify was produced by Caitlin Schiller, Ben Schuman-Stoler, and engineered by João Lucas in Berlin, Germany, for Kollo Media.
Hva betyr egentlig de nye lovkravene til psykososialt arbeidsmiljø i praksis? Og hvor godt rustet er norske virksomheter til å møte dem?Fra 1. januar 2026 er arbeidsgivers ansvar for det psykososiale arbeidsmiljøet blitt tydeligere og mer konkret regulert. Men hva innebærer det i praksis, og hva må du faktisk gjøre annerledes?I denne episoden møter Anne Lise advokat Avesta Gåskjønli, som gir deg et oversiktlig og praktisk blikk på hva som faktisk forventes av arbeidsgivere fremover, hvorfor myndighetene har sett behov for en presisering, og hvilke konsekvenser det kan få dersom virksomheter ikke tar dette på alvor. Dette er ikke bare et juridisk spørsmål, men et tema som treffer rett i kjernen av sykefravær, ledelse, kultur og bærekraftige arbeidsplasser.Du får blant annet høre om: bakgrunnen for lovendringende fire nye arbeidsmiljøfaktorene som nå er løftet frem, og hva de betyr i hverdagenhvorfor kravene treffer mer på individnivåhvordan virksomheter bør jobbe systematisk for å unngå risiko og styrke arbeidsmiljøetDette er en episode for deg som vil forstå endringene før utfordringene dukker opp og som ønsker verktøy for å jobbe mer strategisk, forebyggende og smart.Vil du gå dypere i hvordan du jobber systematisk med psykososialt arbeidsmiljø?Leonda holder heldagskurs 17. mars – les mer og meld deg på her._________Om dagens gjest:Avesta Gåskjønli er assosiert partner og advokat i Littler advokatfirma. Hun er spesialist i arbeidsrett med omfattende erfaring fra både advokatfirmaer, LO og som in-house advokat i en HR-avdeling i en større bedrift. Avesta har dyp innsikt i hele spekteret av arbeidsrett og er HR-avdelinger og lederes «go-to person». Hennes erfaring har gitt henne god kommersiell forståelse, slik at hennes råd blir skreddersydd for virksomheten. Avesta er kjent for å levere praktiske og effektive løsninger som bidrar til å styrke virksomhetens strategiske mål.Hun har betydelig erfaring med omorganiseringer, nedbemanninger, oppsigelser, innleie og håndtering av konflikter mellom arbeidsgiver og arbeidstaker, både gjennom forhandlinger og rettssaker.________ Vil du ha e-post med ukens fagtips og personlig invitasjon til webinarer fra Leonda? Ja takk! Sjekk ut Leonda sin nye eventkalender her - med inspirerende webinarer, frokostmøter og kurs. Liker du det du hører? Trykk på følg i din podcast app så får du beskjed når nye ukentlige episoder legges ut.
”Vi spelar SO-lärarmetal. Glasögonormsrock!” Metalbandet Horndal från bruksorten med samma namn har gjort plattor om facklig kamp, nedlagda stålverk och tech-industrins törstiga demoner. Just nu spelar de in ett nytt album som handlar om arbetsplatsolyckor i stålindustrin. Låttitlarna blir i stil med Engulfed in Steel och Drowned in Tar. Brutalt. Horndals batterist Pontus Levahn och brorsan Henrik, textförfattare och sångare, tog en paus från studion för att gästa DJ 50 Spänn. De fick varsin inköpsbudget att spendera på varsitt håll, vilket innebär att det detta avsnitt innehåller dubbelt så många skivor och därmed blir två gånger roligare. Den musikaliska spännvidden är dessutom enorm. Grammofonen snurrar allt från flummig krishnajazz och progressiv kabaretmusik till äkta in-law country och nylonsträngad muzak från Brasilien. Och så testar vi hypnos! Vi pratar om vinnargitarrer, poverty metal, den legendariska Musik för Sex-skivan, jättedyra synth-intron, dubbla baskaggar, groupies som vill prata om postindustriell historia, hur MTV sabbade karriären för gubbar med skägg, hårdrocksdrömmar på Sunset Strip anno 1984, skivgrävarrealism, hängpungsmusik (och annan bluesrock), parnassen i Avesta, den hypnotiserade Ricky Bruchs världsrekord och någonstans i det hela ställs den retoriska frågan: vem skryter idag om sina Spandau Ballet-skivor? Tyvärr plockade en mikrofonkabel upp störningar, så just det här avsnittet låter lite mindre HiFi än vanligt. Men humöret och energin är det inget fel på. Välkomna in! Pontus och Henriks skivor Bethnal – Crash Landing [LP, 1978]Låt: Crash Landing Jim Reeves – Forever [2xLP, 1975]Låt: He’ll Have To Go 3rd Stage Alert – S/T [12″ EP, 1984]Låt: Adagio (For a Dead Soldier) Los Indios di Mayas – Maria Elena [LP, 1973]Låt: Maria Elena Brian Protheroe – Pick-Up [LP, 1975]Låt: Pick-Up Lars-Eric Uneståhl – Hypnos [LP, 1968]Spår: Rökavvänjning J.O.B. Orquestra – Open The Doors To Your Heart [LP, 1978]Låt: Govinda Billy Swan – I Can Help [LP, 1974]Låt: Don’t Be Cruel Steve Miller Band – Book of Dreams [LP, 1977]Låt: Threshold Roger Whittaker – The Very Best of Roger Whittaker Vol. 2 [2xLP, 1976]Låt: Mistral PS: Om du blir sugen på att veta mer om Lars-Eric Uneståhls Hypnos-LP så finns det sjukt nog ett litet radioprogram att lyssna på: Hypnos för hemmabruk. Samma sak gäller för historien om bandet Rasa: Äkta svensk krishnarock. Om du gillar vad du hör … … och har några korvören över – stöd gärna DJ 50 Spänn via Patreon! Varje liten donation hjälper till att hålla DJ 50 Spänn flytande i poddträsket. Den här podden är 100% independent och helt fri från reklam – let's keep it that way. Stort tack till alla hedervärda människor som redan supportar! DJ 50 Spänns patreon Relaterade avsnitt https://dj50spann.se/112-daniel-ekeroth/ https://dj50spann.se/197-rockenrollex/ https://dj50spann.se/196-sofia-bergstrom/ Så här lyssnar och prenumererar du på DJ 50 Spänn: DJ 50 Spänn hittar du i de flesta podd-appar för smartphone, surfplatta och dator. Sök bara efter ”DJ 50 Spänn” i poddappens sökfält. Glöm inte att prenumerera – då slipper du missa nya avsnitt. Om du behöver en address till själva RSS-feeden som berättar om nya avsnitt, kopiera den här: https://dj50spann.se/feed/podcast/. Du kan förstås också lyssna här på hemsidan. OBS! DJ 50 Spänn finns inte längre på Spotify. Använd en klassisk poddspelare istället. Du vet, en sådan som fanns långt innan det stora streamingbolaget började exploatera podcastvärlden. Det finns många att välja mellan. Följ DJ 50 Spänn på sociala medier, yeah? Jag finns på Instagram, Facebook och Bluesky. Utöver facebooksidan finns även följande facebookgrupper under DJ 50 Spänns paraply. Ansök om medlemskap redan idag. Tiokronorsvinyl DJ 50 SPÄNN – THE GROUP Försvenskat också! Streamingjättens Utmarker Den Inre Jukeboxen The Hans Edler Universe DJ50:– på Radio Viking 101,4 Varje lördag mellan klockan 11 och 12 sänder DJ 50 Spänn (AKA Tommie Jönsson) en musikmix med oborstad vinyl på Radio Viking som hörs över Ekerö och delar av Stockholmsområdet på frekvensen 101,4 MHz. Programmet går också att livelyssna på via radioviking.se eller valfri app för nätradio (Radio Garden Live rekommenderas, men det finns många andra). DJ 50 Spänn är en podd om musik på billig vinyl. I varje avsnitt får en musikintresserad gäst köpa begagnade skivor för en femtiolapp. Sedan pratar vi om det som musiken styr oss in på. Programledare, producent och ljuddesigner: Tommie Jönsson, radioproducent. Kolla gärna in mina radiodokumentärer Jakten på Fiskargubben (om hemligheten bakom den berömda kitschtavlan) och Rederietstjärnans dolda passion (om skådespelaren Gaby Stenbergs sköna insektsmusik). Webbguru för DJ50:- är Gunnar Lindberg Årneby. Kontakt: hej[at]dj50spann.se
Es ist jedes Jahr dasselbe: Kaum ist die Rallye Dakar vorbei, verlagert sich das Interesse von echten Motorsportkennern aufs Eis. Denn die neue Eisspeedwaysaison steht an – und in manchen Regionen hat sie sogar schon begonnen. Dieser neue Podcast der PITCAST-Reihe – eine Gemeinschaftsproduktion der Zeitschrift PITWALK und der Website http://www.bahndienst.com als deutsches Leitmedium für Bahnsport – dreht sich denn auch komplett um den Wintersport. In Weißenbach in Tirol gab's ein Eisspeedwayrennen, im schwedischen Avesta einen auf WM-Niveau besetzten Paarcup – und in Steingaden ein Skijöring. Das sind grob gesagt Speedwayfahrer, die hinter ihren Halblitermaschinen einen Skifahrer auf alpinen Brettern an einem Tau hinter sich herziehen wie ein fleischgewordenes Ausgleichgewicht. Norbert Ockenga hat sich als Chefredakteur von PITWALK und bahndienst.com ausgiebig mit beiden Wintersportarten befasst. In einer Analyse des Paarcup in Avesta befragt er Max Niedermaier und den Engländer Paul Cooper, der sommertags auf Grasbahnen unterwegs ist. Hans Weber, Christoph Kirchner und Franz Mayerbüchler lassen das Spektakel in Weißenbach Revue passieren und ordnen die Lehren daraus ein. Simon Mayer und dessen Mechaniker Patrick Schneider berichten direkt aus Schweden, wie die Vorbereitung auf das Ligawochenende der Allsvenskan in Skandinavien vorangeht. Und Dominik Werkstetter, der das Skijöring als erstes Rennen auf dem harten Comebackweg nach einem schweren Unfall im Frühling genutzt hat, entführt uns in die fremde, aber spannende Welt der Mischung aus Motor- und Alpinistensport.
Här kan du lyssna på en AI-genererad uppläsning av följande artikel: Beskedet skulle trygga jobben i Avesta – sen kom tullhoten från Trump: ”Stör”
The Legacy of Zoroastrianism for Judaism, Christianity and Islam: Part IV: Synopsis
Det här är bara utvecklingen, den får vi vika oss för! Så beskriver statsvetaren Evert Vedung den inställning som gjorde att Sverige på kort tid lyckades skapa ett överskott av elektricitet, med ett högt pris för naturen och samerna. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Programmet sändes första gången 20220830.Sveriges elhistoria är den om tidig och snabb utbyggnad av olika energislag som kunde producera el till låga priser. Om innovationer, framsynthet och långsiktighet, men också om naturvärden som offrades i moderniseringens namn. Har vi idag något att lära av den historien, när nu elproduktionen i landet behöver öka kraftigt och snabbt, för att vi ska nå klimatmålen och samtidigt ha en ekonomi i tillväxt?I tre program besöker Vetenskapsradion några olika elhistoriska platser i Sverige. I denna första del bland annat Horndal i Dalarna, som var den sydliga slutpunkten för den första kraftledningen mellan norra och södra Sverige, vilken togs i drift 1936. Horndal är än idag en stor knutpunkt för kraftledningar och inte minst därför har Google planer på att bygga ett gigantiskt datacenter där, som kommer att sluka oerhörda mängder el.Vi får också höra historien om hur det spektakulära Stora Sjöfallet i Lappland offrades för vattenkraften.Medverkande: Magnus Carlson, förvaltare Vattenfall; Kerstin Enflo, ekonomhistoriker Lunds Universitet; Lasse Wallbing, kraftverksveteran och aktiv i Porjus arkivkommitté; Lars-Erik Lindström på museet i Krångede; Evert Vedung, professor emeritus i statsvetenskap på Uppsala Universitet; Börje Forslund, lokalhistoriker från Avesta samt Bengt Söderkvist, boende i Horndal.Reporter: Mats Carlsson-LénartProducent: Björn Gunérbjorn.guner@sr.se
GOD: An Autobiography, As Told to a Philosopher - The Podcast, S1
Questions? Comments? Text Us!Jerry shares his fascinating revelations during prayer concerning the prophet Zoroaster's profound encounter with the divine.Zoroastrianism is one of the world's oldest known monotheistic religions, but few know its rich history—largely preserved through oral tradition—that allows us to understand what God was communicating to Zoroaster through the cosmic battle between good and evil.In this powerful narrative, we're introduced to the figure of Ahura Mazda—the embodiment of wisdom and goodness—and His counterpart, the Hostile Spirit, often perceived as God's “evil twin.” This story dives into the eternal struggle between light and darkness, a central theme in Zoroastrian belief and one still deeply relevant to the modern spiritual seeker.Join us as we explore these ancient revelations and how they continue to echo in our understanding of the divine, the nature of evil, and the choices our souls are called to make.Are you paying attention? Visit godanautobiography.com for more information and to get your copy of God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher — the true story of an agnostic philosopher who heard the voice of God and recorded their conversations.Other Series:The podcast began with the Dramatic Adaptation of the book and now has several series:Life Wisdom Project: How to live a wiser, happier, and more meaningful life with special guests.From God To Jerry To You: Calling for the attention of spiritual seekers everywhere, featuring breakthroughs, pathways, and illuminations.Two Philosophers Wrestle With God: Sit in on a dialogue between philosophers about God and the questions we all have.What's On Our Mind- Connect the dots with Jerry and Scott over the most recent series of episodes.What's On Your Mind: What are readers and listeners saying? What is God saying?Resources:READ: "You Could Be Wrong."FROM GOD TO JERRY TO YOU PLAYLISTWould you like to be featured on the show or have questions about spirituality or divine communication? Share your story or experience with God!#fromgodtojerrytoyou #FGTJTY #godanautobiographythepodcast #experiencegod #SpiritualAwakeningShare Your Story | Site | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube
What is the difference between East and West? One helpful line to draw is that between Iranian and Indo-Aryan cultures, as seen in the extremely ancient traditions of the Avesta and the Ṛigveda, respectively. Whereas the common Indo-European heritage of multiple generations of gods (ahuras/asuras vs daēwas/devas, see also titans vs gods—which, as long as we're painting with broad brushes, we might imagine have something to do with memory of past relations of production as “ages”) is ultimately nondual, the Iranian tradition demonizes the gods (Skt. devas, Av. daēwas) and elevates one of the earlier ahuras (cf. Skt. asuras) into an absolute good creator, to whom is opposed an absolute evil which has corrupted the world and from which a series of saviors must be sent to save us, culminating in a final eschaton, a resurrection and final judgment, etc—the whole apparatus of Abrahamism is basically here already. Within this, we explore the Indo-European myth of the first man and the first king, whose Avestan expression features a societal collapse and a post-apocalyptic remnant surviving in some sort of secure underground enclosure called the wara. The new Japanese translation of the entire Avesta by Prof. Noda Keigō (2020), the first into any language in nearly a hundred years, as well as the new English Ṛigveda of Jamison and Brereton (2014), equip us uniquely well for this investigation. Our main takeaway is the sheer age of ruling class myths of the need to hole up in a cult compound to survive the collapse of class society—when in fact (even supposing we will need counter-waras and defensive tunnels of our own to survive climate collapse and extermination campaigns) it was always the ruling class who most needed to hide away, whereas the masses have always found a way out and forward in the struggle for production and human flourishing. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What does it mean to live with truth, righteousness, and a sense of responsibility toward the world? The Avesta, the sacred text of Zoroastrianism, offers answers that are just as meaningful today as they were thousands of years ago. But how do these ancient teachings apply to modern life?In this episode, Dr Ramiyar Karanjia—scholar, author, and Principal of the Dadar Athornan Institute—joins us to break down the deeper messages of the Avesta. He explains what “good thoughts, good words, good deeds” truly means beyond its well-known phrase, the role of fire as a bridge between the physical and the divine, and why Zoroastrianism places such importance on protecting nature.We also get into the hidden world, the power of the mind in spiritual practice, and the system of preserving the Avesta through memory long before it was written down. What wisdom does this ancient text hold for those seeking clarity and balance today? And what simple practice from the Avesta can shift the way you think?Tune in for a fascinating conversation that looks beyond religion and into the heart of what it means to live with purpose.For a transcript of this show, go to https://wellnesscurated.life/the-avesta-and-its-teachings-on-life-and-beyond-2/If you liked our episode, you can subscribe to our podcast on any of the major podcasting platforms like Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Google Podcasts. Please leave us a review on Apple iTunes and help others discover this podcast. You can visit wellnesscurated.life and follow us on Twitter @WellnessCurated, On Instagram @wellnesscurated.life,On Facebook @Wellness Curated by Anshu Bahanda,On LinkedIn @Wellness Curated by Anshu Bahanda, And on YouTube @wellnesscuratedbyanshubahanda. for more wellness tips to help you live your best life.
I denne episoden av HR-podden fortsetter vi å dykke ned i det arbeidsrettslige feltet. Vi tar for oss innstramningene i innleieregelverket - et regelverk som har skapt hodebry for noen, men også bedret arbeidsbetingelsene for andre.Vi har besøk av advokat Avesta Gåskjønli med spesialisering innen arbeidsrett. Med hennes omfattende erfaring og dype innsikt er hun HR-avdelinger og lederes «go-to person» på feltet. Nå også vår "go-to-person". Avesta geleider oss igjennom hva som gjelder av regler ved midlertidig ansettelse:Hva som ikke er lovHvilke unntak som gjelderFallgruver og gråsonerHva bør du ha kontroll på hvis du leier inn arbeidskraft til din virksomhetAvesta oppdaterer oss også på saker som nå er inne til behandling hos rettsvesenet, og hvilke konsekvenser disse kan få for lovverket.God lytting!___________-Om dagens gjest:Avesta Gåskjønli er assosiert partner og advokat i Littler advokatfirma. Hun er spesialist i arbeidsrett med omfattende erfaring fra både advokatfirmaer, LO og som in-house advokat i en HR-avdeling i en større bedrift. Avesta har dyp innsikt i hele spekteret av arbeidsrett og er HR-avdelinger og lederes «go-to person». Hennes erfaring har gitt henne god kommersiell forståelse, slik at hennes råd blir skreddersydd for virksomheten. Avesta er kjent for å levere praktiske og effektive løsninger som bidrar til å styrke virksomhetens strategiske mål. Hun har betydelig erfaring med omorganiseringer, nedbemanninger, oppsigelser, innleie og håndtering av konflikter mellom arbeidsgiver og arbeidstaker, både gjennom forhandlinger og rettssaker.__________ Vil du ha e-post med ukens fagtips og personlig invitasjon til webinarer fra Leonda? Ja takk! Liker du det du hører? Trykk på følg i din podcast app så får du beskjed når nye ukentlige episoder legges ut.
Vi träffar inhoppande hjältarna Jesper och Robert. Jesper är återkommande gäst som bland annat berättat om sin rädsla för gigantiska råttor. Robert är plåtslagare från Avesta som råkade vara i Stockholm och inte tvekade att hoppa in på kort varsel. De berättar stories om ”Jesus”, ett dyrt misstag med plåttak, lärlingsbus och lite naket.
Bienvenidos a un nuevo Spaces en directo desde Twitter. Hoy vamos a ponernos en plan esotérico, para intentar explicar algunos de los misterios más escondidos y a la vez más a la vista de todos los tiempos. La energia que supuestamente recorre nuestros centros energéticos o chakras con k de kilo. Según la doctrina hinduista, los chakras son centros de energía inconmensurable y no medible mediante la tecnologia actual situados en el cuerpo humano. Y digo lo de k de kilo porque en castellano la RAE define a chacra con ce como Alquería o granja. Me pregunto si este nombre no estará relacionado con la granja humana de la que hablaba Freixedo. Si está por ahi Puntal de dios le aconsejo que cierre los oídos ya que vamos a utilizar algún texto de una persona que sigue a masones y magos negros como Manly Palmer Hall. Seguidor y propagador de las ideas de la también satanista Helena Blavatsky, también conocida como Madame Blavatsky. Le hablaré sobre los misterios mitríacos y nórdicos apoyandome en una traducción de un hilo de @AmurakaHidden del mismo nombre. Hall escribe: "Para el ocultista, el NACIMIENTO es la MUERTE y la MUERTE es el DESPERTAR. Los antiguos místicos enseñaban que nacer en el mundo físico era entrar en una TUMBA, porque ningún otro plano de la naturaleza es tan insensible y limitado como la Tierra”. "El TIEMPO y la DISTANCIA eran barrotes que encadenaban al alma a un entorno estrecho. El calor y el frío atormentaban al alma, la edad la privaba de sus facultades y la VIDA del hombre no era más que una preparación para la MUERTE.” Esto es interesante, ya que Hall continúa: "Los Misterios enseñaban que durante los grados superiores de iniciación los mismos dioses participaban en la instrucción de los candidatos o al menos estaban presentes, lo que era en sí mismo una bendición”. "Como las deidades habitaban en los mundos invisibles y sólo venían en sus cuerpos espirituales, era imposible para el neófito reconocerlas sin la ayuda de drogas que estimulaban el centro clarividente de su conciencia (probablemente la glándula pineal)”. "Muchos iniciados en los antiguos Misterios afirmaron enfáticamente que habían conversado con los inmortales y habían contemplado a los dioses". Hall escribe: "Los misterios nórdicos se daban en nueve cámaras o cavernas, y el candidato avanzaba a través de ellas en orden secuencial”. "Estas cámaras de iniciación representaban las nueve esferas en las que los Drottars dividían el Universo”. El inframundo azteca, Mictlan, constaba de NUEVE niveles distintos. Hoy en día, los rituales de iniciación suelen realizarse en CUEVAS o LUGARES DE OSCURIDAD. Esto proviene de los Misterios Nórdicos y Mitriacos. Mucha gente ha visto los rituales de la Muerte Simulada donde el Candidato es levantado por el Agarre de la Pata del León que, también, proviene del Mitraísmo. La Cueva de la Natividad de Jesús fue, también según Hall, un Ritual de Iniciación Oculta, los Tres Reyes Magos eran Adeptos Espirituales. WL Wilmshurst dice: "Los 'pastores que cuidaban sus rebaños' en el momento de la Natividad no eran rústicos ni granjeros, sino adeptos espirituales a cargo de grupos de iniciados". Los Misterios Mitriacos se realizaban en Cavernas Subterráneas conocidas como Mitreos, Templos Mitraicos Ocultos. Las catacumbas cristianas y los hipogeos o Mitreos de culto a Mitra estuvieron juntas durante por lo menos 300 años y lógicamente se produjo una colusión entre ambas religiones. En estas Cavernas Subterráneas, conocidas como Mitreos, los Iniciados serían conducidos de la Oscuridad a la LUZ. De la oscuridad a la LUZ MASÓNICA. Porfirio, en su Caverna de las Ninfas, afirma que Zaratustra (Zoroastro) fue el primero en consagrar una cueva al culto del Único Dios Verdadero, porque una caverna era un símbolo de la tierra, o del mundo inferior de las tinieblas. "Estas cuevas estaban adornadas con los signos del Zodíaco, Cáncer y Capricornio. Los solsticios de verano e invierno eran visibles, como las puertas de las almas que descendían a esta vida, o salían de ella en su ascenso hacia los Dioses; Cáncer era la puerta del Descenso, Capricornio, la del Ascenso”. Esto tiene que ver con los solsticios de verano e invierno que se venian representando en la llamada rueda de los años o de culto a Baal. Donde la celebración de Yule es en torno al 20-23 de diciembre y la de Midsummer entre el 19 y 23 de junio. Tanto el trópico de Cáncer como el trópico de Capricornio tienen una relación directa con el solsticio de verano, pues ambos son la línea imaginaria en la Tierra en la que los rayos del Sol son completamente verticales en el instante del solsticio, es decir, cuando el Sol se encontrará exactamente en el centro de la esfera de cielo visible cuando se produzca el solsticio y, por tanto, la sombra de cualquier objeto tendrá la componente longitudinal nula en dicha línea. Esto ocurre una sola vez al año por cada hemisferio, y también la igualdad en tiempo entre el día y la noche. Al hemisferio norte le corresponde el trópico de Cáncer y al hemisferio sur, el trópico de Capricornio. Hall concluye: "En el antiguo sistema de iniciación, el iniciado (o buscador) debe pasar por un SEGUNDO NACIMIENTO, y aquellos que alcanzaban este estado exaltado eran conocidos a partir de entonces como "Los Dos Veces Nacidos". Sólo aquel que ha nacido de nuevo puede comprender los misterios del cielo”. "Este nuevo nacimiento, sin embargo, no se logra simplemente uniéndose a una secta. Debe ganarse personalmente mediante una regeneración completa del carácter y la conducta." Así como un Fénix RENACE de las Cenizas, lo mismo ocurre con el Iniciado. Hall dice: "En los Misterios, a los iniciados se les llamaba fénix u hombres nacidos de nuevo, porque así como el nacimiento físico da al hombre conciencia en el mundo físico, así también el neófito, después de nueve grados en el vientre de los Misterios, nacía en una conciencia de lo Espiritual”. “Este es el misterio de la iniciación al que se refirió Cristo cuando dijo: “El que no naciere de nuevo no puede ver el reino de Dios”. El Fénix es un símbolo apropiado de esta verdad espiritual”. La Kundalini despierta sube por las 33 Vértebras, la Escalera de Jacob, la Columna Vertebral, pasa por los Siete Arcángeles hasta llegar y reunirse con el TRONO de Dios. Hay 33 vértebras en total. La palabra Elohim se utiliza 33 veces en Génesis. 33 años en la vida de Jesús. 33 grados en la Masonería. En el cuerpo humano, el Fuego Divino se arrastra como una serpiente por el Árbol de la Vida, la Médula Espinal o la Escalera de Jacob. Hay Siete Vértebras Cervicales en la Columna Superior que se asemejan a las Alas de un Ángel. Estos son los Siete Arcángeles que guardan la CIMA de la Escalera de Jacob, el Cerebro. En el mitraísmo, existían siete niveles de iniciación, que pueden estar relacionados con los siete planetas de la astronomía de la época (Luna, Mercurio, Venus, Sol, Marte, Júpiter y Saturno). La mayoría de los miembros llegaban únicamente, hasta el cuarto grado (leo) y solo unos escogidos accedían a los rangos superiores. Los niveles, conocidos gracias a un texto de San Jerónimo que confirman varias inscripciones, eran los siguientes: Corax (cuervo); Cryphius (oculto) o Nymphus (esposo); Miles (soldado). Leo (león). Perses (persa); Heliodromus (emisario solar). Pater (padre). Sus atributos (el gorro frigio, la vara y el anillo) recuerdan a los del obispo cristiano. En los ritos, los iniciados llevaban máscaras de animales relativas a su nivel de iniciación y se dividían en dos grupos: los servidores, por debajo del grado de leo y los participantes, el resto. Siete Arcángeles, Siete Puertas Planetarias, Siete Metales Alquímicos. Siete colores del arco iris. Teseo, el héroe fundador de Atenas cuya acción más conocida fue la de derrotar al Minotauro del laberinto de Creta y evitar así el sacrificio de 7 doncellas y 7 jóvenes como tributo al rey Minos. Siete notas musicales. Por cierto el dibujo de la Harmonía musical es clavado a la tetraktys pitagórica. Se atribuye a Pitágoras el descubrimiento de la representación de los ritmos básicos de la música griega mediante las razones 1:2 como octava, 3:2 como quinta y 4:3 como cuarta. Así, los pitagóricos estimaban que el orden y la belleza lo daban esos cuatro primeros números cuya suma es diez, que consideraban el número perfecto. En el Cuerpo Humano, la Escalera de Jacob (la Médula Espinal) conduce al Cerebro Humano. El Cerebro Humano tiene Dos Hemisferios, el Boaz y el Jachim del Templo de Salomón. En el cerebro humano, así como existe el hemisferio izquierdo y el derecho, también existe la amígdala izquierda y la derecha. En la "Atanomia bíblica", estas son las dos Marías: María Magdalena y la Virgen María. Estas "Marías" representan el nacimiento físico y el segundo nacimiento, el nacimiento espiritual. Existe, también, el Tálamo izquierdo y derecho (el “Tammuz” babilónico, Hijo de Semíramis, la “María” babilónica), las glándulas PINEAL y PITUITARIA están centradas y no están ubicadas en cada hemisferio si no reflejándose una a la otra: una ARRIBA y la otra ABAJO. La representación de estas dos glándulas la podemos ver en el gorro que porta el dios egipcio Khnum o dios cabeza de cordero, el protector o enriquecedor de la naturaleza. La Anatomía del Cerebro es el origen de la alegoría esotérica del “Padre” que está ARRIBA y el “Hijo” que está ABAJO. Jesús nació en un pesebre, aunque también otras costumbres lo sitúan en una CUEVA utilizada como pesebre; ésta es verdaderamente la ‘Cueva de Brahman’ dentro de nuestro Cerebro. La 'Cueva de Brahman' es donde la Pineal y la Pituitaria son capaces de iluminarse como un Árbol de Navidad cuando la Energía Espiritual se transmuta por la ESCALERA DE JACOB como un FÉNIX RENACIDO, ¡un verdadero Milagro de Navidad! La “CUEVA DE BRAHMA” es la “CUEVA INTERNA” dentro del Cerebro, directamente encima de la Pineal, la Pituitaria, el Tálamo y el Hipotálamo. Este es el PALACIO DE CRISTAL Taoísta. El Palacio de CRISTO-EL, el Reino de los Cielos en el interior, el TERCER VENTRÍCULO, el Asiento de Jehová. "Los Misterios enseñan que el Tercer Ventrículo es la sede de JEHOVÁ en el cuerpo humano. Si bien su función es a través del SISTEMA GENERATIVO, su CENTRO DE CONCIENCIA como parte del espíritu del hombre se supone que está ubicado en un mar de éter azul llamado el VELO de ISIS.” Hall finaliza: “El velo de ISIS en el hombre se encuentra en el centro del seno frontal”. ………………………………………………………………………………………. La abadía de Westminster, famosa mundialmente, fue construida donde estaba el templo pagano de Apolo, el dios Romano. Algo que me conmocionó profundamente fue saber de la Piedra de Scone, o Piedra del Destino, también conocida como Piedra de la Coronación. Una piedra que ha sido utilizada por todos los reyes escoceses y que también fue utilizada en la coronación de la reina de Inglaterra Isabel II, por cierto a pesar de sufrir muchos contratiempos ya que esta piedra fue supuestamente robada por unos estudiantes. ¿Qué tiene que ver todo esto de la piedra del destino con las líneas ley y los niveles de consciencia? Según la leyenda esta piedra es la piedra que hizo que se le apareciese a Jacob uno de los mas famosos dioses, Yahveh. El dios en el que sigue creyendo por cierto el pastor evangélico Rony Chaves que tiene uno de los pocos libros que hablan sobre estas lineas energéticas. Este Jacob soñó con una escalera por la que los ángeles ascendían y descendían del cielo. Vamos, lo que podría ser considerado un medio de comunicación interdimensional. La abadía de San Pedro y San Pablo en Bath, Inglaterra, incluye esculturas de ángeles que suben al cielo en dos escaleras de piedra. Concretamente son siete ángeles o mejor dicho, siete arcángeles. “[…]porque los ángeles no son todos iguales, sino que con arreglo a su condición están jerarquizados entre sí e integrados en tres grupos diferentes. Al primero de esos grupos damos el nombre de Epifanía, palabra que significa categoría máxima o superior; al segundo lo llamamos Hyperfanía, palabra que quiere decir categoría intermedia; al tercero lo designamos Hypofanía, que equivale a categoría inferior. […]Cada una de estas jerarquías consta de tres órdenes: a la primera de ellas, o Epifanía, pertenecen los serafines, querubines y tronos; a la segunda o Hyperfanía, según Dionisio, pertenecen las dominaciones, virtudes y las potestades; a la tercera o Hypofanía, también según Dionisio, pertenecen los principados, los arcángeles y los ángeles. Se da cierta semejanza entre la ordenación o disposición de los espíritus celestiales y la que existes entre los diferentes poderes terrenos.” Jacopo de la Vorágine, Leyenda Dorada, siglo XIII. En el articulo “Los Siete Arcángeles. Una iconografía al servicio del poder” de Cipriano García Hidalgo Villena leemos: “La tradición judía del Antiguo Testamento organizó a estos seres incorpóreos que, generalmente y comúnmente, llamamos ángeles, de la misma forma que estaba organizada la jerarquía babilónica, el gran imperio antiguo que influyó decisivamente en la concepción hebrea durante el periodo del exílio, que se data en el siglo VI a. C., la ordenación jerárquica de la corte celestial se inspiraba así en la tradición zoroástrica. En el libro sagrado del Avesta se recoge que, junto a la divinidad, se sitúan un consejo celestial de bienhechores inmortales formado por siete miembros y capitaneados por Ahura Mazda. El número siete es fundamental en la tradición numerológica oriental que se trasmitió también a occidente, pues es el número que aúna lo divino, formado por el número tres, con lo terrenal, que se corresponde con el cuatro. El problema es que los textos bíblicos, canónicamente aceptados por el cristianismo, sólo mencionan a tres arcángeles con nombre: Miguel, Gabriel y Rafael, que serán los arcángeles canónicos. Pero en los apócrifos aparecen muchísimos más nombres. El texto fundamental para la creación de la advocación de los siete arcángeles será el Libro de Enoch: “Me dijo Metatrón: Siete son los grandes príncipes, hermosos, temibles, maravillosos, honorables, que están a cargo de los siete cielos. Ellos son: Miguel, Gabriel, Satquiel, Sajaquiel, Bakariel, Badariel y Pajriel […] Todos ellos ciñen reales coronas, visten hábitos reales y se cubren con reales vestiduras. Todos ellos cabalgan sobre reales corceles y sus manos empuñan cetros reales. Cuando cada uno de ellos se desplaza por Raquia, van corriendo ante él reales sirvientes con gran pompa y boato, del mismo modo que se desplazan los príncipes en la tierra en carroza, con jinetes y numerosas huestes, con gloria, grandeza, alabanza, loa y ornato” Libro de Enoch (versión hebréa) en Díez Macho, Alejandro: Apócrifos del Antiguo Testamento El emperador Carlos V y los jesuitas fueron los que hicieron posible que se les rindiese culto hasta nuestros días. Si os fijáis hay siete niveles, como había 7 grados en el Mitraísmo. Para mi estas líneas ley sirven entre otras cosas para eso, para comunicarse con esos entrecomillas “ángeles”. Invitados: Semshu Hor @trips0 …. macaco @10macaco10 …. Dra Yane #JusticiaParaUTP @ayec98_2 Médico y Buscadora de la verdad. Con Dios siempre! No permito q me dividan c/izq -derecha, raza, religión ni nada de la Creación. https://youtu.be/TXEEZUYd4c0 …. UTP Ramón Valero @tecn_preocupado Un técnico Preocupado un FP2 IVOOX UTP http://cutt.ly/dzhhGrf BLOG http://cutt.ly/dzhh2LX Ayúdame desde mi Crowfunding aquí https://cutt.ly/W0DsPVq ………………………………………………………………………………………. Enlaces citados en el podcast: Sintonía Alfa 4x08 - Hipogeus (Hipogeos) Culto a Mitra https://www.ivoox.com/sintonia-alfa-4x08-hipogeus-hipogeos-enric-puig-audios-mp3_rf_26520071_1.html PODEMOS, LOS PITUFOS Y EL GORRO FRIGIO https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2014/11/27/podemos-pitufos-gorro-frigio/ Mitraísmo https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitra%C3%ADsmo Los misterios de Mitra https://x.com/AmurakaHidden/status/1835514957707800983 Los Siete Arcángeles. Una iconografía al servicio del poder. https://www.investigart.com/2020/06/02/los-siete-arcangeles-una-iconografia-al-servicio-del-poder/ Universo fractal https://www.ivoox.com/universo-fractal-audios-mp3_rf_9991855_1.html EL VUELO INFINITO DE LAS MARIPOSAS I https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2023/07/27/el-vuelo-infinito-de-las-mariposas-i/ SINCRONICIDADES Y EL EFECTO MARIPOSA II https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2023/11/19/sincronicidades-y-el-efecto-mariposa-ii/ ………………………………………………………………………………………. Música utilizada en este podcast: Tema inicial Heros ………………………………………………………………………………………. Epílogo Red - Bian I El B Los Aldeanos https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiAIkZ6BLlg
What happens when you combine faith, business, and a commitment to community transformation? In this episode of The Construction MF'ers Podcast, Scott Peper, Founder & CEO of Mobilization Funding, sits down with Rob Reynolds, Founder and President of Cross Boss Media. Rob shares his journey from co-founding Avesta, a real estate company with $1.7 billion in assets and $200 million in revenue, to launching Studio 3:16, a faith-based media program for children.Episode Highlights:
Heute sprechen wir über einen Philosophen, von dem ihr alle schon gehört habt. Aber wahrscheinlich nur, weil ein anderer Philosoph ihn als dramatische Figur in einem Buch benutzt hat. "Also sprach Zarathustra" ist einer der bekanntesten Texte der deutschen Philosophiegeschichte, aber wieso hat Friedrich Nietzsche sich aus der iranischen Antike bedient und gab es Zarathustra eigentlich wirklich? Darüber spreche ich mit Kianoosh Rezania, der mir erklärt, was Zoroastrismus ist, was in den Gathas und dem Avesta steht und wieso das Konzept des Dualismus wohl tatsächlich auf Zarathustra zurückgeht. Kianoosh Rezania ist Professor für Westasiatische Religionsgeschichte an der Ruhr-Universität Bochum.
Rebecca Hatfield is the CEO and president of Avesta Housing. With a background in finance and tech, Rebecca brings a unique blend of analytical prowess and compassion to her role at one of Maine's most well-recognized affordable housing non-profits. Raised on the West Coast, Rebecca spent time all over the world before moving to her husband's home state nine years ago. She has become known as a strategic leader dedicated to tackling Maine's housing crisis head-on, noting the critical intersection of stable housing and overall well-being. Join our conversation with Rebecca Hatfield today on Radio Maine.
Sweden launched a groundbreaking new law on July 1 that allows grandparents to step in and get paid parental leave while taking care of their grandchildren for up to three months of a child's first year. The development comes after the Swedish parliament, the 349-seat Riksdag, approved last December the government's proposal on the transfer of parental allowance. This comes 50 years after the Scandinavian country became the first in the world to introduce paid parental leave for fathers and not just mothers. Under the law, parents can transfer some of their generous parental leave allowance to the child's grandparents. A parent couple can transfer a maximum of 45 days to others while a single parent can transfer 90 days, according to the Social Insurance Agency, a government agency that administers the social insurance system. This Scandinavian country of 10 million, known for its taxpayer-funded social welfare system, has over generations built a society where citizens are taken care of from cradle to grave. In Sweden, you are entitled to be fully off work when your child is born. Parental benefit is paid out for 480 days, or about 16 months, per child. Of those, the compensation for 390 days is calculated based on a person's full income, while for the remaining 90 days, people get a fixed amount of 180 kronor ($17) per day. Alexandra Wallin of Sweden's Social Insurance Agency told Swedish broadcaster SVT the new law will “give greater opportunities.” Still, the rules for grandparents, she said, are the same as for ordinary parental allowance and require a person to be insured for parental allowance, which most people in Sweden are. There are conditions for parental allowance—a retiree can also take parental leave, for example, in which case the compensation is based on the person's pension. A person may not look for work or study during the time they receive parental allowance. In the central town of Avesta, about 140 kilometers (87 miles) northwest of Stockholm, Ritva Kärkkäinen told SVT she is considering taking time off work to care for her grandchildren. This article was provided by The Associated Press.
Dan French is on ATX's Investment Committee. He has been a business partner of ATX Founder, Peter Rex, for 1 8 years. He served as CEO of Avesta beginning in 2015 and was instrumental in helping grow it into a company with roughly 500 teammates which was named one of Fortune Magazine's ‘Best Places to Work' and ranked top 5 for most apartment renovations.To learn more about this amazing investment opportunity, Portofino Club Apartments by ATX Acquisitions, please click here - https://impactequity.investnext.com/portal/offerings/5843/ RANDY SMITH Connect with our host, Randy Smith, for more educational content or to discuss investment opportunities in the real estate syndication space at www.impactequity.net, https://www.linkedin.com/in/randallsmith or on Instagram at @randysmithinvestor
Jimmy Johansson äventyraren mot mobbing. Jimmy sprang 450 km 2022, från Avesta till Kalmar i ett sträck. Löpturen var till förmån med insamling för Måns Jenningers Fond och Orka & Funka. Jimmy har nya äventyr på gång med insamling till förmån för HNF & Statsmissionen. I detta program möter vi även Jimmys kompis Maria Hallgren. Maria berättar bland annat om hur hon hittade sin man efter ett misslyckat självmords försök, idag lever mannen på ett LSS boende och hon är ensam med tre barn. Programledare: Pierre Näsman
Midowga Yurub wuxuu adkeeynayaa sharciyada ka ganacsiga dadka. Raii'sul wasaaraha Hungary Viktor Orbán ayaa wadahadal la yeeshay xoghayaha guud ee gaashaanbuurta NATO Jens Stoltenberg. Dhowr qof ayaa la xiray ka dib howlgal ballaaran oo boolisku ka sameeyeen magaalada Avesta.
Ocean 2.0 is a continuously expanding collection of open-access religious and spiritual texts - from Avesta to the Upanishads, and much more!Learn more at https://oceanlibrary.com Sacred Traditions City: Granite Bay Address: 7890 Boren Lane Website https://oceanlibrary.com Phone +19167656913 Email chadananda@gmail.com
Katie Goar is wrapping up our conversation with Rebecca Hatfield, the president and CEO of Avesta Housing, the largest nonprofit affordable housing provider in northern New England. In this episode, Rebecca shares how she approaches the leadership of her organization. She talks about her values, her vision, and her strategies for creating a culture of excellence and collaboration. She also shares some of the challenges and opportunities that are unique to New England. She also gives some advice for aspiring ChangeMakers who want to make a difference in the world. If you want to learn more about how Rebecca and Avesta Housing are creating homes and hope for thousands of people in need, you don't want to miss this episode of ChangeMakers. It will inspire you to lead with passion and purpose!
This week, Katie is joined by ChangeMaker, Rebecca Hatfield, the president and CEO of Avesta Housing, the largest nonprofit affordable housing provider in northern New England. They serve more than 4,000 residents, many of whom are seniors, veterans, families, and people with disabilities. Rebecca has been with Avesta since 2015 and has transformed them into a successful and innovative organization. She is a passionate leader who cares deeply about the people she serves. She is also a community leader who supports various causes that improve the quality of life for everyone. In this episode, Rebecca shares her story of how she became the head of a thriving nonprofit organization. She also talks about the challenges and opportunities of providing affordable housing in a time of crisis and change. She also shares her vision for the future of Avesta Housing and how they are making a difference in the world. Don't miss this episode of ChangeMakers. It will inspire you!
Första rad: Det var varmt i luften UPPLÄSNING: Nils-Åke Hasselmark DIKT: Ur "Avesta jernverk" av Nils-Åke HasselmarkDIKTSAMLING: Avesta jernverk (Edition Tegnér, 2022)MUSIK: Ralph Vaughan Williams: Hymn tune prelude on eventideEXEKUTÖR: Londons symfoniorkester, Bryden Thomson, dirigent
"Det här är bara utvecklingen, den får vi vika oss för!" Så beskriver statsvetaren Evert Vedung den inställning som gjorde att Sverige på kort tid lyckades skapa ett överskott av elektricitet, med ett högt pris för naturen och samerna. Sveriges elhistoria är den om tidig och snabb utbyggnad av olika energislag som kunde producera el till låga priser. Om innovationer, framsynthet och långsiktighet, men också om naturvärden som offrades i moderniseringens namn. Har vi idag något att lära av den historien, när nu elproduktionen i landet behöver öka kraftigt och snabbt, för att vi ska nå klimatmålen och samtidigt ha en ekonomi i tillväxt?I tre program besöker Vetenskapsradion några olika elhistoriska platser i Sverige. I denna första del bland annat Horndal i Dalarna, som var den sydliga slutpunkten för den första kraftledningen mellan norra och södra Sverige, vilken togs i drift 1936. Horndal är än idag en stor knutpunkt för kraftledningar och inte minst därför har Google planer på att bygga ett gigantiskt datacenter där, som kommer att sluka oerhörda mängder el.Vi får också höra historien om hur det spektakulära Stora Sjöfallet i Lappland offrades för vattenkraften.Programmet är en repris från 30 augusti 2022. Medverkande: Magnus Carlson, förvaltare Vattenfall; Kerstin Enflo, ekonomhistoriker Lunds Universitet; Lasse Wallbing, kraftverksveteran och aktiv i Porjus arkivkommitté; Lars-Erik Lindström på museet i Krångede; Evert Vedung, professor emeritus i statsvetenskap på Uppsala Universitet; Börje Forslund, lokalhistoriker från Avesta samt Bengt Söderkvist, boende i Horndal.Reporter: Mats Carlsson-LénartProducent: Björn Gunérbjorn.guner@sr.se
In this episode of The Boulos Beat, guest host Claire Richardson speaks with Rebecca Hatfield, president and CEO of Avesta Housing. Avesta Housing is northern New England's largest non-profit affordable housing provider, with more than 100 properties and 40 municipalities throughout Maine and New Hampshire. Rebecca and Claire sit down to discuss how she became the CEO and president of Avesta Housing and the transition from senior vice president at Citigroup to her new role. They also talk about the housing shortage, what needs to be done to change it, and how Avesta Housing is working towards that goal. They also get into Rebecca's biggest inspirations and mentors, her experience being a woman of color in the housing and real estate industry, and the short-term focus and long-term goals for Avesta Housing. Listen to the latest episode of The Boulos Beat on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Vimeo!
Baabuurta la geeyo Skrott-ka oo yaraaday. Duulimaadyada diyaaradaha oo dib ugu laabtay heerkii Covid ka hor iyo degmadda Avesta oo dhalleeceyn kaga timid dhanka IVO
It's almost officially springtime in the Northern Hemisphere, and the vernal equinox brings with it another reason to celebrate: Nowruz! Commonly known as Persian New Year, Nowruz has its roots in a millennia-old religion founded by a man named Zartosht whose ideas had a profound impact on the world. Anna introduces fire temples and what ancient writers had to say about Zoroastrianism, while Amber hypes the Bronze Age in Central Asia and suggests some ways in which Zoroastrian ideas have affected other religions. Nowruz: Traditions for Persian New Year (United States Institute of Peace: The Iran Primer)What life was like when Zoroaster lived? (Zoroastrian Kids)Avesta (Livius.org)Zoroastrians of Central Asia: Evidence from Archaeology and Art (FEZANA Journal via Academia.edu)Records of the General Conference, 31st session, Paris, 2001, v. 2: Proceedings (UNESCO)Ancient Sogdiana: A ‘Zoroastrian Stronghold' (Avesta.org)Parsi Woman Excommunication Case (Supreme Court Observer)Early Chahar-Taqi Fire Houses and Temples (Heritage Institute)The culture and social institutions of ancient Iran (WorldCat.org)Ātaškada (Encyclopedia Iranica)Fire Altars and Fire Temples in the First Millennia BC/AD in the Iranian World (via ResearchGate)Zoroastrians in East Africa (The Zoroastrian Diaspora)The Obscure Religion that Shaped the West (BBC Culture)An Archaeology of Religion (via Google Books)A Rare Glimpse Inside A Zoroastrian Temple In New York (HuffPost)
Efter en våldtäkt knuffas kvinnan ner i ett gruvhål. Hör om mordförsöket, den mirakulösa räddningen, polisutredningen och om den ovanliga domen. Från ett 24 meter djupt gruvhål hörs ett rop på hjälp. Bland snötäckta sopor och bråte har en kvinna kämpat för sitt liv i nästan 30 timmar. Av en slump går en man och hans två barn förbi i den ödsliga skogen mellan Avesta och Norberg och kan slå larm.Brandmannen Oscar Alm Sarin är den första personen som möter kvinnan nere i gruvhålet. Hör honom berätta om den dramatiska räddningsinsatsen, konstiga magkänslan och varför han aldrig kommer glömma den dagen.Hör också åklagare Ann-Sofie Trossing och rådman Johan Alvner om varför den åtalade mannen dömdes till Sveriges hårdaste straff - något som är ovanligt när det handlar om mordförsök.När det här avsnittets släpps har domen överklagats av mannens advokat Anders Ylönen, och kommer att prövas i hovrätten.Övriga medverkande:Mårten Andersson, polis och utredningsledare. Dennis Martinsson, universitetslektor i rättsvetenskap och doktor i straffrätt vid Stockholms universitet.Programledare: Linus Lindahl, Fanny HedenmoProducent: Stefan SundbergReporter: Jennifer Ahlbom & Linnéa WanneforsTekniker: Fredrik NilssonKontakt: p3krim@sverigesradio.seTipstelefon: 0734-61 29 15
Linus Lindahl och Fanny Hedenmo ger den senaste uppdateringen av veckans krimnyheter. Hör detaljerna kring de viktigaste händelserna. Förra veckan sköts en man till döds i en bil på Södra länken i Stockholm, mitt under rusningstrafik. Tre män är häktade för mordet. Hör kammaråklagare Daniel Jonsson om det senaste i fallet.De tolv klimataktivister från gruppen Återställ våtmarker har fått sina domar efter att blockerat vägbanan på E4an vid Haga Norra vid Solna i augusti. Samtliga tolv åtalade dömdes i måndags av Solna tingsrätt för sabotage å ohörsamhet mot ordningsmakten.Det blir livstids fängelse för den man som våldtog och kastade ner en kvinna i ett gruvhål mellan Avesta och Norberg. Det meddelande tingsrätten i förra fredagen. Men enligt åklagaren är det en ganska ovanlig dom.Programledare: Stefan Sundberg, Fanny HedenmoProducent: Stefan SundbergReporter: Jennifer Ahlbom & Linnéa WanneforsKontakt: p3krim@sverigesradio.seTipstelefon: 0734-61 29 15
Linus Lindahl och Pernilla Wadebäck ger den senaste uppdateringen av veckans krimnyheter. Hör detaljerna kring de viktigaste händelserna. En kvinna i Blekinge har häktats misstänkt för grov misshandel, efter flera filmklipp som spridits på sociala medier som uppges visa hur hon slår sitt barn. Hör advokat Markus Segerström och åklagare Anna Johansson Toresten.Riksåklagare meddelar att de inte kommer att pröva fallet Alexandra. Vi har tidigare berättat om hur hennes fall preskriberades mitt under pågående rättegång. Justiteombudsmannen Per Lennerbrant och kammaråklagare Sara Stolper berättar mer.I april hittades en kvinna i ett gruvhål mellan Avesta och Norberg. En man står åtalad för försök till mord och grov våldtäkt. I måndags inleddes rättegången.Det har tillkommit nya brottsmisstankar i fallet med dödspåkörningen på Hisingen i somras, där två bröder misstänks för mord och mordförsök efter att ha kört ihjäl sin mamma. Hör åklagare Hediye Kurt.Programledare: Linus Lindahl, Pernilla WadebäckProducent: Filip BohmReporter: Jennifer AhlbomKontakt: p3krim@sverigesradio.seTipstelefon: 0734-61 29 15
"Det här är bara utvecklingen, den får vi vika oss för!" Så beskriver statsvetaren Evert Vedung den inställning som gjorde att Sverige på kort tid lyckades skapa ett överskott av elektricitet, med ett högt pris för naturen och samerna. Sveriges elhistoria är den om tidig och snabb utbyggnad av olika energislag som kunde producera el till låga priser. Om innovationer, framsynthet och långsiktighet, men också om naturvärden som offrades i moderniseringens namn. Har vi idag något att lära av den historien, när nu elproduktionen i landet behöver öka kraftigt och snabbt, för att vi ska nå klimatmålen och samtidigt ha en ekonomi i tillväxt?I tre program besöker Vetenskapsradion några olika elhistoriska platser i Sverige. I denna första del bland annat Horndal i Dalarna, som var den sydliga slutpunkten för den första kraftledningen mellan norra och södra Sverige, vilken togs i drift 1936. Horndal är än idag en stor knutpunkt för kraftledningar och inte minst därför har Google planer på att bygga ett gigantiskt datacenter där, som kommer att sluka oerhörda mängder el.Vi får också höra historien om hur det spektakulära Stora Sjöfallet i Lappland offrades för vattenkraften.Medverkande: Magnus Carlson, förvaltare Vattenfall; Kerstin Enflo, ekonomhistoriker Lunds Universitet; Lasse Wallbing, kraftverksveteran och aktiv i Porjus arkivkommitté; Lars-Erik Lindström på museet i Krångede; Evert Vedung, professor emeritus i statsvetenskap på Uppsala Universitet; Börje Forslund, lokalhistoriker från Avesta samt Bengt Söderkvist, boende i Horndal.Reporter: Mats Carlsson-LénartProducent: Björn Gunér bjorn.guner@sr.se
"Det här är bara utvecklingen, den får vi vika oss för!" Så beskriver statsvetaren Evert Vedung den inställning som gjorde att Sverige på kort tid lyckades skapa ett överskott av elektricitet, med ett högt pris för naturen och samerna. Sveriges elhistoria är den om tidig och snabb utbyggnad av olika energislag som kunde producera el till låga priser. Om innovationer, framsynthet och långsiktighet, men också om naturvärden som offrades i moderniseringens namn. Har vi idag något att lära av den historien, när nu elproduktionen i landet behöver öka kraftigt och snabbt, för att vi ska nå klimatmålen och samtidigt ha en ekonomi i tillväxt?I tre program besöker Vetenskapsradion några olika elhistoriska platser i Sverige. I denna första del bland annat Horndal i Dalarna, som var den sydliga slutpunkten för den första kraftledningen mellan norra och södra Sverige, vilken togs i drift 1936. Horndal är än idag en stor knutpunkt för kraftledningar och inte minst därför har Google planer på att bygga ett gigantiskt datacenter där, som kommer att sluka oerhörda mängder el.Vi får också höra historien om hur det spektakulära Stora Sjöfallet i Lappland offrades för vattenkraften.Medverkande: Magnus Carlson, förvaltare Vattenfall; Kerstin Enflo, ekonomhistoriker Lunds Universitet; Lasse Wallbing, kraftverksveteran och aktiv i Porjus arkivkommitté; Lars-Erik Lindström på museet i Krångede; Evert Vedung, professor emeritus i statsvetenskap på Uppsala Universitet; Börje Forslund, lokalhistoriker från Avesta samt Bengt Söderkvist, boende i Horndal.Reporter: Mats Carlsson-LénartProducent: Björn Gunér bjorn.guner@sr.se
Join John Williams and Dana Connors with special guest Dana Totman CEO of Avesta Housing for this weeks Maine Business Outreach.
A round-up of the main headlines in Sweden on August 1st, 2022. You can hear more reports on our homepage www.radiosweden.se, or in our app Sveriges Radio Play. Presenter: Michael WalshProducer: Dave Russell
Avesta Housing's Catherine Elliott joins us to share about the opening of Gauvreau Place, a multi-story apartment building in Lewiston owned by CCI that is providing 35 new homes for individuals and families in our neighborhood. CCI and Avesta, who partnered as a developer on the project, celebrated the building's opening on July 12th with a ribbon cutting ceremony. Governor Janet Mills, MaineHousing Director Daniel Brennan, Avesta President and CEO Dana Totman, CCI's Shawn Yardley, and Johanna Gauvreau spoke at the event honoring the opening of the building as well as Paul Gauvreau, whom the building is named after. Paul Gauvreau was a well-known Lewiston attorney and state legislator who served for more than 20 years in the Office of Maine's Attorney General. Gauvreau also served as a CCI board member and supported many local organizations including Tri-County Mental Health Services, The Boys and Girls Club, Kiwanis, and Legal Services for the Elderly. He passed away unexpectedly in April of 2020. Located at the corner of Blake and Pine Streets in Lewiston's Tree Streets Neighborhood, Gauvreau Place will bring much needed safe and affordable housing to the city. Learn more about the building and ribbon cutting ceremony here. To donate to the Paul Gauvreau Legacy Fund, established in honor of Paul to provide CCI flexibility to quickly respond to the changing needs of the community, please visit our website.
Cykelsäsongen är i full färd och därför ska vi ut och cykla! Christian Olsson sitter på pakethållaren. Karlavagnen onsdag sticker ut på cykelturTog du med hela familjen ut på cykelsemester en sommar? Hur var det och hur gick det till rent logistiskt? Har du cyklat tandemcykel med Prins Daniel längs ett öländskt rapsfält? Och hur känns det att susa upp för den branta backen på din dyra elcykel, förbi alla andra som kämpar med mjölksyran på en gammal rostig velociped?När det blev felVi har alla hamnat i olika prekära situationer när det inte riktigt gick som det var tänkt, eftersom vi trampade snett och därmed hamnade i diket. De historierna är också välkomna i Karlavagnen onsdag! Har du missförstått vad en äggledare egentligen var, något du blev smärtsamt medveten om kring påsk eller har du helt enkelt cyklat till Alvesta fast du skulle till Avesta? När var du ute och cyklade?Ring till Christian Olsson i KarlavagnenDela med dig av din cykelhistoria! Du kan mejla karlavagnen@sverigesradio.se eller skriva till oss på Facebook och Instagram. Programmet börjar kl 21.03 i P4, ring oss från kl 20.00. 020-22 10 30Direktsänder från GöteborgChristian sänder programmet direkt från radiohuset i Göteborg men du kan också lyssna på podden i efterhand i Sveriges Radio Play eller på webben.Ansvarig utgivare: Sabina Schatzl
Pertti Lindgren dyker upp i TV som sol- och-vårare, sexrådgivare och storbedragare. Hundratals kvinnor sägs ha fallit offer för honom. Men vad var egentligen sant i berättelsen om tangogreven Pertti? Pertti Lindgren föds 1936 i Finland och livet tar sin början ett krig. Han kommer till Sverige som krigsbarn, endast fem år gammal. Hans pappa har dött vid fronten, mamman är utfattig och kan inte behålla honom. I Sverige hamnar han hos en välbeställd familj, femhundra mil och ett kosmos från tillvaron han lämnat bakom sig. Även om meningarna går isär om vad som egentligen händer hos familjen i Avesta, börjar Pertti drömma om ett annat, rikare och större liv. Kvinnotjusaren och bedragaren Pertti LindgrenUnder 1970- och 80-talen skapas stora rubriker i dagspressen om sol- och våraren, kvinnotjusaren och bedragaren Pertti Lindgren. Som artist kallade han sig själv Tangogreven. I en självbiografi skriver han om sina öden och äventyr och den bilden av honom blir rådande över 50 år. Men vad är drömmen om ett mer spännande liv och vad är verklighet?Här ger hans barn för första gången sin bild av pappa Pertti och kvinnan som är målsägande i det enda rättsfallet i Sverige där Pertti Lindgren stått åtalad berättar om ett dråpligt kärleksförsök i Västerås 1961. Programmet är gjort 2022.Reporter: Max Landergård Producenter: Sofia Kottorp och Ola Hemström
In this Get On Code panel discussion the Christian-Magic practitioner #ChakraDoctor, the Metaphysician #MinisterZumbiShawala, and Gnostic Empowerment Seeker @SekoVarner discuss the messages, meanings, and guidance in the Resurrection stories in the Metu Neter, the Bible, the Quran, and the Avesta. Tap in! #Easter: Your #Cross, Your #Cave, Your #Resurrection. Get On Code, share the code, teach the code, become the code. Our code is empowerment. Focused on #Empowerment, passionate about #BlackEmpowerment, the Get On Code (The Fly Guy Show), is built on the #EmpowermentAgenda, and led by the #Hotep Conscious Ω Bruh' @SekoVarner aka #MrEmpowerment. #GetOnCode #GetOnCodeShow #GetOnCodePodcast #TheFlyGuysShow #OmegaPsiPhi #Ques #Uplift #ConsciousCommunity #PanAfrican #FoundationalBlackAmerican Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Email TheFlyGuysShow@gmail.com . Private Money for Real Estate Investments: https://PositiveVibesFinancial.com Purify yourself, house, and environment to remain safe: https://www.vollara.com/PositiveVibes Invest with Acorns: https://www.acorns.com/invite?code=zd3daa Invest in stocks via STASH: https://get.stashinvest.com/sekosq72j Fix your credit: https://positivevibes.myecon.net/my-credit-system/ Healthy Health & Beauty products: http://commonscents4u.org/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/get-on-code/message
Supporta BLMP genom att bli en patron! Spana in de olika alternativen på http://www.patreon.com/blmetalpodcast B.L. kör lite solokvist och berättar lite om en punkig helg i Avesta, men också hur man kan höra att en sångare har halstatuering. Mycket missnöje! Playlist: God Mother - Teething Golgothan Remains - Wandering Through Chambers of Deathlike Void Heaving Earth - Violent Gospels (Ordination of the Holy Trinity) Ljosazabojstwa - Zorka Pałyn Nite - Edge of the Night DHG - Vendetta Assassin I samarbete med Medborgarskolan.
In this episode, Avesta talks about the struggles of living with ADHD in academia and in an ableist world. From her early struggles as a child to the way her medication helped her, she generously paints a portrait of the reality of living in her brain. This is a great first episode of the topic of ADHD in which I hope you will learn as much as I did. - - - - - - - Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/mentalhealthmuch
Hello Everyone! I'm Ani Avedissian. Welcome to Metaphysical Martini. Three parts spirit. One part rational mind. Add two drops of optimism. Give it all good, hard shake and pour. Dress it with the olives of grace and empathy. Sit back, sip slowly and contemplate the wonder of cosmic co-creation. Join me, Ani Avedissian, to find out what's true...what's woo...and what gets flushed down the loo in today's poorly educated, highly opinionated, dysfunctional little world. Our goal is to "Let the Spirit Inhabit the Human" but be warned - this show is politically incorrect because we do not wish to erode our intellect. If you are easily offended, this show is not for you. If, on the other hand, you are a sovereign soul with a sense of humor and capacity for objectivity, then welcome aboard! ******************** ABOUT METAPHYSICAL MARTINI "Metaphysical Martini” with Ani Avedissian, the Suburban Shaman. Live on CosmicReality.com/radio every other Wednesday 7-8 pm EST/4-5 pm PST https://www.cosmicreality.com/radio.html PODCAST ARCHIVES Cosmic Reality - https://www.cosmicreality.com/archives.html Podcast.co - https://pod.co/points-to-ponder-during-happy-hour ANI ON THE WEB Ani's website - http://aniavedissian.com YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDk0ipSNxRzExCG1sHKNiew Don't miss Ani's "Patriot Rap" https://www.bitchute.com/video/kFkA5lKbjuG6/ SUPPORT COSMIC ANI Hey Peeps! I make these podcasts and videos on my own dime to promote social awareness, to encourage We the Peeps to share ideas and opinions. Without open, civil discussion, we cannot build a better world. We need space to share, to declare and above all, we need to relearn the importance of discussion for the sake of evolution, not for the sake of winning an argument. All donations are gratefully received. PayPal: https://paypal.me/AniAvedissian If you do not wish to use PayPal, my mailing address is Cosmic Ani PO Box 714 Wilsonville OR 97070 USA
Före detta ishockeyspelaren och legendaren Nicklas ”Lidas” Lidström gör storartad entré i Framgångspodden! Under sina 20 år i Nordamerika och NHL spelade han för Detroit Red Wings där han vann Stanley Cup inte mindre än fyra gånger. Han är den europé som spelat flest slutspelsmatcher och 2015 blev han invald i Hockey Hall of Fame. Vi går igenom hans otroliga karriär, från att ha vuxit upp i Avesta och spelat hockey i Västerås till att bli en av de mest framgångsrika backarna genom historien. Vi får höra Nicklas berätta hur han arbetat både fysiskt och psykiskt för att klara att vara på topp under så lång tid, och hur han hanterat motgångarna längst vägen. Vi pratar också om vikten av mentorer, vad Börje Salming betytt för honom, om mötet med George W. Busch, om livet efter hockeykarriären och massor av annat! Ett otroligt avsnitt om att alltid prestera på topp! Besök Framgångsakademin: www.framgangsakademin.se Beställ "Mitt Framgångsår": https://bit.ly/3jGuZyJ Alexander Pärleros Instagram: www.instagram.com/alexanderparleros Bästa tipsen från avsnittet i Nyhetsbrevet: www.framgangspodden.se I samarbete med Convendum: www.convendum.se - Ange koden "Framgångspodden" när du kontaktar contact@convendum.se See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Före detta ishockeyspelaren och legendaren Nicklas ”Lidas” Lidström gör storartad entré i Framgångspodden! Under sina 20 år i Nordamerika och NHL spelade han för Detroit Red Wings där han vann Stanley Cup inte mindre än fyra gånger. Han är den europé som spelat flest slutspelsmatcher och 2015 blev han invald i Hockey Hall of Fame. Vi går igenom hans otroliga karriär, från att ha vuxit upp i Avesta och spelat hockey i Västerås till att bli en av de mest framgångsrika backarna genom historien. Vi får höra Nicklas berätta hur han arbetat både fysiskt och psykiskt för att klara att vara på topp under så lång tid, och hur han hanterat motgångarna längst vägen. Vi pratar också om vikten av mentorer, vad Börje Salming betytt för honom, om mötet med George W. Busch, om livet efter hockeykarriären och massor av annat! Ett otroligt avsnitt om att alltid prestera på topp! Besök Framgångsakademin: www.framgangsakademin.se Beställ "Mitt Framgångsår": https://bit.ly/3jGuZyJ Alexander Pärleros Instagram: www.instagram.com/alexanderparleros Bästa tipsen från avsnittet i Nyhetsbrevet: www.framgangspodden.se I samarbete med Convendum: www.convendum.se - Ange koden "Framgångspodden" när du kontaktar contact@convendum.se See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode, host Greg Boulos sits down with Dana Totman, President and CEO of Avesta Housing. Avesta Housing is a nonprofit affordable housing provider whose mission is to improve lives and strengthen communities by promoting and providing quality affordable homes for people in need. Avesta has seen significant growth over the past 20 years growing from 800 units to over 2,900 units. Discover how Dana determines which sites to develop into affordable housing, his advice on getting into the development business, and his passion for climbing mountains.
Mr. Crawford is a Co-founder and President of Coltala Holdings. He has over 15 years of experience in investing, asset management and building operating teams. As a Managing Director of Avesta Holdings, Mr. Crawford led business development activities; identified capital and acquisitions, special situation opportunities and managed key investor relationships. Mr. Crawford helped build Avesta's business to include over 320 employees and $1billion in assets and $100 million in revenue. Mr. Crawford was a Vice President at Goldman Sachs where he spent seven years as an advisor to numerous CEOs, institutions and private company owners. Mr. Crawford joined Goldman Sachs from the private equity firm Advantage Capital Partners (ACP), a national lower, middle-market, private equity firm. Prior to joining ACP, he served as a Peace Corps volunteer in the Dominican Republic where, at 23 years of age, he founded a four-member coffee cooperative and grew it to include more than 200 coffee farmers with access to global markets. Mr. Crawford is a trustee of the New World Symphony in Miami Beach, Florida; a trustee on the Business School Council at The Freeman School of Business at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana; and a Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. As a U.S. Naval Intelligence Officer, Mr. Crawford served with Special Operations Command South in Latin America. From 2012-2013, he was deployed to Afghanistan as the Tribal and Political Adviser for SEAL Teams Two and Four as part of a Special Operations Task Force. He was awarded the Bronze Star for his service. Education MBA, MIT Sloan School of Management (MIT Sloan Leadership Fellow) MA, GMBA Tulane University, Latin America Studies / Finance (Morton Aldrich Fellow / FLAS Fellow / Cowen Scholar) BA, Texas Christian University / English Literature Listen to Edwards Ted Talk: https://youtu.be/gl4n6b5Lu-8 www.enothstar.com 000003E4 000003E1 0000535A 0000535A 00064FB6 00064FB6 00008045 00007F60 00014A68 00014A68
The Project EGG Show: Entrepreneurs Gathering for Growth | Conversations That Change The World
Mr. Crawford is a Co-founder and President of Coltala Holdings. He has over 15 years of experience in investing, asset management and building operating teams. As a Managing Director of Avesta Holdings, Mr. Crawford led business development activities; identified capital and acquisitions, special situation opportunities and managed key investor relationships. Mr. Crawford helped build Avesta's business to include over 320 employees and $1billion in assets and $100 million in revenue. Mr. Crawford was a Vice President at Goldman Sachs where he spent seven years as an advisor to numerous CEOs, institutions and private company owners. Mr. Crawford joined Goldman Sachs from the private equity firm Advantage Capital Partners (ACP), a national lower, middle-market, private equity firm. Prior to joining ACP, he served as a Peace Corps volunteer in the Dominican Republic where, at 23 years of age, he founded a four-member coffee cooperative and grew it to include more than 200 coffee farmers with access to global markets. Mr. Crawford is a trustee of the New World Symphony in Miami Beach, Florida; a trustee on the Business School Council at The Freeman School of Business at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana; and a Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. As a U.S. Naval Intelligence Officer, Mr. Crawford served with Special Operations Command South in Latin America. From 2012-2013, he was deployed to Afghanistan as the Tribal and Political Adviser for SEAL Teams Two and Four as part of a Special Operations Task Force. He was awarded the Bronze Star for his service. About The Project EGG Show: The Project EGG Show is a video talk show that introduces you to entrepreneurs from around the world. It is broadcast from studios in Metairie, Louisiana to online platforms including YouTube, iTunes, Google Play, Spotify and Stitcher, and hosted by Ben Gothard. Our goal is to give you a fresh, unscripted and unedited look into the lives of real entrepreneurs from around the globe. From billionaires to New York Times best selling authors to Emmy Award winners to Forbes 30 Under 30 recipients to TEDx speakers – we present their real stories – uncensored and uncut. Subscribe To The Show: https://projectegg.co/podcast/ Get Access To: 1. Resources: https://projectegg.co/resources/ 2. Financing Solutions: https://projectegg.co/epoch/ 3. Payment Solutions: https://projectegg.co/sempr/ 4. Services: https://projectegg.co/resources#services 5. Courses: https://projectegg.co/resources#courses 6. Software: https://projectegg.co/resources#software 7. Book: https://projectegg.co/resources#books --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/projectegg/support