Podcasts about baim

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Best podcasts about baim

Latest podcast episodes about baim

Radijo dokumentika
Serialas „Keturios baimės dienos“: Pasinerti (5/6)

Radijo dokumentika

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2024 29:09


„Keturios baimės dienos“ – tai šešių dalių dokumentinis audioserialas apie pabėgimą iš komunistinės Rytų Vokietijos. Nauji epizodai įkeliami sekmadieniais.*5 dalis. 1973 m. liepos 5 d.Ketvirtoji slapstymosi diena. Berbel nueina į lauko baseiną paplaukioti ir likti nepastebėta. Slaptoji policija Stasi krečia jos namus Halėje. Tuo metu jos brolis prisimena savo pabėgimą iš VDR, kai jam teko suvalgyti... pasą.*2019 m. dokumentinį serialą „Keturios baimės dienos“ (vok. „4 Tage Angst“) prodiusavo Vokietijos Bavarijos radijas („Bayerischer Rundfunk“).Autorius – Till Ottlitz, režisierė – Alexandra Distler, garso inžinierius – Fabian Zweck, redaktorius – Klaus Uhrig, redaktoriaus padėjėja – Laura Freisberg.2024 m. lietuviškai adaptuoti serialą LRT RADIJUI licenciją suteikė „BRmedia Service“.Iš vokiečių kalbos vertė Lina Čerkauskienė, redagavo Miglė Bagdonė.Vertimą įgarsino: Inga Burneikaitė, Rimantas Bagdzevičius, Ignas Ciplijauskas, Adelė Čepienė, Larisa Kalpokaitė, Violeta Podolskaitė, Arvydas Urba ir Odeta Vasiliauskaitė.Lietuviškai adaptavo: Rūta Dambravaitė, Sonata Jadevičienė, Vaida Pilibaitytė ir Inga Tamulevičienė.Adaptacijos redaktorė – Vaida Pilibaitytė.

hal stasi ryt tuo lietuvi baim vdr vokietijos nauji dienos ketvirtoji keturios lrt radijui dambravait rimantas bagdzevi sonata jadevi vaida pilibaityt arvydas urba
Proto Pemza
#92 - Kraugerių dvarai: baudžiava Lietuvoje

Proto Pemza

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 97:45


Vergija Lietuvoje buvo, tiesa, mes geriau ją pažįstame baudžiavos vardu. Bevardžiais įrankiais paversti mūsų protėviai kančių piką pasiekė Carinės Rusijos sudėtyje, todėl ten jus ir tempsime. Dėmesys šįkart kasdieniams Lietuvos vergų išgyvenimams: nuo brutaliai įprastų prievartavimų iki krauju apskretusiuose loviuose atliekamų fizinių bausmių. Prisisekit saugos diržus, nes kelias per baudžiavą bus duobėtas. Taip pat aiškinsimės, į ką buvo išmainytas Karbauskis,  ką prityrė Stonkus, bei atliksime testą: jei dabar būtų XIX a., ar išgyvenčiaus „Baimės metus“?  Iliustracija: @tinymischiefs  Muzika: Šimonių etnografinis ansamblis, Juozas Tallat-Kelpša, Karo mokyklos choras, Lietuvos nacionalinė Martyno Mažvydo biblioteka, Gustavo_Alivera, zagi2, LimitSnap Creations, szegvari, music_for_video, JuliusH.

Radijo dokumentika
Serialas „Keturios baimės dienos“. Nepriklausomybės diena (4/6)

Radijo dokumentika

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2024 31:16


„Keturios baimės dienos“ – tai šešių dalių dokumentinis audioserialas apie pabėgimą iš komunistinės Rytų Vokietijos. Nauji epizodai įkeliami sekmadieniais.*4 dalis. 1973 m. liepos 4 d.Trečioji slapstymosi diena. Berbel keliauja traukiniais po VDR. Jos ieškantys Stasi pareigūnai tardo pažįstamus. Susitikimas kavinėje Unter den Linden alėjoje baigiasi ne taip, kaip planuota, ir Berbel turi priimti dar vieną sprendimą.*2019 m. dokumentinį serialą „Keturios baimės dienos“ (vok. „4 Tage Angst“) prodiusavo Vokietijos Bavarijos radijas („Bayerischer Rundfunk“).Autorius – Till Ottlitz, režisierė – Alexandra Distler, garso inžinierius – Fabian Zweck, redaktorius – Klaus Uhrig, redaktoriaus padėjėja – Laura Freisberg.2024 m. lietuviškai adaptuoti serialą LRT RADIJUI licenciją suteikė „BRmedia Service“.Iš vokiečių kalbos vertė Lina Čerkauskienė, redagavo Miglė Bagdonė.Vertimą įgarsino: Inga Burneikaitė, Ignas Ciplijauskas, Adelė Čepienė, Larisa Kalpokaitė, Arvydas Urba ir Odeta Vasiliauskaitė.Lietuviškai adaptavo: Rūta Dambravaitė, Sonata Jadevičienė, Vaida Pilibaitytė ir Inga Tamulevičienė.Adaptacijos redaktorė – Vaida Pilibaitytė. 

jos unter linden stasi lietuvi baim vdr nauji dienos nepriklausomyb susitikimas keturios lrt radijui dambravait sonata jadevi vaida pilibaityt arvydas urba
Radijo dokumentika
Serialas „Keturios baimės dienos“. Susitikimo vieta – Aleksandro aikštė (3/6)

Radijo dokumentika

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2024 30:50


„Keturios baimės dienos“ – tai šešių dalių dokumentinis audioserialas apie pabėgimą iš komunistinės Rytų Vokietijos. Nauji epizodai įkeliami sekmadieniais.*3 dalis. 1973 m. liepos 3 d.Antroji slapstymosi diena. Rytų Berlyne Aleksandro aikštėje Berbel susitinka su ryšininku, kuris paskiria naują pabėgimo dieną ir laiką. Pavojus būti sučiuptai slaptosios policijos auga. Vakare ji skambina į visiškai nepažįstamos šeimos duris.*2019 m. dokumentinį serialą „Keturios baimės dienos“ (vok. „4 Tage Angst“) prodiusavo Vokietijos Bavarijos radijas („Bayerischer Rundfunk“).Autorius – Till Ottlitz, režisierė – Alexandra Distler, garso inžinierius – Fabian Zweck, redaktorius – Klaus Uhrig, redaktoriaus padėjėja – Laura Freisberg.2024 m. lietuviškai adaptuoti serialą LRT RADIJUI licenciją suteikė „BRmedia Service“.Iš vokiečių kalbos vertė Lina Čerkauskienė, redagavo Miglė Bagdonė.Vertimą įgarsino: Inga Burneikaitė, Jonas Braškys, Ignas Ciplijauskas, Inga Šalkauskaitė ir Jūratė Vilūnaitė.Lietuviškai adaptavo: Rūta Dambravaitė, Sonata Jadevičienė, Vaida Pilibaitytė ir Inga Tamulevičienė.Adaptacijos redaktorė – Vaida Pilibaitytė.

vil lietuvi baim nauji dienos antroji aleksandro keturios lrt radijui dambravait sonata jadevi jonas bra vaida pilibaityt
Radijo dokumentika
Serialas „Keturios baimės dienos“. Šiuo numeriu niekas neatsiliepia (2/6)

Radijo dokumentika

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2024 24:48


„Keturios baimės dienos“ – tai šešių dalių dokumentinis audioserialas apie pabėgimą iš komunistinės Rytų Vokietijos. Nauji epizodai įkeliami sekmadieniais.*2 dalis. 1973 m. liepos 2 d.Pirmoji slapstymosi diena. Berbel glaudžiasi pas draugę Leipcige. Bet visiems, kurie jai padeda, kyla pavojus. Ir ji turi tik vienos pabėgimo pagalbininkės Vakaruose telefono numerį, kuriuo niekas neatsiliepia.*2019 m. dokumentinį serialą „Keturios baimės dienos“ (vok. „4 Tage Angst“) prodiusavo Vokietijos Bavarijos radijas („Bayerischer Rundfunk“).Autorius – Till Ottlitz, režisierė – Alexandra Distler, garso inžinierius – Fabian Zweck, redaktorius – Klaus Uhrig, redaktoriaus padėjėja – Laura Freisberg.2024 m. lietuviškai adaptuoti serialą LRT RADIJUI licenciją suteikė „BRmedia Service“.Iš vokiečių kalbos vertė Lina Čerkauskienė, redagavo Miglė Bagdonė.Vertimą įgarsino: Inga Burneikaitė, Mindaugas Capas, Ignas Ciplijauskas, Violeta Podolskaitė ir Inga Šalkauskaitė.Lietuviškai adaptavo: Rūta Dambravaitė, Sonata Jadevičienė, Vaida Pilibaitytė ir Inga Tamulevičienė.Adaptacijos redaktorė – Vaida Pilibaitytė.

bet ir ryt lietuvi baim pirmoji vokietijos nauji dienos niekas vakaruose keturios lrt radijui dambravait sonata jadevi vaida pilibaityt
Radijo dokumentika
Serialas „Keturios baimės dienos“. Pabėgimas iš Respublikos (1/6)

Radijo dokumentika

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2024 25:08


„Keturios baimės dienos“ – tai šešių dalių dokumentinis audioserialas apie pabėgimą iš komunistinės Rytų Vokietijos. Nauji epizodai publikuojami sekmadieniais.*1 dalis. 1973 m. liepos 1 d.1973-iųjų vasara. Berbel susiruošia bėgti iš komunistinės Rytų Vokietijos. Jos planas skamba tobulai: sutartoje vietoje Rytų Berlyno pakraštyje „Volkswagen“ autobusiuke laukia amerikiečių kariai. Jie paslėps ją tuščioje ginkluotės dėžėje ir perveš per Rytų ir Vakarų Berlyną skiriančios sienos perėjimo punktą „Checkpoint Charlie“.Bet įvykiai pasisuka netikėta linkme ir Berbel tenka keturias dienas bėgti nuo slaptosios policijos – Stasi. Ji dar nežino, kad tai bus sunkiausias išbandymas jos gyvenime.Ar jai pavyks likti nepastebėtai ir vėl bandyti pabėgti?*2019 m. dokumentinį serialą „Keturios baimės dienos“ (vok. „4 Tage Angst“) prodiusavo Vokietijos Bavarijos radijas („Bayerischer Rundfunk“).Autorius – Till Ottlitz, režisierė – Alexandra Distler, garso inžinierius – Fabian Zweck, redaktorius – Klaus Uhrig, redaktoriaus padėjėja – Laura Freisberg.2024 m. lietuviškai adaptuoti serialą LRT RADIJUI licenciją suteikė „BRmedia Service“.Iš vokiečių kalbos vertė Lina Čerkauskienė, redagavo Miglė Bagdonė.Vertimą įgarsino: Inga Burneikaitė, Rimantas Bagdzevičius, Ignas Ciplijauskas, Adomas Šimkus ir Odeta Vasiliauskaitė.Lietuviškai adaptavo Rūta Dambravaitė, Sonata Jadevičienė, Vaida Pilibaitytė ir Inga Tamulevičienė.Adaptacijos redaktorė – Vaida Pilibaitytė.

bet jos volkswagen ji stasi ryt checkpoint charlie vakar jie lietuvi baim vokietijos nauji berlyn dienos berlyno adomas keturios lrt radijui dambravait rimantas bagdzevi sonata jadevi vaida pilibaityt
Close The Door
Eps 967 - AYAH BILANG AKU ANAK GAGAL⁉️ OH OK.. GUE BONGKAR SEMUA YA AYAH.. BAIM CILIK BICARA (Ft. Baim Alkatiri)

Close The Door

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 62:35


Close The Door Podcast bersama Baim Alkatiri

O, Dangau! Sportas
Lietuvos olimpinis gedulas ir ką mes žaidžiam? | Rinktinė 24

O, Dangau! Sportas

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2024 64:00


00:00:00 – Įžanga 00:01:33 – Ką mes žaidžiam? 00:04:38 – Išjungti Lietuvos lyderiai 00:07:05 – Baimė žaidėjų viduje 00:09:12 – individualus krepšinis 00:13:27 – Neišnaudoti pranašumai 00:17:22 – Blogas visas ciklas 00:21:20 – Lietuvos krepšinio regresas 00:29:50 – Prasta reakcija į eigą 00:32:33 –LKF veiklos rezultatai 00:37:30 – Sabonio lyderystė 00:44:25 – Lietuvos treneriai ir užsieniečiai 00:57:00 – Atrankų nugalėtojai

Mokslo pasaulyje
MOKSLAS ŠIANDIEN 2024.05.24 | Apie baimę ką nors praleisti

Mokslo pasaulyje

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 2:42


Trumpa informacinė RADIOCENTRO laida apie mokslo naujienas ir naujausius pasiekimus.Klausyk šiokiadieniais 13.30 val. per RADIOCENTRĄ arba mūsų podkaste „Mokslas šiandien“.

Daiktiniai įrodymai
Baimė įsileisti: apie kitokius ir tokius pačius su Romu Zabarausku

Daiktiniai įrodymai

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024 44:34


Krikštijomės Europoje patys paskutiniausi. Ar taip bus, kad būsime patys paskutiniai, kurie toje pačioje Europioje pripažins, kad visi žmonės turi tokias pačias žmogaus teises?Ved. Aidas Puklevičius

LRT Aktualijų studija
Ar įtraukųjį ugdymą stabdys baimė dėl reitingų?

LRT Aktualijų studija

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2024 54:43


Lietuvos mokyklose - didžiuliai skirtumai, atskleidė naujausi mokyklų reitingai. Visgi yra sakančių, kad pats mokyklų reitingavimas yra kenksmingas ir gali stabdyti įtraukiojo ugdymo plėtrą, mat mokyklos labiau rūpinsis gerais rodikliais nei vaikų savijauta.Ar įtraukujį ugdymą stabdys baimė dėl reitingų?Laidoje dalyvauja švietimo, mokslo ir sporto viceministras Ignas Gaižiūnas, žurnalo „Reitingai“ vyr.redaktorius Gintaras Sarafinas, Lietuvos pagrindinių mokyklų asociacijos prezidentas Darius Mockus, bendrijos „Viltis“ vadovė, Lietuvos negalios forumo tarybos narė Ramunė Lebedytė - Undzėnienė ir švietimo ekspertė Ugnė Jakubauskaitė - Alasevičienė.Ved. Liepa Želnienė

Mokslo pasaulyje
MOKSLAS ŠIANDIEN 2024.04.19 | Ar šunys gali padėti įveikti skrydžio baimę?

Mokslo pasaulyje

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 2:32


Trumpa informacinė RADIOCENTRO laida apie mokslo naujienas ir naujausius pasiekimus.Klausyk šiokiadieniais 13.30 val. per RADIOCENTRĄ arba mūsų podkaste „Mokslas šiandien“.

Vienkartinė planeta
Baimės ieškojimas ir pelkės atkūrimas Šepetoje

Vienkartinė planeta

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 28:34


Banguolė Žalnieriūnaitė - žmogus, savyje talpinantis susidomėjimą tiek pelkės įvaizdžiu lietuvių pasaulėžiūroje, tiek pelkės gyvūnija. Ji kilusi iš Šepetos, kur kažkada plytėjo didžiulė ir vertinga pelkė, tarpukariu jai suteikti draustinio statusą siūlė Tadas Ivanauskas, kiti mokslininkai išsamiai ištyrė bei aprašė pelkės augaliją. Bet jau daug dešimtmečių čia veikia durpynas - jo istoriją Banguolė irgi gerai žino, nes jame ilgus metus dirbo jos seneliai.Dainius Pilka vadovauja įmonei „Durpeta“. Šepetos durpyne kartu su kasybos ir gamybos darbais įmonė vykdo paruošiamuosius darbus pelkės at(si)kūrimui. Dalis plotų jau patvenkta, bet kartais vandens lygis nuleidžiamas - kai reikia iškasti likusį durpių kiekį, arba per daug užmirksta keliai. Mokslininkas Remigijus Daubaras teigia, jog esant tinkamam vandens lygiui aukštapelkei būdinga augalija atsikuria per kelis dešimtmečius. O pats durpių klodas formuojasi dar lėčiau.Laidoje panaudoti gervių ir ėjimo per pelkę garsai iš Banguolės Žalnieriūnaitės asmeninio archyvo. Laidos autorę konsultavo: dr. Jūratė Sendžikaitė, dr. Ilona Jukonienė, Simonas Danielius, Giedrius KavaliauskasAutorė Inga Janiulytė TemporinBanguolės Žalnieriūnaitės nuotr.

Mažoji studija. Kultūra ir religija.
Mažoji studija. Kultūra ir religija. Søreno Kierkegaardo „Baimė ir drebėjimas“: knyga, skirta ateistams, bet gausiai skaitoma tikinčiųjų

Mažoji studija. Kultūra ir religija.

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2024 25:00


„Knyga, skirta ateistams, bet gausiai skaitoma tikinčiųjų“, - taip apibūdinama danų filosofo ir teologo, vieno egzistencializmo filosofijos pirmtakų Søreno Kierkegaardo knyga „Baimė ir drebėjimas“. Knyga, parašyta XIX a. viduryje ir išversta į begalę skirtingų kalbų, jau beveik 200 metų tebėra skaitoma, pasirodo vis nauji jos leidimai. Net ir Lietuvoje po Nepriklausomybės atkūrimo pasirodė jau trečiasis jos leidimas. Pats Kierkegaardas yra pasakęs, kad vien jo „Baimės ir drebėjimo“ pakaks, kad pasaulis niekada nepamirštų jo vardo. Kas galėjo lemti tokį autoriaus pranašystės išsipildymą? Knygoje nagrinėjama anaiptol ne pati lengviausia tema. Tai – Senojo Testamento istorija apie Abraomą, kuriam Dievas paliepia paaukoti vienintelį jo sūnų Izaoką. Tėvas klusniai vykdo gautą įsakymą ir yra pasiryžęs nužudyti savo vaiką. Kodėl, remdamasi šia bibline istorija, judėjų-krikščionių tradicija suteikė Abraomui „tikėjimo protėvio“ vaidmenį. Abraomas yra įsitikinęs, kad Dievas, kuris jam įsako atlikti baisiausią ir sunkiausią dalyką, kartu yra ir Dievas, kuris jį myli. Šis paradoksas suteikia Kierkegarrdui progą iškelti sudėtingus klausimus apie krikščioniško tikėjimo prigimtį ir vertę. Šiandieninės laidos dalyviai sako, kad "Baimės ir drebėjimo" patrauklumą skaitytojams lemia tai, kad joje keliami klausimai atliepia nūdienos žmonių jauseną, o tai, kad knyga parašyta pirmuoju asmeniu, apeliuoja į kiekvieną individą. Kalbant apie dabartinius laikus, ko gero, būtų sunku įsivaizduoti tinkamesnį veikalą negandų nuojautomis alsuojančiame pasaulyje.Apie naują Soreno Kierkegaardo knygos „Baimė ir drebėjimas“ lietuvišką leidimą (knygą iš danų kalbos išvertė Jolita ex-Adomėnienė) kalbasi filosofas, leidyklos Hubris vadovas Viktoras Bachmetjevas ir Vilniaus Universiteto filosofijos bei istorijos fakultetų dėstytojas Laurynas Peluritis.Redaktorė Rūta Tumėnaitė.

Vakaro pasaka
Vakaro pasaka. Evelina Daciūtė. „Baimė ir medinis arkliukas“

Vakaro pasaka

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2024 6:54


Evelina Daciūtė. „Baimė ir medinis arkliukas“ iš knygos „Lubinų labirintas“. Išleido leidykla „Nieko rimto”. Skaito aktorius Algirdas Dainavičius.

apologetika.lt
Kaip nugalėti baimę?

apologetika.lt

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2024 56:20


Laurynas Jacevičius (apologetika.lt) baigiamuoju mokymu apie baimę, drąsą ir krikščioniškojo tikėjimo pavyzdžius krikščioniškoje jaunimo konferencijoje Saltshaker / Druskinė 2023-2024. http://apologetika.lt/

Tuzinas
Tuzinas. Amerikoje užaugęs režisierius Tomas Vengris: mamos didžiausia baimė buvo užauginti amerikietiškus vaikus

Tuzinas

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 41:57


„Daug dalykų Amerikoje, kaip ir Lietuvoje man yra svetimi“ - pasakoja JAV užaugęs, bet Lietuvos nepamiršęs režisierius Tomas Vengris. Pats Tomas atskleisdamas išskirtinę savo šeimos istoriją prisimena, kad jo mama visada siekė išlaikyti lietuviškumą ir kalbą, o amerikietiški žaislai ir daiktai jai atrodė nepriimtini. Baigęs kino mokslus prestižiniame Amerikos kino institute Los Andžele, režisierius pripažįsta, kad pasirinko ne Holivudo kryptį. Tomas pasakoja, kad kolegos iš kino industrijos Los Andžele jam pavydi kūrybinės laisvės, kurią jis turi kurdamas čia Europoje.Kaip Tomo Vengrio vaikystė suformavo jo asmenybę? Kodėl Tomas visgi nepaniro į Amerikos kino kultūrą? Kokį vaidmenį šiuolaikiniame pasaulyje atlieka kino režisierius?Dvylika punktų apie režisieriaus gyvenimą su Tomu Vengriu.Ved. Ignas Klėjus

O, Dangau! Sportas
„Žalgirio“ baimė ir „rankininkai“, sausas Šmitas ir Trinchieri kritika | Širdyje

O, Dangau! Sportas

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2024 54:55


Connecting the Dots with Dr Wilmer Leon
Cornel West for President

Connecting the Dots with Dr Wilmer Leon

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 61:40


You can find me and the show on social media by searching the handle @DrWilmerLeon on X (Twitter), Instagram, and YouTube. Our Facebook page is www.facebook.com/Drwilmerleonctd All our episodes can be found at CTDpodcast.com.   TRANSCRIPT: Dr Wilmer Leon (00:13): Welcome to the Connecting the Dots podcast with Dr. Wilmer Leon. I am Wilmer Leon. Here's the point. We have a tendency to view current events as though they occur in a vacuum, failing to understand the broader historical context in which most events take place. During each episode of this podcast, my guests and I will have probing, provocative, and in-depth discussions that connect the dots between the current events and the broader historic context in which they occur. This will enable you to better understand and analyze the events that impact the global village in which we live. On today's episode, we explore the presidential candidacy of Dr. Cornell West. If you go to Cornell West 2020 four.com, it opens with this brother, Cornell West is a living embodiment of the power of an independent mind forever reminding us that greatness is born of the courage to stand apart and speak one's truth. (01:13) To help me connect these dots, let's turn to my guest. He needs no introduction, but I'll say he is the Dietrich Bonhoeffer professor of philosophy and Christian practice at Union Theological Seminary. He's the former university professor at Harvard University and Professor Emeritus at Princeton University. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard in three years and obtained his master's and PhD in philosophy at Princeton. He's the first black person to receive a PhD In more detail, let me say, he's written 20 books, edited 13 and has written numerous forwards as we'll talk about in. He's one a sacramental zone and affectionately known to many as Brother West, Dr. Cornell West. Welcome, and let's connect some dots. Dr Cornel West (01:59): I'm with you though, man. We putting smiles on our precious mama's faces. I know mom was there right there in the living room and in the kitchen when you got home and your precious mother had passed. But just think how blessed we are. I think it's very providential as well as significant that we could start this year together. Dr Wilmer Leon (02:20): In fact, I'm glad you mentioned our parents because what would your folks be thinking of their son in these efforts today? Dr Cornel West (02:30): Well, it's hard to say Mom and dad were unpredictable in terms of their judgment and highly predictable in terms of their deep, deep love though, brother, so that they would be loving me to death as they always did up until their death and they loved me now after death on their life. But I think it's hard to say they were such independent thinkers, you know what I mean? Dr Wilmer Leon (02:53): I do. I do know. Lemme put you another way then. What are the two or three most salient points or lessons that you carry forward that your parents instilled in you? Dr Cornel West (03:09): Oh, one is that you want to be in the world but not of it. So that you always recognize as standards bigger than you. You will always fall short of those standards, but never forget what they are. And those standards are always hope. And the greatest of them is love, love of God, love of neighbor, love of especially the least of these love, especially of poor and working people love especially of those friends from on called The Wretched Up the Earth. That's what I learned. West Household, you can see it, my brother Cliff, my sister, Cynthia and Cheryl, and you certainly can see it, Shiloh Baptist Church right on Ninth Avenue at Old Park Brother with Reverend Willie P. Cook and others. So those were the crucial things, not just the values in the abstract sense, but the virtues in the lived concrete sense of ways of being in the world, modes of existing, trying to be forces for good in the language of the great John Coltrane. (04:05) You see his various incarnation in terms of his faces on the albums here in the backdrop of my room. I think my dear wife Vanta for that and buying me this gift. It's a beautiful gift, but I think for them, the question becomes, are you being true to that calling? Are you being true to that vocation? Are you being true to that? Which tries to lure out of you the best who you are given the crack vessel that you are? And I take those insights and those lessons very, very seriously though, brother. So I wake up every morning, I say, Hey, crack vessel, that I am center, that I've always been. I'm going to be a force for good. I'm going to tell some truth. I'm going to bear some witness. I'm going to seek justice and I'm going to do it no matter what costs, no matter what burden, no matter what responsibility it entails, because that's what I'm here to do. And I'm going to do it with fun. Joy. I just finished the biography, brotherly Stone. Thank you. Wow. Letting me be myself. And he talks about Cynthia Robinson, you know, from Sacramento. Yes, beloved sister Anita Robinson. We went to high school together. He talked about Cynthia Robinson when he moved to Sacramento for a while, Sacramento inspirational choir. He had played Shiloh sometimes with Clarence Adams, Bobby Adams, and Brother Clarence. Dr Wilmer Leon (05:33): I didn't know that. Dr Cornel West (05:34): Oh yeah, yeah. I used to see Sylvester on the organ right there. Shiloh man. Dr Wilmer Leon (05:40): I did not. He's Dr Cornel West (05:41): From Vallejo. Dr Wilmer Leon (05:42): Yeah, I know he's from Vallejo, but I didn't know that he had spent time in Sacramento. Dr Cornel West (05:47): Oh Lord. Yes. Dr Wilmer Leon (05:48): It says on your site, even as a young child, you exhibited the remarkable qualities that would define your life's journey and path to the presidency. In the third grade, you fearlessly stood up to your teacher challenging her ideas and defining the conventional norms of your time. And that stands out to me because during the medal ceremony of the Olympics in 1968, Mexico City, as you recall, John Carlos and Tommy Smith raised their black glove fists during the playing of the national anthem. And on October 17th, the day after that, I went to school, raised my fist during the morning pledge of the allegiance, and I got kicked out of school. And I read that on your site and thought about the parallels of our lives. And here we sit today still challenging the dominant narrative and the ideas and defying the conventional norms of our time. And I think is a very good summary of your candidacy. Dr Cornel West (06:59): That's beautiful. But I think that's also an example though, brother, of how your precious mother and my precious mother and precious fathers as well tried to support into us examples of integrity, honesty, and decency. And when you have a flag that's waving, that's not signifying what it ought in terms of it's talking about liberty and justice for all, but you got lynching going on and you've got degradation, discrimination, segregation going on is just decent to have integrity, to have honesty is to call it into question. And when you do that, you're going to be in the world or not of it because you're going to be going against the grain. You're going to be going against what is popular in the name of what ought to have a certain kind of moral substance and spiritual content to it. And here that was how many years ago now? Man, that was 1968 is, Dr Wilmer Leon (08:01): Oh, that was Dr Cornel West (08:02): 50, 52 years. Yeah, that's 56 years. You see, I refuse to salute the flag. My great uncle had been lynched in Texas and they wrapped the flag around his body. So that's what I associated as a young brother. Now that to me, I don't put other people down for salute the flag because some people see that flag and they think of their husband or their uncle or their wife who was killed in the war and they loved, they got right to support their loved ones, and they were fighting for that flag. But that's what goes in their mind. But my mind is the flag wrapped around the body s sw in the southern breeze, that strange fruit that Billie Holiday sing about. So everybody has their right to respond. Same was true with Brother Colin. When Colin saw that flag, he thought all of these young black brothers and sisters being killed, the police, yeah, he gets down. We can understand that somebody else see the flag and they think of their uncle, a great uncle in Hiroshima who's fighting against Japanese fascism. Sure. Everybody's got their lens through which they view the world. We have to be open to that. But most importantly, we got to be true to ourselves. Dr Wilmer Leon (09:15): In talking about your candidacy, you announced your candidacy in the People's Party switched to the Green Party, and now you're running as what you call a truly, truly a people's campaign that is a movement rooted in truth, justice, and love. Why the changes? And where are we with your candidacy today? Dr Cornel West (09:39): Yes, back in June, June 5th, it was the People's party that came forward. It met with myself and Brother Chris Hedges, my dear brother, I have great respect for, great love for. And they were kind enough to make the invitation. When I accepted the invitation, I realized very quickly that there were going to be some very deep challenges. There's going to be some very deep problems there. Chris Hedges and Jill Stein and Jammu Barack and others asked me to meet with the Green Party people and to see whether there's a possibility. We met, we made the shift to the Green Party. We worked very closely for a good while, and I realized that the Green Party had so many different requirements in terms of internal debates with presidential candidates going to different states and state conventions and so forth. And I wanted to go directly to the people because I've been going directly to the folk. (10:33) And I realized that even though the Green Party had 17 states in regard to ballot access, that I could actually get 15 or 16 states rather quickly. And that's precisely what we're doing now. We already got Alaska, we're moving on to Utah by eyes of March 15th. We should have, we hope a good 15 states or so. I would've caught up with the Green Party. But I have a freedom to really not just be myself more fully, but also to go directly to the people rather than spending so much time on inter-party activities that the Green Party requires. And so a lot of people say, well, you got false starts. I say, no, no, I'm a jazz man. That's first take. That's the first take. Dr Wilmer Leon (11:23): Folks can go to your website, Cornell West 2020 four.com, click on the platform tab and they can see a list of general areas such as economic justice, worker justice, environmental justice, and a number of others. And then below each of those, there are the bullet points that articulate your positions on those issues. And I'd like to get to this point, this particular point, because I think it allows us to speak to a number of things that are impacting not only this country but the world, and that is the United States supporting funding and arming genocide in Gaza. How does an American administration, the Biden administration with the backing of Congress, and particularly the Congressional Blackhawk Caucus, which is supposed to be the conscious of the Congress, how can they back this play? Dr Cornel West (12:27): Yeah, that's a wonderful question though, brother. I think we have to first begin by situating my campaign as a moment in a movement that's rooted in a great tradition of Martin Luther King, Jr. Fannie Lou Haman, rabbi Heschel and Dorothy Day. And what they were about was first there's a moral starting point. You see that a precious Palestinian baby has exactly the same value as your baby and my baby, an Israeli baby, a Haitian baby, an Egyptian baby, a Guatemalan baby, but there's been almost 9,000 babies killed a 50 some days. We can see just the level of baity there. Now, every life, no matter what color agenda for me, has the same value. There's no doubt about that. But you start with on a moral premise, then you got to move to your social analysis. How could it be that the United States, the American Empire, enables not just this genocidal assault that's been going on, but how has it enabled the apartheid regime for so long of Israel vis-a-vis those occupied territories with precious Palestinians have been subjugated and degraded. (13:47) How has it facilitated ethnic cleansing where you're seeing now almost 2 million fellow Palestinians who are pushed out of their land? Well, the same thing happened in 1948 with 750,000 Palestinians. They called Arabs at the time were pushed out. So you start on a moral note, and I begin on a spiritual note, just as a Christian, you know what I mean, that there's certain principles that I'm not going to give up. And there's oppressed peoples no matter where they are, no matter, it can be in cashmere, they can be in Chad, they can be in the south side of Chicago. They could be white brothers and sisters in Kentucky. They could be Latinos in South la. Their lives have exactly the same value as the lives of the rich and wealthy and famous. And when you proceed in that way, you have a set of lens that you're looking at the world that's very different from any of the parties because you see both parties, Republicans and Democratic parties have been so tied to Israel in a critical, Israel's been proceeding with impunity for decades, not just since October 7th for decades. (14:57) They've been able to do and say anything they want. They've been able to get billions and billions of dollars from taxpayers' money to the United States with no accountability whatsoever. And when people try to impose some accountability, be it United Nations or be it progressive Jews, or be it Palestinians or Arabs or other people around the world, Israel acts as if they can still do what they want to do with no answerability and no responsibility. They just proceed and do what they want to do. You say, well, wait a minute. And we've reached the point now where, oh, my brother, you got the invoking of Amalek, the first Samuel 15, and the third verse, what does that say in the Old Testament for Christians and Hebrew scripture from Jewish brothers and sisters, he would to kill every man, every woman, every child, every ox, every sheep. Well, that's genocidal intent. (15:52) And then you got genocidal execution when you got over 22,000. And that's just a modest count because you got so many in the rubble that are not counted, and the 9,000 children is just off the chart. I mean, it's just unimaginable that that could happen to so many precious children. You say, no, what is going on? Well, then you come back to United States and you say, wait a minute. Now we've got a politics where the lobby that is primarily responsible for the money that goes from the US government to Israel is one of the most powerful lobbies, not just in America, but in the history of the country, in the history of the country that owing to the high civic participation rate of Jewish Americans. And we talk about Jewish Americans, you're never talking about a monolith or a homogeneous group. You're talking about a variety of different kinds of Jews because we've seen the Jewish young people and Jewish progressives are as critical of Israel as I am, Dr Wilmer Leon (16:57): Jewish voices for peace, Dr Cornel West (16:59): That Jewish voices for peace. If not now, you've got a whole host of them that have been quite courageous in that regard. So it's not a matter and must never be a matter of anti-Jewish hatred, anti-Jewish sentiment. It's hating occupation, domination, subjugation. In this case, it's Israeli subjugation, Israeli domination, Israeli occupation. Now, the sad thing is, Dr Wilmer Leon (17:27): But wait a minute. It's also understanding the difference between Zionism and Judaism. And as much as the dominant narrative wants to try to equate those two, they are not the same. One is a religious practice, and the other for the most part is a political ideology. Dr Cornel West (17:51): That's exactly right. I mean, what makes it difficult really is that you see Jewish brothers and sisters have been terrorized and traumatized and hated over 2,500 years with different attacks, assaults, pogroms, culminating in the show and the Holocaust with the gangster Hitler and the gangster Nazis and so forth. And they jump out of the burning buildings of Europe and they're looking for a place to go. Zionism is a 19th century movement of nationalism that's looking for a home for Jews, a nation state for Jews, and they land on somebody else's land. It's like the pilgrims landing in the new world and saying, there's no people here. Yes, there are. Now of course, in America, what did they say? There's no human beings. There's just buffaloes and Indians. Hey, wait a minute, Indians are as human as you Europeans, we Africans, anybody else? Well, that's part of the deep white supremacy and racism that's happening. (18:58) What else was happening with Zionism? But they told a lie and they said, we got land with no people. That's not true. You got 750, got almost 1000080% of the population don't act like they don't exist. Oh, in your mind, they might be non-entities, but in God's eyes, in our eyes, they're human just like you and just like me. And so you end up with this ideology that responds to this indescribably vicious treatment of Jews for 2,500 years in the middle of Europe. So-called civilized Europe. Now, of course, Belgium already killed 7,000 Africans in Bellevue, Congo in the Dr Wilmer Leon (19:39): Congo, right? Dr Cornel West (19:40): Not too many Europeans said a mumbling word. Turkey had already killed Armenians with genocidal attacks. Europeans didn't say a mumbling word. Italy had already invaded Ethiopia. Europe didn't say a mumbling word. So you can already see the hypocrisy there. But what makes it difficult in the United States is that our Jewish brothers and sisters who are thoroughgoing Zionists, they use the fact that Jews have been hated for so long as a fundamental foundation of what they do and that they think allows them to rationalize, hating Palestinians, terrorizing Palestinians, traumatizing Palestinians. I'm against traumatizing, hating, terrorizing anybody, anybody. If black folk were terrorizing white folk, I'm going to defend white folk. If Palestinians are terrorizing Jews, I'm going to defend Jews. If Jews are terrorizing Palestinians, I'm going to defend Palestinians. That's morality and spirituality. Now, we live in a moment Dr Wilmer Leon (20:54): And consistency Dr Cornel West (20:55): And a certain kind of moral consistency that you try to hold on now. And I know, man, we live in a moment of such overwhelming baity man, organized greed, institutionalized hatred, routinized, indifference toward the suffering of others, especially the weak. So it's just a matter of the strong just thinking and the rich thinking. They can act and do anything. They like to crush the weak. And what happens now in the Middle East, especially in this situation with Gaza, is that you have Nathan, Yahoo, and others who are using the most reactionary tradition in the history of Zionism, which comes out of Jabotinsky that says that there will be Jewish security only when there's either Jewish domination of Palestinians or Jewish annihilation of Palestinians. That's in the writings of Jabotinsky. Netanyahu's father was an assistant to Jabotinsky that is a deeply, deeply right wing of not outright fascist version of Zionism. Now, there's liberal versions of Zionism that's very different, but even those liberal versions still want to argue that Palestinians would never have equality in their state have equal status in their state. And so we have to be able to put that in historical context. We have the right kind of morality and spirituality for people to understand why people like myself will never ever, ever be silent when it comes to Israeli genocidal attacks on Palestinians when it comes to Israeli ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. And when it comes to Israeli apartheid regime, that's why South Africa's taking him to the international court. Dr Wilmer Leon (22:45): How does a president Cornell West intervene, interject and change the trajectory of this ongoing genocide? Dr Cornel West (22:57): It means that the policy is qualitatively different than you get into Biden. It's clear that Biden has no concern for the most part with Palestinian suffering. No, Dr Wilmer Leon (23:07): He has said numerous times that he is a Zionist. Dr Cornel West (23:10): He's a Zionist. He doesn't talk about the numbers, he doesn't talk about the suffering. He doesn't talk about the unbelievable pain of Palestinians, not just now, but during the 40 some years he's been in office. You see? So from the very beginning, he makes it very, very clear that these Palestinian brothers and sisters don't count for me. Their lives don't really matter. Now, of course, we got memories of white supremacists in the United States. These black people don't count. These indigenous peoples don't count. They're just farter for our projects. We step on them like cockroaches. We crush them like they're creatures below. And you say, now, oh no, that's not my tradition. So as presidents especially shoot under a West administration, shoot, I'd be calling for the end of occupation, the end of the siege, a cease fire to sit down and come up with a way in which Jews and Palestinians can live together under conditions of equality, with equality under the law and equality in terms of assets to resources. So it's a qualitatively different way of looking at the world and proceeding in that part of the world. Dr Wilmer Leon (24:32): What about the most recent action of circumventing Congress and sending more arms, weaponry, and military resources to the genocide? What about how does a President Cornell West cut off the spigot of the funding? Dr Cornel West (24:55): Oh one, it is not just for me, just a matter of withdrawing aid and cutting off the spigot, but it's a matter of trying to get the leadership, Israeli leadership, Palestinian leadership, to sit down and come up with ways in which they can create a society in which they live together. And whatever financial support I provide is a financial support that would sustain that kind of egalitarian arrangement. There would not be a penny from a West administration for any apartheid regime, for any ethnic cleansing, and certainly not for any genocidal attack and assault on Palestinians or anybody else. Dr Wilmer Leon (25:40): So how do you negotiate with a Netanyahu who you just so accurately stated, his father was an advisor to Jinky who has compromised his own principles to go further, right, to formulate his government. And so with the Troches and all of those other genocidal maniacs, Dr Cornel West (26:11): That's right. Dr Wilmer Leon (26:13): How can you negotiate with someone who is sworn to the annihilation of an entire group of human beings? Dr Cornel West (26:24): Well, one, in any diplomatic process, you end up sitting down with people you disagree with. But you're absolutely right. It would not so much be a negotiation with the Nathan Yahu. It would be a teasing out of Israeli leadership that was open to egalitarian arrangement with Palestinians and teasing out the Palestinian leadership that's open to an egalitarian arrangement among Jews. So you really talking about trying to lure and to appeal to voices and figures and movements. The combatants for veterans, for example, that has Palestinians and Israelis working together, the Baim de meanies who are part of the Martin Luther King Jr tradition of struggling together Palestinians and Jews together, and even try to tease out some of the best of their labor movements, the trade union movements, Palestinian trade union movement, Israeli trade union movements where you do have some, not enough, but you got some overlap of people recognizing that Jews and Israelis can work together for something bigger than them. So you're right, it's not so much a matter of just negotiation, but it's a matter of withdrawal of funds. It's a matter of a certain kind of rejection. We've got to have some wholesale rejection of fascists. And that's true, not just as it relates to Israel and Nathan Yahoo, but that would be true for fascism in all of its various forms. It could be in Iran, it could be in Chad, it could be in Haiti, it could be anywhere. Fascism raises its ugly face. Dr Wilmer Leon (28:20): Moving this out to a slightly broader context, you have the United States through the US UN ambassador, Linda Thomas Greenfield vetoing the calls for a peace agreement in Gaza. Then you have the Ansara LA or the Houthis reaching a peace agreement or working, coming very, very close to a peace agreement with the Saudis and the United States intervening and saying, we will not accept that. We will not accept a peace agreement that we're going to label the Houthis as a terrorist organization, therefore Saudis will not be able to engage with the Houthis without incurring sanctions. Then you've got the conflict between Venezuela and Guyana, and they agree, I think in St. Croix, they come to an agreement and say, we're going to work on this peaceably. And then the United States gets Britain to send a warship off the coast of God. Point being, these are three within the last 10 days. These are three examples of entities in conflict agreeing to work for peace in the United States, injecting militarism into the negotiation. How does a President Cornell West put a stop to that? Dr Cornel West (29:53): One is my brother. We need exactly what you just did, which means you have to respect the people enough to tell them the truth. So a president also has to play a role of a teacher. See the large numbers of our fellow citizens, they don't really know the truth about the Middle East. They don't really know about the truth of Latin America. They don't really know about the truth of the ways in which the American Empire has been reshaping the whole world in its interest in image, both in Latin America for so long, when Latin America was viewed as a kind of a playground for America and all the various cos and Democratic elections overthrown by Dr Wilmer Leon (30:30): Chile, Argentina, Dr Cornel West (30:32): Chile, Argentina, Dominican Republic, Panama, Grenada. We can go on and on and on. When you look at how the US government has overthrown democratically elected governments when it was not in the interest of the corporate elite to accept those democratic elected democratic elections. But you have to just tell people the truth. But that in and of itself was a major move. That's a major move to tell people the truth. And then beyond that, to intervene and to act and you say, oh, now as president, based on the legacy of Martin King and Fannie Lou Hamer and others, and looking at the world through the lens of the least of these poor and working people, I'm going to be putting forward policies that strike you as so outside of the realm that you are used to because these two parties, Democrats and Republicans have been tied to big militarism abroad. Military adventurism abroad have been tied to overthrowing. Democratic regimes abroad have been tied to 57 cents for every dollar going to them. And oftentimes they get more than they request. But then there's austerity when it comes to education, when it comes to housing, when it comes to jobs with a living wage, when it comes to the healthcare and so forth. That's a very different way of looking at the world. I mean, the very idea of there being a US president who would be an anti-imperialist, and you see, I am a gut bucket. (32:19) And what I mean by that is that I want nations to be nations among nations. We do not need empires that try to get other nations to defer to their imperial dominance, to their imperial domination. The United States has 800 military units around the world over special operations in a hundred countries. China and Russia have hardly 35 or 40 combined. Why do we need 800 military units around the world? Why do we need a ship in every shore? Well, we got corporate interests, you got us geopolitical interests, and you've got elites in Washington who want to do what dominate the world. And that's precisely the thing that needs to be called into question. We can be a decent nation among nations. We can be a dignified nation among nations. We do not need to be an empire. Why? Because like the Roman Empire, like the British Empire, it's not only that they all dissolve, but they all have an arrogance and a hubris. (33:31) And his brother, Martin Luther King used to say, I can hear the God of the universe saying, I'll break your power if you keep crushing these poor people and acting as if you're doing in the name of liberty and equality, and you're really doing it in the name of your own greed, your own wealth and your own power. That's a great tradition, and we need to keep that tradition alive any way we can. I'm just trying to do it because the movement spills over into electoral politics. I'm going to be doing it till the day I die, and I've been doing it prior to being a candidate. Dr Wilmer Leon (34:06): So as you look at the development of the bricks, the new international economic organization that's Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, and then I think they've just admitted about another seven countries into the bricks as both President Xi in China as well as President Putin of Russia, have been talking about moving from the unipolar or the unilateral where the United States is in control of everything to a multilateral dynamic. How does a president Cornell West deal with the development of the bricks? Dr Cornel West (34:45): Well, one, you see, I look at the multilateralism through the same lens. I look at the unilateralism, us unilateralism on the one hand and the multi-country multilateralism because you see the multilateralism is still a combination of elite. And many of the countries that you talked about have high levels of repression and domination in their countries. I look at the world through the lens of the poor and the working classes in their respective countries, and I want United States to be in solidarity with the poor and working classes in India, for example, I'm not impressed by Modi. I know Modi is a Trump-like figure. I know Modi is not concerned about the poor. He's not concerned about the dollars, he's not concerned about the working class in India. So even when he, at those bricks meetings, I know he's not speaking on behalf of the masses of Indians. (35:48) He's speaking on behalf of that very ugly Hindu nationalist movement that he's a part. And so even when I look at the bricks, I know that that is a sign that US empire and US power is waning, but it's not as if simply because they're outside of the United States, that they're not subject to the same criticism, the same standards as the United States itself is. They have their own elites. They have their own policies that do not speak to satisfying the needs of their own poor and their own working class or their own women, or those who are outside of the dominant religion. Look at the Muslims in India. I'm concerned about them. No Modi's a Hindu nationalist, very narrow one at that because there's many Hindus who oppose him as well. And the same would be true in the other countries as well, even South Africa, as you know, I have tremendous respect for the legacy of a Nelson Mandela or sister. (36:57) I had a chance to meet both of them when I was in South Africa. But the South African government today, it doesn't speak to the needs of poor and working class South Africans. I'll say that the brother Cyril, I have great respect for Brother Cyril, and I'm so glad he's taking Israel to the court, the International Court of Justice, no doubt about that. And I believe all the nations need to be called into question if they commit war crimes, Hamas itself commits war crimes. But those war crimes are not crimes of genocide. There are war crimes. They're wrong, they're unjust, but there's not an attempt to act as if they're trying to wipe out a people war crimes, crimes against humanity and crimes of genocide. Three different levels. And it's very important to always distinguish them so that when we talk about bricks, I still don't want us to in any way assume that just because you get an Indian face or a Brazilian face or an African face, that somehow they are concerned about the poor and working classes in their own respective nations. Most of them are not. Most of them are part of their own bourgeoisie. They're part of their own professional classes that look down and do not put the needs of poor and working people at the center of their government. And Nelson Mandela, for example, in some ways turning over in his grave, when you look at the situation of poor people in Soweto and what he was trying to do when he emerged out of that jail cell, Dr Wilmer Leon (38:36): Is there an attack on independent thought and a growing sense of anti-intellectualism in the United States? That we look at the rise of the attacks on social media sites. We look at the attacks on independent journalists, the recent resignation of former Harvard President, Claudine Gay, Harvard's first African-American president and a female, and particularly looking at the manner in which she was done away with accusing her of plagiarism. So not only removing her from her position as president, but doing it in a manner of attacking her very character as a scholar, which seems like they almost want to see to it that she never gets another job. And I in her life, is there an attack on intellectualism and you truly as an intellectual, speak to that, please? Dr Cornel West (39:38): Yeah. Well, one is that United States has always been a deeply anti-intellectual country. The business of America is business. America's always been highly suspicious of those voices. That's why they put a bounty on the head of Ida B. Wells. They put a bounty on the head of Frederick Douglass. That's why they murdered Martin Luther King and Malcolm. That's why they kept Paul Robeson under house arrest at 46 45 Walnut Street in Philadelphia. Why they put Du Bois under House of West A 31 grace place in Brooklyn. It's why Eugene Debbs had to run for president from the sale he ran on the Socialist Park. All he was doing was just giving speeches critical of the war. So America has always had a deep anti-intellectual impulse. It is certainly at work today and certainly is manifest today. And you're right. I'm glad you mentioned Sister Gay because I think it's a very sad situation. It shows what happens when you get a little small group of highly wealthy figures, billionaire figures in this case, primarily Jewish figures, who feel as if they can shape and reshape an institution by either withholding their monies or bringing power and pressure to bear to try to eliminate. Dear Sister Gay, they had these major buses with her picture on it right in front of Harvard Yard, national Disgrace. (41:09) They're organized in front of her house, and she got what she calls racial animus and these threats that she received. It's a very ugly and a vicious thing. But you know, there's an irony there, which is that, as you know, just a few years ago, I was actually pushed out of Harvard. Dr Wilmer Leon (41:30): That's why I'm asking you this Dr Cornel West (41:31): Question. pro-Palestinian stances. I was a faculty advisor to the Palestinian student Group, and they made it very clear that they were not going to have tenured faculties who had strong pro-Palestinian sensibilities, strong pro-Palestinian convictions. Now, at that time, sister Gay was head of the faculty. She was dean of the faculty, which is third in charge after the provost Larry be Kyle, Alan Garber, Claudine gay. And at that time, it was hard for her to come forward and support of me. No, and I didn't want to put her in a position. I know she was new. I know that she's betw and between, but the irony is that her silence at that time about those forces now comes back, or those same forces come back at her. Dr Wilmer Leon (42:34): And what's that adage? When they came for the Jews, I didn't say anything because I wasn't a Jew. When they came for the Christians, I didn't say anything because I wasn't a Christian, blah, blah, blah. By the time they got to me, wasn't nobody left to defend. Dr Cornel West (42:47): Nobody left. Now see, many of us still supported her because it's a matter of principle. It's a deep, deep racism belief because what is happening right now, as you know, when you look at Ackerman, you look at Bloom, you look at Summers, the folk who are very much behind these things, what they're saying is, is that all of the black folk at Harvard, for the most part, do not belong because they didn't get there based on merit and excellence. They got there because of diversity, equity, and inclusion. And we're calling all of that into question. You just read the recent piece by Brett Stevens, the New York Times. He's the same brother who says, anybody who calls it genocide must be antisemitic. And yet the next moment Nathan Yahu can call Hamas attack on precious Israelis genocidal. But that's not anti Palestinian. Oh, no, no. See, the double standards, the hypocrisy is so overwhelming that it's hard to even sit still. (43:47) And so now we are in a situation where it's not just the Harvards and University of Pennsylvanias and others, but you've got now these groups that say, we will dictate who your president is. We will dictate what the criteria is of who gangs, assets, and professorships. We will even dictate some of the content of your curriculum because we got all this money. We got our names on the buildings, we will withhold it. Now, it's not exclusively Jewish, but it is disproportionately Jewish because it has to do with the issue of antisemitism. And you and I, we fight antisemitism. We're not going to allow Jewish brothers and sisters to get degraded and demeaned, but we are not going to allow Palestinians to get degraded and demeaned, let alone black folk get degraded and demeaned. And it's very interesting. You see, when they come for us, you don't get a whole lot of defense and concern about free expression cancellation. The same groups that were against cancellation now, not just canceling a president, but forcing a president out. Dr Wilmer Leon (44:57): Where's the Congressional Black Caucus in defending her? Dr Cornel West (44:59): Oh, congressional Black Caucus is about as weak as pre-seed Kool-Aid. They ain't going to do nothing. So much of they money comes out of the big lobby, APEC and so forth. But also we could say naacp Sharpton n Urban League, so much of their money comes out of Jewish elites so that they got a noose around their neck. They can't say anything. They're not free. They're not free. Can you imagine John Coltrane showing up at the club and they got this scarf around his neck where he can't blow what he wants to blow. And they say, we want you to sound like you're playing Mozart. He said, yeah, I can play Mozart, but I feel like playing Love Supreme. I got to be free. We don't have enough free black folk. They locked in. They accommodated. They well adjusted the injustice Dr Wilmer Leon (46:02): On the domestic front as we move towards the 2024 election, and we see that Biden's numbers have, he's hustling backwards. He's around somewhere between 37 and 40% and on the wane, but one of the things that they're going to tout is omics. And what doesn't seem to get articulated in this discussion about omics is the financialized side of the economy is doing great. If you have a 401k, you are as happy as a clam. If you are invested in stock market, you are invested. You are just ecstatic at how well your portfolio has grown. But homelessness is up in America. Oh, yeah. Homelessness has reached a level in this country. The likes we have not seen in years. Dr Cornel West (46:58): That's right. Dr Wilmer Leon (46:58): So how, two things, one, how do the Democrats square that circle of omics doing so well, but I'll just say poverty as a overall blanket term is on the rise in America when in fact, the Democrats canceled the extra monies that were going into the Wix programs and the other child poverty programs during the Covid era, which I think came out of the Trump administration. And then what does a president Cornell West do? Dr Cornel West (47:32): Yes, again, you see, following the legacy of Brother Martin King, I'm an abolitionist when it comes to poverty. I want to abolish poverty. We could abolish poverty nearly overnight if we had a disinvestment from significant sums in the military and reinvestment in jobs with a living wage, basic income support, housing, and free healthcare for all. We could do that. We have spent $5.6 trillion for wars in 20 years. We could abolish poverty with a small percentage of that. Dr Wilmer Leon (48:17): And wait a minute, Dr Cornel West (48:18): And wait a minute. Dr Wilmer Leon (48:18): Wait a minute. Wars that we have started. Yes, we started a conflict in Afghanistan. Dr Cornel West (48:25): That's Dr Wilmer Leon (48:26): True. We started the Ukraine, Russian conflict. Dr Cornel West (48:29): Iraq, yes. Dr Wilmer Leon (48:30): We started, we went in and bombed Iraq. Dr Cornel West (48:33): That's right. Dr Wilmer Leon (48:34): We went in and assassinated Kaddafi. Dr Cornel West (48:37): That's Dr Wilmer Leon (48:37): True. And Kaddafi warned Barack Obama, don't mess with them. Folks in the West, you have no idea who you're dealing with, do not mess with them. And the United States, and we are right now trying our damnedest to start a fight with China. With Dr Cornel West (48:54): China, Dr Wilmer Leon (48:55): So the Lockheed Martins of the world and the Raytheons of the world. That's Dr Cornel West (48:58): Right. Dr Wilmer Leon (49:01): We are, it's a money laundering scheme. We're taking our hard earned tax dollars, starting fights around the world. And then Lockheed Martin comes in saying, oh, I got the solution. Let's sell 'em some more F 30 fives and let's sell 'em some more tomahawk cruise missiles at a million dollars a copy. Dr Cornel West (49:20): That's right. Dr Wilmer Leon (49:22): I interrupted you, sir. Dr Cornel West (49:23): No, but you are absolutely right. And you think about this though. You got 62% of our fellow citizens are living paycheck to paycheck. 50% of our fellow citizens have 2.6% of the wealth. 1% has 40% of the wealth, and of course, three individuals in the country have wealth equivalent to 50% of Americans. That's 160 million. 160 million has wealth equivalent to three individuals. Now, all the omics in the world, the world does not address that kind of grotesque wealth inequality. This is the kind of thing brother Bernie Sanders was rightly talking about. Now, Bernie hasn't been as strong as he ought on the Middle East, hasn't been as strong as ought on a number of different issues. But when it comes to Wall Street greed, when it comes to grotesque wealth inequality, he still hits the nail on the head. And if we're serious, I was just with my dear brother, pastor Q and others down at Skid Row here in la, because you got almost 40,000 precious brothers and sisters in Los Angeles had their own skid row, their own city, 40% of 'em black, 90% of the town is black. Dr Wilmer Leon (50:39): Sounds like Oakland to me. Dr Cornel West (50:41): Well, yeah, Oakland and I Dr Wilmer Leon (50:44): Sounds like Sacramento to me, Dr Cornel West (50:45): Sister. Sound like s though I live in Harlem, sound like Dr Wilmer Leon (50:50): Over there near Cal Expo in Sacramento, along the American River where all those encampments are. Dr Cornel West (50:56): That's exactly right. I mean, it is a crime and a shame that the richest nation in the history of the world and the history of the species still has that kind of poverty. And of course, it goes even beyond that because you've got fossil fuel companies with their greed leading toward ecological catastrophe and the calling and the question, the very possibility of life on the planet if we don't come to terms with the shift from fossil fuel to renewable and regenerative forms of energy. So that, I mean, part of this is the philosophical question, which is to say, how is it that we, human beings are just so downright wretched, what we used to talk about in Shiloh, the hounds of hell, greed, hatred, envy, resentment, fear all used and manipulate it to crush each other. That's so much the history of who we are as a species, but we're also wonderful. We have the capacity to be better, to think, to feel, to love, to organize, to be in solidarity, but those who are suffering to have empathy and compassion and those two sides, the wretchedness and the wonderfulness, Dr Wilmer Leon (52:16): The yin and the yang, Dr Cornel West (52:17): The yin and the yang, the ugliness and the beauty of a smile, a grin, the beauty of a friendship and a love, the beauty of a mama and a daddy. The beauty of people marching, fighting for something bigger than them. The beauty of being in solidarity with Palestinians and Gaza right now, given the indescribable realities that they have to deal with. But same is true with solidarity, with our brothers and sisters in Sudan, with brothers and sisters in India, brothers Jews in Russia, whoever it is who's catching hell, we ought to be open to our solidarity. Why? Because that fights against the greed and the hatred and the fear and the wretchedness manifest in who we are as a species. Dr Wilmer Leon (53:08): As I was trying to figure out how to close this conversation. Well, you know what, before I get to that, let me ask you this. As you are now not only talking to America, but talking to the world, what are the three salient very important things that you want, those that are listening to this podcast, watching this podcast, other than you being brilliant and being from Sacramento and Southland Park Drive like me, what is it that you want the audience to really understand about Dr. Cornell West? Dr Cornel West (53:51): I want them to understand that I come from a great people of black people who after being terrorized, traumatized, and hated for 400 years, have continually dished out love warriors, freedom fighters, joy shares, and wounded healers. And I'm just a small little wave in that grand ocean. And what sits at the center of that great tradition of black folk just like this, John Coltrane I got it could have been, could be Aretha, could be Luther Vandross, could be a whole host of others, could be a Phil Randolph early by Russian. Rusty is courage to think critically and quest for truth, the courage to act compassionately and in pursuing justice. And then also the courage to love and laugh. To laugh at yourself, to know that you a cracked vessel, to know that you try again, fell again and fell better. That nobody's a messiah, nobody's a savior. We're here to make the world just a little better than we found it. As Reverend Cook used to tell us, if the kingdom of God is within us, then everywhere we go, we ought to leave a little heaven behind. Dr Wilmer Leon (55:09): Amen, my brother. Amen. Let me, so I was trying to figure out how to end this conversation, and it dawned on me as I was going from idea to idea. I said, I've got a piece. This is from a book, knowledge, power, and Black Politics by Dr. Mack h Jones, who I think, Dr Cornel West (55:38): Oh, he's a giant. He's a giant, Dr Wilmer Leon (55:40): And I went to this. It's a collection of essays that he's written over the years and chapter 17, Cornell West, the insurgent black intellectual race matters. A critical comment, and this is part of what Mack writes. Cornell West has established himself as one of the leading political thinkers of our time, and it is fitting and appropriate that we pause and reflect on his ideas. When we engage in such an exchange of ideas, we continue a long enduring tradition within the black community that goes to the beginning of our sojourn on these shores in spite of what our detractors want to say. Principled dialogue and debate have always been a part of black cultural life in the United States, and it is alive and well even as we speak. I've been familiar with West Scholarship for quite some time. I've read and studied most of his published works and found them for the most part to be challenging, insightful, and often provocative. (56:53) I've used some of his essays in my classes with good results. They address issues and problems essential to our survival and evolution as a people, and he makes us think more deeply about them. Professor West is a decided asset to us as a people and to the human family in general. And so to that, I ask the audience, or I want to leave the audience with this, I'm not going to be presumptuous enough to try to tell people how they should vote or who they should vote for. I merely ask them to consider this. Do you want a former President Trump, a man who Senator Lindsey Graham called a race baiting, xenophobic bigot, and a jackass? Now, that's not me. That's Lindsey Graham. Or do you want a President Biden, who is in a state of cognitive decline, started a war in Ukraine, trying to start a war with China, is a self-proclaimed Zionist who is backing funding and supporting genocide? Or do you want to consider a man who the brilliant Dr. Mack h Jones says makes us think more deeply about these issues? He is a decided asset to us as a people and to the human family in general. My brother, Dr. Cornell West with that, what you got, man, wow. Dr Cornel West (58:33): You moved me very deeply though. Mac Jones was one of the great giants that he invited me to come to Prairie Review, and he was teaching there, and he and I talked together, wrestled together. I learned so much from him. I really just sat at his feet. He was just so, so kind. Adolf Reed worked with him as well, with Mack Jones there at Atlanta University, but for you to read his words at the beginning of 2024, you don't know what that means to me though, man, because I had such deep love and respect for Mack Jones, and he has such a, it is like Brother Ron at Howard Walters, and he has, he's the Dr Wilmer Leon (59:17): Reason I have a PhD in political science is because of him. Dr Cornel West (59:20): Is that right? Dr Wilmer Leon (59:21): Yeah. I studied under him. I went to Howard and studied on him in Howard. Dr Cornel West (59:24): Oh, yeah, yeah. Oh my God. Because both of those brothers, they were at the peak of academic achievement, but they had such a deep love for the people, the love for black people, a love for oppressed people, a love for people catching hell everywhere in the world, and to see that in the flesh in him meant so much to me, and for you to read those words just fires me up, brother. It fortifies me. I think I'm going run on and see what the end going be. Dr Wilmer Leon (59:59): Well, Dr. Cornell West 2024 candidate for President of the United States, I want to thank you for joining me today. I want to thank you for connecting the dots Dr Cornel West (01:00:11): As a young brother for me. This is 35 years ago, and I'm talking about Mac Jones. You see, it just meant the world to me, and I'd seen it before in other examples, but to be able to see it. Thank you, my brother. Love you. Respect your man, Dr Wilmer Leon (01:00:24): Man, and you know I love you folks. Thank you so much for listening to the Connecting the Dots podcast with me, Dr. Wi Leon, and stay tuned for new episodes every week. Also, please follow and subscribe. Leave a review. Please share the show. Follow us on social media. You can find all the links below because remember that this is where the analysis of politics, culture, and history converge in the show description. Talk without analysis is just chatter, and we don't chatter on connecting the dots. See you again next time. Until then, I'm Dr. Wilmer Leon. Have a good one. Peace and blessings. I'm out

covid-19 united states america god love american university texas president chicago donald trump europe israel earth china peace man house los angeles washington moving olympic games talk americans new york times sound west phd christians russia joe biden european ukraine italy philadelphia japanese russian mom south barack obama brazil jewish south africa utah african americans congress african afghanistan indian harvard respect turkey connecting argentina kentucky middle east iran jews nazis stone military alaska kingdom of god republicans wall street britain muslims old testament martin luther king jr vladimir putin democrats wars iraq chile adolf hitler sister bernie sanders venezuela united nations democratic belgium oakland israelis brazilian egyptian haiti gaza latin america harvard university amen holocaust hebrew sacramento yahoo south africans hamas folks bloom palestinians judaism cliff ethiopia mexico city congo homelessness panama indians dominican republic mozart hindu sudan xi haitian princeton university nelson mandela roman empire latinos rusty benjamin netanyahu summers hiroshima fascism professor emeritus dubois kool aid mac jones modi british empire dots armenian cyril guyana sylvester green party frederick douglass arabs billie holiday lockheed martin zionism houthis skid row bellevue lindsey graham disgrace zionists vallejo saudis wix dietrich bonhoeffer grenada john coltrane ackerman croix hindus guatemalan lemme oh lord luther vandross amalek apec cornel west international courts american empire soweto jewish american ida b wells claudine gay jill stein principled urban league union theological seminary fannie lou hamer paul robeson congressional black caucus dorothy day love supreme chris hedges vanta john carlos sharpton black caucus american rivers black politics cornell west usun shiloh baptist church tommy smith heschel baim linda thomas greenfield martin king harvard yard walnut street jabotinsky atlanta university professor west cal expo brett stevens wilmer leon cynthia robinson
Daiktiniai įrodymai
Daiktiniai įrodymai. Baimė pasikartoti: apie originalumą ir banalumą su Airidu Jankumi

Daiktiniai įrodymai

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2024 46:21


Dažnai bandymą kurti nurašome kaip neoriginalų. Bet ar vis dar įmanoma sukurti kažką tokio, kas niekaip nebūtų toptelėję į kitą galvą anksčiau?Ved. Aidas Puklevičius

Ryto garsai
Ryto garsai. Skirma Kondratas: baimės dėl pilietybės išsaugojimo dažnai yra iš nežinojimo

Ryto garsai

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 110:31


Kur rasti informacijos apie asmenis viešosios erdvėse, pavyzdžiui lauke, renkančius paramą? Į LRT RADIJĄ kreipėsi klausytojas, kuris teiraujasi, kaip reglamentuojamas paramos rinkimas? Kas tai gali daryti?Seimas praplėtė užsienio lietuviams galimybę gauti Lietuvos pilietybę. Šią savaitę priimti įstatymo pakeitimai leis pateikti prašymą dėl Lietuvos pilietybės suteikimo ne tik nepilnamečiams, kaip buvo iki šiol, bet ir 18-iolikos sulaukusiems asmenims, jeigu pilietybė jiems priklausė pagal numatytą išimtį. Pokalbis su Jungtinės Karalystės lietuvių bendruomenės pirmininke Alvija Černiauskaite ir Pasaulio lietuvių bendruomenės atstove Lietuvoje Skirma Kondratas.Nekilnojamo turto kainos siekia aukštumas, mažėja sandorių. Kaip gali pasikeisti situacija artimiausiu metu?Miego skola panaši į piniginę – kuo daugiau nepakankamai miegotų naktų, tuo sudėtingiau šią susikaupusią skolą kompensuoti. O ar įmanoma ją pilnai „grąžinti“? Ką atsako mokslas, naujame „Miego DNR“ epizode paaiškina neuromokslininkė Laura Bojarskaitė.Ved. Darius Matas

Draugystė veža
Draugystė veža. Dramos terapija – puikus vaistas nuo baimės, nerimo, nežinios

Draugystė veža

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2023 28:09


Trumpėjant dienoms ir ilgėjant tamsiajam paros metui, vykstant karams, siautėjant įvairiausioms gamtos stichijoms, dažnas jaučiame padidėjusį nerimą, baimę ir nežinią. Laidoje pokalbis apie dramos terapiją kaip būdą gerinti psichikos sveikatą.Dalyavuja Dramos terapijos asociacijos prezidentė, teatro mokytoja ekspertė, psichodramos vadovė, LMTA dėstytoja Vida Lipskyte, Gailė Kvietkutė-Gudelė - individualiosios psichologijos konsultantė, paskaitų jaunimui lektorė, dramos terapeutė, ir Audronė Masiukienė - dramos terapeutė, teatro mokytoja ekspertė, socialinio emocinio ugdymo lektorė.Kada ir kokiose situacijose dramos terapija yra veiksminga labiausiai? Kaip dramos terapijos metodai gali būti paveikūs ir taikomi daugeliui netikėtose situacijose? Kokias psichologines problemas spręsti gali pagelbėti šis metodas? Atsakymai į šiuos ir kitus klausimus – laidoje.Ved. Žydrė Gedrimaitė

PORTAL (Podcast Remaja Digital)
Suka-Suka Gue Special : Behind The Scenes of The Sounds Project Vol. 6 (Ft. Lucky & Baim)

PORTAL (Podcast Remaja Digital)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2023 28:20


Suka-Suka Gue S1 EP8 : Halo halo halo welcome back guys gue! Kali ini adalah sebuah episode spesial, dimana kita akan membahas all about The Sounds Project Vol. 6 bulan agustus kemaren. Jadi, marilah kita simak! Hosted By : @ayasyaskurrr, @raflinayakaa The Sound Project Team : @luckyraidhika, @mrafliibra

True Crime BnB
Episode 79; New York Mad Bomber with Buckeye Don; the Darrow, Pratt, & Baim Family Survivors

True Crime BnB

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 57:41


Hello again, y'all, and thank you for being here for Episode 79!This week I have brought in a guest host who is one of my oldest friends--we went to college together in 1821! Okay, it was a few years after that, but we've literally been friends since I was 18. That was even before I started the BnB!!Buckeye Don bravely took on co-hosting duties today, and he brought us a hella interesting case. Don is sharing the story around the origin and the investigation of the man known in New York City in the 1940's and 1950's as the Mad Bomber.George Metesky started out with a legitimate complaint against how he was treated, but oh BOY did he take it so much too far.Beth follows up with a survivor story a little bit different from many that we've shared before. This is an entire family, three of whom were physically attacked and could have been killed by a home invader. But three of these family members: Joy Darrow, Steven Pratt, and daughter Tracy Baim, all went on to be extraordinary journalists and to set an example of how to love and respect all people for who they are.And mother Joy and daughter Tracy accomplished something extra-special together that will never be forgotten.Don's first episode went great, and he's welcome to pop back in at the BnB whenever he feels like he wants to get away. Hope you enjoy meeting my old pal, and we thank you for listening!See you in two weeks for Episode 80!!. . . . ..Look for episodes from True Crime BnB about every other week, still on Fridays.. . .If you enjoy our show, please share our episodes on social media--that's the greatest way to help us find new listeners.Another way is to rate and review on Apple Podcasts or GoodPods, or give us a 5-star rating on whatever platform you prefer!https://linktr.ee/TrueCrimeBnB?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=9e8aa538-d3ee-4823-b2e1-cb1625692e7aYou can find us on Instagram, X (Twitter), or Facebook @TrueCrimeBnBYou can send us an email at TrueCrimeBnBPod@gmail.comAnd lastly, we thank all of you for just coming along to listen. That's the best!!

Tuzinas
Tuzinas. Apie melus ir manipuliacijas emocijomis su Vita Mikuličiūte: tiek baimė, tiek džiaugsmas paverčia mus mažiau kritiškais

Tuzinas

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 39:20


Gyvename laikais, kuomet skambių pranešimų patikimumo riba socialiniuose tinkluose ne visada yra aiškiai matoma, nors galimybių tikrinti faktus turime daugiau nei bet kada. Supratimas, kodėl meluojame, kuriame istorijas ir manipuliuojame yra kelias į tikrą tiesą ir išmintingesnių sprendimų priėmimą. Kaip melas ir jo formavimas veikia mūsų elgesį? Kaip manipuliuojama emocijomis? Ar įmanoma tai pastebėti prieš tampant melo auka?Į šį, kartais iškreiptą pasaulį, pasinersime kartu su Vilniaus universiteto mokslininke, psichologe dr. Vita Mikuličiūte, kuri savo žiniomis, žmonių elgesį melagingų naujienų ir kito melo akivaizdoje, su komanda narplioja įvairiomis kryptimis.Ved. Ignas Klėjus

Gyvenimo citrinos
Gyvenimo citrinos. Prieš 10 m. Virginijui nustatė ketvirtos stadijos vėžį: išgirstos žinios manyje įžiebė ne baimę, o didelį ryžtą pasveikti

Gyvenimo citrinos

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 44:03


Ketvirta vėžio stadija neretu atveju žmonėms ir jų aplinkiniams skamba kaip nuosprendis, paskutinių gyvenimo valandų skaitiklio įjungimas. Tačiau Virginijus Šaulys turėjo vieną tikslą - pasveikti, todėl apie šią ligą sužinojo viską ir su būriu specialistų išleido knygą „Vėžys 24/7“. Nuo diagnozės jau praėjo dešimtmetis, o Virginijus gyvena sveiką, prasmingą ir laimingą gyvenimą.„Tai, kas man nutiko, yra geriausia, ką galėjau patirti per visą savo gyvenimą", - sako pašnekovas. Kodėl, išgirskite pokalbyje.Ved. Lavija Šurnaitė

Gimtoji žemė
Gimtoji žemė. Ar pagrįstos baimės dėl lenkiškos paukštienos kokybės?

Gimtoji žemė

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 23:07


Šalyje yra per 30 stambesnių paukštynų ir paukščių augintojų. Jie į rinką tiekia mėsą ir kiaušinius. Pusė jų pagamintos produkcijos suvartojama Lietuvoje ir kitose Baltijos šalyse, o likusi eksportuojama į daugiau kaip 50 pasaulio šalių. Pastaraisiais metais beveik pusė mūsų šalyje suvartojamos paukštienos ir kiaušinių įvežama iš Lenkijos. Ar ši produkcija konkuruoja su lietuviška tik kaina?Jauna mergina Asta Kavaliauskaitė, gyvenanti kaime šalia Birštono, žirgais jodinėja nuo 6 m. Užaugusi nusprendė ir kitiems padėti susidraugauti su žirgais. Taip atsirado karieta tiems, kurie nori važinėti ir pamėgusiems arklių jojimą. Mergina pripažįsta: kai kuriomis dienomis, organizuodama turus po Birštono apylinkes, pati žirgu įveikia iki 60 km.Iš Norvegijos į Lietuvą grįžęs jaunas žmogus Gintas Žiemelis su šeima sukūrė savo verslą gimtajame Kratiškių kaime Biržų rajone. Jo autoservisas dabar populiarus ne tik tarp vietinių – ir iš kitų rajonų automobilių savininkai atvažiuoja, net eilėse tenka palaukti.Ved. Regina Montvilienė

Compliance Perspectives
Eric Baim on Compliant Business Communications Through Messaging Apps [Podcast]

Compliance Perspectives

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2023 10:15


By Adam Turteltaub Email isn't enough anymore, if it ever really was. Employees are communicating with each other, clients and prospects via texts, WhatsApp, Teams, Slack and many, many more tools. Much attention has been paid to the US Department of Justice's call for organizations to be able to produce all that communication, which is not an easy task. Eric Baim, partner at Dovetail Consulting Group, explains that focusing on producing the communications is important, but it is isn't enough. Compliance teams need  to train employees to use these technology appropriately. That education process begins with compliance developing an understanding of what these applications were designed to do;  facilitate quick, back and forth interactions, brainstorm, and ask a question less formally than one would via email. The problem is that often these interactions lack context because they are continuations of other conversations. As a result, an outsider seeing them can draw very incorrect conclusions about what was being said. With that understanding in mind, it's important to make it clear to employees that if they are conducting company activity via these communication tools, they still need to follow company policy. Next, help them to understand the risk of comments taken out of context and to ensure that they add some. If the text, for example, is a follow up to an in-person meeting, reference it. Be sure also to underscore the importance of avoiding jargon, being truthful or making assumptive statements. Stick to the facts and keep personal commentary out. Internally, compliance teams, he argues, should take the time to understand how they can use these channels to communicate with the workforce. Communicating with the business where it is can help keep compliance top of mind and relatable. It can also help foster greater dialog which is, after all, what these applications were designed for.

Tuzinas
Tuzinas. Filosofė Jurga Jonutytė apie visuomenės baimę „kitaip“ atrodantiems: žmonės bijo savo paties kūno pažeidžiamumo

Tuzinas

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2023 38:45


„Klaidingai tikime, jog kuo labiau žmonės panašūs vienas į kitą, tuo labiau visuomenė tampa stipresne“ – apie negalią turinčių žmonių atskirtį visuomenėje kalba filosofė Jurga Jonutytė. Filosofė tyrinėja kaip visuomenėje suvokiama negalia, koks požiūris į savo kūną dominuoja ir ką vertiname kaip „normalų“ bei „nenormalų“ žmogų.Kodėl „kitaip“ atrodančių ir negalią patiriančių žmonių vis dar nepriimame kaip natūralaus žmonijos bruožo? Kaip visuomenė suvokia „nenormalumo“ aspektą ir kas labiausiai formuoja mūsų požiūrį šiuo klausimu?Pokalbis ir dvylika punktų su Vytauto Didžiojo universiteto filosofe Jurga Jonutyte.Ved. Ignas Klėjus.

O, Dangau! Sportas
Istorinis debiutas, „Žalgirio“ mūšis, Barselonos baimė, LKL naujokai ir nuskriaustieji

O, Dangau! Sportas

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2023 88:20


Daugiau naujienų https://osportas.lt/   00:00:00 – Įžanga 00:01:25 – Prizas kur dingo Žydrūnas? Ir kinas 00:05:08 – Nukrypimas į futbolo lyderius 00:09:00 – Mažeikiai į LKL ir NKL lyga 00:12:45 – Kasparas Jakučionis debiutas Barcelona 00:16:35 – Jasaitis ir Jomantas LKL? 00:23:30 – LKL turnyro lentelė 00:25:00 – „Žalgiris“ vs „Wolves“ 00:27:20 – Taškų rekordas ir Utenos nesėkmės 00:34:04 – „Neptūno“ forma ir Matas Jogėla 00:37:07 – „Rytas“ verčia po 100 00:41:51 – Jerai Grant į „Wolves“ 00:45:04 – Proto užtemimai „Lietkabelis“ vs Prienai 00:48:52 – Savaitės MVP 00:56:30 – Eurolygos atkrintamos: Monaco – Maccabi 01:02:22 – Partizan – Real Madrid 01:08:13 – Olympiacos – Fenerbahce

Tuzinas
Tuzinas. Sociologė prof. Aušra Maslauskaitė apie skaldančią šeimos sampratą: šeimos išnykimo baimės istorijoje linkusios kartotis

Tuzinas

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023 45:34


„Daliai žmonių įsivaizdavimas, kad egzistuoja viena teisinga šeimos forma yra savotiškas pagalbos mechanizmas, susidorojant su neapibrėžtumu, atsiradusiu po atgautos Lietuvos nepriklausomybės“ - teigia sociologė Aušra Maslauskaitė.Šeimos sąvoka pastaraisiais metais Lietuvoje tapusi tam tikra visuomenės susiskaldymo priežastimi, tačiau šeimos portretas ir veikimas nuolat kito istorinėje eigoje. Kas labiausiai pakeitė šeimos sampratą Lietuvoje per pastaruosius šimtą metų? Kuo skiriasi tarpukario, sovietinės okupacijos ir šiuolaikinė Lietuva? Ar iš tiesų šiuolaikinei šeimai didelę įtaką turi individualizmas?Pokalbis su Vytauto Didžiojo universiteto ir Lietuvos socialinių mokslų centro sociologe prof. Aušra Maslauskaite.Ved. Ignas Klėjus

Pralaužk vieną šaltą
#100 cmd DNR ATSAKYMAI | Hiparikų veipų muziejus, keistos baimės

Pralaužk vieną šaltą

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2023 107:44


Ir štai 100CMD epizodas, kuriame apsilnakė mūsų geras bičiulis Benas Lastauskas! Epizodo metu apžvelgėm DNR rezultatus. Pakalbėjom apie spalinukių tikrinimą mokykloje, apie Švedų norą sukurti tobulą rasę, apie tai kaip Airidas turėjo būti OHO reklaminiu veidu, apie baimę, kad gali nustoti veikti kojos. Apie interneto apribojimą ir veiperius, bei žmones, kurie naudoja iphone ir android. Daug juoko, daug temų, ŽIŪRIM!Contribee:https://contribee.com/pralauzk-viena-saltaInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/mantasgm/https://www.instagram.com/jankusairidas/https://www.instagram.com/kaipsuprast/https://www.instagram.com/pralauzkvienasalta Support the show

Mokslo pasaulyje
MOKSLAS ŠIANDIEN 2023.01.02 | Kaip galima užkirsti kelią baimėms?

Mokslo pasaulyje

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2023 2:21


Trumpa informacinė RADIOCENTRO laida apie mokslo naujienas ir naujausius pasiekimus.Klausyk šiokiadieniais 13.30 val. per RADIOCENTRĄ arba mūsų podkaste „Mokslas šiandien“.

Homo cultus. Žmogus ir miestas
Homo cultus. Žmogus ir miestas. Ar miesto erdvės draugiškos jaunimui? Pokalbis su atviro jaunimo centro „Mes“ komanda

Homo cultus. Žmogus ir miestas

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2023 42:32


Kokios miesto erdvės yra prieinamos paauglių veikloms? Kodėl dirbant su jaunimu tenka imtis tarpininko tarp vietos bendruomenės ir jaunuolių vaidmens? Kokiais principais remiantis galima sukurti saugią ir draugišką jaunimui erdvę? Kuo svarbus darbas gatvėse ir kaip auginamas pasitikėjimas? Kodėl svarbu pažinti savo baimes ir kas yra „Baimės laboratorija”?Savo patirtimi kuriant jaunimui draugiškas erdves dalijasi šios laidos viešnios: Asta Bieliauskaitė, Vilniaus atviro jaunimo centro „Mes“ direktorė; Audronė Masiukienė, dramos terapeutė, viena iš „Baimės laboratorijos“ vadovių ir idėjos autorių; Greta Zigmantavičienė, socialinė pedagogė, vadovavusi atvirai jaunimo erdvei „Vaga“ Naujoje Vilniuje; Žavinta Pašiulevičė, Vilniaus atviro jaunimo centro „Mes“ direktorės pavaduotoja, baigusi socialinio darbo magistrą.Laidos vedėja - miesto antropologė Jekaterina Lavrinec.Daugiau apie šešiuose Vilniaus rajonuose dirbantį atvirą jaunimo centro „Mes“ veiklas galima sužinoti čia: https://www.facebook.com/vilniausajcmes

Baimė būti atstumtam. Pokalbis su terapeutu Gintaru Šmatavičium

"Ai, viskas gerai..." Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 50:49


Naujas #56Pirmąjį 2023 metų penktadienį kviečiame jus išgirsti naują mūsų pokalbį su geru “ai, viskas gerai..” draugu, terapeutu Gintaru Šmatavičium. Apie baimę, su kuria susiduria ne vienas, tik įvardint ją ne visiems pavyksta - baimę būti atstumtam.Šią baimę svarbu pažinti, atpažinti ir tiems, kurie bijo būti savimi, bet kokį pasakymą priima, kaip kritiką ir tiems, šalia kurių yra toks žmogus, kad pavyktų jį priimti, suprasti, padrąsinti ir palaikyti.Pasirodo, kad tie žmonės, kurie atsiriboja ir bijo būti įvertinti iš tiesų labiausiai trokšta meilės ir pripažinimo, tiesiog nemoka to paprašyti.Malonaus klausymo,Eglė ir Neringa

Podcast Pemain Cadangan
Baim Wong "Cinta" Widy! Cieh...

Podcast Pemain Cadangan

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2022 18:41


Obrolan dengan Coach David Singleton, antara dia happy timnya jadi lengkap dan  pertanyaan jail Augie yg menggouda!! Baru tau juga apa yang di lakukan Baim Wong setelah SM kalah di Indonesia Cup kepada pengurus. The winning culture harus berlanjut kata Elijah Foster , apaan tuh ya??See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

N'DIGO STUDIO PODCAST
Tracy Baim: The New Mainstream Media

N'DIGO STUDIO PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2022 30:05 Transcription Available


In this episode with host Hermene Hartman, Tracy Baim Baim discusses her career in media and her upcoming departure as editor-in-chief of The Chicago Reader. "I think alternative really is the new mainstream to me. Like alternative media is where you're going to be really local. "- Tracy Baim Tracy Baim is a publisher and journalist who has been at the forefront of Chicago media for over three decades. She is the co-founder of Windy City Times, one of the nation's leading LGBT news publications, and has been the publisher of the Chicago Reader since 2016. A tireless advocate for community media, Baim is a leading voice in the push for more resources for local journalism. This is Tracy Baim's story...Tracy Baim has been in the publishing business for over 30 years. She is the publisher of the Chicago Reader, an alternative newspaper. She has seen the industry change a lot over the years, from the decline in print media to the rise of digital media. Despite these changes, she still believes in the importance of print media and its role in providing information to the public. She is also hopeful that small community media outlets will continue to thrive.In this episode, you will learn the following:1. The role of community media in informing and shaping public opinion2. The challenges and opportunities of running a media organization3. The evolving landscape of media, including the rise of digital and social media Listen: Apple Podcasts|Spotify|Stitcher|Amazon Music|Google PodcastsChapter Summaries:[00:00:00] - Hermien. Hermene Hartman hosts a conversation with Tracy Baim Baim, an alternative newspaper publisher.[00:00:43] - Tracy Baim is the publisher of Chicago Reader. She is not retiring, but she is looking for a new job. Tracy Baim wants to work in the journalism ecosystem and advocate for more resources for community media. [00:04:38] - The Reader started in 1971 as an alternative newspaper. Now, because of the egalitarian nature of the internet, anybody can start a newspaper, and it's cheaper to do it than when N'DIGO started. Even Twitter and social media are different kinds of channels to communicate. That never existed before.[00:06:09] - As a publisher, it's a great honor to be in that role. But there are sacrifices. She misses the physical part of producing a paper, but she appreciates the stages of media before it became digital. She wants to get back to the writing that inspired her to go into journalism when she was ten.[00:09:09] - As a student at Lane Tech High School, she learned about hotel machines and computer graphic machines. He was a sociologist, a psychologist, and a behavioral scientist at City Colleges. [00:10:32] - When she took over at the Reader, it was losing a million dollars a year. She had to turn around the trains, make some new tracks and create new revenue opportunities. Now it's growing stronger on digital and social media. It's printing 60,000 copies every two weeks. It went by weekly during COVID. It will stay biweekly.[00:13:20] - Tracy Baim thinks the vast majority of media will be distributed online in the future.[00:14:33] - BMO for Black and Latinx Businesses program provides better access to educational resources, partnerships and funding for small businesses. BMO has already provided financing to more than 1200 businesses throughout the Midwest. Business owners who are part of the program benefit from a wide range of tools, webinars and coaching.[00:15:54] - Tracy Baim Baime believes that the traditional access points to get into media are a high bar. She would like to see Journalism 101 taught in high school and then in college. She thinks there's a symbiotic relationship between community media and mainstream media. She believes that citizen journalists in social media sphere could benefit from understanding the basics of research and fact-checking.[00:21:02] - Hermene Hartman and Tracy Baim are talking about the future of the media in Chicago. They discuss the main problems of the journalism space in Chicago today. They also discuss the current political situation in the US and the progress made since the early 60s.[00:26:36] - The media is so amorphous. Mainstream media takes a talking heads approach to the news. In Illinois, the last two gubernatorial governors who won spent millions of dollars on TV. Social media alone is a mistake. It's both in and out. You've got to be selective.[00:27:47] - There's going to be a nightmare election to cover in February. The media has to focus on the most important races and educate the public about them. The nonprofit is not endorsing now, but it didn't endorse before as well. It's to survey, interview and compromise.[00:28:22] - At least 15 candidates are running for Chicago's upcoming major mayoral election. About ten of them are running, and they are waiting for more to join the race. The only way to cover the issues is to survey the issues and write as much as possible to educate people about the positions.[00:29:22] - Tracy Baim has a rumor out that she's retiring, but she's not going to go. Hermene suggests Tracey should teach publishing. Thanks for listening.Other episodes you'll enjoy:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/bishop-tavis-grant-on-the-future-of-the/id1493840851?i=1000580832631 https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/sasha-the-story-of-sasha-dalton-how-a-chicago/id1493840851?i=1000577806726 Connect with me:Instagram: iamhermenehartmanFacebook: hermenehartmanTwitter: HermeneNdigoWebsite: https://ndigo.com/Loved this episode? Leave us a review and rating here: {LINK} https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ndigo-studio-podcast/id1493840851

Close The Door
Eps 691 - Coki Bangsat, Antara Baim Wong , Billar dan Bebek Carok (Ft. Tretan Muslim)

Close The Door

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2022 42:56


Coki itu susah om, tuh orang bener - bener... mhmhm yaa sudahlah.

Close The Door
Eps 689 - Baim Wong Harus Di Tangkap (Ft. Zanzabella & Prabowo)

Close The Door

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 52:51


Ngeprank Polisi, Baim Harus di tangkap. Demi konten kok pura - pura KDRT, ntar jadi beneran gimana?

Morning Shift Podcast
Tracy Baim's Influence On Chicago Journalism

Morning Shift Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2022 16:20


After years with the Chicago Reader and decades in community journalism, publisher Tracy Baim will turn over leadership to fresh voices by the end of the year. Reset sits down with Baim to learn about her inspiration and visions for the future.

Charting Queer Health
Episode 22 (Part 2) - Pride 101! With Tracy Baim

Charting Queer Health

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 26:27


In part two of our Pride series, we are again joined by Tracy Baim (LGBTQ+ Hall of Fame member, queer historian, and journalist) to talk about rainbow washing, inclusivity in the queer community, and how to advocate for a better tomorrow. 

pride baim tracy baim
Charting Queer Health
Episode 21 (Part 1) - Pride 101! With Tracy Baim

Charting Queer Health

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 29:35


In part one of our Pride series, we are joined by Tracy Baim (LGBTQ+ Hall of Fame member, queer historian, and journalist) to break down the origins of Pride and who we have to thank for the progress we've made. 

pride baim tracy baim
A.D. Q&A with A.D. Quig
A.D. Q&A with Chicago Reader Publisher Tracy Baim

A.D. Q&A with A.D. Quig

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 47:03


The Chicago Reader is one of the city's best-known free papers and one of a few remaining alt-weeklies to survive the media crunch that killed dozens across the country. Until recently, the Reader seemed like it was about to go under, too. Our guest this week is the Reader's publisher, Tracy Baim. She's been in the Chicago media world since she was a kid. Her mother, father and stepfather were all in the biz. Fresh out of college, she founded the LGBTQ publication the Windy City Times. In 2018, she stepped in to lead the Reader. And what a ride it's been. When print advertising from bars, restaurants and venues dried up in the early COVID days, the paper survived thanks to a federal PPP loan, another loan from the city, a series of innovative fundraising measures and leftover investment from the paper's co-owners, lawyer Len Goodman and real estate developer Elzie Higginbottom. But in recent months, a spat with Goodman almost brought the Reader down. He wrote a column detailing his concerns about getting his daughter vaccinated for covid. It led to an uproar and an outside fact-check that found several errors. Editors wanted a correction, an editors note, or for the story to get taken down. Goodman cried censorship, and the fight hit pause on the paper's transition to nonprofit status, a transition that would have allowed for money from foundations and philanthropists to flow in. In this episode, Baim brings us behind the scenes of that tussle, explains where the Reader goes from here, and forecasts what a broader shift to nonprofit status for legacy media means--for example, is the Sun-Times/WBEZ merger good for all the other, smaller independent publications dotting Chicago? And is there a way for Chicago foundations to pool their money for media in a way that spreads the wealth to smaller outlets?

Pralaužk vieną šaltą
#79 cmd Kas yra didelis?| Kaip atrodo tikras LIETUVIS? Viešbučių baimė

Pralaužk vieną šaltą

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 110:32


Naujausias pilnas juokų, protingų minčių ir prizų - siurprizų CMD epizodas, kartu su bičiulu, komiku Nedu Zimantu. Podcaste pakalbėjom, apie tai kaip atrodo tikras lietuvis. Mantas bandė įrodyti, kad nėra didelis, Kisliakas pasidalino savo viešbučių baime. Pažaidėm žaidimą "kiek šis jobnutas TikTokas turi peržiūrų?" Linksmai pasedėjom, pažvengėm ir pastūmėm, gero pirmadienio!Contribee:https://contribee.com/pralauzk-viena-saltaInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/mantasgm/https://www.instagram.com/jankusairidas/https://www.instagram.com/kaipsuprast/https://www.instagram.com/pralauzkvienasalta Support the show

podcaste cmd mantas kaip baim atrodo naujausias tikras didelis
Les Immatures De Paris And The Policeman
BAGBO VS MAKOSSO_nous pouvons avoir des pensées d'anticipation du type « il ne va pas m'aimer », qu'est-ce qu'elle va penser de moi ? »

Les Immatures De Paris And The Policeman

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 0:06


10–12
10–12. Marijos iš Hostomelio istorija – 10 dienų baimės ir grėsmės gyvybei

10–12

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 95:47


Lietuviai ir ukrainiečiai išleidžia bendrą laikraštį, skirtą Ukrainos žmonėms. Pokalbis su Lietuvos žurnalistų sąjungos pirmininku Dainiumi Radzevičiumi ir viena leidinio redaktorių Jolanta Beniušyte.Marijos Pleskač iš Hostomelio istorija – apie jos akyse rusų nužudytą draugą, okupantų nusiaubtą mylimą miestą, 10 dienų baimės ir grėsmės gyvybei.Aleksandras Taraikovskis buvo nužudytas Minsko centre, kai po suklastotų prezidento rinkimų 2020 m. protestuotojus vaikė specialiosios policijos pajėgos. Tai buvo pirmoji šių protestų auka. Ši istorija - spektaklio „ERROR 403“ centre. Jau šį penktadienį spektaklis bus rodomas Lietuvos nacionaliniame dramos teatre, o pjesės autorius, vienas spektaklio režisierių ir Baltarusijos laisvojo teatro įkūrėjas Nikolai Khalezin - laidos pašnekovas.Lrt.lt projekte „Lietuva po rytojaus“ Andriaus Balčiūno straipsnis, pavadinimu „Aušta nauja pasaulio tvarka: Lietuvai senų pasirinkimų tarp Rusijos ir Vakarų nebeužteks“.Ved. Agnė Skamarakaitė

UNBOSSED by Marina
E32 - Interview with Tracy Baim, Publisher at Chicago Reader

UNBOSSED by Marina

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2021 48:39


Tracy Baim is co-publisher of the Chicago Reader newspaper. She is owner and co-founder of Windy City Times, a 35-year-old LGBTQ newspaper. She is the author or co-author of 12 books on LGBTQ history (including Out and Proud in Chicago, Obama and the Gays, and Gay Press, Gay Power), producer of four films, creator of the That's So Gay! LGBTQ trivia game, and a longtime journalist and organizer. Major events she has helped lead include Gay Games VII in Chicago in 2006, and the March on Springfield for Marriage Equality. She founded the LGBT Chamber of Commerce of Illinois in 1996, and has won numerous awards for her journalism and activism, including the Studs Terkel Award. Baim has been inducted into the National LGBT Journalists Association Hall of Fame, Association of Women Journalists-Chicago Hall of Fame, and the Chicago LGBT Hall of Fame. She received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of Professional Journalists-Chicago. Oh Hey, and I'm Marina. I am a technologist, mom, podcast host, leadership coach, cruciverbalist and aquarian ;) UNBOSSED IS… “Paths To Success of Amazing Women in Chicago” I welcome you to ask questions, participate, and join me as we explore these topics by emailing me at info@unbossed.io or visiting www.unbossed.io. Available on- Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDTz6_FepG04QTs1BjFLBjw/ Spotify: https://lnkd.in/eUhfH8E Apple Podcasts: https://lnkd.in/e7cWtBv Google Podcasts: https://lnkd.in/enjChPt And others.. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/marina-malaguti/support

The HPP Podcast
Ep. 22 Exploring Theatre Connect as an Affirming Space for LGBTQQ Youth

The HPP Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2021 37:32


In this episode, Jeffrey Pufahl and Camilo Reina-Munoz talk about co-directing Theatre Connect, an LGBTQQ youth theatre program. They were joined by Hannah Bayne, a mental health counselor, and Cai Husband, a peer mentor. They discuss the origin of Theatre Connect, Baim's drama spiral, and the need to create a fun space for teens to explore their identities. This episode covers the article “Theatre Connect: Key Strategies for Facilitating LGBTQQ Youth Theatre Programs” by Jeffrey Pufahl, LMUS, MFA, MFA, Camilo Reina-Munoz, MA, and Hannah Bayne, PhD, LMHC (FL), LPC (VA).

Ngobrol Sore Semaunya
NSS Ep.16 -Baim Wong: Direndahkan & Gagal Selama 13 Tahun, Baru Dapat Hikmahnya Sekarang

Ngobrol Sore Semaunya

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2020 39:33


Putri Tanjung dan Baim Wong ngobrol tentang journey karir Baim, cerita mengenai kegagalan demi kegagalan yang akhirnya membuahkan himah yang dalam & yang gak kalah seru disini mereka ngobrol tentang bagaimana industri digital terutama konten YouTube di Indonesia. Ngobrol Sore Semaunya akan ada setiap Kamis jam 18.00 WIB hanya di CXO Media. Jangan lupa subscribe dan share ya! #cxo #cxomedia #ngobrolsoresemaunya

The CornerStore
Tracy Baim | What the future holds for the Chicago Reader, the early house scene in the city, and more

The CornerStore

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020


The Cornerstore spoke with Chicago Reader Publisher and Hall of Famer, Tracy Baim, about the never-ending desire to be a journalist and covering queer stories/news the right way, what the future holds for the Chicago Reader, and more. Stay connected with The Cornerstore on Twitter, Instagram,and Soundcloud! You can also access and download episodes via Spotify and Apple!