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Our guests today come to us from the world of fabric design as we welcome Pat & Walter Bravo from Art Gallery Fabrics- Textile Manufacturer in Miami, Florida. Both born in Buenos Aires Argentina, Pat got the sewing bug beside her mother as she sewed…as she dreamed of painting her world with fabrics.As Pat created a gallery in their home with quilts, their son named it an Art Gallery and an idea was born. So, Pat and her husband Walter turned this passion into a company and Art Gallery Fabrics was born. Pat's life always revolved around art, history, sewing and later quilting – while Walter's was all about Entrepreneurship and Commerce regarding awards and accomplishments Pat and Walter have one son, two new puppies Sol & Luna –and many stories to share!(1:42) Pat's mother taught her to sew starting at age 9. Hear the stories of her early journey and why she liked it so much from the start. (3:10) Pat always dreamt of “painting the world with fabric”. Hear what this truly means to her. She takes us through the wonderful progression of events that eventually led to the founding on Art Gallery Fabrics. (7:40)The Art Gallery Fabrics website features a video tour of the Art Gallery Fabrics office. Pat walks you through the features of this video and their office.(10:21) Walter tells how he and Pat met (they've been together now for 40 years!) and why they came to the US.(11:31) Walter initially worked in the carpet industry in Argentina, moving to the garment industry when he moved to the US. He shares the story of his work and the move to Miami.(13:10) Walter explains his extensive role at art Gallery Fabrics. When it comes to the operations…he does it all!(14:15) And…how does each of them feel about working with their spouse!? Mutual trust is the secret.(16:22) Pat and Walter speak fondly of their team and why they have become family.(19:28) Next, they talk about their different designers and how they choose the patterns that become their fabrics.(21:28) What is the look or stye that they work exemplifies? Pat explains how to tell if something is part of Art Gallery Fabrics.(25:14) Both Pat and Walter walk us through the process of dreaming up a design to taking the fabric to the public. Listen for the word “evocative” !(31:48) Do Pat and Walter get to see the creations made from their fabrics? Absolutely! Hear how much that means to them! And quality…? This is the most important aspect of their products…hear why!(33:12) Many of their designs are inspired by experiences and cultures. Pat talks about her favorite…the Indie Collection. (36:04) You've heard their dogs Sol and Luna in the background throughout our conversation. Let's hear their story!(39:11) So, what's next for them…and what's their dream?(41:28) Is there any question that I didn't ask? Well Pat says…I love my husband so very much” and Walter says he feels the same! Partners is every aspect of life.(42:30) What's the best way to contact Pat and Walter? info@artgalleriesfabric.com , Instagram and Facebook too! Be sure to subscribe to, review and rate this podcast on your favorite platform…and visit our website sewandsopodcast.com for more information about today's and all of our Guests.
¡Sueño cumplido! Viajamos a Buenos Aires Argentina para vivir la pasión del fútbol. En este episodio de las Memorias de un Futbolero Podcast nos sumergimos en la cultura futbolística de esta vibrante ciudad. Exploramos cada rincón: la imponente Bombonera latiendo con su historia, el pintoresco Caminito con su alma bohemia, la increible tienda de Maradona, y la rica historia de los museos de Boca Juniors y River Plate. ¡Pero eso no es todo! Descubre las increíbles historias futboleras que nos regalaron los taxistas porteños sobre los equipos de sus amores. ¡Un viaje inolvidable para cualquier amante del fútbol! #BuenosAires #FutbolArgentino #LaBombonera #Caminito #Maradona #BocaJuniors #RiverPlate #ViajeFutboleroEscribeme a instagram @kitogonzalez12 para conocer tu opinión, sugerencias sobre Memorias de un Futbolero PodcastSupport the showDisponible en Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Podcast, Deezer, iVoox y Youtube.
En la entrevista del programa La Miel en tu radio conversamos con el Gerente Mariano Muñoz de Mar-Plast - Buenos Aires - Argentina 3/5/2025. Quien nos comparte toda la información sobrelas novedades de la empresa líder en envases de plásticos para miel.
Guardian Capital S.A. is a Buenos Aires-based financial advisory firm dedicated to helping individuals and businesses achieve their financial goals through personalized investment strategies. With a team of seasoned professionals, the firm offers tailored solutions in asset allocation, risk management, and portfolio optimization to ensure clients' capital is both protected and positioned for growth. Episode 156 of the Agents of Innovation podcast features two of their co-founders, Tomás Ambrosetti and Martin D'odorico. You can also watch this episode on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRFF3p8qmrEG4l4uR1BDZQg On the 2024 Fearless Journeys group trip to Argentina, our group visited with Tomas and Martin. Now, we bring the world a full conversation with them about how they have grown to about 1,000 clients in just two years as a firm. They use many social media platforms (see below) to communicate financial education messages; these communication and media efforts also help to expand their brand and attract new clients. You can learn more about Guardian Capital at: https://guardiancapital.com.ar Follow Guardian Capital on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/guardiancapital_/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@guardiancapital YouTube: Follow the Agents of Innovation podcast on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/innovationradio/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/agentinnovation Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AgentsOfInnovationPodcast You can support this podcast and our Fearless Journeys community on our Patreon account: www.patreon.com/fearlessjourneys You can also join our network through the Fearless Journeys community at: https://www.fearlessjourneys.org
WWW.ADVENTUREFREAKSSS.COM –Go Straight to the Source!How to work with me: =================================
¿Cómo está el mercado inmobiliario en Buenos Aires? ¿Qué pasó con los precios ajustados por inflación? ¿Qué zonas bajaron más? ¿Dónde están las oportunidades reales y cómo evaluar correctamente una propiedad antes de comprar? Todo esto y mucho más en este episodio.
Francisco, quien nació en la ciudad de Buenos Aires (Argentina) el 17 de diciembre de 1936 fue el papa número 266 de la Iglesia Católica.
Ángeles tiene 16 años y su lunes, 10 de junio de 2013, empieza como cualquier otro: con una clase de gimnasia a las 08:00h. de la mañana. De normal, ese es el día más ajetreado de la semana y no suele volver a casa hasta pasadas las 21:00h. de la noche, pero ese día será distinto...Más información en el blog: https://criminopatia.com/134-angeles-rawson¡Hazte fan de Criminopatía! Tendrás dos nuevos episodios exclusivos cada mes, todos los meses del año: http://criminopatia.com/fansY síguenos en redes en @criminopatia.
Descubre la increíble historia de la primera transacción comercial con Bitcoin en 2010, cuando se compraron dos pizzas por 10.000 BTC. Conoce cómo este simple intercambio sentó las bases para la adopción global de las criptomonedas y qué valor tendría hoy esa transacción.
¡Aprende español con cultura! ️ En esta lección de nivel A2, exploramos Buenos Aires, Argentina, su historia, sus costumbres y su encanto único, mientras mejoras tu español. ️✨ Descubre vocabulario, expresiones y datos interesantes para enriquecer tu aprendizaje. ¡Vamos a viajar con el idioma! Let's speak Spanish together—¡Vamos a practicar! Join the live New Spanish Zoom class!$20 per classspeaking, listening, and reading skillsBeginner-Elementary Spanish A1-A2 BOOK A FREE CONSULTATION SESSION WITH ME: https://calendly.com/davidalexandercantu Follow me on social media below: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl-umo0w-yVjyfYz5zUcRvgInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/davidalexandercantu/Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@davidalexanderspanishFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/davidalexandercantu/ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidalexandercantu/
En este capítulo estrenamos el año con una nueva parte de la sesión de Henry Saiz en la ciudad de Buenos Aires (Argentina) que hemos estado ofreciendo en distintas entregas. Esta semana disfrutamos de la cuarta hora de este set que recorre diversos géneros con el denominador común de la música de club.Escuchar audio
Discover how inflation is destroying the value of your money and eroding the ethical foundations of society. Legendary author Doug Casey reveals the insidious ways rising prices lead to social decay, unethical behavior, and the breakdown of trust. Learn how to protect your prosperity by shifting away from the falling dollar and into real assets like gold, real estate, and carefully selected investments. Don't let inflation rob you - get the insights you need to thrive in this challenging economic environment. Will you please leave a review for the show? I'd be grateful. Search “how to leave an Apple Podcasts review”. Resources: Visit internationalman.com to read Doug Casey's weekly articles and watch his "Doug Casey's Take" videos on YouTube. Show Notes: GetRichEducation.com/534 For access to properties or free help with a GRE Investment Coach, start here: GREmarketplace.com GRE Free Investment Coaching:GREmarketplace.com/Coach Get mortgage loans for investment property: RidgeLendingGroup.com or call 855-74-RIDGE or e-mail: info@RidgeLendingGroup.com Invest with Freedom Family Investments. You get paid first: Text FAMILY to 66866 For advertising inquiries, visit: GetRichEducation.com/ad Best Financial Education: GetRichEducation.com Get our wealth-building newsletter free— text ‘GRE' to 66866 Our YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/c/GetRichEducation Follow us on Instagram: @getricheducation Complete episode transcript: Automatically Transcribed With Otter.ai Keith Weinhold 0:01 Welcome to GRE. I'm your host. Keith Weinhold, inflation does not mean rising prices. Inflation is an expansion of the money supply which results in rising prices, and it leads to wider societal decay and moral breakdowns in ways that you've never thought about before. It misdirects inflation frustration toward people like housing providers and grocers, we explore it today on get rich education. Mid south home buyers, I mean, they're total pros, with over two decades is the nation's highest rated turnkey provider. Their empathetic property managers use your ROI as their North Star. So it's no wonder that smart investors just keep lining up to get their completely renovated income properties like it's the newest iPhone. They're headquartered in Memphis and have globally attractive cash flows and A plus rating with a better business bureau and now over 5000 houses renovated. There's zero markup on maintenance. Let that sink in, and they average a 98.9% occupancy rate, while their average renter stays more than three and a half years. Every home they offer has brand new components, a bumper to bumper, one year warranty, new 30 year roofs. And wait for it, a high quality renter. Remember that part and in an astounding price range, 100 to 180k. I've personally toured their office and their properties in person in Memphis, get to know Mid South. Enjoy cash flow from day one. Start yourself right now at mid south homebuyers.com that's mid south homebuyers.com you know, whenever you want the best written real estate and finance info. Oh, geez. Today's experience limits your free articles access, and it's got paywalls and pop ups and push notifications and cookies disclaimers. It's not so great. So then it's vital to place nice, clean, free content into your hands that adds no hype value to your life. That's why this is the golden age of quality newsletters, and I write every word of ours myself. It's got a dash of humor, and it's to the point because even the word abbreviation is too long, my letter usually takes less than three minutes to read, and when you start the letter, you also get my one hour fast real estate video. Course, it's all completely free. It's called the Don't quit your Daydream letter. It wires your mind for wealth, and it couldn't be easier for you to get it right now. Just text GRE to 66866, while it's on your mind, take a moment to do it right now. Text GRE to 66 866. Speaker 1 3:12 you're listening to the show that has created more financial freedom than nearly any show in the world. This is get rich education. Keith Weinhold 3:28 We are the GRE from Albany, New York to New Albany, Ohio, and across 188 nations worldwide. I'm your host, Keith Weinhold, and this is get rich education. You have probably heard it been said by now that money must have three attributes. It is a store of value, a medium of exchange and a unit of account. The US Dollar does not meet the first one store of value. That's due to inflation. How is the dollar a store of value, it is not so then the dollar is a mere currency, not money. You can make the case that gold is a store of value, maybe that Bitcoin is, although it's got a short track record and it's a volatile ride the S, p5, 100, you could say that's nothing more than a store of value long term. When you understand all the drags on it, you're only treading water long term with the s, p, I've discussed that on shows earlier this year. That leaves real estate as not just a good long term, stable store a value, but when it's done right, it is the vehicle where inflation actually increases your purchasing power. And here's a new way to think about it, money is your time and energy captured in an abstracted form for the government to take out debt. They are borrowing your time and energy. Government debt is the closest thing we've ever seen to time travel.They're borrowing the collective time and energy from your future. How do you achieve time travel? You borrow human time and energy from the future currency debasement steals the time and energy of you and everyone alive today. That's why you've got to protect yourself. And what this does is that it actually increases your time preference. Yeah, the term time preference, that's something that Bitcoin authors like Dr saifedean Amos often use time preference and actually think that it's sort of a confusing term. Time preference, though, it sounds like a good thing, it's actually a bad thing. It means that you would rather consume now and over consume now instead of later. Having a high time preference means that you want to all out, ball out right now, and not consider your future. Well, that's what inflation does whenever you see the term time preference out there. I think the best way for you to remember what that means is think of it instead as a now preference. I think now preference is more intuitive than time preference. Teach me how to Dougie, yes, we've got public figure and mega popular author Doug Casey back with us today to discuss how rising prices lead to social decay and makes humans have a higher time preference resultantly, I guess that is teaching us how to Dougie. Yes, indeed, that is a reference to that, like 15 year old song, teach me how to Dougie, and we would drop some bars of that song right now. Oh, you know that me and the team here, we really want to, but we would probably have some royalty issues with that one here, and I'll tell you that is such a stupid song. Teach me how to Dougie, but at the same time, once you've heard it, the next thing that you want to do is hear it again somehow. But it's pretty likely that Doug Casey and I have some more important things to talk about. So fortunately for you, rather than discuss a 2010, rap song any further, we're going to discuss how rising prices lead to social decay. Monetary inflation is even worse than you think. This era's rising prices and falling values actually lead to social decay. Villains and unethical actors are getting rewarded and they're stealing from you. We're going to discuss just how the international man himself, a legendary and generationally popular author, is back with us for a sobering look at inflation and social decay today. Hey, welcome back in. Doug Casey. Doug Casey 8:04 Nice to talk to you, Keith. I'm speaking to you at the moment from my farm in Uruguay, which is one of the, I would say, two, most stable countries in Latin America, and one of the two or three most stable countries in the Western Hemisphere, there's a lot of real estate in the world, other than in the US. And I know that you mostly talk about real estate. I've actually done a lot of real estate too, all around the world, in the Orient and in Europe and South America, and, of course, a lot in the US and Canada. So I'm generally friendly to real estate, and it's been very, very good to me. Keith Weinhold 8:44 Well, you're truly living up to the International Man moniker again today, joining us from that small South American nation of Uruguay and Doug. Before we talk about the inflation and the social decay, what are property taxes like there in that part of Uruguay. And I know you often spend time in Buenos Aires Argentina as well. If you can talk to us in terms of the percent of the value of the property that you pay in property tax each year, which tends to be one to one and a quarter percent on an average in the United States. Doug Casey 9:13 that's right. And I think in some states like Illinois, it can go up to about 2% if I'm not mistaken, which means that you really don't own your property. If you don't pay your real estate taxes for for a year or two, you'll find out who really owns it, right? But taxes are high in South America, but generally, not too bad on real estate per se, certainly not on farmland, but farmland everywhere in the world doesn't pay much in the way of real estate taxes, and that's certainly the case here in Uruguay, and the same in Argentina, which might be worth more discussion, because Argentina is doing something that's actually unique in world history right now. And I.hope it's a story that ends well, because they're going in the right direction. But to answer your question, if you buy a condo or a house in a city in Uruguay or Argentina or most of these countries down here, you're going to pay real estate taxes, but it's less than in the US typically, like a half a percent, when they get you in South America is value added taxes, or anything you buy, including labor. In most places, you have to pay the government someplace in between 18 or 20 or 22% depending it's like a huge extra sales tax that's hidden in the cost of the item. And of course, they have income taxes down here, just as what they do in the US, approximately American levels. But on the bright side, not that I know about these things from a firsthand point of view, but these Latin American countries are kind of corrupt and not as completely grasping as the US is they're not as competent in going after you, and don't have a worldwide reach, which the US does. Keith Weinhold 11:07 Yeah. Oh, well, that's an interesting comparison there. And yeah, Doug, a lot of Latin American nations have had high rates of inflation in both the recent past and now in a piece that you recently wrote is titled, inflation and social decay, rising prices and falling values. And here in the United States, whether it's at the grocery store or the mall or restaurants or airports or anywhere you turn, people really are finding inferior goods and services yet at higher prices. I mean, everyone sees that now. And Doug, I know that you've maintained that living standards have taken a big step, not forward, but backward, and are trending even worse. So tell us about it. Doug Casey 11:49 Well, the way that you become wealthy is by producing more than you consume and saving the difference. That's the basic formula. Produce more than you consume and save the difference. But when the government inflates the currency, and the government's entirely at fault with it, they have the printing presses. They control the currency. It makes it very, very hard to save, and you can't get ahead. You can't build capital which you need in order to invest and become a capitalist. So inflation is the enemy of the average man, and it's the enemy of society as a whole, but some people do very well because of inflation. Why? Because in the US, it's the people in basically New York and Washington and other big cities that stand very close to the fire hydrant of money that comes out of the government, and they get to drink deeply before something trickles down to the plebs below inflation will destroy a country, and that's why in Latin America in particular, you've got very rich people who are usually connected to the government, who get that money first, and a lot of poor peasants who don't get it, and I'm afraid that the US has been going in that direction for some years. Keith Weinhold 13:08 Well, I'm so glad Doug that you gave us the reminder that the government is the source of inflation. That's where it all begins, because people often blame the landlord for higher rents, but they blame the grocer for the higher beef prices, but the landlord in the grocer, they're only the messenger, not the source. You're absolutely right. It's a question of very bad economic education throughout the school system, all the way up to college and post grad work the butcher and the baker and the oil maker produce real goods that make your standard of living higher. They're the heroes in this scenario. The government, which prints up money through its deficits that it runs, is the villain in this and I never cease to be amazed and shocked how people look at politicians to be their saviors, right? They're heroes. They're not. They're the villains in this piece. They serve no useful purpose. And the same goes for most of these agencies that they set up, which once again, make things easier for the guys on top, that have capital, that have political connections, that can hire the lawyers, hire the accountants to twist things in their favor, makes it very hard for the little guy who can't jump over the hurdles that are put up by regulation as well as taxes as well as inflation. Tell us about how inflation erodes ethical standards. Doug Casey 14:38 Well, that's a problem too, because if you can't trust money, the validity of contracts becomes questionable if you borrow. It's terrible in a country like Argentina, if you borrowed 100 pesos from me and only gave it back to me next year, it'd be worth half as much. But you say, Hey, here's your 100 pesos, but you're subtly cheating the person that you borrowed the money from, right? And it erodes trust. Not only that, but inflation tends to make the banking system unsound for a number of reasons. If you can't trust your bank, you really can't trust any financial institutions. So money is the lifeblood of a society. It represents everything that you want to do and want to provide for other people in the future. And if the government destroys your money, it's destroying your future life. And that erodes trust. It makes people think in terms of, I want it all, and I want it now. I'm not willing to wait, because in the future, I don't know what anything is going to be worth. So it leads to an unstable society. And in an unstable society, you don't trust anything. Keith Weinhold 15:57 right? Well, first, I love your example of the 100 peso loan. I mean, how would one know how much interest to charge in a runaway inflationary environment? Because some people don't realize that high inflation also means more volatile levels of inflation, and banking and lending really break down. You know, Doug, I've got my own example or two about how inflation introduces unethical behavior when the big wave of inflation started to hit in 2021 and 2022 in the United States, you know my favorite cold brew bottled coffee, which I drank because it had good ingredients in it, rather than raising the price on that with inflation, they replaced their higher quality sweeteners in my cold brew coffee, like stevia and monk fruit extract with a junky sucralose sweetener, they could keep their price the same that way. They sure didn't point out that they substituted a junkier sweetener. And really this is another form of inflation called skimplation That was pretty sneaky behavior here. Doug Casey 17:00 you're absolutely correct, Keith, and this further breaks down the bonds of trust in society, because you no longer really trust that manufacturer, and that's just your one particular coffee manufacturer, but it's happening across the board with all manufacturers, so no wonder people start saying, Hey, I hate these companies. They're trying to rip me off. Well, they're not trying to rip you off. They're just trying to survive the consequences of the government debasing the currency. So we have to assign blame where it belongs. That's a very good example that you just gave. I think. Keith Weinhold 17:35 yeah. And I think another way that inflation introduces unethical behavior is say that there are two different manufacturers of wine, and they're selling their bottle of wine for $20 then the currency supply doubles. Okay, well, one manufacturer can go ahead and keep selling their $20 wine with inferior ingredients. Well over here, the honest guy, the other company, they double their price to $40 and they continue to use good quality ingredients. But what do consumers notice? They notice the price more than the ingredients. So therefore the unethical one that waters down their wine ingredients but keeps their price low actually gets rewarded and will get more business. Doug Casey 18:15 You're right, certainly in the short run, but in the long run, inflation is going to destroy both of them, but for different reasons, inflation really destroys the basis of society itself, because it makes it so much harder to produce and you don't have any savings to consume. So money is the basis of society. When you destroy the money you're destroying the basis of society itself. Keith Weinhold 18:43 We're talking with Doug Casey about his recent piece that you can find@internationalman.com it'stitled inflation and social decay, rising prices and falling values. He also hosts the eponymous show, Doug Casey's take more with Doug when we come back, including how inflation leads to a more litigious society and actually creates more lawsuits. That's straight ahead. I'm your host. Keith Weinhold. oh geez, the national average bank account pays less than 1% on your savings, so your bank is getting rich off of you. You've got to earn way more, or else you're losing your hard earned cash to inflation. Let the liquidity fund help you put your money to work with minimum risk, your cash generates up to a 10% return and compounds year in and year out. Instead of earning less than 1% in your bank account, the minimum investment is just 25k you keep getting paid until you decide you want your money back. Their decade plus track record proves they've always paid their investors 100% in full and on time. And you know how I'd know, because I'm an investor in this myself, earn 10% like me and GRE listeners are text family to 66866, to learn about freedom, family investments, liquidity fund, on your journey to financial freedom through passive income. Text, family to 66866 Hey, you can get your mortgage loans at the same place where I get mine, at Ridge lending group NMLS, 42056. They provided our listeners with more loans than any provider in the entire nation because they specialize in income properties, they help you build a long term plan for growing your real estate empire with leverage. You can start your pre qualification and chat with President Caeli Ridge personally. Start Now while it's on your mind at Ridge lendinggroup.com That's ridgelendinggroup.com Richard Duncan 20:53 this is Richard Duncan, publisher and macro watch, listen to get rich Education with Geek Weinhold, and don't quit your Daydream. Keith Weinhold 21:11 Welcome back to get rich education. We're talking with legendary author Doug Casey. In fact, his classic book strategic investing broke the record for receiving the largest advance ever paid for a financial book at the time. And Doug, I know, in one of your latest pieces, you talked about how inflation actually leads to a more litigious society as well. Tell us about that. Doug Casey 21:34 The US is actually the most litigious country in the world, and it's because a company may have a hard time meeting its obligations when the currency that its obligations are denominated in turns into a floating abstraction, and if you can't fulfill your obligation, is the way you would righteously on a handshake. Might you may want to call in your lawyers to help you survive. So it percolates through all areas of society. Keith Weinhold 22:06 Now, on top of inflation, I think there's a problem that's really in one's face today, America has a tip inflation problem where increasingly you are being asked for tips at places where you weren't beforehand. And I think a lot of that really began with COVID. Places like Subway restaurant began asking for tips even though you're standing up to order your food, and it was a way for you to show appreciation that they showed up during the pandemic. But when the pandemic waned, the tip request didn't go away. In fact, I think they've increased. So we have tip inflation on top of inflation. Doug, I recently attended a conference, and the little convenience stores inside the event site hotel, they stated that they are now cashless. Okay, so you're going to be paying with a card, and when you bring your groceries up to the counter, there's a little screen, and they ask you two to three questions. You have to answer two to three prompts if you don't want to leave a tip. This is just at a convenience store. This holds up the line. It's a little frustrating. It wears me out. They say humans can only make 35,000 decisions a day. I just spent three or four of them saying I don't want to leave a tip for this sandwich that I just brought to the counter. And you know what's funny, Doug, I almost consider if this gets annoying after I deny the ridiculous tip request when they didn't provide any additional service. You know what I think about asking Doug, asking that person, oh, okay, well, you asked me to pay more than we agreed to. Where's my discount? Now let me ask you a few questions about my discount now that you ask that I pay more than what we agreed to. So tenations become a problem. Doug Casey 23:47 Actually, it's worse than that, because now that the world is going to computer money less cash, they give you some choices. I know at Starbucks, this is the case. You want to leave a 10% or a 15% or a 20% tip, those are the things that you can check to make it easy for yourself. But wait a minute, I just wanted a coffee, and what services this person provided for me, other than just drawing a coffee for me and I'm given a choice of it used to be that tips were this is a long time ago, but it's still the way it is in many countries in the world, the tips were just the excess change that you left there. Or the waiter in many countries in the world, like, well, two I can think of off the top of my hand, or Japan, where tipping is is not accepted. In fact, I remember in one Tokyo restaurant, I left some money on the table, and the waitress ran down the street after me to give me my money back. She thought that I inadvertently left it on the table and it was supposed to be a tip. Other countries, like New Zealand, there's no tipping. Certainly out in the country, it's only in the big cities. So yeah, it's become a rather pernicious habit, but I understand, because the average guy doing manual hourly labor like waiting is having a really hard time making it these days, and that's evidenced by the fact that both Trump and Kamala Harris were talking about making tips exempt from income taxes, because you might have to pay the government, well, forget about it. You have to pay them 15% in Social Security taxes, which are non deductible, and then you have to pay income taxes on top of the Social Security taxes. So I I understand why you'd want to do that, but inflation is just another kind of tax, actually, when we get right down to it, that's what it is. It's a subtle tax. It's a tax that you don't see. It's a tax that you blame on the person providing the service of the good, rather than the government, which if they tax you directly. Yeah, you see that, but you don't see that. Inflation is just another form of tax. Keith Weinhold 25:59 Sure, an income tax or a property tax is sort of front stage inflation really a backstage tax being surreptitious. To your point, well, if the government is so bad and does such a poor job of issuing currency, Doug, what are your thoughts about the government just getting out of the currency issuance business? Whatever that would look like, a gold standard, a Bitcoin standard. Does the government have to be the one that issues the currency? Doug Casey 26:27 No, it doesn't actually look and we might want to forget about this concept of currency. You've heard that the BRICS, a bunch of third world countries, Russia, India, China, Brazil, many others who want to get out of using the dollar, they don't want to use the dollar because the dollar is turned into a floating abstraction, and they can't trust the US government, as the Russians found, because all dollars clear through New York. So what are they going to do? They don't trust each other's phony baloney currencies. I think that those countries are going to go to gold, not a gold currency, gold, which was money since day one of human history. Actually, I think that's going to happen in the US. And for many, many years, I've suggested that people do their saving in gold, not in dollars. I've been saving in gold for the last 50 years, starting when gold was in the low 40s. And as you do with savings, you put it aside, you forget about it. And the gold that I first saved at $40 an ounce, it's now at 2700 more or less, has treated me very well. I think that people should be saving with something that's not going to lose value the way the dollar does. If the dollar is in a lot of trouble, it could dry up and blow away, quite frankly. So one reason why you want to own real things, commodities, properties, gold, things of that nature, or stocks, if you choose the company well. Keith Weinhold 27:59 I've helped people that have been hesitant about putting a little bit of money into gold or Bitcoin with the mindset of, don't think about how you are buying gold or Bitcoin. Think of it rather as how you are shifting a portion of your prosperity from dollars, pesos, yen or euros over into gold or Bitcoin. Really, you're just shifting some of your prosperity there. Is the way that I like to think about it. But Doug, as we've been talking about inflation, in this theme of government really having intervention and distortions into free markets, including things like inflation. You know, I've got something that I'm thinking about, and you might help shape or change my thinking about this. We generally champion free markets around here that's typically a good economic system. However, is a free market with some guardrails on it actually helpful? Or do you think that the guardrails shouldn't be there? You mentioned Donald Trump a little bit earlier? One thing, for example, that he says he wants to do Doug is fire the current FTC chair, Lina Khan now the Federal Trade Commission. What their role has really been in the past few years is they spend a lot of their energy cracking down on fraudsters, but Lina Khan wants to bust up mega corporations. So really, what I'm getting at is, can one of the guardrails that's important be that say the FTC make sure there isn't like a an early 1900 style, John D Rockefeller monopoly. What are your thoughts with the government's role in breaking up monopolies? Is that a valid guardrail on the free market? Doug Casey 29:30 No, I don't think it is. Look, you've got two kinds of monopolies. You've got market monopolies and legal monopolies. A market monopoly is one where the company provides the good or service so cheaply at such a high quality that nobody can compete with them. It's not worth it. Well, leave it alone. And if they start pricing their product too high, or the quality falls enough in a free market, Competitors will come in. That's one type of monopoly. nothing wrong with that kind of monopoly. The other kind of monopoly is a legal monopoly where the government says you have a franchise to do this, you and only you can do it like, well, like almost anything today, where you have to, you have to get government approval in order to provide the good or service. Like railroads, for instance, you couldn't start a new railroad today if you wanted to. So if it's a legal monopoly, you're fighting the law. If it's a market monopoly, you just have to provide a service or good, cheaper or better. So no, I don't think the FTC or any of these three Leader Letter agencies serve a useful purpose. All they do is add to costs and slow down competition and employ people that stick their nose into your business and tell you what you can or can't do both as a producer and a consumer. Look, the government is force. It's coercion. It should only do three things in a civilized society, we want to limit coercion. That means protect you from coercion outside the country with the military inside the country, with the police force, and allow you to adjudicate disputes peacefully without resorting to coercion through a court system. Everything else can be solved through market processes. Believe it or not, I know that shocks most people to hear they're so used to thinking that big brother is watching over a man is going to save my bank and protect me from bad people out there. I wish there are plenty, but it's not the best way to do it. Frankly. Keith Weinhold 31:33 you've done a good job of drawing a distinct line as to what you think government should stay out of but what about this monopoly power? What if, even with AI inroads, Google still owns more than 90% of the search markets, so therefore they can charge exorbitant prices. Shouldn't something like Google be broken up in an antitrust lawsuit? Doug Casey 31:51 No, no, it shouldn't, because there are other companies out there that provide people are just used to using Google. I use it myself, but there are at least a half a dozen, and I'm not a computer jock, so I think there are more than that, other services out there that you can use instead of Google, and believe me, I don't like these big companies. I mean, they act like semi governments onto themselves. No, you don't want the government to step in, because the government is a far greater danger than Google is. Google can't break down your door at three in the morning with cops and haul you off to jail. Google can just charge you more than you'd want and do other things like that. But you have other alternatives to Google. It's not an active over weeding physical danger the way the government does. And I'm not saying I like Google either. I don't. Let's admit it, they provide us a tremendous service at basically zero cost, and if you can find ways to get around them, I think that's great. Like I said, it's wonderful what they do. But that doesn't mean I'm a fan of them because of the way that, like any big organization, sure, they try to take advantage around the edges. Unfortunately, that's a negative part of human nature. But the government is not the solution to the problem. Keith Weinhold 33:13 And of course, this doesn't mean I'm a pro regulation person. Some states and jurisdictions landlord and tenant act can be overbearing.For example, the FDA is not doing a good job with what is allowed to be put into our food, either. So the size of the regulation probably is too big. Doug Casey 33:31 My old friend Dirk Pearson, who wrote a book called Life Extension, a practical scientific approach, was a huge bestseller some years ago, and Derek always liked to say the FDA it kills more people every year than the Defense Department does decade. And he's right. Keith Weinhold 33:51 Yeah, that is a pretty sad indictment on the state of things there. But do you have given us quite a few things to think about with how inflation is actually an unethical source, and some more thoughts about free markets. If our audience wants to connect with you, what's the best way for them to do that? Doug Casey 34:07 Well, go to internationalman.com I write an article there every week, but every day we have great articles by great people. So go to internationalman.com that's one thing on YouTube. Doug Casey's take, where I have a conversation on these and many, many other subjects with Matt Smith every week. And the last thing is, since you can say some things in the form of fiction that you dare not, or better not say in the form of non fiction, right, I have three novels, speculator, drug lord and assassin that I think are excellent reads, so go on Amazon and pick them up too. Keith Weinhold 34:47 Yeah, Casey, it's been insightful as usual. Thanks for coming back onto the show today. Doug Casey 34:52 Appreciate it, Keith, it's been a pleasure. Keith Weinhold 35:00 Yeah, good insight from Doug. As always, tipflation has become awfully intrusive. I recently made a donation on my nephew's behalf for his soccer team or something like that on the donation platform, okay, they called that donation my pledge. Okay, sure, but before I finaled out my pledge on the site, they next asked me if I would like to leave a tip on top of my pledge. Sheesh. Well, do you blame the donation platform for trying to up charge me after I'm just trying to be giving or instead, after listening to today's episode, do you blame the government for inflation in spending? Is this all just a result of that? And now we have listeners that when they find this show, they want to go back and listen to all currently, 500 plus episodes. Well, if you're listening to this five or 10 years from now, you might find my tipflation stories unusual because the practice could be so common and embedded into society by then. Right now, it's still pretty novel here in the mid 2020s there's a rapid rate of change on the tip flation front. And the next time that you are asked for an out of bounds tip, are you next going to ask the merchant where your discount is and make them answer three questions about it. And by the way, the cold brew coffee that I mentioned with Doug is not the erstwhile la Columbia brand that I talked about two weeks ago. My favorite and real go tos are the Slate and O, W, Y, N brands. That way you get 20 grams of protein with your coffee and no cheap sweeteners in those two. Now, when it comes to the anti trust stuff, breaking up monopolies and duopolies, see real estate is super fractured with who owns it. I mean, even with more institutional buying of real estate, like we've seen this past decade on a national basis, these huge groups that own 1000 homes or more. All those groups, they only own about 710, of 1%of the US single family housing stock. So real estate investing is free market and it is fractured. It is not at all consolidated. And now let me give you something outside of real estate, an example from another segment of business, supermarkets. There is no need for you to frantically hoard Annie's mac and cheese. It's not good for you anyway. But two courts rejected the Kroger Albertsons merger earlier this month, and that effectively broke up the deal that would have brought together two of the largest grocery store chains in America, the decision that really gave a sweet victory to FTC chair Lena Khan, like I mentioned there in the interview, but her time at the agency's Helm, that's going to end in a few weeks with the beginning of a new presidential administration. But see, in my opinion, and going after antitrust cases, she was pro free market and pro competition, which I see as a good thing. That way you have more companies vying for your business with better quality and lower prices. But I do like to listen to the other side, because, like I said in the interview, I'm still forming an opinion on this. That's why I wanted Doug Casey's take. And in this case, the two grocery companies, they had argued that creating a larger entity merging them both that would allow it to compete with Walmart and offer higher wages and lower prices. That is their side of it. Now Andrew Ferguson, he is the apparent new FTC chair. He has promised to reverse what he called Khan's anti business agenda, so we're not going to see as much antitrust crackdown from the looks of things. And note that there is also an antitrust division at the DOJ, so their influence weighs in as well. This really hasn't been much of a problem for real estate, one of the most highly fractured major markets around and now you do have though adjacent industry, like the home builder space, where there is a home building giant like Lennar, but even the home builder space isn't nearly as consolidated and anti competitive as say, the online search industry or the airline industry. I would like to wish you a happy new year. As always, we are back next week with more great content coming up on the show. We go in depth on some real estate asset classes and also how you can really, accionably and seriously reduce your tax burden next year with vehicles like bonus depreciation and cost segregation, simplifying those things for you, these are exactly the types of tools about how the rich get ahead by knowing how the tax laws benefit them, and pretty soon you will too. If you like what you hear here each week, please go ahead and tell a friend about the show. I would really appreciate it. Until then, I'm your host. Keith Weinhold, don't quit your Daydream. Speaker 2 40:15 Nothing on this show should be considered specific personal or professional advice. Please consult an appropriate tax, legal, real estate, financial or business professional for individualized advice. Opinions of guests are their own. Information is not guaranteed. All investment strategies have the potential for profit or loss. The host is operating on behalf of get rich Education LLC, exclusively. Keith Weinhold 40:43 The preceding program was brought to you by your home for wealth, building, get rich, education.com
Somos Gime (@olivaresgimena), John (@joango1985) y Leo (@leandrin84); junto con Fido (@ismaeltoledook) en la operación técnica y Samy (@sammalen) en las redes, hacemos el mejor podcast de toda Latinoamérica unida. Seguinos en nuestras redes sociales: Instagram: @notenemosnombres Youtube: No Tenemos Nombres Bíblicos Facebook: facebook.com/notenemosnombresbiblicos Este podcast se realiza con el apoyo de la iglesia Centro Cristiano Amanecer en la localidad de El Palomar y de los pastores Jorge y Juana Di Nápoli. Si querés conocernos, podes entrar en: Facebook: /CCAmanecerOficial/ Instagram: @centrocristianoamanecer Youtube: Centro Cristiano Amanecer Ficha Técnica: Conducción, ideas y Guión: Gimena Olivares, Joan Godoy y Leandro Ferreiro Operación Técnica, Mezcla y Edición: Ismael "Fido" Toledo. Grabado en estudios "Selah Producciones" en la localidad de El Palomar, Buenos Aires Argentina.
This week we're taking you to Argentina's capital city: Buenos Aires! We share how to spend four days exploring its Beaux-Arts and French neoclassical architecture, and its historical sites, walk the metropolitan streets, and even take you with us to a Gaucho Party! ----------------------------------------------------------------- Shop: Amazon Storefront and TSP Merch Connect: YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram and contact us at travelsquadpodcast@gmail.com to submit a question of the week or inquire about guest interviews and advertising. Submit a question of the week or inquire about guest interviews and advertising.
Comenzamos la serie de pelvis, un podcast con tres expertos en cirugía de pelvis y acetábulo de renombre internacional. Tenemos con nosotros al Dr. Carlos Sanciento, del Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires (Argentina), al Dr. Michel Oransky, que reside y trabaja en Roma, y al Dr. Adrien Roa, de Caracas (Venezuela). En este capítulo nos hablan de cómo se conocieron y cómo se establece su relación con el mundo de la pelvis en España, en concreto su relación con el Dr. Pedro Cano, que les llevó a la fama en nuestro país. Es un capítulo entrañable que irá seguido de otros más técnicos.
Somos Gime (@olivaresgimena), John (@joango1985) y Leo (@leandrin84); junto con Fido (@ismaeltoledook) en la operación técnica y Samy (@sammalen) en las redes, hacemos el mejor podcast de toda Latinoamérica unida. Seguinos en nuestras redes sociales: Instagram: @notenemosnombres Youtube: No Tenemos Nombres Bíblicos Facebook: facebook.com/notenemosnombresbiblicos Este podcast se realiza con el apoyo de la iglesia Centro Cristiano Amanecer en la localidad de El Palomar y de los pastores Jorge y Juana Di Nápoli. Si querés conocernos, podes entrar en: Facebook: /CCAmanecerOficial/ Instagram: @centrocristianoamanecer Youtube: Centro Cristiano Amanecer Ficha Técnica: Conducción, ideas y Guión: Gimena Olivares, Joan Godoy y Leandro Ferreiro Operación Técnica, Mezcla y Edición: Ismael "Fido" Toledo. Grabado en estudios "Selah Producciones" en la localidad de El Palomar, Buenos Aires Argentina.
Julio Bocca ha sido uno de los máximos exponentes de la danza clásica y ballet de Argentina y del mundo. Su virtuosismo y talento le llevaron a llenar teatros como una estrella de rock y a cumplir su sueño de popularizar y convertir la danza en un arte para el pueblo. La primera vez que el abuelo de Julio Bocca le llevó a ver un partido entre Boca Juniors y River Plate, en la cancha del Boca, sentado sobre sus hombros le preguntó: "Abuelo, ¿por qué aquí no se hace ballet?". —"Bueno, no se hace, pero...". En algún rincón de su memoria quedó aquella pregunta sin respuesta. ¿Y si se pudiera hacer? Julio Bocca, hijo de la maestra de bailarines Nancy Bocca, cumplió su sueño y consiguió que el ballet llenara estadios y calles. Ganador de la Medalla de Oro en el prestigioso Concurso Internacional de Danza de Moscú en 1985 y del Premio Gino Tanni en 1990, año en que fue reconocido como el Mejor Bailarín Estrella Internacional de Danza Clásica por la Asociación Iberoamericana de Danza. Su talento le llevó a ser el Primer Bailarín del American Ballet Theatre (ABT) durante dos décadas, fundador del Ballet Argentino a comienzos de los 90, director del Ballet Nacional del Sodre en Uruguay en 2010 y creador de la Fundación Julio Bocca, que se dedica a crear espacios y oportunidades de enseñanza, para hacer del arte un patrimonio universal que esté al alcance de todos. Después de su brillante carrera que le llevó a los más exigentes escenarios de todo el mundo, donde destacó por su extraordinaria capacidad técnica, emocional e interpretativa, Bocca se retiró en 2007 ofreciendo un espectáculo multitudinario, ante trescientas mil personas y el Obelisco de la Avenida 9 de Julio de Buenos Aires (Argentina). Sin embargo, ni la danza salió de su vida, ni él salió de danza: hoy en día Bocca recorre el mundo y sigue acompañando a grandes compañías como maestro y coach de bailarines, a quienes apoya en sus coreografías y transmite su legado.
Send us a textKate y José conversan con Pablo Fasce, profesor en Artes en la Universidad de Buenos Aires y la Universidad Nacional de San Martín, sobre una escalera incaica realizada por Elvira Rojas alrededor de 1920 y que forma parte de la colección del Museo Casa de Ricardo Rojas en Buenos Aires (Argentina)
A lot of terrible things can happen when you put too much pressure on a rookie food truck team, or when you ask a server who doesn't believe you'll actually eat everything you ordered. Here are some spine-chilling stories from service staff and how to avoid them. This is Overseasoned Podcast.
Somos Gime (@olivaresgimena), John (@joango1985) y Leo (@leandrin84); junto con Fido (@ismaeltoledook) en la operación técnica y Samy (@sammalen) en las redes, hacemos el mejor podcast de toda Latinoamérica unida. Seguinos en nuestras redes sociales: Instagram: @notenemosnombres Youtube: No Tenemos Nombres Bíblicos Facebook: facebook.com/notenemosnombresbiblicos Este podcast se realiza con el apoyo de la iglesia Centro Cristiano Amanecer en la localidad de El Palomar y de los pastores Jorge y Juana Di Nápoli. Si querés conocernos, podes entrar en: Facebook: /CCAmanecerOficial/ Instagram: @centrocristianoamanecer Youtube: Centro Cristiano Amanecer Ficha Técnica: Conducción, ideas y Guión: Gimena Olivares, Joan Godoy y Leandro Ferreiro Operación Técnica, Mezcla y Edición: Ismael "Fido" Toledo. Grabado en estudios "Selah Producciones" en la localidad de El Palomar, Buenos Aires Argentina.
We continue with more of our trip through Argentina; we'll tell you how we rediscovered our love for Buenos Aires cuisine, and how we ended up making a homemade "Asado" in the Argentinian style.
We ran out of episodes, so as soon as we arrived in Buenos Aires, we recorded this episode, which will be the prelude to the Overseasoned adventure in Argentina. Enjoy it!
Nuestro historietista Paco Roca nos habla de su reciente viaje a Montevideo (Uruguay) y Buenos Aires (Argentina). Un viaje de trabajo del que no ha sido fácil volver Escuchar audio
José Edelstein es un físico argentino que ha dedicado su carrera científica y académica a la física teórica, con especial énfasis en la gravitación, las teorías de supergravedad y las teorías de cuerdas. Licenciado en Física por la Universidad de Buenos Aires (Argentina), su tesis doctoral bajo la dirección de Hécto Vucetich se centró en la relatividad general y teoría de campos, que sentarían las bases de su posterior desarrollo en instituciones de prestigio internacional y publicaciones científicas que han contribuido al conocimiento en estos campos. Entre otros aspectos, Eldestein ha estudiado la relación entre las estructuras matemáticas, la geometría y la física teórica, como punto de partida para describir el universo. En la actualidad trabaja como profesor titular en la Universidad de Santiago de Compostela (España) y en el Instituto Gallego de Física de Altas Energías (IGFAE). Su compromiso humanístico y social le ha llevado a convertirse en uno de los máximos exponentes de la divulgación científica, apostando por la democratización del conocimiento para que la ciencia no sea materia de elites intelectuales, sino accesible y comprensible para todos, buscando los nexos de unión entre ciencias exactas y humanidades, como refleja en su obra 'Antimateria, magia y poesía' y en los recuerdos humanistas que comparte de su amistad con Stephen Hawking: “Hawking era una persona muy singular. Fue un físico de los más importantes de su tiempo. Yo creo que hasta puede que sea el más importante en su campo de los últimos 50 años. Pero aún más fascinante que su faceta como cientifico era su personalidad, su capacidad de sobreponerse a la enfermedad. Conocí a una persona con una abnegación, con una resiliencia, con una generosidad, que era difícil de apreciar cuando yo lo veía de lejos”. En 2019, Edelstein recibió el Premio Prismas al mejor libro de divulgación por su libro 'Einstein para perplejos', firmado junto al físico chileno Andrés Gomberoff, que se suma a los premios “Raíces” del Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología de Argentina en 2018, varios galardones de Divulgación Científica del Centro Español de Física de Partículas, Astropartículas y Nuclear (CPAN), el Premio de Comunicación Científica de la Fundación Española para la Ciencia y la Tecnología (FECYT) en 2012 y diversas menciones de honor en el Concurso Internacional Ciencia en Acción.
JUAN FERREYRO checks in from BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA to control the decks with an EXCLUSIVE SMOKIN' Tech house set.Powered by the Club Sabroso Radio NetworkFollow IG/FB: @CLUBSABROSORADIO24/7 Live Stream at: WWW.CLUBSABROSORADIO.COM
Recorded live at the WCN' 24 in Buenos Aires Argentina this conversation focuses on the ISN Educational Ambassadors (EA) Program. Renal centers around the world can apply for support of the Educational Ambassadors (EA) Program and receive expert guidance and hands-on training to advance new initiatives, skills or services, and community-based research and screening programs.EA Program Committee member Titi Chen, Nephrologist and Transplant physician from the University of Sydney, Australia, leads a discussion on the purpose and impact of the EA Program with its outgoing chair Gavin Dreyer, Nephrologist, King's College London, UK, and program participants Lázaro Cobiellas Carballo, Nephrologist, University of Medical Sciences in Holguin, Cuba, Juan Santacruz Mancheno, Nephrologist from the Clínica de los riñones Menydial, Ecuador and Bernardo Moguel, Instituto Nacional de Cardiología Ignacio Chavez, Mexico.
E39 Roger Einstoss | Braintly Ever struggle to fight the right development resources for your team? Our podcast guest Roger Einstoss, CEO of Braintly, built his team to solve that exact problem. Roger has a great story about growing up interested in computers, learning to code and eventually building his Braintrly in Buenos Aires Argentina. Near-shore development resources are becoming critical to many businesses because you gain the advantages of lower cost at a high quality of work while also being almost the same timezone as US based businesses. Roger talks us through forming the company, finding their first clients and growing deep relationships with their customers in the US. Roger Einstoss: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rogereinstoss/ Braintly: https://braintly.com/ Business Innovation Technology Entrepreneurship Strategy Spotify/Apple: https://www.nanochomp.com/podcast nanochomp's Strategic Mind GPT: https://nanochomp.com/strategygpt https://www.nanochomp.com Hosts: Lauren Taber: https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurentaber/ Derek Loyer: https://www.linkedin.com/in/derekloyer/ #Business #Innovation #Technology #Entrepreneurship #Strategy #Consulting #leadership #wellness #digitaltransformation #marketing #digitalmarketing #AI #artificialintelligence #agile #leadgen #sales #growth #productowner #productmanagement #digitalexperience #digitaloptimization
AM Sermon
Todos los jueves al iniciar la noche desde Buenos Aires Argentina, te invito a que sintonices. Elektronaclub.com donde podras disfrutar lo mejor de la musica electronica. Recuerda Jueves NO CHEKE NO PARTY 12:00am tiempo de Mexico 04:00am Tiempo de Argentina.
¡El Pastor Hamilton Leon, director del Instituto Pentecostal de Estudios Bíblicos en Buenos Aires Argentina, es la persona ideal para guiarnos en este tema! Su conocimiento y experiencia nos brindarán un espacio de aprendizaje enriquecedor y nos ayudarán a conceptualizar mejor el tema.
Vanessa is an entrepreneur and realtor in Buenos Aires Argentina (and a childhood friend of mine). She came to coaching with some pretty tangible business goals in mind, and quickly discovered that the most important work she could do - and had to do – was to develop a more supportive relationship with herself. She's worked hard on turning her inner mean girl into a bestie, and the results have been literally life-changing. This is a really important episode about the centrality of our goals to our self-relationship, and also to the power of coaching. Enjoy the episode.
Send us a Text Message.Episode 441: David Capablanca travels to Buenos Aires, Argentina. Social MediaConscious Trading AcademyInstagram: conscioustradingacademyLinkedin: Conscious Trading Academywww.conscioustradingacademy.com Conscious Trading AcademyTransform Your Mind. Master Your Trades - Memberships & Courses now available.Friendly Bear DiscordJoin The Friendly Bear Discord (message a mod for trade floor channel access):CenterpointFree commissions for 60 days when signing up through linkCobra TradingClick the link and get 33% off commissions for life as well as one month of free DAS Trader PlatformSuccessTraderMention Friendly Bear when calling up SuccessTrader directly for the best possible dealDilution TrackerClick the link and get 10% off of Dilution TrackerEdgeToTradeUse coupon code FRIENDLYBEAR15 for 15% off EdgeToTrade, the financial research platform for traders.TraderSyncUse coupon code FRNLYBR for 15% off monthly, 55% off yearly for TraderSync trading journal software TradeIdeasUse coupon code FRIENDLYBEAR for 15% off TradeIdeas real-time data stock scannerFlashSECClick the link and get 15% off 12 months of FlashSECTC2000Click the link to get $25 off TC2000 servicesOrtexORTEX brings you the most timely and accurate Short interest data available.Flash ResearchUse coupon code FB15 for 15% off Premium. Find your edge with the best stock analyzer. Friendly Bear Trading BooksThis is a complete list of all my trading books of all my trading computer equipment on AmazonKinfoUse coupon code FRIENDLYB106728 for 10% off Kinfo PRODisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the Show.
From Sparks to Light - Inspiring Stories for Challenging Times
“I wanted to work in something that could better the lives of my community,” says Mariana Incarnato, an Ashoka Fellow and the Founder of Doncel, an agency in Buenos Aires Argentina that focuses on changing the way youth who leave residential care are supported as they find their way into adulthood. A clinical psychologist from Buenos Aires Argentina, she worked in Spain for a few years before returning home to her native Argentina. “My sense of belonging was very deep,” she says of her desire to return home. “And my sense of working for social justice was very deep as well.”That injustice motivated her. “Almost 50% of the people live below the poverty line so when you feel you belong to a community, that sense is very strong —that commitment is very strong, if you've had more opportunity than others.”She founded Doncel, an organization dedicated to fighting for the rights of children who were timing out of residential care. Faced with the end of care at the age of 18, young people who have been in the foster care system face an uphill battle. Without family to support them, many end up on the streets, struggling to find their way. Armed with the knowledge that youth leaving care had knowledge to share, Mariana Incarnato and her band of activists fought to create laws that would put in place supports that would give them the help they needed to take their place in society.As you listen to this episode, consider:Each of us have an opportunity to create a community where we all belong. Which are the communities where you feel a sense of belonging?Mariana believes that if we are fortunate enough to have opportunity, we can do something that could better the lives of others. Where have you been given opportunity? Is there something you can do to share what you have been given?Who are the voices that need to be heard in society? What might we learn if we could take the time to listen?Learn more about Mariana's work here.Visit her Ashoka Fellows page here.To learn more about Robert Maggio, the composer of "Where Love is Love," our theme music, please check out his website.To learn more about Suzanne, visit her website. To learn more about the inspiration for this podcast, please check out Suzanne's memoir, Estrellas - Moments of Illumination Along El Camino de SantiagoFollow Suzanne on Social Media Instagram @suzannemaggio_author Facebook @ Suzanne Maggio author Twitter @ bottomofninth
Alejandro Storni is a visionary rooted in the vibrant streets of Buenos Aires, effortlessly intertwines creativity into every facet of his life. Leading Shock Your Cocktail, he crafts immersive event experiences while championing CoolturaBA, a cultural cornerstone online honored by the City Government. As Senior Creative at Drago for IQOS global communication, Alejandro deftly navigates the dynamic realms of creativity, culture, and marketing. A respected educator at the Universidad Argentina de la Empresa (UADE), Alejandro's innovative teaching methods have earned him acclaim among peers and students alike. His entrepreneurial spirit expressed itself in Wimet, an inventive startup reshaping idle spaces for productions & events, sold in 2018. In all his endeavors, Alejandro's dedication to innovation and cultural enrichment shines through. With a fervent passion for turning ideas into reality, he seeks to inspire others and pushes the boundaries of creativity, enriching the cultural landscape one venture at a time. Alejandro is also a local advisor to Fearless Journeys and has helped organize so many great experiences in Argentina. He was our guest on Episode 139 of the Agents of Innovation podcast. You can also watch this episode on YouTube here: https://youtu.be/BTG5of9vCNY You can learn more about Alejandro Storni at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alejandrostornithe Agents of Innovation podcast. Follow the Agents of Innovation podcast on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AgentsOfInnovationPodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/innovationradio/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/agentinnovation You can support this podcast and our Fearless Journeys community on our Patreon account: www.patreon.com/fearlessjourneys You can also join our network through the Fearless Journeys community at: https://www.fearlessjourneys.org/
In this episode, we join our tour guide Santiago as he shares with us his love and passion for his home country of Argentina. Buenos Aires is one of those places that has been on my bucket list of places to return to with you and spend some time visiting as tourists. We had one day to hit the highlights on a business trip a few years ago, but let's hear from Santiago on whether or not that is enough time. He'll take us through the city of Buenos Aires and it's many neighborhoods that each have a history and culture of their own. Some links are affiliate links. See our disclosure. Find your Perfect Stay at sunshinetravelers.com/booking Do More with Viator. Visit sunshinetravelers.com/viator to book local tours & experiences you'll remember. Sign up for free travel deals and exclusive content here. Read more about this and other travel destinations on our BLOG Follow our travels on Facebook Follow our travels on Instagram Save our travel ideas on Pinterest See our travel videos on You Tube Music Credit Music by OYStudio from Pixabay
“In August 2023, I participated as an editor in the 2nd “Encuentro Provincial de Bibliotecas Populares” in Chapadmalal, which brings together librarians, independent publishers, and officials from the province's cultural […]
O carioca Lucas cresceu em Angra dos Reis, e se interessou por tecnologia aos nove anos de idade, graças ao contato com um computador com Windows 98. Após o ensino médio, Lucas fez Análise de Sistemas e, para matar a vontade de ter uma experiência no exterior, mudou-se para a Argentina, onde mora há aproximadamente 7 anos. Neste episódio, o Lucas conta sua experiência trabalhando no MercadoLivre e outras empresas argentinas, além das particularidades de se morar na terra do alfajor. Fabrício Carraro, o seu viajante poliglota Lucas de Souza, Desenvolvedor Full-stack Sênior em Buenos Aires, Argentina Inscreva-se no Curso Gratuito de Python: Imersão do Excel à Análise de Dados, e aprenda como usar Python na prática, desenvolver habilidades essenciais em análise de dados e potencializar a sua carreira transformando dados em insights valiosos. Conheça os Cursos de GoLang da Alura e aprenda a tirar o máximo proveito da linguagem de programação criada pelo Google. TechGuide.sh, um mapeamento das principais tecnologias demandadas pelo mercado para diferentes carreiras, com nossas sugestões e opiniões. #7DaysOfCode: Coloque em prática os seus conhecimentos de programação em desafios diários e gratuitos. Acesse https://7daysofcode.io/ Ouvintes do podcast Dev Sem Fronteiras têm 10% de desconto em todos os planos da Alura Língua. Basta ir a https://www.aluralingua.com.br/promocao/devsemfronteiras/e começar a aprender inglês e espanhol hoje mesmo! Produção e conteúdo: Alura Língua Cursos online de Idiomas – https://www.aluralingua.com.br/ Alura Cursos online de Tecnologia – https://www.alura.com.br/ Edição e sonorização: Rede Gigahertz de Podcasts
“After nearly three consecutive years of drought (caused by La Niña phenomenon in the surface waters of the Pacific and exacerbated by increasing climate change), El Niño brought relief to […]
Caso Sonia Rebeca Soloaga. Fue encontrada culpable del homicidio de Alberto Antonio Chricio y su esposa, María Delia Speranza, de 71 y 63 años respectivamente, en el barrio de Parque de Avellaneda de Buenos Aires Argentina.Distribuido por Genuina Media
"The challenge is to learn and be aware of new techniques and applications and apply them." Eduardo Corti discusses his Honorary Lecture, "Unconventional Borehole Seismic Techniques." Unconventional borehole seismic services encompass techniques that go beyond conventional seismic methods. With over eight decades of classical seismic methods shaping our understanding, Eduardo introduces listeners to the newer techniques that have emerged in the past 15 years, which promise greater detail and higher resolution insights into reservoir properties. While these techniques may be less familiar to geophysicists in exploration and reservoir management, Eduardo emphasizes the importance of local experience and operational involvement to leverage their capabilities fully. He shares his favorites – microseismic and borehole acoustic reflection surveys – and discusses the future of these methods in Latin America, particularly in countries like Bolivia, Argentina, Chile, and Brazil. Listeners will understand both the advantages and limitations of unconventional seismic techniques. Eduardo will offer his 2024 Latin America Lecture in both Spanish and English.
In this workshop, Karin discussed her career where she trained in Argentina, then came to Palo Alto to learn at the Mental Research Institute forty years ago. She discussed the place the MRI has in the history of developing family and systemic therapy. She worked with Paul Watzlawick, Dick Fisch, and John Weakland, and eventually became the Director of the Brief Therapy Center, a title she still holds. In 1966, the group was interested in seeing what type of changes they could help create within 10 sessions (hence the term brief), which was very different from the prevailing psychoanalytic approach during the time. She discussed how the approach based in systems theory, but is a minimalistic family therapy/systems therapy way of promoting change, where they don't need the whole system to be present in the office for change to occur. Interactions are always in the clinician's mind, understanding who is this effecting, how is someone reacting to this, which allows you to intervene with the person who is the most motivated for change in the system. She explained that they're not necessarily trying to achieve perfection, but instead help the person in pain and asking for help at the time to get out of a hole. She shared the quote by John Weakland that “when you have a problem, life is the same damn thing over and over again, and when you no longer have a problem, life is one damn thing after another”. Karin discussed identifying whom to focus on in the therapy by identifying who is most in pain and therefore is most motivated to work with the therapist to promote a positive change. If working with a family, the therapist might not put all of their energy into the child since they have the least power in the system, and the most motivated one in the family might be the parent, so they will be the one you need to engage to make change. She also pointed out that they go straight into the problem that brought clients in, and stay in the here and now, and try not to “open doors” to the past, which is what allows the work to be so brief. We discussed how the approach postulates that the attempted solution is what has become the problem, keeping the system stuck, so instead, having the individual, couple or family do the 180 degree opposite of that, even if it goes against common sense, then observing what happens and discussing in the following session. As opposed to many other models of systemic and family therapy, the Brief Therapy Center works with fewer people and change happens outside of the session. She pointed out that they were able to make significant change in a matter of ten sessions, with the average amount of sessions being six. Karin explained that there have been many different models and techniques developed over the years, although the simplicity of the Brief Therapy approach still stands as an effective treatment and could be the key to reduce the mental health crisis in the U.S. currently. Karin Schlanger, LMFT was the Director of the Brief Therapy Center in MRI since 2008 until the sale of the building in 2019. She continues to be the director of the BTC currently. She has worked as a psychologist, supervisor in the Brief Therapy Model and professor at several universities internationally. She studied Psychology in the Universidad of Buenos Aires – Argentina and graduated in 1982. She arrived at the MRI in 1983 having heard of the work of John Weakland, Dick Fisch and Paul Wazlawick and worked with them until the end of their days. In 1990, she opened the Centro Latino de Terapia Breve to do research on how this pure American model of Problem solving can be applied in other cultures. This project continues today, working with low income Spanish-speaking families, who are at the worse end of society's inequality. In 2012, she founded a NGO, Room to Talk, to offer psychological services to students, families and school staff at the school. She was the Executive Director. She has been a professor in several local Universities — University of San Francisco, Stanford University, School of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, College of Notre Dame de Namur, and other Universities of Spain — Valencia International University, Universidad de Abat Oliva, Institute Systemic de Barcelona. She is a supervisor in the Hospital of San Pau, in Barcelona. Karin is the author of a book that has been translated to 5 languages, and the author of many articles and chapters of lots of books throughout the years. Also, in 2012, she has started the Grupo Palo Alto Internacional, which was officially launched in Mexico, January – 2016. Currently, Karin trains and supervises therapists internationally as well as locally through county mental health programming. She provides trainings through the https://www.brieftherapycenter.org/
Red hot ep incoming as Lauren Bonner returns to the show to talk about the months she spent living in Buenos Aires as she filmed a TV show. We hear about Lauren's experiences as she navigated a new city and culture, and the process of making television magic. We also covered Argentina's now new president who wields a chainsaw and models his look on Wolverine. We hear about how a nightclub bouncer ended up becoming one of the most famous religious figures in the world. We tell the tale of a man who was conned when he went looking for love, and in the spirit of one of our favourite pods Mid Flight Brawl, cover a truly insane passenger meltdown. This one has it all. We also have a Patreon. You can access bonus episodes featuring more great Community Noticeboard content for $5 a month. Check the link below for bonus eps, merch and all our socials. Thanks for listening! https://linktr.ee/CommunityNoticeboardPodcast
O caieirense Wallace teve seu primeiro contato com tecnologia com um computador Compaq. Após a graduação de Comunicação para a Web e o MBA em Inovação e Empreendedorismo e, com passagens por empresas como a Claro e o Estadão, ele fundou a Orbital, que logo expandiu sua presença para a América Latina e Dubai. Por conta de uma mudança profissional da esposa, o Wallace foi morar em Buenos Aires, onde reverteu uma má impressão deixada durante uma viagem. Neste episódio, o Wallace conta como foi seu processo de adaptação, além das diferenças entre o dia a dia e o que vemos no noticiário na terra das empanadas. Fabrício Carraro, o seu viajante poliglota Wallace Erick, desenvolvedor e fundador da Orbital em Buenos Aires, Argentina Links: Instagram do Wallace Site da Orbital TechGuide.sh, um mapeamento das principais tecnologias demandadas pelo mercado para diferentes carreiras, com nossas sugestões e opiniões. #7DaysOfCode: Coloque em prática os seus conhecimentos de programação em desafios diários e gratuitos. Acesse https://7daysofcode.io/ Ouvintes do podcast Dev Sem Fronteiras têm 10% de desconto em todos os planos da Alura Língua. Basta ir a https://www.aluralingua.com.br/promocao/devsemfronteiras/e começar a aprender inglês e espanhol hoje mesmo! Produção e conteúdo: Alura Língua Cursos online de Idiomas – https://www.aluralingua.com.br/ Alura Cursos online de Tecnologia – https://www.alura.com.br/ Edição e sonorização: Rede Gigahertz de Podcasts
Buenos Aires es la capital y ciudad más grande de Argentina, ubicada en la orilla occidental del estuario del Río de la Plata. Esta es la historia de una ciudad que ha sido varias ciudades. Ha sido una ciudad colonial, libertadora, ciudad de inmigrantes, ciudad país, ciudad intelectual, ciudad del rock, ciudad de la furia. Es conocida por su rico patrimonio cultural, incluyendo su arquitectura, el tango, librerías y gastronomía. Buenos Aires es otro de los destinos fundamentales para entender la historia latinoamericana. Notas del espisodio Los debates sobre “las dos fundaciones de Buenos Aires” Asentamientos indígenas anteriores a la llegada de los españoles en Buenos Aires Nuestra Señora de Buenos Aires y el nacimiento de una ciudad Las invasiones inglesas y la resistencia de Buenos Aires El paso de Buenos Aires entre los siglos Un mito del rock, un mito urbano: La ciudad de la Furia ¡Síguenos en nuestras Redes Sociales! Facebook: / dianauribe.fm Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/dianauribe.... Twitter: https://twitter.com/dianauribefm?lang=es Pagina web: https://www.dianauribe.fm
Dark, underground & perfect for this edition of 'Theatre of the Mind' 2am-6am in a full capacity club in the heart of Buenos Aires.. Enjoy x
Travel 365 is a daily getaway for you in the crazy that is day to day life. Going to a new destination one day at a time. With the hopes of giving you some insight into new places, different places to go and help you plan your next getaway. From the creators of Swipe Wrong, we gelt we should help be the ones to show you the way when you just need to get away from it all. Like, Follow, Subscribe and Share.. but above all sit back relax and enjoy. Get in contact with us at swipewrongpod@gmail.com call or text 317-426-6616
It is impossible to pack all that Argentina and Buenos Aires have to offer into one episode, so we focused on one iconic piece of culture: Tango. The roots of this popular dance style might surprise you and seeing tango live might inspire you to give it a try; that's what it did for us! Listen to learn more about our time exploring a variety of dance experiences in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Try this, this week: Summer Dance Chicago Shout Outs: Free Walking Tour - BA Gran Café Tortoni - History & Visit Details La Catedral Club Niceto Club (69) Mentions: Bardo (Music)
Guillermo Rauch is the CEO and Founder of Vercel. In this episode, Guillermo discusses growing up around Buenos Aires, Argentina, family, childhood, business and technology in his teenage years, entrepreneurship, community, San Francisco, advice to entrepreneurs and his younger self, and so much more!
En este capítulo exploramos el corazón de la serie, que es el sentimiento latinoamericano, esta vez expresado en el arte. El Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (MALBA) es el encuentro de la experiencia americana por medio de las expresiones artísticas, del color y la forma. Fundado en el 2001, una época convulsa en la historia de Argentina, en este capítulo exploraremos el origen de los museos de arte y la importancia histórica y cultural del mecenazgo, el surgimiento del concepto América Latina, la relevancia cultural de Argentina en la región, y el desarrollo de lo latinoamericano desde lo geográfico, lo político y lo pictórico. Notas del episodio: Historia del mecenazgo Recorrido virtual del MALBA Historia del MALBA y palabras de Eduardo Costantini (fundador) Historia del arte latinoamericano Sobre el Corralito, crisis de Argentina en 2001: Turismo cultural Buenos Aires ¡Síguenos en nuestras Redes Sociales! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DianaUribe.fm/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dianauribe.fm/?hl=es Twitter: https://twitter.com/dianauribefm?lang=es Pagina web: https://www.dianauribe.fm