POPULARITY
Vốn là một giảng viên của trường Đại học Hàng hải, nhưng khi đất nước bước vào giai đoạn Kháng chiến chống Mỹ, chàng thanh niên Lê Xuân Khảm cùng nhiều đồng nghiệp của mình đã trích máu tay ký vào đơn nhập ngũ. Sau 2 chuyến tàu đi trinh sát quần đảo Hoàng Sa, Trường Sa, ông đã được điều động sang tàu mang số hiệu C69, thuộc Đoàn tàu Không số, thực hiện vận chuyển vũ khí vào chiến trường miền Nam vào đầu năm 1966.Con tàu đã bị tàu địch đeo bám và lạc đường, nhưng nhờ sự mưu trí, dũng cảm của các chiến sĩ hải quân và sự đùm bọc của nhân dân, đoàn tàu vẫn bảo toàn được toàn bộ vũ khí.Phóng viên VOV Giao thông đã có cuộc trao đổi với Cựu chiến binh Lê Xuân Khảm, người duy nhất sống sót trên con tàu C69.
CBC tells its journalists not to call Hamas terrorists, the Supreme Court shuts down Trudeau’s environmental law C69, and another BC LNG project files for environmental assessment. Also, Trudeau will do all he can to prevent Alberta from leaving the CPP. Hosts: Shane and Patrick Duration: 1:01:49 For detailed show notes visit westerncontext.ca.
The Line's Matt Gurney and Jen Gerson discuss the atrocities committed by Hamas in Israel; Israel's response in the Gaza Strip — and North America's progressives, who have left their asses hanging in the wind by applauding and condoning acts of violence that include the murder of children and sexual assault of Israeli women. Progressives are doing incredible damage to their own causes by justifying the violence of Hamas — a genocidal and theocratic terrorist organization — under leftist jargon like "decolonization." In other news, Canada's Supreme Court has ruled the federal government's environmental impact legislation — also known as C-69, or the "no more pipelines" bill — as unconstitutional. To the shock and surprise of everyone who expected this court to rule in Justin Trudeau's favour, the SCC agreed with the Alberta Court of Appeal: that C-69 oversteps provincial jurisdiction, and undermines the constitutional right of provinces to develop and manage their own natural resources.
On a trouvé la solution pour ne plus faire de cauchemar : l'accord C69 d'un piano !
Onderzoekers uit Zwitserland hebben iets ontdekt dat - in combinatie met bestaande therapie - kan helpen tegen ernstige en terugkerende nachtmerries: het C69 piano-akkoord. In een experiment waaraan mensen meededen die last hebben van een nachtmerriestoornis, combineerden de wetenschappers bestaande therapie met een tweede therapie. De eerste therapie (Imagery Rehearsal Therapy) laat mensen hun nachtmerries opschrijven en vervolgens herschrijven. Dat positieve scenario moet vervolgens overdag in gedachten worden herhaald. De tweede therapie (Targeted Memory Reactivation) koppelt een stimulus (zoals een geur of geluid) aan iets wat iemand moet herinneren. Presenteer je die stimulus tijdens het slapen weer, is het idee, dan versterkt dat de herinnering. In dit geval kreeg de helft van de proefpersonen zowel bij het bedenken van het positieve droomscenario als tijdens de remslaap om de tien seconden het C69 akkoord te horen. Wat bleek: bij deze groep namen de nachtmerries een stuk sterker af dan in de controlegroep. Ook nam het aantal positieve dromen in de piano-groep toe. Deze effecten waren drie maanden na het experiment nog zichtbaar. Het onderzoek is nog niet helemaal klaar en thuis alleen een C69-bandje afspelen tijdens het slapen zal waarschijnlijk weinig doen, maar dat een akkoord dit effect lijkt te hebben is op z'n minst opmerkelijk. Lees meer: The major chord that cures nightmares. De paper vind je hier: Enhancing imagery rehearsal therapy for nightmares with targeted memory reactivation. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In overhauling Canada’s regulatory environmental review process, Bill C-69 has good intentions, but as written it would endanger the very things it is trying to fix: explains Patrick McDonald of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. McDonald and Energy Examined host Tonya Zelinsky discuss what's involved with this controversial proposal, the latest update on Senate deliberations, and why Bill C-69 could drive away investment and cost jobs in industries well beyond oil and natural gas if it isn't changed to prevent an already complex regulatory review process from becoming unmanageable.
Dennis, some positive developments on KXL? Elaborate for us. Status of C69 – where is this? And the Alberta election, what hangs in the balance vis a vis Ottawa depending on a potential Kenney win.
This week we interview Alex Pourbaix the President and CEO of Cenovus Energy, Canada’s largest SAGD oil sands producer. Alex explains that the oil sands are not what they used to be; new barrels are lower cost and lower carbon. The discussion covers a range of topics including; the Alberta Government’s production curtailment, pipelines and […] The post Getting the Message Out on Modern Oil Sands: Lower Cost, Lower Carbon first appeared on ARC Energy Research Institute.
It has been a few weeks since the last podcast, what developments do you want to touch on? Dennis provides a few comments on the TMX/KXL/Enbridge Line 3 status, and also overall developments on Canadian carbon policy. Updates on these oil sands pipelines. Canadian carbon policy, the biggest development is the advent of the Ford government in Ontario and its resistance to carbon pricing. And the looming deadline on “carbon plans” from the provinces later this year. In closing, C69 looms out there to be finally passed.
Over the past week, how do you see the reaction to the federal acquisition of TM unfolding? From the ENGO perspective, where do they go next? What was your view of the prospects of the government actually being able to sell this position in the short run? Finally, where does bill C69 stand right now?
Team Trudeau made a lot of big promises on the campaign trail in 2015. Promises to "set things right", to promote "transparency", to create things for the future that will be "clear and straightforward". Sunny Ways, my friends. At what is more or less the midway point of their mandate, the record on delivering compared to promising is nothing to be overly excited about. The Harper gang made their priorities and more or less rammed them through without dissent being tolerated from within or without. Despite claiming to be pro-Canada and pro-Big Oil, the environmental approval process was a gong show. But wait friends, Sunny Ways was here. Travel the country having town halls and staffers running about collecting the input from Canadians. We listen, we pay heed, we are not the Harperites. Uh huh. Anyone who took part in the Electoral Reform circus knows this is a ruse, plain and simple. The official title for C-69 is an "Act to enact the Impact Assessment Act and the Canadian Energy Regulator Act, to amend the Navigation Protection Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts". Sounds straightforward, right? This government said omnibus bills were a thing of the past. C-69 is 412 pages. It makes changes to 31 existing Acts. Because of its sheer size and scope, informed critique is slow to reach the public while the government seeks to sell it. The idea seems to be to give new names, new legislation and new branding to a system that will remain essentially the same. The derided NEB is replaced by the Canadian Energy Regulator. The CEAA 2012 is replaced by the Impact Assessment Act. The View Up Here presents this backgrounder episode to inform on C-69 and set the stage for future episodes on its changes, eventual passage and decisions. on-line input and guides from Ottawa https://www.impactassessmentregulations.ca/