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Wat is astrologie? In welke mate kan dit tot jouw geluk bijdragen? Huizen, tekens, planeten... begrijpe wie begrijpe kan. Astrologe Carens legt ons uit hoe we een radix kunnen gebruiken in onze persoonlijke evolutie. Als we daarbij nog extra hemelkaarten zoals een solar, een composiet en een combine toevoegen, zijn we helemaal het noorden kwijt. Tenzij het over de noordelijke maansknoop gaat want die representeert dan weer het persoonlijke zielenpad. Om nog maar te zwijgen van een al dan niet gekraakte Pluto.
Before the start of the 2022 Players Championship, our John Rathouz sat down for a chat with caddie Mark Carens — a man who knows TPC Sawgrass better than most, having won the tournament while on the bag of Si Woo Kim in 2017. In the pod, Carens tells a story about how the Sunday before the 2017 Players he and Kim were playing their own practice round on the back 9. Carens was recording Kim with his camera and before Kim hit on 18, Carens said, “one-shot lead on the last,” and then Kim barked back, “No, two-shot lead…” and that's exactly what ended up happening the following Sunday.
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://uandiautomobiles.com/kia-to-begin-the-booking-of-kia-carens-in-april-2022/
- Dan Ammann Abruptly Let Go as CEO Of Cruise - Hyundai's Head Of R and D Retires - China Pressures Continental to Stop Using Parts Made in Lithuania - Unvaccinated GM Canada Workers Could Be Fired - Car Sales Expected to Rise Next Year - Audi Testing AI to Do Quality Control Checks of Spot Welds - Kia Unveils All-New Carens - Rivian To Build Second Plant in Georgia - Arrival Reveals First Prototype for Uber
- Dan Ammann Abruptly Let Go as CEO Of Cruise- Hyundai's Head Of R and D Retires- China Pressures Continental to Stop Using Parts Made in Lithuania- Unvaccinated GM Canada Workers Could Be Fired- Car Sales Expected to Rise Next Year- Audi Testing AI to Do Quality Control Checks of Spot Welds- Kia Unveils All-New Carens- Rivian To Build Second Plant in Georgia- Arrival Reveals First Prototype for Uber
La marca Italo-mexicana Inferno Automobili, Kia revive Carens, La nueva Oroch 2023, Foxconn y Stellantis quieren semiconductores para todos y al final un poco del Gran premio de Arabia Saudita | #21
- Stellantis Reveals Its Software Strategy- Foxconn and Stellantis Partner on New Semiconductor Chips- Stellantis Expands Its Partnership with Waymo- VW CEO Likely to Keep His Job- GM Seeing Some Relief from Chip Shortage - Toyota Announces New Battery Plant- Intel to Spin Off Mobileye- Sketches Show New Kia CUV for India- BMW Sold Its 1-Millionth Electrified Vehicle- Ferrari's Future Product Plans
- Stellantis Reveals Its Software Strategy - Foxconn and Stellantis Partner on New Semiconductor Chips - Stellantis Expands Its Partnership with Waymo - VW CEO Likely to Keep His Job - GM Seeing Some Relief from Chip Shortage - Toyota Announces New Battery Plant - Intel to Spin Off Mobileye - Sketches Show New Kia CUV for India - BMW Sold Its 1-Millionth Electrified Vehicle - Ferrari's Future Product Plans
It's all about Jonathan today because we watched season 4, episode 17 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer entitled "Superstar"! Join us as we discuss new beds, downtown Chicago, apartment open houses, bluetooth lights, gym shoes, bachelor pads, cats eating everything, astrology signs, killing Spike, CG-eyes, leaving relationships, Carens, tech hearts, & more! Our Patreon is live! Head over to Patreon.com/MLMpod to hear exclusive Marsh Land Media podcasts, including our spin-off show "The Podcast That Be" where we're watching Angel, while supporting our growth as a network! Follow TC on Twitter @tavia_cw and Instagram @tavia.cw as well as their transitioning Instagram @TransitioningWithTC! Check out James' other podcasts, "Mostly Speakin' Sentai", "This Movie's Gay", and "Hit It & Crit It" on the podcast app you're using to listen to What The Hellmouth. Find out more about these Marsh Land Media podcast on our website, www.MLMPod.com! Mostly Speakin' Sentai, a podcast where him & his betrothed talk to artists, podcasters, & musicians from Chicago trying to get them into Super Sentai, the source material for Power Rangers. Twitter & Facebook @MSSPod & Instagram @MSSPodcast. This Movie's Gay, where him & Corwyn watch then discuss LGBTQ movies! Follow them on Twitter @ThisMoviesGay! Hit it & Crit It! A Dungeons & Dragons play podcast with James & a gang of others! Listen to James' rap music under Marsh Land Monster on wherever music is found! Plus, watch him and Nicole live stream video games under "Mostly Speakin' Sentai" on Twitch!
Today we chat Carens, America's best breakfast sandwich, missing hikers, and microwave technology. we also give an update on the murderous hornets invading America.
Topics discussed on today's show: WHO confirms Transmission, Wearing a Mask, Lawn Furniture, Disney Opening, Frank's Garage, Power of the Carens, Birthdays, News of the Day, Amber Heard Pooped The Bed, Nuke of Humiliation, Dan and Blythe Brown, Living A Double Life, Permission To Have An Affair, Crossing Streams, Fruity Vegetables, and Apologies.
The most dangerous place your kid could be right now is a public school, the BLM virus runs rampant. POTUS is pushing hard for states to re-open. Mayor of Atlanta mandates masks in spite of not having the authority to do so. New hate crime bill to punish white people, otherwise known as Carens.
Dans ce neuvième épisode nous nous intéresserons à l’un des thèmes qui est sujet à discussion perpétuelle : l’immigration. Trop importante pour certains, une chance pour les autres, elle exprime de façon caricaturale le vieux clivage gauche-droite. Nous allons nous pencher sur la position des libéraux, voir si les frontières peuvent se justifier, et si oui (ou non), comment, avec quels arguments. Nous reviendrons également sur l’importance de la libre-circulation des personnes pour les libéraux. Pistes de lecture: 1. Etrangers et citoyens : un plaidoyer en faveur de l'ouverture des frontières (Joseph H. Carens) 2. Libéralisme (Pascal Salin) 3. Anarchie, État et utopie (Robert Nozick)
The podcast rages on in the wake of Coronavirus. Dennis learns what a "finsta" is. Carroll County Public Schools deals with a finsta of their own. Carens collide, clash and coerce collateral comradery in a local community Facebook group. Sykesville vies for the national title of America's Main Street. Dennis and Randy unveil Tactical Military Randy and Dennis Logg. Dennis offers Randy his slot, and we have questions. But wait, why is there an abandoned "Marital Aid" in the middle of Rt 97? Sherri has some answers.
Apologies for the poor sound quality of this episode. In 1987 Joseph Carens, Professor and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, University of Toronto, pioneered political philosophy on immigration by making the case for open borders. In his most recent book, The Ethics of Immigration, he restated his case for keeping borders open. Yet some people find that this is simply too idealistic and that even political philosophers must think about what can actually be done in the real world. Carens himself discusses this, for example in his recent book. He joins the podcast to talk about whether, when it comes to immigration, we should be idealists or realists, or both.
It is commonly assumed that states have a right to broad discretionary control over immigration, and that they may decide almost in any way they choose, who may stay within the territory and who must leave. But even supposing that there is such a right, we may ask the decidedly moral question about how it may be exercised. And this query calls us to try to bring our views about the ethics of immigration into equilibrium with our other moral convictions about citizenship, liberty, and equality. Can our common views and practices concerning immigration be rendered consistent with these deeper commitments? In The Ethics of Immigration (Oxford University Press, 2013), Joseph Carens argues that our common commitment to democratic principles requires us to revise much of our thinking about immigration. Beginning with the uncontroversial practice of granting citizenship immediately to those born within a country’s territory, Carens argues that claims to social membership and thus to citizenship strengthen as individuals stay in a state; consequently, there is a point at which not extending citizenship to those living within a state’s borders is grossly immoral, even for those who have settled without the state’s permission. Carens’ arguments about the moral constraints on the state’s rights to exclude eventuate in an argument in favor of open borders. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It is commonly assumed that states have a right to broad discretionary control over immigration, and that they may decide almost in any way they choose, who may stay within the territory and who must leave. But even supposing that there is such a right, we may ask the decidedly moral question about how it may be exercised. And this query calls us to try to bring our views about the ethics of immigration into equilibrium with our other moral convictions about citizenship, liberty, and equality. Can our common views and practices concerning immigration be rendered consistent with these deeper commitments? In The Ethics of Immigration (Oxford University Press, 2013), Joseph Carens argues that our common commitment to democratic principles requires us to revise much of our thinking about immigration. Beginning with the uncontroversial practice of granting citizenship immediately to those born within a country’s territory, Carens argues that claims to social membership and thus to citizenship strengthen as individuals stay in a state; consequently, there is a point at which not extending citizenship to those living within a state’s borders is grossly immoral, even for those who have settled without the state’s permission. Carens’ arguments about the moral constraints on the state’s rights to exclude eventuate in an argument in favor of open borders. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It is commonly assumed that states have a right to broad discretionary control over immigration, and that they may decide almost in any way they choose, who may stay within the territory and who must leave. But even supposing that there is such a right, we may ask the decidedly moral question about how it may be exercised. And this query calls us to try to bring our views about the ethics of immigration into equilibrium with our other moral convictions about citizenship, liberty, and equality. Can our common views and practices concerning immigration be rendered consistent with these deeper commitments? In The Ethics of Immigration (Oxford University Press, 2013), Joseph Carens argues that our common commitment to democratic principles requires us to revise much of our thinking about immigration. Beginning with the uncontroversial practice of granting citizenship immediately to those born within a country's territory, Carens argues that claims to social membership and thus to citizenship strengthen as individuals stay in a state; consequently, there is a point at which not extending citizenship to those living within a state's borders is grossly immoral, even for those who have settled without the state's permission. Carens' arguments about the moral constraints on the state's rights to exclude eventuate in an argument in favor of open borders.
It is commonly assumed that states have a right to broad discretionary control over immigration, and that they may decide almost in any way they choose, who may stay within the territory and who must leave. But even supposing that there is such a right, we may ask the decidedly moral question about how it may be exercised. And this query calls us to try to bring our views about the ethics of immigration into equilibrium with our other moral convictions about citizenship, liberty, and equality. Can our common views and practices concerning immigration be rendered consistent with these deeper commitments? In The Ethics of Immigration (Oxford University Press, 2013), Joseph Carens argues that our common commitment to democratic principles requires us to revise much of our thinking about immigration. Beginning with the uncontroversial practice of granting citizenship immediately to those born within a country’s territory, Carens argues that claims to social membership and thus to citizenship strengthen as individuals stay in a state; consequently, there is a point at which not extending citizenship to those living within a state’s borders is grossly immoral, even for those who have settled without the state’s permission. Carens’ arguments about the moral constraints on the state’s rights to exclude eventuate in an argument in favor of open borders. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It is commonly assumed that states have a right to broad discretionary control over immigration, and that they may decide almost in any way they choose, who may stay within the territory and who must leave. But even supposing that there is such a right, we may ask the decidedly moral question about how it may be exercised. And this query calls us to try to bring our views about the ethics of immigration into equilibrium with our other moral convictions about citizenship, liberty, and equality. Can our common views and practices concerning immigration be rendered consistent with these deeper commitments? In The Ethics of Immigration (Oxford University Press, 2013), Joseph Carens argues that our common commitment to democratic principles requires us to revise much of our thinking about immigration. Beginning with the uncontroversial practice of granting citizenship immediately to those born within a country’s territory, Carens argues that claims to social membership and thus to citizenship strengthen as individuals stay in a state; consequently, there is a point at which not extending citizenship to those living within a state’s borders is grossly immoral, even for those who have settled without the state’s permission. Carens’ arguments about the moral constraints on the state’s rights to exclude eventuate in an argument in favor of open borders. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ford, Daimler and Peugeot all reported their financial numbers for the first half and the results are mixed. Traffic deaths in the U.S. are up 13.5 percent in the first quarter of this year. Kia is coming out with an all-new version of its compact minivan, the Carens at the Paris Auto Show. All that and more, plus John responds to your questions and comments in “You Said It!”
Auto - Rund ums Auto. Fahrberichte, Gespräche und Informationen
Das Frauen auf Autos gelegentlich eifersüchtig sind, ist ja nichts Neues. Männer verbringen bekanntermaßen oft mehr Zeit mit ihren fahrbaren Untersetzern, als mit der Familie. Wenn der Wagen dann auch noch Carens heißt, was von Klang her leicht mit „Karin“ verwechselt werden kann, dann kann der Haussegen schon mal richtig schief hängen! Michel Weyland spricht in seinem Beitrag aber ganz klar vom „Carens!“
Auto - Rund ums Auto. Fahrberichte, Gespräche und Informationen
Das Frauen auf Autos gelegentlich eifersüchtig sind, ist ja nichts Neues. Männer verbringen bekanntermaßen oft mehr Zeit mit ihren fahrbaren Untersetzern, als mit der Familie. Wenn der Wagen dann auch noch Carens heißt, was von Klang her leicht mit „Karin“ verwechselt werden kann, dann kann der Haussegen schon mal richtig schief hängen! Michel Weyland spricht in seinem Beitrag aber ganz klar vom „Carens!“