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Guest: Dan Flores. European colonizers, shocked by America's abundance, introduced a "herding culture" mindset that demonized predators and enforced a philosophy of human exceptionalism regarding animal souls.1838 COMMORANTS. AUDOBON
Hello Interactors,Minnesota has seen federal incursion and overreach before. And not just in 2020. These removal tests we're witnessing are rooted in the premise of US ‘manifest destiny' and how quickly the notion of ‘home' can be made fungible by a violent state. But likeminded bodies always resist being bullied.SCAFFOLD, SOVEREIGNTY, AND SEIZUREOn December 26, 1862, during the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln authorized the hanging of 38 Dakota men in Mankato, Minnesota. The execution, staged as public theater, was not a solemn judicial act. A special scaffold was built, martial law was declared, and an estimated 4,000 spectators witnessed the largest mass execution in U.S. history. The spectacle mattered because it carried meaning beyond Mankato. The hanging marked the end of the six-week U.S.–Dakota War of 1862. This brutal conflict devastated the Minnesota River Valley and left deep trauma in Dakota communities. It also conveyed that the state could swiftly and effectively attempt control of contested land by violent force.Mankato was the visible climax, but Fort Snelling was the quieter cruelty that continued. After the war, Dakota families — women, children, elders — were confined in harsh conditions near the fort during the winter of 1862–63. Disease and exposure killed between 130 and 300 Dakota people. Execution and exile worked together. One provided public power, the other attempted to ensure territorial outcomes.Here's what Dakota Chief Wabasha's son-in-law, Hdainyanka, wrote to him shortly before his execution:“You have deceived me. You told me that if we followed the advice of General Sibley, and gave ourselves up to the whites, all would be well; no innocent man would be injured. I have not killed, wounded or injured a white man, or any white persons. I have not participated in the plunder of their property; and yet to-day I am set apart for execution, and must die in a few days, while men who are guilty will remain in prison. My wife is your daughter, my children are your grandchildren. I leave them all in your care and under your protection. Do not let them suffer; and when my children are grown up, let them know that their father died because he followed the advice of his chief, and without having the blood of a white man to answer for to the Great Spirit.”This moral failing was part of a larger burgeoning political economy. In 1862, the Twin Cities were still emerging, with mills, river commerce, and infrastructure. Yet the region's future as an urban, financial, and political center depended on converting Dakota and Ojibwe homelands into transferable property. The spring prior to the massacre, in May 1862, Lincoln signed the Homestead Act, handing out 160-acre chunks of stolen land labeled now as “public.” Colonizers and immigrants could occupy this land, and be defended by the US government, if they showed they could “improve” it through five years of occupation.This act negated all Dakota treaties, seized 24 million acres of Minnesota lands, and mandated removal of what were now called Dakota “outlaws.” This converted communal Indigenous homelands into surveyed “public domain” eligible for homesteading, auctions, and rail grants, directly feeding wheat production for Minneapolis mills. Speculators and railroads exploited the act via proxy filings, reselling “cleared” parcels at profit to European immigrants.By 1870, non-Native population surged from 172,000 to over 439,000. The “clearing” of land was not metaphorical. It was the prerequisite for surveying, fencing, settlement, rail corridors, and the wider commodity circuits that would bind the Upper Midwest to national and global markets.That is what Harvard historian Sven Beckert calls war capitalism. He argues that global capitalism's ascent was not a clean evolution toward free exchange. It relied on coercion, conquest, and violence. As his book on the history of Capitalism lays out, state funded war capitalism fundamentally relied on slavery, the dispossession of Indigenous peoples, imperial expansion, armed commerce, and the imposition of sovereignty over both people and territory. In this framing, the Dakota and Ojibwe were obstacles to industrialization and commodification. The frontier needed to be safe for settlement and investment of Germans, Irish, and Scandinavians, as well as railroads and industry. This included these two flour mills, the world's largest by 1880: General Mills and Pillsbury.The gallows in Mankato were the blunt instrument that made the state-capital alliance credible. The point was not only to punish alleged crimes, but to demonstrate a capacity and will to kill. The American state needed to show it could override Indigenous sovereignty and reorder space. The subsequent removals and confinement at Fort Snelling completed the transformation. “Home” was recoded from relationship into asset. This land was no longer lived geography but extractable territory, from stewarding real soil to the selling of real estate.TOPHOPHILIA, TIES, AND TENSIONSWar capitalism is not merely to punish resistance, but to convert a lived place into a fungible asset. But violence plays a deeper role than just legal rearrangement. It has to break this constant of human life: our attachment to place.Behavioral geographer Yi-Fu Tuan borrowed the term topophilia to describe this attachment — the “affective bond between people and place or setting.” The phrase can sound soft and sentimental but it can also cause friction in projects of political economy.The state may be able to abolish or rewrite a treaty, redraw a border, rename a river, and issue new deeds, but it still confronts bodies that have been oriented by firm ground. It's on these grounds that paths are walked, food gathered, relatives buried, stories anchored to landmarks, and seasonal rhythms internalized as a habit of life. The obstacle is embedded and embodied in the physiology, including cognitive, and grounds to location.Modern neuroscience gives a concrete account of how place becomes part of a person. The hippocampus plays a central role in spatial memory and navigation, and research on place cells shows that hippocampal neurons fire in relation to specific locations in an environment. Familiar surroundings are not only around us they are within us. The brain builds spatial scaffolding that links location to memory, routine, prediction, and emotional regulation.When cognition is tied to the specificity of place, it becomes hard for a parcel to be made equivalent to another. Commodification demands interchangeability. A home cannot easily be made equivalent to another home when it's part of the nervous system — not quickly, not cleanly, and often not at all. When the state-capital alliance imagines territory as a grid of extractable value, it is implicitly trying to override how humans experience territory. That is why “simple” displacement so often produces disproportionate harm. Psychiatrist Mindy Fullilove coined the term root shock to describe the traumatic stress that follows the destruction of one's “emotional ecosystem.” Root shock is not only grief or nostalgia. It is a stress response to the sudden loss of the social and spatial cues that stabilize daily life. The shredding of a mesh of relationships, routines, and meanings embedded in a neighborhood or homeland.The root shock of the state violence of 1862 was not just incidental to the project of transformation. It was structurally necessary. If topophilia is a biological and psychological anchor, then a purely legal or economic strategy (bureaucratic coercion) will often be insufficient because the anchor of topophilia holds. To clear land at speed and scale, the state reaches for tools that can sever attachment abruptly. Public executions, mass incarceration, forced marches, and exile doesn't just relocate people. They're violent attempts to scramble the conditions under which people can remain attached at all. It transforms topophilia into vulnerability.Work on social exclusion and “social pain” helps explain why. In a widely cited fMRI study, Naomi Eisenberger and colleagues found increased activity in the anterior cingulate cortex during experiences of exclusion. This parallels patterns seen in physical pain studies where distress is tracked with painful activities. The point is not that social threat is “just like” physical injury, but that the brain treats social severing as a serious alarm condition. It's something that demands attention, vigilance, and behavioral change to overcome.ROOTS, RESISTANCE, AND REPAIRTopophilia doesn't end with the so-called frontier or attempts at ‘removing' its inhabitants. It reappears wherever people form durable bonds. That includes the streets and schools, churches and parks, language, kin, and the local economies and cultures war capitalism eventually built. The Dakota and Ojibwe were never “removed” in any final sense. Many live and organize in and around the Twin Cities today.In South Minneapolis, the Indigenous Protector Movement, a biproduct of the American Indian Movement, works out of the American Indian Cultural Corridor along Franklin Avenue — an immediate target for ICE. The protectors made their presence known as a form of ongoing place-based care and defense. It is a living archive of tactics for defending attachment under pressure through direct action, community building, patrols, and the mundane discipline of showing up. What it offers is not merely a critique of state violence, but vigilance without spectacle, care without permission, and solidarity as a daily habit rather than a momentary sentiment.Other areas of Minneapolis show how when federal enforcement turns public space into a zone of uncertainty, topophilic neighbors often respond by adopting exactly those same “weapons” of persistence — care, documentation, rapid communication, mutual aid — that have long characterized Indigenous resistance and slavery abolitionist networks.Standing Rock, where the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and allies gathered in 2016 to oppose the Dakota Access Pipeline, demonstrated how quickly infrastructure can scale when a place becomes a shared object of defense.The #NoDAPL movement assembled a broad coalition of Indigenous nations and allies, over 200 tribes, alongside legal support, medical care, and communications systems designed to withstand state patience. The 2020 George Floyd uprising in Minneapolis also revealed how love of place can become a platform for organized care rather than retreat. Alongside protest, residents built mutual-aid channels, street-medic networks, food distribution, and neighborhood defense efforts that treated the city as an emotional ecosystem worth repairing. What looked to outsiders like spontaneous eruption was, on the ground, a rapid layering of roles that included medics, legal observers, supply runners, translators, and de-escalators. This ecology of participation made it possible for large numbers of people to act without centralized command.Social psychology helps explain why these movements generate allies rather than only sympathizers. One key concept is collective efficacy — the combination of social cohesion and a shared willingness to intervene for the common good. It blossoms when people repeatedly see each other act, learn local norms of mutual obligation, and build trust that intervention will be supported rather than punished. All rooted in topophilia.Place attachment can bridge boundaries that would otherwise keep people separate. Work in community psychology and planning shows that place attachment and meaning can support participation and collective engagement, especially when development or coercion threatens everyday life. In other words, topophilia is not just private feeling. When it's under threat it can become public motive and an engine for coalition.The coalition in Minneapolis is being characterized by the federal government as terrorists. This borrows from a long history of resistance to violence because war capitalism has never been only domestic. The United States and its allies refined coercive governance overseas through night raids and “capture-or-kill” operations in Afghanistan, midnight house raids in Iraq, and broader militarized campaigns that treat homes as “searchable terrain” and communities as “intelligence environments.”Many of the officials, contractors, and voters who authorized or normalized these methods rarely imagined the same atmosphere of violent seizure in their neighborhood. As unimaginable as it may be watching unmarked vehicles, sudden detentions, and public uncertainty coming to American streets — used against the very citizens and taxpayers who fund such operations — it's not to those victims overseas in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine, or even inner city America.That return is what the poet and politician Aimé Césaire called the “imperial boomerang” effect, the idea that techniques tolerated in peripheral countries can come home to roost. In the U.S., the boomerang has long “landed” first on people of color. It emerges through surveillance and disruption campaigns like the two decades of the covert and illegal COINTELPRO program where the FBI targeted counterculture groups of the so-called New Left.Or the “Palmer Raids” of 1919 and 1920 targeting largely Italian and Eastern European Jewish immigrants and their left-leaning politics. These led to riots in 30 US cities and culminated in the bombing of the home of A. Mitchell Palmer, the US attorney general. These programs all reflect the notion that war can come home — just look at the increased militarizing of policing complete with SWAT tactics. And the same history that produced the scaffold of war capitalism of the past also produced reservoirs of resistance we see here and now. When neighbors anywhere respond to incursions not only with fear but with organized vigilance and material support, they are adapting older strategies of care found in Indigenous, abolitionist, and other movement-based defenses of people and places against infiltration, intimidation, and attempted violent removal.We can see how war capitalism endures. Mankato's 1862 gallows aimed to clear Dakota homelands of their people for homesteading, rails, and mills. Meanwhile, today's Operation Metro Surge includes thousands of federal agents raiding Minneapolis homes and streets, attempting to sever immigrant attachments to allegedly enforce labor control and national security. These militarized spectacles of warrantless entries, tear gas, and shootings echo what Beckert has uncovered. They treat people and place as obstacles to commodification rather than roots of stewardship.Yet topophilia also persists. These cross cultural rapid-response networks are not new to these lands, even though the US government tried to erase them centuries ago. The inspiring actions we see in Minneapolis reflect the values of compassion, positiveness, and respect for all relatives with neighborly solidarity that the first occupants of that land embraced. They're now woven with their allied 21st century neighbors in common and shared resistance. As best expressed here by Indigenous studies and political ecology scholar Melanie Yazzie. (and the longer version here) Minneapolis, like those acts of resistance in the nearby Dakotas, enacts and rehearses an alternative form of civil governance that centers mutual obligation over coercion and extraction. It shows how cities can survive the strain and stay alive — not through fear and gain, but through care that grounds and sustains. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit interplace.io
What happens when you come out online—and thousands of people decide they're done with you?In this episode, Alix & Kayla unpack cancel culture, internet outrage, and the emotional, financial, and personal fallout of coming out publicly. From losing 50,000 followers to navigating homophobia disguised as “wellness,” they explore why the internet struggles with nuance, change, and coexistence—and why scrolling past the beans might save us all.This is a raw, thoughtful conversation about queerness, yoga culture, social media power, cancel culture, and learning how to live outside the echo chamber.00:00 – Intro: married, queer, and back online02:10 – Cancelable or not? Internet apology culture05:15 – Cancel culture vs real accountability07:45 – Allegations, platforms & public judgment12:50 – Cancel culture fatigue & social currency14:30 – Coming out online & losing 50,000 followers18:40 – COVID, internet culture & rising hostility22:45 – “Colonizer,” “predator,” and wellness backlash25:05 – Is social media a workplace? Queerness at work32:20 – Why follower loss still matters38:30 – Yoga, religion & spiritualized homophobia43:00 – Inclusivity with an asterisk47:00 – The Bean Soup Theory & online outrage52:15 – Echo chambers, empathy & coexistence01:04:00 – Who's the problem? Public figures & politics#QueerPodcast #CancelCulture #LGBTQPodcast #InternetCulture #ComingOutOnline #WellnessIndustry #QueerVoices #YogaCulture #SocialMediaTalk #WivesNotSistersConnect with us on social media: IG: @wivesnotsisterspod | TikTok: @wivesnotsisterspod | Youtube: @wivesnotsisterspod Follow our hosts on Instagram: @kaylalanielsen @alix_tucker You can also watch our episodes on Youtube at youtube.com/@wivesnotsisterspod!
Donate to Movember: https://ca.movember.com/mospace/15368227In this episode, I speak to award-winning director, writer, and filmmaker Tristan Barrocks about the things we rarely talk about as men. This was one of the most raw and honest conversations I've had on the podcast. We talk about a multitude of things, including: - Facing a Miscarriage- Dealing with addiction- Balancing fatherhood and entrepreneurship- Losing a father- Why Canadians struggle with excellence And so much more. This is one of the most honest conversations we've had on the show. Let me know what you think of it in the comments below.Chapters00:00 Introduction to Mental Health and Presence02:54 Grief and Emotional Awareness in Men06:11 The Complexity of Male Emotions09:05 Navigating Grief and Healing11:55 The Impact of Distractions on Mental Health15:03 Addiction and Coping Mechanisms17:58 The Importance of Journaling and Reflection21:10 Intentional Living and Time Management23:57 Family Dynamics and Parenting26:55 The Creative Journey and Storytelling29:47 Cultural Representation in Film33:13 Challenges in the Arts and Funding36:05 The Future of Canadian Creativity
Underground Feed Back Stereo x Brothers Perspective Magazine Broadcast
Underground Feed Back Stereo - Brothers Perspective Magazine - Personal Opinion Database - Whats GOOD About YA colonizerBlack August Resistance Uprising against white aggression in Montgomery Alabama in 2023. Black People suffer in a place many are void of Self Awareness and Dignified Liberation. These project 2025 europeons stole the land by killing the natives of lands but not to share with the original inhabitant or those they enslaved. These tyrants are negative to the core and cant do good. The fight is to know what an oppressor is and how a system operates from this oppression. The euro colonizers designs all the laws to neglect BLACK People from benefiting from the Land. The Black people are enslaved property on stolen land not able to benefit from the life they live! The payback for such atrocities can never be forgiven. Its the mind you must maintain against colonial genocide. This also happens with the endless rejection letters from art galleries etc. No respect to you! Sound Art? Black People Dont Benefit from Slavery! Tune in to these educated brothers as they deliver Personal Opinions for Brothers Perspective Audio Feedback #Reparations #diabetes #75dab #WilliamFroggieJames #lyching #basketball #nyc #fakereligion #war #neverapologize #brooklyn #guncontrol #birthcontrol #gentrification #trump #affirmitiveaction #nokings #criticalracetheory #tennessee #stopviolence #blackmusic #marshallact #music #europeanrecoveryprogram #chicago #sense #zantac #rayygunn #blackjobs #southsidechicago #blackart #redlining #maumau #biko70 #chicago #soldout #dei #equality #podcast #PersonalOpinionDataBase #protest #blackart #africanart #gasprices #colonialoppressors #undergroundfeedbackstereo #blackpeople #race #womansbasketball #blackjesus #colonialoppression #blackpeopledontbenefitfromslavery #Montgomery #alabama #foldingchairs #blackrussianjesus #gaza #brothersperspectivemagazine #art #slavery #MUSK #doge #spacex #watergate #thomasjefferson #tariff #project2025brothersperspective.com undergroundfeedbackstereo.com feat. art 75dab
Send us a textHappy 2026! (Notice how "new year" has been omitted?)Find out more about your Chinese Zodiac animal and how to embrace and navigate the Fire Horse year fully.Support the showThe hashtag for the podcast is #nourishyourflourish. You can also find our firm, The Eudaimonia Center on the following social media outlets:Facebook: The Eudaimonia CenterInstagram: theeudaimoniacenterThreads: The Eudaimonia CenterFor more integrative reproductive medicine and women's health information and other valuable resources, make sure to visit our website.Have a question, comment, guest suggestion, or want to share your story? Email us at info@laurenawhite.com
Mike is at Papas Italian Restaurant speaking with Tom Bruno about their amazing half priced ALL MENU meal deal. Later Mike talks about beer hiking in Colorado. And a segment of "You can't make this stuff up" - Santa the Colonizer. This and more on Hour 2 of the Mike Boyle Restaurant ShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Geschiedenis voor herbeginners - gesproken dagblad in virale tijden
Waarin het Europese kolonialisme ons naar het Verre Oosten voert, in de greep van opiumoorlogen, een Bokseropstand en een keizerlijk moderniseringsproject.WIJ ZIJN: Jonas Goossenaerts (inhoud en vertelstem), Filip Vekemans (montage), Benjamin Goyvaerts (inhoud) en Laurent Poschet (inhoud). MET BIJDRAGEN VAN: Pieter Jan de Paepe (Lin), Annelies Gilbos (keizerin Tsju-sji), Anouck Luyten en Marjan De Schutter (Koningin Victoria). WIL JE ONS EEN FOOI GEVEN? Fooienpod - Al schenkt u tien cent of tien euro, het duurt tien seconden met een handige QR-code. WIL JE ADVERTEREN IN DEZE PODCAST? Neem dan contact op met adverteren@dagennacht.nl MEER WETEN? Onze geraadpleegde en geciteerde bronnen:Boeken en artikels: Benson, A.C., Strachey, L. (Eds.). (2018). The letters of Queen Victoria. John Murray. Londen.Evans, R. J. (2023). De eeuw van de macht: Europa 1815–1914. Spectrum. Amsterdam.Flath, J. (2011). “This is How the Chinese People Began Their Struggle.” Humen and the Opium War as a Site of Memory, In: Matten, M.A. (2011). Places of Memory in Modern China. pag.167–192.Grataloup, C. (2024). Atlas van de wereldgeschiedenis. Nieuw Amsterdam. Amsterdam.Maalouf, A. (2021). Een doolhof vol verdwaalden. Ambo|Anthos. Amsterdam.Websites:Baird, J. (2024). Koningin Victoria: een intieme biografie. Historiek. https://historiek.net/koningin-victoria-verenigd-koninkrijk/67918/ (geraadpleegd op 14/11/2025).Crowning the Colonizer. The Museum of British Colonialism. https://museumofbritishcolonialism.org/2023-4-22-monarchy-and-empire-victoria/ (geraadpleegd op 14/11/2025).Dower, J.W. (s.d.). Black Ships and Samurai. Commodore Perry and the Opening of Japan (1853-1854). MIT Visualizing Cultures (geraadpleegd op 1/12/2025).Queen Vicyoria's Journals. Royal Archives. queenvictoriajournals.orgThe Letters of Queen Victoria. Project Gutenberg. https://www.gutenberg.org/files/20023/20023-h/20023-h.htmYamamoto, J. (2003). Perry in Japan, a visual history. Brown University Library Centre for Digital Scholarship. https://library.brown.edu/cds/perry/scroll9_Yamamoto.html?utm_source (geraadpleegd op 2/12/2025).Beeld: Wikimedia CommonsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Conan chats with Arjun from Kerala in southern India about looking for a partner, Kerala's history as a spice hub, and what it would take to accept Conan as his wingman. Wanna get a chance to talk to Conan? Submit here: teamcoco.com/apply Get access to all the podcasts you love, music channels and radio shows with the SiriusXM App! Get 3 months free using this show link: https://siriusxm.com/conan. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
P is back! This week we talk about Thanksgiving, the weather, Hades II, Ghost of Yotei, the electric car market, Trump voters, Trump bankrupting companies, UCMJ and unlawful orders, Wicked for Good, Emergency Guardianship, and more! Come follow us: http://www.beenhadproductions.squarespace.com/bthanbti SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/bthanbtiI Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BthanBTI/ Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/bthanbti Twitter: @BthanBTI iTunes: https://itun.es/i6SJ6Pw YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/BlackerThanBlackTimesInfinity Rescue + Residence https://www.rescueresidence.org/ Donate: https://www.givebutter.com/R_R_Champions
Geschiedenis voor herbeginners - gesproken dagblad in virale tijden
Waarin we zien hoe de Britse Queen Victoria aan het hoofd kwam te staan van een wereldrijk én hoe koloniale onderdanen zich met wisselend succes tegen de Europese heerschappij verzetten.WIJ ZIJN: Jonas Goossenaerts (inhoud en vertelstem), Filip Vekemans (montage), Benjamin Goyvaerts (inhoud) en Laurent Poschet (inhoud). MET BIJDRAGEN VAN: Annelies Gilbos, Pieter Jan De Paepe, Anouck Luyten (jonge Victoria) en Marjan De Schutter (Victoria op leeftijd). WIL JE ONS EEN FOOI GEVEN? Fooienpod - Al schenkt u tien cent of tien euro, het duurt tien seconden met een handige QR-code. WIL JE ADVERTEREN IN DEZE PODCAST? Neem dan contact op met adverteren@dagennacht.nl MEER WETEN? Onze geraadpleegde en geciteerde bronnen:Boeken: Adu Boahen, A. (1987). African perspectives on colonialism. Johns Hopkins University Press. Baltimore.Benson, A.C., Strachey, L. (Eds.). (2018). The letters of Queen Victoria. John Murray. Londen.Evans, R. J. (2023). De eeuw van de macht: Europa 1815–1914. Spectrum. Amsterdam.Grataloup, C. (2024). Atlas van de wereldgeschiedenis. Nieuw Amsterdam. Amsterdam.Maalouf, A. (2021). Een doolhof vol verdwaalden. Ambo|Anthos. Amsterdam.Websites:Crowning the Colonizer. https://museumofbritishcolonialism.org/2023-4-22-monarchy-and-empire-victoria/ (geraadpleegd op 14/11/2025).Perspectives of the Sepoy Rebellion Perspectives Packet. https://larrymcelhiney.com/Sepoy/Sepoy_Rebellion_Perspectives.pdf (geraadpleegd op 14/11/2025).Beeld: Wikimedia CommonsAnno 117 Pax Romana: Geef vorm aan het Romeinse Rijk in deze baanbrekende, strategische bouwgame. Bouw steden en breid je invloed uit over de Romeinse provincies. Download hem nu via annogame.com/herbeginners en bestuur met economische bekwaamheid, diplomatieke vaardigheden of militaire macht. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
During the 1950s and 1960s, the Soviet Union began a new era of political engagement with the global south. One feature was development assistance. The Soviet Union embodied, offered and inspired an alternative approach to development, industrialization and modernization across the global south. Countries such as Ghana, Guinea and Mali in the 1950s-60s were governed by nationalists, not Marxists or Communists, and were newly independent from European imperial-colonial control.Soviet specialists assessed the difficult conditions of these post-colonial countries as opening a path for “non-capitalist” development: state led modernization. As opposed to a Western promoted primacy of markets and individuals, “non-capitalist” development would ensure sovereignty and economic growth by shielding against French or British neo-colonial exploitation, improving living standards, empowering the state and strengthening political ties with the socialist world.To discuss all this and more, we welcome historian Alessandro Iandolo, author of the book Arrested Development: The Soviet Union in Ghana, Guinea and Mali 1955-1968Book description:In Arrested Development, Alessandro Iandolo examines the USSR's role in West Africa during the 1950s and 1960s as an aid donor, trade partner, and political model for newly independent Ghana, Guinea, and Mali.With a strong economy in the 1950s, the USSR expanded its global outreach, supporting economic development in post-colonial Africa and Asia. Many nations saw the Soviet model as a path to political and economic independence. Drawing on extensive Russian and West African archival research, Iandolo explores Soviet ideas, sponsored projects, and their lasting impact.Soviet specialists worked alongside West African colleagues to design ambitious development plans, build infrastructure, establish collective farms, survey mineral resources, and manage banking and trade. These collaborations—and the tensions they created—shed light on how Soviet and West African visions of development intersected. Arrested Development positions the USSR as a key player in twentieth-century economic history, reshaping global approaches to modernization.Alessandro Iandolo is Lecturer in Soviet and Post-Soviet History at University College London.The episode art is a 1960 poster from the Georgian SSR by Giorgi Pirtskhalava that reads: კოლონიზატორებო გაეთრიეთ! - Colonizers, get out!
Jewish Diaspora Report - Episode 176 On this episode of the Jewish Diaspora Report, Host Mike Jordan discusses the "Palestinian Narrative" about their indigeneity to the land of Israel ("Palestine"), where this claim comes from and which of these claims claims do or do not match historical records. Often the "Palestinians" claim to have evidence to support their claim, however, there may be something that they are not telling you!Explore these challenging issues and join the Jewish Diaspora Report for future episodes on issues of Politics, Culture, Current Events and more! Check us out on Instagram @jdr.podcastSend us a textSupport the show
Sara Century of www.saracentury.com joins Straight Outta Gallifrey to talk about the Malcolm Hulke story, Colony in Space, where the Doctor and Joe go off planet and witness some of the same patterns and pitfalls we saw in the 1970s or 1980s, U.N.I.T. dating, have not been solved in the distant future. Colonizers, bureaucracy and cover ups are all in full effect on other worlds in this rollicking six-part story. Oh, and did we mention the Master is in this one? Many of you knew that already. Let us know your thoughts at prydonian.post@gmail.com https://directory.libsyn.com/shows/view/id/straightouttagallifrey www.patreon.com/wrightonnetwork Bluesky: huestone44
Next Monday is Columbus Day. Or should it be Indigenous People's Day? According to the historian Matthew Restall we should be celebrating both Columbus and Indigenous People on Monday. The author of the timely The Nine Lives of Christopher Columbus, Restall places Genoa's most famous sailor as a prisoner of history - endlessly protean to reflect each era's changing values. The many lives of Columbus, then, is a mirror of how we have thought differently about him over the last 500 years. As history's greatest saint and sinner, Christopher Columbus might be the ultimate Rorschach test. Tell me what you'll be celebrating next Monday and I'll tell you who you are. Happy hols!1. Columbus Was a “Manic Narcissist” Who Believed He Was God's Agent Restall discovered Columbus wasn't likable—he descended into believing he was divinely chosen and could even be found in the Old Testament. This grandiosity was partly his undoing as a colonial administrator.2. Columbus Failed as a Colonizer and Administrator Unlike the conquistadors who came after him, Columbus lacked political and diplomatic skills. He was “just a sailor”—son of a weaver, grandson of a cheesemaker—and Spanish authorities quickly sidelined him. He died in 1506, only 13 years after his first voyage, with a declining reputation.3. The Columbus Day Debate Is About Different Columbuses Italian-Americans defend a 19th/20th century “Italian-American Columbus”—a symbol of immigrant achievement—while Indigenous Peoples' Day supporters condemn the “historic Columbus” who began a colonization process that killed 70-90% of indigenous populations within a century. These groups are talking past each other about entirely different figures.4. Conquistadors Were “Armed Entrepreneurs” Running Investment Companies Spanish conquistadors functioned like venture capital firms—assembling ships, soldiers, and supplies as investments, seeking returns through plunder and enslaved people, then winning authority positions to generate more profit while paying a 20% tax to the crown.5. Columbus's One Success: Founding a Noble Dynasty That Still Exists Despite his failures, Columbus achieved his main ambition—establishing an aristocratic dynasty. The title “Admiral of the Ocean Sea” granted in 1493 is still held today by the 20th admiral, a Spanish naval officer and businessman named Don Cristóbal Colón.Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Imago Interlude by nobigdyl.Christian music or music that Christians useTo get they fix just another hit of the clicks and viewsOfficially I don't play by your silly rulesWe independent cuz that's how I felt the Spirit moveLooked for Yeshua I didn't see him on the tubeI couldn't find him on the web or in triple letter newsI saw him on the corner begging for some drugs and foodI couldn't stop cuz I'm a little late for Sunday schoolChristian music or music that Christians useI read epistles and take a sip of the liquor tooAnd everyone you listen to I saw they did it tooI saw a lot of dying happenin' in livin' roomsIs that a preacher or a wolf that's covered in the woolIs that a fetus or human covered in the wombWe disagreeing or are we just politicians toolsCan't pledge allegiance to a system feeding off of foolsChristian music or music that Christians useI looked for Jesus and I didn't see him on the newsSaw him in Palestine the power lines were out of juiceHe was a 9-year-old her body had been battered bruisedSaw him in Zion too a missile through a tattered roofA father clinging to his child pleading out to youSaw him in Kyiv and MoscowThe bleeding won't stop nowThe cop and the black body he shot downChristian music or music that Christians useLooked for Messiah I couldn't find him in interviewsSittin' in silence I felt an ancient pullHe said to be Samaritan to every single JewRight then he showed me rockets over top of Tel AvivColonizers shippin' people across the seven seasTelevangelist devisin' petty schemesYou don't know Jesus till you see him in your enemyI hate the people that we becameI love the people we became
I am sharing what I captured of Reverend Dr. Louis Anthony sermon from WHUR 96.3 Public Service who aired it from Rankin Memorial Chapel. He preached on your lack of action to say Don't Miss Your Chance from the Bible Verse Luke 19:44. And I continue to share other peoples perspective on the Colonizer's Religion.
THE TIM JONES AND CHRIS ARPS SHOW 0:00 SEG 1 No two-state solution? | Colonizers don't provide comfort, food, and aide | Visiting Israels Capitol Hill, the Knesset 14:55 SEG 2 ZACK SMITH, Sr. Legal Fellow at The Heritage Foundation | TOPIC: Top legal headlines of the day | Will SCOTUS overturn gay marriage | Trump combating DC crime | Southern District of New York has gone crazy | Judges picking prosecuting attorney is problematic | Reforming the Israeli judicial system https://x.com/tzsmithhttps://www.heritage.org/staff/zack-smith 32:27 SEG 3 CHRIS’ CORNERWesley Bell is in Israel | Tim trading pins with other Speakers https://newstalkstl.com/ FOLLOW TIM - https://twitter.com/SpeakerTimJones FOLLOW CHRIS - https://twitter.com/chris_arps 24/7 LIVESTREAM - http://bit.ly/NEWSTALKSTLSTREAMS RUMBLE - https://rumble.com/NewsTalkSTL See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Support the show. Become a Patron: www.patreon.com/highscore510 ----more---- We discuss: QUESTION of the DAY: Do you qualify as a "Top Tier Man"? {12:05} - NEWS: The "High School Challenge " is the NEW viral challenge {18:20} - MLB: MLB All Star game follows tradition and was a let down {22:10} - VIDEO GAME: "Relooted" heist game allows you to steal artifacts from COLONIZERS {12:55} - Onlyfans: Gabby Zuniga has retire from OnlyFans {27:20} - NFL News: Donald Trump calls for return of the Redskins {31:40} - WNBA: Players united to fight for equal pay before All Star game {38:38} *Patreon Page: www.patreon.com/highscore510 *Email: (HighScore510.Fans@gmail.com) *MUSIC BY: Taj Easton (https://www.tajeaston.com) *SPONSORS: 1) New Parkway Theatre, Oakland: https://www.thenewparkway.com 2) Til Infinity Clothing
Support the show. Become a Patron: www.patreon.com/highscore510 ----more---- We discuss: INTROS: Dr. Umar on the biggest fear for African babies - NEWS: UCLA discovers baldness cure {8:00} - NEWS: Las Vegas is bringing UNO in as a table game {10:23} - VIDEO GAME: "Relooted" heist game allows you to steal artifacts from COLONIZERS {12:55} - Ninjas Needing Attention: Drake! Says UK rappers are the best lyricists in the world {20:04} - MMA News: Conor McGregor sends Presidential D*ck Picks to Azealia Banks {26:20} - Joy Taylor and Emmanuel Acho out at Fox Sports. Good Riddance? {28:50} - NINJAS NEEDING ATTENTION #2: Drake's Lebron Tattoo {36:45} - NBA: Cooper Flagg shutdown after 2 Summer League Games {39:35} - NFL: Amon Ra St. Brown father's "Black Gold" & breeding strategy {48:45} *Patreon Page: www.patreon.com/highscore510 *Email: (HighScore510.Fans@gmail.com) *MUSIC BY: Taj Easton (https://www.tajeaston.com) *SPONSORS: 1) New Parkway Theatre, Oakland: https://www.thenewparkway.com 2) Til Infinity Clothing
Lou Meyer, reginal business developer in Davey's Mid-Atlantic region, talks about the beautiful tulip poplar tree, including its height, classification and uses for its wood. In this episode we cover: Description of the tulip poplar (00:42)Where and how do they grow? (2:18)Weak wood vs. mid wood trees (5:02)Colonizer trees (6:03)Tulip poplar leaves (7:43)Tulip poplar flowers (8:52)Tulip poplar fruit (9:57)They grow to extremely tall heights (10:24)How are trees like these measured? (12:03)How do climbers face their fear of heights? (14:28)Uses for the tulip poplar's wood (16:34)Tulip poplar pests and diseases (17:14)To find your local Davey office, check out our find a local office page to search by zip code.To read our tree blogs to learn all about the different flowering trees in the magnolia genus, visit Blog.Davey.com by clicking here - Tree Care Tips, News & ChecklistsConnect with Davey Tree on social media:Twitter: @DaveyTreeFacebook: @DaveyTreeInstagram: @daveytreeYouTube: The Davey Tree Expert CompanyLinkedIn: The Davey Tree Expert Company Connect with Doug Oster at www.dougoster.com. Have topics you'd like us to cover on the podcast? Email us at podcasts@davey.com. We want to hear from you!Click here to send Talking Trees Fan Mail!
The colonizer: "I know what's best for you; do this or suffer!"The Colonized: "We will do what we want."The Colonizer: "You are terrorists and evil and will therefore destroy you."The Colonized: "Do what you must, but we will do what we can to become like you... powerful and threatening."Rev. Renaldo McKenzie is Author of Neoliberalism, Globalization, Income Inequality, Poverty and Resistance (Neoliberalism)The Neoliberal CorporationHttps://theneoliberal.comSubscribe for free on ay stream: https://anchor.fm/theneoliberalDonate to us: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=USSJLFU2HRVAQ
This Sunday Worship Episode is a Special for our Juneteenth Holiday! I have added some History on Religion and Christianity that I captured from other people perspectives broadcasted on Tik Tok as well. The History of Juneteenth tells of the last State named Texas did not let their Black Slaves know that they were free for two years after it was made Law.
When self-loathing stops selling, what happens to those who built entire empires on our shame?There's a deep shift rumbling underfoot—and it's not a political campaign or marketing trend. It's cultural. Spiritual. Almost romantic. America, for all its bruises and betrayals, is on the edge of something dangerous:It might start loving itself again.Not the flag-waving jingoism of talk radio. Not the sanitized patriotism of Memorial Day ads. Something messier. Stranger. Post-shame. A populist reconciliation where people stop apologizing for their gut instincts, their neighborliness, or their American-ness.And that's a problem for the class of people, industries, and institutions that built their relevance on American self-hate.Because once Americans stop hating themselves—once they no longer see their culture as inherently oppressive, their traditions as tainted, their flag as a hate symbol—the control matrix begins to short-circuit.Shame Was the ProductFor decades, the American psyche was mined for guilt. White guilt. Male guilt. Christian guilt. Cis guilt. Western guilt. Consumer guilt. Colonizer guilt. Guilt became a currency. Shame became social credit.Every institution got in on it:Academia turned self-flagellation into prestige.Brands commodified penance into ad campaigns.Politicians leveraged confusion into votes.NGOs and influencers made careers managing public confession.But what happens when people stop buying it?When working-class Latinos in Texas vote red—not because they're “brainwashed,” but because they're tired of hearing their values are backwards?When a gay couple in Oklahoma flies the stars and stripes next to their Pride flag—not to troll, but because they mean both?When people stop looking to D.C. or New York for moral clarity—and start turning inward, to their neighbors, their church, or even just their gut?The whole machine wobbles.The Ozempic Body and the American SoulSure, part of this shift is aesthetic. The Ozempic era flattened a million bellies. Testosterone clinics are booming. Cold plunges, Bibles, kettlebells, and banjos are back.But it's not just self-improvement. It's self-respect.It's what happens when the American everyman—fat, tired, broke, and spiritually malnourished—starts remembering how to walk tall. To live with pride, not performative guilt. To feel righteous without NPR's permission.This isn't a return to Reagan-era patriotism. It's something more anarchic. A love affair with American-ness that's post-partisan, embodied, and deeply uninterested in elite approval.Love Is Not the Narrative They WantedPopulism wasn't supposed to be joyful. It wasn't supposed to have goat cheese and jazz. It wasn't supposed to include Black homesteaders, Latina gun girls, trans folks with chickens, and veterans running permaculture farms.But it does.Because when you get off the grid—physically or spiritually—you stop caring about elite scripts.And here's the kicker: when America stops being defined by its sins and starts being redefined by its resilience and beauty—what happens to those whose power depends on unending grievance?What happens to the NGOs? The think tanks? The DEI consultants? The marketing agencies whose schtick is managing identity-based shame?They lose relevance. Influence. Power.Because you can't guilt someone who no longer believes they're broken.The Reckoning for the Shame EconomySo yes—be afraid. Be very afraid.Because when Americans stop hating themselves, they start building again. Loving again. Protecting what's theirs again. And that doesn't always look like bootstraps and Bud Light. Sometimes it looks like sourdough, or homeschooling, or a new liturgy no one asked permission to write.The culture war isn't over. But the ground is shifting.And when America looks in the mirror and smiles?That's the moment every shame merchant should fear.
In this Radio Feature, Rabbi Gary continues to discuss Israel's War with Hamas in Gaza. This 1 minute episode will air on KKLA 99.5 in Los Angeles, beginning June 20, 2025, on Fridays during rush hour.Send us a text
Many people are moving to other countries where the cost of living is lower and their money goes farther. This is called currency hacking or geo arbitrage, and many people are doing this to have more time and financial freedom. Makes economic sense, right? The question is: how do we practice geo arbitrage without being a colonizer asshole? In this episode I explore the underlying dynamics/attitudes/practices that contribute to the soft colonialism that is modern currency hacking and offer 8 ways to move to your dream country and also contribute to the people, culture, environment, and local economy of where you are being hosted. This is an ongoing exploration, not easy answers. Download my 3-session money magnetism activation, PROSPER, to increase your financial confidence and cash flow: https://ishavela.com Apply to book your free financial strategy session: https://vortex-financial.ck.page/71853aa421 Apply to join my team of financial revolutionaries on a mission to empower women with financial education and resources: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScjU5QXtEnJiBA6kNK46JB4C9M5zJGOHhY2RsZJXwK66gYqjQ/viewform Access free content on my YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@isha_vela Follow me on IG: https://www.instagram.com/isha_vela
Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin, is a farmer, systems developer, agronomist, and business manager who runs an ecosystem. He joins Luis for a fascinating conversation ranging from the Indigenous intellect to hazelnuts. We are a reflection of the earth, all yearning for connection. To understand the earth we need to look within and ask, do we dominate, or relate? Reginaldo tells the story of his chickens and his hazelnuts and the reciprocal ecosystem he has developed and tends. It is a system of economic transaction seen from a holistic regenerative framework, rather than an extractive linear mentality. How can we harvest in a way that stewards, regenerates and serves?You can read more about Reginaldo's work here:https://treerangefarms.com/https://www.regenagalliance.org/https://www.regenpoultry.com/https://www.salvatierrafarms.com/https://www.salvatierrafarms.com/store-2/p/bookYou can read more about, and register for, the Sugar-To-Adrenaline Sequence webinar here: https://www.holisticlifenavigation.com/events/the-sugar-to-adrenaline-pipeline-webinar To read more about, and register for, the 2025 Menla retreat, click here: https://www.holisticlifenavigation.com/menla-retreat----You can learn more on the website: https://www.holisticlifenavigation.com/ Learn more about the self-led course here: https://www.holisticlifenavigation.com/self-led-new Join the waitlist to pre-order Luis' book here: https://www.holisticlifenavigation.com/the-book You can follow Luis on Instagram @holistic.life.navigationQuestions? You can email us at info@holisticlifenavigation.com
Stories in this Episode:- The Book of Mormon is the Tool of Conversion- The Power and Doctrine of the Book- James Godson Bleak as One of the Colonizers and Pioneers- It Comes from GodSign up for FREE weekly stories here.Join my VIP Subscription and get access to all of my stories here.Contact me at Glenn@GlennRawsonStories.com
Hosts Angela Rye, Andrew Gillum, and Tiffany Cross, along with guest-host Elie Mystal, respond to a provocative listener question submitted by Dr. B.J. Brunious. Dr. Brunious saw last week’s episode and, as a Black gay man, was TRIGGERED. He doesn’t know anyone who identifies as “gay” before “Black” (as was discussed last week). He asks how it came to be that some Black folk think that one group’s gains (hispanics, LGBTQ, etc.) mean the Black community’s loss? Isn’t this the same logic used by white people AGAINST the Black community all the time? If you’d like to submit a question, check out our tutorial video: www.instagram.com/reel/C5j_oBXLIg0/ Welcome home y’all! —--------- We want to hear from you! Send us a video @nativelandpod and we may feature you on the podcast. Instagram X/Twitter Facebook NativeLandPod.com Watch full episodes of Native Land Pod here on YouTube. Native Land Pod is brought to you by Reasoned Choice Media. Thank you to the Native Land Pod team: Angela Rye as host, executive producer and cofounder of Reasoned Choice Media; Tiffany Cross as host and producer, Andrew Gillum as host and producer, and Lauren Hansen as executive producer; Loren Mychael is our research producer, and Nikolas Harter is our editor and producer. Special thanks to Chris Morrow and Lenard McKelvey, co-founders of Reasoned Choice Media. Theme music created by Daniel Laurent.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Department of Education is on its way out – what will happen to American education? The libs DID start the fire… in all the Tesla dealerships. Protestants are alarmed by the amount of people converting to Catholicism, JFK docs get out, and Shakespeare gets targeted for being a colonizer? All this and more on the LOOPcast! EMAIL US: loopcast@catholicvote.org SUPPORT LOOPCAST: www.loopcast.org The best way to protect your equity is with Home Title Lock's exclusive Million Dollar Triple Lock Protection. This service offers 24/7 monitoring, urgent alerts, and if fraud should occur, their U.S.- based restoration team will spend up to $1 Million to fix the fraud and restore your title. Go to hometitlelock.com/loopcast to save 30% AND you'll also get a free title history report to ensure you're not already a victim.Did you know… LOOPcast is on your favorite podcast platform. Subscribe on Apple, Google Podcasts, or wherever you listen!LINKS YOU'LL LOVETrump's New DOE Executive OrderMen v Women StatisticsShakespeare the Colonizer???Meagan Markle for Lent?All opinions expressed on LOOPcast by the participants are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of CatholicVote.TIMESTAMPS00:00 – Welcome back to the LOOPcast!00:40 – DOE Shut down?27:00 – Home title lock28:30 – Tesla Arson43:40 – Protestants vs Catholics58:34 – JFK documents?1:03:36 – Twilight Zone
On this episode, Neil and E-Man break down the Kendrick Lamar Superbowl halftime show, New music from The Weeknd and the late Mac Miller, E-Man recaps his recent trip to Portugal and Spain and more! Shout out to the city of Detroit for making February 7th officially "Dilla Day" in honor of the late world renowned producer, J Dilla. Opening: FrostISRad: System of a Down Freestyle(Tiny Desk Submission} Closing: NameNReverse: Holy Water
Welcome back to season six of the NAS Podcast! Episode four sees Origin Crxss and Lisa Haden chat to Baltimore emcee TJ4Play. They talk about his music and influences, his journey, pushing the pen and having the "last laugh".TJ4Play is a conscious emcee from Baltimore, MD with an eclectic and visceral style. Inspired by artists like A Tribe Called Quest Nas and Kendrick Lamar, TJ's infectious lyrics coupled with Kembari's Black Noir production leaves the listener begging for more. In 2021, TJ4Play debuted with an EP Caution: Content's Hot, then released his first single Money Tree at year's end. TJ4Play and Kembari have quietly compiled a vault of singles throughout the years like Old School, Colonizers, Rotary, Mt. Rushmore, and Stedman . With his newest single Metamorphosis, TJ4Play continues to stake his claim as an artist to watch!New Artist Spotlight is a community of indie musicians from around the globe. We believe in the power of numbers so we work together to promote each other's music. Our goal is to create a safe and supportive space where indie musicians can get their music heard and find their first fans.Join the community - https://www.newartistspotlight.org/
Can an oppressed people who gain independence, end up becoming the oppressor of others? Hafsa Kanjwal, associate professor of South Asian History at Lafayette College, examines this in a hotly contested area of the world. Hafsa Kanjwal is an associate professor of South Asian History at Lafayette College. As a historian of modern Kashmir, she […]
Emanuela Trevisan Semi's Taamrat Emmanuel: An Ethiopian Jewish Intellectual, Between Colonized and Colonizers (Centro Primo Levi, 2018) is an insightful biographical study of a key figure among Ethiopian Jews of the early 20th Century. Taamrat Emmanuel was profoundly fascinated by European Jewish culture, by Western thought, and by Italy's language and customs. …His free spirit, his independence and critical thinking, his suspicion of power, his sarcasm, and his irony flowered and were nurtured during his years in Italy as a young man. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Emanuela Trevisan Semi's Taamrat Emmanuel: An Ethiopian Jewish Intellectual, Between Colonized and Colonizers (Centro Primo Levi, 2018) is an insightful biographical study of a key figure among Ethiopian Jews of the early 20th Century. Taamrat Emmanuel was profoundly fascinated by European Jewish culture, by Western thought, and by Italy's language and customs. …His free spirit, his independence and critical thinking, his suspicion of power, his sarcasm, and his irony flowered and were nurtured during his years in Italy as a young man. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Emanuela Trevisan Semi's Taamrat Emmanuel: An Ethiopian Jewish Intellectual, Between Colonized and Colonizers (Centro Primo Levi, 2018) is an insightful biographical study of a key figure among Ethiopian Jews of the early 20th Century. Taamrat Emmanuel was profoundly fascinated by European Jewish culture, by Western thought, and by Italy's language and customs. …His free spirit, his independence and critical thinking, his suspicion of power, his sarcasm, and his irony flowered and were nurtured during his years in Italy as a young man. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/jewish-studies
Emanuela Trevisan Semi's Taamrat Emmanuel: An Ethiopian Jewish Intellectual, Between Colonized and Colonizers (Centro Primo Levi, 2018) is an insightful biographical study of a key figure among Ethiopian Jews of the early 20th Century. Taamrat Emmanuel was profoundly fascinated by European Jewish culture, by Western thought, and by Italy's language and customs. …His free spirit, his independence and critical thinking, his suspicion of power, his sarcasm, and his irony flowered and were nurtured during his years in Italy as a young man. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/african-studies
Send us a textIn this thought-provoking episode, we sit down with Dr. Keolu Fox (Kanaka Maoli) to explore the environmental impacts of artificial intelligence (AI) and what it means for Indigenous data sovereignty. From the energy-hungry servers behind our everyday Googling to the broader implications of AI on Indigenous knowledge systems, we ask: Can AI be done better?Can contemporary Native communities live in harmony with AI, or is it just another tool of colonization? Dr. Fox breaks down the risks, opportunities, and what Indigenous-led AI could look like. If you've ever wondered how technology intersects with sustainability, sovereignty, and cultural preservation, this is the episode for you.Tune in to join the conversation and rethink what AI could mean for the future of Indigenous innovation.++++++Big Thank you's to Dr.Keolu Fox and the Indigenous Futures Institute. Editing & All the things by Teo ShantzEpisode artwork by Ciara SanaFilm work by Francisco SánchezSupport the showFollow us on Instagam @amrpodcast, or support our work on Patreon. Show notes are published on our website, Allmyrelationspodcast.com. Matika's book Project 562: Changing the Way We See Native America is available now! T'igwicid and Hyshqe for being on this journey with us.
In episode 1784, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian and co-host of The Worst Idea of All Time and Til Death Do Us Blart, Tim Batt, to discuss… Social Media Ban Joins Gun Buyback As Thing in Australia That Americans Can Just Watch Jealously, Dictionary.com Names ‘Demure' As Its Word Of The Year For 2024 and more! Social Media Ban Joins Gun Buyback As Thing in Australia That Americans Can Just Watch Jealously Dictionary.com Names ‘Demure' As Its Word Of The Year For 2024 LISTEN: peekaboo (feat. azchike) by Kendrick LamarSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thanks to Lydia and "warblrwatchr" for this week's suggestions! Further reading: Sweet tooth: Ethiopian wolves seen feeding on nectar The African wild dog is not actually a dog and eats lots of things: The aardwolf is not a dog at all and eats insects: The Ethiopian wolf is not a dog (or a wolf or a fox) and eats rodents and nectar [photo by Adrien Lesaffre and taken from this page]: Show transcript: Welcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I'm your host, Kate Shaw. This week we're going to talk about three dog-like animals from Africa, suggested by Lydia and “warblrwatchr,” even though none of the three animals are dogs. We'll start with one of Lydia's suggestions, the African wild dog, also called the painted dog or painted wolf. Despite those names, it's not very closely related to dogs and wolves. It's the only species in its own genus, although it is a member of the family Canidae. Colonizers from Europe thought the animal was just a feral dog, not anything special that should be protected, and they also brought domestic dogs with them to Africa. Domestic dogs mean diseases that other canids can catch. Between introduced diseases, farmers killing the animals to keep them away from livestock, and habitat loss, the African wild dog is endangered. Luckily, these days conservation groups have been working to protect the animal, and its numbers are increasing slowly in Kenya's national parks in particular. The African wild dog is a tall, strong canid with great big ears and no dewclaws. It has a yellowish coat with black blotches and some white spots, including a white tail tip, although some subspecies have darker coats. Unlike most canids, its fur is bristly and doesn't have a soft undercoat, and as the dog ages, it loses its fur until old dogs are nearly bald. It's very social, as canids almost always are, and its varied coat pattern helps individuals recognize friends and pack-mates at a distance. The African wild dog prefers savannas and other open areas. It hunts in packs and mostly preys on antelopes, although it will also kill zebras and other large animals, and individual dogs will sometimes catch small animals like hares and rodents. The African wild dog pack isn't especially hierarchical. The males of the pack are mainly led by the dominant male, while the females are mainly led by the oldest female, who is usually the most dominant. The dominant pair is usually the only pair that has babies. A mother dog has up to 16 pups at a time but only one litter a year. In a lot of animals, as the babies grow up, the males are usually the ones who are driven out of the pack or leave on their own to find a new pack. In the African wild dog, females are the ones who leave as they grow up. Sometimes the females join a different pack and sometimes they start their own. Either way, it stops a pack from becoming inbred. The African wild dog is extremely vocal, making lots of different sounds to communicate with its pack-mates. It sounds a lot more like a bird than a dog. This is what African wild dogs sound like: [doggo sounds] Next, Lydia and warblrwatchr wanted to learn about the aardwolf, which lives in eastern and southern Africa. Unlike the African wild dog, which is mostly active during the day, the aardwolf is nocturnal. It spends most of the day in a burrow, sometimes one it digs itself, but more often one that another animal dug and abandoned at some point. The aardwolf has black stripes on a yellowish or reddish coat, a mane of long hair down its neck and back, large ears, and a bushy tail. It's about the size of a big dog, about 20 inches tall at the shoulders, or 50 cm, but it looks like a small, slender hyena. That's because it is actually a type of hyena, although it's not closely related to other hyenas. Hyenas look dog-like but they aren't canids at all. In fact, they're more closely related to cats than to dogs,
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This week, Jon and Kim discuss some drama in the world of boba. Jon also reluctantly tries his English accent again.Hosted by Kim Chi (@kimchi_chic) and Jon Kung (@JonKung)Produced by Rob PeraArt by @Mamobot Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
(2:00) Media says FEMA is Now the Victim, NOT the VictimsWaPo Misinfo: "Militia Hunting FEMA"Even leftist in Ashville says government has been of no use — its neighbor helping neighbor regardless of political tribeIllegal crime is soaring in NC (now 3rd in nation) thanks to sanctuary sheriff — better pay attention to local races(29:30) Aurora, CO Taken Over? Yes, but FBI says it's nationwideABC's Martha Raddatz doesn't care that several apartment complexes in Aurora have been taken over a Venezuelan gang — and NEITHER DOES THE REPUBLICAN MAYOR. Sound familiar?Owners and managers of the apartment complex taken over by "squatter" gangs speak out on what's really happening after Raddatz's shameful commentsBill Clinton speaks about the border — Did he give Trump his next commercial or were his comments taken out of context? Both parties are lying to you and so is Bill ClintonTrump & the GOP's nightmare vision of biometric surveillance to "protect borders"Why did we have virtually ZERO illegal immigration in the 1950s without ANY wall or border protection?(1:03:36) Leftist Struggle Sessions Over Christopher Columbus — Do You Understand What This is REALLY About?Was Christopher Jewish? Does it matter?New claim that King Arthur was LGBT - do you see a pattern?District of Columbia, Columbia University, and others rail against ColumbusLala hypocritically supports "Indigenous" people and condemns slavery although her Marxist father boasted his family owned slavesWhy it all matters to them and to us(1:27:44) Satanic Temple's Rite to Abortion and HOW MANY ABORTIONS Has Lala Harris Had?Satanic Temple lies to women about abortion pills as it pushes abortion as a religious rite in opposition to anti-abortion liesAs a sex worker who slept her way up the ladder, how many abortions has Lala Harris had?Are Christians who don't vote for Trump "rebelling against God" as a mega-church, MAGA-church pastor says?Glenn Beck says not voting but "just praying" is insane and Kirk Cameron agrees that its immoralFOX skewers Vance about his promise to defund Planned Parenthood and he flees(2:02:59) INTERVIEW A Very Convenient Warming…or how I stopped worrying and learned to love the CO2One group got it right about hurricane Milton — and it wasn't the climate alarmists.Gregory Wrightstone, geologist with 35 years experience and the author of Amazon best seller, "A Very Convenient Warming" Debunking the fear, junk science & alarmism about CO2 — it's a GOOD thingMore resources can be found at CO2Coalition.org and for teaching children, books and resources at CO2LearningCenter.com(2:52:56) UK Shows OUR Future of Electricity Rationing Happening NOW This is where the green policies are taking us — by designIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
(2:00) Media says FEMA is Now the Victim, NOT the VictimsWaPo Misinfo: "Militia Hunting FEMA"Even leftist in Ashville says government has been of no use — its neighbor helping neighbor regardless of political tribeIllegal crime is soaring in NC (now 3rd in nation) thanks to sanctuary sheriff — better pay attention to local races(29:30) Aurora, CO Taken Over? Yes, but FBI says it's nationwideABC's Martha Raddatz doesn't care that several apartment complexes in Aurora have been taken over a Venezuelan gang — and NEITHER DOES THE REPUBLICAN MAYOR. Sound familiar?Owners and managers of the apartment complex taken over by "squatter" gangs speak out on what's really happening after Raddatz's shameful commentsBill Clinton speaks about the border — Did he give Trump his next commercial or were his comments taken out of context? Both parties are lying to you and so is Bill ClintonTrump & the GOP's nightmare vision of biometric surveillance to "protect borders"Why did we have virtually ZERO illegal immigration in the 1950s without ANY wall or border protection?(1:03:36) Leftist Struggle Sessions Over Christopher Columbus — Do You Understand What This is REALLY About?Was Christopher Jewish? Does it matter?New claim that King Arthur was LGBT - do you see a pattern?District of Columbia, Columbia University, and others rail against ColumbusLala hypocritically supports "Indigenous" people and condemns slavery although her Marxist father boasted his family owned slavesWhy it all matters to them and to us(1:27:44) Satanic Temple's Rite to Abortion and HOW MANY ABORTIONS Has Lala Harris Had?Satanic Temple lies to women about abortion pills as it pushes abortion as a religious rite in opposition to anti-abortion liesAs a sex worker who slept her way up the ladder, how many abortions has Lala Harris had?Are Christians who don't vote for Trump "rebelling against God" as a mega-church, MAGA-church pastor says?Glenn Beck says not voting but "just praying" is insane and Kirk Cameron agrees that its immoralFOX skewers Vance about his promise to defund Planned Parenthood and he flees(2:02:59) INTERVIEW A Very Convenient Warming…or how I stopped worrying and learned to love the CO2One group got it right about hurricane Milton — and it wasn't the climate alarmists.Gregory Wrightstone, geologist with 35 years experience and the author of Amazon best seller, "A Very Convenient Warming" Debunking the fear, junk science & alarmism about CO2 — it's a GOOD thingMore resources can be found at CO2Coalition.org and for teaching children, books and resources at CO2LearningCenter.com(2:52:56) UK Shows OUR Future of Electricity Rationing Happening NOW This is where the green policies are taking us — by designIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-real-david-knight-show--5282736/support.
Can you imagine walking out of fourth grade in protest against white supremacy and racism? Dr. John B. Diamond did exactly that before becoming a sociologist studying race and education. He's not alone, did you know about Barbara Johns and the 1951 student walkout in Farmville, VA? In this episode, we break down the relationship between social inequality and educational opportunity, revisit what DuBois described as the color line, and Derrick A. Bell noted as the permanence of white supremacy and anti-Blackness, describe what Brown and the NAACP got wrong, unpack the consequences of distortions and failures (including Black educators losing the ability to teach), discuss the cost of integrating Black students into hostile environments, and the value of what Dr. Jarvis Giving termed “Fugitive Pedagogy” and libratory spaces that are supportive of Black and other non-white, non-privileged students thriving. Educators, system leaders, policymakers, and legal-activist/scholars will want to bookmark this episode. Despite the Best Intentions: How Inequality Thrives in Good Schools 2022 Brown Lecture in Education Research https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uqAC4GoBBww Distributed Leadership in Practice (Critical Issues in Educational Leadership Series) by John B. Diamond and James P. Spillane (Editor), John B. Diamond (Editor), & 1 more
In today's episode, John and Patrick discuss the disruptive impact of British colonization on Kenya and its agricultural landscape. Kenyan farmers and communities faced immense hardships, from having their lands appropriated to being restricted on what crops they could grow. As tensions boil over following the Second World War, leading to open rebellion, the big questions emerge: Will Kenyans reclaim their ancestral lands, or will the British manage to suppress the uprising and hold their ground? And how has this historic conflict shaped modern-day Kenya? Tune in to find out!In Sponsorship with Cornell University: Dyson Cornell SC Johnson College of BusinessJoin the History of Fresh Produce Club (https://app.theproduceindustrypodcast.com/access/) for ad-free listening, bonus episodes, book discounts and access to an exclusive chatroom community.Instagram, TikTok, Threads:@historyoffreshproduceEmail: historyoffreshproduce@gmail.com
In today's episode, John and Patrick discuss the disruptive impact of British colonization on Kenya and its agricultural landscape. Kenyan farmers and communities faced immense hardships, from having their lands appropriated to being restricted on what crops they could grow. As tensions boil over following the Second World War, leading to open rebellion, the big questions emerge: Will Kenyans reclaim their ancestral lands, or will the British manage to suppress the uprising and hold their ground? And how has this historic conflict shaped modern-day Kenya? Tune in to find out!Join the History of Fresh Produce Club (https://app.theproduceindustrypodcast.com/access/) for ad-free listening, bonus episodes, book discounts and access to an exclusive chatroom community.Instagram, TikTok, Threads:@historyoffreshproduceEmail: historyoffreshproduce@gmail.com
Today the Chicks discuss the latest excuse from the Biden campaign, the big push to make Kamala the president, and what Hawk Tuah girl is doing now.Find out how fast they can help you get out of debt with ZERO DEBT USA. Visit https://zapmydebt.comVisit http://fogchicks.com and use promo code CHICKS to save 15% off your order plus Free Rush ShippingPamper your pet with a new dog bed from MyPillow. Visit https://Mypillow.com and use Code CHICKS - Save big during the $25 Extravaganza!
If you grew up outside of Africa, you might know Haile Selassie's name from reggae music - the man who ruled Ethiopia is considered a god in Jamaica. In Ethiopia opinions are more varied. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.