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Gio shared a story about young kids driving to McDonald's. Jerry's final update featured Kevin Harlan's call of the Knicks' Game 1 win in Boston. The Mets homered to victory, while the Yankees lost at home. Roger Goodell and Donald Trump announced the 2027 NFL Draft in DC. The Moment of the Day highlighted a listener's change of heart and a jab at Evan's attire. In the final segment, former Sixers fan Abdul Carter might become a Knicks fan. They discussed Carter's jersey number and the Giants' decision to give Malik Nabers the retired #1. The show ended with a clip of Bill de Blasio promoting vaccinations with free food.
Hour 1 The Knicks beat the Celtics in Boston (Game 1). Boomer discussed bench performances and Boston's record number of missed threes, calling their 60 three-point attempts "lazy basketball." He noted three road teams won Game 1, attributing it to excessive rest. Gio sees reasons for Knicks' series belief, praising OG Anunoby and Jalen Brunson's ball-handling. Jerry's update included the Knicks' post-game sound. The Nuggets also won Game 1 on the road. The Mets beat Arizona with homers from Lindor and Alonso, while the Yankees lost to the Padres. The Ravens released Justin Tucker, and the Islanders won the draft lottery. Actor Timothee Chalamet skipped the MET Gala to support the Knicks, while Spike Lee attended the Gala instead. Hour 2 Last night, the Knicks won Game 1 in Boston, fueled by Villanova players Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart, and Mikal Bridges. Boomer observed Hart sometimes seems hesitant to shoot, while Gio apologized to Bridges (Boomer's reaction: "who cares?"). Jerry's update featured Kevin Harlan's call of the Knicks' victory and Coach Thibs discussing their road playoff performance. The Yankees lost their third straight game. Lindor and Alonso homered in the Mets' win in Arizona. The hour concluded with Knicks fan calls. Hour 3 Can the Knicks win the first two in Boston? Boomer noted the Celtics' off night and injuries, highlighting the Villanova players' performance. While Boomer was happy with the Knicks' win, Gio insisted it doesn't preclude criticizing Towns. A reluctant woman now enjoys the show. Jerry's update included Tommy Lugauer's pre-Game 1 "Knicks in six" prediction, the Celtics missing 45 of 60 three-pointers, and Evan Roberts' reaction. The Yankees lost again due to Devin Williams' rough inning. The Mets won in Arizona despite bullpen struggles. The Islanders won the draft lottery. Game 2 is tomorrow in Boston, followed by a Saturday game at the Garden. Gio almost gave up watching when the Knicks were down 20. Hour 4 Gio shared a story about young kids driving to McDonald's. Jerry's final update featured Kevin Harlan's call of the Knicks' Game 1 win in Boston. The Mets homered to victory, while the Yankees lost at home. Roger Goodell and Donald Trump announced the 2027 NFL Draft in DC. The Moment of the Day highlighted a listener's change of heart and a jab at Evan's attire. In the final segment, former Sixers fan Abdul Carter might become a Knicks fan. They discussed Carter's jersey number and the Giants' decision to give Malik Nabers the retired #1. The show ended with a clip of Bill de Blasio promoting vaccinations with free food.
Energy Vista: A Podcast on Energy Issues, Professional and Personal Trajectories
In this episode of Energy Vista, Leslie Palti-Guzman speaks with Nicola De Blasio, Senior Fellow at Harvard's Belfer Center, about the transformative potential of #blockchain #technology in #energy systems. They explore how blockchain can improve energy #trading, certify low-carbon commodities like #hydrogen, and enable #decentralized energy access. Nicola also discusses the challenges to adoption — from regulation to misconceptions — and why collaboration across industry, government, and innovators is key to unlocking blockchain's promise. Education is also critical for adoption of this new technology.Recorded on April 25, 2025.
The chaos at the Pentagon is getting worse as more and more news stories about Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth continue to pour out. And now, the staffers he fired (that he also hired) for allegedly leaking are coming after him. They're eating their own–and the mayhem is expanding quickly and overwhelming Hegseth and The Building. What happens next? Will Trump fire him? Who could replace him? Who's watching our nukes?!?! It's another wild week in America–and time for another walk and talk. And this week, Paul is back in New York City. And spring has finally sprung in the Big Apple. And the political chaos here continues to grow like tulips in the sunshine. It's also home to some of the worst mayors anyone has ever seen. From the epic failure that was DeBlasio to the now disgraced Giuliani, to the criminally corrupt and incompetent Eric Adams, the city that never sleeps also seems to be the city that can never catch a break when it comes to good leadership. And with Trump constantly focused on it, what happens in NYC impacts the world now more than ever. And this fall, there's a massive off-cycle election to determine who takes if from here. And this week, we've got a candidate for Mayor that wants to end the chaos. And wants to do it differently: as an independent. But you've probably never heard of him until now. Jim Walden (@JimForNYC) is a former prosecutor for the Eastern District of New York and a first time candidate. He's prosecuted mob bosses, corrupt governments, institutions and defended Chris Krebs when Trump came after him. He's a centrist who is offering solutions to problems from the middle. He's got a bold centrist view and a political affiliation that make his visit to this show timely, important and unique. And he shares his vision for the future, why he's an independent, what he thinks of Democrat Eric Adams running as an independent, what he'll do on crime, prices, immigration, Trump and more. It's the first conversation for 2025 in our annual “Meet The Independent Candidates” series. And it's one you don't want to miss. From open primaries to the city's regulation of helicopter traffic after a terrible recent crash, it's a candid and serious conversation with a candidate that deserves more attention. Because Jim Walden is what a lot of people say they want their politicians to sound like. Reasonable, rational, centrist. But he's also new and inexperienced. And he's joining us to face some hard questions from the best independent show in America. It's a refreshing dose of independence and inspiration you probably need after all of the other crazy news of the last week. And we cover all of that too. Because if it's related to National Security and veterans, we've got you covered. From Hegseth and his growing crisis of confidence to Rubio abandoning his duty — and Ukraine, the hits keep coming. And your host Paul Rieckhoff has you covered. Welcome to Independent Americans. Welcome to Episode 330. Be sure to check it out on our YouTube page here. -Get extra content, connect with guests, attend exclusive events, get merch discounts and support this critical show that speaks truth to power by joining our IA community on Patreon. -NEW! Watch the video version of the entire podcast here. -Find us on social media and www.IndependentAmericans.us. Where you can also get some very cool IA merch in time for Easter, Mother's Day or Father's Day. -Check out Jim Walden's website. Ways to listen: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0F1lzdRbTB0XYen8kyEqXe Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/independent-americans-with-paul-rieckhoff/id1457899667 Ways to watch: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@independentamericans Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/IndependentAmericansUS/ Social channels: X/Twitter: https://x.com/indy_americans BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/indyamericans.bsky.social Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IndependentAmericansUS/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode is with the distinguished Rev Frederick Davie, former Chairman of the NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board and retired executive vice president of the world famous Union Theological Seminary in New York on.Rev Davie has worked along side-by-side with some of the most influential figures of the late 20th and early centuries! He worked in the administration's of President Bill Clinton and Barack Obama to the Mayoral administration's of NYC mayor David Dinkins and Bill DeBlasio. Sit back and watch or listen on Podcast to this terrific conversation...you will love it.
Jane Blasio was six years old when she was first called a 'black market baby.' Taunts from her peers at school forced her parents to tell her that she was adopted. The news planted the seed of desire to learn the truth about her birth family. But on her quest for answers, Jane learned that she was stolen at birth and sold as part of a sinister baby trafficking ring. Author Jane Blasio discusses her quest for truth and justice and shares how she broke the story of the horrors that took place inside of Dr. Thomas Hicks' clinic, as detailed in her book, Taken At Birth. Follow Emily on Instagram: @realemilycompagno If you have a story or topic we should feature on the FOX True Crime Podcast, send us an email at: truecrimepodcast@fox.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Neighbors say the man fatally shot by police in Astoria this week struggled with mental health issues and had been left without support following his parents' deaths. Meanwhile, Governor Hochul vows to fight the Trump administration's decision to pause a major wind energy project off Long Island. Plus, in this week's Politics Brief, a Trump administration official is asking prosecutors to investigate whether New York Attorney General Letitia James committed mortgage fraud, former Governor Cuomo faces mixed news in the mayoral race, former Mayor Bill de Blasio reappears alongside Mayor Adams, and state lawmakers weigh a ban on flavored nicotine pouches as budget talks continue.
This is the All Local 4pm update for April 16, 2025
The All Local Afternoon Update for Wednesday, April 16 2025
For episode 44 of Staffcast, Tom and Richard are joined by Lindsey Adler to talk about baseball phrenology, transitioning...to pitching, asking every important person you come across to rank The Beatles, the new generation of Georgeheads, a Dan Flashes Party, two-tone summer, Tony Hawk's Pro Skater, Bill de Blasio, and more!Subscribe to Lindsey's Substack! Follow your incredibly cool hosts and guest:Lindsey AdlerSean DoolittleTrevor HildenbergerRichard StaffTom HackimerEpisode art by Abigail Noy (sympatheticinker.com)Edited by Italian Dave (twitter.com/theitaliandave)Intro: Reclamation - FugaziOutro: Shooting Stars - Bag Raiders
Former Mayor Bill de Blasio isn't ready to back any candidates in New York City's mayoral race. Plus, some Muslim worshippers on Long Island have a new ally in a quest to build an upgraded mosque in Nassau County. Also, there are a couple days left of juror selection in the high profile case of Harvey Weinstein. And finally, the Forest Hills Stadium summer concert series is officially back on after months of bitter standoff between venue organizers and a group of residents in the area.
Today's guest is Peter Moskos, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He spent two years as a police officer in Baltimore. I asked him to come on and talk about his new book, Back from the Brink, Inside the NYPD and New York City's Extraordinary 1990s Crime Drop. It's one of my favorite books I've read this year (and it was one of my three book recommendations on Ezra Klein's show last week).Peter spoke with hundreds of police officers and NYC officials to understand and describe exactly how the city's leaders in the early 1990s managed to drive down crime so successfully.We discussed:* How bad did things get in the 1970s?* Why did processing an arrest take so long?* What did Bill Bratton and other key leaders do differently?* How did police get rid of the squeegee men?I've included my reading list at the bottom of this piece. Thanks to Harry Fletcher-Wood for his judicious transcript edits.Subscribe for one new interview a week.Peter, how would you describe yourself?I would say I'm a criminologist: my background is sociology, but I am not in the sociology department. I'm not so big on theory, and sociology has a lot of theory. I was a grad student at Harvard in sociology and worked as a police officer [in Baltimore] and that became my dissertation and first book, Cop in the Hood. I've somewhat banked my career on those 20 months in the police department.Not a lot of sociologists spend a couple of years working a police beat.It's generally frowned upon, both for methodological reasons and issues of bias. But there is also an ideological opposition in a lot of academia to policing. It's seen as going to the dark side and something to be condemned, not understood.Sociologists said crime can't go down unless we fix society first. It's caused by poverty, racism, unemployment, and social and economic factors — they're called the root causes. But they don't seem to have a great impact on crime, as important as they are. When I'm in grad school, murders dropped 30-40% in New York City. At the same time, Mayor Giuliani is slashing social spending, and poverty is increasing. The whole academic field is just wrong. I thought it an interesting field to get into.We're going to talk about your new book, which is called Back from the Brink, Inside the NYPD and New York City's Extraordinary 1990s Crime Drop. I had a blast reading it. Tell me about the process of writing it.A lot of this is oral history, basically. But supposedly people don't like buying books that are called oral histories. It is told entirely from the perspective of police officers who were on the job at the time. I would not pretend I talked to everyone, because there were 30,000+ cops around, but I spoke to many cops and to all the major players involved in the 1990s crime drop in New York City.I was born in the ‘90s, and I had no idea about a crazy statistic you cite: 25% of the entire national crime decline was attributable to New York City's crime decline.In one year, yeah. One of the things people say to diminish the role of policing is that the crime drop happened everywhere — and it did end up happening almost everywhere. But I think that is partly because what happened in New York City was a lot of hard work, but it wasn't that complicated. It was very easy to propagate, and people came to New York to find out what was going on. You could see results, literally in a matter of months.It happened first in New York City. Really, it happened first in the subways and that's interesting, because if crime goes down in the subways [which, at the time, fell under the separate New York City Transit Police] and not in the rest of the city, you say, “What is going on in the subways that is unique?” It was the exact same strategies and leadership that later transformed the NYPD [New York Police Department].Set the scene: What was the state of crime and disorder in New York in the ‘70s and into the ‘80s?Long story short, it was bad. Crime in New York was a big problem from the late ‘60s up to the mid ‘90s, and the ‘70s is when the people who became the leaders started their careers. So these were defining moments. The city was almost bankrupt in 1975 and laid off 5,000 cops; 3,000 for a long period of time. That was arguably the nadir. It scarred the police department and the city.Eventually, the city got its finances in order and came to the realization that “we've got a big crime problem too.” That crime problem really came to a head with crack cocaine. Robberies peaked in New York City in 1980. There were above 100,000 robberies in 1981, and those are just reported robberies. A lot of people get robbed and just say, “It's not worth it to report,” or, “I'm going to work,” or, “Cops aren't going to do anything.” The number of robberies and car thefts was amazingly high. The trauma, the impact on the city and on urban space, and people's perception of fear, all comes from that. If you're afraid of crime, it's high up on the hierarchy of needs.To some extent, those lessons have been lost or forgotten. Last year there were 16,600 [robberies], which is a huge increase from a few years ago, but we're still talking an 85% reduction compared to the worst years. It supposedly wasn't possible. What I wanted to get into in Back from the Brink was the actual mechanisms of the crime drop. I did about fifty formal interviews and hundreds of informal interviews building the story. By and large, people were telling the same story.In 1975, the city almost goes bankrupt. It's cutting costs everywhere, and it lays off more than 5,000 cops, about 20% of the force, in one day. There's not a new police academy class until 1979, four years later. Talk to me about where the NYPD was at that time.They were retrenched, and the cops were demoralized because “This is how the city treats us?” The actual process of laying off the cops itself was just brutal: they went to work, and were told once they got to work that they were no longer cops. “Give me your badge, give me your gun."The city also was dealing with crime, disorder, and racial unrest. The police department was worried about corruption, which was a legacy of the Knapp Commission [which investigated NYPD corruption] and [Frank] Serpico [a whistleblowing officer]. It's an old police adage, that if you don't work, you can't get in trouble. That became very much the standard way of doing things. Keep your head low, stay out of trouble, and you'll collect your paycheck and go home.You talk about the blackout in 1977, when much of the city lost power and you have widespread looting and arson. 13,000 off-duty cops get called in during the emergency, and only about 5,000 show up, which is a remarkable sign of the state of morale.The person in my book who's talking about that is Louis Anemone. He showed up because his neighbor and friend and partner was there, and he's got to help him. It was very much an in-the-foxholes experience. I contrast that with the more recent blackout, in which the city went and had a big block party instead. That is reflective of the change that happened in the city.In the mid-80s you get the crack cocaine epidemic. Talk to me about how police respond.From a political perspective, that era coincided with David Dinkins as [New York City's first black] mayor. He was universally disliked, to put it mildly, by white and black police officers alike. He was seen as hands off. He was elected in part to improve racial relations in New York City, to mitigate racial strife, but in Crown Heights and Washington Heights, there were riots, and racial relations got worse. He failed at the level he was supposed to be good at. Crime and quality of life were the major issues in that election.Dinkins's approach to the violence is centered around what they called “community policing.” Will you describe how Dinkins and political leaders in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s thought about policing?This is under Ben Ward, the [NYPD] Commissioner at the time. The mayor appoints the police commissioner — and the buck does stop with the mayor — but the mayor is not actively involved in day-to-day operations. That part does go down to the police department.Community policing was seen as an attempt to improve relations between the police and the community. The real goal was to lessen racial strife and unrest between black (and to a lesser extent Hispanic) communities and the NYPD. Going back to the ‘60s, New York had been rocked by continued unrest in neighborhoods like Central Harlem, East New York, and Bushwick. Community policing was seen as saying that police are partly to blame, and we want to improve relations. Some of it was an attempt to get the community more involved in crime fighting.It's tough. It involves a certain rosy view of the community, but that part of the community isn't causing the problems. It avoids the fact there are people who are actively criming and are willing to hurt people who get in their way. Community policing doesn't really address the active criminal element, that is a small part of any community, including high-crime communities.Arrests increased drastically during this era, more than in the ‘90s with broken windows policing. If the idea is to have fewer arrests, it didn't happen in the ‘80s. Some good came out of it, because it did encourage cops to be a bit more active and cops are incentivized by overtime. Arrests were so incredibly time-consuming, which kind of defeated the purpose of community policing. If you made an arrest in that era, there was a good chance you might spend literally 24 hours processing the arrest.Will you describe what goes into that 24 hours?From my experience policing in Baltimore, I knew arrests were time-consuming and paperwork redundant, but I could process a simple arrest in an hour or two. Even a complicated one that involved juveniles and guns and drugs, we're talking six to eight hours.In the ‘80s, Bob Davin, [in the] Transit Police, would say they'd make an arrest, process at the local precinct, search him in front of a desk officer, print him, and then they would have to get a radio car off patrol to drive you down to central booking at 100 Centre Street [New York City Criminal Court]. Then they would fingerprint him. They didn't have the live scan fingerprints machine, it was all ink. It had to be faxed up to Albany and the FBI to see if it hit on any warrant federally and for positive identification of the person. Sometimes it took 12 hours to have the prints come back and the perp would be remanded until that time. Then you'd have to wait for the prosecutor to get their act together and to review all the paperwork. You couldn't consider bail unless the prints came back either positive or negative and then you would have that initial arraignment and the cop could then go home. There are a lot of moving parts, and they moved at a glacial pace.The system often doesn't work 24/7. A lot of this has changed, but some of it was having to wait until 9 am for people to show up to go to work, because it's not a single system. The courts, the jails, and policing all march to their own drummer, and that created a level of inefficiency.So much of the nitty-gritty of what cops actually do is boring, behind-the-scenes stuff: How do we speed up the paperwork? Can we group prisoners together? Can we do some of this at the police station instead of taking it downtown? Is all of this necessary? Can we cooperate with the various prosecutors? There are five different prosecutors in New York City, one for each borough.There's not a great incentive to streamline this. Cops enjoyed the overtime. That's one of the reasons they would make arrests. So during this time, if a cop makes an arrest for drug dealing, that cop is gone and no cop was there to replace him. If it's a minor arrest, there's a good chance in the long run charges will be dropped anyway. And you're taking cops off the street. In that sense, it's lose-lose. But, you have to think, “What's the alternative?”Bob Davin is a fascinating guy. There's a famous picture from 1981 by Martha Cooper of two cops on a subway train. It's graffitied up and they're in their leather jackets and look like cops from the ‘70s. Martha Cooper graciously gave me permission to use the picture, but she said, "You have to indemnify me because I don't have a release form. I don't know who the cops are." I said, "Martha, I do know who the cop is, because he's in my book and he loves the picture.” Bob Davin is the cop on the right.Davin says that things started to get more efficient. They had hub sites in the late ‘80s or ‘90s, so precincts in the north of Manhattan could bring their prisoners there, and you wouldn't have to take a car out of service to go back to Central Booking and deal with traffic. They started collecting prisoners and bringing them en masse on a small school bus, and that would cut into overtime. Then moving to electronic scan fingerprints drastically saves time waiting for those to come back.These improvements were made, but some of them involve collective bargaining with unions, to limit overtime and arrests that are made for the pure purpose of overtime. You want cops making arrests for the right reason and not simply to make money. But boy, there was a lot of money made in arrests.In 1991, you have the infamous Crown Heights riot in Brooklyn. Racial tensions kick off. It's a nightmare for the mayor, there's this sense that he has lost control. The following year, you have this infamous police protest at City Hall where it becomes clear the relationship between the cops and the mayor has totally evaporated. How does all that play into the mayoral race between Dinkins and Giuliani?It was unintentional, but a lot of the blame for Crown Heights falls on the police department. The part of the story that is better known is that there was a procession for a Hasidic rabbi that was led by a police car. He would go to his wife's grave, and he got a little three-car motorcade. At some point, the police look at this and go "Why are we doing this? We're going to change it." The man who made the deal said ‘I"m retiring in a couple weeks, can we just leave it till then? Because I gave him my word." They're like, "Alright, whatever."This motor car procession is then involved in a car crash, and a young child named Gavin Cato is killed, and another girl is severely injured. The volunteer, Jewish-run ambulance shows up and decides they don't have the equipment: they call for a professional city ambulance. Once that ambulance is on the way, they take the mildly-injured Jewish people to the hospital. The rumor starts that the Jewish ambulance abandoned the black children to die.This isn't the first incident. There's long been strife over property and who the landlord is. But this was the spark that set off riots. A young Jewish man was randomly attacked on the street and was killed.As an aside, he also shouldn't have died, but at the hospital they missed internal bleeding.Meanwhile, the police department has no real leadership at the time. One chief is going to retire, another is on vacation, a third doesn't know what he's doing, and basically everyone is afraid to do anything. So police do nothing. They pull back, and you have three days of very anti-Semitic riots. Crowds chanting "Kill the Jews" and marching on the Lubavitch Hasidic Headquarters. Al Sharpton shows up. The riots are blamed on Dinkins, which is partly fair, but a lot of that's on the NYPD. Finally, the mayor and the police commissioner go to see what's going on and they get attacked. It's the only time in New York City history that there's ever been an emergency call from the police commissioner's car. People are throwing rocks at it.It took three days to realise this, but that's when they say “We have to do something here,” and they gather a group of officers who later become many of Bratton's main chiefs at the time [Bill Bratton was Commissioner of the NYPD from 1994-1996, under Giuliani]: Mike Julian, Louis Anemone, Ray Kelly, and [John] Timoney. They end the unrest in a day. They allow people to march, they get the police department to set rules. It still goes on for a bit, but no one gets hurt after that, and that's it.It was a huge, national story at the time, but a lot of the details were not covered. Reporters were taken from their car and beaten and stripped. The significance was downplayed at the time, especially by the New York Times, I would say.That's followed by the Washington Heights riots, which is a different story. A drug dealer was shot and killed by cops. There were rumors, which were proven to be false, that he was executed and unarmed. Then there were three days of rioting there. It wasn't quite as severe, but 53 cops were hurt, 120 stores were set on fire, and Mayor Dinkins paid for the victim's family to go to the Dominican Republic for the funeral. The police perspective again was, “You're picking the wrong side here.”Then there's the so-called Police Riot at City Hall. Nominally, it was about the CCRB, the Civilian Complaint Review Board, and setting up an accountability mechanism to control cops. But really it was just an anti-Dinkins protest. It was drunken and unruly. The cops stormed the steps of City Hall. I have the account of one of the cops who was on the top of those steps looking at this mob of cops storming to him, and he's getting worried he's going to be killed in a crush. There were racist chants from off-duty cops in the crowd. It did not reflect well on police officers. But it showed this hatred of David Dinkins, who was seen as siding with criminals and being anti-police. The irony is that Dinkins is the one who ends up hiring all the cops that Giuliani gets credit for.In the “Safe Streets, Safe City” program?Yes. That was because a white tourist, Brian Watkins, was killed in a subway station protecting his parents who were getting robbed. That led to the famous headline [in the New York Post] of “Dave, do something! Crime-ravaged city cries out for help.” He, with City Council President Peter Vallone, Sr., drafted and pushed through this massive hiring of police officers, “Safe Streets, Safe City.”The hiring wasn't fast-tracked. It might be because Dinkins's people didn't really want more cops. But it was a Dinkins push that got a massive hiring of cops. When the first huge class of police officers graduated, Bill Bratton was there and not David Dinkins.Some interviewees in your book talk about how there's physically not enough room in the police academies at this time, so they have to run classes 24/7. You cycle cohorts in and out of the same classroom, because there are too many new cops for the facilities.You have thousands of cops going through it at once. Everyone describes it as quite a chaotic scene. But it would have been hard to do what the NYPD did without those cops. Ray Kelly, who was police commissioner under Dinkins at the end [from 1992 to 1994] before he became police commissioner for 12 years under Bloomberg [from 2002 to 2013] probably could have done something with those cops too, but he never had the chance, because the mayoral leadership at the time was much more limiting in what they wanted cops to do.Crime starts declining slowly in the first few years of the ‘90s under Dinkins, and then in ‘93 Giuliani wins a squeaker of a mayoral election against Dinkins.One of the major issues was the then-notorious “squeegee men” of New York City. These were guys who would go to cars stopped at bridges and tunnel entrances and would rub a squeegee over the windshield asking for money. It was unpleasant, intimidating, and unwanted, and it was seen as one of those things that were just inevitable. Like graffiti on the subway in the ‘80s. Nothing we can do about it because these poor people don't have jobs or housing or whatever.The irony is that Bratton and Giuliani were happy to take credit for that, and it was an issue in the mayoral campaign, but it was solved under David Dinkins and Ray Kelly and Mike Julian with the help of George Kelling [who, with James Wilson, came up with broken windows theory]. But they never got credit for it. One wonders if, had they done that just a few months earlier, it would have shifted the entire campaign and we'd have a different course of history in New York City.It's a great example of a couple of things that several people in your book talk about. One is that disorder is often caused by a very small set of individuals. There's only like 70 squeegee men, yet everybody sees them, because they're posted up at the main tunnel and bridge entrances to Manhattan. And getting them off the streets solves the problem entirely.Another emphasis in the book is how perceptions of crime are central. You quote Jack Maple, the father of Compstat, as saying, “A murder on the subway counts as a multiple murder up on the street, because everybody feels like that's their subway.” The particular locations of crimes really affect public perception.Absolutely. Perception is reality for a lot of these things, because most people aren't victimized by crime. But when people perceive that no one is in control they feel less safe. It's not that this perception is false, it just might not be directly related to an actual criminal act.The other thing I try to show is that it's not just saying, “We've got to get rid of squeegee men. How do you do it?” They had tried before, but this is why you need smart cops and good leadership, because it's a problem-solving technique, and the way to get rid of graffiti is different to the way you get rid of squeegee men.This book is in opposition to those who just say, “We can't police our way out of this problem.” No, we can. We can't police our way out of every problem. But if you define the problem as, we don't want people at intersections with squeegees, of course we can police our way out of the problem, using legal constitutional tools. You need the political will. And then the hard work starts, because you have to figure out how to actually do it.Will you describe how they tackle the squeegee men problem?Mike Julian was behind it. They hired George Kelling, who's known for broken windows. They said, “These people are here to make money. So to just go there and make a few arrests isn't going to solve the problem.” First of all, he had to figure out what legal authority [to use], and he used Traffic Reg 44 [which prohibits pedestrians from soliciting vehicle occupants]. He talked to Norm Siegel of the NYCLU [New York Civil Liberties Union] about this, who did not want this crackdown to happen. But Norman said, “Okay, this is the law, I can't fight that one. You're doing it legally. It's all in the books.” And So that took away that opposition.But the relentless part of it is key. First they filmed people. Then, when it came to enforcement, they warned people. Then they cited people, and anybody that was left they arrested. They did not have to arrest many people, because the key is they did this every four hours. It was that that changed behavior, because even a simple arrest isn't going to necessarily deter someone if it's a productive way to make money. But being out there every four hours for a couple of weeks or months was enough to get people to do something else. What that something else is, we still don't know, but we solved the squeegee problem.So in 93, Giuliani is elected by something like 50,000 votes overall. Just as an aside, in Prince of the City, Fred Siegel describes something I had no idea about. There's a Puerto Rican Democratic Councilman who flips and supports Giuliani. Mayor Eric Adams, who at the time was the head of a nonprofit for black men in law enforcement, calls him a race traitor for doing that and for being married to a white woman. There was a remarkable level of racial vitriol in that race that I totally missed.10 years ago when I started this, I asked if I could interview then-Brooklyn borough president Eric Adams, and he said yes, and the interview kept getting rescheduled, and I said, “Eh, I don't need him.” It's a regret of mine. I should have pursued that, but coulda, woulda, shoulda.Giuliani is elected, and he campaigns very explicitly on a reducing crime and disorder platform. And he hires Bill Bratton. Tell me about Bratton coming on board as NYPD commissioner.Bratton grew up in Boston, was a police officer there, became head of the New York City Transit Police when that was a separate police department. Right before he becomes NYPD Commissioner, he's back in Boston, as the Chief of Police there, and there is a movement among certain people to get Bratton the NYC job. They succeed in that, and Bratton is a very confident man. He very much took a broken windows approach and said, “We are going to focus on crime.” He has a right-hand man by the name of Jack Maple who he knows from the Transit Police. Maple is just a lieutenant in transit, and Bratton makes him the de facto number two man in the police department.Jack Maple passed away in 2001 and I didn't know what I was going to do, because it's hard to interview a man who's no longer alive. Chris Mitchell co-wrote Jack Maple's autobiography called Crime Fighter and he graciously gave me all the micro-cassettes of the original interviews he conducted with Maple around 1998. Everyone has a Jack Maple story. He's probably the most important character in Back from the Brink.Jack Maple comes in, no one really knows who he is, no one respects him because he was just a lieutenant in Transit. He goes around and asks a basic question — this is 1994 — he says, “How many people were shot in New York City in 1993?” And nobody knows. That is the state of crime-fighting in New York City before this era. There might have been 7,000 people shot in New York City in 1990 and we just don't know, even to this day.One citation from your book: in 1993, an average of 16 people were shot every day. Which is just remarkable.And remember, shootings have been declining for two or three years before that! But nobody knew, because they weren't keeping track of shootings, because it's not one of the FBI Uniform Crime Report [which tracks crime data nationally] index crimes. But wouldn't you be curious? It took Jack Maple to be curious, so he made people count, and it was findable, but you had to go through every aggravated assault and see if a gun was involved. You had to go through every murder from the previous year and see if it was a shooting. He did this. So we only have shooting data in New York City going back to 1993. It's just a simple process of caring.The super-short version of Back from the Brink is it was a change in mission statement: “We're going to care about crime.” Because they hadn't before. They cared about corruption, racial unrest, brutality, and scandal. They cared about the clearance rate for robbery a bit. You were supposed to make three arrests for every ten robberies. It didn't matter so much that you were stopping a pattern or arresting the right person, as long as you had three arrests for every ten reported crimes, that was fine.This is a story about people who cared. They're from this city — Bratton wasn't, but most of the rest are. They understood the trauma of violence and the fact that people with families were afraid to go outside, and nobody in the power structure seemed to care. So they made the NYPD care about this. Suddenly, the mid-level police executives, the precinct commanders, had to care. and the meetings weren't about keeping overtime down, instead they were about ”What are you doing to stop this shooting?”Tell listeners a little bit more about Jack Maple, because he's a remarkable character, and folks may not know what a kook he was.I think he was a little less kooky than he liked to present. His public persona was wearing a snazzy cat and spats and dressing like a fictional cartoon detective from his own mind, but he's a working-class guy from Queens who becomes a transit cop.When Bratton takes over, he writes a letter up the chain of command saying this is what we should do. Bratton read it and said, “This guy is smart.” Listening to 80 hours of Jack Maple, everyone correctly says he was a smart guy, but he had a very working-class demeanor and took to the elite lifestyle. He loved hanging out and getting fancy drinks at the Plaza Hotel. He was the idea man of the NYPD. Everyone has a Jack Maple imitation. “You're talking to the Jackster,” he'd say. He had smart people working under him who were supportive of this. But it was very much trying to figure out as they went along, because the city doesn't stop nor does it sleep.He was a bulls***er, but he's the one who came up with the basic outline of the strategy of crime reduction in New York City. He famously wrote it on a napkin at Elaine's, and it said, “First, we need to gather accurate and timely intelligence.” And that was, in essence, CompStat. “Then, we need to deploy our cops to where they need to be.” That was a big thing. He found out that cops weren't working: specialized units weren't working weekends and nights when the actual crime was happening. They had their excuses, but basically they wanted a cushy schedule. He changed that. Then, of course, you have to figure out what you're doing, what the effective tactics are. Then, constant follow up and assessment.You can't give up. You can't say “Problem solved.” A lot of people say it wasn't so much if your plan didn't work, you just needed a Plan B. It was the idea that throwing your hands in the air and saying, “What are you going to do?” that became notoriously unacceptable under Chief Anemone's stern demeanor at CompStat. These were not pleasant meetings. Those are the meetings that both propagated policies that work and held officers accountable. There was some humiliation going on, so CompStat was feared.Lots of folks hear CompStat and think about better tracking of crime locations and incidents. But as you flesh out, the meat on the bones of CompStat was this relentless follow-up. You'd have these weekly meetings early in the morning with all the precinct heads. There were relentless asks from the bosses, “What's going on in your district or in your precinct? Can you explain why this is happening? What are you doing to get these numbers down?” And follow-ups the following week or month. It was constant.CompStat is often thought of as high-tech computer stuff. It wasn't. There was nothing that couldn't have been done with old overhead projectors. It's just that no one had done it before. Billy Gorta says it's a glorified accountability system at a time when nobody knew anything about computers. Everyone now has access to crime maps on a computer. It was about actually gathering accurate, timely data.Bratton was very concerned that these numbers had to be right. It was getting everyone in the same room and saying, “This is what our focus is going to be now.” And getting people to care about crime victims, especially when those crime victims might be unsympathetic because of their demeanor, criminal activity, or a long arrest record. “We're going to care about every shooting, we're going to care about every murder.”Part of it was cracking down on illegal guns. There were hundreds of tactics. The federal prosecutors also played a key role. It was getting this cooperation. Once it started working and Giuliani made it a major part of claiming success as mayor, suddenly everyone wanted to be part of this, and you had other city agencies trying to figure it out. So it was a very positive feedback loop, once it was seen as a success.When Bratton came on the job, he said, “I'm going to bring down crime 15%.” No police commissioner had ever said that before. In the history of policing before 1994, no police commissioner ever promised a double-digit reduction in crime or even talked about it. People said “That's crazy.” It was done, and then year after year. That's the type of confidence that they had. They were surprised it worked as well as it did, but they all had the sense that there's a new captain on this ship, and we're trying new things. It was an age of ideas and experiment.And it was a very short time.That's the other thing that surprised me. Giuliani fired Bratton in the middle of ‘96.It's remarkable. Bratton comes in ‘94, and August 1994 is where you see crime drop off a cliff. You have this massive beginning of the reduction that continues.That inflection point is important for historical knowledge. I don't address alternatives that other people have proposed [to explain the fall in crime] — For example, the reduction in lead [in gasoline, paint, and water pipes] or legalized abortion with Roe v. Wade [proposed by Stephen Dubner].Reasonable people can differ. Back from the Brink focuses on the police part of the equation. Today, almost nobody, except for a few academics, says that police had nothing to do with the crime drop. That August inflection is key, because there is nothing in a lagged time analysis going back 20 years that is going to say that is the magic month where things happened. Yet if you look at what happened in CompStat, that's the month they started getting individual officer data, and noticing that most cops made zero arrests, and said, “Let's get them in the game as well.” And that seemed to be the key; that's when crime fell off the table. The meetings started in April, I believe, but August is really when the massive crime drop began.To your point about the confidence that crime could be driven down double digits year over year, there's a great quote you have from Jack Maple, where he says to a fellow cop, “This is going to be like shooting fish in a barrel. As long as we have absolute control, we can absolutely drive this number into the floor.”One detail I enjoyed was that Jack Maple, when he was a transit cop, would camp out under a big refrigerator box with little holes cut out for eyes and sit on the subway platform waiting for crooks.For people who are interested in Jack Maple, it is worth reading his autobiography, Crime Fighter. Mike Daly wrote New York's Finest, which uses the same tapes that I had access to, and he is much more focused on that. He's actually the godfather of Jack Maple's son, who is currently a New York City police officer. But Maple and co were confident, and it turned out they were right.As well as having changes in tactics and approach and accountability across the NYPD, you also have a series of specific location cleanups. You have a specific initiative focused on the Port Authority, which is a cesspool at the time, an initiative in Times Square, the Bryant Park cleanup, and then Giuliani also focuses on organized crime on the Fulton Fish Market, and this open-air market in Harlem.I was struck that there was both this general accountability push in the NYPD through CompStat, and a relentless focus on cleaning up individual places that were hubs of disorder.I'm not certain the crime drop would have happened without reclamation of public spaces and business improvement districts. Bryant Park's a fascinating story because Dan Biederman, who heads the Corporation, said, “People just thought it was like a lost cause, this park can't be saved. The city is in a spiral of decline.” He uses Jane Jacobs' “eyes on the street” theory and then George Kelling and James Q. Wilson's broken windows theory. The park has money — not city money, but from local property owners — and it reopens in 1991 to great acclaim and is still a fabulous place to be. It showed for the first time that public space was worth saving and could be saved. New York City at the time needed that lesson. It's interesting that today, Bryant Park has no permanent police presence and less crime. Back in the ‘80s, Bryant Park had an active police presence and a lot more crime.The first class I ever taught when I started at John Jay College in 2004, I was talking about broken windows. A student in the class named Jeff Marshall, who is in my book, told me about Operation Alternatives at the Port Authority. He had been a Port Authority police officer at the time, and I had not heard of this. People are just unaware of this part of history. It very much has lessons for today, because in policing often there's nothing new under the sun. It's just repackaged, dusted off, and done again. The issue was, how do we make the Port Authority safe for passengers? How do we both help and get rid of people living in the bus terminal? It's a semi-public space, so it makes it difficult. There was a social services element about it, that was Operational Alternatives. A lot of people took advantage of that and got help. But the flip side was, you don't have to take services, but you can't stay here.I interviewed the manager of the bus terminal. He was so proud of what he did. He's a bureaucrat, a high-ranking one, but a port authority manager. He came from the George Washington Bridge, which he loved. And he wonders, what the hell am I going to do with this bus terminal? But the Port Authority cared, because they're a huge organization and that's the only thing with their name on it — They also control JFK Airport and bridges and tunnels and all the airports, but people call the bus terminal Port Authority.They gave him almost unlimited money and power and said, “Fix it please, do what you've got to do,” and he did. It was environmental design, giving police overtime so they'd be part of this, a big part of it was having a social service element so it wasn't just kicking people out with nowhere to go.Some of it was also setting up rules. This also helped Bratton in the subway, because this happened at the same time. The court ruled that you can enforce certain rules in the semi-public spaces. It was not clear until this moment whether it was constitutional or not. To be specific, you have a constitutional right to beg on the street, but you do not have a constitutional right to beg on the subway. That came down to a court decision. Had that not happened, I don't know if in the long run the crime drop would have happened.That court decision comes down to the specific point that it's not a free-speech right on the subway to panhandle, because people can't leave, because you've got them trapped in that space.You can't cross the street to get away from it. But it also recognized that it wasn't pure begging, that there was a gray area between aggressive begging and extortion and robbery.You note that in the early 1990s, one-third of subway commuters said they consciously avoided certain stations because of safety, and two thirds felt coerced to give money by aggressive panhandling.The folks in your book talk a lot about the 80/20 rule applying all over the place. That something like 20% of the people you catch are committing 80% of the crimes.There's a similar dynamic that you talk about on the subways, both in the book and in your commentary over the past couple years about disorder in New York. You say approximately 2,000 people with serious mental illness are at risk for street homelessness, and these people cycle through the cities, streets, subways, jails, and hospitals.What lessons from the ‘90s can be applied today for both helping those people and stopping them being a threat to others?Before the ‘80s and Reagan budget cuts there had been a psychiatric system that could help people. That largely got defunded. [Deinstitutionalization began in New York State earlier, in the 1960s.] We did not solve the problem of mental health or homelessness in the ‘90s, but we solved the problem of behavior. George Kelling [of broken windows theory] emphasized this repeatedly, and people would ignore it. We are not criminalizing homelessness or poverty. We're focusing on behavior that we are trying to change. People who willfully ignore that distinction almost assume that poor people are naturally disorderly or criminal, or that all homeless people are twitching and threatening other people. Even people with mental illness can behave in a public space.Times have changed a bit. I think there are different drugs now that make things arguably a bit worse. I am not a mental health expert, but we do need more involuntary commitment, not just for our sake, but for theirs, people who need help. I pass people daily, often the same person, basically decomposing on a subway stop in the cold. They are offered help by social services, and they say no. They should not be allowed to make that choice because they're literally dying on the street in front of us. Basic humanity demands that we be a little more aggressive in forcing people who are not making rational decisions, because now you have to be an imminent threat to yourself or others. That standard does need to change. But there also need to be mental health beds available for people in this condition.I don't know what the solution is to homelessness or mental health. But I do know the solution to public disorder on the subway and that's, regardless of your mental state or housing status, enforcing legal, constitutional rules, policing behavior. It does not involve locking everybody up. It involves drawing the line between acceptable and unacceptable behavior. It's amazing how much people will comply with those rules.That presents the idea that someone's in charge, it's not a free-for-all. You get that virtuous loop, which New York had achieved in 2014–2016, when crime was at an all-time low in the city. Then the politicians decided public order wasn't worth preserving anymore. These are political choices.I had a similar version of this conversation with a friend who was shocked that there were zero murders on the subway in 2017 and that that number was stable: you had one or two a year for several years in the mid-2010s.It was five or fewer a year from 1997 to 2019, and often one or two. Then you have zero in 2017. There were [ten in 2022]. It coincides perfectly with an order from [Mayor] de Blasio's office and the homeless czar [Director of Homeless Services Steven] Banks [which] told police to stop enforcing subway rules against loitering. The subways became — once again — a de facto homeless shelter. Getting rule-violating homeless people out of the subway in the late ‘80s was such a difficult and major accomplishment at the time, and to be fair it's not as bad as it was.The alternative was that homeless outreach was supposed to offer people services. When they decline, which 95% of people do, you're to leave them be. I would argue again, I don't think that's a more humane stance to take. But it's not just about them, it's about subway riders.There's one story that I think was relevant for you to tell. You were attacked this fall on a subway platform by a guy threatening to kill you. It turns out he's had a number of run-ins with the criminal justice system. Can you tell us where that guy is now?I believe he's in prison now. The only reason I know who it is is because I said, one day I'm going to see his picture in the New York Post because he's going to hurt somebody. Am I 100 percent certain it's Michael Blount who attacked me? No, but I'm willing to call him out by name because I believe it is. He was out of prison for raping a child, and he slashed his ex-girlfriend and pushed her on the subway tracks. And then was on the lam for a while. I look at him and the shape of his face, his height, age, build, complexion, and I go, that's got to be him.I wasn't hurt, but he gave me a sucker punch trying to knock me out and then chased me a bit threatening to kill me, and I believe he wanted to. It's the only time I ever was confronted by a person who I really believe wanted to kill me, and this includes policing in the Eastern District in Baltimore. It was an attempted misdemeanor assault in the long run. But I knew it wasn't about me. It was him. I assume he's going to stay in prison longer for what he did to his ex-girlfriend. But I never thought it would happen to me. I was lucky the punch didn't connect.Peter Moskos's new book is Back from the Brink, Inside the NYPD and New York City's Extraordinary 1990s Crime Drop.My reading listEssays:Johnny Hirschauer's reporting, including “A Failed 'Solution' to 'America's Mental Health Crisis',“ “Return to the Roots,” and “The Last Institutions.” “Broken Windows: The Police and Neighborhood Safety,” by George L. Kelling and James Q. Wilson. “It's Time to Talk About America's Disorder Problem,” Charles Lehman.Books:Ghettoside: A True Story of Murder in America, Jill Leovy.Prince of the City: Giuliani, New York, and the Genius of American Life, Fred Siegel. Cop in the Hood: My Year Policing Baltimore's Eastern District, Peter Moskos.Dreamland: The True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic, Sam Quinones.Bonfire of the Vanities, Tom Wolfe. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.statecraft.pub
MSNBC's Ari Melber hosts "The Beat" on Monday, March 31, and reports on stock market lows under the Trump administration, Trump's comments about the possibility of seeking a third term and the Wisconsin Supreme Court election. Plus, Lawrence Wright and Bill de Blasio join for the latest Fallback installment. Wisconsin Supreme Court candidate Susan Crawford also joins.
Jarrod and Zhana return to talk about their new book "Skyscraper Jails: The Abolitionist Fight Against Jail Expansion in New York City"! We look at how the liberal apparatus used identity politics and divert the abolitionist movement to expand incarceration, and check in how the De Blasio-era plan to closer rikers and replace it with four "community" "justice hubs" has fared under the anti-Woke era of the Adams administration. Lastly, we talk about the the recent "Wildcat" CO strike in state prisons as a broader effort to roll back the reforms of the BLM and other anticarceral struggles, as a preview of the dark plans for expanded incarceration of the Trump 2.0In part 2 of the episode we talk about the counter-revolutoinary history of Tren de Aragua and the Enemy Aliens Act of 1798. to hear it, support the show at http://patreon.com/theantifadaBUY the book from Haymarket: https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/2454-skyscraper-jailsAdams on new Manhattan jail developments: https://ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/politics/2025/01/18/rikers-manhattan-jail-contractMore info on MH jail redesign: https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/01/new-preliminary-renderings-revealed-for-manhattan-detention-center-at-124-125-white-street-in-chinatown-manhattan.htmlJarrod on upstate prison strike: https://truthout.org/articles/nys-prison-guard-strike-has-roots-in-decades-of-racialized-deindustrialization/Aziz Rana on Consitutional Crisis: https://newleftreview.org/sidecar/posts/constitutional-collapseOur early episode with Nadja Guyot from No New Jails: https://www.patreon.com/posts/ep-69-abolish-w-30401262 Song: Cock Sparrer - Out on an Island
No government shut down; South African ambassador kicked out of US this evening; Gavin Newsome shifts multiple policy stances to the right during Charlie Kirk recent interview; Jasmine Crockett states a lot of Trump voters regret their decision because they won't be able to get healthcare or eat; Bill DeBlasio admits he and other Democrats knew Biden was not competent for four more years; RFK Jr. Secretary of Health and Human Service calls for removal of fluoride from public water; Trump gets hit in the mouth with a boom mic#trump #foxnews #biden
We open with a nod to Tara Bull's Top 10 news items the Legacy/mainstream media likely didn't tell you about this week, or, at the very least, didn't cover properly. This leads into the dismantling of the Dept. of Education, a real discussion over “tariff wars” and how the Left continues to lie about the continuing resolution. All they have is fear and fakery. Sen. Joni Earnst (R-IA) reveals millions of COVID dollars sent to 11 year olds fraudulently. She says it's just the tip of the iceberg. We have so much fraud, waste and abuse that we finally hear from former President Barack Obama. Unfortunately, while he discusses DOGE, it was actually a speech from 2011. Activist judges are still being cherry-picked to micromanage the presidency. Attorneys for Donald Trump are filling emergency paperwork with the SCOTUS to get them to weigh-in on this obvious Constitutional infringement. The mustache gets the nod for the moronic statement of the week. He thinks Trump only wants peace between Russia and Ukraine so he will get “good publicity” and will “help get him the Nobel Peace Prize.” As a close second, former mayor of NYC, Bill DeBlasio, says out loud what I've been saying about the Left for years, they are gifted with an abundance of magic-thinking. Finally, VP JD Vance, at a noon gathering today remarked about the protesters. He wonders if they have jobs given that it was 12PM on a workday? Please take a moment to rate and review the show and then share the episode on social media. You can find me on Facebook, X, Instagram, GETTR and TRUTH Social by searching for The Alan Sanders Show. And, consider becoming a sponsor of the show by visiting my Patreon page!!
Multifamily housing is dependent upon so many factors: economics, government, policy, locations, demographics, etc. To create successful multifamily brand or campaign, a marketer needs to understand all of these things, and so much more. So, who better to discuss the dynamics behind the role than someone with a background in communications, marketing, government and multifamily? In this episode of Multi-Housing News' Top Marketers podcast, Eric Bederman, the vice president & director of communications at Community Preservation Corp., joins MHN Senior Associate Editor Jordana Rothberg to look at the industry at large.In his current role, Bederman oversees marketing and communications efforts to promote CPC's nonprofit mission and its lending and investing platforms, as well as positioning CPC as a thought leader in the multifamily housing industry. Prior to joining CPC in 2015, Bederman served as the press secretary for the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development for six years, spanning both the Bloomberg and de Blasio administrations, and has held other positions as a marketer and communications professional over the course of his career.Tune in to hear the two go over:· How Bederman got to his current role and the factors that made the difference (1:20)· Similarities and differences between working for a city agency and a nonprofit (6:40)· Bederman's favorite marketing resources at CPC (9:15)· The importance of thought leadership (11:05)· How to stretch marketing dollars with a limited budget (13:10) · Campaigns that make Bederman proud and the communication strategies behind them (15:20) · What's changed in marketing and real estate and where the industry is going now (21:40)
MSNBC's Ari Melber hosts "The Beat" on Wednesday, February 12, and reports on Donald Trump vs the rule of law, Elon Musk and inflation. Teddy Schleifer, Ashley Hayek, Bill De Blasio and Alexis Loeb join.
This episode is with the distinguished Rev Frederick Davie, former Chairman of the NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board and retired executive vice president of the world famous Union Theological Seminary in New York on.Rev Davie has worked along side-by-side with some of the most influential figures of the late 20th and early centuries! He worked in the administration's of President Bill Clinton and Barack Obama to the Mayoral administration's of NYC mayor David Dinkins and Bill DeBlasio. Sit back and watch or listen on Podcast to this terrific conversation...you will love it.
Ilhan Omar is now a constitutional expert? Bill de Blasio chimes in with his usual nonsense. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MSNBC's Ari Melber hosts "The Beat" on Wednesday, January 22, and reports on Donald Trump's executive order to ban birthright citizenship and his new administration. Keith Ellison, Bill de Blasio, John Flannery, and Carrie Sheffield join the show.
Frank Morano discusses some of the hottest topics and gives his opinion. Frank talks about filling in for Roger Stone and then Frank talks about a proposal to have a kind of clean slate act for cops. Frank talks about former Mayor Bill de Blasio attempting to not pay back for his security detail that used taxpayer money when he ran for President and then Frank talks about the NYPD commissioner ordering a full review into a car leasing program that is costing the NYPD millions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Daniel interviews veteran educator, unionist and former political director of the United Federation of Teachers, Paul Egan. We discuss his nearly ten year tenure as the United Federation of Teachers' political director -- from the Bloomberg and Cuomo years to the De Blasio years. Egan dispels the tabloid controversies.
Simply astonishing homelessness data proves to be the final blow to Joe Biden's legacy. A 33% uptick in childhood homelessness is punctuated by several money-making grifts involving well known names. Bill DeBlasio's wife can't account for the $900 million she was granted to help eradicate homelessness in New York City. Rumors of a $20 million Kamala Harris book deal raise eyebrows and attention to the "book deal" scheme that has enriched so many dirty players in DC.
Watch The X22 Report On Video No videos found Click On Picture To See Larger PictureThe entire agenda of the [DS]/[CB] is done, they can try to push it, but in the end the people are awake and the see the truth. The people are now seeing the fraud that government commits and the money they launder. Argentina will establish free trade with the US. Biden says the quiet part out loud on what they are planning to do to the economy when Trump gets into office. Trump offers companies a huge incentive. The countdown until Trump gets in office continues. The [DS] is planning some type of event. The [DS] is using a multi level plan to stop Trump from entering office or they will try to create so much chaos while he is in office that he cannot get anything done. Trump sends a message and all of this will not work, operators are standing by. (function(w,d,s,i){w.ldAdInit=w.ldAdInit||[];w.ldAdInit.push({slot:13499335648425062,size:[0, 0],id:"ld-7164-1323"});if(!d.getElementById(i)){var j=d.createElement(s),p=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];j.async=true;j.src="//cdn2.customads.co/_js/ajs.js";j.id=i;p.parentNode.insertBefore(j,p);}})(window,document,"script","ld-ajs"); Economy Has Trump Already Solved Global Warming? three months ago, the World Economic Forum eagerly mentioned a study that predicted that a “total collapse” of Greenland's ice sheet “could happen by 2025.” Last year, a Washington Post scare-'em-all headline declared “Greenland glacier's rapid melting may signal faster sea level rise.” In another of the many examples we could cite, AZoCleantech.com has claimed that Greenland's changing landscape signals a global threat. A map in Newsweek that purports to show which U.S. cities could be underwater in 2050 due to rising sea levels includes “the same cities that were supposed to be under water by 2000 and 2020.” — Derek Hunter A “massive coverup” by United Kingdom's Met Office has been set in motion “to hide its 103 non-existent temperature measuring stations.” — Watts Up With That? “Despite record emissions, record atmospheric carbon dioxide and 90 years of urban heat island effect, the summer of 2024 was cooler than the summer of 1934 in the U.S., where we have the best temperature records. If every emission causes warming and drives more warming, how can any part of summer 2024 be cooler than summer 1934?” — Steve Milloy, Junk Science And from the Heartland Institute's Climate Realism project: “Check Your Facts, PBS News, Climate Change Has Played No Role in Northeastern Wildfires.” “Global Warming is Not Making Record Typhoons, South China Morning Post.” ‘No, Atlanta News First, Climate Change is Not Threatening the ‘Way of Life' of Georgia Farmers.” “The Guardian is Flat Wrong About Blaming Climate for Extreme Weather.” “Despite Media Panic, There Is No Reason to Think 2024's Warming Is Disastrous.” “Facts show that weather disasters aren't increasing amid climate change, nor has farm production declined.” Source: issuesinsights.com https://twitter.com/BreannaMorello/status/1866250411356598497 —the funds were allocated to help him. We should be calling for the DeBlasio's to be investigated. It's worth noting the DeBlasio's are separated—not divorced. They announced this after Bill's term was up. Why aren't they officially divorced? Possibly to avoid having to testify against one another? https://twitter.com/RepMTG/status/1866540780631830623 wasting taxpayer dollars! Government efficiency is coming to Washington!! https://twitter.com/MailOnline/status/1866619303023280332?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1866619303023280332%7Ctwgr%5Ed43330c531a3a405b54d56ae7156ce97fffe966f%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fredstate.com%2Fwardclark%2F2024%2F12%2F10%2Fpostmaster-general-has-meltdown-throws-tantrum-in-congressional-hearing-n2183044 https://twitter.
SERIES 3 EPISODE 78: COUNTDOWN WITH KEITH OLBERMANN A-Block (1:44) SPECIAL COMMENT: How did this not generate more headlines? It's just a proposed maneuver out of the legal morass Judge Juan Merchan has helped Trump create. But New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg has suggested that one way to solve this sentencing/but he's president/but we can't dismiss the conviction is to treat Trump - in a legal sense - the way you treat a convicted defendant who DIES before he appeals or is sentence. In short: just pretend Trump is dead. SPEAKING OF A BROKEN LEGAL SYSTEM: I'm not advocating for that, nor for guys assassinating CEO's five blocks from my home. But our legal system is broken and it would behoove commentators, columnists, writers, those who suck up to the moneyed class, and conservatives to stop being so surprised at the idea that maybe a majority of Americans is not as outraged as the wealthy are at the actions of Luigi McDreamy. Maybe you need to wonder more about why they perceive the legal system to be broken and the corporations to be legal excuses for nobody being responsible for innocent people dying and being injured. CHRIS WRAY OBEYS IN ADVANCE: He'll quit as FBI director before the inauguration. Maybe he can make a comeback as Trump's second pick for DNI because Tulsi Gabbard is being attacked from the left, the middle, and now from The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board. Also Hegseth's been caught in another lie, about something he had said in public 48 hours earlier. B-Block (23:46) POSTSCRIPTS TO THE NEWS: The World Cup goes to Saudi Arabia because everything is for sale. And an announcement of a candidacy for New York City Council suddenly made me realize that Bill DeBlasio and Eric Adams both became mayor here in part because between us one of my exes and I screwed around with the 2013 campaign. OOPS. (30:22) THE WORST PERSONS IN THE WORLD: Yes she sneaked a gold-plated gun into Australia but how else was she supposed to protect herself at clown school? Speaking of: Newsweek beats the L.A. Times to a "Fairness Meter" for its articles. And Elon Musk insists there's no homelessness because now is exactly the right time for a CEO to assert that. C-Block (39:00) THINGS I PROMISED NOT TO TELL: My favorite Holiday story. The day, on my way to interview Mickey Mantle, I ran into somebody I mistook for just another fan - albeit a well-dressed man. Oops. Turned out he was one of the stars of the greatest movie ever made.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bill de Blasio, former mayor of New York City, talks about how New York's sanctuary city status was strengthened under his administration, and what he believes the city should do to prepare for President-elect Trump's threat for mass deportations. Then, U.S. Representative Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY11, covering Staten Island and parts of South Brooklyn), talks about her calls for more cooperation with ICE by NYC officials.
Karen is the Author of Penis Politics and former Press Secretary to both Housing Secretary Andrew Cuomo and also New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. Listen to Karen's full episode HERE on Spotify and HERE on Apple.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
New York comedian Modi was voted one of the top 10 comedians in New York City by The Hollywood Reporter and has been featured on HBO, CBS, NBC, ABC, Comedy Central, Howard Stern, and E! Entertainment. Modi has received rave reviews in The New York Times, Time Out NY and The New York Post. Born in Tel Aviv, Israel, Modi emigrated with his family to the United States at the age of seven. Equipped with a sharp wit and a knack for reading an audience, Modi has gone on to become a successful fixture in New York's vibrant comedy scene, often doing bits that incorporate his heritage, and he is a hit with diverse Jewish audiences as well as fans of all backgrounds and beliefs. Now a regular performer at the New York and Los Angeles comedy clubs, Modi also headlines around the country and across the globe. Modi has played himself on HBO's Crashing and Netflix's When Jews Were Funny. He's also appeared in several feature films and played leading roles in two: Waiting for Woody Allen, which won the LA Film Festival, and Stand Up, a feature-length film. In 2018, Mayor Bill De Blasio declared June 26th 'Mordechi Modi Rosenfeld Day' in the city of New York for his accomplishments and contributions to the artistic community .For tickets to see Modi live at The London Palladium and all other shows, visit - https://www.modilive.com .Modi is our guest in episode 441 of My Time Capsule and chats to Michael Fenton Stevens about the five things he'd like to put in a time capsule; four he'd like to preserve and one he'd like to bury and never have to think about again .Follow Modi on Twitter: @MODI_COMEDIAN & Instagram @modi_live . Follow My Time Capsule on Instagram: @mytimecapsulepodcast & Twitter & Facebook: @MyTCpod .Follow Michael Fenton Stevens on Twitter: @fentonstevens & Instagram @mikefentonstevens .Produced and edited by John Fenton-Stevens for Cast Off Productions .Music by Pass The Peas Music .Artwork by matthewboxall.com .This podcast is proud to be associated with the charity Viva! Providing theatrical opportunities for hundreds of young people . Get bonus episodes and ad-free listening by becoming a team member with Acast+! Your support will help us to keep making My Time Capsule. Join our team now! https://plus.acast.com/s/mytimecapsule. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
17: Al Smith Dinner Kerfuffle, Panda Exploitation, Time Square Chaos, And A Positive SurpriseWelcome to episode seventeen of David & Stu… Unhinged! As always, we'd like to thank Clara Wang for creating the fantastic artwork for this podcast. Here is what is on deck for this week's milestone episode.1) The Al Smith Dinner, Kamala's absence, and Trump's rambling speech, including a well-deserved bashing of former Mayor DeBlasio;2) The tragic manner in which a beloved endangered species, the Giant Panda, is being exploited;3) The violent teenage gang of illegal immigrants terrorizing tourists and residents in Times Square and how the cops have been stymied to lock these criminals up thanks to the New York progressive's soft-on-crime policies.4) Stu's encounter with a veteran and how he ended up surprised.Catch Stu's live show Vietnam…through my lens on November 10, 2024, at 4:30 PM at the Bedford Playhouse in Westchester County. Get details on Stu's live performance here: https://bedfordplayhouse.org/2024-11-10 Stu's 2020 performance at the empty theater in Norwalk, Connecticut, will be screened on November 11, 2024, at the Picture House in Pelham in Westchester County. Get details for the film here: https://www.thepicturehouse.org/homeConnect with David & Stu: • Email David & Stu: davidandstuunhinged@gmail.com and share your comments, concerns, and questions.The views expressed on air during David & Stu... Unhinged! do not represent the views of the RAGE Works staff, partners, or affiliates. Listener discretion is advised.
15: BLM Anti-Semitics, Pedo Geezers in Prison & More NYC ScumbagsWelcome to episode fifteen of David & Stu… Unhinged! As always, we'd like to thank Clara Wang for creating the fantastic artwork for this podcast. Here is what is on deck for this week's milestone episode.1) An update on steps NYC is finally taking to deal with fare beaters on public transit and the degradation of our city under the failed policies of the Democrat Party;2) A new inductee to the hall of shame, Dr. Jay Varmus, a health commissioner under Mayor DeBlasio, who imposed draconian COVID lockdowns while he and his wife organized sex and dance parties;3) The outrageous anti-Semitic writings of Ta-Nehisi Coates and the controversy that unfolded when he was vigorously questioned on CBC Morning News. Equally outrageous is that these hate-filled writings are required reading in some NYC private schools, including Avenues the World School (better known as the Worst School);4) A discussion of a California law that offers a release from prison for elderly inmates, including pedophiles, and how New York is considering similar legislation.5) Bob Woodward's new book, War, exposes Trump's post-presidential dealings with Putin, as well as Biden's immigration policies and all the criminals who have crossed the border. Catch Stu's live show Vietnam…through my lens on November 10, 2024, at 4:30 PM at the Bedford Playhouse in Westchester County. Get details on Stu's live performance here: https://bedfordplayhouse.org/2024-11-10 Stu's 2020 performance at the empty theater in Norwalk, Connecticut, will be screened on November 11, 2024, at the Picture House in Pelham in Westchester County. Get details for the film here: https://www.thepicturehouse.org/homeConnect with David & Stu: • Email David & Stu: davidandstuunhinged@gmail.com and share your comments, concerns, and questions.
Today Curtis Sliwa started his show, Rip & Read, talking about the Al Smith dinner and speech former president Donald Trump gave. He loved Donald Trump reaping on former New York mayor Bill de Blasio and the terrible job he did during COVID for the city. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
[SEGMENT 2-1] Predicting Leftism Donald Trump has a knack for predicting the future. And I know why he's good at it. He's aware; he pays attention. He's a seeker of the truth. [X] SB – Trump predicted Adams' indictment I said almost the same identical thing… [SEGMENT 2-2] Eric Adams lesson Lots to discuss today and I want to discuss a powerful Democrat as a metaphor. Because he represents that can and will happen to you when you buck the system. We will also discuss Trump's recent victories, which the media doesn't want to highlight. I will highlight things in between that might be of interest, and we will see where the show goes from there. Thanks for being here. A couple of things. We are planning a big event with Hillsdale College in Feb, and for those who would like to support it and get a tax-deduction, please visit SEE.org and donate there. Details of the event will be forthcoming. [X] – Eric Adams addresses upcoming indictment [SEGMENT 2-3] Eric Adams charged 1 The Biden family has 20 shells companies, dozens of LLCs, 150+ SARS reports, and money wires from multiple countries, and NYC Mayor Eric Adams gets hit with 5 criminal counts. Did they think this Black man was Eric TRUMP? Babylon Bee headline: Black man faces punishment for disobeying his Democrat masters https://x.com/TheBabylonBee/status/1839348638419415328 5 counts; don't know whether he did it or not. Conspiracy to commit wire fraud Bribery Wire fraud Solicitation of foreign contribution [X] SB – Adams slashed funding for illegals [SEGMENT 2-4] Eric Adams charged 2 They chose a BROTHER to prosecute Harris. Black on black crime. Damian Williams is the US Attorney who got the gig. I wonder if he volunteered? Where is the outcry from Black Democrats? For two reasons. One: I guarantee you he did nothing that Obama, Clinton, Biden didn't do. Two: They chose a brother to get him. Over $100,000? I'm not buying this. Bloomberg was worth $4B when he became mayor of NYC. When he left, he was worth over $40B How do you gain that much wealth while running one of the largest cities in the world? Guess who wants to run NYC? Andrew Cuomo The Love Gov is willing to become the Love Mayor Speaking of NYC, DeBlasio's wife can't account for $850M in funds given to mental health… Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-kevin-jackson-show--2896352/support.
MSNBC's Ari Melber hosts "The Beat" on Friday, October 4th, and reports on the 2024 election. Plus, Bill de Blasio joins for a Fallback Friday segment. Kurt Andersen, Chai Komanduri, and Amanda Carpenter also join.
Adams will not resign. He wants his day in court Mark interviewed Boston Radio Host Howie Carr. Mark and Howie talked about Mayor Adams being the first NYC mayor ever to be indicted.
Start EVERY day the Chuck Norris Way with Morning Kick! Get the JOY discount on Morning Kick HERE: www.chuckdefense.com/JoyToday we feature Steven Crowder's STUNNING report and undercover videos exposing New York City's COVID czar Dr. Jay Varma. The highly connected, health whisperer to Mayor Bill DeBlasio & Governor Andrew Cuomo was caught on tape bragging about his drug fueled, sex parties WHILE executing the fascist style COVID lockdowns and forced vaccination campaigns for regular citizens.The level of disdain, contempt and depravity is frankly SHOCKING.Sunlight INDEED is the best medicine. And the sunlight is exposing a very DARK underbelly of corruption and gross incompetence among America's medical ‘elite'. The stories we have reported on in the past week have been very revealing and should alarm citizens, academia and our elected officials at EVERY level.In the past week The Shannon Joy Show has exposed this medical industrial complex featuring:*Polly Tommey and Mary Holland of Children's Health Defense talking about “Vaxxed III: Authorized to Kill” the stunning new documentary which exposes the human atrocities committed in hospitals during COVID lockdowns.*Just days later we featured Steve Kirsch of the Vaccine Safety Research Foundation about his righteous campaign to save Alexis Lorenze, a strong young girl who was severely vaccine injured and then left to die at UC Irvine Medical Center.Who ARE these people? How do we STOP them? And how can we protect ourselves?Lot's of questions and answers TODAY on the Shannon Joy Show._______________________________Show Resources & Links:WATCH the full Steven Crowder report on VARMA HERE:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DulLO6C0DikFull update and interview with Alexis Lorenze on VSRF:https://rumble.com/v5fclq5-vsrf-live-144-diseases-vaccines-and-forgotten-history-with-dr.-suzanne-hump.htmlWatch Steve Kirsch on Alexis Lorenze:https://rumble.com/v5f9ki4-the-shannon-joy-show-tuesday-sept-17-live-guest-steve-kirsch-vaccines-and-a.htmlWatch the Polly Tommey & Mary Holland Interview HERE:https://rumble.com/v5es3tl-vaxxed-3-authorized-to-kill-premiers-september-18-live-wmary-holland-and-di.html________________________________________Please Support Our Sponsors:Colonial Metals Group is a valued sponsor of the SJ Show! Set up a SAFE & Secure IRA or 401k with a company who shares your values and supports this show! Learn about your options HERE ——> https://colonialmetalsgroup.com/joyCheck out Patriot Mobile Extra special bonus from Field of Greens!!!!Plug in the promo code SHANNON for an additional 15% off your purchase!Go to www.fieldofgreens.com to shop and save! Support the showPlease Support Our Sponsors! Achieve financial independence with Colonial Metals Group!!! Set up a SAFE & Secure IRA or 401k with a company who shares your values and supports this show! Learn about your options HERE ——>https://colonialmetalsgroup.com/joy
This week on Breaking Battlegrounds, hosts Chuck Warren and Sam Stone are joined by Congressman Bruce Westerman of Arkansas to discuss key legislation moving through Congress, including the NEPA Bill and his bipartisan Fix Our Forests Act. Next, Wall Street Journal reporter Richard Rubin breaks down the latest in U.S. tax policy, from Trump's tax cut proposals to the soaring federal debt. Finally, USMC veteran and CEO of Vetcomm, Kate Monroe, shares her insights on the impact of 9/11 and the Afghanistan pullout on veterans, homeless veterans in America and her thoughts on Kamala Harris. During Kiley's Corner, Kiley delves into some of this week's most shocking stories, including the CIA agent sentenced to prison for drugging and raping women, P. Diddy and the sex slave who shot up Trump Doral Golf Course, and Dr. Jay Varma, NY City Hall's senior public health adviser under Mayor Bill de Blasio, who hosted sex parties during COVID. As always, we end with Jenna's Sunshine Moment as she discusses "Pommel Horse Man" and the Olympic rugby player now competing on Dancing with the Stars. Don't miss this jam-packed episode!www.breakingbattlegrounds.voteTwitter: www.twitter.com/Breaking_BattleFacebook: www.facebook.com/breakingbattlegroundsInstagram: www.instagram.com/breakingbattlegroundsLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/breakingbattlegrounds-Show sponsors:Invest YrefyYrefy offers a secure, collateralized portfolio with a strong, fixed rate of return - up to a 10.25%. There is no attack on your principal if you ever need your money back. You can let your investment compound daily, or take your income whenever you choose. Make sure you tell them Sam and Chuck sent you!Learn more at investyrefy.com4Freedom MobileExperience true freedom with 4Freedom Mobile, the exclusive provider offering nationwide coverage on all three major US networks (Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile) with just one SIM card. Our service not only connects you but also shields you from data collection by network operators, social media platforms, government agencies, and more.Use code ‘Battleground' to get your first month for $9 and save $10 a month every month after.Learn more at: 4FreedomMobile.comDot VoteWith a .VOTE website, you ensure your political campaign stands out among the competition while simplifying how you reach voters.Learn more at: dotvote.vote-About our guests:Bruce Westerman represents Arkansas' Fourth Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives, where he serves on the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and as Chairman of the Committee on Natural Resources.-Richard Rubin is the U.S. tax policy reporter for The Wall Street Journal in Washington, where he focuses on the intersection of taxes, legislation, politics and economics. He was the lead author on the Journal's coverage of the 2017 tax law and now writes frequently about the challenges facing the Internal Revenue Service.Before joining the Journal in 2015, Richard covered tax policy for Bloomberg News and Congressional Quarterly. Earlier in his career, he wrote about local government and transportation policy for the Charlotte Observer. Richard is a native of New Jersey and a graduate of Duke University.-Kate Monroe is a USMC Vet, the CEO of Vetcomm, author of The Race to Save America, and Founder of Border Vets. Follow her on X @KateMonroeCEO. Get full access to Breaking Battlegrounds at breakingbattlegrounds.substack.com/subscribe
Phil Walzak, a political and communications consultant who served in top roles in Bill de Blasio's campaigns and City Hall, joined the show to discuss the challenges facing Mayor Eric Adams and his administration, while also touching on his experience in the NYPD and previewing the 2025 mayoral race. (Ep 461)
The ZENERGY Podcast: Climate Leadership, Finance and Technology
The New York City Comptroller's office works to promote the financial health, integrity, and effectiveness of New York City government, in order to strengthen trust, secure a thriving future for all New Yorkers, and build a more just, equitable, and resilient city. Led by an independently-elected citywide official, the Comptroller's office provides checks and balances needed to hold City government accountable for budgeting wisely, investing responsibly, operating efficiently, acting fairly, living up to its obligations and promises, and paying attention to the long-term challenges we face together. John Adler became the Chief ESG Officer at the New York City Comptroller's Bureau of Asset Management in January 2022, where he oversees initiatives related to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) impacts on pension fund investments. His responsibilities include corporate governance, diversity, equity and inclusion, climate change, workers' rights, and integrating ESG into the investment process. Previously, John was Director of the Mayor's Office of Pensions and Investments under Mayor Bill de Blasio and spent 23 years in the labor movement, most recently leading the SEIU's Retirement Security Campaign and co-founding the Georgetown Center for Retirement Initiatives. Show Notes: [1:50] - John shares his background and how his career path has led him to his current role as the Chief ESG Officer. [4:00] - John discusses the primary focus areas at the Comptroller's Office. [6:55] - His previous experience serving under Mayor de Blasio gave John a lot of knowledge to prepare for the work he's doing now. [11:02] - For making the case for ESG, there were challenges that have evolved over time. [12:31] - ESG has become much more widely accepted in the business world as a way to appropriately evaluate business risk. [16:04] - Managers are committed to ESG and climate change, but they don't want to get in the crosshairs of anti-ESG. [17:38] - Critics believe their criticism serves them politically. [19:09] - Fiduciary duties are taken very seriously. [20:27] - John shares some examples of efforts that have represented ESG's values. [24:27] - John discusses another example of union representation. [26:54] - There is a four component implementation plan to move forward towards climate change goals. [28:39] - The most difficult challenge is identifying private market dedicated strategies to invest in climate solutions. [31:21] - There's a drive in the economy right now for climate solutions. [32:22] - Pension funds are not big enough to adequately address the climate change challenge we are all facing. We need to collaborate. Links and Resources: New York City Comptroller's Office Website
James and Big are back talking 2024 NFL predictions from what they've seen thus far. They also talk about Dogs, estrogen spikes, and pranking former mayor Bill Deblasio.
In this episode, Laura interviews Ariane Hunter, Speaker, Author, and Career Equity Expert, about her book 'Dreaming on Purpose: A Manifesto for Black Women on Taking the Leap, Building Your Dreams, and Being Your Own Boss.' Ariane shares her personal journey and the challenges she faced as a Black woman in the corporate world. She emphasizes the importance of self-discovery, defining success on your own terms, and centering care in your career. Ariane and Laura also discuss the importance of dreaming as a form of resistance and reclaiming oneself. Ariane emphasizes the need to acknowledge and validate our dreams, take action towards them, and ask for help when needed. About Ariane Ariane Hunter is a Speaker, Author, and Career Equity expert who champions work culture and career empowerment solutions for Black millennial professional women. With over twenty years of experience in career and leadership strategy, she is dedicated to helping marginalized groups thrive and cultivate healthy work relationships. As a mental health advocate for Black women, Ariane underscores the importance of firm boundaries and restful practices for a flourishing professional life. Ariane's training encompasses social justice, technology, intersectionality, and futurist insights, aiming to foster sustainable and impactful change. Her professional background includes working with leading marketing and branding agencies in New York City, supporting high-profile clients to achieve industry leadership. She holds an MBA and is a certified career coach. Ariane's debut book, "Dreaming on Purpose: A Manifesto for Black Women on Taking the Leap, Building Your Dreams & Being Your Own Boss," will be released by Indigo River Publishers on August 20, 2024. This business leadership book inspires and guides Black women on a care-centered approach to thriving in business, life, and beyond. She was among the 3% chosen for the Goldman Sachs Black in Business program and was selected for NYC's inaugural BE NYC mentoring program for entrepreneurs, endorsed by Bill De Blasio. Ariane has collaborated with prominent organizations such as Women in STEM Leadership at Stony Brook University, the Women's Catalyst group at Hewlett Packard, and Oracle. She has spoken for The Grio, Ladies Get Paid, Jopwell, NYU Stern Women in Business, Advancing Women in Tech, Karen Millen, ABC Home, and Emerging Leaders for NY Arts. Ariane is also a published writer whose work appears in Time.com, Levo League, Ivy Exec, and The Muse. She has been featured on NBC, CBS, and other local media networks and quoted in Fast Company, Business Insider, CNBC, The Daily Worth, Her Agenda, and more. Connect with Ariane Connect with Ariane on LinkedIn Connect with Ariane on Instagram Resources: Event: Join us for the Black Woman Leading LIVE! Conference +Retreat, May 27-30, 2025 in Virginia Beach! Learn more at bwlretreat.com Credits: Learn more about our consulting work with organizations at https://knightsconsultinggroup.com/ Email Laura: laura@knightsconsultinggroup.com Connect with Laura on LinkedIn Follow BWL on LinkedIn Instagram: @blackwomanleading Facebook: @blackwomanleading Podcast Music & Production: Marshall Knights Graphics: Téa Campbell Listen and follow the podcast on all major platforms: Apple Podcasts Spotify Stitcher iHeartRadio Audible Podbay
Karen is the Author of Penis Politics and former Press Secretary to both Housing Secretary Andrew Cuomo and also New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. Listen to Karen's full episode HERE on Spotify and HERE on AppleSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Nicky Jam reflects on his early days in the music industry; Former NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio on current state of the presidential election; Program provides support for children who lost a parent Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nicky Jam reflects on his early days in the music industry; Former NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio on current state of the presidential election; Program provides support for children who lost a parent Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Rich Zeoli Show- Full Episode (06/13/2024): 3:05pm- While appearing at a joint press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during the G7 Summit in Italy, President Joe Biden denied that he was considering a pardon or commutation for his son Hunter. Earlier in the week, a jury in Wilmington, Delaware found Hunter Biden guilty on three felony charges related to lying on a background-check he submitted when acquiring a firearm in October of 2018. According to reports, the president's son could face up to 25-years in prison and a fine up to $750,000. 3:20pm- Don't miss 1210 WPHT's next Politics and Pints with New York Times best-selling author Jack Carr—hosted by Rich! Tuesday, June 25th from 7:30 to 8:45pm ET at Zlock Performing Arts Center Bucks County Community College in Newtown, Pennsylvania. You can find more information and tickets here: https://www.audacy.com/1210wpht/events/politics-and-pints-with-jack-carr 3:30pm- On Thursday, Donald Trump spoke with House and Senate leadership on Capitol Hill. During a press conference following the meeting, the former president stated: “There is tremendous unity in the Republican party. We want to see a strong military. We want to see a strong military. We want to see money not wasted all over the world. We don't want to see Russian ships right off the coast of Florida.” 3:35pm- According to Michael Scherer of The Washington Post, Democratic donor groups are attempting to “lure young voters” to the polls by providing them with beer and birth control. Rich says this reminds him of when former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio bribed NYC residents to get the COVID-19 vaccine by offering free French fries. You can read the full article here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/06/11/democratic-efforts-lure-young-voters-include-beer-birth-control/ 3:40pm- Dr. Stanley Goldfarb—Chairman of Do No Harm & Professor of Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania—joins The Rich Zeoli Show to discuss the California State Senate's Bill AB1955 which allows schools to promote gender affirmation of students without parental notification, despite evidence-based medicine suggesting this practice is problematic. You can learn more about Do No Harm here: https://donoharmmedicine.org 4:05pm- While appearing at joint press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during the G7 Summit in Italy, President Joe Biden denied that he was considering a pardon or commutation for his son. He explained, “I am extremely proud of my son, Hunter. He has overcome an addiction. He's one of the brightest, most decent men I know.” Earlier in the week, a jury in Wilmington, Delaware found Hunter Biden guilty on three felony charges related to lying on a background-check he submitted when acquiring a firearm in October of 2018. According to reports, the president's son could face up to 25-years in prison and a fine up to $750,000. Could this be used as an excuse for Biden to step aside as the Democrat nominee for president? According to an election forecast model from The Economist, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has a 66-in-100 chance of beating President Joe Biden in the 2024 election. Similarly, The Hill believes Trump has a 56-in-100 chance of winning. 4:30pm- During an interview with Dana Bash on CNN, South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem suggested that Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump should pick a woman to be his running mate. Rich notes that there is no chance she's still in contention for Vice President after her disastrous memoir. 4:40pm- Rich tells Andrew that he hates Bon Jovi, Sean Connery didn't even attempt to hide his Scottish accent in The Hunt for Red October, and Matt gets yelled at for not getting Lunden Roberts—the mother of one of Hunter Biden's children who is actively promoting a new book—on the show yet. 5:00pm- Milo Morris—the Bucks County Chairman for Black Conservative Foundation—joins The Rich Zeoli Show to talk about an upcoming “Flag Day Birthday Rally” for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. It's scheduled for tomorrow (Friday, 6/14) from 4pm to 6pm at Old Doylestown Courthouse on the Corner of N. Main and E. Court Street in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. 5:20pm- While speaking with CNN host Kaitlan Collins, New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman said that voters just don't seem to be interested in the guilty verdict in Donald Trump's “hush money” case. 5:25pm- While speaking with Abby Phillip, former CNN anchor Brian Stelter argued that it's not unreasonable to think Donald Trump will “punish” journalists if he becomes president again. Plus, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez recently revealed that she believes Trump wants to throw her in jail! 5:30pm- Who was the best James Bond: Sean Connery? Daniel Craig? Pierce Brosnan??? Rich, Matt, and Andrew debate. Plus, according to reports, Aaron Taylor Johnson is supposed to be the new Bond. 5:40pm- The New York Post Editorial Board writes that the New York Times is still unwilling to admit that Hunter Biden's laptop is real! You can read the full editorial here: https://nypost.com/2024/06/12/opinion/ny-times-still-cant-admit-hunter-bidens-laptop-is-real-whats-it-going-to-take/ 5:50pm- Brent Scher of The Daily Wire writes: “The Covenant School shooter obsessed in her private journal over her desire to be a man, fantasizing about having an ‘imaginary penis' and lamenting that so-called gender affirming treatments weren't available to her, according to images of her journal obtained by The Daily Wire.” You can read the full article here: https://www.dailywire.com/news/covenant-journal-revealed-my-imaginary-penis?topStoryPosition=1 6:05pm- Biden's Economy: While speaking with the press, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell conceded that the Labor Department may be “overstating” the number of jobs added in the United States. Zero Hedge writes: “While the [Labor Department's] Establishment Survey [from last Friday] did indeed report that 272K ‘jobs' were added, this number also included multiple job holders; stripping those out, we get that the actual number of ‘employed' workers plunged by 408K...” You can read the full article here: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/fed-chair-powell-admits-biden-admin-overstating-jobs 6:10pm- Anders Hagstrom of Fox News writes: “A fleet of Russian warships entered Cuban waters on Wednesday as they prepare to hold military drills in the Caribbean. The deployment is likely a warning to President Biden after he gave approval for Ukrainian forces to strike some targets within Russia using U.S. weaponry, according to Rebekah Koffler, strategic intelligence analyst and author of ‘Putin's Playbook.' Russian President Vladimir Putin is telling Washington, ‘we can touch you,' Koffler said.” You can read the full article here: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/putin-fleet-warships-cuba-direct-warning-biden-experts-say 6:25pm- Ocean Train! While speaking with the press in Italy, President Joe Biden seemed to suggest there will soon be a train that will cross the Indian Ocean…what? 6:45pm- REPLAY: Dr. Stanley Goldfarb—Chairman of Do No Harm & Professor of Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania—joins The Rich Zeoli Show to discuss the California State Senate's Bill AB1955 which allows schools to promote gender affirmation of students without parental notification, despite evidence-based medicine suggesting this practice is problematic. You can learn more about Do No Harm here: https://donoharmmedicine.org
The Rich Zeoli Show- Hour 1: 3:05pm- While appearing at a joint press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during the G7 Summit in Italy, President Joe Biden denied that he was considering a pardon or commutation for his son Hunter. Earlier in the week, a jury in Wilmington, Delaware found Hunter Biden guilty on three felony charges related to lying on a background-check he submitted when acquiring a firearm in October of 2018. According to reports, the president's son could face up to 25-years in prison and a fine up to $750,000. 3:20pm- Don't miss 1210 WPHT's next Politics and Pints with New York Times best-selling author Jack Carr—hosted by Rich! Tuesday, June 25th from 7:30 to 8:45pm ET at Zlock Performing Arts Center Bucks County Community College in Newtown, Pennsylvania. You can find more information and tickets here: https://www.audacy.com/1210wpht/events/politics-and-pints-with-jack-carr 3:30pm- On Thursday, Donald Trump spoke with House and Senate leadership on Capitol Hill. During a press conference following the meeting, the former president stated: “There is tremendous unity in the Republican party. We want to see a strong military. We want to see a strong military. We want to see money not wasted all over the world. We don't want to see Russian ships right off the coast of Florida.” 3:35pm- According to Michael Scherer of The Washington Post, Democratic donor groups are attempting to “lure young voters” to the polls by providing them with beer and birth control. Rich says this reminds him of when former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio bribed NYC residents to get the COVID-19 vaccine by offering free French fries. You can read the full article here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/06/11/democratic-efforts-lure-young-voters-include-beer-birth-control/ 3:40pm- Dr. Stanley Goldfarb—Chairman of Do No Harm & Professor of Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania—joins The Rich Zeoli Show to discuss the California State Senate's Bill AB1955 which allows schools to promote gender affirmation of students without parental notification, despite evidence-based medicine suggesting this practice is problematic. You can learn more about Do No Harm here: https://donoharmmedicine.org
TMBS aired on Jun 16, 2020 Episode summary: Tyson is using the pandemic to hyper exploit their workers. Madina Toure on what De Blasio's budget promises actually mean. Charlie Kirk's sloppy history of philosophy. During the GEM, David breaks down why the Trump recovery is BS. And we debut the 1st half of our interview with Chomsky. - TMBS ReAirs come out every Tuesday here on The Michael Brooks Show YouTube Channel. This program has been put together by The Michael Brooks Legacy Project. To learn more and rewatch the postgame and all other archived content visit https://www.patreon.com/TMBS - The TMBS ReAir project was created to give people who discovered Michael's work towards the end of his life or after his passing a weekly place to access his work without feeling overwhelmed by the volume of content they missed, as well as continuing to give grieving friends, family and fans their Tuesday evenings with Michael. While the majority of the content and analysis on TMBS has stayed relevant and timeless, please remember some of the guest's work and subject matter on the show is very much linked to the time when the show first aired. The appearance of some guests on TMBS does not constitute an endorsement of those guests' current work.
Today we have a very special conversation.As we chart our path through life, there are those rare anchors that help to hold us steady and also point us to new horizons. In this special conversation, I have the privilege of introducing you to my mentor and someone who has been a guiding force in the lives of countless individuals across a spectrum of industries for over forty years. Gary DeBlasio has this incredible knack for unlocking potential in people. It's incredible how he does it. And he's been doing it with leaders in aerospace, healthcare, elite sports and academia for decades. Gary's wisdom is earnestly earned. I've had an upfront seat on how he works – the alone, internal work that he's done for himself, is one of the greatest investments he's provided to his larger community. He is a bellwether for me. His approach to mentorship—being both a teacher and a student, listening deeply to one's inner voice, and fostering a connection with something greater—has profoundly shaped my own path.Today, we dive deep into the heart of our relationship, exploring the transformative power of being seen and nurtured. Gary opens up about his philosophy on life transitions, the challenges of the next generation, and the critical role of recovery and creating safe spaces for oneself and for others.This conversation has so much emotion in it – for both Gary and me….I love you Gary. Thank you for what you've done for me, and for the Finding Mastery community.With fire, gratitude and love,MG-----WATCH this episode on our YouTube channel.Connect with us on our Instagram.Order my book, "The First Rule of Mastery" HERE!For more information and shownotes from every episode, head to findingmastery.com.To check out our exclusive sponsor deals and discounts CLICK HERESee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Clay and Buck take a deep dive into the breaking news on the Fani Willis scandal. It's 10 years since Bill de Blasio killed the groundhog. Filmmaker Robby Starbuck joins Clay and Buck to discuss his new movie, "The War on Children," which exposes how leftist gender ideology is pushed on children through schools, government and social media. Governor DeSantis back to winning in Florida. C&B take calls.Follow Clay & Buck on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/clayandbuckSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.