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Welcome to our daily Perek Shira class. Today's class is the song of the sefardea , which is usually translated as frog . The Sefardeah says, בָּרוּךְ שֵׁם כְּבוֹד מַלְכוּתוֹ לְעוֹלַם וָעֶד: Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto L'Olam Vaed This is an anomaly, as all the other creatures sing songs that are pesukim in the Torah. This is not a pasuk . So where does Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto L'Olam Vaed come from? From Yaakov Avinu, who told this to his children when they said Shema Yisrael. When they accepted upon themselves the yoke of God's kingdom, he responded, Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto L'Olam Vaed. For reasons we won't get into now, Moshe Rabbenu did not put it in the Torah and therefore when we say it, we say it quietly. Frogs are famous for the fact that they came as a plague. Interestingly, the Gemara in Peshachim connect this to Chananya, Mishael and Azarya, three people who jumped into the fiery furnace. Tosafot explains there that it was not due to Avodah Zara, as it was a statue of the king that they were told to bow to. So why were they willing to give up their lives if they really didn't need to? The answer is, they learned it from the sefardeim /the frogs, who didn't have die Al kiddush Hashem, and yet they jumped into the ovens and were ready to die anyway (those that jumped in did survive. God miraculously saved them). The Maharil Diskin, in Shemot 7,28 is bothered. Of course the frogs were commanded to die Al kiddush Hashem . God said the frogs had to go in. That was a command. But he says No. There was a command on the frogs in general that they have to go in. But who said which ones specifically had to go into the ovens? Some chose to go into the ovens. And just like the frogs chose to go into the ovens, So too, Chananya, Mishael and Azarya chose to die Al Kiddush Hashem and jumped into the fire. Furthermore, the Yalkut Shemoni in Shemot, chapter 7, remez 182 says that the word צפרדע Sefardea is a contraction of two words, Sipor De'ah/bird with knowledge. Frogs jump, which is like flying, but what exactly was the wisdom of the frogs? The Imrei Emet on Parashat Vaerah says that the ultimate wisdom is Mesirut Nefesh, which is when you recognize God, realize how great God is, know that there is nothing more important than God, and are willing to die die to bring sanctification to God's name . That is the greatest act of knowledge. The Meshech Chochma explains this in Shemot 35 ,30, where the Torah discusses Betzalel, who was the wisest man, who created the Mishkan. God filled him up with all kinds of wisdom. And he is traced back to Chur, who protested against the Golden Calf (Sotah 37) and was killed. Chur therefore merited to have a grandson so full of knowledge. How is that measure for measure? The answer is, because that willingness to sacrifice yourself is the ultimate wisdom. Rabbenu Yona explains that the ultimate wisdom is saying, It doesn't make sense. Why in the world am I dying Al kiddush Hashem? How does it make sense to die for this one moment? Is it really worth never serving Hashem again? And the answer is yes . The ultimate wisdom is making that choice. So we come full circle. These frogs sing a song of Mesirut Nefesh , " Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto LeOlam Vaed." Why do they sing that? Why isn't their song Shema Yisrael? There's a beautiful thought from the Imrei Emet, in Parashat Vaera, where he quotes the Sfat Emet that we will bring the Geula though Mesirut Nefesh. He cites a pasuk to prove his point. That's what Shema Yisrael is- kabalut ol malchut Shamayim, accepting the yoke of Hashem's Kingdom, which you say with all your heart and all your soul. And at the end of time, when the Geula comes, it's going to be the ultimate perfection- Yechudo Yitbarach/the ultimate Oneness of God's Name , when we will able to look back and see how the Holocaust, the Crusades and everything else makes sense in the larger picture. It's going to be an unbelievable revelation that there is really one big beautiful tapestry of history. At that time, we'll look back and say, Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto LeOlam Vaed. We will look at God's name, and see how it's forever blessed. What's more, the Sfat Emet tells us that when a person says God's name in vain or by mistake, they say Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto LeOlam Vaed. That koshers it, because saying God's name in vain indicates a lack of respect for God, and by saying Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto LeOlam Vaed, we're increasing the respect of God's name. So he says, at the end of time, we're going to say, Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto LeOlam Vaed, and that will fix all of the things that were seemingly out of place in history. We're going to say Baruch Shem… which he says, will be a part of the Torah at that point. It won't just be whispered, it will be said out loud, like on Yom Kippur. So when Mashiach comes, we'll say Baruch Shem out loud, and it will actually be considered a pasuk in the Torah (whatever that means). Therefore, the frog, like all the other creatures, really is saying a pasuk . But his pasuk has not yet become a pasuk. The original revelation of God's Oneness, started in Mitzrayim. The frog was Moser Nefesh then, and he continues to teach us this lesson throughout history, of Mesirut Nefesh that will eventually bring the ultimate Kavod Shamayim . That's why the Song of the Frog is Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto LeOlam Vaed. What a fascinating explanation, from a combination of many great rabbis- the Imrei Emet, the Maharil of Diskin, and the Meshech Chochma, all piecing this beautiful little puzzle together.
In this week's podcast I talk about how to communicate with your child who is sneaking around your rules in different ways, namely with food, and how in doing so in a healthy manner, can help, exponentially, in your childs future. Tune in to hear how I tie NHA's 3 Stands into this topic!
Beitzah 14a: רוח רעה בליל שימורים - Famous story with the Maharil Diskin
Lia Diskin está certa de uma coisa: "não existe vida no isolamento, a vida é um fenômeno que resulta de relações". Relações que ela foi entendendo com o tempo, se fortalecerem quando incorporamos na existência humana a empatia, a solidariedade e o amor. Amor que Lia foi sentindo mais intensamente quando desembarcou no Brasil nos anos 70, fugindo da ditadura na Argentina. Não que tivesse qualquer envolvimento com a luta armada de resistência no país vizinho, mas porque já intuía existirem outros caminhos para se buscar a paz e uma vida mais harmônica. Jornalista de formação com especialização em crítica literária, Lia encontrou o seu propósito nos estudos orientais e em especial sobre as Upanixades e os saberes tibetanos. Morou na Índia, mas foi em São Paulo que começou a colocar em prática a máxima de que a melhor forma de ensinar é viver o que se ensina. E como ela tem ensinado nesses últimos anos. Neste papo com o podcast "45 Do Primeiro Tempo", a co-fundadora da Palas Athena, coordenadora das visitas de Dalai Lama ao Brasil, além de ser detentora de inúmeras premiações pelo mundo por sua contribuição na área de Direitos Humanos e Cultura da Paz e que está lançando o livro "Na Trilha do Entusiasmo - Mitologia e Transformação Pessoal", de Joseph Campbell, contou sua história de vida, relembrou de sua infância e adolescência na Argentina e foi categórica: "o futuro está no passado".See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, Jamie speaks to football journalist, Aaron Diskin about how he discovered his passion for journalism, his first steps in the industry, being nominated for awards and what the future holds for him, enjoy! This podcast is sponsored by FC sensory, a small football club based in Coventry for people under the age of 16 who are partially sighted or blind. For more details, please email fcsensory@protonmail.com
Yahrtzeit Yomi #907!! כט טבת Maharil Diskin רב משה יהושע יהודה ליב ב״ר בנימין מהרי״ל דיסקין רב ד׳בריסק (1818 - 1898) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ To dedicate or sponsor, please contact 917-841-5059. First come, first served. Monthly sponsorships are $540. Weekly sponsorships are $180. Daily sponsorships are as follows: Dedications (l'Zecher Nishmas, Zechus shidduch/refuah/yeshuah, etc.) are $50. Sponsorships (fliers, advertising, promotions, additional links, etc.) are $100. The cost to request and sponsor a Tzaddik that is not included on the following list is $180. Teves Yahrtzeits!! 1. Tekufas Teves 2. Zos Chanukah 3. Rav Chaim Shmulevitz 4. Baal Hatecheiles/Rav P Teitz 5. Yechezkel 33:21 6. Divrei Yechezkel 7. The Ishbitzer 8. Septuagint 9. Ezra HaSofer 10. Rav Nosson of Breslov/Rav Moshe Shapiro 11. Rav Dovid Kronglass 12. Pnei Moshe 13. Rav YM Gordon 14. Rav Aryeh Leib Bakst 15. Rav Raphael of Bershed 16. Rav Chaim Kreiswirth 17. Dubno Maggid 18. Bnei Yissaschar 19. Ketzos Hachoshen 20. Rambam 21. Shimon Ben Yaakov Avinu 22. TBA 23. Rav Mordechai Gifter 24. Baal HaTanya/Rav Dessler 25. Rav YM Tukatchinsky 26. Rav Shlomo Brevda 27. Rav SR Hirsch 28. Rav Shmuel Berenbaum 29. Rav Yitzchak Kaduri Share the Yahrtzeit Yomi link with your contacts!! https://chat.whatsapp.com/JimbwNtBaX31vmRDdnO3yk
In this Complex Care Journal Club podcast episode, Dr. Catherine Diskin and Ms. Kate Robinson discuss their team's approach to co-developing a continuing education seminar series. They describe the value of family partnership in complex care education and research, important considerations for effectively engaging families, and next steps from this work. SPEAKERS Catherine Diskin, MB, BCh, BAO Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, University of Toronto Co-Educational Lead, Complex Care Program, Department of Paediatrics, The Hospital for Sick Children Kate Robinson, MFA Founder and Artistic Director, Foxservingpie.org Mother of a child with medical complexity HOST Emily Goodwin, MD Clinical Associate Professor of Pediatrics, University of Missouri Kansas City School of Medicine Pediatrician, General Academic Pediatrics Beacon Program, Children's Mercy Kansas City DATES Initial Publication: November 6, 2023. CITATION Diskin C, Robinson K, Goodwin EJ. Partnering in Pedagogy: Reflections of a Family Leader and Clinician-Educator. 11/2023. OPENPediatrics. Online Podcast. Links: https://youtu.be/o7qTC7WsAKg, https://soundcloud.com/openpediatrics/partnering-in-pedagogy-reflections-of-a-family-leader-and-clinician-educator. JOURNAL ARTICLE REFERENCED Diskin C, Robinson K, Agrawal R, Masterson D, Coleman C, Cohen E. Family Partnership in Continuing Medical Education: A Collaborative Experience. Pediatrics. 2023;151(5):e2022060280. doi:10.1542/peds.2022-060280 ADDITIONAL ARTICLES CITED Diskin C, Malik K, Gill PJ, Rashid N, Chan CY, Nelson KE, Thomson J, Berry J, Agrawal R, Orkin J, Cohen E. Research priorities for children with neurological impairment and medical complexity in high-income countries. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2022 Feb;64(2):200-208. doi: 10.1111/dmcn.15037. Epub 2021 Aug 30. PMID: 34462917; PMCID: PMC9291325. TRANSCRIPT https://op-docebo-images.s3.amazonaws.com/Transcripts/Partnering+in+Pedagogy+Reflections+of+a+Family+Leader+and+Clinician-Educator.pdf Clinicians across healthcare professions, advocates, researchers, and patients/families are all encouraged to engage and provide feedback! You can recommend an article for discussion using this form: https://forms.gle/Bdxb86Sw5qq1uFhW6 Please visit: http://www.openpediatrics.org OPENPediatrics™ is an interactive digital learning platform for healthcare clinicians sponsored by Boston Children's Hospital and in collaboration with the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies. It is designed to promote the exchange of knowledge between healthcare providers around the world caring for critically ill children in all resource settings. The content includes internationally recognized experts teaching the full range of topics on the care of critically ill children. All content is peer-reviewed and open-access thus at no expense to the user. For further information on how to enroll, please email: openpediatrics@childrens.harvard.edu
Good news, folks! Chris has managed to recover the audio files needed to get our interview with Jan Alkema, drummer from The Drum, out the door! The quality might not be up to the usual standard, but we're so happy to share this with you. Just over a year ago, we did an episode on The Drum's only album/China Drum's third album, "Diskin." As a result, a few members of the band reached out to us on various platforms to talk about the episode. You may remember that we actually had a wee cameo from China Drum's singer/drummer Adam Lee on last year's Xmas episode. Jan also reached out to us and, after a brief back and forth, relayed his story of the creation of "Diskin." He also did a track-by-track rundown of the album, including all the details of the songs' recording process. So naturally, we just had to get him on the show to chat with us in person. After about a good 9 or 10 months of procrastination on our part, we finally sat down together on a Zoom call. Over the course of a couple of hours, we chatted about "Diskin," his experience with China Drum, when and why they changed their name to The Drum, the recording and release of the album, its subsequent tour, and the band's eventual dissolution. He also spoke a little about his own musical background too. In this episode, he talks about his experience as part of The Drum and the recording of "Diskin." The actual track-by-track rundown of the album by him will be released as a bonus episode to our subscribers on Patreon in November. If you want to hear it (and help Chris get a new laptop after last week's ransomware attack), sign up here. Big thanks to Jan for chatting with us. He's a genuinely lovely chap. We hope you enjoy this special interview! Now, due to the recent aforementioned loss of Chris' laptop, we're not sure if we'll have an episode for you next week, but stay tuned for info on when we'll be back in action!
The Florida Pokers go #WorstToFirst and take home the 2023 SFCBL Championship. Hear about this incredible season from the sources themselves! Christian Katt breaks down how the Florida Pokers took home their first SFCBL Championship in team history.
Bruce Goldstein - Retired-------------------------------------------------------------Alan Diskin - Commercial Voiceover, Copy Writer, Creative Commercial Composer, On-Air Personality, Legends RadioWebsite: https://legendsradio.com/About: https://legendsradio.com/radio-rewound/Contact: 561-324-0337Support the show
I'm so excited for all of you to meet Scott. He was one of the Peer Leaders at my fist Nurtured Heart intensive and his energetic alignment, open and gracious heart, and twinkly smile and eyes just blew me away. He has been a mentor and role model for both me and Freddy and this conversation was such a treat! Enjoy! Also this is the first recorded conversation I've ever done like this... can you tell ;)
Try this at home ;)
Meet the Diskin kid's! Join Mussi as she interviews Mendel Diskin, Rivkah Diskin, and Shmulie Diskin on their experience growing up with Nurtured Heart. They are so brave and confident! Do you have questions for them? They have offered to do more interviews so email your questions for them to QandAwithMussi@gmail.com with kids interview in the subject. Enjoy!
*btzelem Elokim is a Hebrew term referencing the concept that we are created in G-de image. **viacharacter.org is the website for the survey Richard mentions Join Advanced Nurtured Heart Approach® Trainers Mussi Diskin and Richard Berger for a candid conversation about Nurtured Heart, Domestic violence, love languages and just a bunch more. Neither of us met each other before even though we share a Jewish Orthodox background. What a great conversation it was. Enjoy! To reach Mussi Mussidiskin.com EnergizingHearts@gmail.com insta: @MussiDiskin To reach Richard richard@rbtherapy
The reported difficulties in the Likud's negotiations to form the new government are about "squeezing the lemon" as political partners try to get the most of their demands, according to political scientist Abraham Diskin, professor emeritus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He told KAN reporter Naomi Segal that overall, the emerging coalition is a cohesive one and understandings will be reached. On criticism of the override clause the coalition is expected to pass and which critics warn is a threat to Israeli democracy, Diskin takes the view that there is a need to rein in court activism. (Photo: Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In July of 1980, the bodies of two unidentified women were found. One in an Almond Orchard in Kern County and one 4 days later, 180 miles away in Ventura County, California. No one knew who they were or who killed them. Over 30 years later, they would be connected by one individual who was already serving life for prior crimes. This is their story. Anyone with information about the Ventura County Jane doe, or who attended the Visalia College of the Sequoias in July of 1980 and may have known her can contact the Ventura County Sheriff's Office: Major Crimes Division at 805-383-8704for more information about the Ventura County Doe and GedMatch, please visit:https://dnadoeproject.org/case/ventura-co-jane-doe/Crime, P. C. (2022, April 24). Who Is the Ventura County Jane Doe? - Pop Culture Crime. Medium. https://popculturecrime.medium.com/who-is-the-ventura-county-jane-doe-9f3858d6d397Diskin, M. V. C. S. (2018a, May 19). Criminal nature stems from childhood discord, man on trial for 1980 slayings says. Ventura. https://eu.vcstar.com/story/news/local/communities/conejo-valley/2018/05/18/thousand-oaks-murder-trial-childhood-discord-triggered-crime/624546002/Diskin, M. V. C. S. (2018b, May 24). Past victims testify in felon's trial over 1980 killings in Ventura, Kern counties. Ventura. https://eu.vcstar.com/story/news/local/communities/conejo-valley/2018/05/23/wilson-chouest-trial-victim-testifies-murder-trial/638521002/Diskin, M. V. C. S. (2018c, July 12). Man sentenced in 1980 rape, murder of women found in Ventura, Kern counties. Ventura. https://eu.vcstar.com/story/news/local/communities/conejo-valley/2018/07/12/man-sentenced-1980-murder-women-ventura-kern-counties/765029002/Farr, L. (2021, December 27). She Has a Name. Alta Online. https://www.altaonline.com/dispatches/a38378086/jane-doe-ventura-steve-rhods-wilson-chouest/Kettler, S. (2022, April 12). Shirley Ann Soosay: Indigenous Murder Victim Went Unnamed for Decades, Until DNA Restored Her Identity. A+E Networks EMEA. https://www.aenetworks.tv/KGET. (2021, April 23). How ‘Kern County Jane Doe' was identified as Shirley Soosay. KGET. https://www.kget.com/news/local-news/how-kern-county-jane-doe-was-identified-as-shirley-soosay/LaVoice, O. (2018, October 24). Kern County and Ventura County Jane Doe may be closer than ever to being identified. KGET. https://www.kget.com/news/local-news/kern-county-and-ventura-county-jane-doe-may-be-closer-than-ever-to-being-identified/1547382038/Moore, H., & Stewart, C. (2021, May 4). California ‘Jane Doe' identified as missing Cree woman. ICT. https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/california-jane-doe-identified-as-missing-cree-womanShirley Soosay. (n.d.). Unidentified Wiki. Retrieved November 12, 2022, from https://unidentified-awareness.fandom.com/wiki/Shirley_SoosayThe Canadian Press. (2022, May 27). ‘Always hope': Remains of Cree woman sent home to Alberta decades after disappearance. North Island Gazette. https://www.northislandgazette.com/news/always-hope-remains-of-cree-woman-sent-home-to-alberta-decades-after-disappearance/Unsolved, S. O. T. (2021, August 13). Ventura County Jane Doe. Stories of the Unsolved. https://storiesoftheunsolved.com/2021/08/12/ventura-county-jane-doe/Ventura Co Jane Doe. (2021, November 19). DNA Doe Project Cases. https://dnadoeproject.org/case/ventura-co-jane-doe/If you enjoyed learning about this case, check out our Instagram @bookofthedeadpodShoot us an email with a case suggestions or just say "hi" at bookofthedeadpod@gmail.comAnd don't forget to rate and review and share with your friendsMuch Love-Courtney and Lisa
We Admit! True Stories from Admission & Enrollment Professionals
Today's guest is the AISAP 2019 Vision and Values Award winner, Bill Diskin. Learn how Bill transitioned from English teacher to poet laureate to athletic director, and finally to Director of Admission and Financial Aid at Cannon School. Through his journey, Bill's greatest lesson learned is treating everyone with dignity, and he remains committed to passing on the wisdom of his career mentors while also conveying a sense of belonging to new students and families at his institutions.
History is littered with bands that went “experimental” for one album and then broke up after said album. A lot of the time, fans and press assume that the reasons for that are simply because they couldn't stand the rejection from their fans. That's not always the case. Formed in 1989, The Drum also go by the name China Drum. If you were around in the 90s and read musi mags or followed the Britrock scene at the time, the name China Drum is probably familiar to you. At the end of the 90s, they decided to embrace new technology and new songwriting techniques (spurred by the addition of a fourth member). The result was a radically different sound, which led them to change their name to The Drum and release their third/debut album Diskin. It's a very different prospect in comparison to the pop punk tinged alt-rock of their previous two albums - Goosefair and Self Made Maniac - but the result is, we feel, thrilling. On this episode we dive inside the band's career and this album, complete with some first hand testimony from singer Adam Lee himself.
**EPISODE LINKS** Authomize: https://www.authomize.com/ Identiverse: https://identiverse.com/ FindBiometrics Financial Identity Summit: https://web.cvent.com/event/20454161-8e78-4ae6-bc85-df7aa59a037b/summary On this episode of ID Talk, FindBiometrics' Doug OGorden speaks to Gal Diskin, Co-founder and CTO of Authomize — a leader in cloud-based authorization management. The conversation begins by highlighting big takeaways from this summer's Identiverse conference in Colorado and introducing Authomize's key competencies. OGorden and Diskin go on to illustrate the current business landscape in which we have come to expect Everything-as-a-Service, and how Authomize fits into that paradigm, before digging into the importance of educating the broader public about identity and access management. They discuss how Authomize works with biometrics, the company's keen collaborative attitude, and what's next for the company. It's a fascinating conversation about an increasingly important segment of the identity space.
Gal: Co-founder and CTO at Authomize - now in his fifth run as a founder! Founded Cyvera which sold to Palo Alto for $200 million Founded Hexponent which was acquired in just 8 months Founded and led Intel's software security division where he oversaw 120 people Listen to the episode for more! We discuss consulting as a way of marketing your start-up, Gal's legacy as a founder, and the technical challenges in building Authomize. Enjoy!
Sicha Mishpotim 5752 - Mrs. Chanie Diskin
Thomas Diskin is pursuing the AASP certification of Certified Mental Performance Consultant (CMPC). As a CMPC, Thomas Diskin hopes to be a resource for athletes looking to build their arsenal of mental skills. Thomas Diskin finds that we often discuss the importance of the mental side of athletics, but rarely do we actually understand it. It is his life's passion to continue learning about performance and positive psychology so that he may become a resource for athletes and other highly motivated individuals. He aims to continue research in the fields of goal orientation and motivational climate. Specifically, he hopes to observe these variables in action in athletic environments and highly charged business environments.To listen more, please go to: http://podcast.retiredfromsports.com/paid-podcast/ You can also find more Richard Listens content on Instagram (@RichardListens), Facebook (@Richard Listens), and RichardListens.com. Support the show (http://patreon.com/Richardlistens)Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/richardlistens/donations
Sneak Peek into RichardListens & Making the Jump Lorenda Philips present Episode 13 with Thomas Diskin, CMPC on Mental Skills for High Performers The Release Date of the Show is January 10th. Listen in for more amazing nuggets from Thomas Diskin, CMPC You can also find more Richard Listens content on Instagram (@RichardListens), Facebook (@Richard Listens), and RichardListens.com. Support the show (http://patreon.com/Richardlistens)Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/richardlistens/donations
Parashat Vayechi - The mitzvah of Bikur Cholim, and story from Maharil Diskin זיע"א by Rabbi Benjamin Lavian
In this episode (recorded a few months ago during Ireland's second lockdown) Sinéad, Peter and Isaac talk about the challenges of creating a sound experience for live-streaming as opposed to a theatre or venue; from technical equipment and software at both ends, to emerging technologies that are developing to suit new needs. They also share their experiences in theatre, where sound design has been, in general, brought in very late in the process, and the difficulties this entails at many levels. For Isaac, sound should be a main part in developing the theatre narrative and therefore sound designers should be a key part of the creative process. Peter Power believes that sound design is becoming more important but conversations need to happen at national level with policy makers; he also thinks that this milieu is changing as new generations of theatre artists are embracing new approaches to the creative process. For Sinéad, one of the key aspects is the obsolescence of the tech model, which has remained the same for a long time, even if the technologies have changed drastically. They also reflect on the lack of sound design training or education specific to theatre, sound design being by nature very interdisciplinary, and the implications of such. Finally, they talk about collaborating with other designers, and issues related to terminology, like the sometimes not very clear difference between sound designer and composer, and the implications of conflating both roles. We hope you enjoy it! _____________________________ DESIGNERS WEBSITES https://soundcloud.com/sinead-diskin https://www.isaacgibson.co.uk/ https://www.peterpower.ie _____________________________ PRODUCTIONS MENTIONED Happy Days – Live Broadcast written by Samuel Beckett directed by Caitríona McLaughlin Olympia Theatre and Landmark Productions https://www.landmarkproductions.ie/production/happy-days/ _____________________________ These podcasts are possible thanks to the Design & Crafts Council of Ireland www.dcci.ie. Each episode covers different aspects of scenography and its processes with designers from all disciplines at a variety of stages in their careers. Stage Left Podcast Music: Venn Diagrams from How To Square A Circle by Alma Kelliher Hosted and produced by ISSSD and Noelia Ruiz © www.isssd.ie
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On the 26th April 1999 Jill Dando, a well known BBC presenter and celebrity was murdered outside her home address. Over a year later Barry George, a vulnerable adult who suffered from a number of disabilities was arrested for her murder. Despite the evidence being extremely sparse and contentious due to the police handling of the investigation, he was convicted at trial and sentenced to life imprisonment. He spent a number of years in prison for a crime he did not commit. Eventually, the Court of Appeal overturned his conviction and he was acquitted at a retrial. His sister Michelle worked tirelessly to support him through the process whilst having to cope with intense media and public scrutiny and raise her family. This is a powerful episode about what happened to her and her brother - the fight for justice goes on for Barry and many others who have been victims of a miscarriage of justice.
Natasha is a personal stylist , life coach, and an accredited cognitive behavioral therapist. She is all about helping women feel confident, boost their self esteem, and develop unstoppable confidence through the power of personal style. As Natasha started putting together her own style and wardrobe, she began to realize that style and fashion can have a direct impact on your mental state/self image. Losing her mother proved to be quite a trial, but she was able to get some last advice from her that has kept her going. She had a big realization while her mother was in the hospital, and that was that her style had a big influence on how confident and good she felt when she was visiting her mom. Putting style and fashion together 2:47Preparation and building resilience/being a mom 9:01Natasha's last moments with her mom 22:08Difference in advice from the living and those who are about to move on 29:40Natasha's upbringing 34:49“Savvy Style, when I launched it, I remember the first day it went live on social media, I knew Mom was there. I could feel her. I just knew she was there and whenever I hit a milestone in my business, I know she's there. I know she's watching. I know wherever she is she'll be happy and she knows that this is what we talked about.” 25:41https://www.savvystyle1.com/@savvystyle1https://www.facebook.com/theirishmummy/https://www.instagram.com/the_irish_mummy/https://www.theirishmummy.com
Jim and Jeff talk with Gal Diskin, Chief Technology Officer and Co-Founder at Authomize, about Identity First Security and Cloud Infrastructure Entitlement Management (CIEM). Connect with Gal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/galdiskin/ Check out his Identiverse 2021 Session: https://identiverse.com/idv2021/speaker/SPEJMKHDGKV/ Learn more about Authomize: https://www.authomize.com/ Lessons Learned for the Next SolarWinds Attack: https://www.authomize.com/blog/lessons-learned-for-the-next-solarwinds-attack/ The Emergence of Cloud Infrastructure Entitlement Management (CIEM): https://www.authomize.com/blog/the-emergence-of-cloud-infrastructure-entitlement-management-ciem/ Connect with Jim and Jeff on LinkedIn here: Jim McDonald: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jimmcdonaldpmp/ Jeff Steadman: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffsteadman/ Visit the show at www.IdentityAtTheCenter.comand follow @IDACPodcast on Twitter. Have a question for Jim and Jeff? Ask us here: https://anchor.fm/identity-at-the-center/message --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/identity-at-the-center/message
In this episode I speak with Dr. Joy James and Khadijah Diskin in which we talk all things liberation. We spoke on black feminism today, sources of our struggle, how we can develop a language that speaks to the race, class and function dynamics and so much more Joy James is the Ebenezer Fitch Professor of the Humanities at Williams College. James is author of: Shadowboxing: Representations of Black Feminist Politics; Transcending the Talented Tenth: Black Leaders and American Intellectuals; Resisting State Violence: Radicalism, Gender and Race in U.S. Culture. Her edited books include: Warfare in the American Homeland; The New Abolitionists: (Neo) Slave Narratives and Contemporary Prison Writings; Imprisoned Intellectuals; States of Confinement; The Black Feminist Reader (co-edited with TD Sharpley-Whiting); and The Angela Y. Davis Reader. James is completing a book on the prosecution of 20th-century interracial rape cases, tentatively titled “Memory, Shame & Rage.” She has contributed articles and book chapters to journals and anthologies addressing feminist and critical race theory, democracy, and social justice. She is the recipient of grants, fellowships or awards from: the Fletcher Foundation; the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities; the Rockefeller Foundation; the Bellagio Fellowship; the Aaron Diamond Foundation/Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture; the Ford Foundation; and the Gustavus Myers Human Rights Award. Khadijah Diskin is a PhD Researcher in Psychology. Her research explores the psychosocial dimension of Black students experiences in British higher education, using Lacanian discourse analysis to interrogate the intersubjective convergences of race, coloniality and neoliberalisation. I.G. @TheGambian Twitter: @MomodouTaal @FanonIsCanon
In this episode, we talk about what it has been like to run a brick and mortar location during a global pandemic, how to create an experience for your customer, and how to use digital channels to drive sales in […] The post Creating An Experience, A Conversation With Travis Diskin Of Curiosities Vintage Mall – Refreshing Edge Podcast 29 first appeared on Edge One Media. The post Creating An Experience, A Conversation With Travis Diskin Of Curiosities Vintage Mall – Refreshing Edge Podcast 29 appeared first on Edge One Media.
In this episode, we talk about what it has been like to run a brick and mortar location during a global pandemic, how to create an experience for your customer, and how to use digital… Continue reading → The post Creating An Experience, A Conversation With Travis Diskin Of Curiosities Vintage Mall – Refreshing Edge Podcast 29 appeared first on Edge One Media.
“For the perfect flâneur, for the passionate spectator, it is an immense joy to set up house in the heart of the multitude, amid the ebb and flow of movement.” Charles Baudelaire A flâneur is a man who saunters about, observing the city. A romantic and a thinker, he can blend into the city space without fear for his safety: a luxury that men and women don’t share equally. Dublin is a very walkable city; from the Docklands to the gates of Phoenix Park in less than four kilometres. From the Rosie Hackett bridge to the women of the Easter Rising, and the Moore Street traders to Outhouse, discover the hidden stories of women who lived in the city on this fascinating audio walking tour. A freelance PR and journalist, Niamh Mongey works in communications, campaigns and outreach. Communications projects include the Women on Walls campaign with Accenture Ireland, and the Irish Times’ Modern Ireland in 100 Artworks. Contributors: Sara Philips is Chair of TENI, she has served on the government’s committee for the Gender Recognition Review and is as a founding member of the Dublin Trans Peer Support Group Donna Cooney is a Green Party Counsellor, community activist and Chair of the Lord Mayor’s Forum on Moore Street Joyce Garvey is a visual artist, writer, award winning filmmaker and author of Lucia Joyce: The Girl Who Danced in Shadows Audio guide produced and edited by sound designer, composer and song writer, Sinéad Diskin. Image/Artwork: Joyce Garvey View the transcription and route map at: https://ilfdublin.com/whats-on/festival/strand/boundless/flaneuse-by-niamh-mongey-self-guided-audio-walk/
We are still reeling from the government's terrible race report. Listen in to my conversation with Deej about what our focuses should be in terms of organising and going forward. Khadijah Diskin is a PhD Researcher in Psychology. Her research explores the psychosocial dimension of Black students experiences in British higher education, using Lacanian discourse analysis to interrogate the intersubjective convergences of race, coloniality and neoliberalisation. I.G. @TheGambian Twitter: @MomodouTaal @FanonIsCanon
We join Adam and Todd in the dog-filled offices of one of the great gems of Wedgewood-Houston, Diskin Cider. They talk about how they started out making cider, breaking-bad style, while realizing Nashville was an "untapped" market for the cider world.Become a subscriber! Visit us at https://www.patreon.com/nashvilledailyTEXT US: 615-392-1358Today's Guests - Adam and Todd, Founders of Diskin Ciderhttps://www.diskincider.com/https://www.instagram.com/diskincider/Nashville Daily Artist of the Day Playlisthttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/51eNcUWPg7qtj8KECrbuwx?si=nEfxeOgmTv6rFUyhVUJY9AFollow us @ XPLR NASHWebsite - https://nashvilledailypodcast.com/YouTube Channel - https://www.youtube.com/c/xplrnashInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/xplr.nash/Twiter - https://twitter.com/xplr_nashNASHVILLE & XPLR MERCH - http://bit.ly/nashville_merchMedia and other inquiries please email hello@xplr.lifeArtists can submit songs to be featured here https://forms.gle/mtkxUCFds7g9e2466
Real Estate Agent Gets Licensed at 19 and CRUSHES IT! GSD Mode Podcast Interview with Diskin Young and Joshua Smith. Diskin got His Real Estate License at 19 years old with intentions of becoming a Real Estate Investor. As He was creating success as a young Real Estate Investor, He decided to also start selling Real Estate and quickly started to have success. After several years of building His Real Estate Business, as well as growing His own Real Estate Investment Portfolio, Diskin decided to start His own Brokerage and today has over 30 Agents inside His Brokerage, in addition to still being a highly successful Real Estate Agent and successful Real Estate Investor! Diskin was recently a NAR "30 Under 30" finalist and continues to CRUSH IT! 00:00 - Introduction 3:40 - What led you into real estate? 9:45 - Using college and high school resources to build his clientele 12:15 - Saying ‘yes’ to everything helped him find success early on 14:35 - When starting a real estate brokerage, when did you know it was a good time to start your own? 20:00 - What does your business look like today currently? 22:20 - Building systems and order of operations 24:45 - What are some things that you adjusted and shifted in order to keep pushing through the pandemic? 27:45 - What do you do in order to think, stay calm, and see clearly? 31:30 - Where do you predict the real estate market is headed? 35:45 - What is currently working for you and your agents in your brokerage to bring in new business? 41:00 - How new agents should go about ‘getting the ball rolling’ when it comes to getting involved with investing 46:00 - Why did you decide to dial back the amount of agents at your brokerage and where do you see yourself taking it? 53:20 - How to avoid burnout and to continue to do the work 55:30 - If you could give your younger self 2 pieces of advice, what would that advice be? 58:50 - Where to learn more about Diskin and get in touch Diskin Young's Contact Info: DiskinRealEstate@Gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/diskin.young https://www.instagram.com/diskinyoung/ https://bellwetherrealestate.com/
Can you eat water lilies? Are brussels sprouts the next pop chip? Want to discover what's next in snacking and surprise and delight your family? Erica Wagner, the Chief Snack Officer, and Arielle Diskin, The Chief Social Snacker, are the Co-Founders of SnackRiot. SnackRiot is a monthly snack subscription service that introduces busy families to new brands, ingredients and flavors with the goal of expanding their snack cabinet options. We discuss why people love new snacks, new food trends and what large companies can learn from their efforts. PS – there is a discount code hidden within the episode.
On the morning of 26 April 1999, Jill Dando, an English journalist, television presenter and newsreader, was shot dead outside her home in London. It prompted the biggest murder inquiry conducted by the Metropolitan Police and the country's largest criminal investigation since the hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper. A year later a local disabled man, Barry George, was arrested and later convicted and imprisoned for the murder. Eight years later, following a successful appeal against his original conviction, he was retried and acquitted. The case remains unsolved.Michelle Diskin is the sister of Barry George. She campaigned tirelessly to prove her brother's innocence. Here she talks about what it is like to a relative caught in a high profile murder case of this kind and what it took from her and others to challenge the British Criminal Justice System.Links:Michelle Diskin https://www.linkedin.com/in/diskinmichelle/?originalSubdomain=ukBook: Stand Against Injustice : Michelle Diskin Bates, : 9781910786246MOJ: http://www.mojuk.org.uk/Appeal: http://appeal.org.uk/Second Chance: facebook.com/RaphaelRowePodcast/Second Chance Webpage: Second ChanceYour Vision Media LTD: www.yourvisionmedia.tv
It is with great pleasure to share today the sicha from משפטים תשנ”ב, כ"ז שבט ,שבת מברכים אדר - ספר השיחות תשנ”ב כרך ב - p. 362 which discusses occurrences in the world and their connection to Moshiach's arrival.Please join Mrs. Chanie Diskin, from Munich, Germany as she relays the Rebbe's very powerful words with message that all our avoda has been completed and the Nosi of the generation is Moshiach of the generation. Be inspired...Inspire others!
CPD #3 - Guest Jeff Diskin Hosted by Nate Trosky & Trent Mongero http://www.troskybaseball.com http://www.troskyranch.com
Myths And Culture © 2020 VOL.1 PODCAST ISBN 978-976-96512-3-4Since our perceptions at times may focus on Myths and Mythology which are just the same. But in the strictest sense, they really aren’t. I am not conflating the two issues but rather trying to make sense of the role of Myths without taking literally their references to gods, monsters, or the supernatural especially its place in Culture in context that connotes the scrutiny of myths and whether our perceptions are influenced by our individual differences and preconceived notions . In my view the aforesaid is perceived as an utterance which in this context consciously or unconsciously is functioning as a request for information, which is expected to be provided in the form of an analytical conversation.WORKS CITED"Euhemerism." The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions.---. Discourse and the Construction of Society: Comparative Studies of Myth, Ritual, and Classification. 1989; NY: Oxford UP, 1992.---. On the Origin of Language. Trans. John H. Moran and Alexander Gode. Chicago: U Chicago P, 1986.---. “A Correspondence on Ossian” and “On Contemporary Uses of Mythology.” The Rise of Modern Mythology. Eds. Burton Feldman and Robert D. Richardson. Bloomington, IN: Indian UP, 2000.---. “From The Language of Adam to the Pluralism of Babel.” Mediterranean Historical Review 12.2 (1997): 51-59.---. “Ideas on the Philosophy of the History of Humankind.” The Idea of Race. Eds. Robert Bernasconi and Tommy L. Lott. Indianapolis: Hackett, 2000.---. Chips from a German Workshop. 4 Vols. NY: Scribner, 1872.---. Fingal: An Ancient Epic Poem in Six Books; Together with Several Other Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Facsimile of the 1792 edition. NY: Woodstock Books, 1996.Aberbach, Alan David. The Ideas of Richard Wagner: An Examination and Analysis. Lanham, MD: UP of America, 2003.Barsalou, Lawrence W.; Kyle Simmons, W.; Barbey, Aron K.; Wilson, Christine D. (February 2003). "Grounding conceptual knowledge in modality-specific systems". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 7 (2): 84–91. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.642.1908. doi:10.1016/s1364-6613(02)00029-3. PMID 12584027. S2CID 805674Barsalou, Lawrence W.; Kyle Simmons, W.; Barbey, Aron K.; Wilson, Christine D. (February 2003). "Grounding conceptual knowledge in modality-specific systems". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 7 (2): 84–91. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.642.1908. doi:10.1016/s1364-6613(02)00029-3. PMID 12584027. S2CID 805674Barthes, Roland (1972). Mythologies. Hill and Wang. ISBN 978-0-09-997220-4.Bascom 1965, p. 9.Bascom 1965, p. 9.Bascom 1965, p. 9.Bascom 1965, p. 9.Bascom 1965, p. 9.Bascom 1965, p. 9.Bascom 1965, p. 9.Belin, Isaiah. Vico and Herder: Two Studies in the History of Ideas. NY: Viking, 1976.Biddiss, Michael Denis. Father of Racist Ideology: The Social and Political Thought of Count Gobineau. NY: Weybright and Talley, 1970.Birenbaum, Harvey. 1988. Myth and Mind. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. pp. 152–53.Boeree.Bultmann, Rudolf. 1958. Jesus Christ and Mythology. New York: Scribner.Clay, Diskin and Andrea Purvis, eds. Four Island Utopias: Being Plato’s Atlantis, Euhemeros of Messene’s Panchaia, Iamboulos’ Island of the Sun, and Sir Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis. Newburyport, MA: Focus, 1999.Corner 1999, pp. 47–59.Cox, George William. The Mythology Support the show (http://www.buzzsprout.com/429292)
Khadijah joined us for reflect on how we spiritually, emotionally and intellectually respond to the people around us trying to 'fix' racism. It was a timely discussion for us (we were exhausted!) where we discussed how Blackness transcends modernity. Weekly sociological reflections with Tissot and Chantelle during the COVID19 global pandemic
Khadijah joined us for reflect on how we spiritually, emotionally and intellectually respond to the people around us trying to 'fix' racism. It was a timely discussion for us (we were exhausted!) where we discussed how Blackness transcends modernity. Weekly sociological reflections with Tissot and Chantelle during the COVID19 global pandemic
Wendy Diskin, REALTOR, with RE/MAX Best Associates - serves the Johnson County / Kansas City area of Kansas. Check out her great local knowledge and real estate advice. Wendy is part of the most advanced real estate coaching system, Tom Ferry. Check out his update on real estate today. Wendy Diskin on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/wendy.w.diskin Tom Ferry - http://www.TomFerry.com Coach Bob McCranie - https://www.facebook.com/BrokerCoachBob
I’m reading from chapter 1 of my book, Earning Freedom: Conquering a 45-Year Prison Term For more information, visit PrisonProfessors.com Podcast 112: Earning Freedom 1.3 ******* The marshals escort four of us in chains through the working areas of the post office. I see postal clerks eying us suspiciously as they sort the mail into large bags while we wait for an elevator to take us to the courthouse. We walk into a bullpen. The marshals remove our handcuffs and chains before locking us in. A few minutes later the marshals bring in Alex, my former partner. I recognize his voice when they lock him into an adjacent cage. We can’t see each other, but once the marshals leave I hold onto the bars on the front gate and talk to Alex, disregarding the solid wall that separates us. “How can you testify against me?” I ask him. “We’ve been like brothers.” Alex graduated from high school two years ahead of me, but despite our age difference, we became close friends. After he introduced me to the money we could earn by selling cocaine, we became partners. “I'm sorry.” I could hear the humiliation in his voice. “It was too fast. When they caught me, I just got scared. I didn’t know this would happen.” Alex began cooperating with prosecutors a year before my arrest, when DEA agents caught him with a kilogram of cocaine. In a plea negotiation that would limit him to two years in prison, he agreed to testify against me. “Do you know that I’m facing a life sentence?” “I heard.” His voice drops, and I know the severity of sanction that I face weighs heavily on him. “The government’s case rests on your testimony.” I try to manipulate not so much what Alex will say, but how he will say it. “It all rests on you. Either you can come across like some kind of star witness, or you can come across in a way that might make you look like a liar in the eyes of the jury. Just remember that you’ve already got your deal. If you fall apart under cross-examination from my attorney, the jury won’t convict me.” “I got ya.” The seed I planted bears fruit. When Alex testifies before the jury, both on direct examination from the prosecutor and on cross-examination from Raymond, he seems totally untrustworthy. His testimony emboldens me, as I know Alex’s stuttering and mumbling portray him as a less than credible witness, out to save his skin at any cost. Later that evening I’m elated when I return to the jail, thinking that my friend came through. The government has been counting on his testimony, but now the prosecutors will have to present more compelling evidence if they want a conviction. In the following days, we have peaks and valleys, scoring well with some witnesses, not so well with others. All in all, I feel my acquittal nearing. ******* My hopes for release shatter during the second week of the trial. When I return to the jail after court one evening, I call Lisa for our nightly conversation. While we’re talking I hear aggressive male voices shouting in the background. Then the line goes dead. I dial the number again. Someone picks up the phone without answering. I hear a click followed by silence. Frantic now, I dial a third time. I haven’t dispelled rumors in the jail that I’m a man of means, and I worry that some gang leader from the jail has orchestrated a home invasion or kidnapping. Finally, a male voice answers. When the operator announces my collect call, the call goes through. “Hello, Michael.” The man who answers takes a familiar tone, snickering. “Who is this and what’re you doing in my house?” I squeeze the handset of the phone in anger. “I’m a special agent with the DEA,” he taunts. “You’ll find out soon enough why we’re here.” “You’re harassing my family because you’re losing the trial.” The agent laughs at me. “I don’t think that’s the case,” he says. Then, just before he hangs up, he adds that they’ve arrested Tom, Lisa’s brother. Minutes later, officers from the jail arrive to pull me out from the housing unit. They lock me between sally port cages that separate the unit from jail corridors and I crouch down in despair. My mind reels with questions. Worry torments me. Why would the agents invade Lisa’s house? Why would the agent tell me they have Tom? My heart races like never before. Then I see a team of DEA agents enter the housing unit. They march past me and into my cell for an apparent search. After the agents finish their ransacking, the guards lead me back into the housing unit and lock me inside. Adrenaline surges through my body, I can’t sleep. When guards come for me in the morning, I’m pacing. They escort me to the bullpen for court transportation and I’m stunned to see Tom, Lisa’s brother. “What’re you doing here?” I can’t believe Tom is in jail. He’s been free on bond since our initial arrest, sitting beside me at trial each day. I can’t fathom what happened. “I messed up.” He doesn’t look at me when he responds. “What are you talking about? Were you home last night when the DEA busted in on Lisa?” Tom didn’t even know that the DEA had been to the house. He tells me that the DEA arrested him yesterday afternoon following the court proceedings. “Why did they arrest you? And why would the DEA bust in on Lisa?” “I messed up.” Tom repeats. He won’t make eye contact. While sitting on the bench, rubbing his face and looking at the floor of the cage, he tells me what happened. Several months ago, just days after my arrest, when I instructed Tom to retrieve those eight kilograms of cocaine and deliver them to Walt, Tom decided to sell them on his own. One of his customers, it turns out, is a DEA agent. “You mean you’ve been selling that cocaine this whole time on your own?” I’m angry to learn that Tom disregarded my specific instructions to deliver the cocaine to Walt. Tom nods. “I thought I could make more money that way.” I close my eyes and shake my head. “Please tell me that you weren’t storing the coke at Lisa’s house.” “I didn’t keep it there, but I stashed money under my mattress. I also gave Lisa some money I’d been paid by the guy who turned out to be the undercover DEA agent.” All I can think about is the possibility that Lisa has been arrested. I receive clarification a few hours later, when Raymond fills me in. He says the agents might charge Lisa with the crime of lying to a federal officer. When the agents were at the house, she told them that the money in her purse belonged to her, when in fact Tom had given her DEA-marked bills. At least she wasn’t in custody. Raymond urges me to snap out of my despair and focus on the final hours of my trial, which is my immediate problem. I no longer care about the trial or its outcome. The true severity of my problems has finally crashed down upon me. I’ve not only made a disaster of my own life, but of everyone else’s, I want to give up, to die. ******* The jury returns its verdict, convicting me on every count. Lies of innocence yield to the reality of my guilt. I have to accept that I’m facing a life sentence. Who cares? I don’t know what’s coming. Nothing matters. The government may charge Lisa with a felony and the thought of her in handcuffs rips me apart. I ask Raymond to make some kind of deal with prosecutors, to tell them I’ll accept a life sentence, a death sentence, I’ll waive my right to appeal, anything, if the government will leave Lisa alone. He tells me the government hasn’t even charged me in the case. “Then tell them I’ll confess. I arranged for Tom to receive those eight kilograms. They were part of the same crime I was just convicted of, but if I hadn’t sent Tom, the coke would’ve stayed buried.” “I'm not going to do that. You’re under duress. I don’t want you cooperating. You haven’t even been sentenced and you’ve got excellent prospects on appeal.” “I don’t care about an appeal, I don’t care about anything other than doing what I can to spare Lisa. She doesn’t deserve this. Call the prosecutor. Tell him I’ll confess.” “I won’t do it.” Raymond doesn’t want to involve himself with my talking to prosecutors. I don’t understand his reluctance–it may be that he doesn’t want me to reveal the counsel he has given throughout my ordeal, or he worries that I might divulge information about the property he received from Paco as part of his fee. I don’t care. Raymond is not my priority. Wanting to do whatever I can for Lisa, I fire Raymond, telling him that I don’t want him to represent me anymore. I dial the prosecutor, Jerry Diskin, myself. “Is this the same Michael Santos who testified that he didn’t know anything about drug trafficking?” The prosecutor is mocking me. “Look, Jerry,” I say, “I was doing what my attorney told me I had to do. I’m sorry. I’ll confess to anything you want, I’ll give up my right to appeal, I’ll accept any sentence you want to impose. Please, just don’t put Lisa through this.” “I have some problems with what you’re offering,” the prosecutor puts me in my place. “Let me start from the beginning. First, don’t ever call me Jerry. I’m a United States Attorney, Mr. Diskin to you. Do you get that?” “Yes. I’m sorry.” “Second, I do not, I repeat, I do not want to speak with you unless it’s through an attorney. Why are you contacting me instead of Raymond?” “Raymond doesn’t want me to talk with you. I don’t want him to represent me anymore.” “Then I’ll have the public defender send someone over. Don’t contact me again. And for the record, let me respond to the offer you made. I don’t need your confession. You’re convicted, and you’re facing a life sentence. Your appeal doesn’t concern me. I don’t know why you think I would want to talk to you.” Mr. Diskin is right, I realize. I breathe in deeply and exhale, trying to ease the pressure and anxiety squeezing my chest. ******* While lying on my rack, I think of all the ways I’ve disappointed and humiliated my parents. They never wanted the business expansion I craved. Throughout my childhood and adolescence, my parents worked hard, hoping to give my sisters and me privileges that they didn’t enjoy growing up. They weren’t college-educated people, but they loved us, and they built a life that provided our family with a beautiful home, new cars, regular vacations. I abused their trust and pushed them into decisions they would’ve never made without my influence. Ultimately, my greed led to the destruction of our family and their business. Then, when I saw a better opportunity to enrich myself by dealing cocaine, I abandoned them. My decisions destroyed my parents’ prosperity, contributed to their divorce, and embarrassed my sisters. My criminal decisions also humiliated my grandparents. They were devout Catholics who expected me to lead a moral life and make good decisions. The letters I’ve been receiving from my mother describe their disgust at my actions. I haven’t had the courage to speak to them since my arrest. Instead, I’ve burdened my mom with the impossible task of defending me to them. My mental anguish is relentless. I carry Lisa’s picture in my hand trying frantically to think of anything that might save her. How can I persuade the government not to prosecute her? Suicide feels so inviting. I think about another prisoner who did it using the blades from one of the plastic razors we’re allowed to have in jail. While sitting in a toilet stall, he sliced his wrists and bled to death. That option appeals to me. It could be one way of reaching Mr. Diskin. If I’m dead, he may feel some sympathy for Lisa. But killing myself would crush my parents and my sisters. Although I don’t want to face the consequences of my actions, I know I can’t allow these suicidal thoughts to continue. My dad urges me to be strong and through long letters that my mom writes, she shows that her support will not waver. Lisa, on the other hand, worries mostly about the fallout from my problems spilling over to her. During our daily phone calls, tormented by the possibility of going to prison she pleads with me to save her. Boils erupt on my arms and legs as the stress I’m feeling manifests itself throughout my body. The egg-sized volcanoes of pus burn like hot acid under my skin, exerting unbearable pressure. Only a visit to the infirmary for an excision relieves the pain, though within hours of having one drained, more begin to fester and swell. ******* I’ve been in jail for six months and must languish through several more before my sentencing date. I don’t know what the judge will impose, though I accept the possibility of a life sentence as being real. I’m not interested in playing cards or table games. I stay in my cell reading the Bible with hopes of finding solace, an anchor. The Scriptures help me resist a growing urge to end my life and strengthen me to hold on for another day. Although I want to identify with the agonies and loss described in the Book of Job, comparisons end there. Job, at least, wasn’t beset with self-recriminations over acting stupidly and dishonestly. Knowing that decisions I made spawned my tribulations aggravates the continuous torment in my mind. The marshals come for me again and drive me to the courthouse. I meet Justin, my public defender who is there for my debriefing session with Mr. Diskin. Justin hasn’t had an opportunity to review any court records or files pertaining to my predicament, though he knows a jury convicted me on numerous counts of high-level drug charges only days before. I haven’t been charged with additional crimes and he doesn’t understand my motivation for wanting to talk with the prosecutors. “Look man,” I tell him in the private room, “I’m responsible for everything. I’m the one who told Tom to pick up the eight keys. He may’ve sold them to the guy who turned out to be DEA, but I’m responsible.” “But you haven’t been charged,” Justin points out. “What do you hope to gain from this admission?” “The government can do whatever it wants with me. But the prosecutors are threatening to charge Lisa with a felony. All I want is to take the punishment myself, whatever it is. Tell them to slam me with whatever, but to leave her alone.” The public defender shakes his head in resignation, knowing that I’m not ready to receive counsel. We walk to an adjacent courtroom to meet with the prosecutor. Justin sits beside me as I respond to Mr. Diskin’s questions. His first question is whether I lied when I took the witness stand during my trial. I answer that I did, and he asks whether I understand that admitting to such lies exposes me to the additional criminal charges of perjury. I offer to accept any charges or sanctions the government wants to impose and then I plead with the prosecutor not to charge Lisa. Mr. Diskin smirks, unmoved. The debriefing session lasts for an hour. In the end, Mr. Diskin tells me that I haven’t revealed anything he doesn’t already know. “You’re going to have to face the full punishment for your crimes.” The prosecutor narrows his eyes as he lashes out at me. “And you may find yourself sitting at the defendant’s table again, this time beside your wife.” The marshals drive me back to the jail. I’m completely spent, knowing that I’m powerless to protect Lisa. For weeks I lie in my cell, clutching my pillow, staring at the wall, catatonic with grief. ******* While I wait through long months leading to my sentencing date, I look for anything that will pique my interest. I stumble across a two-volume hardcover anthology called A Treasury of Philosophy in the jail’s book cart. Hoping it might help, I begin reading. Even though I’ve never been a reader, the essays intrigue me. Since graduating from high school I haven’t read a single book. Yet now, here I am, aching with thoughts tormenting my mind as I try to read philosophy in a jail cell. Philosophy isn’t a subject I’ve encountered before. I find a dictionary and begin a tentative step into another world, discovering that the essays in this anthology help to lessen my feeling of hopelessness. They give me new understanding of an individual’s relationship to society. I begin to believe that maybe, over time, I can reconcile myself with my fellow citizens. This thought of redemption comes to me as I read the French philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau, who defines the “social contract” and outlines each citizen’s covenant with and responsibility to society. In breaking the law, I haven’t been faithful to the social contract Rousseau described, but in reading his work, I begin to believe that I can make amends. I read John Locke, whose essays on human understanding introduce me to the concept of the tabula rasa, or blank slate. Locke believed that everyone comes into this world without prior knowledge or innate ideas. Rather, everything a person sees, feels, tastes, and smells makes an impression, influencing who and what the person becomes. As Locke suggests, I learn from my experiences in society. In turn, those experiences spawn the values that guide my thoughts, my decisions, and my actions. Thinking about Locke’s philosophy, I rest the open book on my chest and stare at the ceiling of my cell while I clasp my hands behind my head. What made the lasting impression on my blank slate? What prompted me to think that earning money by selling cocaine would be a proper life choice? The questions deepen my introspection. ******* Unlike many of the men locked up with me, I had options. Had I chosen college, my parents would’ve supported my decision. But without worries about receiving a paycheck, I took the easy road. At 20, I persuaded my dad to pay me a higher salary than I deserved. He also leased a new black Bronco I could drive without concerning myself with expenses for gasoline, insurance, or maintenance. If it wasn’t economic necessity that drove me to crime, what was it? Maybe insecurity. I wanted others to see me as something more than what I was. Greed and a sense of entitlement drove my decisions. But underneath the flash I wasn’t anything more than an insecure boy. Where did my fixation with money begin? My grandparents lived a moral life as hardworking Americans, and they showered my sisters and me with love from the time we were children. I should’ve learned more from them. Yet, I equated who I was with what I materially possessed, always wanting more. In our household, we never spoke honestly about drugs. Although our parents harped about the wickedness of drugs, their admonitions didn’t apply to the consumption of alcohol. They entertained in our home regularly and drinking was always a major component of any gathering. When my sisters and I discovered that two of our parents’ close friends–one a prominent lawyer and the other a neurologist–had used cocaine, we confronted our parents. They made excuses. I still remember, vividly, how my mother tried to explain, telling my sisters and me that their friends snorted coke for health reasons. Inconsistencies between what my parents said about drugs and alcohol with what I saw may have contributed to my perceptions on morality. Likewise, my parents’ tolerance for bid rigging and collusion in the pursuit of contracts to advance our construction business couldn’t help but influence my sensitivity to the law’s relative importance to society. My parents’ lectures about honesty, integrity, temperance, and other virtues of good citizenship didn’t make as firm an impression on me as the hypocrisy I saw. As far as I was concerned, certain activities might be illegal, but if they were committed without harming recognizable victims, then it was okay to shrug off or disregard those laws. My parents’ reasoning differed dramatically from the principled approach Rousseau taught in his essay on the social contract, a pact that bound all citizens. ******* As I move closer to my sentencing date, I begin to feel responsible for the crimes I committed. By contemplating the writings of John Locke, I start to appreciate the influences that shaped the young man I’ve become, and I accept that I have to change. I must “unlearn” the corrupting influences that led to my bad actions, and eventually, to my imprisonment. When I pick up the Treasury of Philosophy again, I read an essay that describes the trial of Socrates and it slowly helps me accept the predicament I have created. Socrates was convicted for breaking an absurd law that prohibited the aristocratic classes from teaching the commoners. The Athenian tribunal sentenced Socrates to a self-induced death by poisoning for his crime. He waited patiently in jail for the date of his scheduled execution. Many leaders of Athens loved and respected Socrates. Outraged at his sentence, they coordinated a plan that would allow him to escape punishment and live the remainder of his life in exile. Socrates refused the offer, explaining that his conscience would not permit him to sneak away, avoiding punishment for his actions. Reading about Socrates inspires me. As a lover of law and democracy, Socrates asserted that his honor would require that he carry out the sentence by drinking the poison that would kill him. In my eyes, that principled position reveals Socrates as a man of strength and courage. While waiting for the imposition of my sentence, I look to him as a role model for the type of thoughtful man I’d like to become. With my Bible and the philosophy books, I live like a monk in my cell. The reading transports me to new worlds of thought and contemplation. I feel an unfamiliar maturity creeping into me, bringing hope. I write letters to my parents, my sisters, and every day I write to Lisa, promising to redeem my crimes by educating myself and using time in prison to prepare for a productive life upon release. ******* Seven months after my initial arrest, the government indicts me with several new criminal counts. I accept these new charges and don’t dispute the leading role I played in distributing eight kilograms of cocaine or my perjury during the trial. Lisa isn’t named in the indictment, although the lawyers speculate that she’ll later face criminal charges for lying to a federal officer. My efforts to protect Lisa have failed, but prayer and philosophy inspire optimism. Rather than allowing forces I can’t control–such as the sentence my judge will impose–to dictate my attitude, I begin to feel a spiritual strength building inside of me. Prison will not destroy or define me. Rather, I make a commitment to define myself through my response to the sanctions I face. ******* I want to atone for my crimes. To make my statement public, I write to Stuart Eskenazi, a journalist who covered my trial for The Tacoma News Tribune. In the letter, I express remorse for my crimes and for the ways I acted after arrest. I pledge to find ways to make up for my wrongs during the decades ahead. A few days later, Eskenazi comes to interview me in jail. I understand that audiences will be skeptical about my commitment to educating myself and to creating opportunities for positive social contributions. Still, I’m committed to begin anew. I feel myself turning the page on the decisions that brought me into confinement. The front-page story that Mr. Eskenazi writes for the local paper does not influence my sentencing judge. After two separate hearings, he imposes consecutive sentences. In total, the judge orders that I serve a 45-year sentence and fines me $500,000 for my crimes. “You will be an old man when you walk out of prison,” the judge states flatly. “But you’ve earned it.”
Diskin began his real estate career in 2010 at 18 years old, but really it started even earlier than that. He has had a passion for real estate while growing up and all it can do for a person's life. Beginning his career at a young age, he has a unique perspective and a wide range of knowledge. He graduated from Western Washington University in 2014 with a business degree in economics. While gaining his degree he spent extensive time gaining real estate investing knowledge. In 2015, Diskin, along with business partners, started Bellwether Real Estate which they have grown to be the 5th highest producing firm in their area with almost 60 high producing agents. He earned his Managing Brokers license where he managed and oversaw the firm for 1.5 years. In 2019, he was selected as one of Realtor Magazine's 30 Under 30 agents in the Country. He was also highlighted in RE Magazine in 2019 as well. Many ask what drives and pushes him - when he was 16 years old, he was diagnosed with cancer which taught him to work his absolute hardest every day and to live each day to its fullest potential. Diskin began a YouTube Channel in 2018 where he teaches and talks about real estate investing, finances, and other business topics. In this episode, Karen and Diskin discuss: Success Story of Diskin Commit to Get Leads Provide value and give out free information, and it will come back to you ten-fold. Consult to Sell Treat every deal as if it is the biggest deal. Provide the best service possible to every client because you don’t know what it will lead to. Connect to Build and Grow Invest in your future, be in tune with the market, and take advantage of opportunities for yourself and your family as well as your clients. Success Thinking, Activities and Vision You don’t have until you’re 80 or 90. Start now, you don’t know what is going to happen. Sweet Spot of Success "I really just wanted to learn the business. I wasn’t caught up in doing deals myself, I just wanted to learn every aspect of the business. That was how I first started."- Diskin Young Connect with Diskin Young: Realtor Profile by RE Magazine: Diskin Young Facebook: Diskin Young – Real Estate Entrepreneur Website: DiskinYoung.com Email: DiskinRealEstate@gmail.com YouTube: Diskin Young LinkedIn: Diskin Young Instagram: @diskin.re About the Podcast Join host Karen Briscoe each week to learn how you can achieve success at a higher level by investing just 5 minutes a day! Tune in to hear powerful, inspirational success stories and expert insights from entrepreneurs, business owners, industry leaders, and real estate agents that will transform your business and life. Karen shares a-ha moments that have shaped her career and discusses key concepts from her book Real Estate Success in 5 Minutes a Day: Secrets of a Top Agent Revealed. Here’s to your success in business and in life! Connect with Karen Briscoe: Twitter: @5MinuteSuccess Facebook: 5MinuteSuccess Website: 5MinuteSuccess.com Email: Karen@5MinuteSuccess.com 5 Minute Success Links Learn more about Karen’s book, Real Estate Success in 5 Minutes a Day Karen also recommends Moira Lethbridge's book "Savvy Woman in 5 Minutes a Day" Subscribe to 5 Minute Success Podcast Spread the love and share the secrets of 5 Minute Success with your friends and colleagues! Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You're the expert. Your podcast will prove it.
Episode 4 features our first special guest Travis Diskin, the wizard behind the embroidered curtain at Patch Patrol. Josh's voice (and microphone)crap out, so the rest of them talk about Timbers supporter culture both IRL and online, plus a bunch of other stuff Randy wanted to cut because the episode was way too long. Relavent Links: Intro music - Number 10 by Giuda - https://giuda.net Patch Patrol - http://patchpatrol.com Diskin Propaganda https://www.facebook.com/TimbersPropaganda/ London Fanfare Trumpets - Fanfare For A Dignified Occasion - https://youtu.be/0vZpb9wFPx0 F WORD - https://youtu.be/IUdkaVFryMs My Space by The Punk Group - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Punk_Group Feedback: Email - PortlandVanity@gmail.com Leave a voicemail - 503-583-4235 Facebook - https://facebook.com/PortlandVanity/ We are available on: Soundcloud, Spotify, Apple, and Google Play
Our Bodies Ouselves, the book that millions of women turn to for information they could not get elsewhere. With 4,000,000+copies in print in 29 languages worldwide, it has become the saving grace for countless women across the globe. This book made women safe through the power of information. It was the 1960s, and hard as it is to...
In Episode 77 of the Mr. Wine Guy Podcast I had the privilege of sitting down with Ryan Scott, Winemaker for Jack Simon Vineyards out of the San Diego County of Southern, CA. In this episode Ryan shares his personal journey throughout the wine industry and how prior experiences at Witchcreek Winery and Carruth Cellars really propelled him to the level of success that he's achieved today. With that being said, Ryan shares his experiences at Jack Simon Vineyards, what the Diskin family, owners of Jack Simon not only mean to him but also the surrounding community, and what it means to focus of Rhone and Iberian varietals while making wine for this brand. Ryan shares the story of Jack Diskin, owner of Jack Simon Vineyards and just how charasmatic and impactful of a human being Jack is and how Jack's story is such a statement and testament of what being a leader and role model really is. Ryan also shares the story of his interview with FOX5 San Diego and how he single handedly managed to open a bottle of wine on set without the use of a cork screw. This story is one that you are not going to want to miss! These are just a few of the things you're going to get to hear in this podcast but I think the one thing you'll appreciate more than anything is Ryan's humble personality, his ability to be an effective leader, and his appreciation for everyone who has been an intrical part in getting him to where he is today. So sit back, relax, and get ready, because you are going to love this episode. Cheers To follow Ryan Scott of Instagram, head over to: https://www.instagram.com/ryanscottwine/ To follow Jack Simon Vineyards on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, head over to: https://www.instagram.com/jacksimonvineyards/ https://www.facebook.com/jacksimonvineyards/ https://twitter.com/JackSimonWine To learn more about Ryan's wines, and to sign up to be on Jack Simon's mailing list, head over to: http://jacksimonvineyards.com/shop-all/ To learn more about Jack Diskin's incredible journey throughout life, click the link below: https://www.amazon.com/Danzig-Dharma-Life-Two-Centuries/dp/0983260915/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=from+danzig+to+dharma&qid=1572295313&sr=8-3 To watch the infamous FOX5 interview that featured Ryan Scott doing whatever he had to do to open up a bottle of wine on LIVE television, click the link below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuEx5ttPZcE To follow Mr. Wine Guy on Instagram and Facebook, go to: www.instagram.com/themrwineguy www.facebook.com/themrwineguy To connect on Linkedin, go to: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-gallagher-70637b70/ Also, make a statement in your very own Mr. Wine Guy Swag which can be found at https://mrwineguy.com/collections/mr-wine-guy-swag-1
On this episode of Labs Live!, Dan and Tobi discuss the cannabis industry and its adoption of technology with Josh Diskin, Director of Business Development at Detroit Labs.
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Braverman, lefkowitz, Morocan, Yanev, Teimini, etc. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Batley Bulldogs' head coach Matt Diskin takes a pew at the podcast table for this week's Jy and Woody Show where - shock horror - the trio discuss the current situation at Leeds, Matt's Wikipedia career is - for once - accurate and Jy unloads on his arch-nemesis, the 1895 Cup. Part 1 - 00:19 Part 2 - 22:14 Part 3 - 40:44
This week the gang interviews Matt Diskin about his early work with Butch Vallotton and making Dual Action Automatic Knives all the way through his forging career and into the Fiber Smith years up until current day.
Leigh Chambers guest is Michelle Diskin Bates whose memoir Stand Against Injustice details her fight to clear the name of her brother, Barry George, wrongly convicted for the murder of Jill Dando. We also hear from former circuit judge, Peter Murphy, on his latest legal thriller One Law For The Rest Of Us. And children’s […]
Our guest today is Bill Diskin. He is Director of Admission and Financial Aid at Cannon School. Bill specializes in serving students through helping independent schools with enrollment management, admissions, and financial aid for families. In this episode, Bill shares the path of increasing enrollment through defining the school’s mission, refining their focus, and how they put relationships and trust ahead of statistical considerations, but they also use data to target their search for prospects. He gives specific strategies for dynamically broadening the reach of a marketing plan by engaging parents as ambassadors for the school. Listen and take note of how the school uses available data to focus on and reach families who are already a good fit with their values by engaging the word-of-mouth resource of “ambassador parents”. Quotes: 5:00 “Schools can’t just wait for the phone to ring.”24:00 “Families want to get past the admin office and see what teachers are doing and who students are talking to.”27:19 “From day 1, focus on building a network of parent ambassadors.”35:20 “Parent-to-parent conversations are so good; you couldn’t script it any better.”37:10 “If tuition continues to climb faster than household income climbs, we’re sabotaging our own industry.” 44:40 “I try to remember that the most important piece of my day is building relationships with families.”Here are some resources mentioned in our discussion:Peter Drucker’s “5 Most Important Questions” - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Important-Questions-Institute-Drucker-Foundation/dp/0470227567Seth Godin, This Is Marketing - https://seths.blog/tim/Where to learn more about Bill Diskin:Email - wdiskin@cannonschool.orgTwitter - @billdiskinBlog - wilddayssite.wordpress.comBill on Linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/billdiskin/Where to learn more about Enrollhand:Our website: www.enrollhand.comOur webinar: https://webinar-replay.enrollhand.comOur free Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/schoolgrowth/
Tybee Diskin (@hellotybeeren) drops by this week to hang out with the guys. Everyone gets real in the mental health check, the gang discusses discontinued food from the 90s, Steven expresses his love for ketchup, Tybee plays a listener favorite game, and Chris waxes poetic on the enneagram. Music by The Collection & purple-planet.com Recommendation: Boozy Movies
Talent buyer for React Presents, Harrison Diskin, talks about his journey to becoming a talent buyer and starting a blog and a podcast. Harrison also dives into the importance of balance and getting out of your comfort zone, not being too hard on yourself, and mental and physical health.
Cool, casual, hangout episode this week with some friends. Alex Diskin from "Is Anyone There?" joins me with Mr. B. Rob from "Random Ramblings w/Rob". Alyssa White joins us about halfway through the episode! ENJOY Find Alex on Twitter: @IsAnyoneThere12 soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/is-anyone-there-podcast/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/xanaoded1 Find Rob on Twitter: @ItsBRob @3RShow IG: https://www.instagram.com/randomramblingsw_rob/ Alyssa White: @Lyssarie Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/unchartedgirl88 IG: https://www.instagram.com/itsalyssawhite/ >>>> "Horribly Awkward" Outro music by: Liza and Sam of Slammerkin Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/slammerkingdom Sound cloud: https://soundcloud.com/slammerkingdom
Zyme stops by to talk about his new album Nuclear Winter (out now!) We play 3 new tracks "Loser" * "Remarkable" and "Bring It Back" Alex Diskin from "Is Anyone There?" drops by as well to hang out Find Zyme on Twitter: @ZymeIsCool IG; https://www.instagram.com/zymeiscool/ * Find his music on Spotify, iTunes and wherever else cool music is found * Find Alex and -Is Anyone there?- on twitter:@IsAnyoneThere12 >>>> "Horribly Awkward" Outro music by: Liza and Sam of Slammerkin
After countless mentions, Tybee Diskin is finally on the couch joining Jake this week talking about the genesis and ending of her podcast "InterroBang w/ Travis and Tybee" and the good it's done including the incredible "InterroPals" pen pal system she established that puts people in need in touch with others experiencing similar things, and how just being transparent in general helped HER discover information about ADHD/Autism she wouldn't know otherwise. The two talk about Tybee's jovial drunk behavior and how misguided positivity made her cry on her birthday, Jake's sober behavior, being close friends who don't see each other often and how they're both fans of communication. Tybee talks a little about the actors grind that she's left behind, working with Wayside Creations and working on fan films like Fallout Nuka Break as well as the children's book based on her Ninento DS playing giant grandmother that she has put her creative energy into recently. She talks a bit about her grandmother's personality, confidence, and also tells the story of how her grandparents met and it's super awesome. Follow Tybee on social media @HelloTybeeRen PLEASE LIKE, SHARE, RATE & REVIEW
Welcome to udder chaos! This is my virtual party episode. This week I had on Fred Rojas (Gaming History 101), Normii Late (Zombiecast), Alex Diskin (Is Anyone There?), John Munger (Videogame Improv) and Zyme dropped in very briefly. Lots of drink were consumed and a ton of offensive stuff was said. Enjoy it because this is a one of a kind party! Find Fred on Twitter @spydersvenom * Gaming History 101 @TheRealGH101 * Normii @normii477 * Zombie cast @ZombieCastWorld * John Munger @talkinshitout * Videogame Improv @VGImprov * Alex, Is Anyone There? @IsAnyoneThere12 * Zyme @ZymeIsCool * Zyme's project- Manilafornia @ManilaFornia >>>> "Horribly Awkward" Outro music by: Liza and Sam of Slammerkin Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/slammerkingdom Sound cloud: https://soundcloud.com/slammerkingdom
Our title is not our own words but the words of the former Israel Security Agency (or Shin Bet) chief Yuval Diskin according to the Jerusalem Post this week.
Our title is not our own words but the words of the former Israel Security Agency (or Shin Bet) chief Yuval Diskin according to the Jerusalem Post this week.