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In this live episode, Tricia Eastman joins to discuss Seeding Consciousness: Plant Medicine, Ancestral Wisdom, Psychedelic Initiation. She explains why many Indigenous initiatory systems begin with consultation and careful assessment of the person, often using divination and lineage-based diagnostic methods before anyone enters ceremony. Eastman contrasts that with modern frameworks that can move fast, rely on short trainings, or treat the medicine as a stand-alone intervention. Early Themes: Ritual, Preparation, and the Loss of Container Eastman describes her background, including ancestral roots in Mexico and her later work at Crossroads Ibogaine in Mexico, where she supported early ibogaine work with veterans. She frames her broader work as cultural bridging that seeks respect rather than fetishization, and assimilation into modern context rather than appropriation. Early discussion focuses on: Why initiatory traditions emphasize purification, preparation, and long timelines Why consultation matters before any high-intensity medicine work How decades of training shaped traditional initiation roles Why people can get harmed when they treat medicine as plug and play Core Insights: Alchemy, Shadow, and Doing the Work A major throughline is Eastman's critique of the belief that a psychedelic alone will erase trauma. She argues that shadow work remains part of the human condition, and that healing is less about a one-time fix and more about building capacity for relationship with the unconscious. Using alchemical language, she describes "nigredo" as fuel for the creative process, not as something to eliminate forever. Key insights include: Psychedelics are tools, not saviors You cannot outsource responsibility to a pill, a modality, or a facilitator Progress requires practice, discipline, and honest engagement with what arises "Healing" often shows up as obstacles encountered while trying to live and create Later Discussion and Takeaways: Iboga, Ethics, and Biocultural Stewardship Joe and Tricia move into a practical and ethically complex discussion about iboga supply chains, demand pressure, and the risks of amplifying interest without matching it with harm reduction and reciprocity. Eastman emphasizes medical screening, responsible messaging, and supporting Indigenous-led stewardship efforts. She also warns that harm can come from both under-trained modern facilitators and irresponsible people claiming traditional legitimacy. Concrete takeaways include: Treat iboga and ibogaine as high-responsibility work that demands safety protocols Avoid casual marketing that encourages risky self-administration Support Indigenous-led biocultural stewardship and reciprocity efforts Give lineage carriers a meaningful seat at the table in modern policy and clinical conversations Frequently Asked Questions Who is Tricia Eastman? Tricia Eastman is an author, facilitator, and founder of Ancestral Heart. Her work focuses on cultural bridging, initiation frameworks, and Indigenous-led stewardship. What is Seeding Consciousness about? The book examines plant medicine through initiatory traditions, emphasizing consultation, ritual, preparation, and integration rather than reductionistic models. Why does Tricia Eastman critique modern psychedelic models? She argues that many models remove the ritual container and long-form preparation that reduce risk and support deeper integration. Is iboga or ibogaine safe? With the right oversite, yes. Eastman stresses that safety depends on cardiac screening, careful protocols, and experienced oversight. She warns against informal or self-guided use. How can people support reciprocity and stewardship? She encourages donating or supporting Indigenous-led biocultural stewardship initiatives like Ancestral Heart and aligning public messaging with harm reduction. Closing Thoughts This episode makes a clear case that Tricia Eastman Seeding Consciousness is not only a book about psychedelics, but a critique of how the field is developing. Eastman argues that a successful future depends on mature containers, serious safety culture, and respectful partnership with lineage carriers, especially as interest in iboga and ibogaine accelerates. Links https://www.ancestralheart.com https://www.innertraditions.com/author/tricia-eastman Transcript Joe Moore Hello, everybody. Welcome back. Joe Moore with you again from Psychedelics Today, joined today by Tricia Eastman. Tricia, you just wrote a book called Seeding Consciousness. We're going to get into that a bunch today, but how are you today? [00:00:16.07] - Tricia Eastman I'm so good. It's exciting to be live. A lot of the podcasts I do are offline, and so it's like we're being witnessed and feels like just can feel the energy behind It's great. [00:00:31.11] - Joe Moore It's fun. It's a totally different energy than maybe this will come out in four months. This is real, and there's people all over the world watching in real-time. And we'll get some comments. So folks, if you're listening, please leave us some comments. And we'd love to chat a little bit later about those. [00:00:49.23] - Tricia Eastman I'm going to join the chat so that I can see... Wait, I just want to make sure I'm able to see the comments, too. Do I hit join the chat? [00:01:01.17] - Joe Moore Sometimes you can, sometimes you can't. I can throw comments on the screen so we can see them together. [00:01:07.02] - Tricia Eastman Cool. [00:01:08.03] - Joe Moore Yeah. So it'll be fun. Give us comments, people. Please, please, please, please. Yeah, you're all good. So Tricia, I want to chat about your book. Tell us high level about your book, and then we're going to start digging into you. [00:01:22.10] - Tricia Eastman So Seeding Consciousness is the title, and I know it's a long subtitled Plant Medicine, Ancestral Wisdom, Psychedelic Initiation. And I felt like it was absolutely necessary for the times that we are in right now. When I was in Gabon in 2018, in one of my many initiations, as as an initiative, the Fung lineage of Buiti, which I've been practicing in for 11 years now, I was given the instructions. I was given the integration homework to write this book. And I would say I don't see that as this divine thing, like you were given the assignment. I think I was given the assignment because it's hard as F to write a book. I mean, it really tests you on so many levels. I mean, even just thinking about putting yourself out there from a legal perspective, and then also, does it make any sense? Will anyone buy it? And on Honestly, it's not me. It's really what I was given to write, but it's based on my experience working with several thousand people over the years. And really, the essence of it is that in our society, we've taken this reductionistic approach in psychedelics, where we've really taken out the ritual. [00:02:54.05] - Tricia Eastman Even now with the FDA trial for MDMA for PTSD. There's even conversations with a lot of companies that are moving forward, psychedelics, through the FDA process, through that pathway, that are talking about taking the therapy out. And the reality is that in these ancient initiatic traditions, they were very long, drawn out experiences with massive purification rituals, massive amounts of different types of practice in order to prepare oneself to meet the medicine. Different plants were taken, like vomatifs and different types of purification rituals were performed. And then you would go into this profound initiatic experience because the people that were working with you that were in, we call it the Nema, who gives initiations, had decades of training and experience doing these types of initiatic experiences. So if you compare that to the modern day framework, we have people that go online and get a certificate and start serving people medicine or do it in a context where maybe there isn't even an established container or facilitator whatsoever. And so really, the idea is, how can we take the essence of this ancient wisdom wisdom, like when you look at initiation, the first step is consultation, which is really going deep into the history of the individual using different types of techniques that are Indigenous technologies, such as different forms of divination, such as cowrie shell readings. [00:04:52.18] - Tricia Eastman And there's different types of specific divinations that are done in different branches of And before one individual would even go into any initiation, you need to understand the person and where they're coming from. So it's really about that breakdown of all of that, and how can we integrate elements of that into a more modern framework. [00:05:24.23] - Joe Moore Brilliant. All right. Well, thank you for that. And let's chat about you. You've got a really interesting past, very dynamic, could even call it multicultural. And you've got a lot of experience that informed this book. So how did this stuff come forward for you? [00:05:50.02] - Tricia Eastman I mean, I've never been the person to seek anything. My family on my mother's side is from Mexico, from Oaxaca, Trique, Mixtec, and Michica. And we had a long lineage of practice going back to my, at least I know from my great, great grandmother, practicing a blend of mestiza, shamanism, combining centerea and Catholicism together. So it's more of like a syncratic mestiza, mestiza being mixed tradition. And so I found it really interesting because later on, when my grandfather came to the United States, he ended up joining the military. And in being in the US, he didn't really have a place. He's very devout spiritual man, but he didn't have a place to practice this blended spiritual tradition. So the mystical aspect of it went behind. And as I started reconnecting to my ancestral lineage, this came forth that I was really starting to understand the mystical aspect of my ancestry. And interestingly, at the same time, was asked to work at Crossroads Abigain in Mexico. And it's so interesting to see that Mexico has been this melting pot and has been the place where Abigain has chosen to plant its roots, so to say, and has treated thousands of veterans. [00:07:36.28] - Tricia Eastman I got to be part of the group of facilitators back over 10 years ago. We treated the first Navy Seals with Abogaine, and that's really spurred a major interest in Abogaine. Now it's in every headline. I also got 10 I got initiated into the Fung lineage of Buiti and have really studied the traditional knowledge. I created a nonprofit back in 2019 called Ancestral Heart, which is really focused on Indigenous-led stewardship. Really, the book helps as a culmination of the decade of real-world experience of combining My husband, Dr. Joseph Barzulia. He's a psychologist. He's also a pretty well-known published researcher in Abigain and 5MEO-DMT, but also deeply spiritual and deeply in respect for the Indigenous traditions that have carried these medicines before us. So we've really been walking this complex path of world bridging between how we establish these relationships and how we bring some of these ancient knowledge systems back into the forefront, but not in a way of fetishizing them, but in a way of deeply respecting them and what we can learn, but from our own assimilation and context versus appropriation. So really, I think the body of my work is around that cultural bridging. [00:09:31.07] - Joe Moore That's brilliant. And yeah, there's some really fun stuff I learned in the book so far that I want to get into later. But next question is, who is your intended audience here? Because this is an interesting book that could hit a few categories, but I'm curious to hear from you. [00:09:49.02] - Tricia Eastman It's so funny because when I wrote the book, I wasn't thinking, oh, what's my marketing plan? What's my pitch? Who's my intended audience? Because it was my homework, and I knew I needed to write the book, and maybe that was problematic in the sense that I had to go to publishers and have a proposal. And then I had to create a formula in hindsight. And I would say the demographic of the book mirrors the demographic of where people are in the psychedelic space, which It's skewed slightly more male, although very female. I think sex isn't necessarily important when we're thinking about the level of trauma and the level of spiritual healing and this huge deficit that we have in mental health, which is really around our disconnection from our true selves, from our heart, from our souls, from this idea of of what Indigenous knowledge systems call us the sacred. It's really more of an attitude of care and presence. I'm sure we could give it a different name so that individuals don't necessarily have any guard up because we have so much negative conditioning related to the American history of religion, which a lot of people have rejected, and some have gone back to. [00:11:37.06] - Tricia Eastman But I think we need to separate it outside of that. I would say the demographic is really this group of I would say anywhere from 30 to 55 male females that are really in this space where maybe they're doing some of the wellness stuff. They're starting to figure some things out, but it's just not getting them there. And when something happens in life, for example, COVID-19 would be a really great example. It knocks them off course, and they just don't have the tools to find that connection. And I would say it even spans across people that do a lot of spiritual practice and maybe are interested in what psychedelics can do in addition to those practices. Because when we look at my view on psychedelics, is they fit within a whole spectrum of wellness and self-care and any lineage of spiritual practice, whether it's yoga or Sufism or Daoist tradition. But they aren't necessarily the thing that... I think there's an over focus on the actual substance itself and putting it on a pedestal that I think is problematic in our society because it goes back to our religious context in the West is primarily exoteric, meaning that we're seeking something outside of ourselves to fulfill ourselves. [00:13:30.29] - Tricia Eastman And so I think that when we look at psychedelic medicines as this exoteric thing versus when we look at initiatory traditions are about inward and direct experience. And all of these spiritual practices and all of these modalities are really designed to pull you back into yourself, into having a direct relationship with yourself and direct experience. And I feel like the minute that you are able to forge that connection, which takes practice and takes discipline, then you don't need to necessarily look at all these other tools outside of yourself. It's like one of my favorite analogies is the staff on the Titanic were moving the furniture around as it was sinking, thinking that they might save the boat from sinking by moving the furniture around. I think that's how we've been with a lot of ego-driven modalities that aren't actually going into the full unconscious, which is where we need to go to have these direct experiences. Sorry for the long answer, but it is for everybody, and it's not just about psychedelics. Anyone can take something from this doing any spiritual work. But we talk a lot about the Indigenous philosophy and how that ties in alongside with spiritual practice and more of this inner way of connecting with oneself and doing the work. [00:15:21.22] - Tricia Eastman And I think also really not sugar coating it in the sense that the psychedelics aren't going to save us. They're not going to cure PTSD. Nothing you take will. It's you that does the work. And if you don't do the work, you're not going to have an 87 % success rate with opioid use disorder or whatever it is, 60 something % for treatment-resistant depression or whatever. It's like you have to do the work. And so we can't keep putting the power in the modality reality or the pill. [00:16:03.18] - Joe Moore Yeah, that makes sense. So you did an interesting thing here with this book, and it was really highlighting aspects of the alchemical process. And people don't necessarily have exposure. They hear the words alchemy. I get my shoulders go up when I hear alchemizing, like transmutation. But it's a thing. And how do we then start communicating this from Jung? I found out an interesting thing recently as an ongoing student. Carl Jung didn't necessarily have access to all that many manuscripts. There's so many alchemical manuscripts available now compared to what he had. And as a result, our understanding of alchemy has really evolved. Western alchemy, European alchemy, everybody. Perhaps Kmetic, too. I don't know. You could speak to that more. I don't keep track of what's revealed in Egypt. So it's really interesting to present that in a forward way? How has it been received so far? Or were you nervous to present this in this way? [00:17:25.10] - Tricia Eastman I mean, honestly, I think the most important The important thing is that in working with several thousand people over the years, people think that taking the psychedelic and the trauma is going to go away. It's always there. I mean, we We archetypically will have the shadow as long as we need the shadow to learn. And so even if we go into a journey and we transcend it, it's still there. So I would say that the The feedback has been really incredible. I mean, the people that are reading... I mean, I think because I'm weaving so many different, complex and deep concepts into one book, it might be a little harder to market. And I think the biggest bummer was that I was really trying to be respectful to my elders and not say anything in the title about Iboga and Abigain, even though I talk a lot about it in the book, and it's such a hot topic, it's really starting to take off. But the people that have read it really consider it. They really do the work. They do the practices in the book, and I'm just getting really profound feedback. So that's exciting to me because really, ultimately, alchemy... [00:18:55.22] - Tricia Eastman Yeah, you're right. It gets used Used a lot in marketing lingo and sitting in the depth of the tar pit. For me, when I was in Gabon, I remember times where I really had to look at things that were so dark in my family history that I didn't even realize were mine until later connected to my lineage. And the dark darkness connected to that and just feeling that and then knowing really the truth of our being is that we aren't those things. We're in this process of changing and being, and so nothing is is fixed, but there is a alchemical essence in just learning to be with it. And so not always can we just be with something. And and have it change, but there are many times that we can actually just be with those parts of ourselves and be accepting, where it's not like you have to have this intellectualized process It's just like, first you have the negrado, then you tune into the albeda, and you receive the insights, and you journal about it, and da, da, da, da, da Action, Mars aspect of it, the rubeda of the process. It's not like that at all. [00:20:44.15] - Tricia Eastman It's really that the wisdom that comes from it because you're essentially digesting black goo, which is metaphoric to the oil that we use to power all of society that's pulled deep out of the Earth, and it becomes gold. It becomes... And really, the way I like to think of it is like, in life, we are here to create, and we are not here to heal ourselves. So if you go to psychedelic medicine and you want to heal yourself, you're going to be in for... You're just going to be stuck and burnt out because that's not what we're here to do as human beings, and you'll never run out of things to heal. But if you You think of the negrado in alchemy as gasoline in your car. Every time you go back in, it's like refilling your gas tank. And whatever you go back in for as you're moving in the journey, it's almost like that bit of negrado is like a lump of coal that's burning in the gas tank. And that gets you to the next point to which there's another thing related to the creative process. So it's like As you're going in that process, you're going to hit these speed bumps and these obstacles in the way. [00:22:07.29] - Tricia Eastman And those obstacles in the way, that's the healing. So if you just get in the car in the human vehicle and you drive and you continue to pull out the shadow material and face it, you're going to keep having the steam, but not just focus on it, having that intention, having that connection to moving forward in life. And I hate to use those words because they sound so growth and expansion oriented, which life isn't always. It's evolutionary and deevolutionary. It's always in spirals. But ultimately, you're in a creative process would be the best way to orient it. So I think when we look at alchemy from that standpoint, then it's productive. Effective. Otherwise, it sounds like some brand of truffle salt or something. [00:23:09.12] - Joe Moore Yeah, I think it's a... If people want to dig in, amazing. It's just a way to describe processes, and it's super informative if you want to go there, but it's not necessary for folks to do the work. And I like how you framed it quite a bit. So let's see. There is one bit, Tricia, that my ears really went up on this one point about a story about Actually, let me do a tangent for you real quick, and then we're going to come back to this story. So are you familiar with the tribe, the Dogon, in Africa? Of course. Yeah. So they're a group that looks as though they were involved in Jewish and/or Egyptian traditions, and then ended up on the far side of like, what, Western Africa, far away, and had their own evolution away from Egypt and the Middle East. Fascinating. Fascinating stories, fascinating astronomy, and much more. I don't know too much about the religion. I love their masks. But this drew an analogy for me, as you were describing that the Buiti often have stories about having lineage to pre-dynastic Egyptian culture. I guess we'll call it that for now, the Kometic culture. [00:24:44.23] - Joe Moore I had not heard that before. Shame on me because I haven't really read any books about Buiti as a religion or organization, or anything to this point. But I found that really interesting to know that now, at least I'm aware of two groups claiming lineage to that ancient world of magic. Can you speak about that at all for us? Yeah. [00:25:09.24] - Tricia Eastman So first off, there really aren't any books talking about that. Some of the things I've learned from elders that I've spoke with and asked in different lineages in Masoco and in Fong Buiti, there's a few things. One, We lived in many different eras. Even if you go into ancient texts of different religions, creation stories, and biblical stories, they talk about these great floods that wiped out the planet. One of the things that Atum talks about, who is one of my Buiti fathers who passed a couple years ago, is Is the understanding that before we were in these different areas, you had Mu or Lumaria, you had Atlantis, and then you had our current timeline. And the way that consciousness was within those timelines was very different and the way the Earth was. You had a whole another continent called Atlantis that many people, even Plato, talks about a very specific location of. And what happened, I believe during that time period, Africa, at least the Saharan band of the desert was much more lush, and it was a cultural melting pot. So if you think about, for example, the Pygmy tribes, which are in Equatorial Africa, they are the ones that introduced Iboga to the Buiti. [00:27:08.08] - Tricia Eastman If you look at the history of ancient Egypt, what I'm told is that the Pygmies lived in Pharaonic Egypt, all the way up until Pharaonic Egypt. And there was a village. And if you look on the map in Egypt, you see a town called Bawiti, B-A-W-I-T-I. And that is the village where they lived. And I have an interesting hypothesis that the God Bess, if you look at what he's wearing, it's the exact same to a T as what the Pygmies wear. And the inspiration for which a lot of the Buiti, because they use the same symbology, because each part of the outfit, whether it's the Mocingi, which is like this animal skin, or the different feathers, they use the parrot feather as a symbology of speech and communication, all of these things are codes within the ceremony that were passed along. And so when you look at Bess, he's wearing almost the exact same outfit that the Pygmies are wearing and very similar to if you see pictures of the ceremonies of Misoko or Gonde Misoko, which I would say is one of the branches of several branches, but that are closer to the original way of Buiti of the jungle, so closer to the way the Pygmies practice. [00:28:59.16] - Tricia Eastman So If you look at Bess, just to back my hypothesis. So you look at Neteru. Neteru were the... They called them the gods of Egypt, and they were all giant. And many say the word nature actually means nature, but they really represented the divine qualities of nature. There's best. Look at him. And a lot of the historians said he's the God of Harmeline and children and happiness. I think he's more than the God of Harmeline, and I think that the Pygmies worked with many different plants and medicines, and really the ultimate aspect of it was freedom. If you think about liberation, like the libation, number one, that's drunkiness. Number two, liberation, you of freeing the joyous child from within, our true nature of who we are. You look at every temple in Egypt, and you look at these giant statues, and then you have this tiny little pygmy God, and there's no other gods that are like Bess. He's one of a kind. He's in his own category. You've You've got giant Hathor, you've got giant Thoth, you've got giant Osiris, Isis, and then you've got little tiny Bess. And so I think it backs this hypothesis. [00:30:48.27] - Tricia Eastman And my understanding from practitioners of Dogon tradition is that they also believe that their ancestors came from Egypt, and they definitely have a lot of similarity in the teachings that I've seen and been exposed to just from here. I mean, you can... There's some more modern groups, and who's to know, really, the validity of all of it. But there are some, even on YouTube, where you can see there's some more modern Dogon temples that are talking in English or English translation about the teachings, and they definitely line up with Kamehdi teachings. And so my hypothesis around that is that the Dogon are probably most likely pygmy descendants as, And the pygmy were basically run out of Bawiti because there was jealousy with the priest, because there was competition, because all of the offerings that were being made in the temple, there was a lot of power, connected to each of the temples. And there was competitiveness even amongst the different temples, lining the Nile and all of that, of who was getting the most offerings and who was getting the most visits. And so the Pygmies essentially were run out, and they migrated, some of them migrated south to Gabon and Equatorial Africa. [00:32:43.07] - Tricia Eastman And then If you think about the physical changes that happened during these planetary catastrophes, which we know that there had been more than one based on many historical books. So that whole area went through a desertification process, and the Equatorial rainforest remained. So it's highly likely even that Iboga, at one point, grew in that region as well. [00:33:18.00] - Joe Moore Have you ever seen evidence of artwork depicting Iboga there in Egypt? [00:33:24.17] - Tricia Eastman There are several different death temples. I'm trying to remember the name of the exact one that I went to, but on the columns, it looked like Iboga trees that were carved into the columns. And I think what's interesting about this... So Seychet is the divine scribe, the scribe of Egyptian wisdom. And she was basically, essentially the sidekick of Thoth. Thoth was who brought a lot of the ancient wisdom and people like Pythagoras and many of the ancient philosophers in Roman times went and studied in a lot of these Thoth lineage mystery schools. When you look at the the river of the Nile on the east side, east is the energy liturgy of initiation. It's always like if you go into a sweat lodge or if you see an ancient temple, usually the doorway is facing the east. West is where the sun sets, and so that's the death. And what's interesting about that is that it was on the west side in the death temple that you would see these aboga plants. But also Seixat was the one who was the main goddess depicted in the hieroglyphs, and there was other hieroglyphs. I mean, if you look at the hieroglyphs of Seixat, it looks like she has a cannabis leaf above her head, and a lot of people have hypothesized that, that it's cannabis. [00:35:16.03] - Tricia Eastman Of course, historians argue about that. And then she's also carrying a little vessel that looks like it has some mushrooms in it. And obviously, she has blue Lotus. Why would she be carrying around blue Lotus and mushrooms? I don't know. It sounds like some initiation. [00:35:36.19] - Joe Moore Yeah, I love that. Well, thanks so much for going there with me. This photo of Seixet. There's some good animations, but everybody just go look at the temple carvings picturing this goddess. It's stunning. And obviously, cannabis. I think it's hard to argue not. I've seen all these like, mushroom, quote, unquote, mushroom things everywhere. I'm like, Yeah, maybe. But this is like, Yes, that's clear. [00:36:06.27] - Tricia Eastman And if you look at what she's wearing, it's the exact same outfit as Bess, which is classic Basically, how the medicine woman or medicine man or what you would call shaman, the outfit that the healers would wear, the shamans or the oracles, those of the auracular arts, different forms of divination would wear. So if you really follow that and you see, Oh, what's Isis wearing? What's Hathor wearing? What's Thoth wearing? You can tell she's very specifically the healer. And it's interesting because they call her the divine scribe. So she's actually downloading, my guess is she's taking plants and downloading from the primordial. [00:37:02.00] - Joe Moore Well, okay. Thanks for bringing that up. That was a lovely part of your book, was your... There's a big initiation sequence, and then you got to go to this place where you could learn many things. Could you speak to that a little bit? And I hope that's an okay one to bring up. [00:37:22.22] - Tricia Eastman Are you talking about the time that I was in initiation and I went to the different ashrams, the different realms in, like Yogananda calls them astral schools that you go and you just download? It seemed like astral schools, but it seemed like it was a Bwiti initiation, where you were in silence for three days, and then Yeah, that one. So there were several different... I mean, I've done seven official initiations, and then I've had many other initiatic experiences. And I would say this one was incredible. Incredibly profound because what it showed me first was that all of the masters of the planet, it was showing me everyone from Kurt Cobain to Bob Marley to Einstein, all the people that had some special connection to an intelligence that was otherworldly, that they were essentially going to the same place, like they were visiting the same place, and they would go. And so the first thing I noticed was that I recognized a lot of people, and current, I'm not going I don't want to say names of people, but I recognize people that are alive today that I would say are profound thinkers that were going to these places as well. [00:38:57.05] - Tricia Eastman And interestingly, then I was taken into one of the classrooms, and in the classroom, this one, specifically, it showed me that you could download any knowledge instantaneously That essentially, having a connection to that school allowed you to download music or understand very complex ideas ideas of mathematics or physics or science that would take people like lifetimes to understand. So it was essentially showing this. And a lot of people might discredit that, that that might be a specific... That we as humans can do that. Well, I'm not saying that it's not that. I don't I don't want to say that it's anything. But what I can say is that I have definitely noticed the level of access that I have within my consciousness. And also what I notice with the masters of Bwiti, specifically in terms of the level of intelligence that they're accessing and that it's different. It's got a different quality to it. And so it was a really profound teaching. And one of the things, too, that I've learned is I use it to help me learn specific things. I don't know if I can give a positive testimonial, but I am learning French. [00:40:55.00] - Tricia Eastman And I noticed when I was in Aspen at the Abigain meeting, and I was with Mubeiboual, who speaks French, I started saying things French that I didn't even realize that I knew to say. I've had these weird moments where I'm actually using this tool And I'm also using it. I have a Gabonese harp. I don't know if you can see it up on the shelf over there. But I also went and asked for some help with downloading some assistance in the harp, then we'll see how that goes. [00:41:38.17] - Joe Moore Yeah. So that's brilliant. I'm thinking of other precedent for that outside of this context, and I can think of a handful. So I love that, like savant syndrome. And then there's a classic text called Ars Notoria that helps accelerate learning, allegedly. And then there's a number of other really interesting things that can help us gain these bits of wisdom and knowledge. And it does feel a little bit like the Dogon. The story I get is the receiving messages from the dog star, and therefore have all sorts of advanced information that they shouldn't we call it. Yeah. Yeah, which is fascinating. We have that worldwide. I think there's plenty of really interesting stuff here. So what I appreciated, Tricia, about how you're structuring your book, or you did structure your book, is that it it seems at the same time, a memoir, on another hand, workbook, like here are some exercises. On the other hand, like here's some things you might try in session. I really appreciated that. It was like people try to get really complicated when we talk about things like IFS. I'm like, well, you don't necessarily have to. You could. Or is this just a human thing, a human way to look at working with our parts? [00:43:20.15] - Joe Moore I don't know. Do you have any thoughts about the way you were approaching this parts work in your book versus how complicated some people make it feel? [00:43:30.00] - Tricia Eastman Yeah. I find that this is just my personal opinion, and no way to discredit Richard Schwartz's work. But parts work has existed in shamanism since forever. When we really look at even in ancient Egypt, Issus, she put Osiris act together. That was the metaphorical story of soul retrieval, which is really the spiritual journey of us reclaiming these pieces of ourselves that we've been disconnected from a society level or individually. And within the context of parts work, it's very organic and it feels other worldly. It's not like there's ever a force where I'm in the process with someone. And a lot of times I would even go into the process with people because they weren't accustomed to how to work with Iboga or game, and so they would be stuck. And then the minute I was like, you know, Iboga, in the tradition, it's really about... It's like the game Marco Polo. It's call and response. And so you're really an active participant, and you're supposed to engage with the spirits. And so the minute that things would show up, it'd be more about like, oh, what do you see? What's coming up here? Asking questions about it, being curious. [00:45:17.07] - Tricia Eastman If you could engage with it, sometimes there's processes where you can't really engage with things at all. So everything that I'm talking about is It was organically shown up as an active engagement process that it wasn't like we were going in. There have been some where you can guide a little bit, but you never push. It might be something like, go to your house, and it being completely unattached. And if they can't go there, then obviously the psyche doesn't want to go there, but it's really an exercise to help them to connect to their soul. And then in contrast, IFS is like, let's work on these different parts and identify these different parts of ourselves. But then let's give them fixed titles, and let's continually in a non-altered state of consciousness, not when we're meditating, not when we're actively in a state where we have the plasticity to change the pathway in the unconscious mind, but we're working in the egoic mind, and we're talking to these parts of ourselves. That could be helpful in the day-to-day struggles. Let's say you have someone who has a lot of rumination or a very active mind to have something to do with that. [00:46:57.01] - Tricia Eastman But that's not going to be the end-all, be-all solution to their problem. It's only moving the deck chairs around on the Titanic because you're still working in the framework where, I'm sorry, the Titanic is still sinking, and it may or may not be enough. It may or may not produce a reliable outcome that could be connected with some level of true relief and true connection within oneself. And so I think that people just... I feel like they almost get a little too... And maybe it's because we're so isolated and lonely, it's like, Oh, now I've got parts. I'm not by myself. I've got my fire I've got my firefighter, and I've got my guardian, and all these things. And I definitely think that IFS is a really great initiator into the idea of engaging with parts of ourselves and how to talk to them. But I don't think it's... And I think doing a session here and there, for some people, can be incredibly helpful, but to all of a sudden incorporate it in like a dogma is toxic. It's dangerous. And that's what we have to be really careful of. [00:48:23.25] - Joe Moore So thank you for that. There's a complicated discussion happening at the Aspen meeting. I think I was only sitting maybe 30 feet away from you. Sorry, I didn't say hi. But the folks from Blessings of the Forest were there, and I got a chance to chat with a number of them and learn more about nuclear protocols, biopiracy, literal piracy, and smuggling, and the works. I'm curious. This is a really complicated question, and I'm sorry for a complicated question this far in. But it's like, as we talk about this stuff publicly and give it increased profile, we are de facto giving more juice and energy to black markets to pirate. We're adding fuel to this engine that we don't necessarily want to see. Cameroon has nothing left, pretty much. From what I'm told, people from Cameroon are coming in, stealing it from Cabona, bringing it back, and then shipping it out. And there's It's like a whole worldwide market for this stuff. I witnessed it. This stuff. Yeah, right? This is real. So the people, the Buiti, and certain Gabanese farmers, are now being pirated. And international demand does not care necessarily about Nagoya compliance. United States didn't sign Nagoya protocol for this biopiracy protection, but we're not the only violator of these ethics, right? [00:50:00.22] - Joe Moore It's everywhere. So how do we balance thinking about talking about IBOCA publicly, given that there's no clean way to get this stuff in the United States that is probably not pirated materials? And as far as I know, there's only one, quote unquote, Nagoya compliant place. I've heard stories that I haven't shared publicly yet, that there's other groups that are compliant, too. But it's a really interesting conversation, and I'm curious of your perspectives there. [00:50:34.04] - Tricia Eastman I mean, this is a very long, drawn-out question, so forgive me if I give you a long, drawn-out answer. [00:50:41.01] - Joe Moore Go for it. [00:50:41.26] - Tricia Eastman It's all good. So in reality, I do believe... You know the first Ebo, Abogaine, that was done in the country was experiments on eight Black prisoners at a hospital under the MK program. [00:51:01.16] - Joe Moore Pre-lutz off, we were doing Abogaine tests on people. [00:51:06.00] - Tricia Eastman Yeah, so pre-Lutz off. I have a hypothesis, although a lot of people would already know me. [00:51:12.07] - Joe Moore No, I didn't know that. Thank you for sharing that with me. [00:51:14.13] - Tricia Eastman That's great. I'll send you some stuff on that. But the Aboga wanted to be here. The Abogaine wanted to be here. I think it's a complex question because on one side of the coin, you have the spirit of plants, which are wild and crazy sometimes. And then you have the initiatory traditions, which create a scaffolding to essentially put the lightning in a bottle, so to say, so that it's less damaging. [00:51:51.13] - Joe Moore It's almost like a temple structure around it. [00:51:53.16] - Tricia Eastman I like that. Yeah. Put a temple structure around it because it's like, yeah, you can work with new nuclear energy, but you have to wear gloves, you have to do all these different safety precautions. I would say that that's why these traditions go hand in hand with the medicine. So some people might say that the agenda of Iboga and even Abogaine might be a different agenda than the Buiti. And ultimately, whether we are Indigenous or not, the Earth belongs to everyone. It's capitalism and the patriarchy that created all these borders and all these separations between people. And in reality, we still have to acknowledge what the essence of Buiti is, which is really the cause and effect relationship that we have with everything that we do. And so some people might use the term karma. And that is if you're in Abogaine clinic and you're putting a bunch of videos out online, and that's spurring a trend on TikTok, which we already know is a big thing where people are selling illegal market, iBoga, is Is any of that your responsibility? Yes. And if I was to sit down with a kogi kagaba, which are the mamus from Colombia, or if I were to sit down with a who said, Hey, let's do a divination, and let's ask some deep questions about this. [00:53:54.01] - Tricia Eastman It would look at things on a bigger perspective than just like, Oh, this person is completely responsible for this. But when we're talking about a medicine that is so intense, and when I was younger, when I first met the medicine, I first was introduced in 2013 was when I first found out about Abigain and Iboga. And in 2014, I lived with someone who lived with a 14th generation Misoko, maybe it was 10th generation Misoco in Costa Rica. And then he decided to just start serving people medicine. And he left this person paralyzed, one person that he treated for the rest of his life. And Aubrey Marcus, it was his business partner for On It, and he's publicly talked about this, about the story behind this. If you go into his older podcasts and blog posts and stuff, he talks about the situation. And the reality is that this medicine requires a massive amount of responsibility. It has crazy interactions, such as grapefruit juice, for example, and all kinds of other things. And so it's not just the responsibility towards the buiti, it's also the responsibility of, does me talking about this without really talking about the safety and the risks, encourage other people. [00:55:49.10] - Tricia Eastman One of the big problems, back in the day, I went to my first guita conference, Global Abogaine Therapy Alliance in 2016. And And then, ISEARs was debating because there was all these people buying Abogaine online and self-detoxing and literally either dying or ending up in the hospital. And they're like, should we release protocols and just give people instructions on how to do this themselves? And I was like, no, absolutely not. We need to really look at the fact that this is an initiatory tradition, that it's been practiced for thousands of that the minimum level at which a person is administering in Gabon is 10 years of training. The way that we've made up for those mistakes, or sorry, not mistakes, lack of training is that we've used medical oversight. Most of the medical oversight that we've received has been a result of mistakes that were made in the space. The first patient that MAPS treated, they killed them because they gave them way over the amount of what milligrams per kilogram of Abigain that you should give somebody. Every single mistake that was made, which a lot of them related to loss of life, became the global Abogane Therapy Safety Guidelines. [00:57:28.19] - Tricia Eastman And so we've already learned from our mistakes here. And so I think it's really important that we understand that there's that aspect, which is really the blood on our hands of if we're not responsible, if we're encouraging people to do this, and we're talking about it in a casual way on Instagram. Like, yeah, microdosing. Well, did you know there was a guy prosecuted this last year, personal trainer, who killed someone And from microdosing in Colorado, the event happened in 2020, but he just got sentenced early 2025. These are examples that we need to look at as a collective that we need. So that's one side of it. And then the other side of it is the reciprocity piece. And the reciprocity piece related to that is, again, the cause and effect. Is A Abogaine clinic talking about doing Abogaine and doing video testimonials, spurring the efforts that are actively being made in Gabon to protect the cultural lineage and to protect the medicine. The reality is every Abogaine clinic is booked out for... I heard the next year, I don't know if that's fact or fiction, but someone told me for a year, because because of all the stuff with all the celebrities that are now talking about it. [00:59:05.20] - Tricia Eastman And then on top of that, you have all these policy, all these different advocacy groups that are talking about it. Essentially, it's not going to be seven... It's going to be, I would say, seven to 10 years before something gets through the FDA. We haven't even done a phase one safety trial for any of the Abigain that's being commercialized. And even if there's some magic that happens within the Trump administration in the next two years that changes the rules to fast track it, it's not going to cut it down probably more than a year. So then you're looking at maybe six years minimum. That whole time, all that strain is being put on Gabon. And so if you're not supporting Gabon, what's happening is it's losing a battle because the movement is gaining momentum, and Gabon cannot keep up with that momentum. It's a tiny country the size of Colorado. So my belief is that anyone who's benefiting from all the hype around Iboga and Abogayne or personally benefited with healing within themselves should be giving back, either to Ancestral Heart, to Blessings of the Forest, to any group that is doing authentic Indigenous-led biocultural stewardship work. [01:00:45.21] - Joe Moore Thanks for that. It's important that we get into some detail here. I wish we had more time to go further on it. [01:00:54.17] - Tricia Eastman I'll do a quick joke. I know. I have a lot. [01:00:57.17] - Joe Moore Yes. Now do Mike Tyson. Kidding. Yeah. So what did we maybe miss that you want to make sure people hear about your book, any biocultural stuff that you want to get out there? You can go for a few more minutes, too, if you have a few things you want to say. [01:01:20.03] - Tricia Eastman I mean, really, thank you so much for this opportunity. Thank you for caring and being so passionate about the context related to Buiti, which I think is so important. I would just say that I've been working with this medicine for... I've known about it for 13 years, and I've been working with it for 11 years, and this is my life. I've devoted my life to this work, me and my husband, both. And there isn't anything greater of a blessing that it has brought in our life, but it also is it's a very saturnian energy, so it brings chaos. It brings the deepest challenges and forces you to face things that you need to face. But also on the other side of the coin, everything that I've devoted and given back in service to this work has exponentially brought blessing in my life. So again, I see the issue with people doing these shortened processes, whether it's in an Abigain clinic where you just don't have the ritualistic sacred aspects of an initiatic context and really the rituals that really help integrate and ground the medicine. But you still have this opportunity to continue to receive the blessings. [01:03:09.23] - Tricia Eastman And I really feel in our current psychedelic movement, we essentially have a Bugatti. These medicines are the most finely-tuned sports car that can do every... Even more than that, more like a spaceship. We have this incredible tool, but we're driving it in first gear. We don't even really know how to operate it. It's like, well, I guess you could say flight of the Navigator, but that was a self-driving thing, and I guess, psychedelics are self-driving. But I feel that we are discounting ourselves so greatly by not looking into our past of how these medicines were used. I really think the biggest piece around that is consulting the genuine lineage carriers like Buiti elders, like Mubu Bwal, who's the head of Maganga Manan Zembe, And giving them a seat at the head of the table, really, because there's so much I know in my tradition, about what we do to bring cardiac safety. And why is it that people aren't dying as much in Gabon as they're dying in Abigan clinics. [01:04:37.28] - Joe Moore Shots fired. All right. I like it. Thank you. Thank you for everything you've done here today, I think harm reduction is incredibly important. Let's stop people dying out there. Let's do some harm reduction language. I actually was able to sweet talk my way into getting a really cool EKG recently, which I thought really great about. If you can speak clinician, you can go a long way sometimes. [01:05:11.20] - Tricia Eastman Yeah. Oh, no, go ahead. Sorry. [01:05:15.17] - Joe Moore No, that's all. That's all. So harm reduction is important. How do we keep people safe? How do we keep healing people? And thank you for all your hard work. [01:05:27.22] - Tricia Eastman Thank you. I really appreciate it. We're all figuring it out. No one's perfect. So I'm not trying to fire any shots at anybody. I'm just like, Guys, please listen. We need to get in right relationship with the medicine. And we need to include these stakeholders. And on the other side of the coin, I just want to add that there's a lot of irresponsible, claimed traditional practitioners that are running retreat centers in Mexico and Costa Rica and other places that are also causing a lot of harm, too. So the medical monitoring is definitely, if you're going to do anything, Because these people don't have the training, the worst thing you could do is not have someone going in blind that doesn't have training and not have had an EKG and all that stuff. But we've got a long way to go, and I'm excited to help support in a productive way, all coming together. And that's what me and Joseph have been devoted to. [01:06:45.02] - Joe Moore Brilliant. Tricia Eastman, thank you so much. Everybody should go check out your book Seeding Consciousness out now. The audiobook's lovely, too. Thank you so much for being here. And until next time. [01:07:00.14] - Tricia Eastman Thank you.
Alternative titles include: What About A World... She's a Beautiful Bird Diggory Was Always Wrong We're Brainstorming This episode features Scott Dorward from The Good Friends of Jackson Elias. Support the show on Patreon. Buy some merch at the Contention General Store. Follow along on Bluesky. Find other listeners on Discord and Reddit. Join the chat on Twitch. Soundtrack by WAAAVV. Wolf the Dog played "My Life is Great and It's All My Fault" by Altar Girl.
The 365 Days of Astronomy, the daily podcast of the International Year of Astronomy 2009
Hosted by our Director, Avivah Yamani. Today we have sky guide for the rest of December 2025, specifically curated for observers in the equatorial region with Indonesia as the based of location. While the recent dazzling Full Moon and Supermoon gave us a brilliant start, the celestial show continues with powerful planetary meetings and the most spectacular meteor shower of the year! We've added a new way to donate to 365 Days of Astronomy to support editing, hosting, and production costs. Just visit: https://www.patreon.com/365DaysOfAstronomy and donate as much as you can! Share the podcast with your friends and send the Patreon link to them too! Every bit helps! Thank you! ------------------------------------ Do go visit http://www.redbubble.com/people/CosmoQuestX/shop for cool Astronomy Cast and CosmoQuest t-shirts, coffee mugs and other awesomeness! http://cosmoquest.org/Donate This show is made possible through your donations. Thank you! (Haven't donated? It's not too late! Just click!) ------------------------------------ The 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast is produced by the Planetary Science Institute. http://www.psi.edu Visit us on the web at 365DaysOfAstronomy.org or email us at info@365DaysOfAstronomy.org.
SEJA LEGEND E TENHA ACESSO À INTELIGÊNCIA POR TRÁS DA GESTÃO DE GRANDES FORTUNAS: https://lp.mmakers.com.br/market-makers-legend?xpromo=MI-LEGEND-YT-DESCRICAO-EPISODIO251-20250828-POSTUNICOSOBRELEGEND-MM-XTenha acesso a +15 modelos de IA, cursos, ferramentas exclusivas e 30 dias grátis pra testar: https://go.adapta.org/campaign/adapta-mm-youtubeAcesse a plataforma da Credit Guide: https://creditguide.com.br/?utm_source=Market+Markers&utm_medium=videoNeste episódio #287 do Market Makers, Thiago Salomão e Mateus Soares recebem o lendário gestor Florian Bartunek, CIO da Constellation. Bartunek, um dos idealizadores do livro "Fora da Curva", revela os bastidores de uma carreira de décadas dedicada ao Value Investing e ao longo prazo.Bartunek compartilha sua profunda reflexão sobre a última carta de Warren Buffett e como o Oráculo de Omaha moldou não só seus investimentos, mas sua vida pessoal. Ele explica por que a simplicidade e a concentração em poucas empresas de qualidade (como Equatorial, BTG, Nubank e Mercado Livre) se tornaram a sua filosofia central, mesmo após começar com operações de Day Trade na era Pactual.O gestor discute a importância de carregar as posições vencedoras (TOTS, Porto Seguro) e como evitar o erro de vender cedo, ressaltando que "ninguém morreu realizando lucro" é uma frase fatal na bolsa. Ele analisa a evolução do mercado brasileiro, a competição por talentos e as novas opções de investimento que tornaram a vida do gestor de ações mais desafiadora, mas também a oportunidade que o Brasil representa para o investidor global.Florian também mergulha em lições atemporais que vão além do financeiro, abordando a generosidade, a humildade e o poder dos relacionamentos. Ele compartilha o que faz uma "boa empresa" — desde o fanatismo do fundador até a satisfação do cliente — e reflete sobre como a mentalidade de sócio transforma a jornada do investidor.Qual é a sua principal lição de investimento para o longo prazo e por que ela te impede de vender suas melhores ações? Deixe seu comentário!
A Petrobras está prestes a divulgar seu plano de investimentos para os próximos cinco anos, e o mercado acompanha com atenção. Entre a autorização para explorar a Margem Equatorial, a queda do preço do petróleo e a pressão para manter dividendos robustos, quais serão as escolhas da estatal?Quem responde é Adriano Pires, sócio-fundador do Centro Brasileiro de Infraestrutura (CBIE) e um dos maiores especialistas em energia do país, convidado desta edição do podcast.Pires fala sobre o potencial e as polêmicas em torno da nova fronteira de exploração de petróleo na foz do Amazonas, critica o uso político da estatal e revela por que defende a privatização da Petrobras.Entre os Touros e Ursos, a liquidação do Banco Master, a queda das ações da Hapvida e o último investimento de Warren Buffett.#TouroseUrsos #Petrobras #Hapvida #BancoMaster
PodCast do Grupo de Conjuntura IE - UFRJOportunidades e riscos da exploração de petróleo naMargem EquatorialParticipam: Antonio Licha, Francisco Eduardo Pires deSouza, Helder Queiroz e Margarida Gutierrez.
NESTA EDIÇÃO. Pesquisa indica aumento da aprovação popular para exploração de petróleo e gás na Margem Equatorial. Distribuidoras pedem suspensão da venda direta de combustíveis entre a Petrobras e clientes corporativos. Demanda global por resfriamento deve triplicar, mas práticas sustentáveis podem economizar US$ 17 trilhões em consumo de energia, segundo Pnuma. ***Locução gerada por IA
Uma conversa sobre a promessa radical da esquerda americana com um prefeito imigrante em Nova Iorque, e a promessa bilionária da esquerda brasileira com o petróleo da Amazônia. Com Alessandra Orofino e Gregorio DuvivierSéries indicadasCaçador de Marajás (2025) - Charly BraunChico Anysio: Um Homem À Procura De Um Personagem (2025) - Bruno Mazzeo-------O Clube do Livro, em 2026, terá muitas novidades.Fique ligado, coloque seu nome na lista de espera!
O deputado federal Rodrigo Rollemberg (PSB-DF) é o entrevistado do novo episódio do Joule, podcast do JOTA em parceria com o Instituto Brasileiro de Transição Energética (Inté).
Ron Howard's latest is set among German colonists on the Galapagos Islands between the wars of the last century, with Sydney Sweeney, Ana de Armas and Vanessa Kirby (not to mention Jude Law) falling out in the Equatorial sun. What could possibly go wrong? Presented by J.R. Southall, with Jon Arnold and Ryan Blake
Bom dia 247_ Sai a licença da Margem Equatorial_ Vitória do Brasil! _21_10_25_ by TV 247
E mais: Com excesso de petróleo no mundo, navios aguardam compradores em alto-mar.
Programa Aqui Tem Experiência - Record News - Entrevistacom Servio Tulio, CEO da Equatorial Energia no Maranhão. O episódio 4 da 1ª temporada do Aqui Tem Experiência, naRecord News Maranhão, foi ao ar com a participação especial de Servio Tulio, CEO da Equatorial Energia noMaranhão. Durante a entrevista, falamos sobre:✅ Como entregar experiência docliente na área de energia✅ A importância de ouvir a linhade frente e colaborador✅ O papel da liderança namelhoria permanente da experiência do cliente Confira!
NESTA EDIÇÃO. Próximos passos na exploração Margem Equatorial incluem perfuração na Bacia Potiguar em 2026. Brasil e Nigéria negociam parcerias em petróleo, gás e fertilizantes. Cai a participação da Petrobras em contratos de longo prazo com distribuidoras de gás natural.
Steel meets saltwater. On the deck of the Coast Guard cutter Owasso, duty is a constant, and the sea is a relentless master. For Rat, a young deckhand, this voyage to Rio isn't just a job—it's a crucible. Sponsored by author Robert Kamarowski, Moravian Sons Distillery https://moraviansonsdistillery.com and Doc Chavent Amidst the grind of shipboard life, a brotherhood is forged. From the seasoned veterans to the green cadets, each man grapples with his own demons, tested by the unforgiving rhythm of the ocean. The Owasso is a world unto itself, where sweat and steel define the day, and the bonds of shared hardship run deep. Listen in for a chance to win a signed copy of Equatorial Rhythms. Copyright (c) 2025. Emma Blogs, LLC. All rights reserved.
Governo brasileiro apresenta medidas “antitarifaço”. Equatorial divulga resultados.
Este boletim traz um resumo das principais notícias do dia na análise de Samuel Possebon, editor chefe da TELETIME.TELETIME é a publicação de referência para quem acompanha o mercado de telecomunicações, tecnologia e Internet no Brasil. Uma publicação independente dedicada ao debate aprofundado e criterioso das questões econômicas, regulatórias, tecnológicas, operacionais e estratégicas das empresas do setor. Se você ainda não acompanha a newsletter TELETIME, inscreva-se aqui (shorturl.at/juzF1) e fique ligado no dia a dia do mercado de telecom. É simples e é gratuito.Você ainda pode acompanhar TELETIME nas redes sociais:Linkedin: shorturl.at/jGKRVFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/Teletime/ Google News: shorturl.at/kJU35Ou entre em nosso canal no Telegram: https://t.me/teletimenews Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Na edição do Noite Brasil / Cultura Brasileira desta sexta'feira, 08 de agosto de 2025:1. Lula veta 63 pontos da lei que enfraquece o licenciamento ambiental, no entanto edita MP para que a Licença Ambiental Especial (LAE) favoreça a exploração de petróleo da Margem Equatorial do Rio Amazonas;2. Bolsonaristas buscam acordo com Arthur Lira para mudança na lei do Foro Privilegiado;3. No Cultura Brasileira, o centenário de Franz Fannon e as contribuições para o pensamento anticolonial de um dos maiores pensadores dos século XX.Os convidados são a jornalista Cristina Serra (19h), a advogada Tânia Mandarino (19h30) e o assistente social e doutor em Educação Samuel Lima (20h15).
O aparecimento inesperado de Cotrim&Rui Moreira na corrida às presidenciais — onde ainda faltarão pelo menos mais dois candidatos. Os extremos da polémica sobre as aulas de cidadania e a proposta de pergunta de Ventura. E bastidores da adesão da Guiné Equatorial à CPLP: o ultimato de Dilma e José Eduardo dos Santos, os políticos que aceitaram e o número de falantes de português no país de Obiang.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Marcelo (que protesta contra a Guiné Equatorial), Luís Montenegro (que anunciou uma medida que criticou) e o governo (que nomeia ex-secretários de Estado) são o Bom, o Mau e o Vilão.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
O Joule, podcast de energia do JOTA em parceria com o Inté, o Instituto Brasileiro de Transição Energética, recebe Ticiana Alvares, do Instituto de Estudos Estratégicos de Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis (Ineep) e Lucas Kerr-Oliveira, professor da Universidade Federal da Integração Latino-Americana (Unila) e especialista em geopolítica energética. Na entrevista, os dois aprofundaram o debate sobre a Margem Equatorial Brasileira e as novas fronteiras de exploração do petróleo no país. As entrevistas são feitas por Larissa Fafá, analista de energia do JOTA.
O Manhã Brasil desta sexta (27), com o jornalista Mauro Lopes como âncora, tem os seguintes destaques: 1) A crise na montagem política do governo Lula se aprofunda e abre o questionamento: valeu a pena entregar o poder à Frente Amplíssima. De que serviu entregar a Margem Equatorial e largas fatias do governo Federal a David Alcolumbre? 2) As conta da votação que derrubou o decreto do IOF na noite desta quarta são inequívocas: dos 386 votos contra o decreto, 241 foram de partidos com Ministérios. Sem eles, o total seria apenas 148, insuficientes para derrotar o governo. Pessoas convidadas:Ricardo Leães, graduado em Relações Internacionais, mestre e doutor em Ciência Política. Professor de Relações Internacionais na ESPM, com foco em política internacional, geopolítica e economia global. É criador e apresentador do canal "Ricardo Leães – O Mundo ao seu Alcance", no YouTube, no qual divulga conteúdos analíticos sobre temas internacionais para o público em geral.Daniel Cara, educador, professor da Faculdade de Educação da Universidade de São Paulo (FE-USP) e um líder no debate sobre a educação no Brasil
NESTA EDIÇÃO. Ambientalistas e MPF/PA se preparam, em movimentos paralelos, para judicializar o leilão de áreas de petróleo na Margem Equatorial. Em Brasília, Marina Silva passa por fritura em audiência no Senado e, abandonada pela própria base do próprio governo, dá sinais de isolamento. Aneel dá aval à renovação de contratos de quatro distribuidoras, em São Paulo, Maranhão e Pernambuco. Eletronuclear pede nova suspensão do pagamento de dívidas.
Recentemente, em dois episódios diferentes, o Lado B ouviu convidados defendendo abertamente a exploração da Margem Equatorial pela Petrobras. Pelo bem do bom debate e para ajudar você a formar sua própria opinião, abrimos o microfone para ouvir argumentos contrários, com Leandro Lanfredi, petroleiro, diretor do Sindipetro-RJ e colunista no portal Esquerda Diário. No Caô da Semana, a manobra que abre espaço para Rodrigo Bacellar ser governador do Rio de Janeiro e a situação nos Correios.
Justin Nault is a nutritional therapist who has helped thousands of clients escape our broken healthcare system and reclaim their health. We talked about his previous life as a professional musician and his own health journey, as well as the origins of allopathic medicine, seed oils and the hydroelectric dam analogy, what's wrong with rodent studies and nutrition research, how to eat for optimal energy, leanness and performance, longevity in sports, setting 90 years of goals, the politicization of health, finding self-love, and much more. You can learn more about Justin at justinnault.com/stevenMaui Nui Venison (The Healthiest Red Meat on the Planet)mauinuivenison.com/stevenNADS (Men's Organic Cotton Underwear)Use code STEVEN for 15% off NADSHeadspace (Meditation App)Try it for Free for 14 DaysSupport the Podcast Directlypatreon.com/somethingdiffpodWe are supported by these amazing BIG GIVERS:Michael Roy and Mark and Julie CalhounShow Notes: thenuggetclimbing.com/episodes/justin-naultNuggets:(00:00:00) – Intro(00:04:04) – Justin's life as a professional musician(00:08:10) – The costume(00:13:34) – Escapism(00:17:58) – Rocketman(00:20:18) – Collecting data from childhood(00:24:46) – Masochistic fitness(00:28:31) – Justin's niece(00:33:52) – The origins of allopathic medicine(00:35:23) – The limitations of nutrition science(00:37:20) – Seed oils(00:41:44) – The hydroelectric dam analogy(00:46:38) – PUFAs, Omega-6s, & Omega-3s(00:48:31) – Hyperphysiological doses, & fat loss(00:54:37) – A cheap way to check your metabolic rate(00:56:17) – What happened to Primal Kitchen(01:01:24) – Capitalism is demand-driven(01:05:28) – Whose funnel am I in?(01:08:44) – Justin's staple foods(01:10:59) – Cholesterol & thyroid health(01:19:21) – Carbs & saturated fat(01:24:20) – Calories, paleo, & metabolic rate(01:30:01) – Food is data(01:33:17) – Energy flux(01:38:06) – No more sugar cravings(01:41:17) – Architect of freedom(01:45:45) – Thyroid, carb sources, & dairy(01:49:11) – Fiber & blood glucose(01:50:16) – Sugar(01:57:07) – Fructose & fruit juice(01:59:24) – Rodent studies & nutrition research(02:04:41) – The illusion of authority(02:10:07) – The politicization of health(02:13:56) – Covid(02:21:56) – A journey of self-love(02:33:44) – Psychadelics & non-duality(02:37:46) – Is it working(02:45:07) – Top 5 daily prometabolic habits(02:48:49) – Equatorial living(02:51:33) – Leanness & performance(03:00:54) – Longevity in sports(03:03:16) – Justin's athletic life(03:05:32) – 90 years of goals(03:08:05) – Where to find Justin
Bom dia 247_ Magda Chambriard e a urgência do petróleo da Margem Equatorial _20_4_25_ by TV 247
Convidado desta edição, André Leite, sócio e CIO da TAG Investimentos, fala sobre o abalo sísmico nos mercados e na economia global com o anúncio das “tarifas recíprocas” pelo presidente dos Estados Unidos, Donald Trump. Entre os Touros e Ursos da edição, o petróleo e a Nasdaq em queda, a venda bilionária dos ativos da Equatorial e o imbróglio da cidadania italiana.
NESTA EDIÇÃO. Brasil amplia direito de soberania no mar em área com possível ocorrência de petróleo. ANP decide abrir cálculos dos contratos legados de transporte de gás. Pedido de suspensão da mistura de biodiesel ao diesel é negado pela agência. Projeto de lei quer incluir nanoempreendedores na tarifa social de energia. Anac e agência europeia vão colaborar para incentivo a combustíveis sustentáveis de aviação.
Bom dia 247: Lula vai ao Amapá destravar a Margem Equatorial (13.2.25) by TV 247
Faixa de 2.200 km na costa que vai do Amapá ao Rio Grande do Norte, a chamada Margem Equatorial está no centro de um debate envolvendo o governo, a Petrobras e ambientalistas. Desde 2020, a Petrobras tenta junto ao Ibama uma licença para estudar o potencial de exploração de petróleo na região, que fica perto da Foz do Amazonas e é rica em biodiversidade. Nesta quinta-feira (6), a ministra Marina Silva (Meio Ambiente) afirmou não ter influência sobre o processo de licenciamento para pesquisas na região. Um dia antes, o presidente Lula afirmou em entrevista que a questão deve ser debatida. O potencial de produção cria expectativas: para se ter ideia, na Guiana - país onde petróleo foi descoberto em 2015 também na Margem Equatorial – o PIB per capita quase quintuplicou em uma década. Para entender o que leva a Petrobras a se interessar pela Margem Equatorial e as perspectivas de uma decisão sobre o tema no Brasil, Natuza Nery conversa com Felipe Maciel, sócio-fundador e diretor executivo da agência eixos, especializada nos setores de petróleo, gás e energia. Depois, para explicar que tipo de licença a Petrobras tenta e o processo para uma possível exploração de petróleo, a entrevista é com Suely Araújo, ex-presidente do Ibama e coordenadora de políticas públicas no Observatório do Clima.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 27 Episode 153*The Mysterious Origins of Martian MineralsA new study suggests that some Martian minerals may have formed in liquid carbon dioxide rather than water. While traditional views link Mars' dry river channels to past water presence, this research indicates that under ancient Martian conditions, liquid CO2 could have been a significant factor in shaping the planet's geological features. This finding, published in Nature Geoscience, adds a new layer to the ongoing debate about Mars' liquid past and its implications for the planet's habitability.*Australia's Arnhem Space Centre ShutteredEquatorial Launch Australia has announced the closure of the Arnhem Space Centre due to unresolved lease issues with the Northern Land Council. Originally envisioned as a hub for commercial space launches, the project faced multiple delays over land agreements. Plans are now underway to relocate operations to Queensland, aiming to establish the Australian Space Centre, Geberic which promises significant economic benefits and indigenous employment opportunities.*Discovery of the Heaviest Antimatter ParticlePhysicists at CERN's Large Hadron Collider have identified what could be the heaviest antimatter particle ever detected. Using the ALICE experiment, researchers observed anti-hyperhelium 4, an exotic hypernucleus. This discovery provides new insights into the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the universe, as scientists continue to explore the mysteries of the Big Bang and the universe's evolution.00:00 Some Martian minerals may have been formed in liquid carbon dioxide rather than water06:01 Scientists find evidence for what appears to be the most massive antimatter particle ever detected13:15 Move of time projection chamber into ALICE detector starts very slowly15:22 The TPC is our main tracking detector for heavy ion collisions20:21 Living in an agricultural community with high pesticide use may increase cancer risk22:50 Former CNN reporter Tucker Carlson claims he was attacked by a demon while sleepingwww.spacetimewithstuartgary.comwww.bitesz.com
Spaceflight News— Epsilon can't stop exploding (space.com) (youtu.be) (PDF: jaxa.jp)— A Dragonfly on a Falcon Heavy (satellitetoday.com)Short & Sweet— Old spaceport, newish rocket (europeanspaceflight.com)— New rocket, new spaceport (spacenews.com)Questions, Comments, Corrections— From the intro: New Glenn on the pad (space.com) (blueorigin.com)This Week in Spaceflight History— 3 Dec, 2003: Shuttle Training Aircraft loses part of an engine (iasa.com.au VIA web.archive.org) (en.wikipedia.org) (simpleflying.com)— Next week (12/10 - 12/16) in 1970: Equatorial eyes
Confira nossas condições especiais da nossa Black Friday aqui: https://lvnt.app/ud2tyt 19/11: Bolsa 0,30%, Dólar R$ 5,76, VAMO3 +4% e EMBR3 -3% Olá, seja bem-vindo a mais um Fechamento de Mercado, comigo Flávio Conde e sem o Ricardo que emendou os feriados, hoje é 3ª. feira, 19 de novembro, e o programa é dedicado ao ucl, Gilson, Nicoletti, Antonia, Robson, Daniel, Dr. Ronaldo, Alexandre novo cliente Vision que ganhou R$ 5 mil em Blox da Levante) e Dr. Nelson que emendou os dois feriados com a esposa. Vc que já assistiu compartilhe o link nos seus grupos de whatsapp e quem não assistiu ainda vá agora. ObrigadoO Ibovespa estava em leve alta de 0,30%, aos 128.170 pontos, às 17h45, com volume fraco de R$ 19 bi, R$ 6 bi abaixo da média de R$ 25 bi das terças de mercado em alta.Por que a Bolsa performou assim? 1º. A bolsa abriu estranhamente caindo até às 10h30 a 127,3 mil contrariando o Ibovespa futuro que subia em torno de 0,20% no pré market, mas se recuperou e zerou às 10h50 e, a partir daí, operou no positivo atingindo um máximo de quase 128,6 mil para depois recuar um pouco e fechar a 128.170 pontos. Os mercados brasileiros tiveram um comportamento meio estranho que foram as três principais classes de ativos subindo: dólar +0,30%, bolsa +0,30% e juros futuros +0,03% (Será que é uma premunição e será Brasil 0 x 3 Uruguai? Tomará que não). Eu chamo estranho porque a bolsa costuma andar na direção oposta de dólar e juros, que viraram quase irmãos siameses, ou seja, sempre juntos e contra a bolsa. Entretanto, com foram variações muitos pequenas, pois considero abaixo de -/+ 1% baixo, podemos dizer que foi um dia de mercados de lado. No próximo parágrafo, vamos ao que mais interessa: como andaram as ações, principalmente, aquelas que recomendamos aos clientes da Levante.Na B3, as ações da Vale lideraram as altas com o minério subindo 1,8% ao mesmo tempo que ações de bancos (Itaú, BB e Bradesco) e utilities (Eletrobras, Sabesp e Equatorial) que tinham registrado bons resultados no 3T24 e vinham caindo com a fraqueza da bolsa foram compradas por investidores em busca de ações de cias. sólidas e lucros crescentes a preços (cotações) atrativas como as citadas. Já nas quedas apenas Petrobras que tinham subido ontem bem como PRIO além de JBS em levíssima baixa.2º. Na B3, 11 ações subiram entre as 15 ações mais negociadas com destaques para: VALE3 0,4% R$ 57,35 seguindo a alta do minério, BBAS3 0,6% R$ 25,87, ITUB4 1% R$ 34,86, BBDC4 0,9% R$ 13,80 e SBSP3 2,4% R$ 98,23.3º. Apenas 4 ações caíram entre as mais negociadas com destaques para: PETR4 -1% R$ 37,80 porque tinham subido ontem com os potenciais dividendos supostamente preservados no novo Plano Estratégico 2025-29, PRIO3 -1% R$ 39,80 com o petróleo de lado hoje mesmo com uma possível escalada da guerra entre Ucrânia e Rússia, EMBR3 -2,5% R$ 54,30 com banco estrangeiro rebaixando as ações para Venda porque a cotação embutiria um otimismo exagerado com os resultados da cia., e JBSS3 -0,20% R$ 34,83. 4º. O preço do petróleo oscilou perto da estabilidade para fechar no mesmo nível de ontem de US$ 73,3, no centro do limite da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, com investidores atentos durante o dia a uma possível escalada da guerra entre Ucrânia e Rússia.5º. O minério de ferro subiu 1,90% a US$ 107,1 de US$ 105,1, ontem, num movimento de compra por parte de traders e seguindo o petróleo. Conheça a Levante Investimentos: Conheça nossas *Séries de Investimentos*: https://lvnt.app/4q3u3b Acompanhe nosso Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/levante.investimentos/ Fique ligado nas principais notícas do mercado no nosso canal no Telegram: https://lvnt.app/zuntm0
A agência climática dos Estados Unidos indicou nesta semana que o La Niña deverá ter fraca intensidade e duração menor que o esperado. O fenômeno é gerado pelo resfriamento das águas do oceano Pacífico Equatorial e traz efeitos no clima ao redor do mundo, incluindo o Brasil. Com um La Niña de fraca intensidade, a Rural Clima revela que outros fenômenos climáticos já estão atuando no Brasil. A empresa diz ainda que há previsão de mais de 600 milímetros de chuvas em algumas regiões do Brasil em apenas um mês. Veja os mapas com a previsão até maio!
NESTA EDIÇÃO. Os planos da Petrobras para contornar as dificuldades na Margem Equatorial. PDE 2034 prevê R$ 3,2 trilhões em investimentos. MGás autorizada a importar gás argentino. Nova meta climática brasileira é mal recebida. Os impactos da eleição nos EUA no mercado de hidrogênio.
Conheça o método SGR através do grupo exclusivo: https://lvnt.app/evowa8 15/10 - Bolsa 0,03%, WEG 2% e AZUL -3%, Dólar R$ 5,65 Olá, seja bem-vindo a mais um Fechamento de Mercado, comigo Flávio Conde, hoje é segunda-feira, dia 14 de outubro. O Ibovespa fechou estável 0,03%, aos 131.043, com volume regular de R$ 21 bi, R$ 4 bi abaixo da média de R$ 25 bi das terças. Por que a Bolsa performou assim? 1º. A bolsa abriu em leve alta e foi a 131,4 mil, às 10h10, mas não aguentou e negativou em seguida para bater 130,4 mil, às 10h50, e recuperar-se um pouco ao longo da tarde para fechar em 131.043. Nos EUA, as bolsas caíram -1% Nasdaq e -0,75% Dow também pelo receio de quedas nas receitas e lucros das cias. Os resultados decepcionantes da empresa de semicondutores ASML pesaram sobre as ações de tecnologia, com as decepcionantes resultados da empresa no terceiro trimestre. No Brasil, as ações das cias. de commodities, Vale, Petrobras e PRIO, lideraram as quedas seguindo os preços do minério e petróleo que recuaram. Já nas altas das ações mais negociadas a liderança foi com Itaú, WEG, Sabesp e Itaú. 2º. Na B3, apenas 5 ações subiram entre as 15 ações mais negociadas: Itaú 1,1%, Bradesco 0,90%, WEG 2,7%, Sabesp 1,2% e Itaúsa 0,50%. Já nas baixas foram 10 ações, a saber: Vale -1,2%, Petrobras -0,80%, PRIO -0,30%, B3SA3 -0,40%; BBAS3 -0,20%, Ambev -0,30%; Gerdau -0,70%, Eletrobras -0,60%, Assaí -1,8% e Equatorial -0,10%. 3º. O preço do petróleo caiu mais ainda hoje, -3,7%, a US$ 74,7 de US$ 77,4, ontem, bem acima do limite da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, com investidores refletindo nos preços a conversa de Israel com EUA prometendo não atacar plataformas de petróleo do Irã mais a projeção da Agência Internacional de Energia (IEA, em inglês), de que haverá um grande excesso de oferta de petróleo em 2025 porque a demanda crescerá menos do que a produção, 998 mil barris x 1,5 milhão, vindo principalmente dos EUA, Brasil e Canadá, países que não fazem parte da Opep. 4º. O minério de ferro devolveu a alta de ontem e voltou para US$ 111 de US$ 113 por tonelada, ontem, com a incerteza sobre os impactos quanto as recentes medidas do governo chinês para impulsionar a economia do país bem como o setor imobiliário. 5º. As bolsas americanas subiram, 0,87% o Nasdaq e 0,47% o Dow, com investidores mais animados com as perspectivas de resultados do 3T24 que começaram a serem divulgados na semana passada e vão acelerar nos próximos dias. 6º. O dólar à vista voltou a subir e foram 8 centavos para R$ 5,66 de R|$ 5,58, o que nos parece exagerado, com a combinação de quedas dos preços de commodities que o Brasil exporta e gastos do governo. 7º. Nos EUA, os juros dos títulos de 10-anos caíram bem para 4,04% a.a. ante 4,10% a.a., ontem, e sem novidades. No Brasil, a greve dos funcionários do Tesouro Nacional fez com que não houvesse negociação hoje. Lembrando que ontem fechou a 12,66% de 12,88% a.a., na sexta-feira 8º. O saldo de investimentos estrangeiros no mercado secundário da Bovespa, de ações já em circulação, ficou negativo em R$ 491 milhões na sexta-feira, 11 de outubro, conforme dados da B3. No mês de outubro, o saldo acumulado pelos estrangeiros está negativo em R$ 3,5 bilhões e Ibovespa -1,3%. No ano, os estrangeiros tiraram da Bovespa R$ 26,7 bilhões. Os estrangeiros respondem por 57,90% do volume negociado em outubro e por 55,20% do volume no ano. MAIORES ALTAS LWSA3 +4.22% R$ 4,45 WEGE3 +2.71% R$ 56,53 JBSS3 +2.54% R$ 33,57 TIMS3 +2.25% R$ 17,28 ENEV3 +1.78% R$ 14,28 MAIORES BAIXAS AZUL4 -2.97% R$ 5,88 USIM5 -2.39% R$ 6,12 YDUQ3 -2.29% R$ 10,25 RECV3 -2.01% R$ 17,54 ASAI3 -1.82% R$ 7,01
Gaúcha ZS - 02/10/2024 - Jonatan Silva, Analista Do Prog. De Efic. Energética Da CEEE G. Equatorial by Rádio Gaúcha
Quer melhorar a performance da sua carteira e minimizar os riscos? Preencha o formulário para participar da pré consultoria com o meu time de especialistas e conhecer a estratégia de maior sucesso da Levante: https://app.pipefy.com/public/form/Jy... 05/09 - Bolsa +0,29%, IRB +6%, ASAI -4% e R$ 5,57 O Ibovespa subiu um pouco, 0,29%, para 136.502 pontos, com volume fraco de R$ 19 bilhões, R$ 6 bilhões abaixo da média de R$ 25 bilhões das quintas. Por que a Bolsa performou assim? 1º. A bolsa ficou o dia inteiro rabiscando para cima e para baixo entre 136 mil e 136,6 mil pontos em dia de volume fraco. A boa notícia do dia foi, finalmente, a queda do dólar em -1,2% influenciado pelo segundo dia de desvalorização da moeda norte-americana versus moedas fortes e emergentes devido a queda das taxas de juros de longo prazo dos EUA. 2º. Na B3, das 15 ações mais negociadas apenas 6 ações caíram: Petrobras ON e PN, PRIO, Equatorial, 3R e Eletrobras. 3º. Nove ações subiram entre as 15 mais negociadas: VALE, Itaú, Bradesco, Embraer, B3, BB, Hapvida, Rumo e JBS. 4º. O preço do petróleo subiu, 0,20%, fechando a US$ 72,7 de US$ 72,2, ontem, dentro do limite da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, e sem novidades. 5º. O preço do minério de ferro caiu -1,6% para US$ 95,6 de US$ 97 por tonelada, ontem, dentro da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, devido a fraqueza do setor imobiliário chinês e nenhuma medida forte para ajudar o setor. 6º. As bolsas americanas foram mistas hoje, 0,25% o Nasdaq e -0,50% Dow Jones. Investidores venderam ações de cias. mais dependentes da economia americana depois da divulgação de que foram criados “apenas” 99 mil empregos no setor privado em agosto quando eram esperado 111 mil empregos. 7º. O dólar à vista finalmente caiu e fechou a R$ 5,57, cinco centavos abaixo dos R$ 5,63, de ontem, em função do segundo dia de desvalorização da moeda norte-americana versus moedas fortes e emergentes. 8º. Nos EUA, os títulos de 10-anos caíram pelo terceiro dia e foram de 3,77% para 3,72% a.a. com os dados mais fracos da geração de empregos no setor privado em agosto. No Brasil, as taxas de juros dos títulos do Tesouro do Brasil recuaram, de novo, seguindo as taxas americanas, com o Prefixado 2031 indo 12,08% para 12,02% a.a., mas ainda estão em nível muito alto. 9º. O saldo de investimentos estrangeiros ficou negativo em R$ 265 milhões na terça-feira, 3 de setembro, conforme dados da B3. Com isso, o saldo acumulado em setembro está negativo em R$ 334 milhões. No ano pelos estrangeiros está negativo em R$ 21,5 bilhões. MAIORES ALTAS IRBR3 +6.14% R$ 51,69 MRVE3 +5.99% R$ 7,79 NTCO3 +3.55% R$ 13,99 CMIN3 +3.31% R$ 5,93 LREN3 +3.15% R$ 18,03 MAIORES BAIXAS ASAI3 -3.91% R$ 9,59 AZUL4 -3.66% R$ 4,74 BEEF3 -2.83% R$ 7,20 BRKM5 -2.29% R$ 18,35 STBP3 -2.22% R$ 13,64 Conheça a Levante Investimentos: Conheça nossas *Séries de Investimentos*: https://lvnt.app/4q3u3b Acompanhe nosso Instagram: / levante.investimentos Fique ligado nas principais notícas do mercado no nosso canal no Telegram: https://lvnt.app/zuntm0
Quer melhorar a performance da sua carteira e minimizar os riscos? Preencha o formulário para participar da pré consultoria com o meu time de especialistas e conhecer a estratégia de maior sucesso da Levante: https://app.pipefy.com/public/form/Jy... 04/09 - Bolsa +1,3%, Varejo, Elétricas e Siderúrgicas Sobem O Ibovespa voltou a subir depois de quatro dias quedas, 1,31%, para 136,111 mil pontos, com volume razoável de R$ 22 bilhões, R$ 3 bilhões abaixo da média de R$ 25 bilhões das quartas. Por que a Bolsa performou assim? 1º. A bolsa abriu em alta e acelerou até 136,8 mil pontos, às 12h, parta depois ficar oscilando até 136,3 mil e fechar positivo em 136,1 mil pontos. O que levou a bolsa para cima? Um conjunto de dados positivos: 1) PIB crescendo 1,4% no 2T24 bem acima do 0,9% esperados; 2) Pelo lado da oferta, o avanço da indústria de transformação e construção civil foi fundamental para o avanço de 1,8% desse segmento; 3) Os serviços de informação e de intermediação financeira tiveram melhor desempenho permitindo crescimento de 1%; 4) Haddad disse que trabalharia para maiores cortes nas despesas de 2025 e que a economia vai muito já crescendo no ritmo de 3% anual como mostrou o resultado do PIB no 2T24 e com inflação baixa; e 5) Juros de longo prazo recuaram entre -0,10% e -0,20%. 2º. Na B3, apenas 3 ações caíram, PRIO, 3R e Petrobras por conta da queda de quase -2% do petróleo, entre as 15 ações mais negociadas. Os destaques de altas entre as mais negociadas foram: Embraer +5% (porque um banco americano reforçou a recomendação de compra da fabricante de aeronaves), B3 +3% (com aumento do volume negociado hoje), e Equatorial +4% (como reflexo do leilão de venda da cia. de saneamento de Sergipe). 3º. O preço do petróleo caiu quase -2% fechando a US$ 72,4 de US$ 73,7, ontem, quase no limite da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, em função de relatório do Citibank onde alerta que os preços do petróleo podem cair para US$ 60, em 2025, por conta do aumento de produção e exportação de países produtores de petróleo que não fazem parte da Opep e caso a Opep não reduza sua produção. 4º. O preço do minério de ferro caiu -1,8% para US$ 97 de US$ 98,8 por tonelada, ontem, dentro da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, devido a fraqueza da economia chinesa, especialmente, na indústria e imóveis. 5º. As bolsas americanas foram mistas hoje, -0,30% o Nasdaq e 0,10% Dow Jones. No Nasdaq, as ações da Nvidia recuaram -1% depois de terem caído -9% ontem mostrando o comportamento defensivo de boa parte de investidores depois das ações subirem mais 150% esse ano. 6º. O dólar à vista ficou oscilando entre R$ 5,63 e 5,64, ontem, e não seguiu a desvalorização da moeda norte-americana de -0,50% versus moedas fortes e -0,30% versus moedas de países emergentes. 7º. Nos EUA, os títulos de 10-anos caíram bem de 3,84% para 3,77% a.a. com os dados mais fracos da geração de empregos em agosto. No Brasil, as taxas de juros dos títulos do Tesouro do Brasil recuaram, seguindo as taxas americanas, com o Prefixado 2031 indo 12,18% para 12,08% a.a. 8º. O saldo de investimentos estrangeiros no mercado secundário da Bovespa, de ações já em circulação, ficou negativo em R$ 70 milhões na segunda-feira, 3 de setembro, conforme dados da B3. Com isso, o saldo acumulado no ano pelos estrangeiros está negativo em R$ 21,5 bilhões. MAIORES ALTAS PCAR3 +9.12% R$ 3,23 MRFG3 +7.46% R$ 14,69 EMBR3 +5.79% R$ 49,11 EQTL3 +4.27% R$ 35,68 BRFS3 +4.21% R$ 25,50 MAIORES BAIXAS IRBR3 -6.27% R$ 48,70 RRRP3 -3.22% R$ 24,65 CXSE3 -2.69% R$ 15,94 PRIO3 -1.31% R$ 43,72 PETR3 -0.38% R$ 42,15 Conheça a Levante Investimentos: Conheça nossas *Séries de Investimentos*: https://lvnt.app/4q3u3b Acompanhe nosso Instagram: / levante.investimentos Fique ligado nas principais notícas do mercado no nosso canal no Telegram: https://lvnt.app/zuntm0
Quer melhorar a performance da sua carteira e minimizar os riscos? Preencha o formulário para participar da pré consultoria com o meu time de especialistas e conhecer a estratégia de maior sucesso da Levante: https://app.pipefy.com/public/form/JylJv372 03/09 - 4º. Baixa da Bolsa, AZUL +9% e PRIO -5% O Ibovespa caiu pelo quarto dia, -0,41%, para 134.353 pontos, com volume fraco de R$ 20 bilhões, R$ 5 bilhões abaixo da média de R$ 25 bilhões das terças. Por que a Bolsa performou assim? 1º. A bolsa abriu caindo e foi oscilando bem até fechar negativo em 134,3 mil pontos. O que levou a bolsa para baixo? Um conjunto de dados negativos: 1) Dados mais fracos da indústria e construção nos EUA levaram as bolsas do país para baixo, 2) Preocupação com Nvidia e ações de tecnologia que subiram muito em 2024 e levaram investidores a venderem ações do Nasdaq que caiu -3%, 3) Queda de -4% do preço do petróleo devido a fraca demanda da China levou ações de Petrobras, PRIO e 3R para baixo, e 4) Mais uma baixa do preço do minério de ferro, hoje em -4%, fez ações de VALE, CMIN e siderúrgicas caírem. 2º. Na B3, as 15 ações mais negociadas ficaram divididas com 7 subindo e 8 caindo. Nas altas destaques para: Itaú, BB, Rumo, Embraer, Renner, WEG, Equatorial e Sabesp. Já nas baixas destaques para: Vale, Petrobras, PRIO, B3, Eletrobras, Suzano, Localiza, Magalu e Ambev. 3º. O preço do petróleo despencou -4% fechando a US$ 73,7 de US$ 77,5, ontem, o dobro do limite da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, em função da informação que alguns produtores de petróleo da Opep estariam produzindo acima da cota combinada com o Curdistão. 4º. O preço do minério de ferro caiu -4% para US$ 98,8 de US$ 102 por tonelada, ontem, bem acima da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, devido a contração da atividade das fábricas na China pelo quarto mês consecutivo em agosto, enquanto os últimos números de vendas de imóveis mostraram um agravamento na recessão residencial. Além disso, um dos maiores desenvolvedores imobiliários do país registrou sua primeira perda em mais de duas décadas. 5º. As bolsas americanas caíram forte hoje, -3,2% o Nasdaq e -1,5% Dow Jones. No Nasdaq, as ações da Nvidia caíram -9% com investidores receosos com o potencial menor crescimento das vendas da fabricante de chips nos próximos trimestres levando várias ações de tecnologia a recuarem como Google Meta -3% e Netflix -3%. 6º. O dólar à vista voltou a subir, mais 2 centavos, para R$ 5,64 de R$ 5,62, ontem, seguindo a valorização da moeda norte-americana em 0,20% versus moedas fortes e 0,35% versus moedas de países emergentes. 7º. Nos EUA, os títulos de 10-anos caíram bem de 3,92% para 3,84% a.a. com os dados mais fracos da indústria e construção. No Brasil, as taxas de juros dos títulos do Tesouro do Brasil recuaram, seguindo as taxas americanas, com o Prefixado 2031 indo 12,25% para 12,18% a.a. 8º. Estrangeiros trouxeram R$ 10 bi para a Bovespa em agosto, melhor mês do ano. O saldo de investimentos estrangeiros no mercado secundário da Bovespa, de ações já em circulação, ficou negativo em R$ 51,3 milhões na sexta-feira, 30 de agosto, segundo dados da B3. Com isso, agosto fechou com uma entrada líquida de recursos estrangeiros no mercado secundário da bolsa de R$ 10,013 bilhões, o segundo mês positivo consecutivo, e o maior em 2024. Em julho, os estrangeiros trouxeram para a Bovespa R$ 7,345 bilhões, no primeiro mês do ano de saldo positivo de estrangeiros. Em dois meses, os estrangeiros trouxeram para a bolsa brasileira R$ 17,358 bilhões, valor insuficiente, porém, para compensar as fortes saídas dos seis primeiros meses do ano. No acumulado de 2024, o saldo de estrangeiros na Bovespa está negativo em R$ 21,502 bilhões.
Quer melhorar a performance da sua carteira e minimizar os riscos? Preencha o formulário para participar da pré consultoria com o meu time de especialistas e conhecer a estratégia de maior sucesso da Levante: https://app.pipefy.com/public/form/Jy... 20/08 - 10º. Dia de Alta, 1 Ação para Vender 1 Comprar O programa de hoje é dedicado ao Dr. Élton, meu radiologista e coincidentemente torcedor do Santos e investidor de Bolsa. O Ibovespa subiu dez pregões em onze, hoje 0,23%, aos 136.087 pontos e volume regular de R$ 22 bi, R$ 3 bi abaixo da média de R$ 25 bi das terças. Por que a Bolsa performou assim? 1º. A bolsa já abriu em alta, mas realizou rápido e foi para mínima negativa de 135,3 mil pontos, às 11:30, para começar a subir de novo e positivar às 12:50 e subir fechando em 136.087 pontos e +0,23%. Na B3, a bolsa teve os seguintes destaques nas altas: Sabesp, Weg e Equatorial foram os destaques das altas. Já os destaques nas baixas: CVC, varejistas e educacionais devolveram parte das altas de agosto. 2º. Entre as 15 ações mais negociadas 8 subiram lideradas em volume negociado por: VALE3 0,40%, ITUB4 0,70%, B3SA3 0,8%, BBDC4 0,4%, BBAS3 0,50%, SBSP3 2%, EQTL3 1,3% e ITSA4 0,30%. 3º. Sete ações caíram entre as 15 mais negociadas: PETR4 -0,4%, RENT3 -2,8%, PRIO3 -0,2%, ELET3 -0,3%, PETR3 -0,4%, MLU3 -0,8, LREN3 -0,2% e ABEV -0,5%. 4º. O preço do petróleo caiu -0,6% para US$ 77,2 de US$ 77,8, ontem, dentro da volatilidade diária de -/+2%, com notícias de menores tensões no Oriente Médio. 5º. O preço do minério de ferro leve baixa de 0,30% para US$ 99,5 de US$ 99,7 por tonelada, ontem, voltando perto dos US$ 100 que ainda é baixo. Portanto, continua a preocupação com o preço do minério de ferro devendo fazer os resultados do 3T24 serem menores que o 2T24. 6º. As bolsas americanas foram cederam um pouco com Nasdaq -0,30% e Dow -0,15%. Investidores realizaram parte dos lucros dos últimos meses. 7º. O dólar à vista subiu 7 centavos para R$ 5,48 de R$ 5,41, ontem, em um dia marcado pela busca global por ativos mais seguros, por ajustes técnicos no Brasil e por declarações consideradas mais brandas do presidente do Banco Central, Roberto Campos Neto, sobre a política monetária 8º. Nos EUA, os juros dos títulos de 10-anos recuaram bem a 3,82% de 3,88% a.a. com menor risco de recessão nos EUA. No Brasil, as taxas de juros dos títulos do Tesouro do Brasil subiram com o Prefixado 2031 indo de 11,46% a.a. para 11,56% a.a. influenciadas pela alta do dólar. 9º. Os investidores estrangeiros compraram líquido R$ 2,4 bilhões em recursos no segmento secundário da B3 Cotação de B3 (ações já listadas) na sexta-feira, dia 16. No acumulado de agosto, os estrangeiros trouxeram para o mercado secundário da Bovespa R$ 6,4 bilhões e o Ibovespa sobe 6,6%. No ano, o saldo dos investimentos estrangeiros na Bovespa está negativo, em R$ 25 bilhões. Percebam a importância dos investimentos dos estrangeiros no segmento secundário de ações da B3: em agosto, os estrangeiros respondem por 54,40% do volume negociado na Bovespa e 54,50% do acumulado no ano. MAIORES ALTAS BRKM5 +3.15% R$ 17,71 KLBN11 +3.10% R$ 21,95 PETZ3 +3.00% R$ 4,81 RDOR3 +2.84% R$ 32,96 WEGE3 +2.55% R$ 53,11 MAIORES BAIXAS CVCB3 -4.67% R$ 2,04 ASAI3 -4.58% R$ 10,22 LWSA3 -3.83% R$ 5,02 CRFB3 -3.81% R$ 9,34 VAMO3 -3.42% R$ 8,48
Check out our STRAIN DATABASE aka CODEX: https://codex.thebreederssyndicate.com/Join this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCp9mauDnr-JxOiG_ek4BWag/joinOr check out our Patreon here:https://www.patreon.com/breederssyndicateOUR MERCH STORE IS LIVE!!!! BREEDERS SYNDICATE LINKS: https://linktr.ee/riotseedsBREEDERS SYNDICATE MERCH! - https://www.syndicategear.comBreeders Syndicate website: http://www.breederpodcast.comIntro / Outro countresy of Sight of Wonders / Approaching the Middle East / courtesy of www.epidemicsound.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/breeders-syndicate-2-0--5630034/support.
Check out our STRAIN DATABASE aka CODEX: https://codex.thebreederssyndicate.com/Join this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCp9mauDnr-JxOiG_ek4BWag/joinOr check out our Patreon here:https://www.patreon.com/breederssyndicateOUR MERCH STORE IS LIVE!!!! BREEDERS SYNDICATE LINKS: https://linktr.ee/riotseedsBREEDERS SYNDICATE MERCH! - https://www.syndicategear.comBreeders Syndicate website: http://www.breederpodcast.comIntro / Outro countresy of Sight of Wonders / Approaching the Middle East / courtesy of www.epidemicsound.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/breeders-syndicate-2-0--5630034/support.
In today's episode, Izzy discusses the importance of a marketing plan with Amanda Hudswell at Equatorial Launch Australia. A marketing plan provides a blueprint for your communication activities, maximizes your efforts by targeting the most important audiences, and determines the marketing activities that resonate with them. A plan transforms dreams into reality by establishing the steps necessary for an idea to come to fruition and it provides clarity for action for the entire company and its team. Amanda Hudswell Head of Marketing Communications and Public Affairs Equatorial Launch Australia https://ela.space CHAPTERS: 01:17 Importance of a marketing plan 03:01 Eclipse 04:27 Meet Amanda Hudswell 07:54 About ELA 13:59 When to bring in a marketing professional 16:24 The Marketing Plan 19:17 Your audience and crafting a message that resonates 22:25 Strategies and tactics of a marketing plan 24:02 Constructing the plan and getting scrappy 22:37 Measuring and testing 30:24 Non-digital results 32:52 Telling the space story 36:47 Your audience is the hero, your company is the guide 39:53 Marketing challenges 41:59 Marketing successes 44:17 Algorithms - shooting at a moving target 46:34 Bad actors, trolls, and grumpy people 53:59 The future of space 58:57 Final Thoughts MENTIONS: GSA Spaceport Summit - https://www.globalspaceportalliance.com/gsa-spaceport-summit-2/ Building a BrandStory by Donald Miller ITAR regulations - The International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) are a set of US government regulations that control the import and export of defense products, services, and information. The purpose of ITAR is to protect national security and advance American foreign policy interests. ITAR governs the following: Manufacture, Export, Temporary import, Provision of defense services, and Brokerage activities involving items described on the USML. https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=24d528fddbfc930044f9ff621f961987 ABOUT IZZY Izzy's website - https://izzy.house Author of Space Marketing: Competing in the new commercial space industry AND Space Marketing: Spaceports on Amazon and Audible - https://bit.ly/Space-Marketing Podcast host for Space Marketing Podcast - https://spacemarketingpodcast.com Organizer for Space for Kentucky Roundtable - https://spaceforkentucky.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
I read from equatorial to equilibrant. Hopefully this will help you understand that one definition of "equidistant" which seems like it was about "projection". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azimuthal_equidistant_projection The word of the episode is "equatorward". Theme music from Tom Maslowski https://zestysol.com/ Merchandising! https://www.teepublic.com/user/spejampar "The Dictionary - Letter A" on YouTube "The Dictionary - Letter B" on YouTube "The Dictionary - Letter C" on YouTube "The Dictionary - Letter D" on YouTube "The Dictionary - Letter E" on YouTube Featured in a Top 10 Dictionary Podcasts list! https://blog.feedspot.com/dictionary_podcasts/ Backwards Talking on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmIujMwEDbgZUexyR90jaTEEVmAYcCzuq https://linktr.ee/spejampar dictionarypod@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/thedictionarypod/ https://www.threads.net/@dictionarypod https://twitter.com/dictionarypod https://www.instagram.com/dictionarypod/ https://www.patreon.com/spejampar https://www.tiktok.com/@spejampar 917-727-5757
For this week's episode we interview Leila Shomali and Lara Kilani Leila Shomali is a Palestinian PhD candidate in International Law at Maynooth University Ireland and a member of the Good Shepherd Collective. Lara Kilani is a Palestinian-American researcher, PhD student, and is also a member of the Good Shepherd Collective. We interviewed them on January 12th to talk about their recent piece “Anti-Zionism As Decolonisation” which is published in the brand new debut physical edition of Ebb Magazine. We will also link a web version of the article in the show notes. I will also say quickly that just recently we hosted a conversation with Louis Allday on our YouTube channel that goes over some of the other topics and analyses in that issue of Ebb Magazine. I highly recommend it and I actually bought a couple copies so that I could share it with others. In this conversation we talk about both the terms anti-zionism and decolonization which have each faced their own forms of elite capture and distortion. Along the way we talk about settler colonialism, the Oslo Accords, NGO's, the limits of human rights discourse and international law for Palestinians, the problems of neoliberal identity reductionism, and why as Lara and Leila write, “the caretakers of anti-zionist thought are indigenous communities resisting colonial erasure.” I very much enjoyed this discussion and encourage people to check out and support the work of the Good Shepherd Collective which Leila and Lara are members of, and which they talk about through the conversation as well. We will link their work in the show notes. Leila and Lara reference a number of articles in their discussion and we will link those in the show notes. We do have a study group starting next week, where we will go over the US military counterinsurgency field manual Thursdays at 7:30 PM ET. If you are interested in that I put a link in our show notes. It is for our supporters whether you support us on patreon on or Youtube. And if you want to stay up to date on all of our work and support our work the best way to do that is to become a patron of the show for as little as $1 a month at patreon.com/millennialsarekillingcapitalism "Anti-Zionism As Decolonisation" (their article the episode is based on) "Jewish Settlers Stole My House. It's Not My Fault They're Jewish" by Mohammed El-Kurd When Does a Settler Become a Native? Reflections of the Colonial Roots of Citizenship in Equatorial and South Africa by Mahmoud Madani Guide for Jewish Anti-Zionist Allyship Steven Salaita "A Postmortem on Bernie Sanders and Palestine" Defund Racism (includes their report on Regavim)
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
The Space News PodcastSpaceTime Series 26 Episode 156*Equatorial Launch Australia unveils its plans for new spaceport launch padsEquatorial Launch Australia has unveiled the final plans for its spaceport launch pads at the Arnhem Space Centre east of Darwin. *Rocket Lab back in spaceRocket Lab has returned to flight status successfully launching an electron rocket from its Mahia Peninsula space port on New Zealand's North Island. *North Korea's launches its biggest ICBMNorth Korean Dictator Kim Jong Un has vowed to accelerate his country's nuclear build-up after overseeing the launch of the solid-fuelled Hwasong-18 – Pyongyang's most powerful ballistic missile so far.*January SkywatchThe Earth enters perihelion, a look at Sirius the dog star and the brightest star in the night skies, and the Quadrantids Meteor Shower are among the highlights of the January night skies. This week's guests:Fermi Deputy Project Scientist Judy Racusin from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. And our regular guests:Alex Zaharov-Reutt from techadvice.lifeTim Mendham from Australian SkepticsScience writer Jonathan Nally from Sky and Telescope MagazineListen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen and access show links via https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://bitesz.com Your support is needed...**Support SpaceTime with Stuart Gary: Be Part of Our Cosmic Journey!** SpaceTime is fueled by passion, not big corporations or grants. We're on a mission to become 100% listener-supported, allowing us to focus solely on bringing you riveting space stories without the interruption of ads.