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We break down the Bills' firing of Sean McDermott after their loss to the Broncos, analyze the hire of John Harbaugh to the Giants, and preview the Championship Sunday matchups: Patriots vs. Broncos and Rams vs. Seahawks. Plus, was that the best throw of Caleb Williams' life?—In this episode:The McDermott Firing & Coaching Carousel: We analyze the Bills' decision to move on from Sean McDermott, the hiring of John Harbaugh by the Giants, and Kevin Stefanski landing in Atlanta.Playoff Recap & Controversy: We break down the controversial finish to the Bills-Broncos game, the “meta” flip that doomed Buffalo's roster construction, and Caleb Williams' insane throw in the Bears' loss.The CJ Stroud Dilemma: We discuss the Texans' offensive collapse against New England and debate whether Houston is stuck in “quarterback purgatory” regarding Stroud's next contract.AFC Championship Preview (Patriots vs. Broncos): We look at how the Patriots can attack Denver's pass rush and how the Broncos will adjust with Jared Stidham stepping in for the injured Bo Nix.NFC Championship Preview (Rams vs. Seahawks): We preview the Round 3 matchup between Seattle and LA, focusing on the Stafford vs. Darnold quarterback battle and the Jaxon Smith-Njigba X-factor.—Timestamps:» Part I: The Coaching Carousel & Front Office00:00 The Bills Clean House Discussion on the firing of Sean McDermott and the promotion of GM Brandon Beane.00:47 Roster vs. The Meta Analysis of how the Bills built a roster to beat the Chiefs/Bengals but failed to adjust to the league-wide shift toward 12 personnel.05:43 The “Intellectual” Defensive Coach: A look at candidates like Brian Daboll and the trend toward hiring “intellectual” defensive minds similar to Mike Macdonald and Brandon Staley.07:53 Stefanski to Atlanta Breakdown of the potential fit for Kevin Stefanski with the Falcons' offensive weapons (Bijan Robinson, Drake London).10:38 Ulbrich & The Wide-9 Shift: Why keeping Jeff Ulbrich signals a commitment to the Wide-9/Quarters-heavy defensive structures popularized by the Saleh tree.12:50 The Harbaugh Clause: John Harbaugh to the Giants, and the unique contract clause stating he answers only to the owner.» Part II: Schematic Analysis & Game Recaps21:03 Gap Schemes vs. Speed: How the Bills utilized Pin-Pull concepts to exploit Denver's speed, noting Denver's 20th rank against Duo runs.22:33 Motion to Disrupt Coverage Denver used motion on 75% of plays (a season-high) to force communication checks and disrupt Buffalo's split-field rotations.24:22 Erasing the Deep Ball Denver's secondary held Josh Allen to 0-for-6 passing with 2 INTs on attempts of 20+ yards.27:03 Texans Offensive Collaps:e A breakdown of C.J. Stroud's struggles and the Texans' inability to counter the Patriots' game plan.30:08 Patriots MOFO Spike The Patriots increased their Middle of Field Open (MOFO) usage to 60%, using weak rotation vs. 3x1 and split-field vs. 2x2 to eliminate crossing routes.» Part III: Previews & Adjustments32:59 Patriots vs. Broncos Preview: The matchup of the Patriots' Man-Blocking/Duo schemes against the Broncos' fast-flow defense.40:35 The Caleb Williams Throw Reaction to the 45-yard cross-body throw from Caleb Williams in the Rams-Bears game.46:02 Pressure vs. Condensed Sets Dennis Allen's adjustment to blitz the edges and use DB pressure specifically against 12/13 personnel condensed formations, forcing the Rams into spread looks.» Part IV: NFC Championship Preview48:41 #1 Offense vs. #1 Defense Setting the stage for the Rams (Outside Zone) vs. Seahawks (Wide-9/Cover 2).50:00 The Schematic Conflict The clash between the Rams' outside run game and the Seahawks' defensive front is designed to force runs inside.51:27 The Cover 2 Weakness Identifying the Seahawks' 16th-ranked DVOA vs. Tight Ends as the key area for Stafford to attack the interior of the Cover 2.55:53 The JSN Factor: Why Jaxon Smith-Njigba is the X-factor for breaking down zone coverages in this matchup.—» Join Felix and Cody each Wednesday as we dive deep into the game we love!MatchQuarters is a reader-supported publication. So, make sure to subscribe.—© 2025 MatchQuarters | Cody Alexander | All rights reserved. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.matchquarters.com/subscribe
At 50 years old, Charlotte Dance had a 2 year old child placed in her lap. And instead of walking away, Charlotte not only legally adopted the child, she also informally adopted his broken family. She even says that they adopted her too! This episode will teach you about finding love in the most unexpected places like no other story. Support the show: https://www.normalfolks.us/premiumSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
At 50 years old, Charlotte Dance had a 2 year old child placed in her lap. And instead of walking away, Charlotte not only legally adopted the child, she also informally adopted his broken family. She even says that they adopted her too! This episode will teach you about finding love in the most unexpected places like no other story.Support the show: https://www.normalfolks.us/premiumSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Please join us at patreon.com/tortoiseshack In this short PalCast, Yousef updates us on what is happening in Gaza, the ever expanding Yellow Line, the destruction of what little infrastructure remains, the creation of new mass graves and how the Knesset plans to hang Palestinian "prisoners." Semi-Surviving the Genocide with Reem Hamdaqa is out now here:https://www.patreon.com/posts/patron-exclusive-148679263 Gilded Rage with Jacob Silverman is here:https://www.patreon.com/posts/patron-exclusive-148385638 Support ‘Ocras' here: https://chuffed.org/project/165535-ocras-hunger-striker-support-fund Ireland's GDP is a mirage podcast with Prof Aidan Regan is out now here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/patron-exclusive-148284291 Support Dignity for Palestine here:https://www.patreon.com/posts/call-to-stand-143037542
Is the strict, invisible line between your ‘work self' and your ‘real self' the biggest thing holding your career back? In a world obsessed with maintaining a polished, professional veneer, being truly authentic can feel like a massive risk. But what if it's your greatest asset? In this fascinating episode from the archive, Andy Lopata is joined by Bernard Savage, a business development expert who built a successful company with the unconventional name "Size 10 and a Half Boots." Andy and Bernard look into the power of blurring the lines between the personal and professional to build stronger, more meaningful connections. From the surprising business development power of a weekly music playlist on LinkedIn to a powerful story of how a senior partner's career skyrocketed after sharing a deeply personal secret, this conversation is a masterclass in authentic leadership. Discover why your hobbies are your best networking tool and how being unapologetically yourself is the ultimate client filter. Key Takeaways From This Episode What is the incredible football story behind a company called "Size 10 and a Half Boots" and how does the name itself act as a perfect client filter? How did a senior partner's career transform the moment she was encouraged to stop hiding a core part of her identity from her colleagues? Why is posting a weekly music playlist on LinkedIn a surprisingly powerful strategy for deepening client relationships and generating new business? What can a football stadium teach leaders about building a truly diverse network that transcends job titles and social status? How do you build a connection when you have nothing in common, and when is it right to simply stop trying? 3 Actionable Insights Use Your Personality as a Filter Stop trying to be all things to all people. Be authentically yourself—whether through your company's name, your sense of humour, or your opinions. Share Your Passions Professionally: Don't hide your hobbies. Bernard's weekly music playlist on LinkedIn became a major relationship-building tool. Start sharing something you're passionate about—a book you're reading, a concert you attended, a sport you love. It provides more "hooks" for people to connect with the real you. Seek Connection in Unexpected Places: Actively build a more diverse network by leveraging your personal interests. A shared passion, like sport or music, can be a powerful bridge to connect with people from completely different backgrounds, industries, and levels of seniority, enriching your perspective and expanding your influence. SELECTED LINKS FROM THE EPISODE Connect with Andy Lopata: Website | Instagram | LinkedIn | X/Twitter | YouTube Connect with Bernard Savage: Website |LinkedIn | The Financial Times Guide to Mentoring Episode 152 Featuring Bernard Savage
Seven-year-old Ariel hands the mic to her father, Angel Santana, and what begins as a warm family moment quickly unfolds into a raw, honest journey through regret, depression, and the mercy that remakes a life. Angel walks us through scripture and memory — from Romans to Joseph — showing how grace does not erase pain but redeems it, turning wounds into wisdom. He shares his own story of loss, years of struggle, and the slow work of forgiveness, inviting listeners to stop living under shame and start connecting the dots God is still drawing. This episode offers a simple, practical challenge and a prayerful invitation: release the past into God's hands and step toward the future with courage.
Latest episode of the podcast. Please consider sponsoring a class online in someones merit, memory or refuah shelemah. You can donate here in the app or send us an email at info@ejsny.org with the dedication you want to make. Thanks!
This episode continues the Mishnah Berurah's detailed analysis of the laws of writing on Shabbat, expanding beyond the Shulchan Aruch's brief treatment. It clarifies when writing two letters creates biblical liability, including cases where letters are written on separate surfaces that can be read together. The discussion covers writing in abnormal ways (left hand, foot, mouth), writing through another person, destructive writing, artistic designs, appliqué letters, puzzles and letter games, erasing in order to correct or rewrite, and scoring or marking lines for writing, cutting, or construction. The episode concludes with practical distinctions between biblical and rabbinic prohibitions, including leniencies such as temporary fingernail marks used only as reminders, and why these differences matter for real-life Shabbat observance.
This episode explores the laws of writing and erasing on Shabbat, focusing on what creates biblical liability versus rabbinic prohibition. Writing is biblically prohibited only when a lasting mark is made with a lasting substance on a lasting surface. Writing with liquids, ash, sand, or on surfaces where the mark won't endure is rabbinically forbidden but not biblically liable. Making signs in the air or tracing letters without leaving a recognizable impression is permitted.The discussion also covers writing on skin, impressions on glass, congealed substances, and engraving versus marking. Key rules are clarified regarding erasing, writing over existing letters, changing colors, and when an act counts as constructive or destructive. Finally, the episode explains the minimum measure for liability—two letters—how intent affects responsibility, and why writing is prohibited in any language or symbol system.A clear, practical framework for understanding what halachically defines “writing” on Shabbat, and where the critical boundaries lie.
This episode continues the laws of 'shearing' and then erasing on Shabbat. Topics include removing warts, scabs, loose skin, and dry lips; when erasing ink, wax, or smudges creates biblical versus rabbinic liability; and how much erasure constitutes a violation. We explore practical cases such as wax or stains on books and Torah scrolls, erasing in order to rewrite, and intention-based liability. The discussion then turns to modern and everyday scenarios: letters on cakes, children breaking lettered foods, designs formed by molds or edible substances, food packaging graphics, and words printed on the edges of book pages. Clear guidance is given on what is prohibited, what is permitted, and where common custom is lenient—making this a practical guide to erasing and writing issues encountered on Shabbat.
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Mike Johnson, Beau Morgan, and Ali Mac react to all the first round College Football Playoff games, and explain why they think Alabama showed championship pedigree by not blinking and coming back to beat Oklahoma in their first round College Football Playoff matchup after being down 17-0 early on in the game.
Gov. Greg Abbott gets the last word on San Antonio's Pride rainbow crosswalk on North Main, and Thursday's City Council vote on moving municipal elections is shaping up to be a test of Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones' strength -- or a measure of her weakness. City Hall reporters Megan Rodriguez and Molly Smith and host Greg Jefferson discuss. Suggested reading: San Antonio's request to keep rainbow crosswalks not 'acceptable,' state says Few San Antonio City Council members outright support move to November elections Mayor Jones wants to move city elections to November to boost turnout Sign up here for our ENside Politics newsletter: https://www.expressnews.com/newsletters/ensidepolitics/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When Dublin officials moved to strip the name of Chaim Herzog—Israel's Irish-born sixth president—from a community park, it wasn't just a local dispute. It was an act of erasure. In this emotional episode, Dr. Alexandra Herzog, AJC's Director of the William Petschek Global Jewish Communities Department, explains why this attempt to rewrite history should alarm not only Jews, but all citizens of goodwill. As anti-Zionist fervor increasingly targets Jewish identity across the West, the push to remove a Jewish name from a park beside Ireland's only Jewish school sends a chilling message: Jewish heritage has now become a political battleground. Alexandra shares personal memories of her grandfather and illustrates why this fight isn't about a plaque in Ireland—it's about halting the slide from criticism of Israel into the deletion of Jewish memory. Tune in to understand why defending this history is essential to protecting Jewish dignity everywhere. Key Resources: AJC Welcomes Dublin City Council's Decision to Shelve Renaming of Herzog Park Letter in the Irish Times: Renaming Herzog Park in Dublin Would Be An Act of Erasure Against Ireland's Jews Listen: Will Ireland Finally Stop Paying Lip Service When it Comes to Combating Antisemitism? AJC Directly Addresses Antisemitism and Vilification of Israel in Ireland with the Prime Minister Listen – AJC Podcasts: Architects of Peace The Forgotten Exodus People of the Pod Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org If you've appreciated this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, and rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Read the full transcript: https://www.ajc.org/news/podcast/erasing-jewish-history-why-what-happened-in-ireland-should-alarm-all-jews Transcript of the Interview: Manya Brachear Pashman: Members of the City Council of Dublin, Ireland have withdrawn a proposal to rename a park that since 1995 has honored former Israeli President Chaim Herzog. The park, located near Dublin's only Jewish school, is named after Herzog, Israel's sixth president, who was born in Belfast. Here to talk about the now withdrawn proposal is Alexandra Herzog, AJC's Director of the William Petschek Global Jewish Communities Department, and Chaim Herzog's granddaughter. Alexandra, welcome to People of the Pod. Alexandra Herzog: Thank you so much for having me, Manya. Manya Brachear Pashman: So you have joined us before, but on a different podcast, The Forgotten Exodus, which is our narrative series about Jews from the Middle East and North Africa. You were joining us to talk about your maternal grandfather, Nessim Gaon, the longtime president of the World Sephardi Federation. He came to Israel from Sudan. But this time, we're talking about your paternal grandfather, Chaim Herzog. How did someone born in Ireland later become President of Israel? Alexandra Herzog: Yes, that's a great question. Manya, so my grandfather, Chaim Herzog, was, as you said, born in Belfast. He grew up in Dublin in a very proudly Jewish home. His father actually was a Rabbi Isaac Halevi Herzog, and he served as the Rabbi of Belfast before becoming the chief rabbi of Ireland. So he moved from Belfast to Dublin in 1919. He was affectionately known as the Sinn Féin rabbi, and he was highly respected and close to many of the leaders of the Irish independence movement. So my grandfather really grew up in a house that was deeply steeped in Jewish learning, in Irish patriotism, and he had a very strong sense of moral responsibility. And as a young man, he had to leave Ireland to study, and he later enlisted in the British Army during World War Two, he fought the Nazis as an intelligence officer. He was one of the first soldiers actually to enter the concentration camp of Bergen Belsen, and he interrogated senior Nazi officials. Now, after the war, he moved to what would become the State of Israel, and he helped build the very young country, almost from its founding, in different positions. And you know, then later, he became Israel's ambassador to the UN and a member of the Israeli parliament, the Knesset. And by the time he was elected as Israel's sixth president in 1983 he was widely seen really, as a statesman who combined Irish warmth and some storytelling with a very deep sense of Jewish history and Jewish responsibility. He never stopped describing himself, actually, as an Irish born man. and he often spoke about how Ireland really shaped his worldview, and his commitment to freedom and to democracy. Manya Brachear Pashman: And you mentioned that he was the ambassador to the United Nations. He was, in fact, Ambassador when the resolution Zionism is Racism was, was part of the conversation. Alexandra Herzog: That's right. Yes, one of the two UN resolutions ever to be withdrawn and canceled, very important one. That's right. Manya Brachear Pashman: In fact, if I'm not mistaken, he tore it in half. Alexandra Herzog: He did. He tore it in half saying that this was nothing but a piece of paper, and explained how, you know, we could not equate Zionism to racism in any sort of way. Manya Brachear Pashman: So were those the reasons why, in 1995, the Dublin City Council decided to name the park after your grandfather? Or were there other reasons? Yeah. Alexandra Herzog: I mean, I think that, you know, I think it was a gesture, really, of recognition, of pride. I mean, Dublin was basically honoring an Irish man, you know, one of its own, an Irish born Jew who had gone to become, it's true, a global statesman, the President of Israel, but who really never stopped speaking about his Irish roots. And I think that that was really a source of pride for him, but also for Ireland in general, for many, many years. And as you said, you know, Herzog Park really sits in a very historically Jewish neighborhood. It's near, actually, where my family lived, where my grandfather grew up, and it's right next to the country's only Jewish school. So naming a park for my grandfather was, I think, really a way of acknowledging this deep Irish Jewish history, and the fact that it is part of Irish history. So I think that my family story is very much woven into the country's broader story of independence, of democracy and of moral courage, really. Manya Brachear Pashman: Yet 30 years later, there has been an attempt to rename that park and strip that name from the park. Why? What happened in 30 years? Alexandra Herzog: It's a great question. I think that in the past three decades, you know, we've really seen the Israeli Palestinian conflict become a proxy battlefield for broader political debates in Europe, but also really everywhere around the world. In Ireland, the criticism of Israeli policies, of the Israeli government, has increasingly blurred into hostility towards Israel as a whole, and at times even towards Israelis and towards Jews. What is really striking about this proposal is that it doesn't target a policy or even a government decision within Ireland. It targets a piece of Jewish and Irish history. So instead of creating a new space or a memorial, the proposal really sought to erase an existing Jewish name. And I think that that shift from debate to erasure, because that's really what we're talking about, is what worries me the most. It reflects really a climate in which maybe some feel that expressing solidarity with Palestinians require overriding an important part of Jewish history and Jewish presence. Jewish memory, really. So one of their proposals is actually to rename it Free Palestine park, or to rename it after, you know, a Palestinian child. Obviously from a personal perspective, it's extremely problematic to remove a Jewish name to replace it by another group. We don't need to do that. We can recognize the realities and the lived experiences of both groups without having to erase one over another. Manya Brachear Pashman: I should note that last year, Israel recalled its ambassador, and in December, closed its embassy in Dublin, accusing the Irish government of extreme anti-Israel policies, antisemitic rhetoric and double standards. So really, taking the debate to extremes, and that the, in fact, the tiny Jewish community that is still there about–would you say about 3000 people in the Irish Jewish community? Alexandra Herzog: That's right. Manya Brachear Pashman: They're facing antisemitism as well. We actually interviewed our colleague, AJC's Director of International Jewish Affairs, Rabbi Andrew Baker, at the time, just about a year ago, because he also serves as the Personal Representative on Combating Antisemitism and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. So he had just met with the Irish Prime Minister whose administration had recently adopted the international Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's Working Definition of Antisemitism. So I'm curious now with this attempt to rename the park and do something so harsh to erase Jewish history, has that definition been implemented, or has it failed to be implemented? Alexandra Herzog: Yeah, I think that the adoption of the IHRA working definition of antisemitism by the Irish government was really an important and a very welcome step. On paper, you know, it gives officials and institutions, law enforcement, a shared framework, really, for recognizing antisemitism, including when it appears in the guise of anti-Israel rhetoric. I think that the challenge, really, as always, is implementation. So from what I hear in conversations with the Irish Jewish community, and you know, Jewish community leaders and colleagues who follow these issues very closely, there's still a significant gap between the formal adoption of the IHRA and the day to day practice. Whether it's in, you know, political discourse or in education, or even how incidents are simply discussed or understood. And I think that the current controversy here that we're talking about with Herzog Park is a perfect example of that. If you apply the IHRA seriously, then you see very quickly how targeting a specifically Jewish symbol in a Jewish neighborhood, in order to make a political point about Israel, actually crosses the line into antisemitism. So I think that if we could really work on the implementation much more, that would be extremely positive. Manya Brachear Pashman: And in fact, the prime minister himself actually condemned the attempt by the Dublin City Council to rename the park, correct, he encouraged the withdrawal of this proposal? Alexandra Herzog: That's correct. Both the Prime Minister and the Deputy Prime Minister actually issued statements saying that this proposal should not have come to even be considered, and that they should be withdrawn. And I'm very grateful for their leadership in that. And I think that it's important, though, to underline the fact that it is not, you know, just a global form of antisemitism, but that it is really an expressed form of antisemitism on the ground, really erasing Jewish history and blaming an entire Jewish population for what is happening miles and miles away is antisemitism. Manya Brachear Pashman: So what are you hearing from the tiny Jewish community there? Are you in touch with people there? Do you still have relatives who live in Ireland? Alexandra Herzog: I sadly don't have relatives there anymore, but I am in contact with the Jewish community. And I think that, you know, it's a community that really has a lot of pride in their Jewish history and their Irish history and in their Irish roots. I think there is a feeling, what I'm hearing from them, that there is a bit of a mix of fatigue also, and of anxiety. And you know this, we're talking, as we said before, about a very small community, about 3000 Jews. It's a close knit community that has contributed far beyond its size to Irish society. They love Ireland, and they feel deeply Irish, but in the past years, and especially since October 7, they have felt increasingly targeted, and they often have felt exposed, misunderstood. So I think that incidents like the proposed renaming of the park lands particularly hard because it's not abstract. It's a park that's in their neighborhood, that's next to their children's school, and bearing the name of someone who for them symbolizes their connection to Ireland. So to see this name singled out really sends a chilling message that, you know, Jewish presence, Jewish history are negotiable. Manya Brachear Pashman: You know, we talked about similar issues when we talked about your maternal grandfather in Sudan and the erasure of Jewish history across the Middle East and North Africa in these countries where Jews fled. Would you say that there are parallels here? Or is that, is that an unfair statement? Is that taking it too far? Alexandra Herzog: I mean, I think that, in general, the notion of commemoration, the notion of really talking about one's history is, is a problematic one, when those commemorations, or those celebrations of memory, of Jewish memory and Jewish impact, are being erased because of the connection with Israel. And when people use the platform to accuse Israel of genocide, they distort history. They weaponize really Jewish suffering. I think that there is something to be said there. And, you know, it's the same idea as, you know, removing a Jewish name from a park in order to make that political point about Israel. I think that it is something that we're seeing way too much. It is a very slippery slope, and it's something that we should be 100% avoiding. Because Jewish memory, whether it be, you know, like a commemoration about like, what happened to Jews from our fleeing Arab lands, what happened during the Holocaust, anything that has to do with Jewish memory, it needs to be preserved. It needs to be honored on its own terms. It cannot be repurposed or overwritten to serve certain political narratives or even certain political accusations that like the ones that we're hearing right now, to me, that is very deeply troubling, and it's something that Jewish communities worldwide, I think, are experiencing more and more unfortunately. Manya Brachear Pashman: So I wanted to ask you, your grandfather passed away in 1997. This park was named two years earlier. Was he present for that dedication? Alexandra Herzog: Yeah, unfortunately, he wasn't able to attend the inauguration. He was still alive, that's true when the park was named, and he was deeply touched by the gesture. I think that for him, it really symbolized a bit of a full circle somehow. You know, the Irish boy who became President of Israel, who's being honored in the neighborhood where his story really began. I think that there was something very powerful and beautiful about it. For the 100th anniversary of my grandfather's birth in 2018 the family actually went to the park and got the dedication plaque up. And you know, that was a very meaningful event. Manya Brachear Pashman: It must be heartbreaking for you to know that they want to tear that plaque down now. Alexandra Herzog: I know how proud my grandfather was of his Irish roots. I know the work that my great-grandfather did in Ireland for Irish independence. And I think that it's completely uncalled for right now to rewrite history and to pretend that our family's story has no place in this country that meant so much for two generations of my family, and really even as a statement for Israel. My grandfather always, you know, talked about Ireland, and really always had this pride. So it touches very deeply. I think it really gives the very wrong message to young Jews and children who are growing up in a country where they are such a minority, I think that we have to put things in perspective a little bit. And, you know, I imagine being a kid and seeing like the name of somebody who maybe symbolizes something for you, their name being removed.It sends a message that really should not be out there in any kind of way and is not justified. Manya Brachear Pashman: You knew your grandfather. Did he share stories about his childhood, and was there anything as you were standing in that park that reflected those stories? Alexandra Herzog: Yeah, I had the very big privilege to know my grandfather very well, to spend a lot of time with him. I'm his first grandchild, so we spent a lot of time together. We shared a deep passion together for history, for literature, for politics, but also for nature. For me, before any before being a public figure, he really was my grandfather, my Saba. Someone who was warm, who was funny, who was very present as a grandfather, who would take me to the garden and show me all of his fruit trees that he was so very proud. And I had this feeling, I mean, the park, this park is very small. It's a tiny, you know, it's a tiny park, but somehow is so meaningful to him. And I know that he loved living in that neighborhood. It was very hard for him to leave Ireland and, you know, go to what was then Palestine. So it's something that I really felt very strongly when I was there, and that I think that our family thinks about often. Manya Brachear Pashman: Well, Alexandra, I am so glad that the Dublin City Council tabled this proposal for the time being. And I appreciate you sharing some memories about your grandfather and putting this in perspective for our listeners. Alexandra Herzog: Thank you very much. It was an honor. Manya Brachear Pashman: You can hear the story of Alexandra Herzog's maternal grandfather Nissim Gaon and the challenges he and his family faced in Sudan in the first season of our award-winning series The Forgotten Exodus. In 12 episodes, we also share the erased or often-forgotten stories of Jewish families who left or were driven from their homes in the Middle East and North Africa. And don't forget to listen to our most recent series about reconciliation in the region: Architects of Peace: The Abraham Accords Story.
With each win, individual Celtics players are proving their worth and erasing doubts about them that existed before the season. Is Jaylen Brown a Number 1? Is Payton Pritchard a starting NBA point guard? Is Jaylen Brown a viable NBA player. A quarter of the way through the 25-26 season, we appear to have answers to those questions. We discuss.#DifferentHere #JaylenBrown #PaytonPritchard #JordanWalsh #DerrickWhite #Queta #SamHauser #AnferneeSimons #XTillman #Cavs #NBACheck out the latest Celtics coverage with our partners from SportSpyder: https://sportspyder.com/nba/boston-celtics/news?pid=20906
Dermot Lacey, Labour Councillor for Pembroke, and Daithí Doolan, Sinn Féin Councillor for Ballyfermot-Drimnagh, discuss a potential vote of the city council to rename Herzog Park in Rathgar.
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An early rally on Wall Street goes south.
The Rebel News podcasts features free audio-only versions of select RebelNews+ content and other Rebel News long-form videos, livestreams, and interviews. Monday to Friday enjoy the audio version of Ezra Levant's daily TV-style show, The Ezra Levant Show, where Ezra gives you his contrarian and conservative take on free speech, politics, and foreign policy through in-depth commentary and interviews. Wednesday evenings you can listen to the audio version of The Gunn Show with Sheila Gunn Reid the Chief Reporter of Rebel News. Sheila brings a western sensibility to Canadian news. With one foot in the oil patch and one foot in agriculture, Sheila challenges mainstream media narratives and stands up for Albertans. If you want to watch the video versions of these podcasts, make sure to begin your free RebelNewsPlus trial by subscribing at http://www.RebelNewsPlus.com
Today I am delighted to talk with Eunsong Kim about her stunning book, The Politics of Collecting: Race & the Aestheticization of Property. It is remarkable in its theoretical conceptualization, argument, and archival work. Kim argues that the beginnings of elite art collection in the United States coincided with the rise of the robber barons and the suppression of the labor movement. She connects this to Taylorism and the idea of scientific management, that further extenuated the rift between the mind and the body, between intellectual activity and labor. Not coincidentally, this distribution of kinds of work created a new distribution of value. In each case, Kim argues, race played a fundamental role. Ranging from the “found” art of Duchamp to the pseudo-Marxist conceptual art of Sierra, Kim eviscerates both pretention and cruelty, and restores the laboring body and what it produces to prominence, along with a truly re-invigorated and capacious sense of the Imagination outside of the constraints of neoliberal aesthetics.Eunsong Kim is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at Northeastern University. She is the author of gospel of regicide (2017), and with Sung Gi Kim she translated Kim Eon Hee's poetic text Have You Been Feeling Blue These Days? published in 2019. Her monograph, The Politics of Collecting: Race & the Aestheticization of Property (Duke 2024) materializes the histories of immaterialism by examining the rise of US museums, avant-garde forms, digitization, and neoliberal aesthetics, to consider how race and property become foundational to modern artistic institutions. In 2021 she co-founded offshoot, an arts space for transnational activist conversations.
==============Join us for worship this Sunday at 10:30am (CST)! Connect with our community and experience a message of hope.Learn more about Redeemer Church: http://www.redeemermn.org/Ready to take a next step? Fill out a connect card: http://www.redeemermn.org/nextsteps Need prayer? We're here for you: http://www.redeemermn.org/prayerSupport our mission: http://www.redeemermn.org/give=============== Stay Connected: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redeemermn_church/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/redeemermn/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RedeemerMNSupport the show
Madelaine Weiss is a Harvard-trained Licensed Psychotherapist, Mindset Expert, and Board-Certified Executive, Career, and Life Coach who helps high-achieving professionals master their minds so they can sustain—and truly enjoy—success across every area of life.She is the co-author of The Handbook of Stressful Transitions Across the Lifespan and the author of the acclaimed new release Getting to G.R.E.A.T.: 5-Step Strategy for Work and Life.Continuing her mission to support leaders both at work and at home, Madelaine is launching What's Your Story?, a personal development workbook for children and the adults who care about them. Her expertise in this space is rooted in her past roles as Chair of the School Business Partnership and as a parenting educator for the Massachusetts court system.Madelaine also brings deep organizational experience to her work, having served as a group mental health practice administrative director, a corporate Chief Organizational Development Officer, and an associate director of an educational resource program at Harvard Medical School.As a sought-after corporate trainer, she has designed and delivered programs for organizations including Harvard Medical School, the American Bar Association, Legal Services Corporation, AARP, MedSense, Harvard Law School Association, the International Association of Business Communicators, the National Association of Realtors, the DC Academy of General Dentistry, the Wharton Innovation Summit, and the Bureau of National Affairs.Madelaine's insights have been featured on NBC, Bold TV, and FOX5, and she is a frequent guest expert on leading podcasts, including Major, Lindsey & Africa's Erasing the Stigma. Her writing has appeared in Thrive Global, Authority Magazine's Editors List, UpJourney, and My Perfect Financial Advisor.
THE WORLD IS CHANGING!!! Erasing fear with evidence, science and facts! This conversation delves into the significant impact of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on women's health, particularly in the context of menopause. Dr. Rubin, Casperson and Makary discuss the recent FDA decision to remove black box warnings associated with HRT, which have perpetuated fear and misinformation for decades. They emphasize the importance of educating both clinicians and patients about the benefits and risks of HRT, highlighting the long-term health advantages it offers, such as reducing the risk of heart disease and osteoporosis. The discussion also addresses the need for informed consent and the importance of empowering women to make educated decisions about their health. Takeaways 50 to 70 million women have been denied health benefits from HRT. The FDA's removal of black box warnings is monumental. Misconceptions about HRT have persisted for decades. Education is crucial for both clinicians and patients. Hormone therapy can significantly reduce heart disease risk. Women often face barriers in accessing HRT. Informed consent is essential for women's health decisions. Long-term benefits of HRT include reduced risk of osteoporosis. The healthcare system needs to better address women's health issues. A collaborative approach is needed to improve women's health outcomes. FDA DIRECT podcast Dr. Makary's "Blind Spots" book To my fellow clinicians: listen to this podcast on Pinnacle for FREE to earn CME credit Listen to my Tedx Talk: Why we need adult sex ed Take my Adult Sex Ed Master Class: My Website Interested in my sexual health and hormone clinic? Waitlist is open Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
==============Join us for worship this Sunday at 10:30am (CST)! Connect with our community and experience a message of hope.Learn more about Redeemer Church: http://www.redeemermn.org/Ready to take a next step? Fill out a connect card: http://www.redeemermn.org/nextsteps Need prayer? We're here for you: http://www.redeemermn.org/prayerSupport our mission: http://www.redeemermn.org/give=============== Stay Connected: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redeemermn_church/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/redeemermn/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RedeemerMNSupport the show
In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, I explore the neuroscience of fear and trauma and how to effectively process and eliminate traumatic responses. I explain why successful fear treatment requires both extinction of the old fearful response and replacement with a new positive association—not just cognitive reframing. I also explain how the threat reflex activates specific circuits connecting the amygdala, prefrontal cortex, and dopamine systems, and why detailed recounting of traumatic events progressively reduces their physiological impact. Finally, I review evidence-based approaches, including prolonged exposure therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy, discuss how five minutes per day of deliberate stress through cyclic hyperventilation can rewire fear responses, explain the critical role of social connection in activating neural pathways that reduce trauma, and share supplementation options for managing anxiety. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AGZ by AG1: https://drinkagz.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Function: https://functionhealth.com/huberman Timestamps (0:00) Introducing Fear & Trauma (0:17) What is Fear? (1:03) Autonomic Arousal: "Alertness" vs. "Calmness" (2:05) Fear vs. Stress & Anxiety (9:20) "The Threat Reflex": Neural Circuits for Fear (20:50) Cognitive (Narrative) Therapies for Fear (26:35) PTSD Treatments: Ketamine, MDMA, Oxytocin (33:11) Deliberate Brief Stress Can Erase Fears & Trauma (35:51) Nutrition, Sleep, & Other General Support Erasing Fear & Trauma (38:18) Recap Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this essential and empathetic episode of Navigating Cancer TOGETHER, host Talaya Dendy welcomes Amy Chastain, a seasoned caregiver and Registered Nurse, author, and tireless caregiver advocate. Amy shares wisdom from decades of experience, navigating the complexities of caregiving not only in her professional life but also through personal challenges.We dive deep into "the invisible job" that so many undertake: the role that is often exhausting, unacknowledged, and challenging to both the mind and the spirit.Why You Need to Listen:This conversation is a lifeline for caregivers, family members, and anyone who wants to know how to truly support someone through illness. You will gain:Validation: A powerful discussion on the intense emotional, spiritual, and personal grief that comes with being a caregiver.Wisdom: Honest advice on why asking for help is essential, and how to prepare for future caregiving roles.Empowerment: Strategies for holding onto yourself, your fun, and your identitywhen the demands of caregiving threaten to erase them.Advocacy: Insights on how to erase the stigma surrounding illness and caregiving so that everyone feels seen and supported.✨Episode Highlights:06:58 The Emotional Journey of Caregiving: Understanding the Invisible Burden10:15 The Importance of Asking for Help (And How to Actually Do It)12:53 Understanding Grief from Multiple Perspectives (The patient's, the caregiver's, the family's)20:31 Spiritual Challenges in Caregiving27:06 The Invisible Caregiver: The risk of losing yourself vs. Holding Onto Yourself (28:13)35:57 Advice on Preparing for Future Caregiving Roles43:36 Erasing the Stigma Around Caregiving and IllnessTranscript: https://bit.ly/podscript176Connect & Engage with Amy:Website: https://amychastain.comBook: https://a.co/d/btOgK9vInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/amychastain_author/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/amychastainauthor/Let us know what you think about this episode. Send an email to nctpodcastfan@gmail.comSubscribe or follow Navigating Cancer TOGETHER on your favorite podcast app or platform so you never miss a life-changing conversation.Sponsor: This episode is brought to you by Laya's Haven Calming Health & Wellness Coaching. Thank you for your support!Hosted, Produced, Written, and Edited by: Talaya DendyDisclaimer: The information on this podcast is for general informational purposes only and SHOULD NOT be used as a substitute for sound professional medical advice, evaluation, or care from your physician or other qualified health care provider.Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.
==============Join us for worship this Sunday at 10:30am (CST)! Connect with our community and experience a message of hope.Learn more about Redeemer Church: http://www.redeemermn.org/Ready to take a next step? Fill out a connect card: http://www.redeemermn.org/nextsteps Need prayer? We're here for you: http://www.redeemermn.org/prayerSupport our mission: http://www.redeemermn.org/give=============== Stay Connected: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redeemermn_church/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/redeemermn/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RedeemerMNSupport the show
Join The Shift!You've been lied to — your thoughts aren't you.In this soul-activating episode of The Positive Mindset Podcast, Henry Lawrence drops a truth bomb that will shake you to your core: You are not your thoughts. You are the observer. The creator. The shift.If you've been drowning in doubt, stuck in struggle, or haunted by failure, this episode is your lifeline.➤ You'll learn how to disconnect from the noise in your mind.➤ How to reclaim your power and speak a new reality into existence.➤ And how to use your attention as the most powerful creative force in your life.We end with a deep healing breath to anchor in this transformation — plus a powerful prayer to call in divine momentum.
SEND ME A TEXT MESSAGE NOWThis is the Monday Fall, where the weekend's lies meet Monday's reality.This episode exposes the quiet chokehold being placed on truth itself. Across every screen and platform, from Washington to Wall Street, the same pattern is taking shape. What you can say, what you can see, and what you can believe are all being shaped for you.My first story takes you deep inside the tightening grip of social media control.The same digital platforms that once promised freedom of speech are now quietly deciding which voices matter. It is not about politics. It is about power, and who gets to keep it.Next, I move into a story that should shake anyone who still believes in a free press.Journalists who once stood their ground inside the Pentagon are now walking out, refusing to play by new rules that turn reporting into stage management. It is a moment that marks something far bigger than headlines. It marks the end of trust between the press and the powerful.From there, the focus shifts to the world stage and a so-called truce that is not what it seems.The United States and China are once again selling calm while chaos brews underneath. This story reveals what these photo opportunities really mean for global stability and why every investor cheering a breakthru may be cheering a ghost.And finally, the focus turns to the global economy itself, where the numbers look strong but the foundation is cracking.The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank are sending quiet warnings, showing why this slowdown is not a crash but something far more dangerous. It is a slow fade into exhaustion, a system running on fumes while leaders smile for the cameras.Each of these stories connects to one truth.Control the message, and you control the public. Censorship is not always loud. Sometimes it is subtle, polite, and dressed as protection. What matters is that people keep asking questions, keep challenging power, and keep believing that truth belongs to everyone.A World Gone Mad Podcast exists to fight that silence.My Podcast is a voice for anyone who refuses to accept the scripted version of reality. Listen, question, share, and help keep independent commentary alive. Because if the people who still care about truth stay quiet, the silence becomes permanent.You can reach me by email at: WolfPackTalks@gmail.comAWorldGoneMadPodcast@gmail.com
Esosa Osa of Onyx Impact on their new study BlackOutReport.org: The Real-World Cost of Erasing, Distorting, and Suppressing Black ProgressAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Every time I tried to run from my pain, I was also running from my power.In this episode of Empowering Her, I'm sharing what a single line from And Just Like That taught me about how we view aging, pain, and growth. When I heard the words “poof, the last 15 years are gone,” I felt something deep inside me shift. Why would I ever want to erase the years that shaped me—the ones that broke me open, stretched me, and turned me into the woman I am today?I talk about what it means to go through and grow through pain, how I've learned to heal my inner girl, and why that healing matters for the next generation watching us. When we stop trying to erase our stories, we become living examples of what strength, resilience, and authenticity look like for the girls who will come after us.In This Episode, I Share:Why I no longer wish away my past or try to “undo” the years that shaped me.How I learned to stop avoiding pain and start asking what it's here to teach me.Why healing my inner girl helps me raise emotionally strong and grounded girls.The mindset shift from “Why me?” to “What did this teach me?”How reframing pain turns it into a powerful source of wisdom and strength.What the next generation learns when we model emotional honesty and healing.Why every challenge becomes a portal to our deepest power if we let it.If this message spoke to you, you'll love my newest book, The Connection Book – 33 Prompts to Help You and Your Child Talk More, Scroll Less, and Love Deeper. It's a simple yet powerful way to build meaningful conversations with the young people in your life. You can grab your copy at melodypourmoradi.com/connectionAnd if you have a product, mission, or service that aligns with the heart of this community, I'm now accepting podcast sponsors for Empowering Her. We're in the top 1% of all podcasts worldwide, and this is a beautiful opportunity to share your voice with a powerful audience of women who are here for growth, healing, and transformation. Learn more at melodypourmoradi.com/sponsorship.Let's Stay Connected!As an empowerment coach, author, twin girl mom, and the creator of the GiRLiFE Academy, my mission is to help every woman and girl discover her voice and live a life that lights her up from the inside out.I'd love to connect with you and continue this beautiful journey together!
This season, we've been talking about what to do when you look around at your life and think, “Wait… this is not what I ordered.” Maybe things didn't turn out the way you thought they would — and now you're asking those big, scary, beautiful questions: Who am I now? What do I want? Where do I go from here? But for a lot of us who grew up in church, those questions can feel… complicated. Because somewhere along the way, we were taught that it's wrong to want things. That it's dangerous to trust ourselves. That being a “good Christian woman” means making yourself smaller — dying to yourself, staying quiet, and serving everyone else first. Today we're having a conversation I think so many of us need — about what faith actually asks of us. Our guest is Dr. Alison Cook, a therapist, host of The Best of You podcast, and author of the bestselling book by the same name. Alison is an expert at the intersection of faith and psychology. She helps women heal from past wounds, develop a strong sense of self, and experience a loving God who is for them — not asking them to disappear. We're going to talk about what self-denial really means, how to know when faith has turned into self-erasure, and what it looks like to follow Jesus without losing yourself in the process. You ready? Let's jump into my conversation with Alison! Mentioned in this episode:
We're in a fight for our right to speak up, and out—but it's not the first time.
Carl and Mike get right back into Falcons talk as they continue to react to the win over the Bills and discuss why the Falcons defense is proving Terry Fontenot has been getting things right with draft selections and offseason player acquisitions.
YouTube link: https://youtube.com/live/DfJSxApybKUSupport the show
For over a century, vaccination has been repeatedly linked to severe neurological injuries including brain damage — with many modern studies showing a 3 to 7 fold increase in common chronic illnesses To dodge this massive liability, all research into vaccine injuries (and many other catastrophes like Agent Orange) was suppressed so that health authorities could claim there was “no evidence” of vaccine harm Another scheme was to redefine the brain injury as “autism” rather than encephalitis (which the U.S. government was legally required to provide injury compensation for) Previously, children with significant vaccine brain damage were referred to as “mentally retarded.” However, after a multi-decade campaign cancelled “retarded” they were instead diagnosed as autistic — a vague term which blurs severe and minor disability together, thereby effectively concealing the severe cases from the public's awareness This article will reveal the manipulative techniques and wordplay that have been used to conceal vaccine injuries from the public's awareness, as now is the time when we can at last end this atrocity
We're talking about the tax credits that help people buy health insurance through state and federal health insurance exchanges. David W. Johnson and Julie Murchinson tell us who wins and who loses in the shutdown showdown on, “Erasing Enhanced Premium Tax Credits for ACA Health Plans,” the new episode of the 4sight Health Roundup podcast, moderated by David Burda.
Galatians 3 has done a lot of heavy lifting in modern theology. Some say it proves everything is now “spiritual,” that Israel was folded into the church and the land promise dissolved. We open the text and ask: is that what Paul actually says? Paul's concern is rescue, not replacement. He confronts the claim that Gentiles need the works of the law to belong. By returning to Abraham, he shows that righteousness has always been by faith and that the blessing promised to the nations reaches its center in the Messiah. That's inclusion without erasure. We then trace what Galatians 3 does say - justification by faith, Gentile heirship with Abraham, the law as guardian, one body in Messiah - and what it never says: that the church is the new Israel or that Jewish identity and the land are cancelled. The result is a bigger table, not a different family. Key Takeaways Justification by faith predates Sinai; Abraham believed and was counted righteous. Gentiles are heirs with Abraham through the promised Seed, Messiah Jesus, without identity transfer to “Israel.” The law is a guardian, not a ladder; it cannot annul the earlier promise. “Neither Jew nor Greek” means equal standing, not uniform roles in redemptive history. Paul never says “the church is Israel.” Inclusion doesn't require erasing Jewish calling. The three strands remain - people, place, purpose - brought to coherence in Messiah, not collapsed by Him. Romans 9–11 safeguards Israel's ongoing calling, warning Gentiles against arrogance. Chapter Markers 00:00 Welcome & Series Setup: “Still Chosen” 03:00 Why Galatians? The Rescue Mission Context 08:30 Sons of Abraham by Faith (Gal 3:6–9) 14:30 Promise vs. Law; the Singular Seed (Gal 3:15–18) 21:00 Guardian to the Messiah; Faith as the Doorway (Gal 3:23–26) 24:00 “Neither Jew nor Greek”: Unity without Erasure (Gal 3:27–29) 31:00 What Paul Doesn't Say: No Replacement of Israel 37:30 Analogies: The Expanded Table & Family Business 43:00 Land Promise and Acts 1:6—“Not yet,” not “never” 49:00 Lightning Round Q&A and Next Episode Tease Galatians 3 throws the doors wide to the nations through the Messiah without canceling God's covenant with Israel. Equal standing at the Father's table, distinct roles in His unfolding story. Explore more resources at The Jewish Road, consider coming to Israel with us, and if this ministry blesses you, join “The Few” and support the work.
The statistics on how many Christian men are viewing porn regularly are very sad. Jim Daly talks with Sherri Mueller and Erin Smalley on how sexual sin is having negative consequences on young people. Also, John and the Smalley's offer hope to people who are feeling shame over past sexual sin. Find us online at focusonthefamily.com/marriagepodcast or call 1-800-A-FAMILY. Receive the book The Disconnected Man for your donation of any amount! Hope Restored Pursuing Intimacy with a Reluctant Husband Contact our Counseling Team How Important is Sex in a Marriage Support This Show! If you enjoyed listening to the Focus on Marriage Podcast, please give us your feedback.
Republican State Representative Chase Tramont has filed a bill to prevent the use of the name West Bank in Florida materials.
Listen to all my reddit storytime episodes in the background in this easy playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_wX8l9EBnOM303JyilY8TTSrLz2e2kRGThis is the Redditor podcast! Here you will find all of Redditor's best Reddit stories from his YouTube channel. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In the aftermath of Charlie Kirk's assassination, media voices and political elites are working overtime to erase the shooter's left-wing ideology. ABC's Jonathan Karl declared the killing “not political,” while academics and commentators rushed to reframe it as random violence. But with clear evidence of extremist motives—from the shooter's own family to his pro-Biden ties—why the coordinated denial? In this episode, Lee and Tara expose the Orwellian narrative shift, the troubling role of institutions in normalizing political violence, and why Americans are seeing censorship and intimidation weaponized in real time.
In this powerfully tender episode of Live Your Best Life, Liz is joined by intercessors Liz and Deborah for a Spirit-led time of healing prayer and testimony. From supernatural intervention in a family crisis to a miraculous recovery from sepsis with no chance of recovery, their personal stories reveal the kindness and power of Jesus in the most desperate moments. This isn't just encouragement—it's an impartation of faith. Together, they release healing over physical, emotional, relational, and financial needs while leading listeners into the fountain of His presence. You'll be reminded that God sees every detail and moves on your behalf—even when hope feels gone. Get ready to receive, reconnect, and believe again.Related MaterialsThe Throne is an invitation directly from the Lord's heart. This is a holy gathering. As we sit at His feet together, He will open up the realm of the Throne to us. We will see Him as He is! Come expectant because there is going to be a powerful activation encounter with Jesus as supreme authority, and an activation within YOU to steward His authority and implement His victory on the earth!
It's been happening all over FL but is this really what the Government needs to be focusing on?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This transcript delves into the speaker's perspective on the withdrawal from Afghanistan and the Abbey Gate bombing, arguing that the events were a deliberate act orchestrated by the Biden administration. The speaker claims this was done to facilitate a deal with China for control of Afghanistan's valuable lithium and rare earth mineral mines, with Hunter and Jill Biden allegedly receiving payment. The monologue asserts that military advisors were ignored and that the withdrawal was intended to allow the country to fall to the Taliban, which the speaker claims had a pre-existing deal with China. A Worldwide System of Chaos: Cashless Bail, Woke Policies, and the Erasing of White Men The speaker connects the events in Afghanistan to a broader "worldwide battle," claiming that a "worldwide system" is at play to sow chaos and tyranny. This system, according to the speaker, is responsible for cashless bail policies in the US and Europe, which the speaker claims allow criminals and "illegal immigrants" to go free. The transcript also critiques "woke" policies in corporate America, citing Cracker Barrel and the Human Rights Campaign, and suggests that these policies are part of an unwritten rule to "erase" white males from media because they are more likely to vote Republican. The speaker also references a viral video of a tourist in Germany being stabbed, which is presented as an example of this global system in action.
Segment 1: • What makes us different from machines? Todd unpacks the doctrine of Imago Dei and how AI is blurring the lines between man and machine. • A Christianity Today issue surprisingly focuses on AI—but how helpful was it really? • Baylor gets a grant to study why Christianity "hurts" LGBT students. Todd explores the deeper problem behind that question. • AI algorithms are shaping addictive social media habits—and possibly shaping your soul. Segment 2: • What is intelligence? And what makes human intelligence unique? • Todd explains how Christians are turning to their theological catalogs to make sense of AI's rise. • With machines giving life advice and learning faster than ever, the question looms: Should they get human rights? Segment 3: • Could robots someday replace your pastor? A wild idea, but maybe not far off. • Christianity Today's AI issue wasn't all bad—Todd shares what was decent and what wasn't. • Are we made for this speed of life? Internet and urban living may be rewiring our brains in harmful ways. Segment 4: • A moment of honesty: Todd gives credit to a few C.T. articles. • But Christine Caine's “testimony” in the same issue raises red flags—comparing her sin to Judas's betrayal. • Was Jesus inviting Judas to repent? Todd tackles the theology—and calls out false narratives with clarity. ___ Thanks for listening! Wretched Radio would not be possible without the financial support of our Gospel Partners. If you would like to support Wretched Radio we would be extremely grateful. VISIT https://fortisinstitute.org/donate/ If you are already a Gospel Partner we couldn't be more thankful for you if we tried!