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Sarah Moeremans is theatermaker, curator, regisseur en sinds 2023 artistiek directeur bij Het Zuidelijk Toneel. Ze maakt visuele essays in het theater, met gebruik van taal, literatuur, kunstgeschiedenis, filosofie en satire. Voorbeelden hiervan zijn de succesvolle shows ‘Mission Molière' en ‘Crashtest Ibsen'. Haar nieuwste voorstelling ‘Reigen re-Erected' laat in tien scenes een portret zien van de seksuele moraal in eind 19e eeuw. De voorstelling is gebaseerd op de eerdere voorstelling ‘Rijgen', de Oerolhit van 2022. In deze versie belicht Moeremans samen met schrijver Joachim Robbrecht de mysterieuze en kwetsbare hoeken van lust en liefde in onze tijd. Atze de Vrieze gaat met Sarah Moeremans in gesprek. En Atze belt met redacteur Sarah van Binsbergen, zij doet kort verslag live vanaf het boekenbal.
Newsom Roasted Over Statue Erected of Himself Please Subscribe + Rate & Review KMJ’s Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson wherever you listen! --- KMJ’s Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music or wherever else you listen. --- Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson – KMJ’s Afternoon Drive Weekdays 2-6 PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ DriveKMJ.com | Podcast | Facebook | X | Instagram --- Everything KMJ: kmjnow.com | Streaming | Podcasts | Facebook | X | Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Newsom Roasted Over Statue Erected of Himself Please Subscribe + Rate & Review KMJ’s Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson wherever you listen! --- KMJ’s Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music or wherever else you listen. --- Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson – KMJ’s Afternoon Drive Weekdays 2-6 PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ DriveKMJ.com | Podcast | Facebook | X | Instagram --- Everything KMJ: kmjnow.com | Streaming | Podcasts | Facebook | X | Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mark visits the Montrose Air Station Museum to hear about a new addition to their collection, part of a Halifax Bomber, which crashed in the Angus glens in 1944. Shan Brewis tells us the story behind the plane crash, and how the piece of wreckage came to be discovered exactly 80 years after the tragedy.Red Squirrels in Scotland are often under threat, but Rachel finds out about the newest concern for our native population. Speaking to Meja Vesterlund from Saving Scotland's Squirrels, she hears about the threat of squirrel pox.Global celebrations have been taking place this week for World Gaelic Week. Mark spoke to Robyn Ireland, Gaelic Officer with Nature.Scot, about the Forgotten Woodlands project, which mapped Gaelic place names in order to show historically wooded areas across Scotland, demonstrating both the ecological and cultural relevance of the Gaelic language.Roslin Glen Country Park is something of a hidden gem, close by to the well-known Rosslyn Chapel. Mark is shown around by park ranger Alan Krumholds, who divulges the interesting industrial past of the area, and its present day, flourishing flora and fauna.Erected in 2014, the Tom Weir Statue in Balmaha is a fitting tribute to the popular mountaineer, author and broadcaster. Rachel talks to John Urquhart, from the conservation charity ‘Friends of Loch Lomond and The Trossachs', to reflect on the decade since the statue's installation and the new campaign to upgrade the signage and information in the area.Professor Catherine Heymans joins us on the programme, reflecting on the Planetary Parade phenomena that has gripped the UK over the past week, and shares her thoughts on the benefits of getting out to gaze up at the night sky.Lossiemouth Community Council has discovered an innovative use for last year's Christmas trees. Phil visits the beach where these discarded trees are being repurposed as a defence against coastal erosion.Rachel is out on the Water of Leith with wildlife photographer Tom Kelly, to find out about the rich variety of species that he captures on a daily basis at his patch along the river.
Become Strategic or Die: Blueprint for Black Power, an antifragile framework for success Release 5: Demystifying the Nonsense, they call the News: It's Not the Thought that Counts, it's What the Thought Makes You Do: No Pushback from the Spineless: “_____”, Drugs and Rock and Roll, What is the Missing Word?: Bible Study with an Atheist: They Who Created God:Closing: Perfectly Black Sources:https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/211874.Blueprint_for_Black_Powerhttps://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/nov/14/us-election-donald-trump-voters-gender-race-data?utm_source=chatgpt.comhttps://apnews.com/article/ukraine-russia-trump-war-zelenskyy-putin-7fe8c0c80b4e93e3bc079c621a44e8bbhttps://tucson.com/news/nation-world/crime-courts/david-mcgee-the-bridge-guns-fentanyl-pastor-las-vegas/article_848416bf-0113-5972-ac62-e34ec7739bb2.htmlhttps://blacknews.com/news/sahli-negassi-black-teen-new-jersey-scores-perfect-1600-sat/Power Concedes Nothing without a Demand...
fWotD Episode 2843: Boot Monument Welcome to Featured Wiki of the Day, your daily dose of knowledge from Wikipedia’s finest articles.The featured article for Saturday, 15 February 2025 is Boot Monument.The Boot Monument is an American Revolutionary War memorial located in Saratoga National Historical Park, New York. Erected during 1887 by John Watts de Peyster and sculpted by George Edwin Bissell, it commemorates Major General Benedict Arnold's service at the Battles of Saratoga while in the Continental Army, but does not mention him on the monument because Arnold later defected from the Americans to the British. Instead, it commemorates Arnold as the "most brilliant soldier of the Continental Army". While fighting at the Battle of Bemis Heights, the second of the Saratoga engagements, Arnold was shot and severely injured in his left leg. His horse was also hit by gunfire and fell on Arnold, crushing his already injured leg. After this, Arnold continued to grow ever more bitter towards the Continental Army when he was passed over for promotion and was court-martialed. He later attempted to help the British capture the fortification of West Point but was discovered and fled to the British army.This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 01:00 UTC on Saturday, 15 February 2025.For the full current version of the article, see Boot Monument on Wikipedia.This podcast uses content from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Visit our archives at wikioftheday.com and subscribe to stay updated on new episodes.Follow us on Mastodon at @wikioftheday@masto.ai.Also check out Curmudgeon's Corner, a current events podcast.Until next time, I'm neural Kendra.
Election posters in Cork erected too low are becoming an obstacle for people especially those with vision impairment Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The House of the Temple is the headquarters for the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, Southern Jurisdiction (SRSMJ). Erected on October 18, 1915 and modeled after the Tomb of King Mausolus, the House of the Temple is also one of the most well-known haunted buildings in the nation's capital. RW Maynard Edwards, 33°, and Bro. Matt Bowers are the voices behind the SRSMJ podcasts and also happens to call the House of the Temple their office. They share the stories and investigation on the hauntings at this historic site. Show notes:Follow the Scottish Rite Southern Masonic Jurisdiction on YouTubeFollow the Craftsmen Online Podcast on Spotify.Subscribe to the Craftsmen Online Podcast on Apple Podcasts.Follow Craftsmen Online on YouTube, hit subscribe and get notified the next time we go LIVE with a podcast recording!Visit the Craftsmen Online website to learn more about our next Reading Room event, New York Masonic History and see the Lafayette Bicentennial Calendar!Get tickets to the first New York Masonic Con, happening on January 18, 2025 at the Grand Lodge of New YorkGet our latest announcements and important updates in your inbox with the Craftsmen Online Newsletter.Email the host, RW Michael Arce! Yes, we will read your email and may even reach out to be a guest on a future episode.Support the Craftsmen Online Podcast. Whether it's a one time donation or you become a Patreon Subscriber, we appreciate your support!Sponsor offer: Don't forget to use the promo code CRAFTSMEN to receive free shipping with your first order from Bricks Masons!Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/craftsmen-online-podcast--4822031/support.
In this episode of Unexplained Legends, Roger and Denis dive into the eerie mystery of the Georgia Guidestones, often called “America's Stonehenge.” Erected in 1980 by an anonymous group, these giant granite slabs are engraved with cryptic guidelines for humanity's future, written in multiple languages. From their strange apocalyptic messages about population control to their controversial destruction in 2022, the Guidestones have sparked countless conspiracy theories. Were they part of a secret New World Order plan, or just a harmless artistic statement meant to provoke thought about humanity's future?Roger and Denis explore the strange history of the monument, examining the wild theories and heated debate surrounding it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Lord Mayor of Dublin, James Geoghegan has backed calls for a statue of the late Sinead O'Connor to be erected in Dublin. Despite a longstanding rule in Dublin City Council that you can't build a statue or a memorial for someone unless they have been deceased for 20 years. We get the view of Daithi Doolan, Sinn Fein Group Leader on Dublin City Council.
The Lord Mayor of Dublin, James Geoghegan has backed calls for a statue of the late Sinead O'Connor to be erected in Dublin. Despite a longstanding rule in Dublin City Council that you can't build a statue or a memorial for someone unless they have been deceased for 20 years. We get the view of Daithi Doolan, Sinn Fein Group Leader on Dublin City Council.
Johann Adolph Scheibe went down in history for attacking Bach's “turgid and confused” style. “…from the natural to the artificial, and from the lofty to the obscure ... one wonders at the painful labor of it all, that nevertheless comes to nothing, since it is at variance with reason.”Let's examine the controversy from the beginning. How To Support This Podcast:https://www.paypal.me/wtfbachhttps://venmo.com/wtfbachhttps://cash.app/$wtfbachor become a paid subscriber at wtfbach.substack.comThe first three albums of the 'Complete Works for Solo Keyboard' are live everywhere. Stream while sleeping to achieve maximum effect.Volume One:Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/ycy2fab7Apple Music: https://tinyurl.com/nhfuws4tAmazon Music: https://tinyurl.com/mrxj7pwsVolume Two:Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/msjyhamhApple Music: https://tinyurl.com/mtykbxnzAmazon Music: https://tinyurl.com/3m7b9v6wVolume Three:Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/4xneak6rApple Music: https://tinyurl.com/mr44kwmfAmazon Music: https://tinyurl.com/3e4kwnsb Get full access to WTF Bach at wtfbach.substack.com/subscribe
UFF and UDA flags erected outside a new social housing development in north Belfast. A woman fighting for her disabled daughters rights to be looked after appropriately in a care home finally gets the result she was entitled to all along and the BBC has once again revealed its annual list of the corporation's highest earning talent.
Maggie Doyle reports.
John Cummins, Fine Gael Senator; Duncan Smith, Labour TD for Dublin Fingal; Louise O'Reilly, Sinn Féin TD for Dublin Fingal; Christina Finn, Political Editor for The Journal
Niall Collins, Minister of State Department of Further & Higher Education; Sorca Clarke, Sinn Féin TD Longford Westmeath; Richard Boyd Barrett, People Before Profit TD for Dun Laoghaire
It was in the ancient city of Petra, in 2013, when National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek said he came upon a crossroad filled with antiquity, fabulous monuments, palaces and grand avenues chiseled into a sandstone canyon far above the rift valley of Jordan. After walking for the better part of a year through the desolate deserts of the Horn of Africa and then into the almost equally desert and empty landscape of Saudi Arabia, Salopek said he was welcomed into Jordan by a Bedouin musician named Qasim Ali. Qasim Ali sings the blues, Bedouin style, at Petra, the ancient heart of the Nabatean empire. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic Ali sang the blues while playing the Rababa, an ancient stringed instrument. Salopek described it as a dramatic setting.“It kind of became the backdrop music for stepping from nomadism into millennia of settlement, into this highly contested, many-chambered heart that we call the Levant,” he said.The World's Marco Werman talked more with Salopek about his journey through Jordan and into the Israeli-occupied West Bank, following in the footsteps of the first humans out of Africa. Marco Werman: Your walk through Jordan was a kind of transition from the world of Bedouin herders and nomadic life to a world of farms and villages where early people first put down roots. How did walking it on foot help you appreciate human history?Paul Salopek: Well, it was kind of almost a schizophrenic reality, Marco. There was kind of walking through every day at three miles an hour out of the empty desert, and suddenly tomato farms started to appear. Irrigation canals … the whole infrastructure of modern-day farming. But at the same time, my project is about deep, deep history and the people I'm following, when they walked through, none of that was there. But something happened when we first migrated out of Africa, through this part of the world. As one archeologist told me, we finally sat down. We stopped moving so much. We settled. We invented agriculture. We started piling rocks on top of each other. We smelted metal. And this era, called the Neolithic, is the one, essentially, that we're still inhabiting today. A city-based, urban, settled lifestyle. This was one of the corners of the world where it began. Ghawarna women dye wool using oxide-rich mud. Modaita, the yawning camel is unimpressed. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic You crossed a border in May of 2014, the Jordan River, and you walked into the West Bank through Israeli army checkpoints. Give us a sense of life in the Palestinian West Bank in 2014.Back at that time, it was a time of, relatively speaking, calm, right? I mean, there's always tension in this corner of the world, but there was no open warfare that I saw. But this, this was a foretaste, again, of this extraordinary maze of the Middle East, of the West Bank, which is partitioned, as you probably know, into three different administrative sectors: Israeli, Palestinian, and then mixed administrative control. There were checkpoints everywhere. There were barriers everywhere. For somebody coming from almost a year on foot, out of kind of relatively open horizons, it was dizzying. It was just a bit surreal. I was walking at the time with my Palestinian walking partner Bassam Almohor, and he said, “Paul, this is my life. I have to kind of change personality every time I cross one of these checkpoints.” And he was a walker, Marco. He was one of the founders of a walking club based in Ramallah. His philosophy was “My piece of Earth. This place I call home is so small that walking makes it big. This is how I keep my sanity.” Bullet on the road to Bethlehem. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic Wow. Well, we know that things had been tense and violent in the West Bank before 2014 when you were there. Your journey also took you into the ancient city of Jerusalem. You walk the same paths as the ancient Egyptians, Jews, Greeks, Romans, early Christians and Muslims. How much did that sense of history color your view of the modern state of Israel?It was inescapable. I mean, there are just so many layers. Again, I deal with historians and archeologists. These are the people that I talk to to advise me on what compass bearing to move on as I pass along these ancient pathways of dispersal out of Africa. Another archeologist based in Jerusalem said, “Paul, Jerusalem was a village, a settlement that was prehistoric.” You know, it started to kind of appear in the consciousness of that inhabited landscape around the Bronze Age. I measured history, recorded history, from the time of that settlement to today, there had been 700 or more wars. But everybody that I met in that highly conflicted, highly contested, very small corner of the world has their own ways of trying to keep life good. And he said, “Paul, I focused not on those 700 wars but on the spaces of peace in between.” In Bethlehem, the Church of the Nativity. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic So, as you follow the news from the Middle East today, what jogs your memories of walking the Holy Land on foot?This part of the world was new to me. I never covered it as a journalist, and I'd covered some pretty big episodes of mass violence among humans in Africa. I covered, for example, the Congo Civil War, which was one of the bloodiest and most devastating at the time in the early 2000s. The numbers there are staggering. In Central Africa, almost 5 million people died in that conflict. And so here I am, coming from out of Africa into the Middle East, where it's tiny, by African standards. And I was astonished at the amount of attention that was focused on it. It was like there was this global stadium built around this quadrant of the world, where the whole world was looking down on these conflicts among villages, among cities, among invisible lines. To be perfectly candid, I was kind of scratching my head. I said, “Why is this corner of the world getting so much attention when the rest of the world has far larger, gaping wounds, in terms of just bloodshed?” If you want to use a metric of human blood. But now, looking back from 13 years later, seeing what's happening now, I think that was a measure, sort of my naivete, of the fact that I was comparing human suffering to human suffering ... which is always a dangerous thing to do. And what we're seeing now is just how incredibly deep — it may be small, Marco — but how incredibly deep these fissures run. Yuval Ben-Ami at the Separation Barrier in East Jerusalem. Erected by the Israeli government to thwart terror attacks, it cleaves some Palestinian neighborhoods in half. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic It struck me when you said you'd been in Africa for that long. You actually started in the Out of Eden Walk. You've kind of followed, in a way, the Levantine Corridor that humans left many thousands of years ago into the Middle East. I wonder how, on foot, that changed how you see this tense modern world.When you walk for very long periods – and I'm talking months and years – across horizons ... you kind of enter a mental state where you look at the surface tensions of the world. You look at the cities, the conflicts, the way we've treated the planet, the way we've subjugated and, in many ways, destroyed nature. And I'm not saying that it makes you fatalistic, but there's a sense of equanimity that comes with it. A sense of, “God, this is all going to be scraped away.” Everything we say is going to be scraped away during the next glaciation. And all of our monuments, all of our heroes, all of our statues are going to be kind of in the moraines of these glaciers, 12,000 years from now. That doesn't make me feel fatalistic. It doesn't make me shrug. It gives me a sense of, sort of, I don't know, of … patience, if you will, with this troublesome species that we are — both so very good and very bad.Parts of this interview have been lightly edited for length and clarity.Writer and National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek has embarked on a 24,000-mile storytelling trek across the world called the “Out of Eden Walk.” The National Geographic Society, committed to illuminating and protecting the wonder of our world, has funded Salopek and the project since 2013. Explore the project here. Follow the journey on X at @PaulSalopek, @outofedenwalk and also at @InsideNatGeo.
It was in the ancient city of Petra, in 2013, when National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek said he came upon a crossroad filled with antiquity, fabulous monuments, palaces and grand avenues chiseled into a sandstone canyon far above the rift valley of Jordan. After walking for the better part of a year through the desolate deserts of the Horn of Africa and then into the almost equally desert and empty landscape of Saudi Arabia, Salopek said he was welcomed into Jordan by a Bedouin musician named Qasim Ali. Qasim Ali sings the blues, Bedouin style, at Petra, the ancient heart of the Nabatean empire. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic Ali sang the blues while playing the Rababa, an ancient stringed instrument. Salopek described it as a dramatic setting.“It kind of became the backdrop music for stepping from nomadism into millennia of settlement, into this highly contested, many-chambered heart that we call the Levant,” he said.The World's Marco Werman talked more with Salopek about his journey through Jordan and into the Israeli-occupied West Bank, following in the footsteps of the first humans out of Africa. Marco Werman: Your walk through Jordan was a kind of transition from the world of Bedouin herders and nomadic life to a world of farms and villages where early people first put down roots. How did walking it on foot help you appreciate human history?Paul Salopek: Well, it was kind of almost a schizophrenic reality, Marco. There was kind of walking through every day at three miles an hour out of the empty desert, and suddenly tomato farms started to appear. Irrigation canals … the whole infrastructure of modern-day farming. But at the same time, my project is about deep, deep history and the people I'm following, when they walked through, none of that was there. But something happened when we first migrated out of Africa, through this part of the world. As one archeologist told me, we finally sat down. We stopped moving so much. We settled. We invented agriculture. We started piling rocks on top of each other. We smelted metal. And this era, called the Neolithic, is the one, essentially, that we're still inhabiting today. A city-based, urban, settled lifestyle. This was one of the corners of the world where it began. Ghawarna women dye wool using oxide-rich mud. Modaita, the yawning camel is unimpressed. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic You crossed a border in May of 2014, the Jordan River, and you walked into the West Bank through Israeli army checkpoints. Give us a sense of life in the Palestinian West Bank in 2014.Back at that time, it was a time of, relatively speaking, calm, right? I mean, there's always tension in this corner of the world, but there was no open warfare that I saw. But this, this was a foretaste, again, of this extraordinary maze of the Middle East, of the West Bank, which is partitioned, as you probably know, into three different administrative sectors: Israeli, Palestinian, and then mixed administrative control. There were checkpoints everywhere. There were barriers everywhere. For somebody coming from almost a year on foot, out of kind of relatively open horizons, it was dizzying. It was just a bit surreal. I was walking at the time with my Palestinian walking partner Bassam Almohor, and he said, “Paul, this is my life. I have to kind of change personality every time I cross one of these checkpoints.” And he was a walker, Marco. He was one of the founders of a walking club based in Ramallah. His philosophy was “My piece of Earth. This place I call home is so small that walking makes it big. This is how I keep my sanity.” Bullet on the road to Bethlehem. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic Wow. Well, we know that things had been tense and violent in the West Bank before 2014 when you were there. Your journey also took you into the ancient city of Jerusalem. You walk the same paths as the ancient Egyptians, Jews, Greeks, Romans, early Christians and Muslims. How much did that sense of history color your view of the modern state of Israel?It was inescapable. I mean, there are just so many layers. Again, I deal with historians and archeologists. These are the people that I talk to to advise me on what compass bearing to move on as I pass along these ancient pathways of dispersal out of Africa. Another archeologist based in Jerusalem said, “Paul, Jerusalem was a village, a settlement that was prehistoric.” You know, it started to kind of appear in the consciousness of that inhabited landscape around the Bronze Age. I measured history, recorded history, from the time of that settlement to today, there had been 700 or more wars. But everybody that I met in that highly conflicted, highly contested, very small corner of the world has their own ways of trying to keep life good. And he said, “Paul, I focused not on those 700 wars but on the spaces of peace in between.” In Bethlehem, the Church of the Nativity. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic So, as you follow the news from the Middle East today, what jogs your memories of walking the Holy Land on foot?This part of the world was new to me. I never covered it as a journalist, and I'd covered some pretty big episodes of mass violence among humans in Africa. I covered, for example, the Congo Civil War, which was one of the bloodiest and most devastating at the time in the early 2000s. The numbers there are staggering. In Central Africa, almost 5 million people died in that conflict. And so here I am, coming from out of Africa into the Middle East, where it's tiny, by African standards. And I was astonished at the amount of attention that was focused on it. It was like there was this global stadium built around this quadrant of the world, where the whole world was looking down on these conflicts among villages, among cities, among invisible lines. To be perfectly candid, I was kind of scratching my head. I said, “Why is this corner of the world getting so much attention when the rest of the world has far larger, gaping wounds, in terms of just bloodshed?” If you want to use a metric of human blood. But now, looking back from 13 years later, seeing what's happening now, I think that was a measure, sort of my naivete, of the fact that I was comparing human suffering to human suffering ... which is always a dangerous thing to do. And what we're seeing now is just how incredibly deep — it may be small, Marco — but how incredibly deep these fissures run. Yuval Ben-Ami at the Separation Barrier in East Jerusalem. Erected by the Israeli government to thwart terror attacks, it cleaves some Palestinian neighborhoods in half. Join the journey at outofedenwalk.org. Credit: Paul Salopek/National Geographic It struck me when you said you'd been in Africa for that long. You actually started in the Out of Eden Walk. You've kind of followed, in a way, the Levantine Corridor that humans left many thousands of years ago into the Middle East. I wonder how, on foot, that changed how you see this tense modern world.When you walk for very long periods – and I'm talking months and years – across horizons ... you kind of enter a mental state where you look at the surface tensions of the world. You look at the cities, the conflicts, the way we've treated the planet, the way we've subjugated and, in many ways, destroyed nature. And I'm not saying that it makes you fatalistic, but there's a sense of equanimity that comes with it. A sense of, “God, this is all going to be scraped away.” Everything we say is going to be scraped away during the next glaciation. And all of our monuments, all of our heroes, all of our statues are going to be kind of in the moraines of these glaciers, 12,000 years from now. That doesn't make me feel fatalistic. It doesn't make me shrug. It gives me a sense of, sort of, I don't know, of … patience, if you will, with this troublesome species that we are — both so very good and very bad.Parts of this interview have been lightly edited for length and clarity.Writer and National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek has embarked on a 24,000-mile storytelling trek across the world called the “Out of Eden Walk.” The National Geographic Society, committed to illuminating and protecting the wonder of our world, has funded Salopek and the project since 2013. Explore the project here. Follow the journey on X at @PaulSalopek, @outofedenwalk and also at @InsideNatGeo.
The legacy of a community activist credited with transforming the future for generations of young people in Kilrush will be commemorated with a new structure. A plaque will be erected at the John Paul Estate in the West Clare Town, in memory of Fianna Fáil Councillor, Stephen O'Gorman, who passed away in 2012. During his twenty-years of service, Stephen spearheaded efforts to combat criminality, drug activity and anti-social behaviour in deprived areas often at great personal risk and persevered through numerous attacks against himself and family members. Cathaoirleach of the West Clare Municipal District and Kilrush Independent Councillor Ian Lynch says everyone in the town owes a debt of gratitude to Stephen and his story must be remembered.
In 1902, the Copper Queen Hotel opened its doors in Bisbee, Arizona, and was heralded as the epitome of modern hospitality in the West. Erected during an era when Bisbee boasted its status as the largest urban center between St. Louis and San Francisco, the hotel not only mirrored the prosperity of the local mining industry but also underscored the dominance of railway transportation at the cusp of the twentieth century. Today, the Copper Queen Hotel stands as Arizona's oldest continuously operational hotel and has welcomed many notable figures within its walls. Its esteemed guests have been luminaries such as John Wayne, Marlon Brando, and Harry Houdini. Yet, these renowned names may not hold the most enduring legacy, as some visitors have lingered far beyond their intended stays. Among the spectral inhabitants are the ghosts of Julia Lowell, a young boy known as Billy and an enigmatic figure often referred to as the Smoking Man. Today on the Grave Talks, Part Two of our conversation about the Ghostly Guests of the Copper Queen Hotel, a conversation with Jenna Lampinen. If you'd like information on staying at the hotel or paranormal investigations, contact Jenna Lampinen. You can email her at jenna@copperqueen.com. Become a GRAVE KEEPER and get access to ALL of our EPISODES - AD FREE, BONUS EPISODES & ADVANCE EPISODES!!! Sign up through Apple Podcast Channel or Patreon. Sign up through Apple Podcasts or Patreon http://www.patreon.com/thegravetalks
In 1902, the Copper Queen Hotel opened its doors in Bisbee, Arizona, and was heralded as the epitome of modern hospitality in the West. Erected during an era when Bisbee boasted its status as the largest urban center between St. Louis and San Francisco, the hotel not only mirrored the prosperity of the local mining industry but also underscored the dominance of railway transportation at the cusp of the twentieth century. Today, the Copper Queen Hotel stands as Arizona's oldest continuously operational hotel and has welcomed many notable figures within its walls. Its esteemed guests have been luminaries such as John Wayne, Marlon Brando, and Harry Houdini. Yet, these renowned names may not hold the most enduring legacy, as some visitors have lingered far beyond their intended stays. Among the spectral inhabitants are the ghosts of Julia Lowell, a young boy known as Billy and an enigmatic figure often referred to as the Smoking Man. Today on the Grave Talks, Part One of our conversation about the Ghostly Guests of the Copper Queen Hotel, a conversation with Jenna Lampinen. If you'd like information on staying at the hotel or paranormal investigations, contact Jenna Lampinen. You can email her at jenna@copperqueen.com. Become a GRAVE KEEPER and get access to ALL of our EPISODES - AD FREE, BONUS EPISODES & ADVANCE EPISODES!!! Sign up through Apple Podcast Channel or Patreon. Sign up through Apple Podcasts or Patreon http://www.patreon.com/thegravetalks
Daily Halacha Podcast - Daily Halacha By Rabbi Eli J. Mansour
Rabbi Shemuel Pinhasi, in his work Haim Va'hesed (chapter 16), writes that after a person's passing, Heaven forbid, the Maseva – the tombstone placed at the gravesite – should preferably be placed on the grave already on the seventh day after burial, and no later than the eighth day. According to the Zohar (vol. 1, p. 119), as Rav Pinhasi quotes, the Maseva should not be placed on the grave earlier than the seventh day, as this could be harmful. Therefore, the Maseva should be placed on the seventh day, after the mourners end the Shiba observance, when in any event it is customary to visit the gravesite. It should preferably be placed that day, and no later. This is the ruling of the Kuntras Ha'yehieli, and is the custom in Jerusalem. This is also the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef (Yabia Omer, vol. 4) and of Rav Yitzhak Shehebar. Rav Pinhasi notes the divergent customs of Ashkenazim and Sepharadim regarding the way the deceased's name should appear on the Maseva. Sepharadim name the deceased and his or her mother, whereas some Ashkenazim mention the father. (Other Ashkenazim follow the Sephardic practice in this regard.) Thus, for example, Sepharadim would write on a tombstone "Yitzhak Ben Sara," whereas Ashkenazim would write, "Yitzhak Ben Abraham." The source of the Sephardic custom is the comment of Abayeh cited in the Gemara in Masechet Shabbat that whenever making reference to a person, one should mention the person's mother. Rashi explains this to mean that the mother's name should be mentioned whenever we pray for someone, and it is therefore customary, for example, to mention the mother's name when reciting a "Misheberach" prayer for somebody. We apply this ruling as well to the Ashkaba prayer and the tombstone; in all these contexts, we mention the person and his or her mother. The reason, as explained by the Hochmat Shelomo commentary, is that the mother's relationship to a person is definite beyond a doubt, while a father's presumed relationship to his child cannot be conclusively verified. This is mentioned as well by the Ben Ish Hai (Rav Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909). In any event, as mentioned, the accepted practice among Sepharadim is to mention the mother's name in all contexts, including the inscription on a tombstone. Summary: The tombstone should be placed on the grave on the seventh day, after the mourners finish the Shiba observance. It should not be placed before then, and this should not be delayed beyond the eighth day. Sephardic custom is to inscribe on the tombstone the deceased's name and his mother's name, such as "Yitzhak Ben Sara."
Since 1961, families and friends had been separated by the Berlin Wall. Erected that year by the East German government, the barrier kept its citizens from fleeing to West Germany. In fact, from 1949 to the day the structure was built, it’s estimated that more than 2.5 million East Germans had bolted to the West. US President Ronald Reagan stood at the wall in 1987 and famously said, “Tear down this wall.” His words reflected a groundswell of change in the region that culminated with the wall being torn down in 1989—leading to Germany’s joyous reunification. Paul wrote of a “wall of hostility” torn down by Jesus (Ephesians 2:14). The wall had existed between Jews (God’s chosen people) and gentiles (all other people). And it was symbolized by the dividing wall (the soreg) in the ancient temple erected by Herod the Great in Jerusalem. It kept gentiles from entering beyond the outer courts of the temple, though they could see the inner courts. But Jesus brought “peace” and reconciliation between the Jews and gentiles and between God and all people. He did so by “[breaking] down the wall . . . that separated us” by “his death on the cross” (vv. 14, 16 nlt). The “Good News of peace” made it possible for all to be united by faith in Christ (vv. 17–18 nlt). Today, there are many things that can divide us. As God provides what we need, let’s strive to live out and declare the peace and unity found in Jesus (vv. 19–22).
Exodus 401 The LORD spoke to Moses, saying, 2 “On the first day of the first month you shall erect the tabernacle of the tent of meeting. 3 And you shall put in it the ark of the testimony, and you shall screen the ark with the veil. 4 And you shall bring in the table and arrange it, and you shall bring in the lampstand and set up its lamps. 5 And you shall put the golden altar for incense before the ark of the testimony, and set up the screen for the door of the tabernacle. 6 You shall set the altar of burnt offering before the door of the tabernacle of the tent of meeting, 7 and place the basin between the tent of meeting and the altar, and put water in it. 8 And you shall set up the court all around, and hang up the screen for the gate of the court.9 “Then you shall take the anointing oil and anoint the tabernacle and all that is in it, and consecrate it and all its furniture, so that it may become holy. 10 You shall also anoint the altar of burnt offering and all its utensils, and consecrate the altar, so that the altar may become most holy. 11 You shall also anoint the basin and its stand, and consecrate it. 12 Then you shall bring Aaron and his sons to the entrance of the tent of meeting and shall wash them with water 13 and put on Aaron the holy garments. And you shall anoint him and consecrate him, that he may serve me as priest. 14 You shall bring his sons also and put coats on them, 15 and anoint them, as you anointed their father, that they may serve me as priests. And their anointing shall admit them to a perpetual priesthood throughout their generations.”16 This Moses did; according to all that the LORD commanded him, so he did. 17 In the first month in the second year, on the first day of the month, the tabernacle was erected. 18 Moses erected the tabernacle. He laid its bases, and set up its frames, and put in its poles, and raised up its pillars. 19 And he spread the tent over the tabernacle and put the covering of the tent over it, as the LORD had commanded Moses. 20 He took the testimony and put it into the ark, and put the poles on the ark and set the mercy seat above on the ark. 21 And he brought the ark into the tabernacle and set up the veil of the screen, and screened the ark of the testimony, as the LORD had commanded Moses. 22 He put the table in the tent of meeting, on the north side of the tabernacle, outside the veil, 23 and arranged the bread on it before the LORD, as the LORD had commanded Moses. 24 He put the lampstand in the tent of meeting, opposite the table on the south side of the tabernacle, 25 and set up the lamps before the LORD, as the LORD had commanded Moses. 26 He put the golden altar in the tent of meeting before the veil, 27 and burned fragrant incense on it, as the LORD had commanded Moses. 28 He put in place the screen for the door of the tabernacle. 29 And he set the altar of burnt offering at the entrance of the tabernacle of the tent of meeting, and offered on it the burnt offering and the grain offering, as the LORD had commanded Moses. 30 He set the basin between the tent of meeting and the altar, and put water in it for washing, 31 with which Moses and Aaron and his sons washed their hands and their feet. 32 When they went into the tent of meeting, and when they approached the altar, they washed, as the LORD commanded Moses. 33 And he erected the court around the tabernacle and the altar, and set up the screen of the gate of the court. So Moses finished the work.34 Then the cloud covered the tent of meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle. 35 And Moses was not able to enter the tent of meeting because the cloud settled on it, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle. 36 Throughout all their journeys, whenever the cloud was taken up from over the tabernacle, the people of Israel would set out. 37 But if the cloud was not taken up, then they did not set out till the day that it was taken up. 38 For the cloud of the LORD was on the tabernacle by day, and fire was in it by night, in the sight of all the house of Israel throughout all their journeys.
This podcast completes the book of Exodus. After Adam and Eve sinned and the world fell into decay and death to become separated from God's presence, God returned to choose his people and be their God. He promised Abraham to make his descendants numerous and a nation. He began to fulfill his promise and freed the Israelites who were enslaved in Egypt for 400 years. He made a covenant with them that if they obeyed Him, he would be their God to provide for them and lead them to the promised land. The Israelites, the twelve tribes, agreed and began their exodus from Egypt to the wilderness. It was in the wilderness that God began to reveal Himself to His chosen people and His character. He laid down the law with the Ten Commandments and established the Mosiac covenant to sanctify His people and make them Holy because God is Holy. While Moses was at the mountain top, meeting with God, the Israelites forgot God and built their golden idol calf to worship. In anger, Moses broke the two tablets that God handwrote His commandments. God still gave mercy to allow them to live when He was angered to wipe them out. Afterward, the redeemed Israelites continued with God and built God's house, the Tabernacle, where God will reside once again with His people. This book ends with God's glory resting in His house, His earthly temple. The character of God will continue to be revealed to establish His Kingdom on earth slowly until the new heaven and earth restore God's original plan with the Garden of Eden. Exodus reveals amazing qualities of God and His plan to redeem us into His Kingdom to live with Him once again and restoration.Video at https://youtu.be/MvSb5l8heWk***********Support MrE and his channel at:Apocalypse Watchman by MrE, https://www.bitchute.com/channel/apocalypse_watchman/MrE, https://odysee.com/@MrE:cDonate to MrE at PayPal.me/mrehistoryPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/mremediaCat channel: https://www.youtube.com/@catpocalypsenow8090***********Multiple ways to support my work:My books: https://www.savedandloved.com/shopDonate to my site: https://www.savedandloved.com/donateBuy Me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/savedandlovedDonate at Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SavedAndLoved31
Join us on Maintaining Frame as we look at a story of many brave would be engineers and tech industry hopefuls trying to break into the industry that has until now been far to cis-normative!This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4148711/advertisement
Grab your rotted fish and head to Chubbtown for a new episode of LIVE! What are some statues that should be erected? Pat wants to bring back Ronald McDonald. Matt puts a Draco Malfoy statue in Savannah, Georgia. Nate's cup runneth over with toilets. Plus, how often do you change your bath towel? What happens when you eat pancakes every day? Does being big and purple make you the fun one? All that and grape tummy and it all happens LIVE!
0:00 Intro 0:45 Mask Mandates 10:30 Monosodium Glutamate (MSG) 21:13 Lahaina Black Fencing 33:22 EV Dealers 47:22 IQ Test For more updates, visit: http://www.brighteon.com/channel/hrreport NaturalNews videos would not be possible without you, as always we remain passionately dedicated to our mission of educating people all over the world on the subject of natural healing remedies and personal liberty (food freedom, medical freedom, the freedom of speech, etc.). Together, we're helping create a better world, with more honest food labeling, reduced chemical contamination, the avoidance of toxic heavy metals and vastly increased scientific transparency. ▶️ Every dollar you spend at the Health Ranger Store goes toward helping us achieve important science and content goals for humanity: https://www.healthrangerstore.com/ ▶️ Sign Up For Our Newsletter: https://www.naturalnews.com/Readerregistration.html ▶️ Brighteon: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/hrreport ▶️ Join Our Social Network: https://brighteon.social/@HealthRanger ▶️ Check In Stock Products at: https://PrepWithMike.com
Disclaimer: Halfway through the episode Richard's mic stopped working. You're welcome. In this episode, we answer a thoughtful listener's question about the origin of the oft-quoted missionary stanza (and our podcast's namesake) The Standard of Truth. If you have any questions or possible topics of discussion for upcoming podcasts, please email us at: questions@standardoftruthpodcast.com Subscribe to our free newsletter - https://standardoftruthpodcast.substack.com/ Please visit our website at www.standardoftruth.com
A new MP3 sermon from Grace Baptist Church of Taylors is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Tabernacle: Erected, Covered, Filled Subtitle: Exodus: When God Rescues Speaker: Mark Hatfield Broadcaster: Grace Baptist Church of Taylors Event: Sunday - PM Date: 7/23/2023 Bible: Exodus 40 Length: 49 min.
Police sources find neo-Nazi rhetoric in social media posts from Allen gunman. People returning to Allen outlet mall to claim vehicles left behind during shooting. Senator Ted Cruz introduces bill that would double the number of police officers on school campuses. KRLD All Local - May 8, 2023
Patriot Radio is your best stop for all the reliable news from the worldview of a Pastor, Attorney, Military Officer, and WA State Representative Carl Teichrib's book, Game of Gods: https://www.gameofgods.ca/ Articles from this episode: https://www.westernjournal.com/covenant-school-shooter-scrawled-sick-message-murder-weapon-plan-thwarted-jesus/ ireadepoch.com - use promo code PATRIOTRADIO for HUGE savings on some of the BEST intelligence! BRAVETV is one of the best TV platforms that is not controlled by the enemy... heres a big discount: https://bravetv.store/patriotradio Follow Matt on Social Media: Podcast: https://mattshea.podbean.com Gab: https://gab.com/MattShea Gettr: https://gettr.com/user/mattshea Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/MattShea Clouthub: https://app.clouthub.com/#/users/u/MattShea/posts Broadcast across ACN (American Christian Network) Tuesday & Thursday 4-5 p.m. LIVE Tuesday & Thursday 9-10 p.m. (Replay) Saturday 6-7 p.m. (Replay) 106.5 FM Spokane/Coeur d'Alene (KSPO) 106.1 FM Moses Lake/Soap Lake/ Ephrata (KTBI) 101.3 FM Tri-Cities/Walla/Walla/NE Oregon (KGDN) 97.7 FM Spokane/Coeur d'Alen (KFIO) 96.1 FM Yakima/Lower Valley (KYAK) 93.9 FM Central Washington (KTAC) 1050 AM Spokane/Coeur d'Alene/Pullman/North Idaho/Palouse (KFIO) 810 AM Wenatchee/Moses Lake (KTBI) 930 AM Yakima/Ellensburg (KYAK) LBS (Liberty Broadcasting System) Saturday 3-5 p.m. (Replay) Sunday 12-1 p.m. (Replay) 630 AM Spokane/Couer d'Alene (KTW) 96.5 FM Spokane/Coeur d'Alene (KTW) Streaming live on the internet: https://www.acn.cc/ACN%20Listening%20Page.html
A Perth OnlyFans creator has commissioned a billboard and locals are not happy... but whats the actual issue? Is it any different from a Calvin Klein ad? I chat to Savannah 'W.C Savage' Fletcher about her billboard and the backlash she's received on her (brilliant) idea. To support Savannah and her Billboard, sign the petition HERE LINKS Follow @W.C.Savage on Instagram Follow @christianhull on Instagram Follow @listnrentertainment on Instagram CREDITS Host: Christian HullProducer: Natalie Turner Audio Imager: Nial Fernandes Social Producer: Amber Lowther Supervising Producer: Elise Cooper Managing Producer: Sam Cavanagh Find more great podcasts like this at www.listnr.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A Perth OnlyFans creator has commissioned a billboard and locals are not happy... but whats the actual issue? Is it any different from a Calvin Klein ad? I chat to Savannah 'W.C Savage' Fletcher about her billboard and the backlash she's received on her (brilliant) idea. To support Savannah and her Billboard, sign the petition HERE LINKS Follow @W.C.Savage on Instagram Follow @christianhull on Instagram CREDITS Host: Christian HullProducer: Natalie Turner Audio Imager: Nial Fernandes Social Producer: Amber Lowther Supervising Producer: Elise Cooper Managing Producer: Sam Cavanagh Support me!: https://www.patreon.com/christianhull
Brian O'Connell RTE Reporter
Pastor Lowell Nelson teaches about Exodus 39:32-40:38 "Making Priestly Garments, Tabernacle Erected and The Glory of the Lord" on 3/13/2022 at our Upper Room Bible Study. Exodus 39:32-40:38Making the Priestly Garments 32 Thus all the work of the tabernacle of the tent of meeting was finished. And the children of Israel did according to all that the LORD had commanded Moses; so they did. 33 And they brought the tabernacle to Moses, the tent and all its furnishings: its clasps, its boards, its bars, its pillars, and its sockets; 34 the covering of ram skins dyed red, the covering of badger skins, and the veil of the covering; 35 the ark of the Testimony with its poles, and the mercy seat; 36 the table, all its utensils, and the showbread; 37 the pure gold lampstand with its lamps (the lamps set in order), all its utensils, and the oil for light; 38 the gold altar, the anointing oil, and the sweet incense; the screen for the tabernacle door; 39 the bronze altar, its grate of bronze, its poles, and all its utensils; the laver with its base; 40 the hangings of the court, its pillars and its sockets, the screen for the court gate, its cords, and its pegs; all the utensils for the service of the tabernacle, for the tent of meeting; 41 and the garments of ministry, to minister in the holy place: the holy garments for Aaron the priest, and his sons' garments, to minister as priests. 42 According to all that the LORD had commanded Moses, so the children of Israel did all the work. 43 Then Moses looked over all the work, and indeed they had done it; as the LORD had commanded, just so they had done it. And Moses blessed them. 1 Then the LORD spoke to Moses, saying: 2 "On the first day of the first month you shall set up the tabernacle of the tent of meeting. 3 "You shall put in it the ark of the Testimony, and partition off the ark with the veil. 4 "You shall bring in the table and arrange the things that are to be set in order on it; and you shall bring in the lampstand and light its lamps. 5 "You shall also set the altar of gold for the incense before the ark of the Testimony, and put up the screen for the door of the tabernacle. 6 "Then you shall set the altar of the burnt offering before the door of the tabernacle of the tent of meeting. 7 "And you shall set the laver between the tabernacle of meeting and the altar, and put water in it. 8 "You shall set up the court all around, and hang up the screen at the court gate. 9 "And you shall take the anointing oil, and anoint the tabernacle and all that is in it; and you shall hallow it and all its utensils, and it shall be holy. 10 "You shall anoint the altar of the burnt offering and all its utensils, and consecrate the altar. The altar shall be most holy. 11 "And you shall anoint the laver and its base, and consecrate it. 12 "Then you shall bring Aaron and his sons to the door of the tabernacle of meeting and wash them with water. 13 "You shall put the holy garments on Aaron, and anoint him and consecrate him, that he may minister to Me as priest. 14 "And you shall bring his sons and clothe them with tunics. 15 "You shall anoint them, as you anointed their father, that they may minister to Me as priests; for their anointing shall surely be an everlasting priesthood throughout their generations." 16 Thus Moses did; according to all that the LORD had commanded him, so he did. 17 And it came to pass in the first month of the second year, on the first day of the month, that the tabernacle was raised up. 18 So Moses raised up the tabernacle, fastened its sockets, set up its boards, put in its bars, and raised up its pillars. 19 And he spread out the tent over the tabernacle and put the covering of the tent on top of it, as the LORD had commanded Moses. 20 He took the Testimony and put it into the ark, inserted the poles through the rings of the ark, and put the mercy seat on top of the ark. Continued https://ebible.com/nkjv/exodus/39/32/-/40/38
In this SpaceX update, we cover the recent developments at the launch site and production site. Ship 26 completed two cryogenic proof tests before being lifted from Pad A, and it has been rolled back to the production site for potential engine installation or further testing. A new LR1750 crane has been erected near the rocket garden, which could be used for constructing a potential new high/mega bay at the production site. Meanwhile, work on Booster 7 and the Orbital Launch Mount continues at the launch site. We also check on Ship 25 at the Massey Test Site and provide updates on the production of new ship and booster sections.
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The Daily Quiz Show | History | 9 Today's category is History, how many can you get right? Quiz content sourced from https://opentdb.com/ and https://the-trivia-api.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Episode 429 of the A Minute to Midnite Show. Tony is joined by Leo Hohmann, who exposes some startling information on recent events around the world, and on the ominous direction things are heading.
100722 UT Scott Nielson He Erected An American Flag And The Story That Followed by Kate Dalley
Let's dive deep into the mysterious Georgia Guidestones.The Georgia Guidestones were a granite monument in Elberton County, Georgia. Erected in 1980, by a name under the alias of R.C. Christian, and paid for by an anonymous group still unknown to the public. The guide stones have eight languages containing a message to help humanity upon the happening of an apocalypse. The Georgia Guidestones were destroyed by some type of explosion less than a week ago. Join us as we discuss the possibilities of this once ominous monument, and it's destruction. Instagram - thelivingsourcepodcast
After RED PILL EXPO 2020 on Jekyll Island Georgia Tim visited the Georgia Guidestones. Erected in 1980 in Elbert County, Georgia the monument is steeped in mystery as to this day nobody definitively knows who commissioned the construction of this monolithic structure. Documents from the bank that financed the monument read R. C. Christian, but this is either someone representing another organization, or an alias for that organization. The banker that underwrote the financing for the stones has kept the true identity of its funders a secret for some 40 years now. Check out the Documentary “Dark Clouds Over Elberton” for more information about the Guidestones and their construction. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ae4GArq8VNY ALL links can be found in the link tree: https://linktr.ee/TheLibertyAdvisor Join Tim's eMail list: https://forms.aweber.com/form/52/137208552.htm Join Tim's telegram chat: https://t.me/+GO3z458eqmAzMmNh Get the show on iTunes: https://bit.ly/libertyadvisor Podcasts: https://libertarianadvisor.podbean.com/ Livestreams: https://flote.app/TheLibertyadvisor You can find us on other content platforms by following the link below https://thelibertyadvisorshow.com/showlinks/ Learn more about Tim's services: www.thelibertyadvisor.com Free 15 min Investing Consultation www.bit.ly/booktimp Subscribe to our emergency text list and receive a free ebook “How it's Rigged – The Economy” Text LibertyAdvisor (one word, no spaces) to 71441
Founder's Disease: You started this amazing concept You busted your Butt to get it off the ground Build-out Hiring Training Recipes Marketing/Promotions EVERYTHING! After a while you are stalled out… You have reached limit Josh Kopel and David Dressler call this Founder's Fatigue Do you have the right systems in place so that you can Employ and Empower your people to run business. Do you have the ability to suppress your ego to allow this? You may need to get out of your own way… 3 Steps: Dig the earth! Built the Foundation! Erected and beautiful Building that will be seen and discussed for years to come! https://restauranttopia.com/text/ Join other independent restaurant owners and professionals on our VIP Text Club and get access to exclusive content, industry news, deals, insights, announcements, pro-tips, and more! join our mailing list and get our newsletter: https://lp.constantcontactpages.com/su/dojKlZ5 Enter your email and get the very latest from Restauranttopia - marketing tips and insights, announcements, pro tips, and more! And don't worry, we hate spam too! Check out the show notes at https://restauranttopia.com/category/podcast-episodes/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Restauranttopia/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/restauranttopia Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/restauranttopia/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9aRVuDUYsV370Rfh-QxDag Brian Seitz https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-j-seitz-j-d-19863616/ David Ross https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-ross-b6b39175/ Anthony Hamilton https://www.linkedin.com/in/anthony-hamilton-5805013a/
That's Cool News | A weekly breakdown of positive Science & Tech news.
Brilliant Planet plans cheap, gigaton-scale carbon capture using algae | New Atlas (01:08) Direct air carbon capture is currently far too costly – but this London company, Brilliant Planet, says it can do it at enormous scale for a tenth the price, using engineered algal blooms in ponds located near desert coastlinesGoals to de-acidify the ocean as well. Direct air capture will need to be part of the decarbonizing equation, and it'll need to be massively scalable, energy efficient and much, much cheaper than today's technology. The idea is to corral and harness the carbon-gobbling power of algae, replicating and maintaining the conditions that cause algal blooms in large, low-density outdoor ponds full of seawater.Algae is an inherently more efficient biological machine for carbon capture than trees or plants Its entire surface area is dedicated to photosynthesis and it doesn't waste resources creating trunks, roots or branches Another bonus is that it grows and proliferates extremely fast under the right conditions. Simplified process: Account for most of the energy this system requires A location is chosen, on flat desert land near a coast, A team of bio-prospectors starts filtering through samples of thousands of local strains of algae, selecting the ones that best fits the location. Thus, there are no introduced species, and the algae is already well adapted to the local climate and conditions. They set up a series of pumps, with which to bring seawater into a series of containers and ponds. In these right conditions they would monitor, they can grow a lot of algae. It also can deacidify the seawater. CEO Adam Taylorm said: “For every unit of water that passes through the system we de-acidify the equivalent of 5.1 units back to pre-industrial pH levels." Taylor says the company's already identified a "short list" of about half a million square kilometers of suitably flat coastal desert land. Potential for about two gigatons – two billion tons – of carbon capture In other words, it could cancel out more than 5.5 percent of humanity's annual global CO2 emissions, offsetting about half the total emissions of today's road transport sector. The company has tested its approach successfully in Oman, South Africa. Now they plan on moving to a large area, roughly 74 acres, in 2023. Musk's Starlink Internet Is Now Available in 32 Countries | CNET (07:14) SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet service has now rolled out to 32 countries, the company said Thursday. The hardware can ship "immediately" to areas where the service is available. Starlink is available in much of the US, Europe and New Zealand, in addition to chunks of Canada, Australia and South America. Many of the remaining countries and areas show availability coming in 2023. After a few years of launches, the company has amassed a constellation of more than 2,000 low Earth orbit satellites to provide satellite internet around the globe. Plants Have Been Grown in Lunar Soil For The First Time Ever | Good News Network (09:29) Food has been grown in soil collected from the moon for the first time, paving the way for human migration across the solar system.It is a first step towards producing food and oxygen on the moon, or during space missions. This all relates to NASA's Artemis program which will lay the foundation for a sustained colony on the lunar surface.Using the moon to validate deep space systems and operations—before embarking on a manned voyage to Mars. Co-author Professor Rob Ferl, talked about the future missions and growing food in the lunar soil:“For future, longer space missions, we may use the moon as a hub or launching pad. It makes sense that we would want to use the soil that's already there to grow plants … So, what happens when you grow plants in lunar soil, something that is totally outside of a plant's evolutionary experience? What would plants do in a lunar greenhouse? Could we have lunar farmers?” This University of Florida team planted thale cress seeds in lunar soil picked up by the Apollo 11, 12, and 17 crews between 1969 and 1972.Added water, a cocktail of nutrients, and light, and watched the edible spring salad green flourish. A tiny ‘lunar garden' was created from just a few teaspoons of the prized dirt specially loaned from NASA. The horticulturalists weren't sure if they would sprout, but nearly all of them did. This discovery opens the door to “resource independence” from Earth.Makes missions more sustainable on the lunar surface knowing you can start the growing process and feel that into more growth. Co-author Prof Anna-Lisa Paul talks on what the plants had to go through to grow:“At the genetic level, the plants were pulling out the tools typically used to cope with stressors, such as salt and metals or oxidative stress. So we can infer the plants perceive the lunar soil environment as stressful … Ultimately, we would like to use the gene expression data to help address how we can ameliorate the stress responses to the level where plants – particularly crops – are able to grow in lunar soil with very little impact to their health.” Follow-up studies will build on these questions and more. For now, the researchers are celebrating.. Denmark is launching a huge trio of 15-MW offshore wind turbines | Interesting Engineering (15:03) European Energy and Vestas, a wind turbine manufacturer, have greenlit the installation of the latter's flagship V236-15 MW offshore wind turbines in Denmark.Danish city of Frederikshavn "a focal point in the future of offshore wind technology", per a press release. The offshore wind turbines are planned to be built and operational by 2024, with further plans involving turning green power into green fuels that can help the maritime industry run on sustainable energy. Offshore wind energy is acquired by using the wind force produced on the high seas, where it reaches a greater and more consistent speed than on land due to the lack of obstructions. Erected on the seafloor Outfitted with cutting-edge technological advancements Vestas will design and build three of its newest offshore wind turbines at three of the five test spots presently being developed by European EnergyRoughly four kilometers off the coast Enabling Vestas to demonstrate the wind turbines' viability in an offshore environment Provide early know-how with installation methods and technician training Christian Gjerløv, Head of Offshore Wind Technology at Vestas, talked on the venture:“We are working on getting our flagship offshore wind turbine constructed here in Denmark and look forward to the joint efforts with European Energy to achieve the construction of the offshore wind turbines at the test site outside the city of Frederikshavn … The position will provide us with a unique opportunity to test the offshore wind turbines close to our factories and research facilities in Denmark prior to the serial production and export to the global market." SkySpecs watches wind turbines from above, lands $80M led by Goldman Sachs | TechCrunch (19:20) The company, SkySpecs, is using drones and AI to detect future equipment failures before they grind those giant turbine blades to a halt.Works with wind farms to monitor the health of turbine blades from above. Just locked down a fresh $80 million Series D funding round led by Goldman Sachs to expand its “geographic footprint” and software tools. SkySpecs builds its hardware and software in house, and already claims to monitor the health of close to half of all turbine blades in North America.71,666 turbines in the U.S. alone Since it launched in 2012, the firm says its drones have inspected more than 300,000 blades across dozens of countries. SkySpecs' larger goal is to “help displace fossil fuel generation” by making renewables more efficient, per a statement from the firm. Danny Ellis, CEO, SkySpecs, talks on renewables and his company:“Renewable energy is becoming a viable, attractive, and profitable energy source. In order to scale fast enough to meet the demand, the market needs experts and solutions to help them navigate the complexities of managing their assets. We help customers get the most out of the life of their assets by identifying solutions to their most complex problems … That's why we've developed a solution set that enables companies to manage and optimize their assets from the planning phase right through the full asset lifecycle, including predicting future failures, and prioritizing repairs in order to optimize their maintenance budgets.” SkySpecs is one among many drone businesses to focus on monitoring critical infrastructure.
The lifts weren't operational, so there weren't any visitors, but the commemorative coins had already been minted - so it was 6th May, 1889 that went down in history as the official opening of the Eiffel Tower, at that time the world's tallest man-made structure. Erected for the World's Fair to commemorate 100 years since the French Revolution, it was designed to be dismantled after a few years - not least because there was significant opposition to it from some of Paris's best known artists - yet it remains an iconic part of the Paris skyline to this day. In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how the committee came to choose this unusual structure for their centennial celebrations; compare Gustav Eiffel's elevated office space to Donald Trump's; and explain how radio transmissions saved the Tower from its intended fate… Further Reading: • ‘The artists who protested the Eiffel Tower' (Tour Eiffel Official Website): https://www.toureiffel.paris/en/news/130-years/artists-who-protested-eiffel-tower • ‘Gustave Eiffel's Secret Apartment – Paris, France' (Atlas Obscura, 2006): https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/gustave-eiffels-secret-apartment • ‘Deconstructing History: Eiffel Tower' (History, 2016): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UqHa1XJWODI For bonus material and to support the show, visit Patreon.com/Retrospectors We'll be back on Monday! Follow us wherever you get your podcasts: podfollow.com/Retrospectors The Retrospectors are Olly Mann, Rebecca Messina & Arion McNicoll, with Matt Hill. Theme Music: Pass The Peas. Announcer: Bob Ravelli. Graphic Design: Terry Saunders. Edit Producer: Emma Corsham. Copyright: Rethink Audio / Olly Mann 2022. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Marissa Peer's “I Am Enough Challenge” has been in 600 schools over Europe. It's now made its way into schools in the US is has taken the world by storm. She has a reach of over 65M people and has impacted the lives of many. • Our greatest pain comes from the lies we tell ourselves. • Tell yourself a better lie. • Most common lies people tell themselves. • You value what you earn. • The “bounce back” factor. • What Jane Fonda & Martha Stewart have in common. • People who are successful leave clues. • Success is how fast your get backs up. • Every day do something to move towards your goals. • Installing the cheerleader. TIME-STAMPED SHOW NOTES: [3:55] You'll never amount to anything. [7:15] When you get something without earning it, you don't see the value of it. [10:11] Bounce back factor. weidelonwinning.com/webinar