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The ProcrastiN8r Podcast
Lvl 4: The Labor Movement was a Lazy Movement and We Need to Bring It Back

The ProcrastiN8r Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 25:01


**This weekend is Labor Day weekend, a three day weekend, a “real” weekend. It's the last hoorah and unofficial end of summer.   Labor Day is misnamed and should be properly called “Lazy Day”. The Lazy Movement  wasn't about working harder or working more hours or working in tougher conditions, or heck, workign at younger ages. It was about working less and in more comfortable conditions and eliminating child labor. Labor Day was first proposed by Matthew Macguire in 1882, but it wasn't until over a decade later, in 1894 ,that President Grover Clevland signed and recognized it as a Federal Holiday. This was just a day after he sent 12,000 soldiers to slaughter protestors on the railroad. Thousands of lives lost and all we got was a day off once a year. Quite a weak apology if you ask me. The protestors were violent,; they started tearing up railroads and President Grover Clevland declared it a matter of national security to end it. A better way to protest would have been to just stop going to work, to embrace laziness and leisure, which is what we should do now. Originally the holiday was not about frisbees and barbecues but about speeches and rallies to better the working conditions for laborers. There was still beer kegs though. The American way to celebrate a holiday. It then took over two decades more to establish a federal 40 hour work week and the banning of child labor in 1916. Today, just about a hundred years later, the 40 hour work week is completely gone. We live in a “gig economy” where people are driving Uber or selling on eBay or doing other freelance and side “gigs” in order to compensate for the lack of fair wages and make just enough to get by and pay the bills -- put food on the table and a roof over their head. Accounting for inflation, the average cost of a slave was MORE THAN the total annual income of a minimum wage worker not to mention a slave  actually had health care provided for and received free room and board. Those are benefits a minimum wage worker do NOT receive at all. The current conditions of working are unfair and becoming further unbalanced. We need a new Labor Movement, or as more properly titled, a new Lazy Movement, because let's face it, the workers were being “lazy” back in the day, they wanted LESS work, not more of it, the very definition of laziness. We need to say enough is enough and stop going to work. Employers can't make money off products and services if none of their employees show up to work, if we all procrastinate with purpose for the greater good. This hard work mantra has negative effects on the mental health of individuals living in society, as we have seen recently in the Jacksonville , Florida Shooting at the Madden Tournament. The “go-getter” attitude, “get it now” schedule, and “let it out” emotional framework creates an environment where people are easily riled up and unable  to handle failure, then express it through violent means. We need too sit back and relax. We need to create a more calm, peaceful, and lazy envrionment. Don't go out shopping to hit the Labor Day Sale events; that's too much of a hassle to deal with, and it only makes you a slave to a system of “work hard now and buy harder later”. We need to say our money is our money and our time is our time. We want to do just enough work to get by and not do anything excessive, just like the workers pushed for in the 1800s. It's time for a Lazy Movement.** Link to Blog Post Mentioned

AURN News
Justice for Airman: Demand for Transparency in Florida Shooting

AURN News

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2024 1:53


Florida police have released video of the shocking killing of 23-year-old U.S. Airman Roger Fortson by Okaloosa County Police. The incident, which took place last Friday, has sparked outrage and demands for accountability.  Civil rights attorney Ben Crump addressed the media on Thursday along with Fortson's family. Crump says Fortson, an active duty senior airman, was at home when deputies responded to a call mistakenly targeting his apartment.  During the incident, Fortson, feeling threatened after a series of aggressive knocks and receiving no answer, armed himself with a legally owned firearm. Moments later, deputies announced themselves and when he opened the door, shot him six times upon seeing him armed.  A witness connected with Fortson via FaceTime reported that he was alone and not causing any disturbance. His death raises critical questions about law enforcement's use of force. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

San Angelo LIVE! Daily News
Fatal Crash Victims Identified

San Angelo LIVE! Daily News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 14:02


Today on LIVE! Daily News, the Texas Department of Public Safety has identified the man involved in a fatal crash on FM 2105. Angelo State University unveiled the new Housley Tower, and a thief has taken a plea deal. We also give a weather update for the entire week through Friday. Our interviewee for this edition is Vickie Sanders with West Texas Lighthouse for the Blind. Finally, our sports guy Ryan Chadwick talks about Central's Jaylen Dehoyos signing to Midland University. Today's Top Stories: Here's What's Happening at Lake Nasworthy (04/29/2024)Man Killed in Saturday's FM 2105 Crash Identified (04/29/2024)Troubled Defendant Takes Plea Deal for Stealing & Crashing Semi-Truck (04/29/2024)Driverless Semis To Start Hauling Freight Along Texas Highways (04/29/2024)CV PAWS Still Needs Help Processing Those 80 Dogs (04/29/2024)Migrating Birds in Texas Need Your Help (04/29/2024)Angelo State University Dedicates Housley Tower (04/29/2024)San Angelo State Park Events For May (04/29/2024)Polo on the Concho: A West Texas Celebration of Equestrian Sport Returns to Fort Concho Parade Ground (04/29/2024)Arrests for Speed & Speeding Top Sunday Booking Report (04/29/2024)No. 8 Belles Break Program Record in 4x100-meter Relay (04/29/2024)Houston Texans WR Tank Dell Wounded in Florida Shooting (04/28/2024)Severe Thunderstorms Dump Much Needed Rain (04/28/2024)Arrests for Stalking, Terroristic Threats Top Saturday Booking Report (04/28/2024)‘What We Do Is Amazing' Goodfellow AFB Shows Kids What Deployment Is All About (04/27/2024)Duel of 2 F-250s Leads to Fatal Crash (04/27/2024)NWS: Stormy Saturday Night...Maybe (04/27/2024)Burkett Endorses Griffith for Police Chief (04/27/2024)Assaulting a Cop & Resisting Arrest Top Friday Booking Report (04/27/2024)No. 24 Rams Down No. 5 WT to Claim Series Opening Win (04/27/2024)Pipeline Rupture Sparks Early Morning Fire (04/26/2024)

Suburban Boys
SNEAKO IS LEAVING THE RED PILL & BREAKING DOWN THE RACIST FLORIDA SHOOTING

Suburban Boys

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2023 39:01


Join the Discord https://discord.gg/B7QfufGZ8Z PATREON https://www.patreon.com/suburbanboyspodcast Twitch SB LIVE https://www.twitch.tv/suburbanboyslive

Heartland POD
August 30, 2023 - Heartland Pod Politics Wednesday - 2024 Elections and Government News

Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 26:31


Florida Gov and GOP 2024 also-ran Ron DeSantis looks to lead in wake of violence and major hurricane | Former SC Gov and UN Ambassador under President Trump, Nikki Haley is having a moment, kind of | President Biden names first 10 drugs subject to negotations with Medicare | 60th anniversary of the March on WashingtonSong playsIntro by hostWelcome to Heartland Pod Wednesday!Support this show and all the work in the Heartland POD universe by going to heartlandpod.com and clicking the link for Patreon, or go to Patreon.com/HeartlandPod to sign up. Membership starts at $1/month, with even more extra shows and special access at the higher levels. No matter the level you choose, your membership helps us create these independent shows as we work together to change the conversation.Alright! Let's get into it: Hurricane in Florida / Shooting in FloridaPOLITICO: DeSantis knows how to handle a hurricane. The racist shooting poses a bigger dilemma.A racially-motivated Jacksonville tragedy, couple with a looming storm, pose big tests for the governor.Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, center and his wife Casey, right, bow their heads during a prayer.Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (center) and his wife Casey bow their heads during a prayer at a vigil for the victims of Saturday's mass shooting on Sunday, Aug. 27, 2023, in Jacksonville. | John Raoux/AP PhotoBy KIMBERLY LEONARD08/28/2023 04:14 PM EDTUpdated: 08/28/2023 05:12 PM EDTMIAMI — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' handling of back-to-back crises — a racist mass shooting and a potentially catastrophic hurricane — could help burnish his image as a can-do, effective governor or further damage his standing with Black Americans who have grown livid over his policies.Already, DeSantis' attempts to show leadership in the immediate aftermath of the Saturday shooting were poorly received by some Black lawmakers, Democrats and residents in Florida. In the hours after a 21-year-old white man killed three Black Floridians near a historically Black college in Jacksonville, several state Democrats blamed DeSantis, who is running for president, for creating an environment, through policies such as loosening gun laws and ending diversity programs, that helped hate fester.DeSantis has condemned the shooting and said “targeting people due to their race has no place in this state of Florida.” But attending a Sunday night vigil in Jacksonville, he was jeered and booed by people who had come out to remember the victims. At one point, a Jacksonville Democratic councilmember stepped in to calm the crowd, urging people to “put parties aside.” Later during the event, a pastor took issue with DeSantis describing the gunman as a “scumbag,” and said he should have used the word “racist” instead.The vigil stood in contrast to press conferences in Tallahassee on Sunday and Monday, when DeSantis appeared visibly tired but spoke authoritatively about preparations overseeing Tropical Storm Idalia, which is forecast to become a major hurricane. He canceled campaign appearances and fundraisers, and told Floridians Sunday they could “rest assured” because “I am here” and would “get the job done.”DeSantis says politics won't interfere with storm response“He needs to be in Florida for as long as it takes,” said Adam Hollingsworth, the former chief of staff to Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), who served as governor before DeSantis. “His presidential ambitions could be a distraction, but first Gov. DeSantis has to dance with the one who brought him. Right now, that's the people of Florida.”Though the shooting and looming storm are taking DeSantis away from campaigning for president following a high-profile debate, they'll also allow voters and donors to see the governor at work leading the hurricane response, letting the public assess how he balances multiple priorities, displays empathy and projects leadership in moments of tragedy. At the same time, the shooting has shined a spotlight on DeSantis' record and vulnerabilities on race, one of the areas for which he has faced the most criticism and controversy as governor.In times of tragedy, opponents are “looking for a misstep,” acknowledged Craig Fugate, who led Florida's emergency division under Gov. Jeb Bush and oversaw FEMA during the Obama administration.“They're looking for something to go wrong — particularly for the opponents; they're looking for something to capitalize on,” Fugate said.DeSantis began his Monday morning hurricane preparedness press conference by first addressing the mass shooting. He pledged $1 million in security funding to Edward Waters University, a historically Black university that the gunman is believed to have initially targeted, as well as $100,000 toward a charity for the families of the victims. He also deployed state law enforcement officials to evaluate the campus' security and make additional recommendations, pledging to continue to assist in the “days and weeks ahead.”But many Democrats in the state panned his response. They pointed to laws he enacted in Florida to carve up representation in a Black-majority district that eventually led a Black Democratic congressman, Rep. Al Lawson, to lose his seat. They also pointed to his policies, approved by the GOP-led Legislature, banning what he calls “critical race theory” in schools, as well as his defense of a public school curriculum on Black history that required middle-school teachers to instruct that enslaved people “developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”Florida Minority House Leader Fentrice Driskell, a Black Democrat of Tampa, said it was “absolutely” the right decision for DeSantis to attend the vigil but added that she didn't want to give him a pass.“The reality is, a number of wrongheaded decisions about the state of Florida, and who we are as a people, I think contributed to this charged political climate that resulted in the violence that we saw,” Driskell said in an interview.The accused gunman, identified as Ryan Palmeter, had a racist manifesto and drew swastikas on his weapons. He also had a history of mental illness, having been involuntarily institutionalized for emergency mental health services as a teenager, police said.During DeSantis' vigil remarks Sunday, Democratic state Rep. Angela Nixon, who represents the district where the shooting took place, could be seen glaring at the governor in videos and photos widely shared on social media.“We feel the same,” the NAACP wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.AXIOS: Biden set to name first 10 drugs subject to Medicare negotiations.The blood-thinners Eliquis and Xarelto are among the 10 prescription medicines the Biden administration will seek lower Medicare prices for as part of a new program allowing the government to negotiate drug prices for America's seniors.Why it matters: The administration's landmark announcement Tuesday detailed the first-ever set of drugs subject to Medicare price negotiations, a longtime Democratic priority included in last year's Inflation Reduction Act over drug companies' fervent objections.Other drugs up for negotiation include:Jardiance, a diabetes drug.Januvia, also for diabetes.Farxiga, another diabetes drug.Entresto, for heart failure.Enbrel, for arthritis and psoriasis.Imbruvica, a blood cancer drug.Stelara, used on psoriasis, Crohn's disease and other illnesses.Fiasp, also used for diabetes.Of note: Insulin is already subject to a $35 monthly co-pay cap for Medicare prescription drug plan enrollees under a different provision of the IRA.State of play: The drugs' manufacturers will have just over a month to decide whether to participate in negotiations — which the industry is battling in court — or sit out the process, at the risk of significant financial penalty.Drugmakers who refuse to negotiate with Medicare face an excise tax of up to 95% of their U.S. sales, or they can withdraw their drugs from Medicare and Medicaid coverage, shutting them out of huge markets.What they're saying: "The cancer moonshot will not succeed if this administration continues to dismantle the innovation rocket we need to get there," Stephen Ubl, CEO of industry trade group PhRMA, said in a statement following the release of the list.Zoom out: The medicines up for negotiation were chosen from a list of the 50 products with the highest spending in Medicare's prescription drug program, Part D.The selected drugs accounted for 20% of Part D prescription costs between June 1, 2022 and May 31, 2023, according to the Health and Human Services Department.Some of the highest-cost Medicare drugs were not eligible for this round of negotiations, either because they still have market exclusivity, they're the only option for a rare disease or another factor.The prices won't take effect before the 2024 elections, but Democrats are expected to tout the negotiations, along with other drug cost reforms in the IRA, as part of their campaign messaging.What's next: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will submit price offers to the drug companies by Feb. 1, with negotiations continuing until next August.CMS will publish the drugs' final maximum fair prices by Sept. 1, 2024, and prices will go into effect in 2026.What we're watching: Ongoing legal challenges could draw out or halt the negotiation process.Drugmakers and allied groups have already filed eight lawsuits against the Medicare drug negotiation process, and more lawsuits could follow Tuesday's announcement.President Biden and his health officials committed this morning to fighting industry lawsuits."Let me be clear: I am not backing down. There is no reason why Americans should be forced to pay more than any developed nation for life-saving prescriptions just to pad Big Pharma's pockets," Biden said in a statement.Nikki HaleyDAILY BEAST: Is it time for Republicans to take Nikki Haley seriously?According to a new Emerson College Polling survey, “Haley saw the largest increase in support among Republican candidates, jumping 5 points from 2 percent to 7 percent” following last week's debate.“Nikki Haley's support increased from about 2 percent to 9 percent among voters over 50 [years of age],” said Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling, “while Trump's support dropped within this age group from about 56 percent to 49 percent after the debate.”Republican Debaters Agreed on One Thing: They Hate Vivek RamaswamyThis jump is modest, inasmuch as it still leaves Haley in the single digits. But it's also no outlier. According to a poll conducted by The Washington Post, FiveThirtyEight, and Ipsos released last Thursday, voters were persuaded to at least give her a second look. “Pre-debate, 29 percent of GOP primary voters who watched the debate said they were considering voting for her,” according to the survey, “and that increased to 46 percent after the debate.”So how did she do it? Haley caught our attention by being first to hit Trump (from the right), when she criticized him for “adding eight trillion to our debt.” This surprised everyone, demonstrated courage, and put to rest the notion that she is merely running to be Trump's vice president.Haley also staked out a strong position on abortion. While stressing her pro-life beliefs, she made the pragmatic case that a federal abortion ban would require 60 votes. Instead, Haley urged Republicans to focus on consensus issues, like banning late-term abortions, making sure contraception is widely available, and supporting adoption as an alternative.Trump's former veep, Mike Pence, who supports a 15-week federal ban on abortion, took umbrage with this. “Nikki, you're my friend, but consensus is the opposite of leadership,” Pence scolded. (As the Never Trump conservative writer Jonah Goldberg has pointed out on his podcast, building consensus is often a key attribute of leadership.)The Republican Debate Was a Futile Pudding Wrestling MatchThis exchange, like others during that same debate, made it clear that in a general election Nikki Haley would likely be Joe Biden's most challenging opponent.Having served as governor of South Carolina and ambassador to the United Nations, she has the experience needed for the office. She also has sharp elbows. (“You have no foreign policy experience and it shows,” she told Vivek Ramaswamy.)At 51, Haley would present a stark contrast in terms of generational change, assuming that Joe Biden was still the Democratic nominee. And (unlike others) she is not staking out an abortion position that might render her effectively unelectable, should she become the Republican nominee.Haley (who frequently cites Margaret Thatcher's line, “If you want something said, ask a man. If you want something done, ask a woman”) was the only woman on that stage. Her identity, temperament, and policy positions could help chip away at the gender gap that has only grown in recent years.The obvious caveat here is that all of these things would make Haley a great candidate to beat Joe Biden if she somehow wins the Republican nomination. But that's an awfully big “if.”Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: GOP Debate Showed How Not to Pick a PresidentHaley's answer to this is to make the electability argument: “We have to face the fact that Trump is the most disliked politician in America,” she—and she, alone—averred during last week's debate.But will that dog hunt?Right now, the electability argument isn't persuading Republicans to jump off the Trump bandwagon, even though that argument is likely the only one that could ever work. At some point (perhaps after Donald Trump goes on trial and it's too late), Republicans might be convinced that, as entertaining as Trump is, he simply can't win.Based on all of this, you might expect me to suggest that it's time to clear the field—to rally every freedom conservative, Reagan Republican, and Never Trump conservative to coalesce around Haley as the GOP's last, best hope.Some of my colleagues are already there. The New York Times columnist David Brooks, for example, declared last week that “Wednesday's debate persuaded me that the best Trump alternative is not [Tim] Scott, it's Nikki Haley.”But here's my problem. Haley has been all over the map for years now. One day she's courageous and impressive, and the next day she's a pathetic Trump toady.Haley is a political chameleon, which makes me reluctant to ever trust her again.Trump and Ramaswamy Show Us How the Worst Get to the TopOn the other hand, anyone looking for purity (as it pertains to Trump) can also dismiss Pence and Chris Christie—both of whom supported Trump until Jan. 6—and a vast swath of today's leading Never Trumpers. As the Good Book says, “Who then can be saved?”Nikki Haley's got a long way to go before she clears the not-Trump lane of candidates, much less taking on the final boss himself. And though nothing has yet made a dent in Trump's domination of the GOP voter base, he's never run as a candidate on trial before. But the whole 91-felony indictment thing might just do the trick.If Haley can prove herself by stringing together two or three of these kinds of courageous performances—in which she not only characterizes Trump as the guy who already lost to Biden, but also that she's as real a conservative as any of the other contenders—there is a path to success.It's hardly guaranteed, and as I've noted, courage comes and goes with Haley. But in the “Matt Lewis primary,” you can count me among the 46 percent who are now considering voting for her.Read more at The Daily Beast.SEMAFOR: Nikki Haley's abortion message could catch on in the GOPMorgan Chalfant and Kadia GobaRepublicans worried about Democrats leveraging abortion (again) to make gains in 2024 want GOP candidates to take a page out of Nikki Haley's debate prep playbook.Haley dismissed the idea that a 15-week national abortion ban could pass through Congress. Instead, she argued the focus should be on finding “consensus” around banning “late-term abortions,” sustaining access to contraception, allowing doctors who don't support abortion refuse to perform them, and preventing women who get abortions from being penalized.Defeated Michigan gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon bluntly said on Fox News that Republicans would lose the messaging war in 2024 unless they followed Haley's “perfect response” in the debate.“No one really understood how important abortion would be in 2022 because no one had run in a post-Roe world, so we suddenly got attacked, viciously attacked, by the Democrats, and it is a winning message for them,” she said. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer highlighted Dixon's opposition to rape exceptions in abortion bans in their contest, which took place alongide a ballot initiative guaranteeing abortion rights that passed by a wide margin.“The only candidate on the stage that talked about how we should protect women and not demonize them was Nikki Haley,” Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C. said Sunday on CBS of the first GOP presidential debate. “And that is a message that we have to carry through. We have to be pro-woman and pro-life. You cannot go after women and attack them because they make a choice that you don't like or don't agree with.”And Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., who represents a district President Biden won in 2020, told Semafor at a watch party last week: “She had probably the best-packaged message on abortion that I've heard, I want to say, in my entire adult life.”Haley might have won herself some fans, but her position wasn't a favorite within the anti-abortion movement, which has rallied around a 15-week federal ban as a minimum ask for candidates.

The Heartland POD
August 30, 2023 - Heartland Pod Politics Wednesday - 2024 Elections and Government News

The Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 26:31


Florida Gov and GOP 2024 also-ran Ron DeSantis looks to lead in wake of violence and major hurricane | Former SC Gov and UN Ambassador under President Trump, Nikki Haley is having a moment, kind of | President Biden names first 10 drugs subject to negotations with Medicare | 60th anniversary of the March on WashingtonSong playsIntro by hostWelcome to Heartland Pod Wednesday!Support this show and all the work in the Heartland POD universe by going to heartlandpod.com and clicking the link for Patreon, or go to Patreon.com/HeartlandPod to sign up. Membership starts at $1/month, with even more extra shows and special access at the higher levels. No matter the level you choose, your membership helps us create these independent shows as we work together to change the conversation.Alright! Let's get into it: Hurricane in Florida / Shooting in FloridaPOLITICO: DeSantis knows how to handle a hurricane. The racist shooting poses a bigger dilemma.A racially-motivated Jacksonville tragedy, couple with a looming storm, pose big tests for the governor.Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, center and his wife Casey, right, bow their heads during a prayer.Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (center) and his wife Casey bow their heads during a prayer at a vigil for the victims of Saturday's mass shooting on Sunday, Aug. 27, 2023, in Jacksonville. | John Raoux/AP PhotoBy KIMBERLY LEONARD08/28/2023 04:14 PM EDTUpdated: 08/28/2023 05:12 PM EDTMIAMI — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' handling of back-to-back crises — a racist mass shooting and a potentially catastrophic hurricane — could help burnish his image as a can-do, effective governor or further damage his standing with Black Americans who have grown livid over his policies.Already, DeSantis' attempts to show leadership in the immediate aftermath of the Saturday shooting were poorly received by some Black lawmakers, Democrats and residents in Florida. In the hours after a 21-year-old white man killed three Black Floridians near a historically Black college in Jacksonville, several state Democrats blamed DeSantis, who is running for president, for creating an environment, through policies such as loosening gun laws and ending diversity programs, that helped hate fester.DeSantis has condemned the shooting and said “targeting people due to their race has no place in this state of Florida.” But attending a Sunday night vigil in Jacksonville, he was jeered and booed by people who had come out to remember the victims. At one point, a Jacksonville Democratic councilmember stepped in to calm the crowd, urging people to “put parties aside.” Later during the event, a pastor took issue with DeSantis describing the gunman as a “scumbag,” and said he should have used the word “racist” instead.The vigil stood in contrast to press conferences in Tallahassee on Sunday and Monday, when DeSantis appeared visibly tired but spoke authoritatively about preparations overseeing Tropical Storm Idalia, which is forecast to become a major hurricane. He canceled campaign appearances and fundraisers, and told Floridians Sunday they could “rest assured” because “I am here” and would “get the job done.”DeSantis says politics won't interfere with storm response“He needs to be in Florida for as long as it takes,” said Adam Hollingsworth, the former chief of staff to Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), who served as governor before DeSantis. “His presidential ambitions could be a distraction, but first Gov. DeSantis has to dance with the one who brought him. Right now, that's the people of Florida.”Though the shooting and looming storm are taking DeSantis away from campaigning for president following a high-profile debate, they'll also allow voters and donors to see the governor at work leading the hurricane response, letting the public assess how he balances multiple priorities, displays empathy and projects leadership in moments of tragedy. At the same time, the shooting has shined a spotlight on DeSantis' record and vulnerabilities on race, one of the areas for which he has faced the most criticism and controversy as governor.In times of tragedy, opponents are “looking for a misstep,” acknowledged Craig Fugate, who led Florida's emergency division under Gov. Jeb Bush and oversaw FEMA during the Obama administration.“They're looking for something to go wrong — particularly for the opponents; they're looking for something to capitalize on,” Fugate said.DeSantis began his Monday morning hurricane preparedness press conference by first addressing the mass shooting. He pledged $1 million in security funding to Edward Waters University, a historically Black university that the gunman is believed to have initially targeted, as well as $100,000 toward a charity for the families of the victims. He also deployed state law enforcement officials to evaluate the campus' security and make additional recommendations, pledging to continue to assist in the “days and weeks ahead.”But many Democrats in the state panned his response. They pointed to laws he enacted in Florida to carve up representation in a Black-majority district that eventually led a Black Democratic congressman, Rep. Al Lawson, to lose his seat. They also pointed to his policies, approved by the GOP-led Legislature, banning what he calls “critical race theory” in schools, as well as his defense of a public school curriculum on Black history that required middle-school teachers to instruct that enslaved people “developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”Florida Minority House Leader Fentrice Driskell, a Black Democrat of Tampa, said it was “absolutely” the right decision for DeSantis to attend the vigil but added that she didn't want to give him a pass.“The reality is, a number of wrongheaded decisions about the state of Florida, and who we are as a people, I think contributed to this charged political climate that resulted in the violence that we saw,” Driskell said in an interview.The accused gunman, identified as Ryan Palmeter, had a racist manifesto and drew swastikas on his weapons. He also had a history of mental illness, having been involuntarily institutionalized for emergency mental health services as a teenager, police said.During DeSantis' vigil remarks Sunday, Democratic state Rep. Angela Nixon, who represents the district where the shooting took place, could be seen glaring at the governor in videos and photos widely shared on social media.“We feel the same,” the NAACP wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.AXIOS: Biden set to name first 10 drugs subject to Medicare negotiations.The blood-thinners Eliquis and Xarelto are among the 10 prescription medicines the Biden administration will seek lower Medicare prices for as part of a new program allowing the government to negotiate drug prices for America's seniors.Why it matters: The administration's landmark announcement Tuesday detailed the first-ever set of drugs subject to Medicare price negotiations, a longtime Democratic priority included in last year's Inflation Reduction Act over drug companies' fervent objections.Other drugs up for negotiation include:Jardiance, a diabetes drug.Januvia, also for diabetes.Farxiga, another diabetes drug.Entresto, for heart failure.Enbrel, for arthritis and psoriasis.Imbruvica, a blood cancer drug.Stelara, used on psoriasis, Crohn's disease and other illnesses.Fiasp, also used for diabetes.Of note: Insulin is already subject to a $35 monthly co-pay cap for Medicare prescription drug plan enrollees under a different provision of the IRA.State of play: The drugs' manufacturers will have just over a month to decide whether to participate in negotiations — which the industry is battling in court — or sit out the process, at the risk of significant financial penalty.Drugmakers who refuse to negotiate with Medicare face an excise tax of up to 95% of their U.S. sales, or they can withdraw their drugs from Medicare and Medicaid coverage, shutting them out of huge markets.What they're saying: "The cancer moonshot will not succeed if this administration continues to dismantle the innovation rocket we need to get there," Stephen Ubl, CEO of industry trade group PhRMA, said in a statement following the release of the list.Zoom out: The medicines up for negotiation were chosen from a list of the 50 products with the highest spending in Medicare's prescription drug program, Part D.The selected drugs accounted for 20% of Part D prescription costs between June 1, 2022 and May 31, 2023, according to the Health and Human Services Department.Some of the highest-cost Medicare drugs were not eligible for this round of negotiations, either because they still have market exclusivity, they're the only option for a rare disease or another factor.The prices won't take effect before the 2024 elections, but Democrats are expected to tout the negotiations, along with other drug cost reforms in the IRA, as part of their campaign messaging.What's next: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will submit price offers to the drug companies by Feb. 1, with negotiations continuing until next August.CMS will publish the drugs' final maximum fair prices by Sept. 1, 2024, and prices will go into effect in 2026.What we're watching: Ongoing legal challenges could draw out or halt the negotiation process.Drugmakers and allied groups have already filed eight lawsuits against the Medicare drug negotiation process, and more lawsuits could follow Tuesday's announcement.President Biden and his health officials committed this morning to fighting industry lawsuits."Let me be clear: I am not backing down. There is no reason why Americans should be forced to pay more than any developed nation for life-saving prescriptions just to pad Big Pharma's pockets," Biden said in a statement.Nikki HaleyDAILY BEAST: Is it time for Republicans to take Nikki Haley seriously?According to a new Emerson College Polling survey, “Haley saw the largest increase in support among Republican candidates, jumping 5 points from 2 percent to 7 percent” following last week's debate.“Nikki Haley's support increased from about 2 percent to 9 percent among voters over 50 [years of age],” said Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling, “while Trump's support dropped within this age group from about 56 percent to 49 percent after the debate.”Republican Debaters Agreed on One Thing: They Hate Vivek RamaswamyThis jump is modest, inasmuch as it still leaves Haley in the single digits. But it's also no outlier. According to a poll conducted by The Washington Post, FiveThirtyEight, and Ipsos released last Thursday, voters were persuaded to at least give her a second look. “Pre-debate, 29 percent of GOP primary voters who watched the debate said they were considering voting for her,” according to the survey, “and that increased to 46 percent after the debate.”So how did she do it? Haley caught our attention by being first to hit Trump (from the right), when she criticized him for “adding eight trillion to our debt.” This surprised everyone, demonstrated courage, and put to rest the notion that she is merely running to be Trump's vice president.Haley also staked out a strong position on abortion. While stressing her pro-life beliefs, she made the pragmatic case that a federal abortion ban would require 60 votes. Instead, Haley urged Republicans to focus on consensus issues, like banning late-term abortions, making sure contraception is widely available, and supporting adoption as an alternative.Trump's former veep, Mike Pence, who supports a 15-week federal ban on abortion, took umbrage with this. “Nikki, you're my friend, but consensus is the opposite of leadership,” Pence scolded. (As the Never Trump conservative writer Jonah Goldberg has pointed out on his podcast, building consensus is often a key attribute of leadership.)The Republican Debate Was a Futile Pudding Wrestling MatchThis exchange, like others during that same debate, made it clear that in a general election Nikki Haley would likely be Joe Biden's most challenging opponent.Having served as governor of South Carolina and ambassador to the United Nations, she has the experience needed for the office. She also has sharp elbows. (“You have no foreign policy experience and it shows,” she told Vivek Ramaswamy.)At 51, Haley would present a stark contrast in terms of generational change, assuming that Joe Biden was still the Democratic nominee. And (unlike others) she is not staking out an abortion position that might render her effectively unelectable, should she become the Republican nominee.Haley (who frequently cites Margaret Thatcher's line, “If you want something said, ask a man. If you want something done, ask a woman”) was the only woman on that stage. Her identity, temperament, and policy positions could help chip away at the gender gap that has only grown in recent years.The obvious caveat here is that all of these things would make Haley a great candidate to beat Joe Biden if she somehow wins the Republican nomination. But that's an awfully big “if.”Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: GOP Debate Showed How Not to Pick a PresidentHaley's answer to this is to make the electability argument: “We have to face the fact that Trump is the most disliked politician in America,” she—and she, alone—averred during last week's debate.But will that dog hunt?Right now, the electability argument isn't persuading Republicans to jump off the Trump bandwagon, even though that argument is likely the only one that could ever work. At some point (perhaps after Donald Trump goes on trial and it's too late), Republicans might be convinced that, as entertaining as Trump is, he simply can't win.Based on all of this, you might expect me to suggest that it's time to clear the field—to rally every freedom conservative, Reagan Republican, and Never Trump conservative to coalesce around Haley as the GOP's last, best hope.Some of my colleagues are already there. The New York Times columnist David Brooks, for example, declared last week that “Wednesday's debate persuaded me that the best Trump alternative is not [Tim] Scott, it's Nikki Haley.”But here's my problem. Haley has been all over the map for years now. One day she's courageous and impressive, and the next day she's a pathetic Trump toady.Haley is a political chameleon, which makes me reluctant to ever trust her again.Trump and Ramaswamy Show Us How the Worst Get to the TopOn the other hand, anyone looking for purity (as it pertains to Trump) can also dismiss Pence and Chris Christie—both of whom supported Trump until Jan. 6—and a vast swath of today's leading Never Trumpers. As the Good Book says, “Who then can be saved?”Nikki Haley's got a long way to go before she clears the not-Trump lane of candidates, much less taking on the final boss himself. And though nothing has yet made a dent in Trump's domination of the GOP voter base, he's never run as a candidate on trial before. But the whole 91-felony indictment thing might just do the trick.If Haley can prove herself by stringing together two or three of these kinds of courageous performances—in which she not only characterizes Trump as the guy who already lost to Biden, but also that she's as real a conservative as any of the other contenders—there is a path to success.It's hardly guaranteed, and as I've noted, courage comes and goes with Haley. But in the “Matt Lewis primary,” you can count me among the 46 percent who are now considering voting for her.Read more at The Daily Beast.SEMAFOR: Nikki Haley's abortion message could catch on in the GOPMorgan Chalfant and Kadia GobaRepublicans worried about Democrats leveraging abortion (again) to make gains in 2024 want GOP candidates to take a page out of Nikki Haley's debate prep playbook.Haley dismissed the idea that a 15-week national abortion ban could pass through Congress. Instead, she argued the focus should be on finding “consensus” around banning “late-term abortions,” sustaining access to contraception, allowing doctors who don't support abortion refuse to perform them, and preventing women who get abortions from being penalized.Defeated Michigan gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon bluntly said on Fox News that Republicans would lose the messaging war in 2024 unless they followed Haley's “perfect response” in the debate.“No one really understood how important abortion would be in 2022 because no one had run in a post-Roe world, so we suddenly got attacked, viciously attacked, by the Democrats, and it is a winning message for them,” she said. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer highlighted Dixon's opposition to rape exceptions in abortion bans in their contest, which took place alongide a ballot initiative guaranteeing abortion rights that passed by a wide margin.“The only candidate on the stage that talked about how we should protect women and not demonize them was Nikki Haley,” Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C. said Sunday on CBS of the first GOP presidential debate. “And that is a message that we have to carry through. We have to be pro-woman and pro-life. You cannot go after women and attack them because they make a choice that you don't like or don't agree with.”And Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., who represents a district President Biden won in 2020, told Semafor at a watch party last week: “She had probably the best-packaged message on abortion that I've heard, I want to say, in my entire adult life.”Haley might have won herself some fans, but her position wasn't a favorite within the anti-abortion movement, which has rallied around a 15-week federal ban as a minimum ask for candidates.

Look Forward
Episode 343: Civics, How Do They Work?! (Trump Trial Date, Florida Shooting, Vivek on Jan 6th)

Look Forward

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 61:32


This week on Look Forward, Jay and Brad return to discuss a 2024 trial date is set for former President Donald Trump over charges related to attempting to overturn the 2020 election results, occurring just before the pivotal Super Tuesday, amid his other legal battles. Meanwhile, in a separate trial, ex-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows is testifying, hoping to shift jurisdiction from state to federal court over claims that his efforts were linked to his official position, potentially affecting similar future cases. On the healthcare front, the Biden administration plans to negotiate prices for 10 high-expenditure Medicare drugs, facing resistance from pharmaceutical giants. In Florida, a racial attack near a Dollar General in Jacksonville, which coincided with MLK's 60th anniversary speech, reignited debates on gun control, with Governor DeSantis facing criticism at a related vigil. Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy has voiced contrasting views on the 2020 election's certification, suggesting comprehensive reforms. Interestingly, Ramaswamy's early political skepticism at Harvard in 2003, during a dialogue with Rev. Al Sharpton, has been spotlighted as he navigates critiques about his own political inexperience in the 2024 race.StoriesTrump trial set for the day before Super TuesdayMark Meadows takes the stand in GeorgiaBiden reveals 10 prescription drugs that will be negotiated by the government for pricingMass shooting in Florida exposes DeSantis and the right current situationVivek should have to take a civics test to votePast Vivek comes out against present day VivekThis Week in StupidI HATE BIDEN'S AMERICA (video)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/5941717/advertisement

Improve the News
August 29, 2023: Prigozhin death confirmation, Florida shooting, and France abaya ban

Improve the News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2023 26:22


Facts & Spins for August 29, 2023 Top Stories: Russia confirms Prigozhin's death, Zimbabwe's opposition claims “massive fraud” in election, Three are killed in a racially motivated mass shooting in Jacksonville, Florida, Libya's Foreign Minister is dismissed after meeting with her Israeli counterpart, The US Commerce Secretary calls for stability during a China visit, Foxconn's billionaire founder enters the Taiwan presidential race, A US court cancels a hearing on a Mexican suit against gun makers,  A Texas judge blocks a ban on transgender procedures for minors, France plans to ban students from wearing the Islamic abaya in state schools, and Idalia bears down on Cuba — and eyes a Florida landfall as a major hurricane. Sources: https://www.verity.news/

EpochTV
NTD Evening News (Aug. 28): Trump's Federal Election Case Trial Set for March 4; Suspect Identified in Jacksonville, Florida, Shooting

EpochTV

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 47:27


Federal Judge Tanya Chutkan has set the trial date for the case dealing with former President Donald Trump's efforts to challenge the 2020 election results for March 4, 2024. In a separate case, President Trump and others indicted in Fulton County, Georgia, on Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations charges will appear for arraignment before the Fulton County Superior Court on Sept. 6.   Police have identified the man who shot and killed three people at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida, on Aug. 26 before taking his own life. Ryan Christopher Palmeter, 21, who was white, killed three black individuals at the discount store near Edward Waters University.   Tropical Storm Idalia is slated to strengthen into at least a Category 3 hurricane before slamming into Florida's Gulf Coast on the morning of Aug. 30, according to the latest forecast model released by the National Hurricane Center.   ⭕️ Watch in-depth videos based on Truth & Tradition at Epoch TV

Al Jazeera - Your World
Libya suspends FM after talks with Israel, Biden condemns Florida shooting

Al Jazeera - Your World

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 3:03


Broeske and Musson
8.28.2023 - FLORIDA SHOOTING: Shooter on Racist Killing Spree

Broeske and Musson

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 36:00


Jacksonville, Florida shooter, fueled by racism, kills three black people at a Dollar General storeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Dale Jackson Show
Dale discusses Tabatha Isner and Doug Jones' stupid theories on the Florida shooting, and listeners accusations of racism against Dale - 8-28-23

The Dale Jackson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 17:46


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Dale Jackson Show
Dale and fmr. U.S. Attorney Jay Town discuss the Florida shooting - 8-28-23

The Dale Jackson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 20:00


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

THINKING OUT LOUD with Bens Farel
Florida shooting leaves at least 4 dead, including shooter at Jacksonville Dollar General store

THINKING OUT LOUD with Bens Farel

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2023 21:45


Florida shooting leaves at least 4 dead, including shooter at Jacksonville Dollar General store and a pregnant mother was shot and killed by officer in Ohio --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damitriess-farel/support

THINKING OUT LOUD with Bens Farel
Mother charged after 'incomprehensible' texts reveal she helped son plan deadly Florida shooting

THINKING OUT LOUD with Bens Farel

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 32:28


Mother charged after 'incomprehensible' texts reveal she helped son plan deadly Florida shooting: plus more news --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damitriess-farel/support

AP Audio Stories
Florida shooting puts 2 officers in the hospital in critical condition, police chief says

AP Audio Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2023 0:39


AP correspondent Jackie Quinn reports on Police Shooting Orlando.

Parrot Gaming Productions
#179 Ke$ha, Katholics and K-Aliens something...

Parrot Gaming Productions

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2023 82:11


I got story about Ke$sha b/c I wanna poop on her, The crazy Florida Shooting and I wanted to talk about a Christian Talk Show I listened to, how outta shape I am, Reddit questions. I give a mini update on how everything love life and life in general is stagnating... But I'm getting my workouts in, games and work are going well!!! So there's that. The Florida Shooting Ke$sha and Walker Hayes Aliens Stuff Kurzgesagt – The Dark Forest and The Great Filter ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠NCAA and NFL Podcast⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - I'm the Co-Host of the NFL Friday episode with Marky Mark!!! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠File Under Entertainment⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - I'm the Co-Host too now come out for the Music but stay for ERIC!!! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube Stuff⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - Come check out my Escape from Tarkov Videos and live streams from the past! I've got a ton of previous content backed up here! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Sucias are my Favorite⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - You know Gallo right? - Well here's his Archive If you wanna chat with me, send me a text? 715-600-3619! Just toss me your name and what your thoughts are. I may have lost the password to my email, so here's my Google Voice number, don't call. Text. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jared-and-the-flock/message

The Dennis Michael Lynch Podcast
(EP.104): Liberal Media Lies About Florida Shooting

The Dennis Michael Lynch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 44:00


Trump vs. DeSantis branding of Memorial Day The shooting in Hollywood, Florida Gavin Newsom's response Steven Crowder's response Lululemon firing employees who try to stop thieves Crazy LGBTQ apparel at Kohl's

The Ryan Gorman Show
Hour 3 - Law Change Coming for DeSantis Presidential Bid, New Bryan Kohberger Case Development, Legal Analysis of Florida Shooting Incidents

The Ryan Gorman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2023 27:34


In the 7a hour, NewsRadio WFLA Anchor Chris Trenkmann runs through today's top stories, including Florida Republicans trying to change the "resign-to-run" law ahead of a possible DeSantis 2024 presidential bid. Tom Brady is threatening to sue over an AI-generated impersonation of him. The defense for Bryan Kohberger claims a surviving roommate has evidence that would clear his name. NewsRadio WFLA Legal Analyst Felix Vega analyzes two Florida shooting incidents, including a University of Tampa student who mistakenly tried to get in the wrong car.

RAD Radio
03.21.23 RAD 04 Road Rage Fun Edition & News From Florida - Shooting A Car

RAD Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 22:58


Road Rage Fun Edition & News From Florida - Shooting A CarSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Officer Tatum Show
TV station identifies slain reporter among the 3 killed – including a child – in a Florida shooting spree; US President Joe Biden stumbles, falls again; Trump points fingers at the Biden administration in East Palestine visit; Anti-LGBT+ ‘attacks'

The Officer Tatum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 113:38


The Officer Tatum Show is now available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, and SalemPodcastNetwork.com.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

AP Audio Stories
Florida mass shooting suspect killed during police pursuit

AP Audio Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2023 0:50


AP correspondent Jennifer King reports on Florida Shooting.

CNN News Briefing
10 PM ET: Florida shooting, police beating fallout, Cindy Williams dies & more

CNN News Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 4:00


We start with a drive-by shooting in Lakeland, Florida. Plus, two more Memphis police officers and three fire department personnel have been relieved of their duties following the death of Tyre Nichols. We'll tell you how the White House is responding to Ukraine's requests for fighter jets. We now know when Covid-19 national and public health emergencies in the US are set to end. Police say a man accused of kidnapping a woman and beating her unconscious is on the run. Lastly, actress Cindy Williams, who's known for her role on the sitcom, “Laverne & Shirley,” has died.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

True Crime Daily The Podcast
Dads in road rage gun battle shoot daughters; Bodybuilder suspected of killing, burning ex-wife

True Crime Daily The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 57:54


This Week on True Crime Daily The Podcast: Fathers acting like children leave two children with gunshot wounds in a road rage incident. Plus, a mother found dismembered in a burn pile on her ex-husband's property after filing a domestic abuse injunction against him. Alexandra Guio joins host Ana Garcia.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

4DMBOX.COM
DISGUSTING Shooter MURDERS Father | Tamarius David | Miami Florida Shooting | Newyorkpost | Police

4DMBOX.COM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2021 11:34


projectupland.com On The Go
Ambition to Tradition - Georgia-Florida Shooting Dog Handlers Club

projectupland.com On The Go

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2020 11:38


The missing element is the foundation laid down by black bird dog handlers who stood humbly in the shadows of many of the greatest white dog men and field trial dogs on the American field circuit. From Man Rand and Peck Kelly to Leroy Clayton, Albert Cannon Sr., and Malichi Kalip, a number of great dog men have done everything from managing plantations, to breaking horses to pointers and pointers to bobwhites, to scouting for some of America's renowned talents at every level of field trial history. I once found myself looking through old photos of field trialers, their dogs, and their horses, and every so often I would catch glimpses of black men hidden in the shadows of an already black and white photograph. I wondered who these men were, but seldom if ever was a description left about these figures in the background.

PM Tampa Bay
'Stand Your Ground' Investigation Underway in Florida Shooting

PM Tampa Bay

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 12:46


Ryan and Felix discuss a shooting in Sanford, FL, that's being investigated as a possible instance of "stand your ground," even though the current information doesn't appear to meet that criteria.

Plodcast
Ep. 34 - Gun Control Basics, Idea of Decline, Akrasia

Plodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2018


Tune in to hear Pastor Wilson talk about the Florida school shooting and gun control basics. Then he plugs Idea of Decline in Western History, and wraps things up with a talk about the Greek word “Akrasia”. Happy Plodding!  Show Notes: Gun Control Basics government collapsed during Florida Shooting people naturally cry out to their gods (government) people are crying out to the same government that failed them the right to keep and bear was not about deer hunting, it was adopted so that people could fight against the rise of tyranny from government agents 1.) trump is literally hitler 2.) we should surrender all our guns to him Idea of Decline in Western History written by Arthur Herman  how it came about that people assume things are falling apart you would think with the doctrine of evolution this would not be the case read this as a companion to your study of eschatology Akrasia means excess or lack of control used twice in NT (1. Cor. 7:5, Matt. 23:25) one of the reasons that nonbelievers, even nonbelievers in positions of influence and importance, cannot control themselves is that self-control is a fruit of the spirit they can control one thing, but not the other the Spirit gives us the ability to be self-controlled across the board

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers
Christian Witness and Christian Responsibility in Our Fast-Changing World

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018 40:18


The Christian Outlook -- March 3, 2018 Tim Winter of Parents Television Council and Craig Roberts take a close look at whether Hollywood and the entertainment industry will admit culpability in sowing seeds of violence in light of the recent Florida shooting. Pastor David Ireland of Christ Church in New Jersey joined Kevin McCullough to discuss how our kids need family, the church and more specifically that our boys need men. Mark Elfstrand invites Owen Strachan on to take a close look at a Newsweek report on the controversy surrounding rap artist and poet, Jackie Hilly Perry, and how she hasn't had the warmest reception at Harvard University following her Christian conversion and witness. Thabiti Anyabwile, a pastor at Anacostia River Church in Southeast Washington, D.C. shares his testimony with Georgene Rice and his book, The Gospel for Muslims. David Bahnsen, a Christian in the wealth management industry, discusses insights from his book, Crisis of Responsibility: Our Cultural Addiction to Blame and How You Can Cure It. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Townhall Review | Conservative Commentary On Today's News
The Tragic Mistakes that Led to the Florida Shooting

Townhall Review | Conservative Commentary On Today's News

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2018 40:08


Townhall Review -- March 3, 2018 In the aftermath of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, Michael Medved shares details on how the failure of Broward County Sherrif's Office, in particular that of their leader, Sherriff Scott Israel, was years in the making. Dennis Prager examines the mindset behind the Left demanding gun legislation that would have stopped nothing. Mike Gallagher turns to National Review columnist Andrew McCarthy to make sense of why Democrates are comparing the Russians meddling in the 2016 election to the invasion of Pearl Harbor and even 9/11. Hugh Hewitt invites Peter Peterson, the dean of Pepperdine University Graduate School of Public Policy, to share about the shocking upset of Dianne Feinstein not being able to garner the support of her own Democratic party in California. Larry Elder exposes the lunacy of banning of semi-automatic rifles and ultimately the repeal of the 2nd amendment. Hugh Hewitt speaks with David Dewhirst, Chief Litigation Counsel for the Freedom Foundation, on the labor union case, Janus v. AFSCME, in the U.S. Supreme Court. Wrapping up the show, Dennis Prager returns to dismantle a piece from Bill Press of The Hill on letting highschool students direct policy on guns.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The NP Dude
Episode 126 – Using Non-FDA Approved Equipment in Your Practice and My Response to the Florida School Shooting!

The NP Dude

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2018 28:42


On this episode of the NP Dude podcast I provide perspective on using non-FDA approved equipment in your practice and what the implications if an injury we’re to occur.  I also give my opinion on the recent shooting in Florida.  Have a listen, share the show and keep on giving ratings.  Use the Amazon Affiliate link […] The post Episode 126 – Using Non-FDA Approved Equipment in Your Practice and My Response to the Florida School Shooting! first appeared on The NP Dude.

The Harland Highway
932 - Dr. Debbie Thymer takes SEX calls. How much Sex do we need? Florida shooting horror!

The Harland Highway

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2018 56:50


Dr. Debbie Thymer takes SEX calls. How much Sex do we need? Florida shooting horror! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The More Perfect Union
Teachers Packing Heat (Ep. 142)

The More Perfect Union

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2018 46:00


This episode of The More Perfect Union podcast looks at the idea of arming public school teachers, the latest in the Trump-Russia collusion investigation, and the possibility of Ohio Gov. John Kasich challenging Trump in 2020.

Freedomizer Radio Network
Just Before Dawn w/ Host Will Wacholtz

Freedomizer Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2018 178:00


Tonight, your host, WIll Wacholtz and co-host Tricia, will be discussing the Broward county, Parkland Florida shooting in more depth with new developments about the incident and the ongoing after effects. Also, we will be doing an in depth report on a story that the cabal owned mainstream media refuses to pick up on a large scale. Dr. Timothy J. Cunningham, a team lead with CDC's Division of Population Health, has been missing for over a week, according to Atlanta police. This is after he had anonymously reported that this year's Flu epidemic was caused in large part to the FLU VACCINE!!! Phone lines open for listener participation.

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers
Billy Graham, the Hope of the Gospel and Heartache After Florida Shooting

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2018 39:46


The Christian Outlook -- February 24, 2018. Albert Mohler and Grant Walker, the author of the biography "America's Pastor: Billy Graham and the Shaping of a Nation" remember the impactful legacy of Billy Graham. While on with Don Kroah, David French of the National Review, takes a look at the political rhetoric surrounding the horrific shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida last week. Frank Sontag invites Victor Marx, founder of "All Things Possible" ministries, to share about the spiritual and moral issues at work in last week's massacre. While on with Mark Elfstrand, Josh Weidman points to the horrors of Columbine as the reason he is today a pastor. Finishing out the program are excerpts from a powerful message from Billy Graham delivered in 1958 in San Fransisco entitled, "The Offense of the Cross."See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers
Frank Sontag and Victor Marx on Spiritual Warfare [Full Interview]

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2018 23:24


Frank Sontag invites Victor Marx, founder of "All Things Possible" ministries, to share about the spiritual warfare and moral issues at work in last week's massacre.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand
"Dear Radio..."

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2018 126:17


White House town hall meeting about Florida, Kobe Bryant's MuseCage, How many guns are in the US? and Marco Rubio faces angry highschoolers

Greg & The Morning Buzz
Florida Shooting Victims Dad Speaks.

Greg & The Morning Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2018


The best of Greg & The Morning Buzz. Listen weekdays 5:30am to 10am.

Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Jack Cashill Weighs In - Feb 22, 2018 - Hr 4

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2018 54:57


Jack Cashill discussing the Florida Shooting and the ensuing debate over school shootings.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Townhall Review | Conservative Commentary On Today's News
Hugh Hewitt: Agony in the Wake of Florida Shooting

Townhall Review | Conservative Commentary On Today's News

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2018 1:00


How can the slaughter of high school students be so polarizing? It is agonizing beyond any writer’s ability to convey, but a political football to begin another round of pro- and anti-Trump throwdowns? I didn’t see that coming out of the sorrow from the Florida shooting. It was like an instant replay of reactions that we witnessed after the massacre in Sutherland Springs, Texas and every awful massacre since Columbine. It has left commentary without a purpose. If everyone — always — makes the same demands, nearly instantly; without any room for consideration of the specifics of the murderer’s motivation and history, it’s hard to imagine what “change” will avail. A place to start for us would be hearings. I got the idea from my NBC colleague Chuck Todd. I put it to Education Secretary DeVos and Attorney General Sessions. They both agreed. If hearings occur, we need one more promise: for everyone to actually hear the viewpoints presented. Let’s stop the outrage and just listen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Kelly Manno Show
Ep 119 - A boob flew out at the Olympics. Did you see it? Also, Kellys sticker on her car is 8 months expired.

The Kelly Manno Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2018 57:29


This show is kind of a hot mess express. After doing zero show prep, the crew jumps in and starts with the after effects of the Florida school shooting. We jump over to Kellys illegal car and some of our best stories getting pulled over. A boob flew out of a girls costume at the Olympics. And Kelly would rather stab herself in the eye with a fork than raise teenagers.

PowerLunchHour
Ep161 Wakanda Forever

PowerLunchHour

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2018 111:28


In this weeks episode we talk about Black Panther, All-Star Weekend, Florida Shooting and much more. ***Listener Discretion Advised, Very Mature Content***

Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Open Lines On Florida Shooting - Feb 19, 2018 - Hr 3

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2018 52:22


Discussing the Florida school shooting - guns, mental health, and more.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The A League Podcast
The A League Episode 68: Black Panther Review, Florida Shooting, LeBron "Shut up and Dribble"

The A League Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2018 82:14


The A League Episode 68 Black Panther Review 1:27- 20:13 Bubba Wallace 20:14- 44:00 Florida Shooting/Gun Laws 45:00 -1:02:21 LeBron James "Just Dribble & shut up" 1:02:22- 1:07:24 All-Star Weekend 1:07:25 - 1:21:10

CANTO TALK RADIO SHOW
The Democrats and immigration, Mueller and the Florida shooting

CANTO TALK RADIO SHOW

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2018 16:00


We will look at the immigration debate after it failed in the US Senate........plus the aftermath of the Florida school shooting......the Mueller indictments.....happy # 82 Jim Brown........and other stories..... Please follow my blog or Twitter.

930in716
Florida shooting fallout 930in716 February 16, 2018

930in716

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 14:22


Mark Simone Show
Hour 1 - Bernadette Castro, Florida Shooting, Gun Control

Mark Simone Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2018 33:39


Peter Boyles Show Podcast
More On The Florida Shooting - Feb 15, 2018 - Hr 2

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2018 58:35


Jerry Corsi discusses the Florida shooting. Arapahoe DA George Brauchler discusses the Florida shooting with perspective as the prosecutor of the Aurora theater killer.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Peter Tilden
2/15/2018 -11AM: Florida shooting/profiling of suspected Florida shooter Nikolas Cruz

Peter Tilden

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2018 31:56


Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles Show - Sept 15, 2016 - Hr 1

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2016 54:27


Open Lines - What about Brandon Marshall and his "Florida Shooting" story - wow!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.