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What does the bible tell us about immigration? God's Word gives us insights into almost every area of life, and even the seemingly obscure scriptures turn out to be some of the most profound. God is always testing and inviting us to be students of The Word and not of our emotions. Join Pastor Jack as he delves into the topic of immigration through the lens of God's Word. (00:00) Immigration and Biblical Truth(07:42) Borders and Biblical Truth(18:10) The Importance of Borders in Society(28:22) Border Security and National Sovereignty(41:50) Community Vouching for Immigration Integration CONNECT WITH PASTOR JACK:Website: https://jackhibbs.com/ Instagram: http://bit.ly/2FCyXpO Facebook: https://bit.ly/2WZBWV0 YouTube: https://bit.ly/437xMHn DAZE OF DECEPTION BOOK:https://jackhibbs.com/daze-of-deception/ Did you know we have a Real Life Network? Sign up for free for more exclusive content:https://bit.ly/3CIP3M99
The provision of care for dependents young and old is one of the great challenges of the modern age.The last 60 years have seen significant shifts in family and working lives with greater choice and autonomy bringing great gains for human freedom.Yet many private and public challenges and dilemmas remain. The social care system faces ever-rising demands and pressures. The vital skilled work of care – for the young, the elderly, the sick – remains undervalued and under-invested in. And women remain over-represented in the domain of care, in both the domestic realm and in the public economy.Amidst challenging demographics, declining birth-rates, and the evolving dynamics of modern family life, can we achieve a policy settlement that respects gender equality, meets the rising social need for care and attention, and properly rewards and recognises those who provide it? How do we provide greater support to the networks of relationships that care relies upon?Join David Goodhart and Vicky Pryce at the RSA to debate care, equality, and social progress in the next decade of the 21st century.SpeakersDavid Goodhart, Head of Demography, Immigration & Integration at Policy ExchangeVicky Pryce, economistBecome an RSA Events sponsor: https://utm.guru/ueemb Follow RSA Events on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thersaorg/ Follow the RSA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theRSAorg Donate to the RSA: https://thersa.co/3XPiI1k Like RSA Events on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theRSAorg/ Listen to RSA Events podcasts: https://bit.ly/35EyQYU Join our Fellowship: https://www.thersa.org/fellowship/join
Ben Habib is a former Brexit Party MEP and former Reform UK MP candidate. He joins Winston to discuss his recent debate at the Oxford Union “Is Islam compatible with Democracy?”. We discuss Islam, Islam in Britain, immigration and integration.Ben also explains the profound damage done to Britain by Tony Blair and New Labour, continued by Sir Keir Starmer. How can it be solved?After recording Ben officially parted ways with Reform UK. He expresses his concerns with the party and what he thinks it needs to do next.All this and much more…-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------To see more exclusive content and interviews consider subscribing to my substack here: https://www.winstonmarshall.co.uk/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA:Substack: https://www.winstonmarshall.co.uk/X: https://twitter.com/mrwinmarshallInsta: https://www.instagram.com/winstonmarshallLinktree: https://linktr.ee/winstonmarshall----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapters 00:00 - Introduction 01:27 - Oxford Union Debate on Islam and Democracy04:13 - Challenges of Islam in Western Democracies24:57 - Impact of Immigration & The Role of Free Speech in Democracy27:21 - The Economic and Cultural Argument Against Immigration 35:26 - The Impact of Tony Blair's Policies 40:07 - The Future of British Politics & Reform UK 1:16:09 - The Role of Nigel Farage and the Future of Sovereignty 1:20:41 - Final Thoughts and Reflections Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.louiseperry.co.ukMy guest today is David Goodhart, founder of Prospect magazine and Head of Demography, Immigration & Integration at Policy Exchange. David's new book, 'The Care Dilemma: Caring Enough in the Age of Sex Equality,' is the final instalment of a trilogy of books on class, economics, and the family that began with 'The Road to Somewhere' and 'Head Hand Heart…
“Let us say to the immigrant not that we hope he will learn English, but that he has got to learn it. Let the immigrant who does not learn it go back. He has got to consider the interest of the United States or he should not stay here. He must be made to see that his opportunities in this country depend upon his knowing English and observing American standards. The employer cannot be permitted to regard him only as an industrial asset.”—Theodore Roosevelt, February 1916What does it mean to be American? What role should immigrants play in shaping our national identity? Teddy Roosevelt left us desperately needed perspectives on immigration and Americanization, and how imperative it was for immigrants to learn English and assimilate in order to create a truly unified America. Our conversation doesn't stop at history, however. We'll also have a meaningful discussion on how you can support the ongoing growth and development of our podcast. Discover the benefits of becoming a Buzzsprout subscriber, and how your contribution can help us continue delivering thoughtful, engaging content. We know how critical it is to share these important conversations, and we're asking for your help to spread the word. So, tune in for a fascinating exploration of the past that helps us understand our present.Support the showThe American Soul Podcasthttps://www.buzzsprout.com/1791934/subscribe
The Title 42 immigration restriction is a major issue in Texas, but has some implications here in Milwaukee too.
Task force on immigration integration restarted by Biden. Opioid crackdown prevents patients' access to essential drugs. US to announce breakthrough on clean energy generation. You can subscribe to Five Minute News with Anthony Davis on YouTube, with your preferred podcast app, ask your smart speaker, or enable Five Minute News as your Amazon Alexa Flash Briefing skill. Subscribe, rate and review at www.fiveminute.news Five Minute News is an Evergreen Podcast, covering politics, inequality, health and climate - delivering independent, unbiased and essential world news, daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Series Immigration & Integration - Madinah Document - part 1 (Khutbah 8). Eng. Baker Mohammed
Series Immigration & Integration - Madinah Market- part2 (Khutbah 6) Br. Baker Mohammed
We have a chat with Maria Isaeva, a long time resident of Singapore who recently left the country, about identity, about integration, and what it means to call Singapore home.
In this episode we invited Nakul Gote to prove to everybody that there is an unlikely but nevertheless very real link between immigration and the sacredness of cows. Yes, that was totally the plan. We started by telling some stories about our personal experiences as immigrants in Germany. We discuss issues regarding integration, within the host culture but especially adapting to the multicultural ambient of academia in our new host country. That naturally took us to talk about the so-called "beef ban" imposed in some regions of India. Things got slightly controversial when tried to dig into the "true reasons" of why cows are regarded as sacred in Hinduism. Oh well, we suppose that controversy is encoded in the very DNA of sacred items. Find us in: Our website: https://tillthebottom.com/home/ Our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMXM2Vc0d21wjDt5chP26sQ?view_as=subscriber Our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Tillthebottom/ Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tillthebottom
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
Sociologist Mary C. Waters of Harvard University paints a comprehensive and compelling picture of the immigrant experience in the United States. As the chair of a National Academy of Sciences report on immigration integration, Waters explains that while many aspects of immigrants’ lives improve over time and across generations, there are other significant challenges that remain. She highlights the key issues in this conversation with John Skrentny, the co-director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. Series: "Center for Comparative Immigration Studies " [Public Affairs] [Education] [Show ID: 31810]
TOPICIntertwined Crises in America IN THIS EPISODE [2:48] Manuel talks about his background and motivation [4:05] Spatial, political and intellectual segregation in America [5:57] Manuel talks about the three big crises in the US [9:23] Diverse, Dynamic Epistemic Communities [11:58] Examples of where these communities have come together [17:02] The key to economic growth [23:28] One change that would lead to better communities [24:08] One action listeners can take to build a better future [24:17] What does the world look like 30 years from now? GUESTDr. Manuel Pastor is Professor of Sociology and American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California (USC), where he also serves as the Director of USC’s http://dornsife.usc.edu/pere (Program for Environmental and Regional Equity) (PERE) and Co-Director of USC’s http://dornsife.usc.edu/csii (Center for the Study on Immigration Integration). He is the author of multiple books, including most recently, http://growingtogethermetro.org/ (Equity, Growth, and Community: What the Nation Can Learn from America’s Metro Areas), which he co-authored with Chris Benner from UC Santa Cruz. TAKEAWAY QUOTES“We are in a place where people don’t agree on the basic facts. An epistemic communities are about creating opportunities for people to know together so they can grow together. The thing that we sort of left out in this book is that it’s important for them to be diverse and dynamic. You can’t be surrounded simply by like-minded or like-raced people. You need to make sure that who is at the table is coming from different sectors, different communities, et cetera to be able to understand what it is that weaves us together and where our mutual interests lie.” “It’s basically a nerd fest. We consider ourselves to be nerds for social justice and we did this for a couple of different reasons. Essentially, it was born when Angela Glover Blackwell and I—she’s the head of PolicyLink—were at a meeting at the White House and we realized that while we had pretty good ideas about what to do, few people were paying attention because we didn’t have the kind of data that we needed behind the ideas. This created a way to sort of democratize data.” “Making sure that people understand that there is more than one leverage point; that we need to move the needle on multiple things at the same time; that we need to make sure that people are reentering from the criminal justice system successfully; that we are dealing with immigration reform. We are dealing with gender inequality. We need to get away from the idea that there is a silver bullet for our problems.” RESOURCEShttp://infiniteearthacademy.com/podcast/affordable-housing-and-employment-patterns-in-the-san-francisco-bay-area/ (Infinite Earth Radio Ep. 011 Affordable Housing and Employment Patterns in the San Francisco Bay Area with Dr. Chris Benner) http://dornsife.usc.edu/PERE (USC Program for Environmental and Regional Equity (PERE)) http://dornsife.usc.edu/CSII (USC Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration (CSII)) http://NationalEquityAtlas.org (National Equity Atlas Tool) http://www.lgc.org/ (Local Government Commission) THANKS FOR LISTENING Thanks so much for joining us. Have some feedback or an idea you’d like to share? Leave a note in the comment section below. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave an honest review for Infinite Earth Radio on iTunes. Ratings and reviews are super helpful and greatly appreciated as it helps us expose this show to a wider audience – plus, we read each and every one of them!
Listen to The Michael Imhotep Show, Thur. Aug., 20th, 10pm-12midnight EST (7pm – 9pm PST) with host Michael Imhotep of The African History Network. We'll share the interview that Michael Imhotep did with Dr. Claud Anderson of “Hidden Colors 2” and author of “Black Labor, White Wealth and “PowerNomics” from this morning. We discussed “The Problem with Immigration, Social Integration and Civil Rights for Black Americans”. CALL IN WITH Questions/Comments at 1-888-669-2281. POST YOUR COMMENTS. WE MAY READ THEM ON AIR. Listen online at http://tunein.com/radio/Empowerment-Radio-Network-s199313/ or by downloading the "TuneIn Radio" app to your smartphone and search for "Empowerment Radio Network" or at www.AfricanHistoryNetwork.com. 1) Dr. Claud Anderson of “Hidden Colors 2” was interviewed by Michael Imhotep this morning. He talked about the negative impact that Immigration and Social Integratation has on Black Americans, why it's time for Black Americans to stop chasing Civil Rights and start chasing resources, where the Civil Rights Movement went wrong and more. 2) This date in African American History – The arrival of 20 some odd Africans in Jamestown, VA. in 1607. We'll share an interview with Dr. David Imhotep author of “The First Americans Were Africans: Documented Evidence”. He deals with the fact that African people have been in the U.S. for 51,700 years and are indigenous to North, Central and South America.