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ElizaRAT hits India IT outage impacts Washington courts Alleged Snowflake hacker arrested Thanks to today's episode sponsor, Vanta As third-party breaches continue to rise, companies are increasingly vigilant, which means more time spent on manual security reviews. With Vanta Questionnaire Automation, security & compliance teams can complete security reviews up to 5 times faster, giving you time back to focus on running your security & compliance programs. Over 8,000 global companies like ZoomInfo, SmartRecruiters and Noibu use Vanta to save time on security reviews. Visit vanta.com to learn more about Questionnaire Automation.
In today's episode, we look at 3 big stories:- Angrez people are hot for Indian government bonds- Bangladesh is not paying electricity bills to India- It's like UPI but for loansWe also send out a crisp and short daily newsletter for The Daily Brief. Put your email here and we'll make you smart every day. Subscribe here.You can also watch this podcast in video version on our YouTube channel.
About State Bank of India: It is hard to imagine an elephant dancing, but if that elephant is the State Bank of India, SBI, as popularly known, you are in for a surprise/ delight. SBI is India's biggest bank, with 450M+ customers. As an Indian, you may be able to rattle 100s of challenges and inefficiencies of SBI, but its contribution towards India's growth is second to none. SBI has groomed the finest talents and established financial services and products that has paved the path for other Indian banks. Though established in 1955, but its creation dates back to the Mughals and the East India Company. There are several case studies about SBI cards, insurance and other financial products, but a less talked about aspect is its talent. There are innumerable examples of SBI chairmen who, in an unassuming manner, have led the bank through its ups and downs to where it stands today. Now in the 21st century, with the advent of Neo Banks, SBI has brought YONO (You Only Need One), its digital app play, to the arena and reason I looked into SBI's fascinating history and YONO is because I read about YONO in Weekly Olio, an online weekly newsletter written by Mohit & Peeyush. So, I invited them to co-host this conversation with me. We kick this off with Mohit & Peeyush introducing themselves and talking about the exceptional growth they have witnessed with the newsletter. Follow & Subscribe: WhatsApp: https://bit.ly/TOP_WA2 YouTube: https://bit.ly/TOP_Youtube LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/TOP_LinkedIn Twitter: https://bit.ly/TOP_Twitter1 Instagram: https://bit.ly/TOP_Insta
Linking the Travel Industry is a business travel podcast where we review the top travel industry stories that are posted on LinkedIn by LinkedIn members. We curate the top posts and discuss with them with travel industry veterans in a live session with real audience members. You can join the live recording session by visiting BusinessTravel360.com and registering for the next event.Your Hosts are Riaan van Schoor, Ann Cederhall and Aash Shravah.Stories covered on this session include -The story of the week surely is from SAS - Scandinavian Airlines who were planning to implement the ill-advised "wholesale" model, then postponed it by six months and now abandoning it altogether.We will be joined on Monday by Cameron Bengert from Clyde Travel Management to talk about their #ndc developments.In a fascinating post by Will Horton, it seems that US airlines this week helped put before the White House a draft order that would require foreign airlines to also avoid Russian air space. Kuwait Airways airlines partners up with Malaysia Airlines.The Indian aviation investment just keeps growing, with news that investments in airports will reach $12b. Staying with India: It seems they are not looking at increasing air traffic rights for the United Arab Emirates, despite calls by Gulf carriers, and wants its domestic airlines to offer non-stop long haul flights. Fintech platform Brex adds travel booking services courtesy of Spotnana and therefore takes on SAP Concur amongst others. In another very interesting story by Will Horton we hear how Korea is stepping in to plug the gap in US - China air traffic in light of frosty relations between the two countries.Despite recently partnering up with British Airways, South African based airline Airlink is also teaming up with Etihad.Space News - SpaceX & T-Mobile partner.You can subscribe to this podcast by searching 'BusinessTravel360' on Google Podcast, Apple Podcast, iHeart, Pandora, Spotify, Alexa or your favorite podcast player.This podcast was created, edited and distributed by BusinessTravel360. Be sure to sign up for regular updates at BusinessTravel360.com - Enjoy!Support the show
Every Sunday, Gerard and Laurent discuss last week's news in the #energytransition. This week:- The financing of investment in the Energy Stationary Storage is simply exceptional (US, UK, Australia, India)- It's “Game Over” for coal in Australia- Price of Green Certificates goes ballistic
Heya Cryptozens, Tonight's Show: Weekend Leftovers (Treasury, Tether, MiCA, Kazakhstan, India) It's 10 PM Pacific time and the date is October 8th, 2022. Welcome back to the Crypto Overnighter. My name is Nikodemus, I'll be your host as we take a nightly look at the crypto, nft and metaverse space and the industry that surrounds it. And keep in mind, nothing in this show should ever be considered financial advice. Email: nick@cryptoovernighter.com Salem Friends of Felines: https://sfof.org/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CryptoCorvus1
POT TV – WATCH CCN Newsletter LIVE at 4PM PT on POT.TV. Hosts Anil Sthankiya and Neil Magnuson discussed headlines from the world of cannabis culture. Cannabis Day Protest. What's going on in Vancouver, BC? What's going on where you live? Tired of bad cannabis headlines? Weed may treat fatigue. Thailand's making big moves on marijuana. Quebec cannabis workers on strike. Organigram settles with medical patients. The news is the Cannabis Act is an overbroad and arbitrary violation of the right to peaceful autonomy. Cannabis is a naturally occurring plant, and is not inherently harmful. No penalty for peaceful pot practices should be permissible by law. Show notes: Cannabis Day - July 1rst, 2022 - Thornton Park - Vancouver, BC Zodiac Hemp Co. Louisiana Gov. Edwards Signs A Bundle Of Cannabis Bills Cannabis May Treat Fatigue, Study Suggests How cannabis-fed chickens may help cut Thai farmers' antibiotic use The Complicated World of Medical Cannabis in India ‘It's Past Time To Legalize': Hundreds Of Brazilians March To Legalize Marijuana And ‘Life' Quebec cannabis corporation workers walk off the job in one day strike Thai Cancer Patient Welcomes Cannabis Legalization Growing Cannabis Is Officially Legal in Thailand Organigram settling class action that alleged pot tainted with pesticides Cannabis Day – July 1st, 2022
What makes a city liveable? Who should benefit the most from the growth of a city—financial investors or its residents? On this episode, Sheela Patel, director of SPARC, and Ireena Vittal, former partner at McKinsey, answer these questions and more. Highlights: Who are our cities built for? Whose voices do we prioritise in order to plan our cities better? Climate change is not a separate space, but a lens that we must adopt while planning resilient cities. We need to ensure continuous dialogue between those governing the cities and everyone living in the cities. Citizens must be active participants in the planning and operation of cities. Read more Want a better quality of life? ‘Project spending' can only take our cities so far IDR Explains | Local government in India How can we empower city governments? Fighting COVID-19 in cities Six things we learned from Dr Armida Fernandez The gaps and opportunities in low-income housing How can Indian cities shield vulnerable migrants from climate change? With better affordable housing What India can learn about effective rental housing for migrant workers Photo essay: How sanitation workers live and work in urban India It's time to reimagine water systems in cities Mumbai's climate adaptation plan: Designing the city for water Make India climate smart: We have big infrastructure plans but forget to review them through a climate change lens Finding the missing pieces of urban planning puzzle in India This podcast is a Maed in India production, you can find out more about us https://www.maedinindia.in/
लायन ऍड. अरुण देशमुख हे एक सामाजिक कार्यकर्ते, क्रीडा आणि कायद्यातील 30 पुस्तकांचे लेखक आणि एक मान्यताप्राप्त प्रशिक्षक आहेत. लायन ऍड. अरुण देशमुख यांनी खो खो आणि लंगडी मध्ये 300 पेक्षा जास्त राष्ट्रीय आणि राज्य खेळाडूंना प्रशिक्षित केले आहे, आणि खो खो साठी महाराष्ट्र राज्याचा शिवछत्रपती सर्वोत्कृष्ट प्रशिक्षक पुरस्कार मिळालेला आहे. लायन म्हणून सध्या ते जिल्हा 3231A1 चे झोनल चेअरमन आणि लायन्स क्लब ऑफ माहीमचे विद्यमान अध्यक्ष आहेत. Today we are going to get knowledge about what is a Gazette meaning Rajpatra and why it is published. The Gazette of India is a public journal and an authorized legal document of the Government of India It is published weekly by the Department of Publication, Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. Once something is printing in a Gazette it being public journal, the Gazette prints officially certifies that it is notified by the government. It is authentic in content, accurate, and strictly in accordance with the Government policies and decisions. Ordinary gazettes are regularly published weekly on a particular day of the week. Normally we are familiar to this type of gazette wherein Change of name is published and notified. By publishing in Gazette One shows that his two names which are in existence are pertaining to one and the same person. This helps a person wherein his name is erroneously printed wrongly in some document. For example in Muslims Muhamad and Mohammed is spelled in various ways. Same in Marathi where one finds Sandeep is also written as Sandip. This makes the person vulnerable when he is going for Visa purpose or for higher education our of Country. Thereby a Gazette notification helps that person to continue the documents without change and with help of gazette that it are pertaining and representing him only. For Rest Watch Our Video You can watch our last video about franking click the link below... Hindi Video https://youtu.be/Xp4numSNfEY Marathi Video https://youtu.be/TipjWcPLMUs FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/lionarundeshmukh INSTAGRAM www.instagram.com/5advarundeshmukh Contact For, For getting personal legal guidance you can contact him on +91 98192 56488 Thanks
लायन ऍड अरुण देशमुख एक उत्तम लेखक है मराठी के जानेमाने लेखक होनी उन्होने करीब करीब ३० किताबे लेखी है लायन ऍड अरुण देशमुख मुंबई के लायन्स क्लब ऑफ माहीम के अध्यक्ष है और लायन डिस्ट्रिक्ट ३२३१ए१ के झोनल चेअरमन है यु ट्युब के व्हिडिओ के माध्यम से आज सभी को वाह कानूनी बातो को अवगत करते है Today we are going to get knowledge about what is a Gazette meaning Rajpatra and why it is published. The Gazette of India is a public journal and an authorized legal document of the Government of India It is published weekly by the Department of Publication, Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. Once something is printing in a Gazette it being public journal, the Gazette prints officially certifies that it is notified by the government. It is authentic in content, accurate, and strictly in accordance with the Government policies and decisions. Ordinary gazettes are regularly published weekly on a particular day of the week. Normally we are familiar to this type of gazette wherein Change of name is published and notified. By publishing in Gazette One shows that his two names which are in existence are pertaining to one and the same person. This helps a person wherein his name is erroneously printed wrongly in some document. For example in Muslims Muhamad and Mohammed is spelled in various ways. Same in Marathi where one finds Sandeep is also written as Sandip. This makes the person vulnerable when he is going for Visa purpose or for higher education our of Country. Thereby a Gazette notification helps that person to continue the documents without change and with help of gazette that it are pertaining and representing him only. For Rest Watch Our Video You can watch our last video about franking click the link below... Hindi Video https://youtu.be/Xp4numSNfEY Marathi Video https://youtu.be/TipjWcPLMUs FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/lionarundeshmukh INSTAGRAM www.instagram.com/5advarundeshmukh Contact For, For getting personal legal guidance you can contact him on +91 98192 56488 Thanks
1. Health/Wealth Tip: Health: The Benefits of Ashwagandha - Getting a vitamin boost when you're low on energy - An Ayurvedic herb from India - It lowers your cortisol levels or your stress hormone - It lowers anxiety and makes you feel at peace - It's way cheaper than CBD - Increases strength performance and improves glucose metabolism - Increases your testosterone levels Wealth: Having Financial Conversations with the Right Mental State - Getting your head in the right place to make better financial decisions - Avoiding making financial decisions when you're in a tired state 2. Bronson's Background (17:32) - Being a medical sales professional for over 10 years - Discovering his passion for real estate - Buying single-family houses - Raised over $20 million for multifamily deals in the last three years - Full-time on helping busy professionals achieve a passive income 3. Health Benefits of Donating Blood (20:25) - Not only great for the society but for the donors as well - 88% less chance of having a heart attack for men over 50 - Removes iron from your blood giving the body a chance to purge and regenerate - It takes around 500 calories to replace a pint 4. The Benefits of Ice Tub Bath (23:33) - Burns calories - Boosts metabolism and increases your energy - Water transfers temperature a lot more efficiently than air does - The sweet spot of 30 seconds to 2 minutes - Taking a cold shower as a good alternative 5. Financial Investment (38:16) - Transitioning from corporate sales to passive income - Jumping into the multifamily game - Learning about syndication - Why a rental inspection can steal your profits - Financial freedom is not a why, but a what 6. Final Exam: (1:01:23) - What book or film changed your life? - What's one healthy habit you wish more of your friends did? - What wealth tip do you wish you had learned earlier in life? - What's one thing that you do for fun? - Where do you see yourself in five years? - What did you want to be when you grew up?
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will attend the first ever in-person Quad summit hosted by US President Joe Biden today. The other participants are Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.The summit will be held at the White House in Washington. Defence expert Ajai Shukla explained the significance of the summit and outlined India's expectations going in. He also briefed us on the impact of the new trilateral security alliance, AUKUS. Here are the excerpts: What is the significance of the first in-person quad summit? Quad brings together the US, India, Japan and Australia Objective: Resolving issues in Asia-Pacific, mainly concerning Chinese aggression China views this as an anti-China grouping The leaders will exchange views on global issues like emerging technologies, infra, cyber security, maritime security, humanitarian assistance, disaster relief, climate change and education What are India's expectations from this particular summit and what does it hope to achieve? No deliverables involved this time It maintains the pressure on China Also provides political framework for the Malabar exercise What function does the AUKUS serve? Is it going to be more effective? Is there something new here? AUKUS does not have any participation from India It is a new, purpose-built alliance between the US, UK and Australia Geographical centre of gravity: Western Pacific The three countries also plan to share intelligence, quantum technology and cruise missile technology For now, India will watch AUKUS from the sidelines Hopefully, India-China relations will move on a positive trajectory going forward and both sides will be able to manage their differences without further conflict.
A conversation with Saleem Khan, British Asian Trust on responding to the pandemic in India: It is difficult to forget the harrowing stories/scenes of patients dying for lack of oxygen in India earlier this year, when it was ravaged by the pandemic. A BBC report called it 'A nightmare on repeat'. It was heartening however, to see governments and businesses the world over step up to support India during this terrible crisis. Amongst those responded swiftly was the British Asian Trust that raised over £5 million for its 'Oxygen for India Emergency Appeal' with over 20,000 people donating. My guest on the 42nd Episode of The Elephant in the Room podcast is Saleem Khan, India Director of the British Asian Trust (BAT). In this episode we spoke about
Jim Cramer's Solar Stocks and MUCH More. This episode includes the following stocks and funds. First Solar, Enphase, Generac, Apple, Tesla, GE, Microsoft, Neo, Plug Power, Airbnb, Palantir, Bloom Energy, Ballard Power Systems, Brookfield Renewable Partners, Lucid Motors, BlackRock U.S. Carbon Transition Readiness ETF, iShares ESG Aware MSCI EM ETF, Vanguard ESG U.S. Stock ETF PODCAST: Jim Cramer's Solar Stocks and MUCH More Transcript & Links, Episode 63, July 30, 2021 Hello, Ron Robins here. Welcome to podcast episode 63 published on July 30, titled “Jim Cramer's Solar Stocks and MUCH More” — and presented by Investing for the Soul. investingforthesoul.com is your site for vital global ethical and sustainable investing news, commentary, information, and resources. Remember that you can find a full transcript, links to content – including stock symbols, quotes, and bonus material – at this episode's podcast page located at investingforthesoul.com/podcasts. Now, just a reminder. I do not evaluate any of the stocks or funds mentioned in this podcast. Furthermore, if you're concerned about the ESG and sustainability ratings of any stock or fund included in this podcast, check your broker's site for such information. If your broker doesn't have this information, signup for free with Morningstar and you can gain access to company and fund ESG-sustainability ratings. Please note, I receive no compensation from Morningstar or anyone else covered in these podcasts. Also, if any terms are unfamiliar to you, simply Google them. ------------------------------------------------------------- Jim Cramer's Solar Stocks Let's begin with CNBC's Jim Cramer on Monday revealed his top three solar stock plays. It's by Tyler Clifford on CNBC. Here are some quotes from the article. “'I think your portfolio needs some solar exposure, ideally with First Solar, Enphase or Generac … We needed to wait for the big post-election shakeout before recommending the solar stocks,' Cramer said… (continuing)… ‘I think that this group has a lot more room to run… Generac has been one of my favorite ways to play an increasingly unreliable electric grid, and while the stock looks expensive up here, management's got a terrific track record,' Cramer said.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- These stocks are the top picks for millennials and Gen Z Want to know which stocks millennials and Gen Z favour? This article reveals them. It's titled These stocks are the top picks for millennials and Gen Z by Ihsaan Fanusie appearing on Yahoo! Finance. Quoting the article. “A recent study by financial source DailyFX revealed that Apple (AAPL), Tesla (TSLA), and GE (GE) are the most popular stocks for millennials and Generation Z investors. The study collected data from Robinhood and examined investing preferences among millennials and Gen Z across the United States and United Kingdom for the 12 months ending April 2021… GameStop (GME) was not included in the study… Overall, the technology and automotive industries dominated the market for young people, with companies like Microsoft (MSFT) and Tesla generating significant investment activity. Interestingly, electric vehicle manufacturing company Nio (NIO) was the top security for millennial investors… Sustainability has been a key factor… Plug Power (PLUG), an alternative energy company, was the top stock for the younger generations in seven states… In the UK, Nio, Airbnb (ABNB), and Palantir (PLTR) were the younger generations' most commonly traded stocks.” End quotes ------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Renewable Energy Stocks to Buy If the Market Crashes Continuing in the renewable energy theme is this article 3 Renewable Energy Stocks to Buy If the Market Crashes. Each stock is recommended by a different analyst. Here are the names of the analysts, followed by the company they recommend, and then followed by quotes from them on that company. “1) Travis Hoium picks Bloom Energy (NYSE: BE) One of the most exciting growth markets in renewable energy is hydrogen technology, and Bloom Energy is one of the industry leaders… Bloom Energy hasn't gotten as much attention as Plug Power (NASDAQ: PLUG) or Ballard Power Systems (NASDAQ: BLDP), both of which have higher valuations than it does. But Bloom is a better operator with more revenue and higher gross margins… it has a long growth runway into a total addressable market that management thinks could be over $2 trillion. What Bloom Energy hasn't generated yet are profits… (but) could be profitable in the next few years. 2) Howard Smith likes Brookfield Renewable Partners (NYSE: BEP) The stock's dividend yields around 3% at recent prices, and a market crash could provide investors the chance to lock in income at an even more desirable yield. Brookfield Renewable has a portfolio of almost $60 billion worth of renewable energy assets globally… (its) shares are up about 40% over the past year… Brookfield aims to increase shareholder distributions by between 5% and 9% annually… 3) Daniel Foelber recommends Lucid Motors (NYSE: CCIV) (NASDAQ: LCID) The company says the Lucid Dream Edition (automobile) has an EPA-rated range of 503 miles on a full charge, and that its 1,080-horsepower engine can go from 0 to 60 mph in 2.5 seconds or less. The specs speak for themselves, but it's going to take a lot more than a hot car for Lucid to become a rival to automakers like Tesla… Lucid's marketing strategy resembles the one used by Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA)… begin with the low-volume rollout of a high-margin vehicle, then transition to a lower-margin, higher-volume strategy over time…” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- 7 ESG ETFs to Buy Now Looking for ESG ETFs? You're in luck with this article 7 ESG ETFs to Buy Now by Jeff Reeves on money.usnews.com. Here are some quotes from him on each one. “1) iShares ESG Aware MSCI EM ETF (ESGE) It's… benchmarked to an MSCI index of emerging-market stocks. Emerging markets obviously hold a lot of promise because of their growth potential, but they also can be home to business practices that many Western investors would frown upon… Allocations include 35% of assets in China, 13% in South Korea and 10% in India… (It has) an impressive $8 billion in assets under management. 2) iShares ESG MSCI EAFE ETF (ESGD) Another solid option for international investors… is this sister iShares fund… focused on EAFE markets – that is, Europe, Asia and the Far East. While you won't get exposure to companies in the U.S. and Canada, you do get access to developed markets to supplement the EM approach of the prior iShares fund… With nearly $6 billion in assets under management, this global ESG fund is the go-to option for those looking for exposure outside the U.S. 3) iShares Global Clean Energy ETF (ICLN) Another iShares fund tops this list of leading ESG funds… it's hard to argue that anyone concerned about climate change or carbon emissions would overlook the iShares Global Clean Energy ETF as one of the most important ways to invest with environmental principles in mind. With about $6 billion in assets under management, this fund is a liquid and established way for investors to play top names in the space. 4) Vanguard ESG U.S. Stock ETF (ESGV) At about $5 billion in total assets under management… (it) is among the most diversified when it comes to total holdings. Around 1,500 total components make up this fund, and… they are all U.S.-based corporations… it cuts out the worst based on rankings for ESG criteria and presumes the rest are above board. 5) Xtrackers MSCI USA ESG Leaders Equity ETF (USSG) Another substantial U.S.-based ESG fund… tallies a total of nearly $4 billion in assets… Comprised of a focused list of about 280 securities… About 28% of the fund is in tech, but it diversifies nicely after that with the No. 2 sector being health care at 14%. 6) iShares MSCI KLD 400 Social ETF (DSI) At more than $3 billion in assets… (It's)… pretty much a kind of S&P 500 index with the 100 stocks that rank worst on social criteria being excluded from the lineup. Unfortunately, though it has more total stocks than the prior Xtrackers fund, it's even more biased toward tech with 33% of assets in the sector. 7) iShares MSCI USA ESG Select ETF (SUSA) With only 200 or so holdings in (its) portfolio… the prospectus claims this ESG ETF only backs stocks with ‘leading environmental, social, and governance practices.' You… get exposure to some traditionally popular domestic stocks without sacrificing your principles.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- ESG BS Detector: Do new “green” funds support the carbon transition? Adria Vasil of Canada's Corporate Knights magazine has penned an article titled ESG BS Detector: Do new “green” funds support the carbon transition? Here are some quotes from her piece. “We look under the hood of BlackRock's new Carbon Transition ETF to see if it delivers on its low-carbon promise… This ETF invests in large- and mid-capitalization U.S. equity securities ‘tilting towards those that BlackRock believes are better positioned to benefit from the transition to a low-carbon economy.' The fund is dominated by all the standard Big Tech firms found in conventional ETF holdings… more than a quarter of this fund's holdings trip our red-flag alarms…" End quote. (Issues found by author) "14 energy companies with less than 20% of their near-term investment in the energy transition, including Exxon, Chevron, Kinder Morgan and ConocoPhillips. 8 climate-policy-blocking companies, including Berkshire Hathaway, Goldman Sachs and Valero, as well as a few energy companies. 3 big brands selling industrial meat, including Spam-king Hormel. 1 deforestation and palm oil laggard, namely Kraft Heinz Co., which Global Canopy gives a big fat zero to when it comes to its overarching commitment on deforestation (a primary contributor to climate change). BlackRock's position: ‘BlackRock's new Carbon Transition ETF (LCTU) leverages BlackRock's proprietary climate analytics to analyze a company's ability to thrive in the transition to a low carbon economy, resulting in a portfolio with almost 50% less carbon intensity than its Russell 1000 benchmark.' Bottom line: look before you leap.” End quotes. (For Adria's previous discussion of a similar Blackrock fund see 4. The Top Renewable Energy Stocks, Funds. Plus…) ------------------------------------------------------------- How Engine No. 1's new $100 million ETF plans to change impact investing Many of you will recall how a little-known fund, Engine No. 1, was able to muster enough support to install 3 pro-climate investors on Exxon's board of directors. Well, now they've created a special fund to be in a position to influence the boards of numerous other companies towards pro-climate and ESG policies. Watch this interview on Yahoo! Finance titled How Engine No. 1's new $100 million ETF plans to change impact investing. (The link to this interview is on this podcast's webpage.) The interviewer is Julie Hyman who interviews Yasmin Dahya Bilger, head of ETFs at Engine No. 1. ------------------------------------------------------------- Ending Comment Well, these are my top news stories with their stock and fund tips -- for this podcast: “Jim Cramer's Solar Stocks and MUCH More.“ To get all the links, stock symbols, or to read the transcript of this podcast -- and more -- go to investingforthesoul.com/podcasts and scroll down to this episode. Also, be sure to click the like and subscribe buttons in iTunes/Apple Podcasts or wherever you download or listen to this podcast. And please click the share buttons to share this podcast with your friends and family. Let's promote a better post COVID world through ethical and sustainable investing! Contact me if you have any questions. Stay well and healthy—and conscious about the ethical and sustainable values of your investments! Thank you for listening. Talk to you next on August 13. Bye for now. © 2021 Ron Robins, Investing for the Soul.
Sunil's career has taken him to many destinations but he was one of the early movers to spot opportunity for India IT in UK Going On-shore is a dream for many IT minds from India ...Here is you chance to learn from a veteran on How to be successful in On-Shore roles
Welcome to East West Hurricane! 🌪We update you on the most essential news from Asia in tech, media, and business—the things you need to know that you probably haven’t heard in Western media.Follow us on Twitter and Instagram! ⚡️Apple Opens First Online Store in India - It’s Just The Beginning 🇮🇳On September 23, Apple launched its first online store in India. What does that mean? Now, Indians can go online to order Apple products and services directly. You might be surprised to learn that this is the first time this has ever been possible in India. In the past, you could only purchase Apple products through authorised local partners offline. It has also been hard for Apple to open a retail store in India considering local government regulations. These regulations are being relaxed and Apple plans to open their first offline retail store in India sometime next year. The Indian government has also offered billions of dollars in incentives for smartphone makers to move more of their operations to the country.Apple started manufacturing iPhones in India two years ago, which now allows Apple to sell more affordable phones for the market. This is the 38th country in the world where Apple has launched an online store. But as you know, India is the 2nd biggest country in the world by population. Opening an online store (and eventually offline retail) indicates just the beginning of Apple increasing their marketing investment within the country. India is becoming a more important market for Apple and we should start seeing more investment soon.Japan Wants More Foreign Entrepreneurs - Are You In? 🗾The Japanese government will now start offering a two-year entrepreneurship visa for foreign students graduating from a Japanese university who want to open up a business in the country. Previously, it was a lot more difficult to stay in Japan after your graduation. These sorts of programs usually come with lots of hidden details, but at the very least it signals that the Japanese government is taking an interest in attracting more foreign entrepreneurs to the country. At least within my world of friends, colleagues, and influences, Japan has a really strong, positive brand. These ‘country brands’ will matter more in the increasing world of remote work. And I’m personally predicting mass significant global migrations in both students and workers in the aftermath of the coronavirus. As a country, there are a lot of things you can’t control about what makes you attractive. But laws and regulations around visas play a big role in the decision-making to attract more people and you can definitely affect that. Let’s see how seriously the Japanese government wants to invest in this and let’s see how many people—especially entrepreneurs—end up moving to Japan over the next years. Even More Investing in Asia from KKR and SPACs 🌏KKR, one of the world’s biggest private equity funds, has just finished raising a new $11 Billion dollar fund to focus on investments in Asia. This is the biggest Asian-focused private equity fund ever raised. In related news, Hong Kong-based Pacific Century has combined with the investment fund of Silicon Valley tech billionaire Peter Thiel to create a new $625 Million SPAC focused on Asia. SPAC stands for Special Purpose Acquisition Company, which is a new financial tool to help private companies go public through an acquisition.This new Asia-focused SPAC is called Bridgetown Holdings and is specifically targeting companies in Southeast Asia within sectors like tech, financial services, and media. For small startups or bigger companies across Asia, this means that there are more foreign investors and potential acquirers. You can usually interpret a trail of money as a leading indicator for economic growth. These new Western investment vehicles focusing on Asia show us that the global investment community is looking even more to Asia’s fast-growing companies.*BONUS* TikTok Marketing & Advertising 101At the urging of some readers, I wanted to share something else I’m working on outside of East West Hurricane. If you are a company struggling to achieve the marketing results you really want, I would highly recommend you looking into TikTok. I fully believe it’s currently the world’s most underrated marketing channel. I’ve put together a crash course on TikTok, which you can check it out here.! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit eastwesthurricane.substack.com
Let's begin with India It is quite interesting that the country reported not just its biggest single-day spike in cases and deaths on Saturday, but in recovery as well. Data released by the Health Ministry shows that India’s official tally stands at 173,763, after recording a jump of 7,964 new cases, which is a rise of 4.8 per cent, and indeed is not good news. However, the recovery rate has also been accelerated from just 4.5 per cent to 47.4 per cent after 11,264 patients were successfully treated, taking the total number of recoveries to 82,370 so far. With a net addition of 265 casualties during the past 24 hours, the total death count in the country has risen to 4,971. Now, let’s quickly go through the list of the most-affected states and UTs in terms of their single-day spike: Delhi tops the list with 1,105 new cases, Tamil Nadu added as many as 874, Karnataka had 248, Haryana had 217, closely followed by Uttarakhand with 216 fresh cases. Meanwhile, Maharashtra, the most affected state, has added 2,682 cases to take its tally to 62,228. The state has added more than 2,000 cases in each of the past 13 days, which means about 50.7 per cent (31,522) of all its cases have come in these 12 days alone. Click podcast for more
The Author Sherry Show with Major Mohommed Ali Shah - Highest TEDx Talks Speaker in India It's a great honour to know people who walk in to your life unknown and become brothers for life. With Major Ali Shah Son of Sh.Zamiruddin Shah, Chancellor of AMU Aligarh and nephew of famous actor Naseeruddin Shah an Indian Army Veteran, 16 times TEDx Speaker, Defence Expert, Defence Analyst, Political Analyst, TV Panelist, Theator Actor, Film Actor and Social Activist. He has worked in famous hindi movies like Haider, Bajrangi Bhaijaan, Agent Vinod and other popular bollywood films.
What as the Goddess of Smallpox to do with eradicating this disease in China and India? It turns out: almost everything. These countries with similar epidemiological, socioeconomic, and demographic conditions have experienced strikingly different levels of containment. And that’s because China worked with existing believes and traditions when the officials introduce a new vaccine – and India did not.
Slums are home to 850 million people worldwide, making them prime territory for distributive politics. In this episode of the Governance Podcast, Tariq Thachil (Vanderbilt University) sits down with Irena Schneider (King's College London) to discuss the counterintuitive ways in which governance emerges amidst poverty and informality in Indian cities. Subscribe on iTunes and Spotify Subscribe to the Governance Podcast on iTunes and Spotify today and get all our latest episodes directly in your pocket. Follow Us For more information about our upcoming podcasts and events, follow us on facebook, twitter or instagram (@csgskcl). The Guest Tariq Thachil is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Vanderbilt University. His research focuses on political parties and political behavior, social movements, and ethnic politics, with a regional focus on South Asia. His first book examines how elite parties can use social services to win mass support, through a study of Hindu nationalism in India, and was published by Cambridge University Press (Studies in Comparative Politics) in 2014. This project has won numerous awards, including the 2015 Gregory Luebbert Award for best book in comparative politics, the 2015 Leon Epstein Award for best book on political parties, and 2010 Gabriel Almond Award for best dissertation in comparative politics, all from the American Political Science Association. It also won the 2010 Sardar Patel Prize for best dissertation on modern India in the humanities and social sciences. His current research focuses on the political consequences of urbanization, and draws on extensive qualitative and quantitative research among poor migrants in Indian cities. An article from this project, coauthored with Adam Auerbach, received the 2018 Heinz I. Eulau Award for the best article published in the American Political Science Review in the previous calendar year. Skip Ahead 00:58: As a political scientist, what prompted you to take an interest in the politics of Indian slums? 1:53: You talk a lot about machine politics in India—It's a core element of your book. Historically when we think about machine politics, you also mention in your book that the big examples are US democratic party machines in New York and Chicago which emerged in the 19th century by giving out material benefits to poor European immigrants in exchange for political support. We're seeing similar trends happening across the developing world today. Masses of migrants are flooding to cities, living in slums, and end up being governed by powerful machines. But you're observing something uniquely different about how politics emerges within Indian slums. Quite specifically, you're noticing that the process is a lot more democratic than we thought. What have you been observing? What's counterintuitive? 7:56: That's really interesting because it really has to do with this unique competitive environment. Why is it so competitive? Why is no one able to take over and become a boss in some of these Indian slums? 11:23: You argue that slum residents don't really choose leaders on the basis of petty gifts or cash. Clientelism doesn't boil down to something so simple. What criteria do residents really use to choose their leaders? 14:13: The picture you're painting is that slum residents are much more empowered to choose among competing brokers rather than being passive or manipulated rule takers. How much power do they really have over their local brokers and local politicians? Can they really hold their brokers accountable in ways that would mimic what would happen under a formal democratic institution? 18:54: One of your most interesting findings is that when people are choosing their slum leaders and brokers, they're not necessarily using the basis of caste or ethnicity—and a lot of what really matters is things like education. Talk a little more about that. Are we seeing a crowding out of forms of choice based on old kinds of hierarchy? 23:16: I want to talk a little more about the brokers themselves. They're intermediaries between the slum dwellers and the state. You're finding interesting mechanisms that keep brokers honest. As intermediaries, there's always the concern that they will take state resources for themselves rather than distributing them back to the population. You find that they're not actually pocketing the resources. What incentive to do they have to be honest? 26:56: Do you see these informal institutions as a healthy phenomenon in Indian democracy? Are they effectively a really benign form of bottom up self-governance that fills in the vacuum of the formal state? 29:58: What does this kind of competitive local governance mean for Indian political development in the long term? Do you see political machines in the global south eventually declining in the same way they did in the US in the early 20th century? 35:20: Tying that into questions of economic development in India, as these slums develop over time and residents, having gotten used to a somewhat deliberative process and being somewhat involved in getting public service provision, do you think that will put a long term pressure on the formal system of governance? 37:48: This is a one country example. There is often the question in social science about external generalizability. What lessons are pertinent for the study of political development and urbanization around the world? 41:28: What are the future paths in your research program? 43:00: On a more methodological point, you've been using different kinds of methods, from ethnography to experimentation and survey work. Talk a little bit about the challenges of doing that ethnographic work. What have you been finding most rewarding and challenging? Any advice for young scholars trying to do this kind of fieldwork?
Phir mulaaqat hogi kabhi a beautiful song having wonderful lyrics.This is my reprise version of the song in my channel Guru's Music where song covers you. Use your Headphones for best listening experience. Hope you like this song cover of Phir mulaaqat hogi kabhi by Gurbachan Singh. Please do not forget to like and share the video to your friends and in social media. Give your valuable feedback in the comments section . This song is from movie why cheat India It features Emraan Hashmi and Shreya Dhanwanthary in the lead. This song is originally sung in the voice of "Jubin Nautiyal", composed by " Kunaal-Rangon (Songster)" and the lyrics of this new song are penned by "Kunaal Vermaa". All Video Shooting and Song Recording done on Smart Phone . Mobile App Used to Make this Video---KINEMASTER Mobile App Used to Record Song with HeadPhone------Voiceover Free Mastering of Song done on :- https://www.bandlab.com/ All Rights to Music Label Co. & No Copyright infringement intended. Enjoy and stay connected with me : Subscribe Guru's Music : http://www.youtube.com/c/GURUSMUSIC?s... All YouTube Videos: http://www.youtube.com/c/GURUSMUSIC Visit my WEBSITE : http://gurus-music.business.site Like my FACEBOOK Page : gurussmusic https://www.facebook.com/gurussmusic Follow me on INSTAGRAM: gurussmusic https://www.instagram.com/gurussmusic Follow me on TWITTER : gurussmusic https://www.twitter.com/gurussmusic Follow me on TUMBLER : gurussmusic https://www.tumblr.com/gurussmusic Follow me on Daily Motion :-https://www.dailymotion.com/gurussmusic check out related videos #phirmulaaqatreprise #phirmulaaqatcover #gurbachansingh #gurusmusic --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gurusmusic/message
William Sutcliffe’s hilariously cynical take on backpackers and travellers, 'Are You Experienced?' is still inspiring globe-trotters all over the world. He instantly regretted a solo trip to Pakistan to get the train to Beijing, was horrified by the realities of life on the West Bank, ate nothing but marmalade sandwiches for days when travelling to the remote salt flats in Bolivia and yes a lot of the stories in Are You Experienced are autobiographical. And yes I do dare to ask him about that pretty graphic description of being unwell in India. William Sutcliffe is on the Big Travel Podcast. On this episode we cover: His new book The Gifted, the Talented and Me How Adrian Mole and the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy are still great books for teens How living with teenagers is funny The era of sending postcards and Poste Restante How social media is stressful The difference between travel pre and post internet How travel used to be a way to reinvent yourself How you can reinvent yourself publicly every day How people make friends fast when travelling Lonely Planet being a guide to finding other Westerners Receiving letters in Kathmandu The lack of self-awareness in 18 year old travellers Travellers being at their most pretentious The two ways which travellers react to India How Lonely Planet still recommends his book over 20 years later Monish Rajesh saying it’s her favourite book about India Lisa visiting India in luxury How India can be hard work Lisa’s first time ever asking a guest whether they’ve s*it themselves in a hostel How travellers use the book to put them off India It being easier to go to Spain than India His life-changing solo trip to Pakistan Saving cash for travel by working in HMV The weird travel grant The Karakoram Highway built by China and Pakistan The long-standing dispute over the India China border Wanting to shake up his happy home life A one way ticket to Karachi and a return via Beijing to Moscow Russian invading Afghanistan Landing in Karachi, age 19, and being terrified The actually very hospitable ‘dangerous’ lands of the Peshawar in Pakistan Lisa fighting of an ear-cleaner in Bangalore Ear drum piercing versus Hepatitis Travelling to the Khyber Pass The German gun fan who took him to the gun town Not wanting to shoot a gun in the mountains the Mujahideen Lisa being offered a gun in Phnom Penh The incredible desert frontier town of Kashgar in the Xinjiang Uyghur in China’s far west The oppression of Uighur muslims in China The atmospheric Kashgar Sunday Bazaar Those travel moments out of Kashgar The weird awakening crossing the border from Pakistan to China Saddam as superman ‘death to America’ on a t shirt Feeling unwelcome in communist China British and American politeness A certain admiration for a total lack of any ingratiation Cycling towards Tiananmen Square in a huge boulevard of bikes How hardships when travelling can make you feel good about yourself The ‘deep thoughts’ of teenagers His book The Wall based on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict Feeling he needed an opinion on Israel coming from a Lithuanian Jewish family The max exodus of the Pogroms from Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia His family moving from Lithuania to South Africa His mother’s white South African guilt Travel to Israel, Egypt Sinai Peninsula and Jordan Staying in East Jerusalem, the Palestinian side The world increasingly being divided into haves and have nots Being horrified by the brutality and injustice of the occupation ‘The power of the un-fired gun’ The Israeli hilltop settlements Green Olives tours and revelations Lisa taking the boat from Israel to Egypt and crossing very serious borders What the Israel/Palestinian wall really looks like up close The Salar de Uyuni, amid the Andes in southwest Bolivia, is the world’s largest salt flat Everything being the size of Wales The town of Atacama where it hasn’t rained for 200 years A remote 3 day drive through the desert Nothing to eat but bread and marmalade Feeling like you’re on a U2 album cover His wife, author Maggie O’Farrell Taking it in turns to write and look after the kids The scene in Are You Experienced when Dave is listening to Pink Floyds Comfortably Numb Being a massive music fan and listening to music when writing Switching off from music when travelling His perfect travel music moment with the amazing drumming from a wedding party in Rajasthan
How Florence Nightingale, Hannah Marshman, and Harriet Beecher Stowe changed the world. --- March 8, 1917. As the world is in the throes of a brutal war, tens of thousands of people gather in the centre of the Russian capital, Petrograd. They're on strike, for "bread and peace". This day marked the beginning of the Russian Revolution. Four days later, the Czar abdicated, and women were given the right to vote - because the protesters that started the Russian Revolution weren't male workers, they were mostly women. The Governor of the city said the crowd consisted of "ladies from society, lots more peasant women, student girls and, compared with earlier demonstrations, not many workers." We now use this date every year to celebrate International Women's Day. In this episode, we remember and celebrate the achievement of women in all areas of life. Meet the woman who professionalised nursing, revolutionised health and sanitation, and wrote a book protesting the oppression of women in her time: "To have no food for our heads, no food for our hearts, no food for our activity, is that nothing? … One would think we had no heads nor hearts, by the total indifference of the public towards them. Our bodies are the only things of any consequence. … Jesus Christ raised women above the condition of mere slaves, mere ministers to the passions of the man, raised them by his sympathy, to be ministers of God. He gave them moral activity. But the Age, the World, Humanity, must give them the means to exercise this moral activity, must give them intellectual cultivation, spheres of action." And the woman who was a missionary's wife in India, and a missionary in her own right, driving educational and social reform in India: "It's almost impossible to persuade people that the missionary movement was a women's movement. Not just in the late 19th century when they began sending unmarried women, but from the first. I really haven't found an example of a married missionary couple where the woman and the many daughters they had (when they came of age) didn't start teaching women, giving informal medical care, having classes … This happened all around the world." And the woman who wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin and supposedly started the American Civil War: "Uncle Tom's Cabin was the bestselling book in America before the Civil War, with the exception of the Bible. Part of the reason for that is that in some ways it's a very revolutionary book. Uncle Tom is a Christ figure - and to say that a slave is a representation of Christ is a very radical thing. Harriet Beecher Stowe did not believe that Christianity was about the power that ministers or that elites had, but that the power of Christianity lay in the lowly people." --- FIND OUT MORE about our documentary, For the Love of God: How the church is better and worse than you ever imagined: www.fortheloveofgodproject.com SUBSCRIBE to ‘Life & Faith' on Apple Podcasts: http://bit.ly/cpxpodcast FIND US on Facebook: www.facebook.com/publicchristianity FOLLOW US on Twitter: www.twitter.com/cpx_tweet
Data Breach and Privacy Law Used your credit card online in India? It's probably stolen IRCTC website hacked, information of lakhs feared stolen Oxigen Wallet Denies Alleged Hack, Says Blog Undergoing Maintenance Singapore Debates Breach Disclosure
Rhetoric Before and Beyond the Greeks I’m Mary Hedengren, Samantha and Morgan are in the booth and this is Mere Rhetoric, the podcast for beginners and insiders about the ideas, people and movements who have shaped rhetorical history. But what does that even mean? When we talk about the rhetorical tradition on this podcast, we actually don’t mean the rhetorical tradition. We mean the tradition of a very small group of people living mostly in one city in one corner of the Mediterranean. We mean Athenian rhetorical tradition, which, no doubt, has had a long and extensive influence in Western culture from the Romans to the Victorians to this podcast. But while many views of rhetoric focus on the Athenian theories, rhetoric has a far larger reach. After all, what could be more universal than using words to convince other people, to make them better understand you, to create a connection? If we define rhetoric, as Burke does, as “the use of words by human agents to form attitudes or induce actions in other human agents”—why everyone does that! There have been so many human agents on the world, all over the world, and how have they thought about forming attitudes or actions with words? This is one of the questions that Carol D. Lipson and Roberta A Brinkley seek to answer in their edited anthology Rhetoric Before and Beyond the Greeks. The book looks at 3 major regions, as well as a few “bonus” sections, to find alternative views of rhetoric in the ancient world. The three main areas are Mesopotamian, Egyptian and Chinese rhetoric. Mesopotamian William W Hallo does a quick survey of ancient Mesopotamia and finds rhetorical genres like diatribes and proverbs and disputations as rich ground for a foundation of rhetoric, not to mention the value of looking at epic poetry like Gilgamesh for examples of the kind of rhetoric that sets up such poetic words. Think of the Exordia that calls all the people around to listen to a tale and promises them the relative merits of doing so. Roberta Brinkley, too, looks at the Mesopotamian epics as an early rhetorical hotbed. She focuses on how the epic of Inanna illustrates the rhetorical choices of “the earliest known writer” Enheduanna, who lived in 2300 BC. Let me say that again, 2300 BC. I’m not sure what the Greeks were doing at that time, but they probably weren’t writing what Brinkley calls “rhetorically complex sophistical compositions [that] challenge the traditional canon of rhetoric and thereby many of the origins stores and foundational assumptions of the humanities” (49). And yet, Binkly points out, when did you hear of Enhuduanna? Paul Hoskisson and Grant M. Boswell turn from religious hymns for a goddess to another key genre: shameless self promotion, as Sennacherib “the great king, the powerful king, the king of all there is” sets up some columns to set up how great he is. As Hoskisson and Boswell point out “Assyrian kingship was performative in that Assyrian kings continuously legitimized their claim to the throne” (75).y The next section shifts to the West to the Egyptian rhetorical tradition. Carol S. Lipson argue that “It all comes down to Maat” in ancient Egyptian rhetoric, where Maat is “what is right” sort of justice and morality and the order of the “sun, moon and stars” a “balanced state of creation” (81). Egyptian letters concern themselves with moves that perform “maat” Deborah Sweeny meanwhile examines the legal texts of ancient Egypt for examples of persuasion and eloquence. Just as legal tradition spurred the development of rhetoric in ancient Greece, Sweeney sees similar developments in the legal texts of Egypt. Chinese rhetoric may seem the epitome of exotic compared to Athenian rhetoric, but the Chinese had a richly developed pattern for discussing rhetoric. George Q Xu describes the confusion principles of rhetoric which ranks different kinds of speech, with “clever talk” taking the lowest rung (122) Arabella lyon, meanwhile, describes the value of silence in confusion rhetoric As she says “Confucian silences go beyond a reticence to speak, a willingness to act and a refusal of eloquence” the “silence workds by not saying what should be obsious, what should be self-discovered and that which alienated” (138). Yameng Liu Xunzi and Han Feizi’s rhetorical criticism, arguing hat “instead of a mere byproduct of philosophical inquiries, classical Chinese rhetoric was a discipline/practice in its own right” (161) as different schools of thought competed with each other. After Mesopatamia, Egypt and China are investigated, there’s a sort of catch-all of many alternative traditions. David Metzger writes about the rhetoric of the frist five books of the Hebrew Bible, and James W Watts and C Jan Swearingen look at ancient near eastern texts. Meanwhile Richard Leo Enos actually deals with Greek rhetoric, but a different type of Greek—the rhetoric of Rhodes. Rhodes was a far more diverse city-state than Athens. As Enos says “the orientation of rhetoric at Rhodes was not internal but external. That is, the emphasis on rhetoric was directed toward facilitating communication with other peoples (184) Such a perspective emphasized a cross-cultral epideictic rhetoric, inclusive and found on declamation” (194). Going over my notes in this text, I see I’ve written “ooh, I’m all psyched now,” and I admit that I am again—there’s a lot more the Greek rhetoric than just one city-state stuck in a hundred-year period. That’s what the whole book is arguing—there’s a whole world of rhetoric out there and we ought to do something to explore it. There are some questions of omission you could have about this volume: for example, why talk about ancient China but not India? It’s hard to anthologize anything without leaving something out and especially a topic as ambitious as everything-not-ancient-Greek. Don’t worry, Lipson and Brinkley came out with a sequel to this book five years later called Ancient Non-Greek Rhetoric. And, yep, it continues to expand the view of what is rhetoric, collecting works about the ancient near-east, Japan, India and pre-Roman Ireland. It’s a pretty exciting and wide ranging text itself and you know what? It’s not done yet! Studying the rhetorical traditions of people wherever they use language can yield fresh insights into what rhetoric is and how it works. Kind of makes you want to get out there and open up rhetoric to something beyond just 5h century BC Athens, up to the whole world. If you want to open this podcast up to some particular types of rhetoric, go ahead and email us at mererhetoricpodcast@gmail.com because there’s a lot of rhetoric out there and we just have to tackle it one week at a time.
Within every Freemason Lodge across the world there is an altar and upon that altar is a Bible – that is if one finds themselves inside a lodge in the UK or the U.S. What book would one find if he were in Turkey or in India? It is most likely to be a Quran or one of the Hindu scriptures. When one see’s the Bible upon the altar it gives one a perception that the Bible and its teachings are held as the supreme authority for the Mason. However, as we shall see in this teaching, that is not the case at all! Central to the teachings of Freemasonry is the concept of the Fatherhood of God. Masonry is not only impartial when it comes to what religious book one might hold to as scripture, but is also impartial when it comes to which god one might choose to worship. Is the God of Freemasonry the God of the Holy Bible? Download the notes for this teaching below http://traffic.libsyn.com/bethesdashalom/6d_Freemasonry_Pt4.pdf
What do you think of when you think of INDIA? It is a land of contrasts - with more millionaires than the USA but also 35 million orphans. A land where 456 languages are spoken but the name of Jesus is seldom mentioned or known. Steph and a team of...