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Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
United States v. James Hutchings, Jr.
Imagine steep hillside roads, narrow such that cars often have to give way for the oncoming traffic. People everywhere on both sides of the road: lorries, cars, safari landcruisers. We are talking about a crowded scenario on the Rwandan roads in the area where the Mountain Gorillas dwell. Now imagine a bicycle. No gears, and - I think but am not at all sure - brakes. The men riding the bikes freewheel down the road - down the middle of the road - at the speed of light - from the higher forest area to the market towns below. They are right in the thick of this traffic of cars and people and they are carrying sacks of potatoes weighing around 250 kilograms each. Yep, kg, not lbs. At the source of this daredevilry is a potato field and the harvested potatoes and their non-helmet wearing carriers are setting off, one after the other in intervals such that they don't run into one another if one person is flying downhill faster than another. Never mind the cars, lorries and motorbikes coming the other direction though! My chat with Fabien was borne of a fascination about these wild rides and, as often happens, ended up covering a lot more than that. Special guests on the conversation are Gervais Twamugize, our guide who translated the conversation for me and James Hutchings, my husband who has worked in agriculture for over 30 years in Africa and has some interesting questions for Fabien too. Enjoy our conversations! www.tintrunksafari.com Instagram: @tintrunksafari
‘The Bible and Me’ Podcast S07 E011: James Hutchings – It’s not your choice In this episode of ‘The Bible and Me’ podcast, Nigel Watts sits down with James Hutchings. James has worked in banking. He also has a keen interest in politics and once put himself forward to be an MP in a London constituency. Hear his full story Read the Rest... The post James Hutchings – It’s not your choice- Episode 11 appeared first on Precept UK.
James Hutchings, Executive Director of Incarcerated Males and Females Inc., will share how he found his purpose while incarcerated, and turned his test into a TESTIMONY! Black Girls Getting Their SHIFT Together- http://bit.ly/2NGfaNL James Hutchings- https://incarceratedmalesandfemales.org/ IG- @incarcerated_lives_matter_ent/ Dope Lyricist- IG- @_mrday --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bggyst/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bggyst/support
Based on the cemetery tours of Halloweens past. Yosemite has lost its guardian and it is up to a group of weary travelers to solve the mystery!Special thanks:Nate Smith, Marty Anderson, Ashley McComb, Courtney Johnson, Cory Goehring, and Taylor RobbinsEmail Us:littleyopod@gmail.comFacebook, Instagram, and Twitter:@littleyopod
Because he saw himself as Yosemite's ambassador, Hutchings was surprised when the state of California told him his land claim was invalid. He fought the state for many years, and though he ultimately lost the battle, it didn't sever his ties to Yosemite. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Once Yosemite had been seen by white men, it became the focus of a great deal of attention, both for its natural wonders and for the potential money to be made there. James Hutchings spent the majority of his life writing and speaking about Yosemite. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Horror Addicts Episode# 074Horror Hostess: Emerian RichIntro Music by: Cancer Killing Gemini————————james hutchings | Til Death | Philip Chidel | Devil-Mhttp://traffic.libsyn.com/horroraddicts/HorrorAddicts074.mp3Find articles at: http://www.horroraddicts.net| nosferatu | james hutchings | the wickeds || baycon | san mateo county fair | events || all roads lead to blue lake | free fiction friday || coraline | sabrina the teenage witch | akela cooper || mark allan gunnells | james hutchings | ken guidotti | | gothhaus | sonik foundry | screamordie.com | | master of macabre contestants | band contest || gothic blue book | spooky location | devil-m | | til death & philip chidel | #74 HorrorAddicts.net eStorehttp://astore.amazon.com/horroradnet-20?_encoding=UTF8&node=20Nosferatu - Vampire’s Cry MP3 via AmazonJames Hutchings BookThe Wickeds AnthologyMr. PeppersTinder Box BluesThe QuarryGothic Blue BookBaycon.orgSan Mateo County Fairhttps://www.sanmateocountyfair.com/contests/departments/literary-artsAll Roads Lead To Blue Lakehttp://www.podiobooks.com/title/all-roads-lead-to-blue-lakeJames Hutchingshttp://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/aofKen Guidottihttp://kenguidotti.com/Sonik Foundryhttp://www.sonikfoundry.com/ScreamorDie.comDevil- Mdevil-m.deTil Deathhttp://tildeath-movie.com/h o s t e s s Emerian Richs t a f fKnightmist, Sapphire Neal, David Watson, Ed Pope, Dan Shaurette, Audrey Sabin, Marc ValeWant to be a part of the HA staff? Email horroraddicts@gmail.comc o n t a c t / s h o w . n o t e shttp://www.horroraddicts.netm u s i chttp://www.graveconcernsezine.comt a p i n g . s t u d i oQuills, A Place For Writers13 Nightmare Lane, Awen, Second Lifehttp://slurl.com/secondlife/Awen/168/179/23
I used to hike in and around Yosemite National Park. To me (and I imagine thousands of other visitors), Yosemite was the embodiment of “nature,” something grand, pristine, and, well “natural.” Of course there is a sense in which that is true: Yosemite was not made by the hand of man. But in another sense that understanding is false, as Jen Huntley explains in The Making of Yosemite: James Mason Hutchings and the Origins of America’s Most Popular National Park (UP of Kansas, 2011). Yosemite the Place may be “natural,” but Yosemite the Park is not. It was made by a set of people with a variety of interests, some familiar to us (e.g., making money) and others not (e.g., purifying the nation). Suffice it to say that the makers of Yosemite the Park were not exactly “environmentalists” as we understand them. They were people of their own time, and with that time’s ideas and values. Jen does a terrific job of exploring them (and the fascinating James Hutchings in particular), what they thought, what they wanted to do, and what they did to create Yosemite. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
I used to hike in and around Yosemite National Park. To me (and I imagine thousands of other visitors), Yosemite was the embodiment of “nature,” something grand, pristine, and, well “natural.” Of course there is a sense in which that is true: Yosemite was not made by the hand of man. But in another sense that understanding is false, as Jen Huntley explains in The Making of Yosemite: James Mason Hutchings and the Origins of America’s Most Popular National Park (UP of Kansas, 2011). Yosemite the Place may be “natural,” but Yosemite the Park is not. It was made by a set of people with a variety of interests, some familiar to us (e.g., making money) and others not (e.g., purifying the nation). Suffice it to say that the makers of Yosemite the Park were not exactly “environmentalists” as we understand them. They were people of their own time, and with that time’s ideas and values. Jen does a terrific job of exploring them (and the fascinating James Hutchings in particular), what they thought, what they wanted to do, and what they did to create Yosemite. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
I used to hike in and around Yosemite National Park. To me (and I imagine thousands of other visitors), Yosemite was the embodiment of “nature,” something grand, pristine, and, well “natural.” Of course there is a sense in which that is true: Yosemite was not made by the hand of man. But in another sense that understanding is false, as Jen Huntley explains in The Making of Yosemite: James Mason Hutchings and the Origins of America’s Most Popular National Park (UP of Kansas, 2011). Yosemite the Place may be “natural,” but Yosemite the Park is not. It was made by a set of people with a variety of interests, some familiar to us (e.g., making money) and others not (e.g., purifying the nation). Suffice it to say that the makers of Yosemite the Park were not exactly “environmentalists” as we understand them. They were people of their own time, and with that time’s ideas and values. Jen does a terrific job of exploring them (and the fascinating James Hutchings in particular), what they thought, what they wanted to do, and what they did to create Yosemite. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
I used to hike in and around Yosemite National Park. To me (and I imagine thousands of other visitors), Yosemite was the embodiment of “nature,” something grand, pristine, and, well “natural.” Of course there is a sense in which that is true: Yosemite was not made by the hand of man. But in another sense that understanding is false, as Jen Huntley explains in The Making of Yosemite: James Mason Hutchings and the Origins of America’s Most Popular National Park (UP of Kansas, 2011). Yosemite the Place may be “natural,” but Yosemite the Park is not. It was made by a set of people with a variety of interests, some familiar to us (e.g., making money) and others not (e.g., purifying the nation). Suffice it to say that the makers of Yosemite the Park were not exactly “environmentalists” as we understand them. They were people of their own time, and with that time’s ideas and values. Jen does a terrific job of exploring them (and the fascinating James Hutchings in particular), what they thought, what they wanted to do, and what they did to create Yosemite. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How to Piss off Authority in Eight Easy Steps is a short essay written for young people who are desperate to find something more than just what capitalism and hierarchy have planned for them, but are not sure where to look. Written by James Hutchings and stolen from the Anarchist Library.download