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Water is essential for life, but how much do you know about the health of your local water supply? In this special episode, we speak with two Riverkeepers who explain the importance of water quality monitoring for every living organism, from humans to birds. John Lipscomb shares critical history of the Hudson River and how activism has helped the neighborhood thrive. And John Zaktansky introduces us to Doug Fessler and the technology of BirdNET for his hi-tech patrol. Co-produced by our guest host, Trisha Mukherjee. Tune in!For more information about the From Love to Action campaign, episode transcript and other resources from this episode, visit BirdNote.org.Want more Bring Birds Back? Subscribe to our show and follow us on Instagram! For more about BirdNote, sign up for our weekly newsletter. And for ad-free listening and other perks, sign up for BirdNote+ here.BirdNote is a nonprofit. Your tax-deductible gift makes these shows possible.Bring Birds Back Special Season 5 is sponsored by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
Hello Capital Region! This is the Hudson Mohawk Magazine, broadcasting from the Sanctuary for Independent Media in Troy, NY. We start off today with hearing from some voices of protestors who attended Sunday, June 7th, "Troy Rally, for Black Lives" at Riverfront Park. Then, John Larkins an activist who is currently fighting for black rights, talks about his own experiences with the police. And later on, an interview with two drag queens on how the pandemic has affected their drag careers and the ways they've been innovating new ways of drag performance. After that, we speak with Riverkeeper boat captain, John Lipscomb, about protecting the Hudson River Finally, Clyanna Lightbourn, a Statewide Civil Rights Organizer for Citizen Action of New York gives her opinion about the two candidates running for Albany District Attorney, David Soares and Matt Toporowski.
John Lipscomb Riverkeeper by WOOC 105.3 FM Troy
John Lipscomb is an inventor that is shocking the paranormal industry with his X-Dimensional Camera. His device is able to capture human ghosts, animal spirits, demons, angels, and alien-like creatures so weird they are difficult to explain and are a must see. His other-dimensional entity photograph inventory exceeds 1,000 and all are clear and compelling, unlike what you see on the internet. He has been developing his device for thirty years and it is using a part of the light spectrum between the Xray and Gamma Ray. His equipment comprises of a generator he carries inside a container about the size of an average luggage case, which is hooked up to a digital camera with a very powerful lightsource to capture the entity photographs. He is just now coming public after taking these shocking photos for 6 years. His website is TearingTheVel.TV (.TV) and he hosts a weekly show you can watch from the website. Mr. Lipscomb has teamed up with this show exclusively and will be a regular interview here.Learn more about John here:https://tearingtheveil.tv
Nanalupe's home for children escaping hell by John Lipscomb
The Painting and the Piano is an improbable story of survival and love. Growing up more than a thousand miles apart and worlds away from each other, Johnny and Adrianne seemed to have all that children could ask for. However, the demons of their respective mothers would tear their fragile young lives apart. Eventually, destiny would bring Johnny and Adrianne together, but first they had to endure the painful toll that alcohol, drugs, and a negligent court system would take on them. With parts of Adrianne's story ripped from national news headlines, their story takes them from the depths of despair and near death to their first serendipitous introduction and the moment each knew they were finally safe. Filled with hope, inspiration, and humor, The Painting and the Piano is an unforgettable story of pain, loss, and the undying human quest for happiness.
Complete clean electricity by 2050. Mandatory collection of compost citywide. Carbon neutrality for all large buildings. Those were only some of the many promises touted in Mayor Bill de Blasio's announcement of New York's Green New Deal this week. Gov. Andrew Cuomo also signed historic legislation on Earth Day to ban single-use plastic bags. Our reporter Scott Enman is going to break all of this down for us. Plus, we’ll be hearing from Eric Goldstein at the Natural Resources Defense Council and John Lipscomb of Riverkeeper. Lastly, our reporter Paul Frangipane goes inside a Sunset Park recycling plant. Interview with Scott Enman at 1:11Interview with John Lipscomb at 5:23Interview with Eric Goldstein at 11:06Interview with Paul Frangipane at 14:53Our host Lawrence Madsen is a native New Yorker. His family and friends have told him since he was 17 that he has a voice for radio. When he saw an opportunity to do just that, he jumped for it. He is dearly fond of the Brooklyn Eagle. He attended Columbia University, and volunteers with the disaster relief group Team Rubicon.Subscribe to Brooklyn this Week:iTunesSpotifyStitcher
Skinwalker in my backyard by John Lipscomb
Today's Flash Back Friday takes us to Episode 51 from June 2011. In this technological time, is gardening a lost art? Do you know the difference between hybrid and heirloom seeds? Jason Hartman talks with the founder of El Dorado Heirloom Seeds, John Lipscomb, to discuss whether hybrid seeds is a positive or negative impact on our lives. John Lipscomb founded his company with $2,000 and less than a pound of his own garden heirloom seeds (which he counted and inserted into envelopes at his dining room table). Working on a cash basis with no debt, the company now employs 15 people, and may generate more than $5 million in sales in a year. John wrote an article called HOW HYBRID SEEDS RUINED AMERICA. Other websites include: www.patriotfood.com and www.bigjohnlipscomb.com.
“We both lost our mothers to their disease at 47.” —John on how this disease infects the family tree. John and Adrianne are the co-authors of The Painting and The Piano, their improbable story of survival and love and the painful toll that alcohol, drugs, and a negligent court system would take on them. Both are involved in the AA/Recovery community. Adrianne currently works at a recovery house and Johnny continues speaking, sponsoring and helping others in recovery.
Hudson River water quality; guest John Lipscomb, boat captain for Riverkeeper.
Hudson River water quality; guest John Lipscomb, boat captain for Riverkeeper.
What is the basic difference between hybrid seeds and heirloom seeds? Has gardening become a lost art in this technological age? Join Jason Hartman as he discusses the changeover from heirloom to hybrid seeds in our agricultural industry with John Lipscomb, founder of El Dorado Heirloom Seeds, and how growing from hybrid seeds is having [...]
The General Convention of the Episcopal Church has sharpened our culture’s intensifying focus on homosexuality. In a year of political and religious milestones for gays and lesbians, Gene Robinson became the first openly gay man to be elected an Episcopal Bishop. There were 11th-hour allegations of impropriety. But in the end, the laity, clergy, and House of Bishops of the Church confirmed his election. This week, we set aside the ins and outs of the Robinson controversy. The public furor over this event flows, in part, from our culture’s confusion over what it might mean to morally condone homosexual relationships. And Gene Robinson aside, this issue remains an ongoing source of bitter debate among Anglicans and in most of the mainline churches in this country. How can people of faith reach radically different conclusions while living in the same tradition? Host Krista Tippett engages two Episcopal bishops on either side of the matter in a thoughtful conversation that aims to clarify our understanding of the religious issues at stake.