Podcast appearances and mentions of John Yates

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Best podcasts about John Yates

Latest podcast episodes about John Yates

Emetophobia Help with Anna Christie
S5E20 Is Your "Anxiety Monster" a Safety Behaviour? ~ Psychologist Robert Roopa

Emetophobia Help with Anna Christie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 49:29


SEASON 5 of Emetophobia Help TRIGGER WARNING: Words such as "vomit,” “throw up” and "sick" may be used. Host: Anna Christie, Psychotherapist and Emetophobia SpecialistBooks and Articles Mentioned:"The Mind Illuminated" by John Yates"Healing from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder" by David Keller"Extensions of Core Beliefs" by Robert Roopa - https://www.ocdontario.com/emetophobia-fear-of-vomiting10 Emetophobia CLASSES with Anna: www.emetophobiahelp.org/classesFacebook Group: Emetophobia NO PANICANNA & DAVID'S BOOK: Emetophobia: Understanding and Treating Fear of Vomiting in Children and Adults: Russ, David, Dr., Christie, Anna S., FOR KIDS: "Turnaround Anxiety Program" with Emetophobia supplement (McCarthy/Russ) and  Emetophobia! The Ultimate Kids' Guide eBook : Russ. PhD, DavidIntro Music: YouTube Audio Library, "Far Away (Sting)" by MK2, Used with Permission.Support the showAnna's Website: www.emetophobiahelp.orgResource site for Clinicians: www.emetophobia.netMERCH for stress, anxiety, panic: www.katralex.com

The Falls Church Sermon Series
Sunday, April 13, 2025 | Palm Sunday | John Yates

The Falls Church Sermon Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025


The Ski Podcast
231: John Yates-Smith, YSE Ski - 50 years in Val d'Isère

The Ski Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2024 50:12


This special episode of The Ski Podcast featuring Val d'Isère legend John Yates-Smith.  John is just starting his 50th winter in the resort. He started in the 70s in the early years of the British ski industry and went on to run Bladon Lines' operations in Val d'Isère for a decade.  In 1991, he co-founded his own chalet company, YSE Ski, which has now been offering ski holidays in VDI for over 30 years.  SHOW NOTES Read Iain's article about Bladon Lines (2:00) YSE is a Val d'Isère specialist founded in 1991 (2:45) “YSE is run by hyper-efficient ladies” (3:00) Fiona Easdale is the ‘E' of ‘YSE' “Brexit has been a nightmare for us” (4:00) John's first ski season was with John Morgan in 1975/76 (8:00) “The best skiing in the world and a lot of very pretty chalet girls” (8:15) Is being a KP the best job in the Alps? (9:00) John's brother opened ‘Dick's Tea Bar' (12:30) In 1982, John started working for Bladon Lines (16:00) The company was founded by Mark Lines and Simon Bladon in 1978 (16:30) Bladon Lines staff jackets were so colourful they became known as the ‘Parrots' (18:00) “I hated my parrot jacket and refused to wear it!” (18:15) Telex was the typical mode of communication (21:00) Transfers before the Geneva-Albertville motorway could take up to 13 hours (26:00) In 1991 John started YSE with Fiona Easdale after Bladon Lines sacked her (33:00) In 1995, Inghams bought the brand for next to nothing (35:30) “I was absolutely delighted to see Bladon Lines go” (35:30) John set up the Bladon Lines summer operation in Corsica (37:00) The Hotel Valinco was built with sand from the beach (38:00) John had some attention from the Corsican mafia? (39:15) “There are no honest people in Corsica!” (39:45) John's car was set on fire… (41:00) “What gun have you got?” (42:30) Feedback I enjoy all feedback about the show, I'm always interested to hear what you think, so please do contact me on social @theskipodcast or by email theskipodcast@gmail.com  Dave Mills: "Great podcast and adds to the excitement of another ski season" Adam Fisher: "Good work with the podcast. I really enjoyed the Japan and Joanna Lees episodes.” Mike Greenland: "Always entertaining!” There are now 241 episodes of The Ski Podcast to catch up with. There is so much to listen to in our previous episode, just go to theskipodcast.com and search around the tags and categories: you're bound to find something of interest.  If you like the podcast, there are three things you can do to help:    1) Follow us. Just take a look for that button and press it now  2) Give us a review or just leave a comment on Apple Podcasts or Spotify  3) Book your ski hire with Intersport Rent using the code ‘SKIPODCAST' or take this link You can follow Iain @skipedia and the podcast @theskipodcast Cover Photo courtesy of Felice Hardy, Action Packed Travel

The Stoic Handbook by Jon Brooks
Creating the Ultimate Stoic Routine: Work Rituals (2)

The Stoic Handbook by Jon Brooks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 25:19


Send us a textIn this episode of our series on crafting a Stoic daily routine, we focus on how to build effective work rituals. These rituals are designed to help you find deeper meaning and purpose in whatever form of work you do—whether it's a formal job, creative endeavor, or a personal project like martial arts. Here are the key highlights from the episode:Episode Notes:1. Broadening the Definition of WorkWork doesn't have to be limited to a traditional career. We explore how to recognize anything you spend time on and take seriously as your “work”—whether it's drawing, studying martial arts, or any passion project.2. Pre-Work Ritual: Six Key PointsInspired by John Yates' "The Mind Illuminated," we dive into a six-step preparation ritual that helps set the stage for a successful work session.Key elements include defining your motivation, setting specific goals, acknowledging expectations, committing to diligence, addressing potential distractions, and preparing your work environment.3. Finding Enjoyment in Your WorkWe discuss the importance of enjoying the process rather than seeing work as a box to tick off your list. Finding ways to enjoy your work not only makes it more sustainable but also enriches the entire experience.4. The Power of a Performance StatementDevelop a performance statement as an affirmation to keep you on track. For example: “Every time I get distracted, I will make a note of the distraction and return to the task.” This simple tool helps reinforce positive behavior and mindfulness during work.5. Work as MeditationApplying a meditative mindset to work helps you stay present and focused. Just like mindfulness meditation, when you lose focus, gently redirecting yourself back to the task at hand can transform your productivity and mindset.6. Post-Work ReflectionReflecting on what went well after each work session is crucial. Focus on three positive outcomes to reinforce growth and keep yourself motivated.7. Working with Others: The EAR AcronymGood communication during collaboration can be broken down into Empathy, Assertiveness, and Respect (EAR). This simple framework helps improve how you navigate work relationships and difficult dynamics.8. Premeditation of AdversityInspired by Marcus Aurelius, we explore the Stoic practice of **premeditating potential obstacles** to remain calm and composed during challenging moments at work. It's not about being negative but about being preparedResources Mentioned:John Yates' "The Mind Illuminated"** – The inspiration behind the six-point pre-work ritual.Three Pillars of Skillful Communication Cheat Sheet – Get immediate access to premium Stoic meditation courses, exclusive community, straight-to-the-point lessons, and Q&As created by Jon Brooks. Includes a 7-day free trial.

The Sarah Fraser Show
INTERVIEW: Youtuber John Yates On, Sister Wives Doing A Spinoff With The Kids? His Famous Paedon Brown Chat, And What People Don't Know About Angela Deem. Friday, October 18th, 2024 | Sarah Fraser

The Sarah Fraser Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 63:37


Youtuber John Yates has been covering reality TV, 90 Day Fiance, Sister Wives, and more for nearly a decade. He's broken some of the biggest TLC stories including Christine Brown's son Paedon Brown sitting down with him for nearly 3hrs to talk about Sister Wives, his moms, siblings, and more. John joins the podcast today to chat about the current 90 Day fiance shows, his friendship with Angela Deem, Villains, and his life before YT. John also discusses his controversial reporting style and predicts which TLC star will have the next big scandal. Plus, will Sister Wives being getting a spinoff and more! Follow him on YT @johnyates372 Timestamps: 00:00:00 - Introduction to John Yates 00:12:33 - Impact of the Snowden Series 00:17:13 - Christine's Lawsuit Against Kody 00:24:00 - Potential Spinoffs for Sister Wives 00:38:36 - Angela Deem's True Personality  l Live Podcast Halloween Edition! VIP ticket, Q&A, Halloween costume contest! https://www.eventbrite.com/e/q-a-with-david-yontef-sarah-fraser-halloween-costume-party-edition-tickets-1006324021237?aff=oddtdtcreator Show is sponsored by: Amazfit.com/tsfs a wearable band to help you focus on health and wellness that looks sexy and cute! Get 15% OFF when you use code TSFS Article.com/tsfs for $50 OFF your purchase of $100 or more. Gorgeous furniture, garden, and home decor products that are built to last Field Of Greens use promo code TSFS get 15% OFF your order and FREE rush shipping Honey Play Box adult toys for everyone! Use code TSFS for 20% OFF your order  Horizonfibroids.com get rid of those nasty fibroids Nutrafol.com use code TSFS for FREE shipping and $10 off your subscription Oneskin.co use code TSFS for 15% OFF your fabulous order Quince.com/tsfs for FREE shipping on your order and 365 day returns Taskrabbit.com use promo code TSFS at checkout for 15%. Book taskrabbit for trusted help or home tasks Timeline Nutrition is offering 10% off your first order of mitopure. Go to timeline.com/tsfs Follow me on Instagram/Tiktok: @thesarahfrasershow   ***Visit our Sub-Reddit: reddit.com/r/thesarahfrasershow for ALL things The Sarah Fraser Show!!!*** **Check out some of my FAVORITE things on Amazon Marketplace - especially if you're looking to get geared-up to start your own Podcast!!!** https://www.amazon.com/shop/thesarahfrasershow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Field Gulls: for Seattle Seahawks fans
PREVIEW - Seahawks travel to Atlanta in MUST WIN NFC contest - with special guest John Yates of the Outta Your Falcon Mind podcast

Field Gulls: for Seattle Seahawks fans

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 35:29


John from the Outta Your Falcon Mind podcast joins me today to break down Sunday's matchup between two NFC teams trying to position themselves as playoff contenders. Tune in and join the conversation with your comments and questions! Here's how you can support the Seahawks Forever channel: SUBSCRIBE to the YouTube Channel for video versions: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKP7ohrtTc8P0a4YIBUTfdg Buy me a coffee, or a beer! https://www.buymeacoffee.com/dviens08w Join YouTube Premium! Watch ALL videos across the app AD-FREE (a portion of the fees comes back to the channel) Hit the SUPER THANKS button! Or… just engage with the videos! Comment, critique, as questions. The more interaction the better! FOLLOW me on Twitter @SeahawksForever For promotional or media inquiries - EMAIL dviens08@gmail.com All content on this YouTube channel is produced, written, edited & performed by Dan Viens. All content on this channel is copyrighted and/or licensed to be used under permitted audiovisual grounds, and/or for the single use of "fair use" under news reporting and/or teaching only. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statutes that might otherwise be infringing. No copyright infringement intended. No video is used on this channel that has previously been broadcast and thus unauthorized for use. Only all-22 tape is used, and done so within the legally defined context of “fair use.”  Any re-broadcast, or unauthorized use of content produced on this channel is strictly prohibited and subject to legal consequences unless otherwise permitted by the owner.  #bluewirevideo Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Legends: National Wrestling Hall of Fame
2024 Tribute & Induction: Coleman Scott, Distinguished Member

Legends: National Wrestling Hall of Fame

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2024 26:11


The tribute speeches and induction ceremony for 2024 National Wrestling Hall of Fame Distinguished Member Coleman Scott. Tribute speakers: John Yates and Neil Erisman. Tribune emcee: Dave Martin. Induction ceremony emcee: Sandy Stevens.  Recorded June 2024. SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOWApple Podcasts  | Spreaker | iHeartRadio | Spotify  | Android | RSS ContributeAnd if you're a fan of the extensive and broad-based reach of the shows on the Mat Talk Podcast Network, become a contributor today.. There are various levels of perks for the different levels of patronage. If you like wrestling content — scratch that — if you LOVE great wrestling content, consider becoming a contributor. How much you give is solely up to how much you believe it's worth to you.

Optimal Health Daily
2478: How to Let Go by David Cain of Raptitude on Mindfulness, Meditation & Emotional Intelligence

Optimal Health Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 10:25


Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 2478: David Cain of Raptitude.com dives into the nuanced art of letting go, challenging the notion that it's a simple matter of will. Through exploring the transient nature of experiences and the pitfalls of trying to control them, Cain offers insights into the practice of mindfulness as a path to genuinely releasing what we cannot hold onto. His article illuminates the delicate balance between experiencing and letting experiences pass, providing a thoughtful perspective on navigating life's inevitable ebbs and flows. Read along with the original article(s) here: https://www.raptitude.com/2018/07/let-go/ Quotes to ponder: "Letting go is possible. But it's done differently than we usually think." Episode references: "The Mind Illuminated" by John Yates: https://www.amazon.com/Mind-Illuminated-Meditation-Integrating-Mindfulness/dp/1501156985 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Optimal Health Daily - ARCHIVE 1 - Episodes 1-300 ONLY
2478: How to Let Go by David Cain of Raptitude on Mindfulness, Meditation & Emotional Intelligence

Optimal Health Daily - ARCHIVE 1 - Episodes 1-300 ONLY

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 10:25


Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 2478: David Cain of Raptitude.com dives into the nuanced art of letting go, challenging the notion that it's a simple matter of will. Through exploring the transient nature of experiences and the pitfalls of trying to control them, Cain offers insights into the practice of mindfulness as a path to genuinely releasing what we cannot hold onto. His article illuminates the delicate balance between experiencing and letting experiences pass, providing a thoughtful perspective on navigating life's inevitable ebbs and flows. Read along with the original article(s) here: https://www.raptitude.com/2018/07/let-go/ Quotes to ponder: "Letting go is possible. But it's done differently than we usually think." Episode references: "The Mind Illuminated" by John Yates: https://www.amazon.com/Mind-Illuminated-Meditation-Integrating-Mindfulness/dp/1501156985 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Next Greatest Thing
REPLAY: Behind the Scenes of an Outage

The Next Greatest Thing

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 49:06


Brandon Fisher sits down with AVECC engineering manager Chris Howe, Dispatch Manager, John Yates, and former Operations Manager, Don Easom to discuss the behind-the-scenes of an outage. This episode was originally a two-part series published in 2021. 

MTD Audiobook
Cutting the chatter

MTD Audiobook

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2024 10:15


Productive Machines is on a mission to provide a 15-minute turnaround from receiving data on its cloud-based, artificial intelligence platform to delivering a click-and-play machining protocol that enables manufacturers to machine the best part, faster, first time. John Yates talks to the spin-out team whose software-as-a-service is driving step changes in productivity and sustainability. Walking along the second-floor corridor to the Productive Machines' workspace in the AMP Technology Centre, Rotherham, Dr Erdem Ozturk stops to look through the window at the Rolls-Royce Factory of the Future, whose 3,000sq/m of machining workshops were his research and development laboratory for more than a decade. Erdem led the Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre's brilliant Machining Dynamics Technology Group, which grew in the innovation environment enabled by Dr Sam Turner and AMRC co-founder Professor Keith Ridgway which propelled the Factory of the Future to global leader in aerospace milling. Their success was achieved by adapting and refining the fiendishly complex mathematical models of machining research pioneers like Franz Koenigsberger and Jiri Tlusty whose ideas were turned into game-changing operational manufacturing methods by their former students, and now professors in their own right, Yusuf Altintas, Scott Smith and Tom Delio. Perhaps the AMRC's biggest success came in 2014 when they applied these theoretical models to vibration control, cutting tool design, and residual stress management in a SAMULET project that was to revolutionise the manufacturing of Rolls-Royce aero-engine discs and shaft components.  The improvements in quality, alongside the time and cost savings achieved in the manufacture of the fan disc, have become folklore in the AMRC and the close-knit aerospace manufacturing community: a 50% reduction in cycle times and right-first-time production rates rising from 85% to over 99%. Coupled with cost-savings of £135m, this made UK jet engine production globally competitive, safeguarding 400 high-value-added jobs and unlocking a £300m investment in a North East plant. Not content with this success, Erdem and his AMRC team, along with European partners, began harnessing the power of information technology to push the boundaries of the possible, creating state-of-the-art digital twins that combined machine tool dynamics, control loops, tool-path generation and machining processes, to boost productivity, extend tool life and eliminate chatter. Productive Machines traces its lineage back to this remarkable pedigree. Formed in 2021, shortly before joining an elite group of start-ups on the ATI Boeing Accelerator programme – over 200 applicants from 44 countries were whittled down to just ten – the business was explicit from the start in its mission to maximise the productivity and sustainability of machine tools.  “We are using our unique digital twin to simulate millions of combinations of machine settings to arrive at the optimum feed rate and spindle speed settings for a given process before manufacturing. This eliminates chatter vibrations and provides machining optimisation, preventative maintenance and part quality that may not be achieved by a human operator even with years of continuous improvement,” says Erdem, who now leads a growing international team of machining physics developers and software engineers from their base in the heart of South Yorkshire's Advanced Manufacturing Innovation District. Having raised a cumulative £3m investment, the company launched its Feed Rate Calculator and Spindle Speed Calculator apps in October and November last year respectively. This was followed by an early access programme for a predictive maintenance service for spindle health monitoring in December.  In the next few months, they will be launching the fully automated cloud based system that achieves a 15-minute turnaround from receiving data on its artificial intelligence platform to delivering a click-and-play machining protocol that enables manufacturers to machine the best part, faster, first time. “We saw there was a massive opportunity to turn our cutting-edge technology into a simple, straightforward Software as a Service (SaaS) product,” Erdem adds. “Using artificial intelligence and digital twins of the milling process, we can identify vibration-free parameters and automatically personalise the process to eliminate chatter. This opens up a future where cutting optimisation technology is accessible to all, regardless of the scale of operation” One early client, Yorkshire headquartered Ficep UK, a leading supplier of structural steel and plate fabrication machine tools, has seen process productivity increase by 110%, with cycle times cut by 53% while reducing the magnitude of vibrations five times. Other clients report reductions in machining design and set-up times of 20%; cycle times reduced between ten to more than 50%; operational and maintenance costs cut by 25%; and cutting tool costs reduced by 11%  An additional benefit of this software-as-a-service is the way it can dramatically reduce manufacturers' carbon footprint. “By finally solving the age-old and frustrating problem of machine tool chatter, we calculate that our technology could save a staggering 2.5 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide emissions between now and 2050,” Erdem says. To put this into perspective, 2.5 gigatonnes is equivalent to the UK's total carbon emissions - every factory, fire, car, flight and light - for six years. While work continues in developing and refining the AI platform for launch in the spring, it's fascinating to learn that an essential piece of kit in this operation is one of the oldest in the toolbox: the tap test. Used in aerospace engineering since the 1950s, the tap test relies on simple physics: the kinetic impulse of a hammer strike dissipated as vibration and sound.  However, where traditional tap testing relied on skilled individuals to interpret the sounds made by the struck object, such as a machine tool, today's digital tap tests are much more sophisticated and precise. Instead of transmitting vibration responses to the ear as an acoustic sound wave, a digital tap hammer sends the vibration response as data to a computer for recording and analysis. Specialist software then calculates the precise frequency response from those vibrations, considering parameters like the frequency, amplitude, and decay rate of the vibrations, and enables an exact analysis of that tool's unique characteristics and condition.  From its origins, the age-old practice of tap testing has not only endured but has evolved into an even more powerful tool in the era of smart manufacturing, becoming a critical component of quality control, material characterisation, structural health monitoring. “Digital tap testing, enhanced by AI, is ushering in a new era of precision and efficiency in manufacturing. It empowers manufacturers to optimise machine tool performance, reduce waste, and enhance product quality. It is democratising condition-monitoring and predictive maintenance, enabling even small-scale operators to benefit from data-driven technologies without costly investments in sensors or infrastructure,” Erdem added. Although focused on the future, Erdem is also a keen student of machining history and one of his go-to authors is the American Quaker Frederick Taylor, best known for bringing the ‘scientific method' to the early factory system making it more efficient and productive.  Taylor also wrote a book On the Art of Cutting Metals, published in 1907, which identified “chatter as the most obscure and delicate of all problems facing the machinist – probably no rules or formulae can be devised which will accurately guide the machinist in taking maximum cuts and speeds possible without producing chatter.” Erdem smiles and says Taylor was absolutely right. “There were no formulae available to predict chatter vibrations until 1954 when Tlusty was able to formulate the absolute stability limit for chip width for turning operations. That meant if the process planner selected a chip width smaller than this limit, the process would be stable and there would not be chatter vibrations irrespective of the spindle speed used.” Seventy years on since the formulation of Tlusty's law for the identification of chatter stability lobes in turning processes, the Productive Machines team are coming very close to proving Frederick Taylor wrong by accurately guiding the machinist in making maximum cuts and speeds possible without producing chatter for machining processes.  That, I suspect, matters as much to this team as turning a profit.  It would certainly delight Keith Ridgway: “If I were starting the AMRC today, it would not be by constructing a huge machining research facility. It would be by harnessing the power of artificial intelligence, cloud-based data analytics and digital twins. Product

Church of the Holy Cross
The Reverend Dr. John Yates III :: Rector Institution Service

Church of the Holy Cross

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 16:33


The Institution of The Reverend Michael David Cumbie as the 5th Rector of Church of the Holy Cross

Audio Based Content: an Improv Comedy Podcast
The Party part 7 of 10 Free Form Fellas 2 Amazing Grace

Audio Based Content: an Improv Comedy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 9:57


For my 40th birthday party, I invited over many improvisors to record scenes all taking place at the same fictional party. This is the seventh of ten scenes from the party featuring Cody Hartman, John Yates, and Ryan Wood as a religious father tells his son some life changing news. #improv #comedy #improvcomedy #improvpodcast #comedypodcast #longformimprov #nashvillecomedy #humor --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/audio-based-content/support

Audio Based Content: an Improv Comedy Podcast
The Party part 6 of 10 Free Form Fellas 1 Spider-Man's Web

Audio Based Content: an Improv Comedy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2023 8:01


For my 40th birthday party, I invited over many improvisors to record scenes all taking place at the same fictional party. This is the sixth of ten scenes from the party featuring Cody Hartman, John Yates, and Ryan Wood as two green goblins sexually harass Spider-Man at the party. #improv #comedy #improvcomedy #improvpodcast #comedypodcast #longformimprov #nashvillecomedy #humor --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/audio-based-content/support

FamilyLife Today®
Praying Men: A Gift To Families: John Yates

FamilyLife Today®

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 25:46


Men want to do things they feel they can do well. On FamilyLife Today, retired pastor and long-time speaker for FamilyLife, John Yates, breaks down the simple nature of prayer and how a man's prayer life blesses his family. Show Notes and Resources You can find John's book on our shop: How a Man Prays for His Family Receive 52 Weeks in The Word by giving a donation. and your donation will be matched Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com. See resources from our past podcasts. Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife's app! Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify. Check out all the FamilyLife's podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com
Praying Men: A Gift To Families: John Yates

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 25:45


Men want to do things they feel they can do well. On FamilyLife Today, retired pastor and long-time speaker for FamilyLife, John Yates, breaks down the simple nature of prayer and how a man's prayer life blesses his family. To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/84/29

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com
Praying Men: A Gift To Families: John Yates

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 25:45


Men want to do things they feel they can do well. On FamilyLife Today, retired pastor and long-time speaker for FamilyLife, John Yates, breaks down the simple nature of prayer and how a man's prayer life blesses his family. To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/84/29

FamilyLife Today®
Praying: Men Who Struggle: John Yates

FamilyLife Today®

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 25:08


Many men struggle with praying. John Yates discusses why men struggle, steps to help, and how it can affect their whole lives. Show Notes and Resources You can find John's book on our shop: How a Man Prays for His Family Receive 52 Weeks in The Word by giving a donation. and your donation will be matched Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com. See resources from our past podcasts. Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife's app! Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify. Check out all the FamilyLife's podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com
Praying: Men Who Struggle: John Yates

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 25:07


Many men struggle with praying. John Yates discusses why men struggle, steps to help, and how it can affect their whole lives. To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/84/29

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com
Praying: Men Who Struggle: John Yates

FamilyLife Today® on Oneplace.com

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 25:07


Many men struggle with praying. John Yates discusses why men struggle, steps to help, and how it can affect their whole lives. To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/84/29

Bob Enyart Live
RSR's List of Not So Old Things

Bob Enyart Live

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023


-- Finches Diversify in Decades, Opals Form in Months,  Man's Genetic Diversity in 200 Generations, C-14 Everywhere: Real Science Radio hosts Bob Enyart and Fred Williams present their classic program that led to the audience-favorites rsr.org/list-shows! See below and hear on today's radio program our list of Not So Old and Not So Slow Things! From opals forming in months to man's genetic diversity in 200 generations, and with carbon 14 everywhere it's not supposed to be (including in diamonds and dinosaur bones!), scientific observations fill the guys' most traditional list challenging those who claim that the earth is billions of years old. Many of these scientific finds demand a re-evaluation of supposed million and billion-year ages. * Finches Adapt in 17 Years, Not 2.3 Million: Charles Darwin's finches are claimed to have taken 2,300,000 years to diversify from an initial species blown onto the Galapagos Islands. Yet individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. Bird Reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away and in at most 17 years, like Darwin's finches, they had diversified their beaks, related muscles, and behavior to fill various ecological niches. Hear about this also at rsr.org/spetner. * Opals Can Form in "A Few Months" And Don't Need 100,000 Years: A leading authority on opals, Allan W. Eckert, observed that, "scientific papers and textbooks have told that the process of opal formation requires tens of thousands of years, perhaps hundreds of thousands... Not true." A 2011 peer-reviewed paper in a geology journal from Australia, where almost all the world's opal is found, reported on the: "new timetable for opal formation involving weeks to a few months and not the hundreds of thousands of years envisaged by the conventional weathering model." (And apparently, per a 2019 report from Entomology Today, opals can even form around insects!) More knowledgeable scientists resist the uncritical, group-think insistence on false super-slow formation rates (as also for manganese nodules, gold veins, stone, petroleum, canyons and gullies, and even guts, all below). Regarding opals, Darwinian bias led geologists to long ignore possible quick action, as from microbes, as a possible explanation for these mineraloids. For both in nature and in the lab, opals form rapidly, not even in 10,000 years, but in weeks. See this also from creationists by a geologist, a paleobiochemist, and a nuclear chemist. * Finches Speciate in Two Generations vs Two Million Years for Darwin's Birds?  Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands are said to have diversified into 14 species over a period of two million years. But in 2017 the journal Science reported a newcomer to the Island which within two generations spawned a reproductively isolated new species. In another instance as documented by Lee Spetner, a hundred birds of the same finch species introduced to an island cluster a 1,000 kilometers from Galapagos diversified into species with the typical variations in beak sizes, etc. "If this diversification occurred in less than seventeen years," Dr. Spetner asks, "why did Darwin's Galapagos finches [as claimed by evolutionists] have to take two million years?" * Blue Eyes Originated Not So Long Ago: Not a million years ago, nor a hundred thousand years ago, but based on a peer-reviewed paper in Human Genetics, a press release at Science Daily reports that, "research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor. A team at the University of Copenhagen have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye colour of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today." * Adding the Entire Universe to our List of Not So Old Things? Based on March 2019 findings from Hubble, Nobel laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute and his co-authors in the Astrophysical Journal estimate that the universe is about a billion years younger than previously thought! Then in September 2019 in the journal Science, the age dropped precipitiously to as low as 11.4 billion years! Of course, these measurements also further squeeze the canonical story of the big bang chronology with its many already existing problems including the insufficient time to "evolve" distant mature galaxies, galaxy clusters, superclusters, enormous black holes, filaments, bubbles, walls, and other superstructures. So, even though the latest estimates are still absurdly too old (Google: big bang predictions, and click on the #1 ranked article, or just go on over there to rsr.org/bb), regardless, we thought we'd plop the whole universe down on our List of Not So Old Things!   * After the Soft Tissue Discoveries, NOW Dino DNA: When a North Carolina State University paleontologist took the Tyrannosaurus Rex photos to the right of original biological material, that led to the 2016 discovery of dinosaur DNA, So far researchers have also recovered dinosaur blood vessels, collagen, osteocytes, hemoglobin, red blood cells, and various proteins. As of May 2018, twenty-six scientific journals, including Nature, Science, PNAS, PLoS One, Bone, and Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, have confirmed the discovery of biomaterial fossils from many dinosaurs! Organisms including T. Rex, hadrosaur, titanosaur, triceratops, Lufengosaur, mosasaur, and Archaeopteryx, and many others dated, allegedly, even hundreds of millions of years old, have yielded their endogenous, still-soft biological material. See the web's most complete listing of 100+ journal papers (screenshot, left) announcing these discoveries at bflist.rsr.org and see it in layman's terms at rsr.org/soft. * Rapid Stalactites, Stalagmites, Etc.: A construction worker in 1954 left a lemonade bottle in one of Australia's famous Jenolan Caves. By 2011 it had been naturally transformed into a stalagmite (below, right). Increasing scientific knowledge is arguing for rapid cave formation (see below, Nat'l Park Service shrinks Carlsbad Caverns formation estimates from 260M years, to 10M, to 2M, to it "depends"). Likewise, examples are growing of rapid formations with typical chemical make-up (see bottle, left) of classic stalactites and stalagmites including:- in Nat'l Geo the Carlsbad Caverns stalagmite that rapidly covered a bat - the tunnel stalagmites at Tennessee's Raccoon Mountain - hundreds of stalactites beneath the Lincoln Memorial - those near Gladfelter Hall at Philadelphia's Temple University (send photos to Bob@rsr.org) - hundreds of stalactites at Australia's zinc mine at Mt. Isa.   - and those beneath Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance. * Most Human Mutations Arose in 200 Generations: From Adam until Real Science Radio, in only 200 generations! The journal Nature reports The Recent Origin of Most Human Protein-coding Variants. As summarized by geneticist co-author Joshua Akey, "Most of the mutations that we found arose in the last 200 generations or so" (the same number previously published by biblical creationists). Another 2012 paper, in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Eugenie Scott's own field) on High mitochondrial mutation rates, shows that one mitochondrial DNA mutation occurs every other generation, which, as creationists point out, indicates that mtEve would have lived about 200 generations ago. That's not so old! * National Geographic's Not-So-Old Hard-Rock Canyon at Mount St. Helens: As our List of Not So Old Things (this web page) reveals, by a kneejerk reaction evolutionary scientists assign ages of tens or hundreds of thousands of years (or at least just long enough to contradict Moses' chronology in Genesis.) However, with closer study, routinely, more and more old ages get revised downward to fit the world's growing scientific knowledge. So the trend is not that more information lengthens ages, but rather, as data replaces guesswork, ages tend to shrink until they are consistent with the young-earth biblical timeframe. Consistent with this observation, the May 2000 issue of National Geographic quotes the U.S. Forest Service's scientist at Mount St. Helens, Peter Frenzen, describing the canyon on the north side of the volcano. "You'd expect a hard-rock canyon to be thousands, even hundreds of thousands of years old. But this was cut in less than a decade." And as for the volcano itself, while again, the kneejerk reaction of old-earthers would be to claim that most geologic features are hundreds of thousands or millions of years old, the atheistic National Geographic magazine acknowledges from the evidence that Mount St. Helens, the volcanic mount, is only about 4,000 years old! See below and more at rsr.org/mount-st-helens. * Mount St. Helens Dome Ten Years Old not 1.7 Million: Geochron Laboratories of Cambridge, Mass., using potassium-argon and other radiometric techniques claims the rock sample they dated, from the volcano's dome, solidified somewhere between 340,000 and 2.8 million years ago. However photographic evidence and historical reports document the dome's formation during the 1980s, just ten years prior to the samples being collected. With the age of this rock known, radiometric dating therefore gets the age 99.99999% wrong. * Devils Hole Pupfish Isolated Not for 13,000 Years But for 100: Secular scientists default to knee-jerk, older-than-Bible-age dates. However, a tiny Mojave desert fish is having none of it. Rather than having been genetically isolated from other fish for 13,000 years (which would make this small school of fish older than the Earth itself), according to a paper in the journal Nature, actual measurements of mutation rates indicate that the genetic diversity of these Pupfish could have been generated in about 100 years, give or take a few. * Polystrates like Spines and Rare Schools of Fossilized Jellyfish: Previously, seven sedimentary layers in Wisconsin had been described as taking a million years to form. And because jellyfish have no skeleton, as Charles Darwin pointed out, it is rare to find them among fossils. But now, reported in the journal Geology, a school of jellyfish fossils have been found throughout those same seven layers. So, polystrate fossils that condense the time of strata deposition from eons to hours or months, include: - Jellyfish in central Wisconsin were not deposited and fossilized over a million years but during a single event quick enough to trap a whole school. (This fossil school, therefore, taken as a unit forms a polystrate fossil.) Examples are everywhere that falsify the claims of strata deposition over millions of years. - Countless trilobites buried in astounding three dimensionality around the world are meticulously recovered from limestone, much of which is claimed to have been deposited very slowly. Contrariwise, because these specimens were buried rapidly in quickly laid down sediments, they show no evidence of greater erosion on their upper parts as compared to their lower parts.- The delicacy of radiating spine polystrates, like tadpole and jellyfish fossils, especially clearly demonstrate the rapidity of such strata deposition. - A second school of jellyfish, even though they rarely fossilized, exists in another locale with jellyfish fossils in multiple layers, in Australia's Brockman Iron Formation, constraining there too the rate of strata deposition. By the way, jellyfish are an example of evolution's big squeeze. Like galaxies evolving too quickly, galaxy clusters, and even human feet (which, like Mummy DNA, challenge the Out of Africa paradigm), jellyfish have gotten into the act squeezing evolution's timeline, here by 200 million years when they were found in strata allegedly a half-a-billion years old. Other examples, ironically referred to as Medusoid Problematica, are even found in pre-Cambrian strata. - 171 tadpoles of the same species buried in diatoms. - Leaves buried vertically through single-celled diatoms powerfully refute the claimed super-slow deposition of diatomaceous rock. - Many fossils, including a Mesosaur, have been buried in multiple "varve" layers, which are claimed to be annual depositions, yet they show no erosional patterns that would indicate gradual burial (as they claim, absurdly, over even thousands of years). - A single whale skeleton preserved in California in dozens of layers of diatom deposits thus forming a polystrate fossil. - 40 whales buried in the desert in Chile. "What's really interesting is that this didn't just happen once," said Smithsonian evolutionist Dr. Nick Pyenson. It happened four times." Why's that? Because "the fossil site has at least four layers", to which Real Science Radio's Bob Enyart replies: "Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha", with RSR co-host Fred Williams thoughtfully adding, "Ha ha!" * Polystrate Trees: Examples abound around the world of polystrate trees:  - Yellowstone's petrified polystrate forest (with the NPS exhibit sign removed; see below) with successive layers of rootless trees demonstrating the rapid deposition of fifty layers of strata. - A similarly formed polystrate fossil forest in France demonstrating the rapid deposition of a dozen strata. - In a thousand locations including famously the Fossil Cliffs of Joggins, Nova Scotia, polystrate fossils such as trees span many strata. - These trees lack erosion: Not only should such fossils, generally speaking, not even exist, but polystrates including trees typically show no evidence of erosion increasing with height. All of this powerfully disproves the claim that the layers were deposited slowly over thousands or millions of years. In the experience of your RSR radio hosts, evolutionists commonly respond to this hard evidence with mocking. See CRSQ June 2006, ICR Impact #316, and RSR 8-11-06 at KGOV.com. * Yellowstone Petrified Trees Sign Removed: The National Park Service removed their incorrect sign (see left and more). The NPS had claimed that in dozens of different strata over a 40-square mile area, many petrified trees were still standing where they had grown. The NPS eventually removed the sign partly because those petrified trees had no root systems, which they would have had if they had grown there. Instead, the trees of this "fossil forest" have roots that are abruptly broken off two or three feet from their trunks. If these mature trees actually had been remnants of sequential forests that had grown up in strata layer on top of strata layer, 27 times on Specimen Ridge (and 50 times at Specimen Creek), such a natural history implies passage of more time than permitted by biblical chronology. So, don't trust the National Park Service on historical science because they're wrong on the age of the Earth. * Wood Petrifies Quickly: Not surprisingly, by the common evolutionary knee-jerk claim of deep time, "several researchers believe that several millions of years are necessary for the complete formation of silicified wood". Our List of Not So Old and Not So Slow Things includes the work of five Japanese scientists who proved creationist research and published their results in the peer-reviewed journal Sedimentary Geology showing that wood can and does petrify rapidly. Modern wood significantly petrified in 36 years these researchers concluded that wood buried in strata could have been petrified in "a fairly short period of time, in the order of several tens to hundreds of years." * The Scablands: The primary surface features of the Scablands, which cover thousands of square miles of eastern Washington, were long believed to have formed gradually. Yet, against the determined claims of uniformitarian geologists, there is now overwhelming evidence as presented even in a NOVA TV program that the primary features of the Scablands formed rapidly from a catastrophic breach of Lake Missoula causing a massive regional flood. Of course evolutionary geologists still argue that the landscape was formed over tens of thousands of years, now by claiming there must have been a hundred Missoula floods. However, the evidence that there was Only One Lake Missoula Flood has been powerfully reinforced by a University of Colorado Ph.D. thesis. So the Scablands itself is no longer available to old-earthers as de facto evidence for the passage of millions of years. * The Heart Mountain Detachment: in Wyoming just east of Yellowstone, this mountain did not break apart slowly by uniformitarian processes but in only about half-an-hour as widely reported including in the evolutionist LiveScience.com, "Land Speed Record: Mountain Moves 62 Miles in 30 Minutes." The evidence indicates that this mountain of rock covering 425 square miles rapidly broke into 50 pieces and slid apart over an area of more than 1,300 square miles in a biblical, not a "geological," timeframe.  * "150 Million" year-old Squid Ink Not Decomposed: This still-writable ink had dehydrated but had not decomposed! The British Geological Survey's Dr. Phil Wilby, who excavated the fossil, said, "It is difficult to imagine how you can have something as soft and sloppy as an ink sac fossilised in three dimensions, still black, and inside a rock that is 150 million years old." And the Daily Mail states that, "the black ink was of exactly the same structure as that of today's version", just desiccated. And Wilby added, "Normally you would find only the hard parts like the shell and bones fossilised but... these creatures... can be dissected as if they are living animals, you can see the muscle fibres and cells. It is difficult to imagine... The structure is similar to ink from a modern squid so we can write with it..." Why is this difficult for evolutionists to imagine? Because as Dr. Carl Wieland writes, "Chemical structures 'fall apart' all by themselves over time due to the randomizing effects of molecular motion."Decades ago Bob Enyart broadcast a geology program about Mount St. Helens' catastrophic destruction of forests and the hydraulic transportation and upright deposition of trees. Later, Bob met the chief ranger from Haleakala National Park on Hawaii's island of Maui, Mark Tanaka-Sanders. The ranger agreed to correspond with his colleague at Yellowstone to urge him to have the sign removed. Thankfully, it was then removed. (See also AIG, CMI, and all the original Yellowstone exhibit photos.) Groundbreaking research conducted by creation geologist Dr. Steve Austin in Spirit Lake after Mount St. Helens eruption provided a modern-day analog to the formation of Yellowstone fossil forest. A steam blast from that volcano blew over tens of thousands of trees leaving them without attached roots. Many thousands of those trees were floating upright in Spirit Lake, and began sinking at varying rates into rapidly and sporadically deposited sediments. Once Yellowstone's successive forest interpretation was falsified (though like with junk DNA, it's too big to fail, so many atheists and others still cling to it), the erroneous sign was removed. * Asiatic vs. European Honeybees: These two populations of bees have been separated supposedly for seven million years. A researcher decided to put the two together to see what would happen. What we should have here is a failure to communicate that would have resulted after their "language" evolved over millions of years. However, European and Asiatic honeybees are still able to communicate, putting into doubt the evolutionary claim that they were separated over "geologic periods." For more, see the Public Library of Science, Asiatic Honeybees Can Understand Dance Language of European Honeybees. (Oh yeah, and why don't fossils of poorly-formed honeycombs exist, from the millions of years before the bees and natural selection finally got the design right? Ha! Because they don't exist! :) Nautiloid proves rapid limestone formation. * Remember the Nautiloids: In the Grand Canyon there is a limestone layer averaging seven feet thick that runs the 277 miles of the canyon (and beyond) that covers hundreds of square miles and contains an average of one nautiloid fossil per square meter. Along with many other dead creatures in this one particular layer, 15% of these nautiloids were killed and then fossilized standing on their heads. Yes, vertically. They were caught in such an intense and rapid catastrophic flow that gravity was not able to cause all of their dead carcasses to fall over on their sides. Famed Mount St. Helens geologist Steve Austin is also the world's leading expert on nautiloid fossils and has worked in the canyon and presented his findings to the park's rangers at the invitation of National Park Service officials. Austin points out, as is true of many of the world's mass fossil graveyards, that this enormous nautiloid deposition provides indisputable proof of the extremely rapid formation of a significant layer of limestone near the bottom of the canyon, a layer like the others we've been told about, that allegedly formed at the bottom of a calm and placid sea with slow and gradual sedimentation. But a million nautiloids, standing on their heads, literally, would beg to differ. At our sister stie, RSR provides the relevant Geologic Society of America abstract, links, and video. *  Now It's Allegedly Two Million Year-Old Leaves: "When we started pulling leaves out of the soil, that was surreal, to know that it's millions of years old..." sur-re-al: adjective: a bizarre mix of fact and fantasy. In this case, the leaves are the facts. Earth scientists from Ohio State and the University of Minnesota say that wood and leaves they found in the Canadian Arctic are at least two million years old, and perhaps more than ten million years old, even though the leaves are just dry and crumbly and the wood still burns! * Gold Precipitates in Veins in Less than a Second: After geologists submitted for decades to the assumption that each layer of gold would deposit at the alleged super slow rates of geologic process, the journal Nature Geoscience reports that each layer of deposition can occur within a few tenths of a second. Meanwhile, at the Lihir gold deposit in Papua New Guinea, evolutionists assumed the more than 20 million ounces of gold in the Lihir reserve took millions of years to deposit, but as reported in the journal Science, geologists can now demonstrate that the deposit could have formed in thousands of years, or far more quickly! Iceland's not-so-old Surtsey Island looks ancient. * Surtsey Island, Iceland: Of the volcanic island that formed in 1963, New Scientist reported in 2007 about Surtsey that "geographers... marvel that canyons, gullies and other land features that typically take tens of thousands or millions of years to form were created in less than a decade." Yes. And Sigurdur Thorarinsson, Iceland's chief  geologist, wrote in the months after Surtsey formed, "that the time scale," he had been trained "to attach to geological developments is misleading." [For what is said to] take thousands of years... the same development may take a few weeks or even days here [including to form] a landscape... so varied and mature that it was almost beyond belief... wide sandy beaches and precipitous crags... gravel banks and lagoons, impressive cliffs… hollows, glens and soft undulating land... fractures and faultscarps, channels and screes… confounded by what met your eye... boulders worn by the surf, some of which were almost round... -Iceland's chief geologist * The Palouse River Gorge: In the southeast of Washington State, the Palouse River Gorge is one of many features formed rapidly by 500 cubic miles of water catastrophically released with the breaching of a natural dam in the Lake Missoula Flood (which gouged out the Scablands as described above). So, hard rock can be breached and eroded rapidly. * Leaf Shapes Identical for 190 Million Years?  From Berkley.edu, "Ginkgo biloba... dates back to... about 190 million years ago... fossilized leaf material from the Tertiary species Ginkgo adiantoides is considered similar or even identical to that produced by modern Ginkgo biloba trees... virtually indistinguishable..." The literature describes leaf shapes as "spectacularly diverse" sometimes within a species but especially across the plant kingdom. Because all kinds of plants survive with all kinds of different leaf shapes, the conservation of a species retaining a single shape over alleged deep time is a telling issue. Darwin's theory is undermined by the unchanging shape over millions of years of a species' leaf shape. This lack of change, stasis in what should be an easily morphable plant trait, supports the broader conclusion that chimp-like creatures did not become human beings and all the other ambitious evolutionary creation of new kinds are simply imagined. (Ginkgo adiantoides and biloba are actually the same species. Wikipedia states, "It is doubtful whether the Northern Hemisphere fossil species of Ginkgo can be reliably distinguished." For oftentimes, as documented by Dr. Carl Werner in his Evolution: The Grand Experiment series, paleontogists falsely speciate identical specimens, giving different species names, even different genus names, to the fossil and living animals that appear identical.) * Box Canyon, Idaho: Geologists now think Box Canyon in Idaho, USA, was carved by a catastrophic flood and not slowly over millions of years with 1) huge plunge pools formed by waterfalls; 2) the almost complete removal of large basalt boulders from the canyon; 3) an eroded notch on the plateau at the top of the canyon; and 4) water scour marks on the basalt plateau leading to the canyon. Scientists calculate that the flood was so large that it could have eroded the whole canyon in as little as 35 days. See the journal Science, Formation of Box Canyon, Idaho, by Megaflood, and the Journal of Creation, and Creation Magazine. * Manganese Nodules Rapid Formation: Allegedly, as claimed at the Wikipedia entry from 2005 through 2021: "Nodule growth is one of the slowest of all geological phenomena – in the order of a centimeter over several million years." Wow, that would be slow! And a Texas A&M Marine Sciences technical slide presentation says, “They grow very slowly (mm/million years) and can be tens of millions of years old", with RWU's oceanography textbook also putting it at "0.001 mm per thousand years." But according to a World Almanac documentary they have formed "around beer cans," said marine geologist Dr. John Yates in the 1997 video Universe Beneath the Sea: The Next Frontier. There are also reports of manganese nodules forming around ships sunk in the First World War. See more at at youngearth.com, at TOL, in the print edition of the Journal of Creation, and in this typical forum discussion with atheists (at the Chicago Cubs forum no less :). * "6,000 year-old" Mitochondrial Eve: As the Bible calls "Eve... the mother of all living" (Gen. 3:20), genetic researchers have named the one woman from whom all humans have descended "Mitochondrial Eve." But in a scientific attempt to date her existence, they openly admit that they included chimpanzee DNA in their analysis in order to get what they viewed as a reasonably old date of 200,000 years ago (which is still surprisingly recent from their perspective, but old enough not to strain Darwinian theory too much). But then as widely reported including by Science magazine, when they dropped the chimp data and used only actual human mutation rates, that process determined that Eve lived only six thousand years ago! In Ann Gibbon's Science article, "Calibrating the Mitochondrial Clock," rather than again using circular reasoning by assuming their conclusion (that humans evolved from ape-like creatures), they performed their calculations using actual measured mutation rates. This peer-reviewed journal then reported that if these rates have been constant, "mitochondrial Eve… would be a mere 6000 years old." See also the journal Nature and creation.com's "A shrinking date for Eve," and Walt Brown's assessment. Expectedly though, evolutionists have found a way to reject their own unbiased finding (the conclusion contrary to their self-interest) by returning to their original method of using circular reasoning, as reported in the American Journal of Human Genetics, "calibrating against recent evidence for the divergence time of humans and chimpanzees,"  to reset their mitochondrial clock back to 200,000 years. * Even Younger Y-Chromosomal Adam: (Although he should be called, "Y-Chromosomal Noah.") While we inherit our mtDNA only from our mothers, only men have a Y chromosome (which incidentally genetically disproves the claim that the fetus is "part of the woman's body," since the little boy's y chromosome could never be part of mom's body). Based on documented mutation rates on and the extraordinary lack of mutational differences in this specifically male DNA, the Y-chromosomal Adam would have lived only a few thousand years ago! (He's significantly younger than mtEve because of the genetic bottleneck of the global flood.) Yet while the Darwinian camp wrongly claimed for decades that humans were 98% genetically similar to chimps, secular scientists today, using the same type of calculation only more accurately, have unintentionally documented that chimps are about as far genetically from what makes a human being a male, as mankind itself is from sponges! Geneticists have found now that sponges are 70% the same as humans genetically, and separately, that human and chimp Y chromosomes are  "horrendously" 30%

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The ALL ME® Podcast
Episode 103: Peptides – Dr. John Yates

The ALL ME® Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2023 36:34


The ALL ME® Podcast Peptides – Dr. John Yates Over the past year of delivering our ALL ME education programs in schools we have had a lot of questions about the topic of “Peptides”.  Some of the questions have been “What do you know about Peptides?”  Or we did get the questions “Are Peptides safer than Anabolic Steroids”?  While these are topics that we will cover in our programs we like to interview experts in their fields to talk more about these specific topics.  In this podcast we're going to talk with Dr. John Yates who is an American chemist and Professor at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California.   Dr. Yates' work specializes in mass spectrometry.  He's known for the development of the SEQUEST algorithm for automated peptide sequencing.  This was the best person for us to go to and pick his brain about the topic of Peptides to help students and adult influencers have a better understanding of what Peptides are and how they work. If you are anyone you know has ever had questions about this topic this is a podcast you certainly won't want to miss.  To learn more about Dr. Yates please visit his website: Resource Definitions and Links: What are peptides?  Videos about Peptides:  Follow Us: Twitter:  @theTHF Instagram:  @theTHF Facebook: Taylor Hooton Foundation #ALLMEPEDFREE Contact Us:  Email:  Phone: 214-449-1990 ALL ME Assembly Programs:  

Generational Curse Podcast
Is There Life on Other Planets

Generational Curse Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 89:57


The boys take a break from the norm and deal with a conspiratorial or some might say weird issue. John, Terrance and special guest John Yates tackle the UFO, UAP, Life on Other Planets issue head on.....FROM THE BIBLE!! There are insights from the Christian Holy Book that give evidence of life on other worlds which John Yates will unfold along with many other hidden mysteries. Listen to the end there is a curse that needs to be broken....the revelation of the source of alien abductions may be shocking to you. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/generationalcursepodcast/message

The Proteomics Show
S02E02 - Faces of US HUPO - Dr. John Yates

The Proteomics Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 106:41


As part of the US HUPO sponsored "Faces of US HUPO" series, Ben and Ben sit down to talk with Dr. John Yates from The Scripps Research Institute, and the current US HUPO President-Elect.

Christ Church Vienna
The Lord’s Prayer | Our Father | John Yates

Christ Church Vienna

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2023 43:34


Honored friend John Yates preaches on the great significance of Jesus’s words, “Our Father.” A father brings great significance in a child’s life and offers a “ballast”, a weightiness and steadiness. For the God of the universe to adopt us as sons of God and for Him to be our Father means we have an […]

The Falls Church Sermon Series
Friday, April 7, 2023: Good Friday Tenebrae - the Rev. John Yates

The Falls Church Sermon Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2023


On Leadership
John Yates On Leadership

On Leadership

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 17:14


John Yates is the partner in charge of Morris Manning & Martin's corporate technology practice. But the long-time attorney is probably best known as a master connector—of people to positions, nonprofits to donors and tech founders to funders. He helped launch Venture Atlanta. Since starting in 2007 the annual conference has led to $7.5 billion in funds raised for tech entrepreneurs. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Preparing Our Hearts for Worship
Preparing Our Hearts For Worship Podcast- Faith Is The Victory

Preparing Our Hearts for Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 19:17


“Faith Is the Victory” is a song which emphasizes the fact that the victory which overcomes the world is our faith. The text was written in 1882 by John Yates, who was born in Batavia, NY, on Nov. 21, 1837, the son of John and Elizabeth Yates, both of whom originally came from England to the United States.

Psych Legal Pop Podcast
Sister Wives Book Part 1 and Paedon's interview

Psych Legal Pop Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 63:21


In this episode we discuss the 2012 book "Becoming Sister Wives: The story of an unconventional Marriage" written by Kody, Meri, Janelle, Christine and Robyn Brown. In the first part of this book entitled "Matrimony" Kody and each of his wives recount when they first met, fell and love and married. There are many things in this book that are not revealed on the television show so if you are a hard core Sister Wives fan like us this is worth a listen. After that we discuss paedon Brown's recent 3 hour "interview" on JohnYates' YouTube show where Paedon spills A LOT of Brown family tea.

The VegaBlu Show
Paedon Brown Reveals The Truth Behind Sister Wives ?!

The VegaBlu Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2023 30:02


Listen as Bleu responds to clips from John Yates youtube Interview. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thehollywooddeli/message

Laugh or Cry
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS - Sister Wives - Paedon Brown Revealing Family Truths

Laugh or Cry

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2023 53:25


John Yates interviews Paedon Brown from SISTER WIVES and gets the dirt on the fam. These are my favorite highlights that get to the meat of the questions that we want answers to. If you like this podcast, please consider supporting it so we can continue to make awesome content for you. https://anchor.fm/laughorcry/support Here is the link to view John Yates' full 3-hour video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xyLJSINhKw --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/laughorcry/support

Laugh or Cry
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS - Sister Wives Paedon Brown Revealing Family Truths

Laugh or Cry

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2023 53:25


John Yates interviews Paedon Brown from SISTER WIVES and gets the dirt on the fam. These are my favorite highlights that get to the meat of the questions that we want answers to. If you like this podcast, please consider supporting it so we can continue to make awesome content for you. https://anchor.fm/laughorcry/support Here is the link to view John Yates' full 3-hour video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xyLJSINhKw --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/laughorcry/support

FamilyLife Today®
Best of 2022! Our picks: David and Meg Robbins

FamilyLife Today®

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 26:26


FamilyLife President David Robbins and his wife Meg kick off a thought-provoking series of FamilyLife Today's best, don't-miss episodes of 2022. Show Notes and Resources Receive four copies (three to give away!) of the book "The Four Emotions of Christmas" and a set of greeting cards for your donation of any amount! And now through a special matching opportunity, your gift will be DOUBLED, dollar for dollar: https://donate.familylife.com/december-2022/you-can-help-build-twice-as-many-godly-marriages-and-families/?cru_source=FLTD23&cru_premium=PRE21544&cru_medium=pcnotes&cru_campaign=YE2022 Listen to the Full Episode with Elize Fitzpatrick, "Jesus and Gender" Listen to the Full Episode with John Yates, "How a Man Prays for his Family" Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com. Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife's app! Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify. Check out all the FamilyLife podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

TGC Podcast
What Historical Revival Teaches Us

TGC Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 44:34


In his message at TGC's 2021 National Conference, John Yates teaches on the successes of The Great Awakening of the 1700s to1800s and what this historical revival can show us.Yates explains five things that made the ministry and revival of the early awakeners so effective:1. Their message always started with man's lostness and inability to live up to the standard of God. It always ended with the atonement of Christ and a call to new birth and true faith that brings assurance of salvation.2. Their delivery was filled with a great sense of duty and responsibility to bring others to Christ.3. Their community was set up from the beginning to have small groups with high commitment where honesty and accountability for Christian living were the focus.4. Their emotions, flowing from their devotion to Christ, had a place, and the awakeners used them in their music and writings.5. Their leaders were well trained and educated.Yates closes with encouragement and urges us to pray for revival now as we rely on the Holy Spirit to move.

Audio Based Content: an Improv Comedy Podcast
CLASSIC - John Yates - Phone Number Neighbors

Audio Based Content: an Improv Comedy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 43:51


REBROADCAST John Yates joins me calling his phone number neighbor. #improv #comedy #improvcomedy #improvpodcast #comedypodcast #longformimprov #nashville #nashvillecomedy #humor #repeat #rerun #classic #bestof --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/audio-based-content/support

The Falls Church Sermon Series
Sunday: July 24, 2022: John Yates on The Man of Sorrows

The Falls Church Sermon Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022


TGC Podcast
Pastor, Keep Running Your Race

TGC Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 45:56


John Yates leads a pastoral panel with Matt Carter, Vermon Pierre, and Afshin Ziafat in a discussion on how hard ministry can be and what it takes to not lose heart. They discuss their personal experience of carrying the weight of the church and encountering criticism and fatigue. Together, they suggest how to prevent burnout by having: great mentors, friends inside the church, and a safe place to confess sin. They close with an emphasis on the importance of being surrounded by other believers and letting them speak into your life.

The Falls Church Sermon Series
Sunday May 22, 2022: John Yates on Christ's Ascension

The Falls Church Sermon Series

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022


Startup Showdown Podcast
John Yates With Morris, Manning & Martin LLP

Startup Showdown Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2022


John Yates, Partner, Chair of the Technology Group at Morris, Manning & Martin LLP Mr. Yates has practiced exclusively in the technology law field for 30 years. He chairs the Technology Group at Morris, Manning & Martin, LLP, one of the leading law firms in the country. The firm represents private and public technology companies, […] The post John Yates With Morris, Manning & Martin LLP appeared first on Business RadioX ®.

Business RadioX ® Network
John Yates With Morris, Manning & Martin LLP

Business RadioX ® Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2022


John Yates, Partner, Chair of the Technology Group at Morris, Manning & Martin LLP Mr. Yates has practiced exclusively in the technology law field for 30 years. He chairs the Technology Group at Morris, Manning & Martin, LLP, one of the leading law firms in the country. The firm represents private and public technology companies, […]

Hymn Talk Twin Talk
52. Faith Is The Victory

Hymn Talk Twin Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 46:48


Taken right from the Bible, these words are powerful, encouraging, and TRUE! The poet, John Yates, had such a way with words that when our composer, Ira Sankey, read his poems, he immediately recruited him to write gospel songs for the tent meetings that he and Dwight Moody were running all over the United States and abroad.These two men were quite a pair writing many gospel hymns together, but Faith Is The Victory is arguably their most well-known.Thank you for listening! Please sing along! We are sharing lots of music today!Things we mention in this episode:City Rescue MissionThe N Crew's performance of Faith Is The Victory Ira Sankey's My Life and the Story of Gospel HymnsPlease let us know if you have a request for a future episode! Thank you for supporting Hymn Talk Twin Talk. If you feel so inclined, please consider leaving us a review on your podcasting app and tell your friends about us.God bless you all.In His Service,Kerrie and Kellie#hymntalktwintalkPsalm 104:33Facebook: Hymn Talk Twin TalkTwitter: @hymntalkInstagram: @hymntalktwintalkEmail: hymntalktwintalk@gmail.comPodcast Hosting Site: www.redcircle.com/shows/hymn-twin-talk

Model Rail Radio
Model Rail Radio #207: Not Jaded [December 4, 2021]

Model Rail Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2021 118:08


Mike O'Dorney schools Tom on shipping alternatives as they discuss modules. Ted Roy is building for himself through the new normal. John Yates is calling in from home with a new 3d printer. Who has been making things in silver with a 3d printer? The usual suspects don't appear to be. Jim Gifford has been changing things up a bit with his controller hardware and software. Linton Towell introduces his interests in model railroading and touches on a favorite topic of Tom's what has happened for Australian HO modelers over the past two decades. Mike Slater has made some changes. But he has some ideas about what the Christmas Train should be. Tom wonders about John Garaty's model railroading health with Corrimal and the hobby. John Garaty has been finding ways to introduce the railroad concepts to his granddaughter. Clark Kooning talks about the thick skin you need to have to work in a club. http://www.modelrailradio.com/archive.html#207

trains jaded internet radio john yates mike slater model rail radio corrimal model rail jim gifford ted roy
Model Rail Radio
Model Rail Radio #205: Slumbering Layout [October 2, 2021]

Model Rail Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2021 105:56


John Garaty has been dealing with day light saving and has an update for Corrimal featuring the usual suspects. Jeff Shockley provides a Del Mar Var update for his much celebrated club. Jeff seems to have some good contacts to save his club from being homeless. Jim Gifford's crew are doing more operating thanks to a reduction in COVID restrictions. He provides a detailed update accordingly. Mike Slater recommends a Texas Outfit that builds modules. (Tom purchases a couple of these modules and a future topic is born). Tom wants to know about Mike's former hotter area. Tom also wants a Jim Rindt update - in particular what is happening with the laser and the grandchildren. John Yates wanted to know more about there video conferences with the quilting community that Tom has historically mentioned through lockdown. Brenton Spackman has a number of updates about his living conditions but the hobby is central to his updates. Mike O'Dorney's brain is picked on prebuilt modules. Other topics include the new normal for buying a car. Thanks to Robert Thomas for editing this recording. I really appreciate his assistance here. http://www.modelrailradio.com/archive.html#205

Model Rail Radio
Model Rail Radio #204: Least Threatening Structure Kits [September 18, 2021]

Model Rail Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2021 99:49


Mike O'Dorney fills in the gaps from the last conversation about structure building for people with certain lifestyles. Tom and Mike Slater catch up after a few months. Mike is having trouble getting his local NMRA onto Zoom calls. Mike has been able to find some fun through his trolley meets. It's when Mike talks about what he has done and his plans were the interesting details come out. Jim Gifford provides a detailed update for his crew which seems to be growing in number. Tom asks for some specific updates in there too. After a brief COVID update, Tom asks about Jim's move to NCE. John Yates introduces himself and his model rail roading interests. Tom and John talk about the difficulties of maintaining model rail clubs in rural Australia. John Doehring has a number of updates too including a giant module meet in Wyoming. Module model railroading is an ongoing topic for the next few recordings. Thanks to Robert Thomas for editing a vast majority of this recording. I really appreciate his assistance here. http://www.modelrailradio.com/archive.html#204

Murder She Joked
Episode 25 - HCCMOWEI with John Yates

Murder She Joked

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2021 46:56


Hot Couples Can't Make Out With Each other International was one of the most popular reality dating competition shows. But, when contestants started to be eliminated faster than usual, Amy Foley started to get suspicious. And also because of the chainsaws. This episode features Nashville-based photographer and improviser, John Yates. Cast (in order of appearance:) Katy Hennen, Libby Genz, John Yates, Dana Daniele. Theme Song by Meghan Rose. Artwork by Dave Daniele. Editing by Justin Howard. Production by Dana Daniele. Sound effects from PacDV, FreeSound.org, Sound Effects Plus, and Free Music Archive. Soundtrack by Fiesta Maiden. Additional sound Effects: https://freesound.org/s/70107/ https://freesound.org/s/413493/

Stories about Hymn
Episode 4 - A Shield of Faith

Stories about Hymn

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2021 11:57


In a tune that urges Christians to fight the spiritual battle, the song "Faith is the Victory" by John Yates is a reminder that during our hard times, with have a shield of faith to protect us. Listen through the song to hear a bonus story. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/stories-about-hymn/support

The Anti-Doping Podcast
45 - Applications of Tandem Mass Spec, Bioinformatics, and Proteomics in Anti-Doping - John Yates III, PhD

The Anti-Doping Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2021 28:14


Dr. John Yates is the Ernest W. Hahn Professor in the Departments of Molecular Medicine and Neurobiology at The Scripps Research Institute in California. He is also a member of the PCC's Scientific Advisory Board and a world-renowned expert in proteomics. In this episode, he discusses his career path, his research, impacts of the global pandemic, and potential applications of advanced analytical approaches such as tandem mass spec, bioinformatics, and proteomics for anti-doping.

The Next Greatest Thing

AVECC John Yates manages the Control Center personnel. His team is responsible for Outage Management which includes monitoring AVECC's Electric Distribution system for problems and outages. Get to know John as he discusses his day-to-day duties including his favorite workday snack!