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Aung San Suu Kyi hyllas av en hel värld som fredsikon och hjälte. Men när minoritetsgruppen rohingyer attackeras av militären 2017 och 700 000 tvingas fly från Myanmar, är fredspristagaren tyst. Nya avsnitt från P3 Dokumentär hittar du först i Sveriges Radio Play. När Nobels fredspris delas ut 1991 går det till den frihetsberövade demokratikämpen Aung San Suu Kyi. Världen över blir hon hyllad som symbol för mod och demokrati.Burma, eller Myanmar som landet heter idag, har i mer än ett halvt decennium kontrollerats av landets benhårda militära styre. När landets första fria val går av stapeln vinner Aung San Suu Kyi stort. Men hon tvingas dela på makten med militärjuntan. Under åren som följer eskalerar våldet mot Myanmars muslimska minoritetsgruppEn dag, 2017, när 60-åriga Nour tittar ut genom en glipa i bambuhuset där hon bor, ser hon massa militärer som kommer springande mot byn. De sätter eld på rohingyernas hus så hon samlar sin familj och flyr. Men sonen Mohammed tillfångatas.Snart kommer nyheter om att 300 byar bränts ner och 10 000 rohingyer dödats i brutalt våldsamma attacker mot den muslimska folkgruppen.Det lämnas in en anmälan om folkmord till den internationella domstolen i Haag – och röster höjs för att Aung San Suu Kyi ska lämna tillbaka sitt Nobelpris. Många undrar varför hon inte gör nåt för att stoppa det brutala våldet. Medverkande:Jesper Bengtsson, har skrivit böcker om Aung San Suu Kyi och Burma/Myanmar.Margita Boström, Sveriges Radios tidigare Asienkorrespondent.Nour, rohingyer som tvingades fly från Myanmar.Abul Kalam, svensk-rohingyer som grundat Swedish Rohingya Association.Alexander Jäätmaa, Svenska Burmakommittén.Matthew Wells, Amnesty International.En dokumentär av: Andreas Ståhl.Producent: Rosa Fernández.Dokumentären är producerad 2024.
The scares continue all through Halloween over here at KYI! The hosts, and their guest Levi Butner, wander the graveyards and get stuck in the muck as they discuss Don Coscarelli's cult classic Phantasm. The obvious connections to Spielberg and Raimi are noted, as are the film's roots in the Universal Monster tradition. Join us as we celebrate this massive achievement in low-budget filmmaking. Just watch out for the Tall Man, that motha's stronggg! Topics include: actors watching their own work, “nerd-horror”, and the many places to hide flying orbs inside a person.
On this episode Matt sits down with Bob Peck. Bob is a festival award-winning filmmaker, author, lawnmower, meditator, and a spiritual student of Christ, Krishna, the Buddha, and Paramahansa Yogananda. With bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies & Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas, he has made ‘conscious films'—spiritual & advocacy documentaries—since graduating in 2011. He's also a Kriya Yoga practitioner through KYI and a certified mindfulness & meditation teacher. His day job is centered around ads and mindfulness in Big Tech. A native Austinite, he lives with his wife and young son in Austin, Texas. Original Sin Is A Lie is his first book. Was Jesus a Yogi that traveled to India to study Kriya Yoga? Did he activate his Kundalini? How are Religions all connected? This and more on this episode! Enjoy. Find Bob: https://www.instagram.com/bobpeck https://www.originalsinisalie.com/ Find Matt: https://www.instagram.com/mattxian https://www.mattxian.com
An introduction to using sample libraries focusing on the string section. Composer and Producer Sam Boydell talks us through selecting an orchestral sound library, creating a simple string motif and incorporating more realism into the finished piece by using a range of techniques, including articulations, dynamics and panning.Chapters00:00 - Introduction01:18 - The Tools Of The Trade03:13 - Choosing Your Sound Library06:01 - Starting With A String Motif10:39 - Allocating Orchestral Positions11:58 - Humanising The Performance14:57 - Fine-Tuning Velocity And Timing17:15 - Adding MIDI Automation19:56 - Placing The Orchestra In A Space22:17 - Incorporating Articulations24:39 - Creating More Dynamics27:46 - Mixing And MasteringSam Boydell BiogLearning his craft by working in studios with the likes of Gareth Young (Sugababes), Stephen Lipson (Hans Zimmer) and Mark Hill (Craig David), Sam has grown into being credited for Composing many award-winning Commercials and Documentaries such as drift-racing's, ‘Clipping Point' (2022) rated at 9.3/10 on IMDb, as well as, prestigious TV shows like, Match of the Day (BBC).Sam is also considered one of the premiere Sound Recordists & Commercial Mixers in the UK, having worked with the likes of David Beckham, ITV and Ferrari.Further enterprises include the music label 60hz with Mark Hill and Neil Simpson, which works to nurture talent such as Nat Slater & Kyi in the past. And, Education, where he works with local universities and schools.https://boyde.tv/
It's Problematic Art Week on KYI! This episode Alana and Sam are joined by animator Frank Gidlewski for a round-table on Ralph Bakshi's 1973 Künstlerroman "Heavy Traffic". There is much talk of the film's depictions of various taboos both sexual and racial, so, be warned. Also much rumination on the woes of the modern film/animation landscape so…TW for that as well, if you're an animator. Other topics include: making out during edgy movies, parallels with the Godfather, and feuds with R. Crumb.
Intuitive Medium Ashley Munk interviews Bob Peck, author of the book Original Sin is a Lie. They discuss topics including resurrection and what Jesus meant when he said he “brings the sword.” Bob Peck is a festival award-winning filmmaker, author, lawnmower, meditator, and a spiritual student of Christ, Krishna, the Buddha, and Paramahansa Yogananda. With bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies & Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas, he has made ‘conscious films'—spiritual & advocacy documentaries—since graduating in 2011. He's also a Kriya Yoga practitioner through KYI and a certified mindfulness & meditation teacher. His day job is centered around ads and mindfulness in Big Tech. A native Austinite, he lives with his wife and young son in Austin, Texas.
Stephanie sits down with Bob Peck, author of the book Original Sin Is A Lie!Bob Peck is a festival award-winning filmmaker, author, lawnmower, meditator, and a spiritual student of Christ, Krishna, the Buddha, and Paramahansa Yogananda. With bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies & Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas, he has made ‘conscious films'—spiritual & advocacy documentaries—since graduating in 2011. He's also a Kriya Yoga practitioner through KYI and a certified mindfulness & meditation teacher. His day job is centered around ads and mindfulness in Big Tech. A native Austinite, he lives with his wife and young son in Austin, Texas. Original Sin Is A Lie is his first book.originalsinisalie.comInstagram: @originalsinisalieMormons on Mushrooms – Ways to ContributeOur podcast is supported by our amazing listeners and magical community. If you'd like to energetically contribute to what we're creating, there are several ways to do so:Become a PatreonSend a Contribution (buy us a booch)!Purchase Mormons on Mushrooms Merchandise
Ever wondered what happens behind the scenes of the rap industry or how the mind of an artist works? Well, we've got KyiTheKid, an emerging star in the rap industry, here to spill the secrets! We unpack some of the hottest topics of the day, get down and dirty with discussions on age, the art of deception, food misrepresentation, and even navigate the controversial subject of Poo Shiesty's five-year sentence. Yes, it's a rollercoaster ride, but we promise you won't want to get off!As if that weren't enough, we throw ourselves headfirst into the whirlwind world of Lori Harvey and her captivating lifestyle. Be prepared to be swept away by the tales of her relationships, her stepfather Steve Harvey, and the influence she wields. But hey, it's not all serious - we've got a hilarious pondering on what one should do upon finding an unexpected 'gift' in the shower! And let's not forget about the power of words of affirmation in both phone sex and regular sex - we've got all the juicy details.We wrap it all up with tales from our personal growth journey. We share how moving to Charlotte turned out to be a game-changer and how certain experiences shaped our personalities. You'll hear all about the wild escapades of Kaya, the intriguing case of a friend who unearthed her boyfriend's infidelity, and more. Kyi also enlightens us about his journey in the rap industry, his influences, and the importance of having a strong support system. So, there you have it - an episode packed with humor, hot topics, heartwarming personal stories, and of course, plenty of hip-hop. Tune in, kick back, and let's get this party started!Support the showFollow us on social media www.instagram.com/noadvisoryclt
Bob Peck is a festival award-winning filmmaker, author, lawnmower, meditator, and a spiritual student of Christ, Krishna, the Buddha, and Paramahansa Yogananda. With bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies & Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas, he has made ‘conscious films'—spiritual & advocacy documentaries—since graduating in 2011. He's also a Kriya Yoga practitioner through KYI and a certified mindfulness & meditation teacher. His day job is centered around ads and mindfulness in Big Tech. A native Austinite, he lives with his wife and young son in Austin, Texas. More info about Bob and his book ORIGINAL SIN IS A LIE: https://www.originalsinisalie.com/ IG: @bobpeck ----------- ABOUT YOUR HOST: Porter Singer is music-maker, podcaster and emotional guide. More info: https://portersinger.com/ ------------- MUSIC CREDITS: INTRO: "Don't Worry, Be Happy (Instrumental)" by Porter Singer and Songs of Eden; OUTRO: "If You Want to Sing Out, Sing Out (Instrumental) by Porter Singer and Songs of Eden ------------ COMPANIES WE LOVE EARTH BREEZE LAUNDRY SHEETS ~ These Earth-friendly dehydrated laundry sheets will leave your clothes super clean, without the waste of bulky plastic containers. The referral money we get from YOU clicking on that link and ordering will help sustain this podcast AND help care for our beautiful Earth. Thank you in advance! Click to purchase: https://www.earthbreeze.com/?rfsn=6157640.8b8358 SAGE MOON: I highly recommend their "Inner Child and Beyond" deck. If you've been wanting to heal your relationship, with, well, everything and everyone, I cannot speak highly enough of this deck, with its beautiful imagery and wise soothing prompts. And... I have written songs for the first 10 cards of this deck. https://sagemoon.com/?rfsn=1754610.9fe2b6 BANDZOOGLE WEBSITES ~ We have been using this website provider since the early 2000s. It is so easy to use and customize, and super efficient for selling your music and/or services. Best of all, it's super affordable! More info on Bandzoogle: https://bandzoogle.com/?memref=rd890 If you'd like to leave us a tip--wow, really?!--you can do so by visiting the following sites/apps. @portersinger on Venmo @SirgunKaurK on PayPal
“Original sin” is a lie. Jesus, a deeply profound teacher of Love and Unity, never said a thing about “original sin.” It's a doctrine invented by Augustine of Hippo over three hundred years later. Bob Peck is a festival award-winning filmmaker, author, lawnmower, meditator, and a spiritual student of Christ, Krishna, the Buddha, and Paramahansa Yogananda. With bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies & Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas, he has made ‘conscious films'—spiritual & advocacy documentaries—since graduating in 2011. He's also a Kriya Yoga practitioner through KYI and a certified mindfulness & meditation teacher.Check out his book Original Sin Is A Lie HERE.Expect to hear:Why Bob's book is Chase's new favorite Contemplating hell at 8 years old...too soon?Difference between exoteric and esotericSimilarities between mystical teachingsWho actually coined the concept of "original sin?"Why Bob believes you are inherently goodAre we in a new age of spirituality?and much more!CONNECT WITH BOB: Book // Website // IG OUR LINKS + DISCOUNTSMushyLove Latte (discount: MEDICIN)Immune Intel AHCCOur favorite Reishi KING CoffeePaleovalley Meat Sticks (discount: MEDICIN)KION Protein + Supplements (discount: MEDICIN) Organifi (20% discount: MIMIFIT)See all our favorite products on The Medicin CabinetCONNECT WITH USOur websiteMimi's IG // Chase's IG // The Medicin IGSound from Zapsplat.com
Bob Peck is a festival award-winning filmmaker, author, lawnmower, meditator, and a spiritual student of Christ, Krishna, the Buddha, and Paramahansa Yogananda. With bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies & Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas, he has made ‘conscious films'—spiritual & advocacy documentaries—since graduating in 2011. He's also a Kriya Yoga practitioner through KYI and a certified mindfulness & meditation teacher. His day job is centered around ads and mindfulness in Big Tech. A native Austinite, he lives with his wife and young son in Austin, Texas. "Original Sin Is A Lie" is his first book. This episode is a grand adventure & deep exploration of Christianity, the Bible, Eastern Philosophy & Mysticism. Topics of Discussion: What is original sin & where did it come from? (Hint: Not Jesus) The parallels amongst different religions Beautiful teachings & stories from the Bible, Paramahansa Yogananda, A Course in Miracles, etc. And so much more _________________________________ Get your copy of “Original Sin is a Lie” Donate & support Bob in getting the book translated to Spanish! _________________________________ Connect with Bob: Website Instagram TiKTok _________________________________ Resources mentioned in the podcast: Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda Thich Nhat Hanh & Ram Das interview on “Holding anger like a mother holds a baby” A Course in Miracles The Yoga of Jesus by Paramahansa Yogananda The Second Coming of Christ: The Resurrection of the Christ Within You by Paramahansa Yogananda _________________________________ Connect with Cortney: Cortney's Instagram Unique Way Instagram Cortney's Website Cortney's Newsletter _________________________________ To say thank you for taking the time to subscribe, rate & review the podcast I'm gifting you my Zoom Yoga Library (11 creative vinyasa classes). All you have to do is take a screenshot of your rating & review & send it to hello@cortneyostrosky.com. I'm so grateful for your support & think you'll love these classes!
How did the concept of ‘original sin' get into the bible if Jesus never taught it? Where else did the Bible get it right, and where has it been misinterpreted or manipulated? In this podcast, I'm joined by Bob Peck who is an author and scholar of not only Christianity, but many spiritual traditions. In this episode, we dive into the manipulative concept of ‘original sin', the beautiful and true teachings of Yeshua, and how to integrate the wisdom of Jesus for an updated model of spirituality free of the conditioning of ‘Empire'. In Bob's book “Original Sin Is A Lie” he tells the story of Jesus as a deeply profound teacher of Love and Unity. The concept of original sin that has dominated the last few millennia is a doctrine invented by Augustine of Hippo over three hundred years later. Bob Peck is a festival award-winning filmmaker, author, lawnmower, meditator, and a spiritual student of Christ, Krishna, the Buddha, and Paramahansa Yogananda. With bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies & Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas, he has made ‘conscious films'—spiritual & advocacy documentaries—since graduating in 2011. He's also a Kriya Yoga practitioner through KYI and a certified mindfulness & meditation teacher. He's also one of the pod leaders pushing forward these concepts of mindfulness at Meta. He's also a co-founder of The Awareness & Compassion Project, an effort to help teach kids meditation. | Connect with Bob Peck | Instagram | www.instagram.com/originalsinisalie/ TikTok | www.tiktok.com/@originalsinisalie Facebook | www.facebook.com/originalsinisalie Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/bobpeckiv To partner with the Aubrey Marcus Podcast | Connect with Aubrey | Website | http://bit.ly/2GesYqi Instagram | http://bit.ly/2BlfCEO Facebook | http://bit.ly/2F4nBZk Twitter | http://bit.ly/2BlGBAdAd Check out "Own your Day, Own Your Life" by Aubrey Marcus | http://bit.ly/2vRz4so Subscribe to the Aubrey Marcus newsletter: https://www.aubreymarcus.com/pages/email Subscribe to the Aubrey Marcus podcast: iTunes | https://apple.co/2lMZRCn Spotify | https://spoti.fi/2EaELZO Stitcher | http://bit.ly/2G8ccJt IHeartRadio | https://ihr.fm/3CiV4x3 Google Podcasts | https://bit.ly/3nzCJEh Android | https://bit.ly/2OQeBQg
A Sud di Velyka Novosilka i reparti di Kyïv costringono i russi alla ritirata
On Thanksgiving eve, 2021, three Brooklyn kids , the 12, 13, & 14 year old, Brendan, Kyi-el & Kawun were playing with a basketball where the ball hit the camera damaging it in the process. The business, owned by an ex-police officer Kruythoff Forrester than exited the business and allegedly chased the trio for 7-minutes with his gun out. The ex-officer was then allegedly arrested for the incident and had been detained at the 73rd Precinct in Brownsville. According to The City, NYPD Community Affairs Bureau Chief Jeffrey Maddrey at the time reportedly ordered the ex-cop's arrest to be voided. Hours later Forrester was released and no charges were pressed at the time. The report states that officials say he was licensed to have a pistol, and that Forrester denied drawing or pointing his gun at the boys. Despite the video being released, nothing has happened. They tell their side of the story, and address what accountability looks like for them. They are asking for a public apology. They are organizing for a Youth March April 10 in Brooklyn starting at Brooklyn Borough Hall. Demands beings asked are: transparent investigation by the attorney generals audience for Forrester actions, and actions by NYPD. Resignation by Chief Maddrey and Chief Scott Henderson. Retraction & correction to members of the media who allegedly misrepresented the incident. Find New HOT 97 Podcasts: https://www.hot97.com/podcasts Download the GameTime App and use promo code "EBRO" for $20 off: https://gametime.co/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
L'Ucraina presto riceverà i primi mezzi corazzati occidentali per il suo esercito. Non sono i primi aiuti ‘pesanti' che Kyïv riceve da quando la Russia l'ha invasa.
durée : 00:16:00 - Les Enjeux internationaux - par : Baptiste Muckensturm - Le procès-fleuve de la dirigeante birmane déchue Aung San Suu Kyi, renversée par l'armée début 2021, s'est achevé ce 30 décembre avec une peine de prison de sept ans supplémentaires pour corruption, soit 33 ans au total derrière les barreaux. - invités : François Robinne Anthropologue, directeur de recherche au CNRS, membre de l'Institut d'Asie Orientale (IAO)
World News in 7 minutes. 31st December 2022.Support us and read the transcripts at send7.org/transcriptsToday: Myanmar Kyi more jail. China travel testing. Philippines storm. Iran chess migrant. Romania Tate arrested. Ukraine downs drones. Putin Xi talk. Guterres peace talk. Ethiopia Ertitrean retreat? Angola Santos freezing. US Trump tax published. Brazil Pele gone, Lula returns.Please leave a rating on Apple podcasts or Spotify.With Stephen Devincenzi.Thank you to Juliet Martin, Namitha Ragunath and Khadija Tahir.Contact us at podcast@send7.org or send an audio message at speakpipe.com/send7If you enjoy the podcast please help to support us at send7.org/supportSEND7 (Simple English News Daily in 7 minutes) tells the most important world news stories in intermediate English. Every day, listen to the most important stories from every part of the world in slow, clear English. Whether you are an intermediate learner trying to improve your advanced, technical and business English, or if you are a native speaker who just wants to hear a summary of world news as fast as possible, join Stephen Devincenzi, Namitha Ragunath and Juliet Martin every morning. Transcripts can be found at send7.org/transcripts. Simple English News Daily is the perfect way to start your day, by practising your listening skills and understanding complicated stories in a simple way. It is also highly valuable for IELTS and TOEFL students. Students, teachers, and people with English as a second language, tell us that they listen to SEND7 because they can learn English through hard topics, but simple grammar. We believe that the best way to improve your spoken English is to immerse yourself in real-life content, such as what our podcast provides. SEND7 covers all news including politics, business, natural events and human rights. Whether it is happening in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas or Oceania, you will hear it on SEND7, and you will understand it. For more information visit send7.org/contact
durée : 00:20:44 - Journal de 12h30 - La fin d'un vrai-faux procès en Birmanie. La dirigeante Aung San Suu Kyi renversée il y presque deux ans par un coup d'Etat militaire a été condamnée ce matin à finir sa vie derrière des barreaux. À 77 ans, la célèbre opposante écope de 33 années de réclusion. - invités : Christelle Taraud Historienne
durée : 00:20:44 - Journal de 12h30 - La fin d'un vrai-faux procès en Birmanie. La dirigeante Aung San Suu Kyi renversée il y presque deux ans par un coup d'Etat militaire a été condamnée ce matin à finir sa vie derrière des barreaux. À 77 ans, la célèbre opposante écope de 33 années de réclusion. - invités : Christelle Taraud Historienne
We love our allies! Mama Bear Sara Cunningham and Director Daresha Kyi join us to talk about the Mama Bear movement and the new documentary about Mama Bears directed by Kyi. Free Mom Hugs for everyone! Free Bear Hugs for everyone! Free Bears for everyone! YASS, JESUS! More about the documentary here: https://mamabearsdoc.com/ Yass, Jesus! is hosted by Danny Franzese and Azariah Southworth. Our producers are Ross Murray and Meredith Paulley. Sound, music, and post-production by Chris Heckman. Get to know us better, or Buy Us a Coffee: Daniel Franzese https://whatsupdanny.com/ Twitter Instagram Facebook Azariah Southworth https://azariahspeaks.com/ Instagram Facebook Ross Murray The Naming Project GLAAD Twitter --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/yassjesus/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/yassjesus/support
Leta 2018 je izšel roman Deluje Owens - Tam, kjer pojejo raki (Where the Crawdads sing), ki je postal svetovna uspešnica. Letos je v kinematografe prišel še istoimenski film. Zgodba govori o Kyi, ki svoje otroštvo preživlja sama v močvari; v objemu narave, živali in predvsem stran od ljudi, ki so jo tekom življenja le razočarali. Drugi del knjige je razreševanje umora, ki se je zgodil v močvari in predvsem borba s predsodki, ki kažejo v smer močvirske podgane, kakor jo kličejo ljudje iz bližnjega mesta. Knjiga je sicer fikcija, a skozi zgodovino so na vzhodni obali živeli resnični močvirski ljudje. V novi epizodi vam povem nekaj o knjigi in filmu, pa tudi o resničnih močvirskih in rečnih ljudeh, ki bi lahko bili inspiracija za knjigo.
The story of the film takes place in the mid-twentieth century in North Carolina. It tells about Kyi, who has been abandoned by her family and grows up alone in a swamp away from civilization. However, it is not what the inhabitants of the nearest town - Barkley Cove think. She is a very sensitive and intelligent girl who lacks closeness and touch of another human being. - Historia filmu rozgrywa się w połowie XX wieku w Karolinie Północnej. Opowiada o Kyi, która została porzucona przez rodzinę i samotnie dorasta na bagnach z dala od cywilizacji. Nie jest jednak taka, jak uważają mieszkańcy najbliższego miasteczka - Barkley Cove. Jest bardzo wrażliwą i inteligentną dziewczyną, której brakuje bliskości i dotyku drugiego człowieka.
We had the unique and amazing opportunity to have artist Joey Cook on our show to tell us her incredible story. Special thanks to Joey, as well as Kyi and JJ Braves of Boleyn Records for putting us in touch with her! We're honored to continue to be able to work with such amazing people, and to be able to have these amazing artists come on our show to share their message with our listeners. We hope you enjoy this episode! In part 1 of our 3 part artist spotlight, Joey will tell us about the start of her music career, and how she went from a music enthusiast and avid singer/songwriter, to an enormously popular celebrity overnight when she was one of the few people chosen to be on the fourteenth season of the show American Idol. Debuting on American Idol isn't the only interesting story from her past that she has to share though. In this segment we also delve into everything from her past projects, how she became involved with Boleyn Records, the many celebs and artists that she's worked with, COVID, drug addiction, and the many challenges that she had to overcome to be who she is today. We were really taken by Joey's story, and genuine personality, and had a great time with her on the show. We hope you enjoy. If you're interested learning more about Joey, we'll leave some links below that you can follow to get you started down the Joey Cook rabbit hole! In particular we hope you check out her latest music video titled "End of the World"- https://youtu.be/vk7YJNulfY4 Joey Cook performing PMJ's rendition of "Fancy" on American Idol (2015)- https://youtu.be/ssqa2Z7YLlY Joey Cook's American Idol audition (2015)- https://youtu.be/W9mzcEktyjc Joey Cook on Apple Music- https://music.apple.com/us/artist/joey-cook/309390341 Joey Cook on Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/artist/2pCpho80T9dJe1BOWnyxkF?si=Oiynh9lPS0iuTBZglLl8BA Want to leave us a voice message and tell us how we're doing? Follow this link! https://anchor.fm/tpmusictalkpodcast/message If you would like to support us and help us keep the lights on, just go to https://anchor.fm/tpmusictalkpodcast/support We are excited to announce that we are officially sponsored by "I Engrave Stuff" and we have a water bottle and a wireless charger that can be purchased on their website! "iengravestuff.com". Also, as a special treat and big thank you to our listeners.. Right now if you type in the word "TP10" in all caps in the promo code box when purchasing an item on I Engrave Stuff's website, you can get 10% off anything in the online store. We hope you enjoy this episode. You can find us on Facebook, Twitter, Patreon, Instagram, YouTube, Pinterest, Spotify, Tumblr, Tik Tok, Reddit or Apple Music, by searching for: “TP's Music Talk Podcast" (tpmusictalkpodcast), @tpmusictalkpod (Twitter). You can E-Mail us at “tpmusictalkpodcast@gmail.com”.. And you can of course find us at our website “tpmusictalkpod.wordpress.com”. We will have another episode out for you all to listen too very soon, and we really sincerely appreciate any support you show us on any of our platforms. We hope you enjoy our content, and we love any and all feedback! Thanks for listening today. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tpmusictalkpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tpmusictalkpodcast/support
Today we continue our exclusive deadCenter 2022 coverage with a look at this year's deadCenter opening night film from director Daresha Kyi, Mama Bears. Kyi sits down with us on The Cinematic Schematic to talk about how she first learned about the Mama Bears organization before making the documentary. Joining host Caleb Masters in this interview is a special guest co-host, this year's deadCenter Pride Programmer, Laron Chapman. The film tells the moving story of the rise of the movement of evangelical mothers who decide to embrace and support the LGBTQ community through love, education, and emotional support at weddings. The film follows four different storylines including the rise of Oklahoma's own Sara Cunningham of Free Mom Hugs, Kimberly Shappley, and Tammi Terrell Morris, a young African American lesbian. The empathetic and emotionally charged film touches on many very personal subjects such as the traditional Christian view on same-sex marriage, the negative impacts the politics have on LGBTQ homes, and the importance of love between mothers and their children. Kyi walks us through how she navigated these challenging topics with grace and a message of hope and love first. Check out the full conversation and see the movie by buying your […] The post Mama Bears Makes the Case for Empathy Toward LGBTQ Communities – dCFF22 appeared first on The Cinematropolis.
Russia and Ukraine are all over the news today:( I simply can't stay silent in this situation. Let's all remain human in this situation and remember that peace in the world is the most important thing. Here is the transcript: Киев – столица и самый густонаселенный город Украины. Это важный промышленный, научный, образовательный и культурный центр Восточной Европы. Говорят, что название города происходит от имени Кия, одного из четырех его легендарных основателей. Киев, вероятно, существовал как торговый центр еще в пятом веке. Славянское поселение на великом торговом пути между Скандинавией и Константинополем. Полностью разрушенный во время монгольского нашествия в 1240 году, город утратил большую часть своего влияния. Это была провинциальная столица второстепенного значения на окраине территорий, контролируемых ее могущественными соседями, сначала Литвой, затем Польшей и, наконец, Россией. Город снова процветал во время промышленной революции в Российской империи в конце 19 века. В 1918 году, после того как Украинская Народная Республика провозгласила независимость от Советской России, Киев стал ее столицей. С 1921 г. Киев был городом Советской Украины, а с 1934 г. Киев был ее столицей. Город был почти полностью разрушен во время Второй мировой войны, но быстро восстановился в послевоенные годы, оставаясь третьим по величине городом Советского Союза. После распада Советского Союза и обретения Украиной независимости в 1991 году Киев оставался столицей Украины. Kyiv is the capital and most populous city of Ukraine. It is an important industrial, scientific, educational, and cultural center of Eastern Europe. The city's name is said to derive from the name of Kyi, one of its four legendary founders. Kyiv probably existed as a commercial center as early as the 5th century. A Slavic settlement on the great trade route between Scandinavia and Constantinople. Completely destroyed during the Mongol invasions in 1240, the city lost most of its influence. It was a provincial capital of marginal importance in the outskirts of the territories controlled by its powerful neighbors, first Lithuania, then Poland and ultimately Russia. The city prospered again during the Russian Empire's Industrial Revolution in the late 19th century. In 1918, after the Ukrainian People's Republic declared independence from Soviet Russia, Kyiv became its capital. From 1921 onwards Kyiv was a city of Soviet Ukraine, and, from 1934, Kyiv was its capital. The city was almost completely ruined during World War II but quickly recovered in the postwar years, remaining the Soviet Union's third-largest city. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union and Ukrainian independence in 1991, Kyiv remained Ukraine's capital. If you want to support my work, you can do it in one of these ways: Buy me a coffee – https://www.buymeacoffee.com/realrussianclub Patreon – http://patreon.com/realrussianclub PayPal – http://paypal.me/realrussianclub or directly to slowrussian@gmail.com And if someone decides to participate in my Amazon baby registry for my baby Misha, I'll be greatly happy❤️❤️❤️ – https://www.amazon.com/baby-reg/daria-molchanova-november-2021-boulder/3K2PFROR6ITHM Спасибо!
Our last episode was on Project MAC, a Cold War-era project sponsored by ARPA. That led to many questions like what led to the Cold War and just what was the Cold War. We'll dig into that today. The Cold War was a period between 1946, in the days after World War II, and 1991, when the United States and western allies were engaged in a technical time of peace that was actually an aggressive time of arms buildup and proxy wars. Technology often moves quickly when nations or empires are at war. In many ways, the Cold War gave us the very thought of interactive computing and networking, so is responsible for the acceleration towards our modern digital lives. And while I've never seen it references as such, this was more of a continuation of wars between the former British empire and the Imperialistic Russian empires. These make up two or the three largest empires the world has ever seen and a rare pair of empires that were active at the same time. And the third, well, we'll get to the Mongols in this story as well. These were larger than the Greeks, the Romans, the Persians, or any of the Chinese dynasties. In fact, the British Empire that reached its peak in 1920 was 7 times larger than the land controlled by the Romans, clocking in at 13.7 million square miles. The Russian Empire was 8.8 million square miles. Combined the two held nearly half the world. And their legacies live on in trade empires, in some cases run by the same families that helped fun the previous expansions. But the Russians and British were on a collision course going back to a time when their roots were not as different as one might think. They were both known to the Romans. But yet they both became feudal powers with lineages of rulers going back to Vikings. We know the Romans battled the Celts, but they also knew of a place that Ptolemy called Sarmatia Europea in around 150AD, where a man named Rurik settle far later. He was a Varangian prince, which is the name Romans gave to Vikings from the area we now call Sweden. The 9th to 11th century saw a number o these warrior chiefs flow down rivers throughout the Baltics and modern Russia in search of riches from the dwindling Roman vestiges of empire. Some returned home to Sweden; others conquered and settled. They rowed down the rivers: the Volga, the Volkhov, the Dvina, and the networks of rivers that flow between one another, all the way down the Dnieper river, through the Slavic tripes Ptolemy described which by then had developed into city-states, such as Kiev, past the Romanians and Bulgers and to the second Rome, or Constantinople. The Viking ships rowed down these rivers. They pillaged, conquered, and sometimes settled. The term for rowers was Rus. Some Viking chiefs set up their own city-states in and around the lands. Some when their lands back home were taken while they were off on long campaigns. Charlemagne conquered modern day France and much of Germany, from The Atlantic all the way down into the Italian peninsula, north into Jutland, and east to the border with the Slavic tribes. He weakened many, upsetting the balance of power in the area. Or perhaps there was never a balance of power. Empires such as the Scythians and Sarmatians and various Turkic or Iranian powers had come and gone and each in their wake crossing the vast and harsh lands found only what Homer said of the area all the way back in the 8th century BCE, that the land was deprived of sunshine. The Romans never pushed up so far into the interior of the steppes as the were busy with more fertile farming grounds. But as the Roman Empire fell and the Byzantines flourished, the Vikings traded with them and even took their turn trying to loot Constantinople. And Frankish Paris. And again, settled in the Slavic lands, marrying into cultures and DNA. The Rus Rome retreated from lands as her generals were defeated. The Merovingian dynasty rose in the 5th century with the defeat of Syagrius, the last Roman general Gaul and lasted until a family of advisors slowly took control of running the country, transitioning to the Carolingian Empire, of which Charlemagne, the Holy Roman Emperor, as he was crowned, was the most famous. He conquered and grew the empire. Charlemagne knew the empire had outgrown what one person could rule with the technology of the era, so it was split into three, which his son passed to his grandsons. And so the Carolingian empire had made the Eastern Slavs into tributaries of the Franks. There were hostilities but by the Treaty of Mersen in 870 the split of the empire generally looked like the borders of northern Italy, France, and Germany - although Germany also included Austria but not yet Bohemia. It split and re-merged and smaller boundary changes happened but that left the Slavs aware of these larger empires. The Slavic peoples grew and mixed with people from the Steppes and Vikings. The Viking chiefs were always looking for new extensions to their trade networks. Trade was good. Looting was good. Looting and getting trade concessions to stop looting those already looted was better. The networks grew. One of those Vikings was Rurik. Possibly Danish Rorik, a well documented ally who tended to play all sides of the Carolingians and a well respected raider and military mind. Rurik was brought in as the first Viking, or rower, or Rus, ruler of the important trade city that would be known as New City, or Novgorod. Humans had settled in Kiev since the Stone Age and then by Polans before another prince Kyi took over and then Rurik's successor Oleg took Smolensk and Lyubech. Oleg extended the land of Rus down the trading routes, and conquered Kiev. Now, they had a larger capital and were the Kievan Rus. Rurik's son Igor took over after Oleg and centralized power in Kiev. He took tribute from Constantinople after he attacked, plunder Arab lands off the Caspian Sea, and was killed overtaxing vassal states in his territory. His son Sviatoslav the Brave then conquered the Alans and through other raiding helped cause the collapse of the Kazaria and Bulgarian empires. They expanded throughout the Volga River valley, then to the Balkans, and up the Pontic Steppe, and quickly became the largest empire in Europe of the day. His son Vladimir the Great expanded again, with he empire extending from the Baltics to Belarus to the Baltics and converted to Christianity, thus Christianizing the lands he ruled. He began marrying and integrating into the Christian monarchies, which his son continued. Yaroslov the Wise married the daughter of the King of Sweden who gave him the area around modern-day Leningrad. He then captured Estonia in 1030, and as with others in the Rurikid dynasty as they were now known, made treaties with others and then pillaged more Byzantine treasures. He married one daughter to the King of Norway, another to the King of Hungary, another to the King of the Franks, and another to Edward the Exile of England, and thus was the grandfather of Edgar the Aetheling, who later became a king of England. The Mongols The next couple of centuries saw the rise of Feudalism and the descendants of Rurik fight amongst each other. The various principalities were, as with much of Europe during the Middle Ages, semi-independent duchies, similar to city-states. Kiev became one of the many and around the mid 1100s Yaroslav the Wise's great-grandson, Yuri Dolgoruki built a number of new villages and principalities, including one along the Moskva river they called Moscow. They built a keep there, which the Rus called kremlins. The walls of those keeps didn't keep the Mongols out. They arrived in 1237. They moved the capital to Moscow and Yaroslav II, Yuri's grandson, was poisoned in the court of Ghengis Khan's grandson Batu. The Mongols ruled, sometimes through the descendants of Rurik, sometimes disposing of them and picking a new one, for 200 years. This is known as the time of the “Mongol yoke.” One of those princes the Mongols let rule was Ivan I of Moscow, who helped them put down a revolt in a rival area in the 1300s. The Mongols trusted Moscow after that, and so we see a migration of rulers of the land up into Moscow. The Golden Horde, like the Viking Danes and Swedes settled in some lands. Kublai Khan made himself ruler of China. Khanates splintered off to form the ruling factions of weaker lands, such as modern India and Iran - who were once the cradle of civilization. Those became the Mughals dynasties as they Muslimized and moved south. And so the Golden Horde became the Great Horde. Ivan the Great expanded the Muscovite sphere of influence, taking Novgorod, Rostov, Tver, Vyatka, and up into the land of the Finns. They were finally strong enough to stand up to the Tatars as they called their Mongol overlords and made a Great Stand on the Ugra River. And summoning a great army simply frightened the Mongol Tatars off. Turns out they were going through their own power struggles between princes of their realm and Akhmed was assassinated the next year, with his successor becoming Sheikh instead of Khan. Ivan's grandson, Ivan the Terrible expanded the country even further. He made deals with various Khans and then conquered others, pushing east to conquer the Khanate of Sibiu and so conquered Siberia in the 1580s. The empire then stretched all the way to the Pacific Ocean. He had a son who didn't have any heirs and so was the last in the Rurikid dynasty. But Ivan the Terrible had married Anastasia Romanov, who when he crowned himself Caesar, or Tsar as they called it, made her Tsaritsa. And so the Romanov's came to power in 1596 and following the rule of Peter the Great from 1672 to 1725, brought the Enlightenment to Russia. He started the process of industrialization, built a new capital he called St Petersburg, built a navy, made peace with the Polish king, then Ottoman king, and so took control of the Baltics, where the Swedes had taken control of on and off since the time of Rurik. Russian Empire Thus began the expansion as the Russian Empire. They used an alliance with Denmark-Norway and chased the Swedes through the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, unseating the Polish king along the way. He probably should not have allied with them. They moved back into Finland, took the Baltics so modern Latvia and Estonia, and pushed all the way across the Eurasian content across the frozen tundra and into Alaska. Catherine the Great took power in 1762 and ignited a golden age. She took Belarus, parts of Mongolia, parts of modern day Georgia, overtook the Crimean Khanate, and modern day Azerbaijan. and during her reign founded Odessa, Sevastopol and other cities. She modernized the country like Peter and oversaw nearly constant rebellions in the empire. And her three or four children went on to fill the courts of Britain, Denmark, Sweden, Spain, and the Netherlands. She set up a national network of schools, with teachings from Russian and western philosophers like John Locke. She collected vast amounts of art, including many from China. She set up a banking system and issued paper money. She also started the process to bring about the end of serfdom. Even though between her and the country she owned 3.3 million herself. She planned on invading the Khanate of Persia, but passed away before her army got there. Her son Paul halted expansion. And probably just in time. Her grandson Alexander I supported other imperial powers against Napoleon and so had to deal with the biggest invasion Russia had seen. Napoleon moved in with his grand army of half a million troops. The Russians used a tactic that Peter the Great used and mostly refused to engage Napoleon's troops instead burning the supply lines. Napoleon lost 300,000 troops during that campaign. Soon after the Napoleanic wars ended, the railways began to appear. The country was industrializing and with guns and cannons, growing stronger than ever. The Opium Wars, between China and the UK then the UK and France were not good to China. Even though Russia didn't really help they needed up with a piece of the Chinese empire and so in the last half of the 1800s the Russian Empire grew by another 300,000 square miles on the backs of a series of unequal treaties as they came to be known in China following World War I. And so by 1895, the Romanovs had expanded past their native Moscow, driven back the Mongols, followed some of the former Mongol Khanates to their lands and taken them, took Siberia, parts of the Chinese empire, the Baltics, Alaska, and were sitting on the third largest empire the world had ever seen, which covered nearly 17 percent of the world. Some 8.8 million square miles. And yet, still just a little smaller than the British empire. They had small skirmishes with the British but by and large looked to smaller foes or proxy wars, with the exception of the Crimean War. Revolution The population was expanding and industrializing. Workers flocked to factories on those train lines. And more people in more concentrated urban areas meant more ideas. Rurik came in 862 and his descendants ruled until the Romanovs took power in 1613. They ruled until 1917. That's over 1,000 years of kings, queens, Tsars, and Emperors. The ideas of Marx slowly spread. While the ruling family was busy with treaties and wars and empire, they forgot to pay attention to the wars at home. People like Vladimir Lenin discovered books by people like Karl Marx. Revolution was in the air around the world. France had shown monarchies could be toppled. Some of the revolutionaries were killed, others put to work in labor camps, others exiled, and still others continued on. Still, the empire was caught up in global empire intrigues. The German empire had been growing and the Russians had the Ottomans and Bulgarians on their southern boarders. They allied with France to take Germany, just as they'd allied with Germany to take down Poland. And so after over 1.8 million dead Russians and another 3.2 million wounded or captured and food shortages back home and in the trenches, the people finally had enough of their Tsar. They went on strike but Tsar Nicholas ordered the troops to fire. The troops refused. The Duma stepped in and forced Nicholas to abdicate. Russia had revolted in 1917, sued Germany for peace, and gave up more territory than they wanted in the process. Finland, the Baltics, their share of Poland, parts of the Ukraine. It was too much. But the Germans took a lot of time and focus to occupy and so it helped to weaken them in the overall war effort. Back home, Lenin took a train home and his Bolshevik party took control of the country. After the war Poland was again independent. Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, and the Serbs became independent nations. In the wake of the war the Ottoman Empire was toppled and modern Turkey was born. The German Kaiser abdicated. And socialism and communism were on the rise. In some cases, that was really just a new way to refer to a dictator that pretended to care about the people. Revolution had come to China in 1911 and Mao took power in the 1940s. Meanwhile, Lenin passed in 1924 and Rykov, then Molotov, who helped spur a new wave of industrialization. Then Stalin, who led purges of the Russian people in a number of Show Trials before getting the Soviet Union, as Russian Empire was now called, into World War II. Stalin encouraged Hitler to attack Poland in 1939. Let's sit on that for a second. He tried to build a pact with the Western powers and after that broke down, he launched excursions annexing parts of Poland, Finland, Romania, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia. Many of the lands were parts of the former Russian Empire. The USSR had chunks of Belarus and the Ukraine before but as of the 1950s annexed Poland, Easter Germany, Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Bulgaria as part of the Warsaw Pact, a block of nations we later called the Soviet Bloc. They even built a wall between East and West Germany. During and after the war, the Americans whisked German scientists off to the United States. The Soviets were in no real danger from an invasion by the US and the weakened French, Austrians, and military-less Germans were in no place to attack the Soviets. The UK had to rebuild and British empire quickly fell apart. Even the traditional homes of the vikings who'd rowed down the rivers would cease to become global powers. And thus there were two superpowers remaining in the world, the Soviets and the United States. The Cold War The Soviets took back much of the former Russian Empire, claiming they needed buffer zones or through subterfuge. At its peak, the Soviet Union cover 8.6 million square miles; just a couple hundred thousand shy of the Russian Empire. On the way there, they grew to a nation of over 290 million people with dozens of nationalities. And they expanded the sphere of influence even further, waging proxy wars in places like Vietnam and Korea. They never actually went to war with the United States, in much the same way they mostly avoided the direct big war with the Mongols and the British - and how Rorik of Dorestad played both sides of Frankish conflicts. We now call this period the Cold War. The Cold War was an arms race. This manifested itself first in nuclear weapons. The US is still the only country to detonate a nuclear weapon in war time, from the bombings that caused the surrender of Japan at the end of the war. The Soviets weren't that far behind and detonated a bomb in 1949. That was the same year NATO was founded as a treaty organization between Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, and the United States. The US upped the ante with the hydrogen bomb in 1952. The Soviets got the hydrogen bomb in 1955. And then came the Space Race. Sputnik launched in 1957. The Russians were winning the space race. They further proved that when they put Yuri Gagarin up in 1961. By 1969 the US put Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the moon. Each side developed military coalitions, provided economic aid to allies, built large arsenals of weapons, practiced espionage against one another, deployed massive amounts of propaganda, and spreading their ideology. Or at least that's what the modern interpretation of history tells us. There were certainly ideological differences, but the Cold War saw the spread of communism as a replacement for conquest. That started with Lenin trying to lead a revolt throughout Europe but shifted over the decades into again, pure conquest. Truman saw the rapid expansion of the Soviets and without context that they were mostly reclaiming lands conquered by the Russian imperial forces, won support for the Truman Doctrine. There, he contained Soviet expansion in Eastern Europe. First, they supported Greece and Turkey. But the support extended throughout areas adjacent to Soviet interests. Eisenhower saw how swiftly Russians were putting science in action with satellites and space missions and nuclear weapons - and responded with an emphasis in American science. The post-war advancements in computing were vast in the US. The industry moved from tubes and punch cards to interactive computing after the Whirlwind computer was developed at MIT first to help train pilots and then to intercept soviet nuclear weapons. Packet switching, and so the foundations of the Internet were laid to build a computer network that could withstand nuclear attack. Graphical interfaces got their start when Ivan Sutherland was working at MIT on the grandchild of Whirlwind, the TX-2 - which would evolve into the Digital Equipment PDP once privatized. Drum memory, which became the foundation of storage was developed to help break Russian codes and intercept messages. There isn't a part of the computing industry that isn't touched by the research farmed out by various branches of the military and by ARPA. Before the Cold War, Russia and then the Soviet Union were about half for and half against various countries when it came to proxy wars. They tended to play both sides. After the Cold War it was pretty much always the US or UK vs the Soviet Union. Algeria, Kenya, Taiwan, the Sudan, Lebanon, Central America, the Congo, Eritrea, Yemen, Dhofar, Algeria, Malaysia, the Dominican Republic, Chad, Iran, Iraq, Thailand, Bolivia, South Africa, Nigeria, India, Bangladesh, Angolia, Ethiopia, the Sahara, Indonesia, Somalia, Mozambique, Libya, and Sri Lanka. And the big ones were Korea, Vietnam, and Afghanistan. Many of these are still raging on today. The Soviet empire grew to over 5 million soldiers. The US started with 2 nuclear weapons in 1945 and had nearly 300 by 1950 when the Soviets had just 5. The US stockpile grew to over 18,000 in 1960 and peaked at over 31,000 in 1965. The Soviets had 6,129 by then but kept building until they got close to 40,000 by 1980. By then the Chinese, France, and the UK each had over 200 and India and Israel had developed nuclear weapons. Since then only Pakistan and North Korea have added warheads, although there are US warheads located in Germany, Belgium, Italy, Turkey, and the Netherlands. Modern Russia The buildup was expensive. Research, development, feeding troops, supporting asymmetrical warfare in proxy states, and trade sanctions put a strain on the government and nearly bankrupted Russia. They fell behind in science, after Stalin had been anti-computers. Meanwhile, the US was able to parlay all that research spending into true productivity gains. The venture capital system also fueled increasingly wealthy companies who paid taxes. Banking, supply chains, refrigeration, miniaturization, radio, television, and everywhere else we could think of. By the 1980s, the US had Apple and Microsoft and Commodore. The Russians were trading blat, or an informal black market currency, to gain access to knock-offs of ZX Spectrums when the graphical interfaces systems were born. The system of government in the Soviet Union had become outdated. There were some who had thought to modernize it into more of a technocracy in an era when the US was just starting to build ARPANET - but those ideas never came to fruition. Instead it became almost feudalistic with high-ranking party members replacing the boyars, or aristocrats of the old Kievan Rus days. The standard of living suffered. So many cultures and tribes under one roof, but only the Slavs had much say. As the empire over-extended there were food shortages. If there are independent companies then the finger can be pointed in their direction but when food is rationed by the Politburo then the decline in agricultural production became dependent on bringing food in from the outside. That meant paying for it. Pair that with uneven distribution and overspending on the military. The Marxist-Leninist doctrine had been a one party state. The Communist Party. Michael Gorbachev allowed countries in the Bloc to move into a democratic direction with multiple parties. The Soviet Union simply became unmanageable. And while Gorbachev took the blame for much of the downfall of the empire, there was already a deep decay - they were an oligarchy pretending to be a communist state. The countries outside of Russia quickly voted in non-communist governments and by 1989 the Berlin Wall came down and the Eastern European countries began to seek independence, most moving towards democratic governments. The collapse of the Soviet Union resulted in 15 separate countries and left the United States standing alone as the global superpower. The Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland joined NATO in 1999. 2004 saw Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia join. 2009 brought in Albania and Croatia. 2017 led to Montenegro and then North Macedonia. Then came the subject of adding Ukraine. The country that the Kievan Rus had migrated throughout the lands from. The stem from which the name and possibly soul of the country had sprouted from. How could Vladimir Putin allow that to happen? Why would it come up? As the Soviets pulled out of the Bloc countries , they left remnants of their empire behind. Belarus, Kazakstan, and the Ukraine were left plenty of weapons that couldn't be moved quickly. Ukraine alone had 1,700 nuclear weapons, which included 16 intercontinental ballistic missiles. Add to that nearly 2,000 biological and chemical weapons. Those went to Russia or were disassembled once the Ukrainians were assured of their sovereignty. The Crimea, which had been fought over in multiple bloody wars was added to Ukraine. At least until 2014, when Putin wanted the port of Sevastopol, founded by Catherine the Great. Now there was a gateway from Russia to the Mediterranean yet again. So Kievan Rus under Rurik is really the modern Ukraine and the Russian Empire then Romanov Dynasty flowed from that following the Mongol invasions. The Russian Empire freed other nations from the yolk of Mongolian rule but became something entirely different once they over-extended. Those countries in the empire often traded the Mongol yolk for the Soviet yolk. And entirely different from the Soviet Union that fought the Cold War and the modern Russia we know today. Meanwhile, the states of Europe had been profoundly changed since the days of Thomas Paine's The Rights of Man and Marx. Many moved left of center and became socialized parts of their economy. No one ever need go hungry in a Scandanavian country. Health care, education, even child care became free in many countries. Many of those same ideals that helped lift the standard of living for all in developed countries then spread, including in Canada and some in the US. And so we see socialism to capitalism as more of a spectrum than a boolean choice now. And totalitarianism, oligarchy, and democracy as a spectrum as well. Many could argue reforms in democratic countries are paid for by lobbyists who are paid for by companies and thus an effective oligarchy. Others might argue the elections in many countries are rigged and so they aren't even oligarchs, they're monarchies. Putin took office in 1999 and while Dmitry Medvedev was the president for a time, but he effectively ruled in a tandemocracy with Putin until Putin decided to get back in power. That's 23 years and counting and just a few months behind when King Abdullah took over in Jordan and King Mohammed VI took over in Morocco. And so while democratic in name, they're not all quite so democratic. Yet they do benefit from technology that began in Western countries and spread throughout the world. Countries like semi-conductor manufacturer Sitronics even went public on the London stock exchange. Hard line communists might (and do) counter that the US has an empire and that western countries conspire for the downfall of Russia or want to turn Russians into slaves to the capitalist machine. As mentioned earlier, there has always been plenty of propaganda in this relationship. Or gaslighting. Or fake news. Or disinformation. One of those American advancements that ties the Russians to the capitalist yoke is interactive computing. That could have been developed in Glushkov's or Kitov's labs in Russia, as they had the ideas and talent. But because the oligarchy that formed around communism, the ideas were sidelined and it came out of MIT - and that led to Project MAC, which did as much to democratize computing as Gorbachev did to democratize the Russian Federation.
durée : 00:41:23 - Un jour dans le monde - Ce soir, direction la Birmanie. Aung San Suu Kyi, prix Nobel de la paix, vient d'être condamnée par la junte birmane à deux ans de prison. La situation est chaotique dans le pays, depuis le coup d'état de l'armée en février.
durée : 00:41:23 - Un jour dans le monde - Ce soir, direction la Birmanie. Aung San Suu Kyi, prix Nobel de la paix, vient d'être condamnée par la junte birmane à deux ans de prison. La situation est chaotique dans le pays, depuis le coup d'état de l'armée en février.
durée : 00:03:02 - Un monde d'avance - Dans ce pays d'Asie du Sud-Est, la prix Nobel de la paix Aung San Suu Kyi a été condamnée à quatre ans de prison. Une peine ensuite ramenée à deux ans. Mais pour l'opposition aux militaires, ça ne va pas changer grand-chose.
durée : 00:02:23 - Le monde est à nous - Le procès de l'ex-dirigeante birmane se poursuit en Birmanie. Pour la première fois elle a pu témoigner. Aussitôt fait, aussitôt censurée ?
Your friendly neighborhood librarians are back at it, answering questions from listeners, like you, in episode 7 – The Origin of Underwear in Space. As you might be able to guess from the title our librarians are answering a wide range of questions, so get ready to listen and learn some interesting information! We tackle the origin of the Earth, investigate who invented underwear, and wonder if birds can really fly in space. Join us for a new episode every other Wednesday to see if listeners were able to stump the librarian and learn some rather interesting information! You can submit a question of your own via http://kdl.org/stump. Don't forget to subscribe to Stump the Librarian via https://stumpthelibrarian.podbean.com/ or wherever you prefer to listen to podcasts, so you never miss an episode. You can also reach our librarians with your questions or fan mail by email at Stumpthelibrarian@kdl.org. Interested in learning and exploring more about this episode's curious questions? You can always use any of the databases KDL has to offer with your library card. Just go to https://kdl.org/online-resources/ to find the best database for more information on the answer to your question. Oh, and don't forget the books! Our catalog is full of amazing books that are filled with fascinating information. Just visit https://kdl.bibliocommons.com/ to search for your next great nonfiction read! Concerning the Origin of Earth... Greshko, M. (2021, May 3). The origins of the universe, explained. Science. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/origins-of-the-universe. Khan Academy. (n.d.). Activity: Intro to origin stories (article). Khan Academy. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/big-history-project/what-is-big-history/origin-stories/a/activity-intro-to-origin-stories1. NASA. (2021, July 19). In depth: Earth. NASA. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/earth/in-depth/#otp_formation. SciShow Kids. (2018). Where did Earth come from? Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://youtu.be/i42otfB4xBk. Skinner, A. (n.d.). Potawatomi Oral Tradition. Milwaukee Public Museum. Retrieved October 6, 2021, from http://www.mpm.edu/content/wirp/ICW-137. Concerning Underwear... Kyi, T. L. (2013). 50 Underwear questions. Annick Press. South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology. (2016). Clothing. Museo Archeologico dell'Alto Adige. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.iceman.it/en/clothing/. Swain, R. F., & O'Brien, J. (2008). Underwear: What we wear under there. Holiday House. Concerning Birds in Space... BirdNote. (2021, May 17). How high birds fly I. BirdNote. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.birdnote.org/listen/shows/how-high-birds-fly-i. Cornell University. (2012, November 8). How do birds fly? Celebrate Urban Birds. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://celebrateurbanbirds.org/faq/how-do-birds-fly/. Doc, T. (n.d.). How Far Can Birds Fly Without Needing to Land? Famous Scientists. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.famousscientists.org/how-far-can-birds-fly-without-needing-to-land/. Howell, E. (2017, June 8). What is space? Space.com. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.space.com/24870-what-is-space.html. Leonard, P. (2017, April 27). Flying on fumes: How birds meet their oxygen demands at high altitude. All About Birds. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.allaboutbirds.org/news/flying-on-fumes-how-birds-meet-their-oxygen-demands-at-high-altitude/. Matthews, R. (n.d.). Could a bird fly in space if provided with oxygen? BBC Science Focus Magazine. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.sciencefocus.com/space/could-a-bird-fly-in-space-if-provided-with-oxygen/. Nag, O. S. (2017, April 25). Highest flying birds. WorldAtlas. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/highest-flying-birds.html. Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. (2016, June 3). Has any type of bird ever flown into space? How Things Fly. Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://howthingsfly.si.edu/ask-an-explainer/has-any-type-bird-ever-flown-space.
Before we start, feel free to support the podcast if you've been listening for a while by signing up for my Patreon for $1 and I will love you forever. Kill Your Idols was an American hardcore punk band from New York, active from 1995 through 2007 and were signed to SideOneDummy Records. The band released many 7" EPs, splits with other bands (including Full Speed Ahead, Fisticuffs, Voorhees, Good Riddance, and Poison Idea), compilation tracks, and full-length LPs in their 11-year run. Most of their records were released on vinyl as well as compact disc. They cite Poison Idea, Negative Approach, Sheer Terror, Agnostic Front, Minor Threat, Warzone, Sick of It All, and 7 Seconds as some of their influences. KYI was very fast and had a loud, dirty, dual guitar sound with shouted vocals. They employed hints of melody in their song structure. Although they derived many of their influences from California and D.C. style hardcore, they were considered a New York hardcore band. I got Andy West on the Skype and this is what we chat about: Starting off as a Dead Head Was he a songwriter prior to starting the band Who started getting their tattoos What does he think about playing Long Island Playing every small town that they could Dealing with depression Always writing a ton of songs What are his thoughts on their new songs Their last show when they broke up The Webster Hall show And a ton more If you market aggressively on Instagram Stories and want custom stickers then go here to get custom stickers or just email mike@drive80.com and I can send you samples. These are great for B2C companies and Realtors. Feel free to support the podcast for as little as $1 a month through Patreon Or go to thiswasthescene.com to possibly buy some merch.
durée : 00:02:44 - Un monde d'avance - Cinq mois après le coup d'État militaire dans ce pays d'Asie du Sud Est, la prix Nobel de la Paix se retrouve traduite en procès pour des accusations montées de toutes pièces.
Berättelsen om fredspristagaren som symboliserade kampen för demokrati och sedan anklagades för att ha blundat för folkmord. Under sina 15 år i husarrest blev Aung San Suu Kyi en av världens mest kända politiska fångar och tilldelades Nobels fredspris. Hon sågs som utvald, en symbol för demokrati. Men hennes liv har inte varit utan uppoffringar. År 2010 släpps den burmesiska frihetskämpen fri. Sedan dess har hon och hennes parti NLD vunnit stora valsegrar men också anklagats för att ha blundat för militärens hårda angrepp mot folkgruppen rohingyer. Fördrivningen har kallats för ett folkmord, med hundratusentals människor på flykt. Idag är situationen i Myanmar allvarlig med civila dödsoffer och stora protester, efter militärkuppen i den 1 februari 2021. Och Aung San Suu Kyi är ännu en gång frihetsberövad och riskerar många års fängelse. I programmet medverkar frilansjournalisten Axel Kronholm som länge bevakat Myanmar och journalisten och författaren Jesper Bengtsson som skrivit biografin "En kamp för frihet". Programledare: Vendela Lundberg Avsnittsförfattare & reporter: Sally HenrikssonProducent: Axel WinqvistExekutiv Producent: Ulla SvenssonTekniker: Fredrik NilssonProgrammet är en produktion från produktionsbolaget OLGA. Ljudklippen i dokumentären är hämtade från: BBC, Sveriges Radio, SVT, AP, Nobel media, The White House NDTV, CBS och CNN.
Berättelsen om fredspristagaren som symboliserade kampen för demokrati och sedan anklagades för att ha blundat för folkmord. Under sina 15 år i husarrest blev Aung San Suu Kyi en av världens mest kända politiska fångar och tilldelades Nobels fredspris. Hon sågs som utvald, en symbol för demokrati. Men hennes liv har inte varit utan uppoffringar. År 2010 släpps den burmesiska frihetskämpen fri. Sedan dess har hon och hennes parti NLD vunnit stora valsegrar men också anklagats för att ha blundat för militärens hårda angrepp mot folkgruppen rohingyer. Fördrivningen har kallats för ett folkmord, med hundratusentals människor på flykt. Idag är situationen i Myanmar allvarlig med civila dödsoffer och stora protester, efter militärkuppen i den 1 februari 2021. Och Aung San Suu Kyi är ännu en gång frihetsberövad och riskerar många års fängelse. I programmet medverkar frilansjournalisten Axel Kronholm som länge bevakat Myanmar och journalisten och författaren Jesper Bengtsson som skrivit biografin "En kamp för frihet". Programledare: Vendela Lundberg Avsnittsförfattare & reporter: Sally Henriksson Producent: Axel Winqvist Exekutiv Producent: Ulla Svensson Tekniker: Fredrik Nilsson Programmet är en produktion från produktionsbolaget OLGA. Ljudklippen i dokumentären är hämtade från: BBC, Sveriges Radio, SVT, AP, Nobel media, The White House NDTV, CBS och CNN.
Berättelsen om fredspristagaren som symboliserade kampen för demokrati och sedan anklagades för att ha blundat för folkmord. Under sina 15 år i husarrest blev Aung San Suu Kyi en av världens mest kända politiska fångar och tilldelades Nobels fredspris. Hon sågs som utvald, en symbol för demokrati. Men hennes liv har inte varit utan uppoffringar. År 2010 släpps den burmesiska frihetskämpen fri. Sedan dess har hon och hennes parti NLD vunnit stora valsegrar men också anklagats för att ha blundat för militärens hårda angrepp mot folkgruppen rohingyer. Fördrivningen har kallats för ett folkmord, med hundratusentals människor på flykt. Idag är situationen i Myanmar allvarlig med civila dödsoffer och stora protester, efter militärkuppen i den 1 februari 2021. Och Aung San Suu Kyi är ännu en gång frihetsberövad och riskerar många års fängelse. I programmet medverkar frilansjournalisten Axel Kronholm som länge bevakat Myanmar och journalisten och författaren Jesper Bengtsson som skrivit biografin "En kamp för frihet". Programledare: Vendela Lundberg Avsnittsförfattare & reporter: Sally Henriksson Producent: Axel Winqvist Exekutiv Producent: Ulla Svensson Tekniker: Fredrik Nilsson Programmet är en produktion från produktionsbolaget OLGA. Ljudklippen i dokumentären är hämtade från: BBC, Sveriges Radio, SVT, AP, Nobel media, The White House NDTV, CBS och CNN.
Aung San Suu Kyi, líder civil de Miannar, comparece por videoconferência à audiência em tribunal; Tribunal Criminal de Paris divulga hoje a sentença do ex-presidente da França Nicolas Sarkozy; Alemanha passa exigir a partir desta terça-feira (02) teste PCR negativo em zona de fronteira com a França; primeiro-ministro de Israel acusa Irã de causar explosão de navio israelense em Omã; Mohammad bin Salman, príncipe herdeiro da Arábia Saudita, é acusado em relatório dos EUA de ter autorizado a morte do jornalista Jamal Khashoggi. Uma parceria da Agência Radioweb com a Rádio França Internacional.
durée : 00:57:56 - Cultures Monde - par : Florian Delorme, Mélanie Chalandon, Antoine Dhulster - Aung San Suu Kyi avait décidé de faire confiance à l’armée birmane, qu’elle avait pourtant passé des décennies à combattre. A l'heure où des manifestants se mobilisent à travers la Birmanie pour sa libération, comment expliquer le décalage entre sa popularité domestique et sa perte de légitimité ? - réalisation : Vincent Abouchar, Benjamin Hû - invités : Bénédicte Brac de la Perrière ethnologue, spécialiste de la Birmanie, chercheuse au CNRS – CASE (Centre Asie du Sud-Est).; Olivier Guillard Chercheur au CERIAS, le Centre d'études et de recherche sur l'Inde, l'Asie du Sud et sa diaspora de l’Université du Québec à Montréal, directeur de l’information du cabinet de conseil Crisis24; Marie-Sybille de Vienne professeur à l'Inalco
durée : 00:02:17 - L'Humeur du matin par Guillaume Erner - par : Guillaume Erner - Oui, pourquoi est-elle en état d’arrestation ?
Governo, la trattativa si complica; Il colpo di stato in Myanmar; Il triangolo maledetto della scuola: le Notizie a colazione di martedì 2 febbraio 2021.--Fonti: www.notizieacolazione.itMusica: https://www.bensound.comIllustrazione: Gianpaolo Frascella
durée : 00:03:12 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - La principale dirigeante civile du pays a été arrêtée et la loi martiale a été proclamée lundi par les militaires qui ont repris tout le pouvoir. Les réactions internationales seront-elles suffisantes pour faire reculer les généraux ?
durée : 00:03:12 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - La principale dirigeante civile du pays a été arrêtée et la loi martiale a été proclamée lundi par les militaires qui ont repris tout le pouvoir. Les réactions internationales seront-elles suffisantes pour faire reculer les généraux ?
durée : 00:02:41 - Le monde est à nous - Le président birman et la chef du gouvernement, l'ancienne opposante Aung San Suu Kyi, ont été arrêtés à l'aube ce 1er février. Dans un calme presque étonnant, les militaires ont intégralement repris le pouvoir - qu'ils partageaient jusqu'ici avec les civils.
durée : 00:16:22 - Journal de 8 h - "Ne pas accepter" le putsch militaire. Aung San Suu Kyi s'adresse aux Birmans, dans une lettre ce lundi matin, quelques heures après son arrestation par l'armée. Armée qui prend le pouvoir dans le pays après plusieurs années de rivalité avec le gouvernement. - réalisation : Martin Desclozeaux
durée : 00:24:42 - Journal de 12h30 - Réseaux téléphoniques et internet interrompus, aéroport fermé, la Birmanie se retrouve depuis, ce matin, partiellement coupée du monde, à la suite d'un putsh militaire. La cheffe du gouvernement civil, Aung San Suu Kyi, a été arrêtée et aussitôt remplacée. - invités : Rodolphe Costantino Avocat, défenseur de l'association Enfance & Partage
durée : 00:16:22 - Journal de 8 h - "Ne pas accepter" le putsch militaire. Aung San Suu Kyi s'adresse aux Birmans, dans une lettre ce lundi matin, quelques heures après son arrestation par l'armée. Armée qui prend le pouvoir dans le pays après plusieurs années de rivalité avec le gouvernement. - réalisation : Martin Desclozeaux
durée : 00:24:42 - Journal de 12h30 - Réseaux téléphoniques et internet interrompus, aéroport fermé, la Birmanie se retrouve depuis, ce matin, partiellement coupée du monde, à la suite d'un putsh militaire. La cheffe du gouvernement civil, Aung San Suu Kyi, a été arrêtée et aussitôt remplacée. - invités : Rodolphe Costantino Avocat, défenseur de l'association Enfance & Partage
durée : 00:02:37 - Le monde est à nous - La dirigeante birmane, autrefois adulée par l'opinion internationale, perd une nouvelle distinction : le Prix Sakharov, décerné par le Parlement européen. Aung San Suu Kyi paye son silence sur les crimes de son armée contre la minorité des Rohingyas.
Who is Kyi really? The good the bad and the in between. The journey was real, count it all joy tho!
This week on Breaking Banks Jason Henrichs hosts John Weinkowitz from our sponsor Finastra and Tom Feher from Microsoft to discuss Finastra’s pinnacle core, Fusion Phoenix. Tom and John explore how Microsoft’s Azure Cloud has enabled Finastra to lead the pack in utilizing the cloud to help banks innovate faster and more efficiently. Then, stay tuned as Jason Henrichs speaks to, Sherri Davidoff CEO of LMG Security, about security challenges faced by industries on the bleeding edge of technology. Sherri explains how financial institutions can elevate innovation efforts while also remaining secure. Show Hosts: Jason Henrichs Show Guests:Sherri Davidoff CEO of LMG Security Tom Feher from Microsoft John Weinkowitz from Finastra Sponsored by Finastra TOPICS DISCUSSED: [3:20] How has Finastra embraced cloud technology and how have they leveraged it to make it easy for banks? [3:50] Why did Finastra go all-in on cloud computing technology? [6:17] Were the bigger banks the first to invest in cloud technology and is the playing field being leveled by fintechs? [10:15] Are we seeing a large number of banks considering migrating to the cloud since the COVID19 crisis? [13:02] Customers are increasingly demanding self-service features from their financial institutions. [17:20] Banks are getting really smart about security as they open up to new opportunities and partnerships. [20:00] Finastra customers are realizing the value of KYI, plug and play technologies, and the importance of actionable data. [23:30] Leveraging data to lower risk and find new opportunities is of value for Finastra clients. [29:43] Jason makes the point just because you can physically touch a server does not mean it’s more secure. [31:20] Sherri explains that the cloud has both the ability to be secure and insecure. It’s important to vet your provider. [36:00] Sherri discusses two-factor identification in detail. [41:45] Would it make sense to have hardware tokens? [42:20] Is regulation keeping up with how banks view cybersecurity and technology? [48:02] Security assessments are valuable in today’s climate for organizations and consumers. RESOURCES MENTIONED: Microsoft Azure Finastra Zelle Lyft UberLMG Security Verizon ATT TMobile Breaking Banks is the #1 global fintech radio show and podcast. Tune in every week for a look at how technology and customer behavior will bring about more changes in banking in the next 10 years, than in the last 200 years. Subscribe at Provoke.fm or wherever you get your podcasts. FULL TRANSCRIPTION Announcer: Financial technology or fintech is one of the fastest growing industries in the world today with New York, London, Tel Aviv, Edinburgh, Singapore, Moscow, and other major cities all buy in for a piece of the action. Welcome to Breaking Banks; the first dedicated radio show that focuses on how this new boom is changing everything from the way we bank to the very concept of money itself. Now, here’s your host, Jason Henrichs. Jason Henrichs: Today on the show, talking about cloud, specifically financial services in the cloud. Now, historically, when we bring up cloud within financial services, the debate can take on religious proportions. Tech evangelists sing the praises of the architecture, compliance departments scream it’s not secure, IT departments feel more scared when they can physically go hug that box that’s running code in the cage. Until recently, I think everyone felt more secure when remote access was locked down. Now, current circumstances can show that if everyone has to come into the bank in order to operate the system, well, there’s just some limitations attached to that. Today on the show, John Weinkowitz, GM of retail and head of product strategy for community markets at Finastra in Palm Bay or West region financial services industry director at Microsoft. Talk about banking in the cloud. Tom, do you have a special fold-out on your card to get that whole ...
durée : 00:02:38 - En direct du monde - La dirigeante birmane Aung San Suu Kyi renforce son leadership en incarnant la lutte contre le Covid-19. Le pays compte officiellement 181 cas de coronavirus pour l’instant.
Rupi Kaur, Nayyirah Waheed, Morgane Ortin... La poésie contemporaine est féminine et féministe ! Grâce à une écriture vive et percutante, ces jeunes autrices contemporaines cheminent dans les pas de leurs aînées pour délivrer une poésie engagée et militante.Si le genre a toujours eu une place importante dans la culture anglo-saxonne, celui-ci connaît pourtant un nouvel engouement, porté par de nouveaux canaux de diffusion favorisant sa démocratisation. Clémentine et Kyiémis explorent cette nouvelle culture émergente autour de la poésie notamment à travers le recueil “Je transporte des explosifs, on les appelle des mots “ aux Editions Cambourakis. Références entendues dans l’épisode : La chaîne Youtube Button Poetry est dédiée à la découverte de jeunes auteur.e.s de poésie et à la poésie de performanceJe transporte des explosifs, on les appelle des mots : poésie et féminismes aux Etats-Unis, Cambourakis, 2019Bell Hooks est une militante afroféministe américaineGloria Andaluza (1942-2004) est une poétesse et militante féministe lesbienne chicanaAssata Shakur fut dans les années 1960 et 1970, militante du Black Panther Party et de l’Armée de Libération NoireMohja Kahf, est une poétesse et universitaire syro-américaine. “Hijab Scene 7” est le titre du poème mentionné dans l’épisode. Jan Clausen est une écrivaine, poétesse et militante lesbienne. Elle est cofondatrice de la revue féministe lesbienne Conditions. Audre Lorde (1934-1992) se définissait comme “Noire, lesbienne, féministe, mère, guerrière et poétesse”. Elle est l’autrice du poème “Litanie pour la survie”, et des recueils de poèmes Coal (1976) et The Black Unicorn (1978)Nayyirah Waheed, Salt., CreateSpace, 2013 Rupi Kaur est une poétesse canadienne. Elle est l’autrice de Milk and Honey paru en 2014Une étude américaine publiée en 2018 par le site QuartzyClaire Do Sêrro est éditrice littéraire de NiL éditions (Robert Laffont)Warsan Shire est une poétesse britannico-somalienneIjeoma Umebinyuo est une poétesse nigérianne Amanda Lovelace, The Princess Saves Herself in This One, CreateSpace, 2016Cécile Coulon a publié Les Ronces, un recueil de poèmes récompensé par le prix Apollinaire 2018De nombreux poèmes sont publiés sur la page Facebook Parisian PoetryAmours solitaires rassemble témoignages et poèmes explorant le sentiment amoureux Gael Barboza est un artiste polyvalent et écrivain. Il est l’auteur d’un recueil de poésie, intitulé Jazz (2017). Kyiémis, À nos humanités révoltées, Métagraphes, 2018Maya Angelou (1928-2014) est une poétesse, écrivaine, et militante américaine. John Ashbery (1927-2017) est un poète américain associé à la New York School of Poetry. Son oeuvre a été récompensée par de nombreux prix littéraires. Frank O’Hara, Lunch Poems, City Lights, 1964Adrienne Rich (1929-2012) est une poétesse et essayiste féministe américaineEmily Dickinson (1830 - 1886) est une poétesse américaineLa série Dickinson a été lancée le 1er novembre sur Apple TV+. Hailee Steinfeld y incarne Emily Dickinson.Le film A Quiet Passion (2016) a été réalisé par Terence DaviesLéon-Gontran Damas (1912-1978) est un poète, écrivain et homme politique guyanais. Il est cofondateur du mouvement de la négritude. Black lebelAimé Césaire (1913-2018) est un poète et homme politique français. Il est l’un des fondateurs du mouvement de la négritudeLe Centre international de la Poésie de Marseille (cipM) est situé 2 rue de la Charité dans le 2ème arrondissement de Marseille Le Bordel de la Poésie est un événement littéraire unique autour de la poésie et du monde du cabaretCulture Rapide est un cabaret populaire situé au 103 rue Julien Lacroix dans le 20ème arrondissement de Paris. Le lieu propose des soirées Open Mic “spoken Word Poetry”Le RÊV Café est un café-restaurant solidaire et associatif situé au 54 ter rue de Robespierre à Montreuil Quoi de Meuf est une émission de Nouvelles Écoutes conçue par Clémentine Gallot et présentée avec Kyiémis. Avec la participation d’Alice Heathwood à la lecture des poèmes. Montage et mixage par Laurie Galligani. Générique réalisée par Aurore Meyer Mahieu. Prise de son Eric De La Rochette au Studio Belleville. Coordination Ashley Tola.
In 1982 the Myanmar (Burmese) military government passed a citizenship law that effectively stripped the Rohingya community of their nationality overnight. They’ve been stateless ever since, and subject to institutionalized discrimination and coordinated persecution that has greatly restricted their movement and their access to jobs and education. In August of 2017 Myanmar’s military began an offensive to drive many Rohingya out of their homes in Rakhine state, with the result that roughly 900,000 refugees have fled the country, with reports of widespread and coordinated attacks utilizing arson, rape, and mass killing that bear signs of genocide. Refugee camps in neighboring Bangladesh have long since been filled past overflowing, and many have been reduced to living in squalid and unsafe conditions in and around the camps. JN Joniad fled his home in Rakhine state 6 years ago, and is currently registered in with UNHCR in Indonesia as a refugee, while he awaits resettlement elsewhere. His story not only illuminates the condition of fellow Rohingya, but also uncovers what appears to be a global trend amongst wealthy nations (the US, EU, and Australia) to outsource their border enforcement policy to developing nations through a strategy of deterrence and obscured accountability.
Andy West is Vocalist for Kill Your Idols, a hardcore band form Long Island, York. Andy phoned in from Florida, where he currently resides for an interview just before KYI does some summer shows. In thsi episode, West discusses many things including his musical history, the reasons behind Kill Your Idols’ initial breakup in 2007, how and why they got back together and even some candid stories of history battling his demons. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Discography https://www.discogs.com/artist/435032-Kill-Your-Idols Merch http://deadcityrecords.bigcartel.com/products?search=Kill+your+idols&search-submit= ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Visit our Sponsor! Nautilus Coffee https://nautilusroasting.com/
The Rohingya Muslims of Myanmar (formerly Burma) are one of the most persecuted people's on the globe. They are not wanted in Burma nor in any other country. Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya live as refugees in Bangladesh and other countries. After the show is over, be sure to visit the Show Notes page. The Show Notes are available at: IslamicLearningMaterials.com/Burma Here's some of what you'll find: The transcript for this episode Links to the Muslim Podcast of the Week Links to other related resources You can support the Islamic History Podcast by doing one (or more) of the following: Give a monthly pledge on Patreon Subscribe on iTunes Share with your friends and family You can do it all and more at the Show Notes page:
In this issue of NL Hafta, Hartosh Singh Bal, political editor of The Caravan, joins the regular Hafta gang of Abhinandan Sekhri, Madhu Trehan, Anand Vardhan, Manisha Pande and Raman Kirpal. They discuss The Caravan’s cover story on Anil Ambani and the Rafale deal.Manisha tells us about the reading down of Section 377, and how it is major a civil rights victory in India. The unanimous decision by the Supreme Court was met with much elation, we hear more about the sequence of events that led to this historic win.Abhinandan then brings up the report on Kanhaiya Kumar contesting in Begusarai on a CPI seat. Anand Vardhan talks about Begusarai, a region prominently known for Left politics.The conversation then moves on to Myanmar where two Reuters journalists were arrested under the Official Secrets Act after their report on the killing of 10 Rohingya men and boys. Madhu Trehan compares Aung San Suu Kyi and Nelson Mandela, and talks about Kyi’s perception as a humanitarian, during the current civil crisis in Myanmar.The team also discusses NBSA asking Arnab Goswami and Republic TV to apologise and the arrest of Lois Sofia for shouting slogans on board a plane. Listen up. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We sat down with my girl Kyi ( @muvaastronaut ) last night on #FLOYD118 with our guest host, (@headoverheels_) and chopped it up about the ups and downs of the entertainment industry. Lessons learned from female artist who’ve come before her. Also we talked about the pros and cons of being industry vs. independent. We debated the greatest hip hop labels of all time and discussed urban music now vs the #90s era. Take some time and check her page out. Follow and become a fan
Daresha is an award winning writer, director and producer for film and TV. Daresha made her first film at the age of 16 years old. She casted actor, Isaiah Washington in one of her early narratives film projects. She has been in the industry for over 25 years. We spoke about her journey. Daresha expressed her honor to be gifted to tell such amazing stories such as "Chavela" and "Mama Bears" amongst the many others movies that she has made. She also produced segments on Totally Biased with W. Kamau Bell. "I believe in the power of film to effect social change and I don't limit myself to any particular style of genre. I move fluidly between film and television, comedy, drama and documentary in both Spanish an English." Daresha Kyi website: https://www.dareshakyi.com/ IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1407080/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/daresha.kyi Twitter: https://twitter.com/Daresha11 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dareshakyi/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/daresha-kyi-12a7091 She is currently fundraising for her new project, "Mama Bears." https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/mama-bears-documentary/x/18077839#/
Whose Century Is It?: Ideas, trends & twists shaping the world in the 21st century
Not so long ago, Myanmar (Burma) was a good news story, with democratic reforms, a booming economy and falling poverty rates. Then came ugly military-led attacks on Rohingya Muslims, who killed, raped and burned houses, and forced more than 700,000 Rohingyas to flee to camps in Bangladesh, with little pushback from pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi. What does this mean for Myanmar's democratic future? Khin Ohmar, an exiled Burmese human rights and democracy activist for 30 years, shares her thoughts.
Fasansfulla scener utspelar sig nu för royhingafolket, på bägge sidor om gränsen mellan Bangladesh och Burma. Det rapporteras om människor som halshuggs inför sina släktingar, kvinnor som våldtas, barn flyr som ensamma och desperata till enkla läger där stor brist råder på mat, skydd och mediciner. OmVärlden Podd reder ut vad som lett fram till krisen.
William Childress (skip to 53:30) had me over to his homestay in Siem Reap, Cambodia to talk about Myanmar. He lived there for years. And it was the first place I went on my travels this year. So I finished seeing a temple near Angkor Wat and went to visit him so we could talk about one of my favorite countries in the world. Myanmar is amazing. See it before it gets ruined by globalism. Also, I went kind of nuts on the intro and outro. And then stay tuned after the outro because I also included a conversation I had with a 17 year old Burmese girl I met out there at a restaurant outside Inle Lake. This might be my fullest podcast ever.
This week, we continue our Badass Bitches series with a more modern icon. We take you to Myanmar, where Suu Kyi fights everyday for democracy.
In this week’s Democracy That Delivers podcast, Murray Hiebert, Senior Adviser and Deputy Director of the Southeast Asia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), talks about the historic visit to the U.S. last week of Aung San Suu Kyi. Hiebert discusses what the visit means for Myanmar’s future, including the peace process and the investment climate in a country where peace and development is long overdue. Hiebert also talks about what the lifting of sanctions will mean for the inflow of foreign direct investment, and how economic development and the resolution of ethnic grievances through the peace process are linked. Reaction in Myanmar to Aung San Suu Kyi’s visit is also discussed. Hiebert also talks about the tension between the Muslim-minority Rohingya population and the majority Buddhist population in Myanmar and Aung San Suu Kyi’s commitment to resolve tension between the two groups.
The 3rd KYI show just happened. It was acceptable. The tally so far - 1 mediocre, 1 great and one acceptable. Maybe I need lower standards.
Undulaten som tycker att förtryckta folkgrupper ska TA DET LITE LUGNT!! Hon har 90% av rösterna men får inte bli president. Hon är ju kvinna. Och har utländska barn. Medverkande: Dilan Apak, Petrina Solange, Johannes Finnlaugsson och Elinor Svensson. Producent: Jesper Cederstrand
Actions Have Consequences: Aruna Ratanagiri (30 mins) (keywords) Parenting, kamma, spiritual education, motorbike, accident, hospital, heedlessness, pessimism, optimism, Refuges, Precepts, narcissism, views, hopelessness, awareness, indignation, politics, environment, naivety, strategic optimism, racism, misogyny, homophobia, humility, delusion, synergy, technology, intolerable, Aung San Suu Kyi, incarceration, metta, equanimity, transformation, eradication, slavery, judging, letting go, change, integration, disintegration, honesty, humility, daring.
Gideon Rachman is joined by FT correspondents to discuss the great expectations for Aung San Suu Kyi in the upcoming by-election in Myanmar. They also examine the US Supreme Court case that will determine the fate of the Obama administration’s healthcare reform. Presented by Gideon Rachman, with Gwen Robinson and Alan Rappeport Produced by Amie Tsang and Serena Tarling See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Ken Wiwa, son of Nigerian activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, talks to Allan Gregg about his difficult relationship with his father. Ken Wiwa writes about it in his book, "In the Shadow of a Saint." (Original broadcast Feb 2001)
Ken Wiwa, son of Nigerian activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, talks to Allan Gregg about his difficult relationship with his father. Ken Wiwa writes about it in his book, "In the Shadow of a Saint." (Original broadcast Feb 2001)