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Al-Qaida-ledaren Usama bin Ladin följde händelserna, den 11 september 2001 via BBC:s arabiska sändningar, när två passagerarflygplan kort tid efter varandra flög in i tvillingtornen på World Trade Center i New York. Aldrig tidigare hade världens skådat ett terrordåd av den magnituden.Usama bin Laden hade genomgått en utveckling från en ung blyg religiös man, som levde i enkelhet trots att han ärvt miljoner av faderns som varit Saudiarabiens främsta byggherre, till en finansiär av jihad mot den sovjetiska ockupationen i Afghanistan för att slutligen planera det största terrordådet i världshistorien.I detta avsnitt av podden Historia Nu samtalar programledaren Urban Lindstedt med journalisten Jens Nordqvist som är aktuell med boken Al-Qaidas krig – Historien bakom den islamistiska terrorismen.När den saudiska konservatismen wahhabismen och salafismen under 1970-talet parade sig med den radikala egyptiska jihadismen bildades en explosiv mix, en draksådd ur vilken al-Qaida och senare 2010-talets terrororganisation Islamiska staten, IS, växte fram.Bakom det spektakulära dådet mot tvillingtornens i New York den 11 september 2001 stod nätverket al-Qaida som grundats av bin Laden 1988 i kampen mot den sovjetiska ockupationen av Afghanistan.Al-Qaida vill återupprätta den islamiska civilisationens storhet och att bekämpa de sittande regimerna i muslimska länder, som betraktas som korrupta och beroende av västmakterna. Världsbilden präglas av en föreställning om västmakternas och Israels gemensamma konspiration mot islam.Al-Qaida började som ett logistiskt nätverk för att stödja muslimer från hela världen som kämpade mot Sovjetunionen under det afghanska kriget. När sovjeterna drog sig ur från Afghanistan 1989 skingrades organisationen, men fortsatte att motsätta sig vad dess ledare ansåg korrupta islamiska regimer och utländsk (dvs. USA) närvaro i islamiska länder.Bild:Al-Qaida-ledaren Usama bin Ladin med sin rådgivare Dr Ayman al-Zawahiri under en intervju med den pakistanske journalisten Hamid Mir i november 2001 i Kabul. Dr. Wikipedia, Cretative Commons.Lyssna också på Baader-Meinhof-ligan – från studentprotester till dödskult.Musik: Cinematic Action Drums And Percussion With Dark Ambient Atmospheric Tension Trailer av MEDIA MUSIC GROUP, Storyblocks audio. Vill du stödja podden och samtidigt höra ännu mer av Historia Nu? Gå med i vårt gille genom att klicka här: https://plus.acast.com/s/historianu-med-urban-lindstedt. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I det här oviktiga avsnittet av Frågeklådan, som tidigare bara funnits på Podme, diskuterar Niclas & Jonatan sniglars tendens att förvåna, en bisarr jacuzzi-upplevelse, om det är lättast att se om någon är hårdrockare eller bög, en önskan som skulle bli verklighet samtidigt för alla på jorden, öl-häng med Usama bin Ladin, hur man velat att dokumentären om ens eget liv skulle se ut – och mycket mer! Hjärndöda frågor får meningslösa svar – haka på!Vi finns numera även på Podme! Det betyder att du hittar alla våra avsnitt, helt reklamfritt, i Podme-appen. Signa upp dig på podme.com – de första 14 dagarna är gratis. Ladda sedan ner appen i Appstore eller Google Play.
Från 2021. Berättelsen om hur världens mäktigaste land letade över hela jorden för att hitta världens mest eftersökte terroristledare. Nya avsnitt från P3 Dokumentär hittar du först i Sveriges Radio Play. Sent en natt lyfter två militärhelikoptrar från den amerikanska basen i Afghanistan. De åker mot staden Abbottabad, där Usama Bin Ladin ska finnas. Det har tagit USA tio år att hitta dit.Sökandet efter terroristenElitsoldaterna är väl förberedda, ändå kraschar en av helikoptrarna vid landningen. Hemma i USA har jurister förberett flera sätt att rättfärdiga operationen – som i själva verket är minst sagt tveksam när det gäller internationell lag.Medverkande: Cindy Storer, fd analytiker på amerikanska underrättelsetjänsten, CIA. Will Chesney, fd elitsoldat som medverkade under räden i Abbottabad. Peter Bergen, journalist som intervjuade Usama Bin Laden 1997. Andreas Utterström, USA-expert. Saeed Shah, journalist baserad i Pakistan. Joby Warrick, författare.En dokumentär av: Love Lyssarides. Producent: Lars Truedson/ Tredje Statsmakten. Exekutiv producent: Jon Jordås. Dokumentären är producerad 2021.
Fred's guest on this episode of The Fred Minnick Show is actor Eric Ladin, back for a second round of conversation and whiskey-sipping. Ladin is known for his roles on Mad Men, Boardwalk Empire, American Sniper and many more. During the interview, they talk about music, Venmo strategy, spleens, Clint Eastwood and entertainment residuals, and Fred confesses his hatred for golf. Along the way, they sip on Blackened x Rabbit Hole bourbon, 1992 Blanton's and more. Join Fred's Whiskey Club: https://www.patreon.com/FredMinnick SHOW SPONSORS BAXUS: https://www.baxus.co CR Citrus: https://crcitrus.com Official Glassware of The Fred Minnick Show, Viski: https://viski.com/discount/FRED20 Luxco: https://www.luxco.com Michter's: https://michters.com Woodinville: https://woodinvillewhiskeyco.com The American Spirits Council of Tasters: https://ascotawards.com Use Promo code FRED20 for 20% off Viski Glasses RAYE Whiskey Tasting Glasses https://viski.com/collections/whiskey-glasses/products/4290 RAYE Angled Crystal Nick & Nora Glasses https://viski.com/products/6424?_pos=1&_sid=f623ae171&_ss=r Join Fred's Whiskey Club: https://www.patreon.com/FredMinnick Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Just when you think you know everything there is to know about the White House, here comes Corey Mead and his book The Hidden History of the White House: Power Struggles, Scandals, and Defining Moments, which came out June 4. This book is presented by the hit podcast “American History Tellers,” and it reveals behind-the-scenes stories of some of the most dramatic events in American history, told from right inside the White House where they happened. Talk about “if these walls could talk”—the White House has been the soundstage for some of the most climactic moments in American history, and its walls have witnessed history-making decisions, power struggles, scandals, and so many stories from the First Family, their guests, and the staff at the White House. Just some of the topics delved into were Andrew Jackson's disastrous inauguration; Woodrow Wilson's stroke and his second wife Edith's basically shadow presidency as his administration came to a close; Dolley Madison's courageous act when the White House was set aflame in 1814; when U.K. Prime Minister Winston Churchill visited the White House and plotted, with FDR, plans to defeat Germany; and the decision by Barack Obama to green-light the Navy SEAL raid that ultimately killed Osama bin Ladin. I talk about this with Corey, but maybe one of the most fascinating parts to me about the book—and I wasn't expecting this—was the actual construction of the White House itself and its subsequent renovations, especially the 1948 Truman renovation, which we talk about on the show today. The book is broken into three parts: part one, Laying the Foundation; part two, The People's House; and part three, Halls of Power—each as fascinating as the last. As Corey writes in the book, “Every corner and hallway has a tale to tell,” and there's so many of those tales in this book. We have Corey Mead on the show today, the author of this great book and also an associate professor of English at Baruch College, City University of New York. In addition to this book, Corey is also the author of Angelic Music: The Story of Benjamin Franklin's Glass Armonica and War Play: Video Games and the Future of Armed Conflict. You can also find his work everywhere from Time to Salon, The Daily Beast, and numerous literary journals, and I know you'll enjoy this conversation. P.S.: The Rebecca Boggs Roberts episode we mention in this conversation about First Lady Edith Wilson is from season 7, episode 6! The Hidden History of the White House: Power Struggles, Scandals, and Defining Moments by Corey Mead
VEM: Jens NordqvistYRKE: Författare och journalist.OM: Hur skrämmande koranbränningarna i Sverige är för en expert i jihadism, när det största i livet är att kriga och dö för islam, vad som ledde upp till 9/11 och följderna därefter, kalifatets uppgång och fall, hur kriget mot terrorism bara skapar mer terrorism, de svenska IS-krigarna, förnedringen i Guantánamo-fängelset och hur den kassa täckningen uppe i de afghanska bergen stoppade Usama bin Ladin från att se sitt eget terrordåd på TV.SAMTALSLEDARE: Kristoffer TriumfPRODUCENT: Ninni WestinDISTRIBUTION: Acast KONTAKT: MAIL och INSTAGRAM Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
ECATERINA LADIN, VIAȚA ACTRIȚEI DIN LAS FIERBINȚI. VENITĂ DE PESTE PRUT SĂ CUCEREASCĂ PUBLICUL ROMÂN
With Winterreise, Andrè Schuen and Daniel Heide complete their recordings for DG of Schubert's three song cycles, and have understandably saved the most challenging to last. James Jolly spoke to Andrè to discover how he approaches this colossal work, the Everest of any singer's repertoire. This Gramophone Podcast is produced in association with Wigmore Hall.
Our friend Suma recounts her recent multi-day hike through the Dolomites, which were so breathtakingly beautiful, “it almost seemed like they were in a movie”. She and her friends started in Innsbruck, Austria which was a good route to drive to prepare them for the stunning geography they would see for the rest of the trip. This episode delves into the logistics of the trip, including the benefits of using a company to book accommodations and transfers. We also discuss the hiking experience itself, the fitness level required and the surprising lack of crowds even during the busy Italian tourist month of September. Suma also shares her insights into the Ladin culture of the region, the warm hospitality of the locals, and the hearty mountain cuisine that fueled their journey. She convinced us to go next September, so you might feel the same! https://www.kimberlysitaly.com Instagram Facebook
Carmen bin Ladin was once Osama bin Laden's sister-in-law. Her marriage to Osama's half brother Yeslam broke up several years ago and she had nothing to do with the September 11th attacks. In this 2004 interview Carmen bin Ladin reveals what goes on inside the strict Saudi culture that she and her daughters were part of. Get Inside the Kingdom by Carmen bin LadinAs an Amazon Associate, Now I've Heard Everything earns from qualifying purchases.You may also enjoy my interviews with Betty Mahmoody and Ivana Trump For more vintage interviews with celebrities, leaders, and influencers, subscribe to Now I've Heard Everything on Spotify, Apple Podcasts. and now on YouTube Photo by #osamabinladen #saudiarabia
Efter 11 september-attackerna i USA 2001 skriver al-Qaidaledaren – och hjärnan bakom terrordåden – Usama bin Ladin ett brev där han rättfärdigar attackerna. 20 år senare dyker texten plötsligt upp på Tiktok. Den plockas upp av unga användare som drar paralleller till det pågående kriget mellan Israel och Hamas. Hur kunde bin Ladins ord spridas på en av världens största plattformar? Programledare: Emma Lukins. Med DN:s faktaredaktör Hugo Ewald Hurinsky. Producent: Sabina Marmullakaj.
När al-Qaida den 11 september 2001 flög in med tre kapade passagerarflyg i World Trade Centers tvillingtorn i New York och i Pentagon skulle 3 000 människor dö. Supermakten USA var skakad och en månad senare inleddes president George W Bush krig mot terrorismen genom ett anfall på al-Qaida-baser i Afghanistan. I kampen mot terroristerna skulle USA frångå grundläggande rättsprinciper.Det blev USA:s längsta krig som senare följdes av en fullskalig invasion i Irak, vars regim helt saknade kopplingar till al-Qaida, som skulle kosta 100 000-tals människor livet och skapa grunden till den mest hänsynslösa terrororganisation världen skådat i Islamiska staten som kom att kontrollera stora delar av Irak och Syrien.I detta avsnitt av podden Historia Nu samtalar programledaren Urban Lindstedt med journalisten och författaren Jens Nordquist som är aktuell med boken USA:s hämnd - Kriget mot terrorismen.Kriget mot terrorismen utropades av USA:s president George W. Bush i ett tal till kongressen den 20 september 2001, nio dagar efter terrorattackerna mot New York och Washington. Trots att kampanjen inte riktades mot enskilda länder har den varit mest koncentrerad till tre huvudsakliga arenor: Afghanistan, Irak och Pakistan. Andra länder, såsom Jemen och Somalia, har också varit mål för attacker inom ramen för kriget mot terrorismen.Kriget mot terrorismen ledde till många frågor och kontroverser, inklusive påverkan på medborgerliga friheter, användningen av tortyr, rollen för privata militära entreprenörer och effektiviteten av militärstrategin. Kriget påverkade också världens syn på USA.Invasionen av Afghanistan var tänkt som en kort, intensiv militärinsats för att slå ut al-Qaida och talibanregimen, men resulterade i det längsta kriget i USA:s historia – med stort lidande bland den afghanska civilbefolkningen som konsekvens. Trots den omfattande jakten på al-Qaida lyckades Usama bin Ladin och de andra ledarna att smita undan och senare återuppta sin verksamhet.Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) innebar intensiva bombningar och markattacker i delar av Afghanistan. Talibanregimen föll snabbt, men Usama bin Ladin och andra ledare flydde till grannlandet Pakistan. USA etablerade även en fängelseenhet på Guantánamo-basen på Kuba för att internera misstänkta terrorister utanför det skydd som den amerikanska konstitution hade givit i USA. Flera visade sig vara människor som bara varit på fel plats vid fel tidpunkt.Efter Afghanistan riktade USA uppmärksamheten mot Irak, där man hävdade att Saddam Hussein utgjorde ett hot på grund av sitt påstådda innehav av massförstörelsevapen och sitt stöd till internationell terrorism. Invasionen av Irak motiverades med lögner och falska underrättelserapporter om Saddam Husseins massförstörelsevapen och regimens påstådda kopplingar till al-Qaida.Den internationella uppslutningen kring invasionen av Irak var betydligt mer begränsad än i fallet Afghanistan, och FN-inspektörerna hittade inga bevis för massförstörelsevapen i landet. Efter att ha störtat Saddam Hussein stod USA dock inför en långdragen och våldsam konflikt i Irak, där olika extremistgrupper och al-Qaida etablerade sig.Lyssna också på al-Qaida – från gerillabas till internationell islamistisk terrorismBild: Fångar på Guantánamobasen (januari 2002) Fotograf: [Shane T. McCoy](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shane_T._McCoy), U.S. Navy, Wikipedia, Public Domain.Musik: Taiko Drum Main av Giuseppe Rizzo, Storyblocks AudioKlippare: Emanuel Lehtonen Vill du stödja podden och samtidigt höra ännu mer av Historia Nu? Gå med i vårt gille genom att klicka här: https://plus.acast.com/s/historianu-med-urban-lindstedt. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
¿Qué define la identidad de los pueblos indígenas? Una pregunta corta que guarda una complejidad que nos invita a hablar sobre ancestralidad, pluriculturalidad, multilingüismo, colonialismo, entre otros muchos aspectos relevantes en la identidad de los pueblos originarios. En este episodio de “Saberes”, el podcast conversacional de Ocote para acercarnos a las visiones de los pueblos indígenas, conversamos con la antropóloga, historiadora y activista María Jacinta Xón, quien ha trabajado las identidades de los pueblos indígenas desde distintas aproximaciones como los textiles e indumentaria maya, gastronomía e investigación social. Es autora de Entre la y el mayámetro, dinámicas contemporáneas del colonialismo de editorial Catafixia..
Episode 92! Saudi Arabia's sporting ambitions and investments have been dominating global coverage of the Kingdom in recent months. The 966 speaks with Simon Chadwick, Professor of Sport and Geopolitical Economy, SKEMMA Business School, Paris, about all of the interest and investments by Saudi Arabia and Gulf nations into global sports. Professor Chadwick has consulted for and advised some of the biggest names in sport, such as FC Barcelona, UEFA, Adidas, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). Before that, the hosts discuss a recent article in Newsweek by a previous guest of The 966, David Rundell, about some facts around Saudi Arabia's real role in 9/11, and why context matters. Then the hosts discuss all the latest with NEOM, including a recent interview given by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to Discovery in English. The hosts conclude as always with Yallah! 6 top storylines to get you up to speed heading into the weekend. 5:22 - Richard's One Big Thing is drawing attention and giving credit to a recent op-ed in Newsweek by a previous guest of The 966, David Rundell. Rundell and Gfoeller argue that Saudis "never made up the majority of al-Qaeda's leadership or membership. Below Osama bin Ladin, al-Qaeda's leadership was primarily Egyptian. Al-Qaeda's foot soldiers came from across the Muslim world with North Africans, Indonesians and Pakistanis contributing far more than Saudis. Saudis were used to carry out the 9/11 attacks primarily because it was far easier for them to obtain visas to the United States than it was for their Egyptian or Pakistani colleagues....Nor did al-Qaeda's political agenda originate in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Islam has a long tradition of puritanical intolerance which has most often been directed against the religious practices of other Muslims. Within Saudi Arabia, the religious scholars have an equally long history of condemning terrorism, especially when it involves suicide."24:01 - Lucien's One Big Thing is discussion of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's remarks to a Discovery Channel documentary on Neom and all the other developments that happened in Neom in just the past two weeks. Lucien shares the comments that the Crown Prince made, which demonstrate his enthusiasm for the project and the genesis of the design and need to provide a new, global city for Saudis. Also recently, NEOM has announced that it has finalized contracts with investors for the first phase of its residential communities' expansion, a social infrastructure project that will house the region's growing workforce, and signed a deal with a global yachting brand, a major Saudi media organization, and more. 38:38 - The 966 speaks with Professor Simon Chadwick. Professor of Sport and Geopolitical Economy, SKEMMA Business School, Paris, about all of the interest and investments by Saudi Arabia and Gulf nations into global sports. Professor Chadwick has consulted for and advised some of the biggest names in sport, such as FC Barcelona, UEFA, Adidas, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).1:33 - Yallah! 6 Top Storylines to get you up to speed heading into the weekend. •Nearly 1.5 million foreign pilgrims have arrived in Saudi Arabia so far for annual Hajj pilgrimage •Kingdom at the Forefront of Air Taxi Tech with Test of Volocopter in Collaboration with Neom•Aston Martin Ties with Lucid for EV Partnership•Kante joins Benzema at Al-Ittihad on 3-year deal as Saudi Arabia entices another star player•The framework of the merger agreement of the PGA Tour and Saudi-backed LIV Golf says a for-profit subsidiary of the U.S. golfing body will be created •The 2023 Club World Cup will take place in Saudi Arabian city of JeddahEid Al-Adha Mubarak to all followers and friends! -The 966 Team
Today we're heading to the far north of Italy to the Dolomites and Lake Garda. This magical region is full of craggy spires, sheer cliff faces, verdant valleys, and gorgeous lakes. No wonder it's recognized by UNESCO, will be the home of the next Winter Olympics, and inspires travelers from around the world. My guest today is my partner in the region, Agustina Lagos Marmol. Before starting her company, Agustina was an intrepid mountain guide - taking guests climbing all over the world. Her love for the Dolomites in particular always kept her coming back and she's now cycled, hiked, or skied almost every inch of the region. We discuss everything from the ancient Ladin culture, to World War I history, to incredible mountain adventures finished off with gourmet meals and fabulous wine. Learn more at www.luxtravelinsider.com Connect with me on Social: Instagram LinkedIn
Al-Qaida-ledaren Usama bin Ladin följde händelserna, den 11 september 2001 via BBC:s arabiska sändningar, när två passagerarflygplan kort tid efter varandra flög in i tvillingtornen på World Trade Center i New York. Aldrig tidigare hade världens skådat ett terrordåd av den magnituden.Usama bin Ladin hade genomgått en utveckling från en ung blyg religiös man, som levde i enkelhet trots att han ärvt miljoner av fadern som varit Saudiarabiens främsta byggherre, till en finansiär av jihad mot den sovjetiska ockupationen i Afghanistan för att slutligen planera det största terrordådet i världshistorien.I detta avsnitt av podden Historia Nu samtalar programledaren Urban Lindstedt med journalisten Jens Nordqvist som är aktuell med boken Al-Qaidas krig – Historien bakom den islamistiska terrorismen.När den saudiska konservatismen wahhabismen och salafismen under 1970-talet parade sig med den radikala egyptiska jihadismen bildades en explosiv mix, en draksådd ur vilken al-Qaida och senare 2010-talets terrororganisation Islamiska staten, IS, växte fram.Bakom det spektakulära dådet mot tvillingtornen i New York den 11 september 2001 stod nätverket al-Qaida som grundats av bin Ladin 1988 i kampen mot den sovjetiska ockupationen av Afghanistan.Al-Qaida vill återupprätta den islamiska civilisationens storhet och att bekämpa de sittande regimerna i muslimska länder, som betraktas som korrupta och beroende av västmakterna. Världsbilden präglas av en föreställning om västmakternas och Israels gemensamma konspiration mot islam.Al-Qaida började som ett logistiskt nätverk för att stödja muslimer från hela världen som kämpade mot Sovjetunionen under det afghanska kriget. När sovjeterna drog sig ur från Afghanistan 1989 skingrades organisationen, men fortsatte att motsätta sig vad dess ledare ansåg korrupta islamiska regimer och utländsk (dvs. USA) närvaro i islamiska länder.Bild: Al-Qaida-ledaren Usama bin Ladin med sin rådgivare Dr Ayman al-Zawahiri under en intervju med den pakistanske journalisten Hamid Mir i november 2001 i Kabul. Dr. Wikipedia, Cretative Commons.Lyssna också på Baader-Meinhof-ligan – från studentprotester till dödskult.Musik: Cinematic Action Drums And Percussion With Dark Ambient Atmospheric Tension Trailer av MEDIA MUSIC GROUP, Storyblocks audio.Klippare: Emanuel Lehtonen Vill du stödja podden och samtidigt höra ännu mer av Historia Nu? Gå med i vårt gille genom att klicka här: https://plus.acast.com/s/historianu-med-urban-lindstedt. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
No começo dos anos 2000, a banda carioca Tchakabum lançou um dos maiores hits de festas brasileiras, "Onda Onda (Olha a Onda)". Mais de 20 anos depois, a canção está de volta —e graças a mais uma música acompanhada de uma dança de TikTok, “Tubarão Te Amo”, um dos maiores sucessos deste fim de ano. A música faz parte de um movimento que tem crescido nos últimos tempos: o de canções com samples de hits dos anos 2000 ou com artistas que foram febre na época. O grupo Os Hawaianos, que despontou no Furacão 2000, é outro exemplo disso. A banda tem agitado festas juvenis com canções como “Vai Neymar, Brasil É Tois” e "Desenrola Bate Joga de Ladin", parceria com L7nnon. A referência aos anos 2000 na música é um movimento que tem acontecido em vários gêneros. Nos Estados Unidos, por exemplo, artistas como Willow Smith e Olivia Rodrigo botaram de volta nas rádios uma estética emo. No Brasil, hits antigos do axé, do funk e de outros gêneros estão sendo resgatados por uma geração jovem. O Expresso Ilustrada desta quinta-feira (15) explica o que há por trás desse movimento. Para isso, o programa ouve Marcelo Tchakabum, vocalista do Tchakabum, e Lucas Brêda, repórter de música da Folha. A produção de podcasts de cultura entra numa pausa, depois de quase quatro anos em que o Expresso Ilustradas discutiu as principais tendências do mundo das artes. A edição de som do podcast é de Raphael Concli. A apresentação é de Marina Lourenço e Carolina Moraes, que assinam o roteiro.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
För att lyssna på den här serien och alla andra avsnitt i Naudio Dox - prenumerera på ThirdEar+. Gå in på www.thirdear.studio för att teckna din prenumeration. Som betalande prenumerant får du då även exklusiv tillgång till Spår, En mörk Historia och Skuggland. Efter attentaten den 11:e september svär USA på att hämnas. Amerikanska styrkor ger sig in i Afghanistan för att störta den regim de tidigare hjälpt till makten. Men vad som väntar där är 20 år av motgångar och misstag. Jakten på Usama bin Ladin och al-Qaida lämnar ett spår av krig, konflikt och korruption bakom sig. Fiendens Fiende del 2 är historien om hur det gick till när USA för en andra gång beväpnade talibanerna. Medverkande: Nina Hjelmgren, journalist och författareTim Weiner, journalist och författareMohammad Fazlhashemi, professor i islamisk teologi och filosofiProgramledare: Tobias NorströmProducent: Anton VretanderMix: Jonas SjöbergProducerat av Fisk i Keps
Biel do Furduncinho entrega tudo sobre o sucesso do hit #aipreto com o L7, aqui no Link Podcast! #bieldofurduncinho que está estourado com o hit que viralizou “Desenrola Bate Joga de Ladin” e nos últimos meses o hit “Ai Preto”, em parceria com #L7NNON. Essa é sua atual música de trabalho, ficando em 1º lugar do Top 50 de Portugal, no Spotify. Confessa que depois que você ouviu esse hit não sai da cabeça, não é mesmo? Já fez as dancinhas desses virais? O Biel do Furduncinho vai revelar tudo sobre o seu sucesso e trajetória nessa conversa incrível! EX-CLU-SI-VO, é o primeiro podcast que o cantor participa!
Ladin has guest starred as William Hofstadt on multiple episodes of the AMC show Mad Men and the HBO miniseries Generation Kill as Corporal James Chaffin. He has appeared in the films Toolbox Murders, Cursed and Left in Darkness. He is also the voice of the character Ellis in the cooperative first-person shooter game Left 4 Dead 2, as well as the voice of Cole MacGrath, the lead character of Infamous, in all media beginning with Infamous 2.Ladin played Jamie Wright for two seasons in AMC's The Killing. He guest starred in the Law & Order: SVU episode "Rhodium Nights". He is the voice of Private Todd Kashima in Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare.He garnered fame for his portrayal of J. Edgar Hoover in HBO's Golden Globe and Emmy Award winning series, Boardwalk Empire.In 2019 and 2020 Ladin appeared as Gene Kranz on the Apple TV+ series For All Mankind and Chris Kraft on the Disney+ series The Right Stuff, both characters being NASA space flight directors. Ladin also has a recurring role as Los Angeles Times reporter, Scott Anderson, on the Amazon series, Bosch.In 2020, Ladin starred in the feature psychological thriller film Painter with Betsy Randle.
Historia najbardziej znanej organizacji terrorystycznej na świecie w podkaście “Tygodnika Powszechnego”. W pierwszym rozdziale: jak grupa weteranów wojny w Afganistanie stała się międzynarodową korporacją terrorystyczną? Multimilioner, syn magnata budowlanego, porzuca wygodne życie i staje na czele terrorystycznej międzynarodówki - kim był Osama ibn Ladin? Dlaczego świat tak długo nie traktował Al-Ka'idy poważnie? Co robić, gdy strach staje się bronią skuteczniejszą niż bomby? Na podkast zapraszają: Wojciech Jagielski i Krzysztof Story. Drugi rozdział tej historii już 31 sierpnia.
Usame bin Ladin'in ölümünden sonra El Kaide'nin liderliğini üstlenen Eymen el Zevahiri, Afganistan'da düzenlenen drone saldırısı sonucu öldürüldü. Eymen el Zevahiri, bin Ladin'in sağ kolu ve El Kaide'nin baş ideoloğu olarak biliniyordu. Zevahiri'nin CIA'in düzenlediği bir operasyon sonucu öldürülmesi ne anlama geliyor? ABD ile Çin arasındaki gerilim artıyor. ABD Temsilciler Meclisi Başkanı Nancy Pelosi, Asya turu kapsamında Tayvan'a gitti. Çin'in tüm tehditlerine rağmen adaya inen Pelosi, Tayvan Cumhurbaşkanı Tsai Ing-wen ile de görüştü. ABD ile Çin arasındaki Tayvan gerilimi nereye varacak? Ukrayna'nın Odessa Limanı'ndan hareket eden ve 26 bin ton mısır taşıyan Razoni isimli Sierra Leone bayraklı kuru yük gemisi İstanbul'a vardı. İstanbul Boğazı'nın Karadeniz girişine demirleyen gemi, Müşterek Koordinasyon Merkezi tarafından denetledi ve yoluna devam etti. Gıda krizi çözülecek mi? Gönül Tol ve Ruşen Çakır, Transatlantik'te değerlendirdi. Yayını izleyebilirsiniz: bit.ly/3zUYMOM
Editör: Egemen Gök TBMM'nin tatile girmesi nedeniyle grup toplantısı yerine her hafta salı günü bir ilde toplantı düzenleme kararı alan CHP Genel Başkanı Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, 128 milletvekili ile birlikte ilk toplantı için Erzurum'a gitti. 11. Cumhurbaşkanı Abdullah Gül, siyaset ve ekonomi gündemine dair Karar gazetesine açıklamalarda bulundu. Mersin'de yapımı devam eden Akkuyu Nükleer Güç (ANG) Santrali'ndeki tartışmalar bitmiyor. Projede yer alan yerli şirketlerden IC İçtaş A.Ş.'nin sözleşmesinin feshedilmesi Akkuyu'da yaşananları yeniden gündeme getirdi. Usame bin Ladin'in ölümünden sonra El Kaide'nin liderliğini üstlenen Eymen el Zevahiri öldürüldü. Afganistan'da düzenlenen drone saldırısı sonucu öldürülen el Zevahiri, bin Ladin'in sağ kolu ve El Kaide'nin baş ideoloğu olarak biliniyordu. Asya ziyaretine devam eden Amerika Birleşik Devletleri (ABD) Temsilciler Meclisi Başkanı Nancy Pelosi‘nin uçağı Tayvan‘a indi. Tayvan halkı ile dayanışmanın ABD için her zamankinden daha önemli olduğunu söyleyen Pelosi'nin ziyaretine Çin'den tepki geldi. Gökçe Çiçek Kösedağı'nın sunduğu “Güne Bakış”ta, Medyascope Ankara Temsilcisi Hıdır Göktaş ile Kılıçdaroğlu'nun Erzurum temaslarını, gazeteci Mehmet Ocaktan ile Abdullah Gül röportajını, siyasetbilimci ve Medyascope yorumcusu Ülkü Doğanay ile Gül röportajının yankılarını ve siyasi etkilerini konuşacağız. Yayını izleyebilirsiniz: bit.ly/3bnQe9C
On this episode of the podcast we recap Day 1 of our big competition with Kawaga. CM has a lot of work to do going into tomorrow, but we can make it happen! Tonight, the boys in the senior cabin (Srosen, Peterman, Quinn, Danizger and Harf) join us to recap day 1 and talk about all the great things we saw from the Menominee men that day.
Good evening everybody! On this episode of the podcast we have 5 members of the Senior Cabin on to recap the first day of our big competition with Camp Kawaga. We saw a lot of amazing stuff today from our campers and staff, and we talk all about it. Menominee has a lot of work to do tomorrow, so cheer us on from wherever you are as we mount our comeback. Enjoy!
In this week's episode, we discuss Joe Biden's Advisor admitting that the reason for high gas prices is due to having to maintain the "Liberal World Order", We discuss Disney pushing their Trans agenda onto your young children, leading to a discussion about the dark creepy history of other Disney movies. We also discuss the recent sentencing of child pedophiles and sex traffickers Ghislaine Maxwell. Subscribe and leave a 5-star review! ----more---- Our website https://redpillrevolution.co Protect your family and support the Red Pill Revolution Podcast with Affordable Life Insurance. This is attached to my license and not a third-party ad! Go to https://agents.ethoslife.com/invite/3504a now! Currently available in AZ, MI, MO, LA, NC, OH, IN, TN, WV Email redpillrevolt@protonmail.com if you would like to sign up in a different state Leave a donation, sign up for our weekly podcast companion newsletter, and follow along with all things Red Pill Revolution by going to our new website: https://redpillrevolution.co ----more---- Full Transcription Welcome to the revolution. Hello and welcome to red pill revolution. My name is Austin Adams. Thank you so much for listening today. I appreciate it so much. It has been a little bit since our last episode. Uh, so I'm really excited to jump back into it. I've been literally like itching to do a podcast episode with you guys. There's been so much that has been going on over the last, I don't know. Uh, several, several weeks, I guess, two and a half weeks now. And, uh, again, I'm really excited to jump into it. So today's episode, we're gonna jump into some of the more interesting topics that have come up over the last several weeks, including, uh, we'll touch on the liberal world order that Biden's, uh, advisor spoke to over the last, uh, I believe it was in the. Several days. We're also gonna touch on the Baymax situation with Disney. If you're not familiar, Disney had a new series come out, uh, regarding Baymax and Baymax is . Um, what is the movie called? Uh, big hero. Six, if you don't have children, you might not know it, but big hero six was the movie. It's a great movie, but they came out with a series recently where there's some interesting things that they, uh, talk to your children about. That a lot of people are kind of uncomfortable with, um, some parts of the, uh, trans agenda. So we'll discuss those things today. We're also going to talk on the Joe Biden cue card situation. if you haven't heard about that, basically they were telling him when to breathe and what to say when to sit down the fact that it was going to be him who is sitting down and not somebody else. I don't know how you make somebody else sit down, but, uh, yeah, they were very, very specific in their words. So we'll talk about all of that. All right. Before we jump into that, though, I need you to do one thing for me. Go ahead and hit that subscribe button, whether you're on apple podcast, YouTube, Spotify, rumble, uh, wherever you're at right now. Go ahead and hit that subscribe button. It means the world to me, it takes. Five seconds, five seconds of your time. I know that every day you go through your day, you're trying to look for a way to get some good karma, to feel good about yourself and know that you're doing something for somebody else. And you can do that very easily right now. And all you gotta do. Just tap, tap, tap that subscribe button real quick for me. All right. The next thing you can do leave a five star review. If you're on apple podcast, if you're on Spotify's YouTube, wherever, leave a five star review, it helps us with the rankings. Again, I appreciate it so much. And that's all I got for you there. All right. So what we're gonna go into first is going to be the liberal world order that Joe Biden's advisor talked about. And we'll go ahead and watch the clip first. Then we're gonna look at a clip of Joe Biden, actually referencing the same exact world order, uh, at the world economic forum. So we'll look at that clip from back in 2017, I believe it was. So let's watch this clip. Uh, we'll listen to it together. And then we will look at Joe Biden's clip of him, discussing it back in 2017. And here we go. It's fairly quick. It's like 10 seconds. Um, so here is this clip It's sustainable. What do you say to those families who say, listen, we can't afford to pay 4 85 a gallon for months. If not years, this is just not sustainable. Well, we heard from the president today was a clear articulation of the stakes. This is about the future of the liberal world order and we have to stand firm. So. so you heard it right there. This is about the future of the liberal world order. You paying $6. A gallon is about the future of the liberal world order that nobody even wants you to talk about. And you heard it right from the mouth of Joe Biden's advisor there. So that was a question regarding gas prices, right? They were asking about gas prices. And, uh, the question was basically how long do you expect people to be able to pay this and this, I don't know, airhead advisor, his response was as long as it takes be as long as we can keep up the liberal world order. Well, I don't know about you. I know about my bank account. I know about my friend's bank account. Family's bank account. None of my family members or friends or anybody gives a shit about the liberal world order. None of them, not a single one. Haven't heard him, you know, Hey, you, you really glad the liberal world orders doing well today, aren't you? No, nobody's talking about that. Nobody cares. Right? These, this Joe Biden and his advisors are so far removed from the general rep, uh, public that they think you actually care about the liberal world order. If anything, that's a concerning statement, right? For how long have we heard that the new world order is a conspiracy theory, right? Is, is something that, you know, doesn't exist. And, and, and you're just saying that because, uh, you know, you, you're a conspiracy theorist, a tin foil hat wearing crazy person. And now they're just saying it outright on, I don't know, whatever that was MSNBC or whatever. Um, so the liberal world order is what that advisor just said is the reason that you need to pay six or $7 a gallon for gas. And again, I don't care about the liberal order world order. I don't care. I don't think you do either. I don't think even liberals care about the liberal world order, especially when they have to pay six or $7 a gallon for gas. It's crazy. Um, so we're gonna go back and we're gonna watch a clip real quick of Joe Biden saying a very similar thing in 2017. And what you'll notice if you're actually looking at the video format of this is that the background has three interesting words while he's discussing these things. And it says world economic forum. Hmm. If you don't know what the world economic forum is, you don't know who Charles Schwab. Who leads the world economic forum? Um, it's basically the, the weirdest, uh, star wars, Imperial army. Uh, I don't know, like the legitimate new world order being ran by all of the world governments. All right, now Disney had a new series come out, uh, regarding Baymax this, the wokeness that Disney put into this TV series and I love this show. Like if you've ever seen the big hero, six, show it or movie, it's a great movie. All you have is go to the new show that they have. And again, this is, uh, the new bay max series and there's two episodes in a row. Two episodes in a row where they have this woke ideology and woke agenda being pushed on your children. Now, I, you know, I don't care what you want to get put in front of your children. I don't care what you want to teach your children. Honestly, don't teach my children, your ideology at 5, 6, 7 years old. Right? And even if you wanna introduce it be because there's a reason, there's a reason that you are not allowed to advertise to children. You're not allowed to advertise to children because they cannot make sense of what is true and what is false. They cannot make sense of when somebody is trying to deceive you for profit. Right? So there's literal laws around advertising to children because they know they're susceptible highly susceptible to somebody of authority or somebody like their favorite movie character, pushing an ideology and making something normal that maybe isn't. Or maybe, you know, shouldn't be pushed on a five to six year old. And again, there's two sides of Disney plus the show's on Disney plus, and there's two sides of it. There's like the parent side in the child's side and the kid's side of Disney plus doesn't have a ton of movies that you would normally let your child watch, right? Like Moana's not on there. Uh, cars, three Peter pan Dumbo wreck it, Ralph, like all of these, uh, onward, which is another awesome kid's movie. All of these movies that seemingly should be allowed for children that aren't for some obscure reason, but this new bay max series is on the kid size kid side of Disney, the kid size of di side of Disney. So you start to see in the series very quickly, what they're starting to push. And so we'll watch this clip right here. And what it is is it's this Baymax. If you don't know the, the background of big hero, six big hero, six is a movie about a kid who's, uh, his parents are dead and he lives with his aunt and his brother, his older brother, and his older brother dies in a fire during the movie. And he's a really smart kid and he makes this robot and his brother has a robot. Who's like super nice and like heals people. I don't know. It's a great movie. You should go watch it a hundred percent. You should go watch it. What you shouldn't watch if you're a child, is the bay max series. Because what they do is they, they place the Baymax, this robot, first of all, which is weird in a Pharmac. Like a CVS type of deal. And he's asking what type of tampons he should buy. And I think the context of the episode is that he's looking for tampons for some girl who needs them because it's her first period. And again, this is like five to six year olds can watch this because the, the apparent side of it is like seven or eight plus. So they're expecting five to six year olds to watch this series. And in this series, we'll, we'll go ahead and watch this. Um, he's asking about tampons and there's seven or eight people around him who are answering questions about tampons, which is like, whatever tampons who cares, periods, whatever, like, yeah. You wanna talk to my kid about how the re you know, how their body works at 7, 8, 9 years old? Honestly, it doesn't rub me the wrong way, as long as you're doing it from a medical perspective, but that's not what they are doing here, because one of the individuals is wearing a shirt that with the trans flag on it, As appears to be a male person of the male sex when they were born. I'm not assuming their gender , but it appears to be a man in the way that I was brought up, thinking men look based on their appearance, jawline, clothing, voice, testosterone level genitals, I don't know. Um, but here's the story. Here's the, here's the clip right here. And then we'll talk about Excuse me. Which of these products would you recommend? Oh, um, well these are the tampons I usually use. Thank you. I prefer pads. They're more comfortable for me. Thank you. I always get the ones with wings. Thank you. Get incented and bleach free. If you can. Thank you, yo, my daughter loves these. Thank you. These might be easier if it's her first period. Thank you. These are really environmentally friendly. what they don't show you. There is that one of the individuals is wearing a transfer is a man and says, this is the type of tampon that I use. Excuse me. Ma'am or sir, don't want to, you know, believe what your pronouns are based on your, uh, actual gender at birth. But I don't know where, where is this person with a trans flag on their shirt? Putting this tamp? What is it doing for them? and why are you trying to teach my five, six and seven year olds that periods are, have men have periods, biological men have periods because this was a biological man wearing a transfer in Baymax. Why are you trying to teach my 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 year old? Why are you trying to begin these questions at that age? Because all you're doing and if again, and if you go back to, there was a book written by a woman, um, I forget the name of it, but she wrote a book basically about how the mental health crisis that was prior to this, uh, era. So let's say between like 2000 and 2016, there was a big manifestation of mental health issues for young women in the area of, uh, anorexia and bulimia. And so what they saw was a similar drop between 2000 and I think it was 17 and 2021 when trans. Started to become a very popular topic of conversation. Um, what they saw was a very similar drop in the amount of women who were identifying or, or had a mental health issue represent itself in the way of anorexia and bulimia now representing itself in the way of gender dysphoria. And if you don't know what gender dysphoria is, ask a psychologist because they learned about it in school, in the DSM five, where it outlined what that actually is. And so why are you trying to push? And again, I don't have a problem if you wanna, like, bring this up to a 14, 15 year old in school and represent these ideas and let them know that this is something that's out there. And this is what people think. And you know, maybe, you know, somebody who's in a situation, but don't try and tell my children that a man can have a period. Don't try and tell my six year old, seven year old, five year old. That the, the actual reproductive organs of a man allow for that situation to happen because you're confusing them. That's not science, especially when you're claimed to be the party of science. That's not science. A man cannot have a period, period. it doesn't work that way. I don't have a uterus. I don't have a vagina. I don't have anything. That's shedding its wall or it's lining that's causing, uh, bleeding. I don't have that. I don't bleed from anywhere once a month. It does not work that way. Sorry to tell you Disney, if you were so far uninformed that you actually believed a man could have a period, they can not. So don't groom my child to thinking that they can. And, and, and so you see it prior in the next episode of this bay max series, because I watched it with my daughter right there in the very next episode is. Of, um, a show about a guy who ends up asking another guy out on a date. And again, if you wanna do this with like 12, 13, 14 year olds where they're aware of these things, don't do it to a five, six year old. I, I just don't see the place for this, like sexual orientation being brought up to somebody who is literally a toddler Leah toddler two years ago, because you know what you're doing, you know? Right. And, and then, and again, and I wouldn't have a problem if with this, if it was coming from an independent company, this is literally the biggest entertainment company in the world. You know, the same entertainment company who, when you go back and watch the OG lion king wrote sex in the stars, because they wanted to subconsciously program your children to be hypersexualized. When it was convenient for them, it's the same company who had the, whatever that guy was from the little mermaid with a boner sitting there with a, another character on his lap. It's the same company. I literally have a list here in an article of all the crazy shit that Disney's done. That's been hyper sexualizing, our children for decades, like 55, 60 years. Right. And yet you wanna take off Moana wreck it, Ralph, uh, Molan Peter pan and Dumbo, but you're trying to groom my child into believing a man can have a period. What the fuck planet do you live on? And you're trying to like shape my child's reality because that's what you're doing, right? When you're PO positioning your child in the way, when you're teaching them something, you're shaping their reality because they don't know better. They don't know how these things work. They don't, they haven't been introduced wi by the reproductive system. And all they do is, you know, maybe they watch Netflix, they watch Disney plus they watch a little YouTube and then they speak with the parent. And now they're trying to interject their ideology into your child's mind at five years old, the same way that they were writing sex in the stars. Hyper sexualizing you at the age of 5, 5, 6, 7 years old. When you were watching the lion king back in the nineties, the same way that they were, you know, they had a Ladin saying, good teenagers, take off their clothes. That was in Aladin. That was literally in the OG Aladin to where they, there was like all this controversy around it. But Aladin, there was like, everyone has heard the claim. I have the article up here. Everyone has heard the claim that Aladin says, good teenagers, take off your clothes in the balcony scene, where he's about to take Jasmine on a magic carpet ride while it was argued back and forth. For many years, Disney muted the line in his rerelease of Aladin. Why would you mute a line in the movie unless you believe what it was doing was wrong? Hmm. Now let's look at some other stuff and they literally don't even have Fantasia on the children's Disney side. Like this children's side of Disney. They don't have Fantasia. Fantasia is a literal music based movie from like 1940. With like lights and all this weird, cool stuff. And like, and this is also the same exact company that had Allison Wonderland. They did multiple movies on Allison Wonderland, which is literally just a movie about tripping balls on shrooms or acid. And you can go watch that on Disney plus right now, yet you want censor Moana in cars, three, like you can't watch cars three on there. It's it is just so interesting to me that they want to push this ideology on the child side of Disney. Now, again, I don't like if you want to have, and, and I'll play this clip here of the Baymax, like the, the guy asking the other guy out on a date, which is like, cool. I, you know, do your thing again. I, I don't care what you do in your sex life. I cool. If that's what you do, if that's, you know, your sexuality, I get it 100%. Go ahead and do you, but. I don't think that the same company that's writing sex in the stars should be introducing this to five and six year olds. When at the same time, they're not allowing them to watch cars three in the name of doing the right thing. So, and then if we go back to the aristocrats aristocrats, right, they, they took that off there. Um, because of it, they, they took, um, what was it? The movie, the rescuers, if you go watch the, the old OG Disney movie, the rescuers in the background on a poster, there's a literal naked woman on the poster, still on Disney plus. Let's see, what else do we have here from Disney now they took off, uh, the Peter pan. Now the Peter pan one, like they, I think they did the same thing for mul. Like Mulan has, uh, you know, they did it for racist ideology because, um, I don't know what the part about it was for Mulan with Peter pan. They did it because he wore like the feather hats. Um, and it said the probably the most recent Mo racist moment in the mainstream Disney film is the moment of Peter pan where he a lovely tune explains why native Americans are red in the catchy tune. What makes the red man red? We learned that engines started off as white people. Then they were kissed by girls and turned bright red and the redness never went away. okay. That's one hell of an origin myth. And when it's delivered by a chorus of natives, why wouldn't a six year old child, believe it. And that last line is important there. Why would a, you know, when it's delivered by a chorus of natives, when it's delivered in a situation where there's seven people standing around Baymax, a literal robot, looking for a tampon. There's seven people around him shouting out, you know, uh, tips and tricks for how to use a tampon. And then you have a actual man biological man in the trans shirt. Who's throwing his opinion out about how he utilizes tampons. Now, again, let's take the last sentence of this article, where it says when it's delivered by a chorus of, in this case, individuals in the Baymax show, why wouldn't a six year old child, believe it, why wouldn't a six year old child believe that a man can have a period is, and, and why are you gonna confuse a 11 year old girl into believing that, you know, what happens to you happens to him? And everybody's, you know, it's just, it's not how it works. And we don't live in the fantasy land of Disney, right? And then you get into, you know, even the darker side of Disney, where they find out all of these, you know, all of these, um, sex trafficking rings, where people are being busted as pedophiles in actual Disney world. And it gets even darker. So I don't know, to me it's bothersome, you know, I just watched that clip with my, I actually watched the show with my daughter and to see that, that Baymax clip where the man is talking about how he utilizes tampons and then immediately follow it up, like back to back episodes. Um, where, you know, I don't know, again, I don't care what you do. I think you should absolutely have. I think like in onward, the movie with Disney, they actually have a scene where a woman talks about her wife and like, cool, get it cool. A hundred percent. Um, but trans men don't have periods. Men don't have periods, they don't bleed, they don't shut a uterine lining on their, you know, it just doesn't exist. It doesn't happen. And why are we trying to teach our youth that that's actually a thing it's gross. All right. Now, speaking of gender ideology, Major us airlines to allow gender neutral option on ticket reservations. This is an article from Reuters as of July. First, it goes on to say that major us airlines have agreed to update computer systems by the end of 2024, to allow travelers to purchase tickets with an X gender marker. An airline trade group confirmed on Friday. Us Senator Ron widen in a letter to airlines for America, chief executive Nick Callio that was seen by Reuters said member airlines committed to the change after he had engaged with the group, a spokesman from the airline group confirmed that widens letter was accurate. Airlines for America, represents passenger carriers for Delta airlines, United airlines, American airlines, Southwest airlines, Alaska airlines, Hawaii airlines and jet blue airways. now it goes on to say in March, the Biden administration said that Americans would be allowed to choose an X for gender on their passport applications and select their sex on social security cards. Now I've said this before, I've said it about the bathroom thing. I've said it about sports. I'll say it about this too. If we're gonna have an X option, why don't we just not ask people's gender? If it no longer is if no longer matters, if we can just be whatever we want any given day, depending on how we feel, why not just have it be not gender, like not genderless. You're not genderless. Let's just stop asking gender because literally why does it matter what your gender is when I'm traveling on a plane? Are you gonna check and make sure when I walk in the door or through security, and if I don't have a, a penis, you're gonna turn me around. Like, why are we asking this to begin with? So if you wanna play these silly games, don't make an X. There's no X in gender. It doesn't exist. It's not a thing. There's men and there's women. Those are the only two genitalia that exist in this world. So if we're not checking for anything and there's no reason, same thing with the bathrooms, same thing with sports, right? If you want sports to be allowed to women, to compete with men and men to compete with women. Cool. Do it fine. Leah Thomas, the number one record breaking swimmer of all time and female NCAA IV league swimming. when she was number 400 and whatever, you're just gonna see that women's sports become men's sports. Unfortunately, that's the way that biology works. Men tend to have, you know, better, you know, thicker bone density. They tend to have different muscular structures. If we're gonna say that it doesn't matter what your gender is. If it doesn't matter how your chemical and bodily makeup is and your muscle structure, then just say it doesn't matter. Don't don't tell me that a woman is a man or a man is a woman, and then can then compete in women's sports and shatter every record ever, cuz you're not living in the real world. So in the same case here, if we're gonna have X on our passports as a gender option, then just don't ask me my gender. Cuz obviously it doesn't matter if I can put an X there just don't ask. It's a silly thing to do. So it goes on to say that in March the Biden administrations, that Americans would be allowed to choose an X for their gender on their passport applications and select their sex on social security cards. Nobody should have to misgender themselves in order to book a flight widen wrote and by forcing travelers to book their ticket with inaccurate gender information airlines also end up providing inaccurate information to the transportation security administration. Is it now I want to identify the way that language works, cuz I think this is important to note here when we're talking about gender. That's how the word breaks down. You're talking about the, um, Latin, uh, where the word actually comes from from the Latin language, right? A lot of the American or the English language derives from Latin derivatives and the word gender breaks down to two points within the Latin language, which has meaning itself. Gender is not, or I'm sorry. Language is not a construct. At least in our sense language from the English language does not just derived from air and we can change the way that words work at any given time. No language is sounds that give meaning, and we have derived the meaning of our sounds based on basic languages that came from before English. Right? And in this case, Latin is the, is the derivative of much of the English language. So then when we look at the actual derivative of Jen du. It comes from the same derivative of gen it tolls, genitals, gender. You don't just get to make it a construct and change it to be whatever you want. You don't get to put an X there. Now, if you wanna identify as whatever you wanna wear, whatever clothing you want and say that, you know, you have, you know, go back to the DSM five and talk about that conversation from earlier. That's fine. Do what you wanna do, be who you want to be, wear, what you wanna wear, call yourself, whatever you wanna call yourself. And I will respect that, but X is not a gender doesn't exist. So let's just call it the same way you can have gender neutral bathrooms. Let's have a gender neutral passport. Maybe it doesn't matter what your gender is to go fly on a plane. It shouldn't, it shouldn't matter at all, what your gender is to fly on a plane. It shouldn't matter what your gender is to go to a different country. Shouldn't matter the, in the same way that it shouldn't matter what your sexuality is. You shouldn't have to identify your sexuality when you go fly on a plane. One place that it does matter though, is sports because sports have real repercussions, especially when you're talking about contact sports, just in the same way that we saw, you know, um, transgender MMA fighters, literally breaking the face of women without telling them that they were a man and had different bone density and different, different bodily structure and different, uh, muscle tone in structure. Right. And that's the whole, that's the whole argument. Right? So, so there should be no reason that we have an X on a passport. Okay. Now it goes on to say that widens letter said, member airlines will publish a page on their website detailing the specific steps that non-binary individuals can take to obtain tickets that reflect their gender such as working with a customer service representative who can manually update the gender marker on their ticket. Widens letter noted that United and American airlines have already changed their booking process to allow travelers, to book tickets with an X gender marker, but not all us airlines have followed their example. The state's department in June of 2021 said that us citizen citizens could select their gender on applications without having to submit medical documentation. In October, it issued the first American passport with a X gender marker. what, what does X stand for? The TSA in March said it would implement gender neutral screening at its checkpoints. Now all of you in the comment section here, posting pride flags a hundred percent go pride, right? Pride month, whatever sexuality, whatever trans is not a sexuality. Trans is a, is a gender issue. It's not a sexuality being gay, being lesbian, being bisexual is a sexuality. They've muddied the water of the L G B community. With the tees go watch the, what is it? The, um, oh, what Dave Chappelle, Dave Chappelle has the literal best comedy bit ever, where he talks about the, uh, He like breaks it down into where they like all get into an Uber. There's the LS, the GS, the bees. And they're all mad that the tees are trying to hijack their thunder. It's it's such a great construct that he breaks it down as, because the way that they've tried to like hijack the sexuality movement, because it should absolutely be allowed, you should absolutely be able to marry somebody of the same sex should be like, and, and have it be socially acceptable and raise children together adopt like everything a hundred percent, a hundred percent. But the fact that you want women or men to compete in women's sports and break their fucking face in an MMA fight and not even have to tell the other individual that they're a man and have different bodily and bone structure than the other individuals is a problem. That's a real problem. Again, do what you do sexually, like again, a hundred percent on board with you. You should absolutely be able to get married. You should absolutely be able to date whoever you want to, but don't expect someone to work their ass off their entire life as a woman in female sports, and then to just be super happy and clapping their hands on the podium. As they take second place by a half a mile to a man who had a severe, severe, um, you know, much better bodily makeup to win that event. It's unfair. It's not fair. And in the same case here, let's just call it all gender neutral. Right? Let's have a gender neutral league. for sports. And the problem with that is let's say we mix that. W N B a with the NBA throw LeBron in the w B a throw, you know, what's gonna happen is all of the men are just also going to represent the women's sports. There's not going to be any women in the sports. And the fact is they're bigger, they're stronger. They, they generally are more athletic because of their bodily makeup. They're faster. Now, literally go. I'm not saying these things frivolously. I'm telling you, if you go look at the Guness book of world records or the Olympic records for any event ever, that is specifically athleticism, you will find that the men generally are faster. They generally lift more. When it comes to weights, they're more athletic in, in their events. That's the same reason that the us women's Olympic soccer team plays 14 year old boys teams. And, and a lot of times gets beat. That's a thing. I saw a, an actual, uh, athlete from the us women's Olympic team post about it. and they made a marker, a point of that, the fact that there's a reason that there is differentiations in gender. Now that doesn't exactly pertain to this. That's just a little side note, but let's just call it. Why do we need gender on a passport? Why do we need gender on an airline ticket? It seems stupid. Right? So if we're gonna play these little games where you can put an X on there, let's just not put gender on there. Why does it matter in the first place? All right. So segues segues. Um, so another big event that has come out recently, another big topic of conversation has been that Gale Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in prison in the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking case 20 years, who would've thought. Now I'm surprised because this article was written on June 26th or June 28th, June 28th, that she has not somehow managed to. Kill herself already magically in a prison with, you know, padded walls. But I'm also surprised that you can get a, a sex trafficking case when you've never actually trafficked it to any individuals who are being charged with the crime in the first place. Who did she traffick these people to cuz we know there was a big, long black book. Epstein's black book of every individual, uh, videotapes VHS's in boxes, boxes of VHS tapes that were taken from Epstein island, literal names of all the flight logs, not a single individual at all that we've been told of has been prosecuted for having children trafficked to them by Gale max. So here it goes, it says British socialite turned convicted sex trafficker gal Maxwell finally got her due Tuesday when she was sentenced to 20 years in prison. For her role in helping richen powerful pedophile, Jeffrey Epstein abuse, young girls. Now, what this doesn't mention too, is that she was also accused of raping young girls with him as if you follow the trial you would've saw because there was actually testimony by a, a a, I think it was, uh, guff, G I R a F F E, who testified that she was inappropriately touched. And Glenn Maxwell was actually a part of these actions that happened on the island and was a part of grooming them and actually exploiting them sexually goes on to say that us district judge Allison Nathan said the sentence of 240 months was sufficient and not greater than necessary for Maxwell who appeared, who earlier addressed the court and told victims in a halfhearted apology. I am sorry for the pain that you experienced. Yeah. Okay. As she finally learned her faith, the 60 year old predator's face remained inscrutable and she briefly hugged her attorneys before leaving the courtroom, wearing blue jail scrubs, her dark brown locks cut in a Bob in her ankles and shackles. She did not speak to her siblings who were seated in the row behind her. The number of people harmed is impossible to measure said victim Annie farmer, who testified at trial, told the court during Tuesday's hearing as Maxwell, shoulders, tensed the Epstein. Madam tried to avoid looking at her victims as they spoke, but she did lock eyes with Sarah ransom. When her victim told her you broke me in unfathomable ways, but you didn't break my spirit nor did you dampen my internal flame that now burns brighter than ever. And it's amazing how we got so much coverage, so much coverage of how many trials over the last, how, you know, year and a half between Kyle written house. And like, we've literally never had more celebrity trials than we've had in the last, I don't know, seven months, all these huge, you know, inside the courtroom Hollywood ask type events. And then speaking of that, Nancy Pelosi hiring a literal, uh, you know, director of movies to try and put a, a celebrity ask spin on the January 6th trials, which I think are still going on today. I don't know nobody's watching them and nobody really cares cuz everybody knows that. potentially set up by the FBI as pointed to, by Ted Cruz who interviewed the CIA director assistant of national security. I don't know some long name where she's, you know, if you recall, I put out a video on it where she goes, you know, I can't answer that. You know, did you guys insight violence on January 6th? I can't answer that. Did you guys have agents present who were pro uh, provocateurs to attempt to get into the capital building? I can't answer that. Well, why can't you answer that? Well, you can't answer that because you know the answer's yes. And then we saw, what was it? Ray apps, right? Ray apps. You go back and look at Ray apps. And Ray apps was the individual who I put in my video who was going into the capital into the cap. We gotta go in there, you know, and then no out of everybody, who's literally still sitting in a white jail cell right now in the bottom of Joe Biden's, uh, white house. Being held by the CIA secretly, allegedly, uh, Ray a is still sitting on his, you know, a hundred acre farm with a golf cart, not facing any charges when there's actually footage of him telling people the day before that they have to go into the capital. I don't know. I digress, but it's all a conspiracy theory. I don't actually believe any of that. Um, it says Maxwell's defense attorneys. Meanwhile, I don't know how we got into that. Um, Maxwell's defense attorney. Meanwhile had begged for leniency saying she should get no more than four to five years. Wow. For raping and sex trafficking, dozens, if not hundreds of young women in a literal Ponzi scheme of pedophilia, if you look back, if you go watch the documentary, which I started and didn't finish because it made me sick to my stomach, having to watch this and all the horrific things that they did to these kids. But if you go back the way that they did it is they literally recruited it. Like it was a multi-level market. They would get one girl in the school to go back and recruit other girls from the school to go back and recruit other girls from the school. And they would pay them money for every girl that they brought in to give massages to these old men. And eventually they would be sex traffick to an island of celebrities. And their parents were like, it was just so gross, but it was like a multilevel, literally like a multi-level market, like the Avocare of pedophilia and Glenn Maxwell ran it all, literally ran ital was the one who convinced the girls would go into the, you know, go buy the schools and pick these girls up, would have them in the room with her and then actually sexually assault them the way that they were outlined within that as well. So it goes on to say that her sentence marked to the end of a lengthy criminal proceedings that started after Maxwell's arrested a sprawling New Hampshire estate in July of 2020, prosecutors brought the charges against Maxwell months after Epstein, her former partner in crime killed himself. In Manhattan jail cell while awaiting trial on sex trafficking, raps today's sentence holds gal Maxwell accountable for perpe perpetrating heinous crimes against children, us attorney of the Southern district of New York Navy and Williams said in the statement, this sentence sends a strong message that no one is above the law and is never too late for justice. Maxwell's attorney Bobby stern Heim. And if you watched any of the trials like, or if you listen to the, um, actual, uh, outlines of the trials, or like what was actually said, it was dis this woman was disgusting. She literally related Jeffrey Epstein to James Bond in her opening statement, literally called him a modern day. James Bond in her opening statement about sex trafficking children for pedophilia. It goes on to say, in addition to the prison term, she also imposed a $750,000 fine on Maxwell who could potentially get credit for the two years she's already spent behind bars or have some of her time shaved off for good behavior. That's terrible. I don't think there's any amount of good behavior that overcomes you. Literally sex trafficking, children for profit, and then also sexually assaulting them. It also says that her attorneys requested that she serve out her time at the federal prison in Danbury, Connecticut. The low security women's lockup that served as the inspiration for Netflix. Orange is the new black, the, uh, Oxford educated Aris and daughter of late publishing tycoon. Robert Maxwell, who spent much of her life hobnobbing with the rich and famous hobnobbing. That's an interesting term, um, was convicted of sex trafficking. Now, if you don't know anything about Gale Maxwell's dad, that's another interesting conversation. Gale Maxwell's dad was alleged. A agent for the Maad, which is like a secret intelligence agency. Um, for, I think it's like Saudi Arabia or something like that, or the Saudi princes, I don't know. Um, but he also purchased, uh, the books. Um, what is it? It's uh, McGraw hill, Gale Maxwell's dad bought McGraw hill EV you know, every single textbook ever that you ever got ever in high school that had McGraw hill on it was owned by Gale Maxwell's dad, who at one point considered changing the name to Maxwell, but then didn't do so in fear that it would come back on him and who his actual, you know, his background was, but owned McGraw hill. And I believe still does today. Like that family still owns McGraw hill, which is literally every textbook ever in both high school, middle school, elementary school, and college. Every person out there right now can identify with that book company, McGraw hill is owned by Gale Maxwell's dad. You know, the Gale Maxwell who, and it's like, I think our dad actually died. Got pushed off. Well, didn't get pushed off, fell off of a boat, his yacht in like the middle of the ocean, uh, mysteriously that family's nuts. And you look back at their background. The sister of gal Maxwell, like was one of the very first internet technology tycoons who came out with a search engine or some shit back in the early nineties and became a billionaire off of it. It's crazy. When you look into the history of Gale Maxwell in her family goes on to say that, uh, four women testified at her publicized, highly publicized trial and not enough, highly publicized as, uh, you know, pirates of the Caribbean actor over, uh, minor spousal abuse. But the widely publicized trial in Manhattan, federal court, and two of them, several other accusers also addressed the court Tuesday, calling out on the judge to lock Maxwell up and throw away the key. They hailed the sentence that Nathan opposed with one Elizabeth Stein calling it vindication in validation, Virginia guff Roberts, which is the individual I was talking about earlier, who had long accused Maxwell and Epstein of trafficking, her to Britain's prince Andrew described Maxwell like a Wolf in sheep's clothing in her letter to the court. Yeah, it's interesting. How, uh, prince Andrew per Andrew literal royalty was accused during this trial of sexually abusing a girl who is in the trial under oath. And he's sitting free somewhere right now, probably on a different island, sexually assaulting other young children. Like how, what the fuck kind of world is this. Says, um, she went on to say that Gale, you deserve to spend the rest of your life in the jail cell. She wrote you deserve to be trapped in a cage forever. Just like you trapped your victims. Kate, a former British model who also used her first name and testified at trial said Maxwell and Epstein's victims are unified to bring justice to a common enemy. No person should be shielded from the consequences of their actions. Case said, calling Maxwell, a manipulative and cruel person who has shown a lack of remorse for how she ruined the lives of countless women and children staring at Maxwell. She said today I can look at gal Elaine and tell her that I became what I am today in spite of her and her efforts to make me feel powerless and insignificant the disgrace socialite, who has denied that she abused. Anyone has remained, locked up in Brooklyn's metropolitan detention center for nearly two years since her bust and throughout her month long trial. Federal prosecutors at trial portrayed Maxwell as a sophisticated predator who was inextricably linked to Epstein, including in his pursuit of gross to sexually abuse from 1994 to 2004, it goes on to show a literal picture of prince Andrew with Virginia guff with Gale Maxwell smirking behind her Maxwell was Jeffrey Epstein's right hand said, assistant us attorney general, or us attorney Allison Moe. As she said in her clothing, state closing statements in December 20th, Maxwell and Epstein were partners. She said they were partners in crime who sexually exploited young girls together. So ding dong the witch is dead bitches. Glenn Maxwell is in jail for at least 20 years. Well, at the most 20 years, which I think is insignificant, I think she should literally be given a 40 year sentence and on good behavior, have the opportunity to be out when shes. 125 years old. I think that, uh, 20 year state, uh, sentence for all of the horrific things that she did is unjust. And eventually we'll either see that, you know, maybe she's gonna wind up hanging herself in her prison cell that with padded walls, with, you know, the video being cut at exactly the right time with while on suicide watch , or maybe we'll see her, uh, get out on good behavior after seven years, which I think is the more likely of the scenarios. All right. And then the last article that we're going to talk about, because it just caught my eye based on all of the weirdness and diet today, um, is going to be this one by New York post, which says that vegan mom starved her toddler to death with diet of raw vegetables and fruits. This was on July 1st, 2022 written by the New York post goes on to say that a Florida vegan mother has been found guilty of murdering her 18 month old son after only feeding him raw fruits and vegetables. Sheila O'Leary 39 years old is facing life in prison after a jury life in prison after, uh, convicted her Wednesday of murder in a string of child abuse charges over 2019 death of her toddler, Ezra O'Leary her little boy weighed just 17 pounds, seven pounds below average. When his parents noticed he had stopped breathing O'Leary and her husband, Ryan O'Leary told police that Azara followed a strict vegan diet, but that he was also breastfed. They said the boy hadn't eaten in the, for about a week prior to his death and was having trouble sleep. An autopsy found the little boy died of malnutrition complications. Prosecutors accused the mother of failing to seek proper medical care for her son. When she realized he was ill, she to, she chose she's. She chose to disregard his cries assistant state attorney. Sarah Miller said she didn't need a scale to see his bones. She didn't need a scale to hear his cry. Prosecutors added that the couple had also been neglecting their three children all under the age of 11. When Ezra died, we're here because their children were starving so much that the youngest starved to death, like that's horrible. And there's this like the, this situation with all of these fad diets and you see it every day with like all of the individuals who are out there who are literally like the vegan cat hashtag on Instagram. where people try to feed their cat, who is a carnivore lettuce. Um, like all these little crazy people that are out there, uh, because they're vegan, like somehow, you know, they're, they're helping the world by not feeding their cat, the proper nutrition that they need. So we see it here with this woman who obviously tried to impose her, her nutritional ideology onto her infant at a very young age, in this horrific incident. Um, I just can't imagine what a 17 pound 18 month old would look like. And to know how long she must have known that he was, you know, not given the proper nutrition. Uh, but that's just so frustrating to read. And, and again, it comes back to like literally fad diet, you really fat diets. Your toddler does not need to be vegan. Your toddler needs proper nutrition. It needs protein. It needs much more than raw vegetables and fruit. But I would say if that's all this, like if she just literally just didn't feed him proper nutrients and he died, that's horrible. And she definitely deserves to be treated as such and to go to jail for. Uh, not giving her child proper nutrition, but a life sentence for that compared to 20 years for gal Elaine Maxwell, who purposefully sexually assaulted in trafficked young women for decades to Hollywood and political elites, at least that's similar, at least that's comparable. And so the fact that Gale Maxwell got 20 years and this woman's facing a life sentence, you know, if that's the only thing to the story, I don't know what the other types of, of, you know, um, you know, improper care that was going on here was, but if that's it and they were just improperly feeding this child, now, obviously the child died and that's horrific and, and this is a terrible situation. Um, but if the mother wasn't just actually starving her child with purposeful intent to. Kill her child off and was feeding them just the wrong diet was an absolute idiot and had no idea of how nutrition works or to look at a child and know that they're obviously in need of better nutrition standards. I dunno it still, it still seems to me as if maybe there should at least be a comparable standard anyways, um, on that note kind of a negative way to, to, to end off here. but it's good to be back. Thank you guys so much for joining me. I appreciate you so much. Um, I hope you enjoyed today's episode, uh, and we will be back again a second time this week for another episode, cuz I have lots. Lots to talk about. So, um, again, thank you so much for listening. I appreciate you so much. Go ahead and hit that subscribe button right now, head over to red pill, revolution.co, and make sure that you're not leaving your children, your spouse, your wife, your husband, um, without the proper financial backing, if you do die, because one thing is for sure, every single person that's listening to this. Every single person that's watching, this has loved ones and is also going to die. And you can at least alleviate some aspect of that by making sure that you financially take care of them with life insurance, red pill, revolution.co.com is for losers again. Um, five star review. I appreciate you so much hit that subscribe button. Have a great rest of your day. If you are listening to this, uh, in the, um, as it was put out, it is the 3rd of July, uh, when I'm recording this in 2022. So happy fourth, I hope you enjoy your weekend and have a great day. Welcome to the revolution. Thank you.
South Tyrol is an autonomous, majority German-speaking region in Italy bordering Austria and Switzerland. It's one of the few places outside of Germany, Austria and Switzerland where German is an official language, alongside Italian and Ladin. But while these three languages are all recognised today, it was a difficult road to get here - the people of South Tyrol suffered some dark chapters which had awful consequences for families and communities, throwing their identity as South Tyroleans into question.In this episode I talk to Richard Bonomo, a South Tyrolean living in Vienna, about the history and language(s) of South Tyrol. We talk about the attempt to eradicate the German language and culture from this region, as well as the resulting "Option" which essentially tore the region apart. We also talk about some features of the languages spoken in South Tyrol, specifically German.Episode transcript: https://yellowoftheegg.com/transcripts/s2e11-south-tyrolean-transcript/Guest: Richard BonomoOutro music by Euphoniques. This episode the song is "No Fear".Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/track/6ICWr2qwrwinOkcyq9XoQ0?si=c617d947dad74dc3Yellow of the Egg is hosted and produced by Luke Green.Links and socials:- Web: yellowoftheegg.com - Instagram: @yotepodcast (https://www.instagram.com/yotepodcast) - Facebook: @yellowoftheegg (https://www.facebook.com/yellowoftheegg) - Email: yellowoftheegg.podcast@gmail.com - Patreon: patreon.com/yellowoftheegg - YOTE theme music by Vincent Tone (PremiumBeat.com)
Our guest this week is Scott Ladin, Certified SCORE Mentor with SCORE Chapters in Rochester and Phoenix.www.greaterrochester.score.orgHosted by Tamara MacDuff (pickle#1) and Sid Ragona (pickle#2) of Re-Thinking Business: Success Sauce & Two Pickles. Greater Rochester SCORE's weekly podcast.
Advance care planning is a term used to describe when a person prepares for future management of serious or terminal illness, including developing an advance care directive or what is sometimes is called a living will.Beginning in January of 2016, Medicare made it possible for certain clinicians to bill for their work for patients to develop advance care plans.Despite the new billing option, uptake has been quite slow.In health care, we often use financial incentives to motivate behavior change. You might have expected that simply creating a payment option for advance care planning would make it happen.Keren Ladin from Tufts University joins Health Affairs Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil on A Health Podyssey to discuss the reasons Medicare's payment policy has not led to the greater pursuit of advance care planning.Ladin and coauthors published a paper in the January 2022 issue of Health Affairs examining the limited use of advance care planning billing codes among clinicians. Their qualitative study revealed a number of potential explanations for low use that can help us understand why a seemingly simple payment change doesn't automatically yield a desired result.Barriers to use of the advance care planning billing codes include institutional practices, concerns about the effects on patients and more.If you enjoy this interview, order the January 2022 Health Affairs issue.Pre-order the February 2022 Racism and Health issue.Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Google Podcasts
Eden Ladin se pohybuje hlavně mezi Tel Avivem a New Yorkem, letos na podzim ale zavítal také do Prahy, kde vystoupil v rámci Mezinárodního festivalu jazzového piana v Rudolfinu. O tom, jaké to je vyrůstat v hudební rodině, co ho ovlivňuje ve vlastní tvorbě a jak se mu líbí v Praze, si s ním povídala Pavlína Šulcová. Tento podcast je v angličtině. Autorka: Pavlína Šulcová Nahráno ve studiu Mr. Wombat Postprodukce: Roman Štětina Tento díl byl podpořen JCC Global v rámci projektu Z3 Project: Reimaging Israel – Diaspora Relations.
Dec 8, 2021 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In episode 182, Teri welcomes Marc Ladin, Founder of VoicePunch and Marc Ladin, Founder of VoicePunch Talks About Venture Capital Investments in the Voice Industry. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
USA la, enligt The Atlantic, ner tre biljoner kronor i jakten på Usama bin Ladin. Men Janne Josefsson tänkte åka till Afghanistan och hitta terroristen på egen hand. Hör honom berätta i detta bonusavsnitt av ”Jag var där”. Alla avsnitt finns redan ute helt gratis på podplay.se eller i podplay-appen
Ne gariptir ki bu sorunun bir benzeri yıllar önce Amerika'nın önde gelen Bin Ladin uzmanlarından olan Profesör David Ray Griffin'in El kaide lideri Ladin için, “Yaşıyor Mu, Öldü Mü” adlı kitabında sorulmuştu. Çünkü güvenilir kaynaklar El-Kaide lideri Usame Bin Ladin'in 13 Aralık 2007'de Tora Bora dağlarında öldüğü istihbaratını paylaşmışlardı. Yıllar önce sol böbreği işlemez hale gelen El- Kaide lideri, 2004 yılında sağ böbreğinde de sorun yaşadı. “ABD'yi titreten” Ladin, Tora Bora'daki ilkel şartlar altında, 3 yıl tek böbreğiyle hayatta kalmaya çalıştı. 13 Aralık 2007 sabahı hayatını kaybetti. Yine güvenilir kaynaklardan alınan bilgilerde Ladin hastalığını tedavi ettirebilmek için Kabil'deki CIA istasyonundan yardım dahi almıştı. Profesör Griffin kitabında sunduğu bilimsel kanıtlarla Amerikan kamuoyunun dikkatini çekmeyi başarmıştı. Dönemin El Kaide lideri Bin Ladin'in 2001-2008 döneminde yayınlanan tüm mesajlarını inceleyen Griffin, tüm kasetlerin ses ve video kayıtlarının ABD ve İngiliz gizli servislerinin işi olduğunu yazıyordu. Bin Ladin'e ait olabileceği açıklanan ses bantlarının da ABD gizli servisleri tarafından üretilmiş olabileceği iddialarına dayanan komplo teorisi etkisini az da olsa yitirerek böylece inanırlık kazanmaya başlamıştı. Bin Ladin'in son gerçek ses kaydı, 28 Eylül 2001'de yayınlandı. El Kaide lideri o kasette 11 Eylül saldırılarının sorumluluğunu reddetmiş, “Biz masum öldürmeyiz” demişti. Profesör Griffin'e göre; “Bu tarihten sonra yayınlanan ve 11 Eylül'ün sorumluluğunu üstlenen görüntülerdeki kişi, makyajla Bin Ladin'e benzetilmiş bir aktördü. Kalın burnu, cüssesi, büyük elleri, esmerliği ve farklı sakal rengi onu ele veriyor. Vahhabi'ler asla altın takmaz. Bazı görüntülerde Bin Ladin altın yüzük takıyor. Ayrıca Bin Ladin solak, oysa görüntülerde sağ elle yazıyordu. Bin Ladin bir kasetinde '11 Eylül'de demir iskeletli o koca binaları yıktık' diyor. Oysa bir inşaat mühendisi olarak bunu söylemez, çünkü gökdelenlerin demir değil, çelik iskeletli olduğunu bilir. Videolardan biri de Ekim 2004'te ABD Başkanlık seçimlerinden günler önce yayınlandı. Bu video George W. Bush'un ikinci kez başkan seçilmesini sağladı.”
If you follow my newsletter, you probably saw what I had in the signature line the last few weeks: how to make a fake identity. Well, we're going to take it a little bit differently today and talk about how to stop spam with a fake email. [Automated transcript follows] [00:00:16] Email is something that we've had for a long time. [00:00:19] I think I've told you before I had email way back in the early eighties, late seventies, actually. So, yeah, it's been a while and I get tens of thousands of email every day, uh, sent to my domain, you know, mainstream.net. That's my company. I've had that same domain name for 30 years and, and it just kinda got out of control. [00:00:46] And so we have. Big Cisco server, that exclusively filters email for us and our clients. And so it cuts down the tens of thousands to a very manageable couple of hundred a day. If you think that's manageable and it gets sort of almost all of the fishing and a lot of the spam and other things that are coming. [00:01:09] But, you know, there's an easier way to do this. Maybe not quite as effective, but allowing you to track this whole email problem and the spam, I'm going over this in some detail in. Coming bootcamp. So make sure we keep an eye on your emails. So you know about this thing again, it's free, right? I do a lot of the stuff just to help you guys understand it. [00:01:34] I'm not trying to, you know, just be June to submission to buy something. This is a boot camp. My workshops, my boot camps, my emails, they are all about informing you. I try to make them the most valuable piece of email. During the week. So we're going to go into this in some detail in this upcoming bootcamp. [00:01:55] But what we're looking at now is a number of different vendors that have gotten together in order to help prevent some of the spam that you might've been in. Uh, I think that's a very cool idea to have these, these sometimes temporary, sometimes fake email addresses that you can use. There's a company out there called fast to mail. [00:02:20] You might want to check them out. There's another company called apple. And you might might want to check them out. I'll be talking about their solution here as well. But the idea is why not just have one email address? And if you're an apple user, even if you don't have the hardware, you can sign up for an apple account. [00:02:42] And then once you have that account, you can use a new feature. I saw. Oh, in, in fact, in Firefox, if you use Firefox at all, when there's a form and it asks for an email address, Firefox volunteers to help you make a fake ish email address. Now I say fake ish, because it's a real email address that forwards to your normal regular. [00:03:10] Email address. And as part of the bootcamp, I'm also going to be explaining the eight email addresses, minimum eight, that you have to have what they are, how to get them, how to use them. But for now you can just go online to Google and this will get you started and do a search for Apple's new hide. My email feature. [00:03:30] This lets you create random email addresses and those email addresses. And up in your regular, uh, icloud.com or me.com, whatever you might have for your email address, address that apple has set up for you. Isn't that cool. And you can do that by going into your iCloud settings. And it's part of their service that are offering for this iCloud plus thing. [00:03:57] And they've got three different fi privacy focused services, right? So in order to get this from apple, so you can create these unlimited number of rather random looking emails, for instance, a blue one to six underscore cat I cloud.com that doesn't tell anybody. Who you are, and you can put a label in there. [00:04:21] What's the name of the website that, that, or the, the, a URL of the website, the two created this email for, and then a note so that you can look at it later on to try new member and that way. Site that you just created it for in this case, this is an article from CNET. They had an account@jamwirebeats.com. [00:04:45] This is a weekly music magazine subscription that they had. And apple generated this fake email address, blue one to 600 score Canada, cobb.com. Now I can hear you right now. Why would you bother doing that? It sounds like a lot of work. Well, first of all, it's not a whole lot of work, but the main reason to do that, If you get an email address to blue cat, one, two6@icloud.com and it's supposedly from bank of America, you instantly know that is spam. [00:05:23] That is a phishing email because it's not using the email address you gave to TD bank. No it's using the email address that it was created for one website jam wire beats.com. This is an important feature. And that's what I've been doing for decades. Email allows you to have a plus sign. In the email address and Microsoft even supports it. [00:05:53] Now you have to turn it on. So I will use, for instance, Craig, plus a Libsyn as an example@craigpeterson.com and now emails that Libson wants to send me. I'll go to Craig. Libsyn@craigpeterson.com. Right? So the, the trick here is now if I get an email from someone other than libs, and I know, wait a minute, this isn't Libsyn, and that now flags, it has a phishing attack, right. [00:06:28] Or at the very least as some form of spam. So you've got to keep an eye out for that. So you got to have my called plus, and if. Pay for the premium upgrade, which ranges from a dollar to $10. Uh, you you've got it. Okay. If you already have an iCloud account, your account automatically gets upgraded to iCloud plus as part of iOS 15, that just came out. [00:06:55] All right. So that's one way you can do it. If you're not an apple fan. I already mentioned that Firefox, which is a browser has a similar feature. Uh, Firefox has just been crazy about trying to protect your privacy. Good for them, frankly. Right? So they've been doing a whole lot of stuff to protect your privacy. [00:07:17] However, there you are. They have a couple of features that get around some of the corporate security and good corporate security people have those features block because it makes it impossible for them to monitor bad guys that might hack your account. So that's another thing you can look at is Firefox. [00:07:37] Have a look@fastmail.com. And as I said, we're going to go into this in some detail in the bootcamp, but fast mail lets you have these multiple email accounts. No, they restricted. It's not like apple where it's an infinite number, but depending on how much you pay fast mail is going to help you out there. [00:07:57] And then if you're interested, by the way, just send an email to me, me. Craig peterson.com. Please use that email address emmy@craigpeterson.com because that one is the one that's monitored most closely. And just ask for my report on email and I've got a bunch of them, uh, that I'll be glad to send you the gets into some detail here, but proton mail. [00:08:22] Is a mail service that's located in Switzerland? No, I know of in fact, a couple of a high ranking military people. I mean really high ranking military people that are supposedly using proton mail. I have a proton mail account. I don't use it that much because I have so much else going on, but the advantage. [00:08:45] Proton mail is it is in Switzerland. And as a general rule, they do not let people know what your identity is. So it's kind of untraceable. Hence these people high up in the department of defense, right. That are using proton mail. However, it is not completely untraceable. There is a court case that a proton man. [00:09:12] I don't know if you'd say they lost, but proton mail was ordered about a month ago to start logging access and provide it for certain accounts so they can do it. They are doing it. They don't use it in most cases, but proton mail is quite good. They have a little free level. Paid levels. And you can do all kinds of cool stuff with proton mail. [00:09:35] And many of you guys have already switched, uh, particularly people who asked for my special report on email, because I go into some reasons why you want to use different things. Now there's one more I want to bring up. And that is Tempa mail it's temp-mail.org. Don't send anything. That is confidential on this. [00:09:57] Don't include any credit card numbers, nothing. Okay. But temp-mail.org will generate a temporary email address. Part of the problem with this, these temporary email address. Is, they are blocked at some sites that really, really, really want to know what your really mail address is. Okay. But it's quite cool. [00:10:22] It's quite simple. So I'm right there right now. temp-mail.org. And I said, okay, give me email address. So gave me one. five04@datacop.com. Is this temporary email, so you can copy that address. Then you can come back into again, temp-mail.org and read your email for a certain period of time. So it is free. [00:10:48] It's disposable email. It's not particularly private. They have some other things, but I wouldn't use them because I don't know them for some of these other features and services. Stop pesky email stop. Some of these successful phishing attempt by having a unique, not just password, but a unique email for all those accounts. [00:11:12] And as I mentioned, upcoming bootcamp, and I'll announce it in my weekly email, we're going to cover this in some detail. Craig peterson.com. Make sure you subscribe to my newsletter. [00:11:25] Well, you've all heard is up. So what does that mean? Well, okay. It's up 33% since the last two years, really. But what does that amount to, we're going to talk about that. And what do you do after you've been ransomed? [00:11:42] Ransomware is terrible. It's crazy. Much of it comes in via email. [00:11:49] These malicious emails, they are up 600% due to COVID-19. 37% of organizations were affected by ransomware attacks in the last year. That's according to Sofos. 37% more than the third. Isn't that something in 2021, the largest ransomware payout, according to business insider was made by an insurance company at $40 million setting a world record. [00:12:21] The average ransom fee requested increased from 5,020 18 to around 200,000 in 2020. Isn't that something. So in the course of three years, it went from $5,000 to 200,000. That's according to the national security Institute, experts estimate that a ransomware attack will occur every 11 seconds for the rest of the year. [00:12:50] Uh, it's just crazy. Absolutely. Crazy all of these steps. So what does it mean? Or, you know, okay. It's up this much is up that much. Okay. Businesses are paying millions of dollars to get their data back. How about you as an individual? Well, as an individual right now, the average ransom is $11,605. So are you willing to pay more than $11,000 to get your pictures back off of your home computer in order to get your. [00:13:27] Work documents or whatever you have on your home computer. Hopefully you don't have any work information on your home computer over $11,000. Now, by the way, most of the time, these ransoms are actually unaffiliate affair. In other words, there is a company. That is doing the ransom work and they are pain and affiliate who are the, the affiliate in this case. [00:13:55] So the people who infected you and the affiliates are making up to 80% from all of these rents. Payments it's crazy. Right? So you can see why it's up. You can just go ahead and try and fool somebody into clicking on a link. Maybe it's a friend of yours. You don't productively like some friend, right. And you can go ahead and send them an email with a link in it. [00:14:20] And they click the link and it installs ransomware and you get 80% of them. Well, it is happening. It's happening a lot. So what do you do? This is a great little article over on dark reading and you'll see it on the website. The Craig peterson.com. But this article goes through. What are some of the steps it's by Daniel Clayton? [00:14:48] It's actually quite a good little article. He's the VP of global security services and support over at bit defender bit defender is. Great, uh, software that you've got versions of it for the Mac. You've got versions four of it for window. You might want to check it out, but he's got a nice little list here of things that you want to do. [00:15:13] So number one, Don't panic, right? Scott Adams don't panic. So we're worried because we think we're going to lose our job June. Do you know what? By the way is in the top drawer of the majority of chief information, security officers, two things. Uh, w one is their resignation letter and the second one is their resume because if they are attacked and it's very common and if they get in trouble, they are leaving. [00:15:47] And that's pretty common too. Although I have heard of some companies that understand, Hey, listen, you can't be 100% effective. You got to prioritize your money and play. It really is kind of like going to Vegas and betting on red or black, right? 50, 50 chance. Now, if you're a higher level organization, like our customers that have to meet these highest compliance standards, these federal government regulations and some of the European regulations, even state regulations, well, then we've got to keep you better than 99% safe and knock on wood over the course of 30 years. [00:16:27] That's a long I've been doing. 30 years. We have never had a single customer get a S uh, and. Type of malware, whether it is ransomware or anything else, including one custom company, that's a multinational. We were taking care of one of their divisions and the whole company got infected with ransomware. [00:16:50] They had to shut down globally for. Two weeks while they tried to recover everything, our little corner of the woods, the offices that we were protecting for that division, however, didn't get hit at all. So it is possible, right? I don't want you guys to think, man. There was nothing I can do. So I'm not going to do anything. [00:17:14] One of the ladies in one of my mastermind groups basically said that, right? Cause I was explaining another member of my mastermind group. Got. And I got hit for, I think it turned out to be $35,000 and, you know, that's a bad thing. Plus you feel just so exposed. I've been robbed before, uh, and it's just a terrible, terrible feeling. [00:17:37] So he was just kind of freaking out for good. But I explained, okay, so here's what you do. And she walked away from it thinking, well, there's nothing I can do. Well, there are things you can do. It is not terribly difficult. And listening here, getting my newsletter, going to my bootcamps and the workshops, which are more involved, you can do it. [00:18:03] Okay. It can be done. So I don't want. Panic. I don't want you to think that there's zero. You can do so that's number one. If you do get ransomware, number two, you got to figure out where did this come from? What happened? I would change this order. So I would say don't panic. And then number two is turn off the system that got rants. [00:18:29] Turn it off one or more systems. I might've gotten ransomware. And remember that the ransomware notification does not come up right. When it starts encrypting your data. It doesn't come up once they've stolen your data. It comes up after they have spread through your organization. So smart money would say shut off every computer, every. [00:18:56] Not just pull the plug. I w I'm talking about the ethernet cable, right? Don't just disconnect from wifi. Turn it off. Immediately. Shut it off. Pull the plug. It might be okay. In some cases, the next thing that has to happen is each one of those machines needs to have its disc drive probably removed and examined to see if it has. [00:19:18] Any of that ransomware on it. And if it does have the ransomware, it needs to get cleaned up or replaced. And in most cases we recommend, Hey, good time. Replace all the machines, upgrade everything. Okay. So that's the bottom line. So that's my mind. Number two. Okay. Um, he has isolated and save, which makes sense. [00:19:40] You're trying to minimize the blast radius. So he wants you to isolate him. I want you to turn them off because you do not want. Any ransomware that's on a machine in the process of encrypting your files. You don't want it to keep continuing to encrypting. Okay. So hopefully you've done the right thing. [00:20:00] You are following my 3, 2, 1 backup schedule that I taught last year, too, for free. For anybody that attended, hopefully you've already figured out if you're going to pay. Pay. I got to say some big companies have driven up the price of Bitcoin because they've been buying it as kind of a hedge against getting ransomware so they can just pay it right away. [00:20:25] But you got to figure that out. There's no one size fits all for all of this. At over $11,000 for an individual ransom, uh, this requires some preparation and some thought stick around, got a lot more coming up. Visit me online, Craig Peterson.com and get my newsletter along with all of the free trainings. [00:20:52] Well, the bad guys have done it again. There is yet another way that they are sneaking in some of this ransomware and it has to do with Q R codes. This is actually kind of clever. [00:21:08] By now you must've seen if not used QR codes. [00:21:12] These are these codes that they're generally in a square and the shape of a square and inside there's these various lines and in a QR code, you can encode almost anything. Usually what it is, is a URL. So it's just like typing in a web address into your phone, into your web browser, whatever you might be using. [00:21:35] And they have been very, very handy. I've used them. I've noticed them even showing up now on television ad down in the corner, you can just scan the QR code in order to apply right away to get your gin Sioux knives. Actually, I haven't seen it on that commercial, but, uh, it's a different one. And we talked last week about some of these stores that are putting QR codes in their windows. [00:22:02] So people who are walking by, we even when the store is closed, can order stuff, can get stuff. It's really rather cool. Very nice technology. Uh, so. There is a new technique to get past the email filters. You know, I provide email filters, these big boxes, I mean, huge machines running Cisco software that are tied into, uh, literally billion end points, plus monitoring tens of hundreds of millions of emails a day. [00:22:39] It's just huge. I don't even. I can ha can't get my head around some of those numbers, but it's looking at all those emails. It is cleaning them up. It's looking at every URL that's embedded in an email says, well, is this a bad guy? It'll even go out and check the URL. It will look at the domain. Say how long has this domain been registered? [00:23:01] What is the spam score overall on the domain? As well as the email, it just does a whole lot of stuff. Well, how can it get around a really great tight filter like that? That's a very good question. How can you and the bottom line answer is, uh, how about, uh, using the QR code? So that's what bad guys are doing right now. [00:23:26] They are using a QR code in side email. Yeah. So the emails that have been caught so far by a company called abnormal security have been saying that, uh, you have a missed voicemail, and if you want to pick it up, then scan this QR. It looks pretty legitimate, obviously designed to bypass enterprise, email gateway scans that are really set up to detect malicious links and attachments. [00:24:01] Right? So all of these QR codes that abnormal detected were created the same day they were sent. So it's unlikely that the QR codes, even that they'd been detected would have been previously. Poured it included in any security blacklist. One of the good things for these bad guys about the QR codes is they can easily change the look of the QR code. [00:24:26] So even if the mail gateway software is scanning for pictures and looking for a specific QR codes, basically, they're still getting. So the good news is the use of the QR codes in these types of phishing emails is still quite rare. We're not seeing a lot of them yet. We are just starting to see them, uh, hyperlinks to phishing sites, a really common with some of these QR codes. [00:24:58] But this is the first time we've seen an actor embed, a functional QR code into an email is not. Now the better business bureau warned of a recent uptick, ticking complaints from consumers about scams involving QR codes, not just an email here, but because these codes can't really be read by the human eye at all. [00:25:21] The attackers are using them to disguise malicious links so that you know, that vendor that I talked about, that retail establishment that's using the QR codes and hoping people walking by will scan it in order to get some of that information. Well, People are going to be more and more wary of scanning QR codes, right? [00:25:43] Isn't that just make a lot of sense, which is why, again, one of the items in our protection stack that we use filters URLs. Now you can get a free. The filter and I cover this in my workshop, how to do it, but if you go to open DNS, check them out, open DNS, they have a free version. If you're a business, they want you to pay, but we have some business related ones to let you have your own site to. [00:26:15] Based on categories and all that sort of stuff, but the free stuff is pretty generalized. They usually have two types, one for family, which blocks the stuff you might think would be blocked. Uh, and other so that if you scan one of these QR codes and you are using open DNS umbrella, one of these others, you're going to be much, much. [00:26:39] Because it will, most of the time be blocked because again, the umbrella is more up-to-date than open DNS is, but they are constantly monitoring these sites and blocking them as they need to a mobile iron, another security company. I conducted a survey of more than 4,400 people last year. And they found that 84% have used a QR code. [00:27:05] So that's a little better than I thought it was. Twenty-five percent of them said that they had run into situations where a QR code did something they did not expect including taking them to a malicious website. And I don't know, are they like scanning QR codes in the, in the men's room or something in this doll? [00:27:24] I don't know. I've never come across a QR code. That was a malicious that I tried to scan, but maybe I'm a little more cautious. 37% were. Saying that they could spot a malicious QR code. Yeah. Yeah. They can read these things while 70% said they'd be able to spot a URL to a phishing or other malicious website that I can believe. [00:27:50] But part of the problem is when you scan a QR code, it usually comes up and it says, Hey, do you want to open this? And most of that link has invisible is, is not visible because it is on your smartphone and it's not a very big screen. So we'll just show you the very first part of it. And the first part of it, it's going to look pretty darn legit. [00:28:14] So again, that's why you need to make sure you're using open DNS or umbrella. Ideally, you've got it installed right at your edge at your router at whoever's handling DHCP for your organization. Uh, in the phishing campaign at normal had detected with using this QR code, uh, code they're saying the attackers had previously compromised, some outlook, email accounts, belonging to some legitimate organizations. [00:28:43] To send the emails with malicious QR codes. And we've talked about that before they use password stuffing, et cetera. And we're covering all of this stuff in the bootcamp and also, well, some of it in the bootcamp and all of this really in the workshops that are coming up. So keep an eye out for that stuff. [00:29:03] Okay. Soup to nuts here. Uh, it's a, uh, it's a real. Every week, I send out an email and I have been including my show notes in those emails, but I found that most people don't do anything with the show notes. So I'm changing, I'm changing things this week. How some of you have gotten the show notes, some of you haven't gotten the show notes, but what I'm going to be doing is I've got my show notes on my website@craigpeterson.com. [00:29:35] So you'll find them right. And you can get the links for everything I talk about right here on this. I also now have training in every one of my weekly emails. It's usually a little list that we've started calling listicles and it is training on things you can do. It is. And anybody can do this is not high level stuff for people that are in the cybersecurity business, right. [00:30:07] Home users, small businesses, but you got to get the email first, Craig peterson.com and signup. [00:30:14] California is really in trouble with these new environmental laws. And yet, somehow they found a major exception. They're letting the mine lithium in the great salt and sea out in California. We'll tell you why. [00:30:31] There's an Article in the New York times. And this is fantastic. It's just a incredible it talking about the lithium gold rush. [00:30:43] You already know, I'm sure that China has been playing games with some of these minerals. Some of the ones that we really, really need exotic minerals that are used to make. Batteries that are used to power our cars. And now California is banning all small gasoline engine sales. So the, what is it? 55,000 companies out in California that do lawn maintenance are going down. [00:31:13] To drive those big lawnmowers around running on batteries. They're estimating it'll take 30 packs battery packs a day. Now, remember California is one of these places that is having rolling blackouts because they don't have. Power, right. It's not just China. It's not just Europe where they are literally freezing people. [00:31:37] They did it last winter. They expect to do it more. This winter, since we stopped shipping natural gas and oil, they're freezing people middle of winter, turning off electronics. California, at least they're not too likely to freeze unless they're up in the mountains in California. So they don't have enough power to begin with. [00:31:57] And what are they doing there? They're making it mandatory. I think it was by 2035 that every car sold has to be electric. And now they have just gotten rid of all of the small gasoline engines they've already got. Rolling blackouts, come on. People smarten up. So they said, okay, well here's what we're going to do. [00:32:20] We need lithium in order to make these batteries. Right. You've heard of lithium-ion batteries. They're in everything. Now, have you noticed with lithium batteries, you're supposed to take them to a recycling center and I'm sure all of you do. When your battery's dead in your phone, you take it to a recycling center. [00:32:39] Or if you have a battery that you've been using in your Energizer bunny, and it's a lithium battery, of course you take it to the appropriate authorities to be properly disposed of because it's toxic people. It is toxic. So we have to be careful with this. Well, now we're trying to produce lithium in the United States. [00:33:06] There are different projects in different parts of the country, all the way from Maine through of course, California, in order to try and pull the lithium out of the ground and all. Let me tell you, this is not very green at all. So novel. Peppa Northern Nevada. They've started here blasting and digging out a giant pit in this dormant volcano. [00:33:38] That's going to serve as the first large scale, lithium mine in the United States and more than a decade. Well, that's good. Cause we need it. And do you know about the supply chain problems? Right. You've probably heard about that sort of thing, but that's good. This mine is on least federal lands. What does that mean? [00:33:59] Well, that means if Bernie Sanders becomes president with the flick of a pen, just like Joe Biden did on his first day, he could close those leads to federal lands. Yeah. And, uh, we're back in trouble again, because we have a heavy reliance on foreign sources of lithium, right. So this project's known as lithium Americas. [00:34:25] There are some native American tribes, first nation as they're called in Canada. Uh, ranchers environmental groups that are really worried, because guess what? In order to mine, the lithium, and to do the basic processing onsite that needs to be done, they will be using. Billions of gallons of groundwater. [00:34:48] Now think of Nevada. Think of California. Uh, you don't normally think of massive lakes of fresh water to. No. Uh, how about those people that are opposed to fracking? Most of them are opposed to fracking because we're pumping the water and something, various chemicals into the ground in order to crack the rock, to get the gas out. [00:35:11] Right. That's what we're doing. They don't like that. But yet, somehow. Contaminating the water for 300 years and leaving behind a giant mound of waste. Isn't a problem for these so-called Greenies. Yeah. A blowing up visit quote here from max Wilbert. This is a guy who has been living in a tent on this proposed mine site. [00:35:38] He's got a. Lawsuits that are going, trying to block the project. He says blowing up a mountain. Isn't green, no matter how much marketing spend people put on it, what have I been saying forever? We're crazy. We are insane. I love electric cars. If they are coolest. Heck I would drive one. If I had one, no problem. [00:35:57] I'm not going to bother to go out and buy one, but, uh, yeah, it's very cool, but it is anything but green. Electric cars and renewable energy are not green, renewable energy. The solar and the wind do not stop the need for nuclear plants or oil or gas burners, or cold burners, et cetera. Because when the sun isn't shining, we still need electricity. [00:36:29] Where are we getting to get it? When the wind isn't blowing or when the windmills are broken, which happens quite frequently. Where are we going to get our power? We have to get it from the same way we always have from maybe some, uh, some old hydro dams. Right. But really we got to start paying a lot more attention to nuclear. [00:36:53] I saw a couple of more nuclear licenses were issued for these six gen nuclear plants that are green people. They are green, but back to our lithium mine. They're producing cobalt and nickel as well as the lithium. And they are ruined this to land, water, wildlife, and. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. Uh, we have had wars over gold and oil before and now we're looking at minerals. [00:37:27] In fact, there's a race underway between the United States, China, Europe, Russia, and others, looking for economic and technological dominance for decades to come by grabbing many of these precious minerals. So let's get into this a little bit further here. Okay. So they're trying to do good, but really they're not green. [00:37:53] They're they're not doing good. And this is causing friction. Okay. Um, first three months of this year, us lithium miners raise nearly three and a half billion dollars from wall street, seven times the amount raised in the last six months or 36 months. Yeah, huge. Money's going into it. Okay. They're going after lithium from California's largest leak, the Salton sea. [00:38:23] Yeah. Yeah. So they're going to use specially coded beads to extract lithium salt from the hot liquid pumped up from an aquifer more than 4,000 feet below the surface. Hmm. Sounds like drilling aren't they anti drilling to the self-contained systems connected to geothermal power plants generating emission free electricity. [00:38:44] Oh, that's right. They don't have a problem with the ring of fire in California with earthquakes and things. Right. Ah, yeah. Drilling on that and using the, the, uh, It's not going to be a problem. Uh, so, um, yeah, so that you're hoping to generate revenue needed to restore the lake fouled by toxic runoff from area farms for decades. [00:39:08] So they're looking to do more here. Lithium brine, Arkansas, Nevada, North Dakota, as I mentioned already, Maine. Uh, they're using it in every car that's out there, smartphones, et cetera. Uh, the us has some of the world's largest reserves, which is, I guess, a very good thing. Right? A silver peak mine in Nevada is producing 5,000 tons a year, which is less than 2% of the world's supply. [00:39:40] Uh, this is just absolutely amazing going through this. Okay. Um, I know bomb administration official, Ben Steinberg said right now, China decided to cut off the U S for a variety of reasons. We're in trouble. Yeah. You think. Uh, the another thing here in the New York times article is from this rancher and it's a bit of a problem. [00:40:06] He's got 500 cows and calves. Roaming is 50,000 acres and Nevada's high desert is going to have to start buying feed for. This local, mine's going to reach about 370 feet. Uh, here's another kind of interesting thing. This mine one mine is going to consume 3,200 gallons of water. Per minute. Yeah. In, in Baron Nevada, I I'm looking at a picture of this and it is just dead sagebrush. [00:40:37] Oh my gosh. So they're expecting the water table will drop at least 12 feet. They're going to be producing 66,000 tons of battery grade, lithium carbonate a year. But, uh, here we go. They're digging out this mountain side and they're using 5,800 tons of so FERC acid per day. Yeah. They're mixing clay dug out from the ma from the Mount side with 5,800 tons of clay of sulfuric acid. [00:41:10] I should say every day, they're also consuming 354 million cubic yards. Of mining waste. I'm not consuming creating 354 million cubic yards of mining waste loaded with, uh, discharged from this sulfuric acid treatment and may contain. Modest amounts of radioactive uranium. That's according to the permit documents, they're expecting it'll degrade quote unquote 5,000 acres of winter range used by the antelope herd, the habitat of the Sage groves nesting areas for Eagles. [00:41:48] It just goes on and on. It is not. BLM is not, of course stumbled the bureau of land management, but I guess both PLMs are not, and this is a real problem and the tribes are trying to stop it. The farmers are trying to stop it, but Hey, California needs more lithium batteries for their electric cars. [00:42:10] They're electric lawn mowers, leaf blowers, et cetera. So we've got to get that lithium. We've got to get it right away, uh, in order for their green appetite in. Hey get some sanity. Craig peterson.com. Sign up for my newsletter right now. [00:42:28] Doing a little training here on how to spot fake log-in pages. We just covered fishing and some real world examples of it, of some free quiz stuff that you can use to help with it. And now we're moving on to the next. [00:42:44] The next thing to look for when it comes to the emails and these fake log-in pages is a spelling mistake or grammatical errors. [00:42:56] Most of the time, these emails that we get that are faking emails are, have really poor grammar in them. Many times, of course the, the commas are in the wrong place, et cetera, et cetera. But most of us weren't English majors. So we're not going to pick that up myself included. Right. That's why I use Grammarly. [00:43:17] If you have to ever write anything or which includes anything from an email or a document, uh, you, you probably want to get Grammarly. There's a few out there, but that's the one I liked the best for making sure my grammar. So a tip, I guess, to the hackers out there, but the hackers will often use a URL that is very close to. [00:43:41] Where are you want to go? So they might put a zero in place of an O in the domain, or they might make up some other domain. So it might be a amazon-aws.com or a TD bank dash. Um, account.com, something like that. Sometimes the registrars they'll catch that sort of thing and kill it. Sometimes the business that they are trying to fake will catch it and let them know as well. [00:44:16] There's companies out there that watch for that sort of thing. But many times it takes a while and it's only fixed once enough people have reported it. So look at the URL. Uh, make sure it's legitimate. I always advise that instead of clicking on the link in the email, try and go directly to the website. [00:44:38] It's like the old days you got a phone call and somebody saying, yo, I'm from the bank and I need your name and social security number. So I can validate the someone broke into your account. No, no, no, no, no, they don't. They don't just call you up like that nowadays. They'll send you a message in their app. [00:44:55] That's on your smart. But they're not going to call you. And the advice I've always given is look up their phone now. And by the way, do it in the phone book, they remember those and then call them back. That's the safest way to do that sort of thing. And that's true for emails as well. If it's supposedly your bank and it's reporting something like someone has broken into your account, which is a pretty common technique for these fissures, these hackers that are out there, just type in the bank URL as you know, it not what's in the email and. [00:45:32] There will be a message there for you if it's legitimate, always. Okay. So before you click on any website, Email links, just try and go directly to the website. Now, if it's one of these deep links where it's taking new Jew, something specific within the site, the next trick you can play is to just mouse over the link. [00:45:57] So bring your mouse down to where the link is. And typically what'll happen is at the bottom left of your. Your screen or of the window. It'll give you the actual link. Now, if you look at some of them, for instance, the emails that I send out, I don't like to bother people. So if you have an open one of my emails in a while, I'll just automatically say, Hey, I have not opened them in a while. [00:46:25] And then I will drop you off the list. Plus if you hit reply to one of my newsletters, my show notes, newsletters. That's just fine, but it's not going to go to me@craigpeterson.com and some people you listeners being the best and brightest have noticed that what happens is it comes up and it's some really weird URL that's so I can track who responded to. [00:46:53] And that way I can just sit down and say, okay, now let me go through who has responded? And I've got a, kind of a customer relationship management system that lets me keep track of all of that stuff so that I know that you responded. I know you're interacting, so I know I'm not bothering you. Right. And I know I need to respond to. [00:47:13] Well much the same thing is true with some of these links. When I have a link in my newsletter and I say, Hey, I'm linking to MIT's article. It is not going to be an MIT. Because again, I want to know what are you guys interested in? So anytime you click on a link, I'll know, and I need to know that, so I know why, Hey, wait a minute. [00:47:37] Now, 50% of all of the people that opened the emails are interested in identifying fake login pages. So what do I do? I do something like I'm doing right now. I go into depth on fake login. Pages. I wouldn't have known that if I wasn't able to track it. So just because the link doesn't absolutely look legit doesn't mean it isn't legit, but then again, if it's a bank of it involves financial transactions or some of these other things be more cautious. [00:48:13] So double-check for misspellings or grammatical errors. Next thing to do is to check the certificate, the security certificate on the site. You're on this gets a little bit confusing. If you go to a website, you might notice up in the URL bar, the bar that has the universal resource locator, that's part of the internet. [00:48:40] You might've noticed. There's a. And people might've told you do check for the lock. Well, that lock does not mean that you are saying. All it means is there is a secure VPN from your computer to the computer on the other side. So if it's a hacker on the other side, you're sending your data securely to the hacker, right? [00:49:07] That's not really going to do you a whole lot of good. This is probably one of the least understood things in the whole computer security side, that connect. Maybe secure, but is this really who you think it is? So what you need to do is click on their certificate and the certificate will tell you more detail. [00:49:32] So double-check their certificate and make sure it is for the site. You really. To go to, so when it's a bank site, it's going to say, you know, the bank is going to have the bank information on it. That makes sense. But if you go for instance on now, I'm going to throw a monkey wrench into this whole thing. [00:49:51] If you go to Craig peterson.com, for instance, it's going to say. Connection is secure. The certificate is valid, but if you look at their certificate and the trust in the details, it's going to be issued by some company, but it's going to just say Craig peterson.com. It's not going to give a business name like it would probably do for a bank. [00:50:17] So you know, a little bit of a twist to it, but that's an important thing. Don't just count on the lock, make sure that the certificate is for the place you want to contact. Last, but not least is multi-factor authentication. I can't say this enough. If the bad guys have your username or email address and your password for a site, if you're using multifactor authentication, they cannot get. [00:50:56] So it's going to prevent credential stuffing tactics, or they'll use your email and password combinations that have already been stolen for mothers sites to try and hack in to your online profile. So very important to set up and I advise against using two factor authentication with your, just a cell phone, as in a text message SMS, it is not secure and it's being hacked all of the time. [00:51:26] Get an authorization. App like one password for instance, and you shouldn't be using one password anyways, for all of your password. And then Google has a free one called Google authenticator. Use those instead of your phone number for authentication. [00:51:43] I've been warning about biometric databases. And I, I sat down with a friend of mine who is an attorney, and he's using this clear thing at the airport. I don't know if you've seen it, but it's a biometric database. What are the real world risks? [00:52:00] Well, this " Clear"company uses biometrics. It's using your eye. Brent, if you will, it's using your Iris. [00:52:08] Every one of us has a pretty darn unique Iris, and they're counting on that and they're using it to let you through TSA very quickly. And this attorney, friend of mine thinks it's the best thing since sliced bread, because he can just. Right on through, but the problem here is that we're talking about biometrics. [00:52:30] If your password gets stolen, you can change it. If your email account gets hacked, I have another friend who his account got hacked. You can get a new email account. If your Iris scan that's in this biometric database gets stolen. You cannot replace your eyes unless of course you're Tom cruise and you remember that movie, right. [00:53:00] And it's impossible to replace your fingerprints. It's possible to replace your face print. Well, I guess you could, to a degree or another, right. Some fat injections or other things. Could it be done to change your face sprint, but these Iris scans fingerprints and facial images are something I try not to provide any. [00:53:27] Apple has done a very good job with the security of their face print, as well as their fingerprint, because they do not send any of that information out directly to themselves, or do any database at all. They are stored only on the device itself. And they're in this wonderful little piece of electronics that cannot be physically compromised. [00:53:56] And to date has not been electronically compromised either. They've done a very, very good. Other vendors on other operating systems like Android, again, not so much, but there are also databases that are being kept out there by the federal government. I mentioned this clear database, which isn't the federal government, it's a private company, but the federal government obviously has its fingers into that thing. [00:54:27] The office of personnel. Uh, for the federal government, they had their entire database, at least pretty much the entire database. I think it was 50 million people stolen by the red, Chinese about six years ago. So the communists. Uh, copies of all of the information that the officer personnel management had about people, including background checks and things. [00:54:55] You've probably heard me talk about that before. So having that information in a database is dangerous because it attracts the hackers. It attracts the cybercriminals. They want to get their hands on it. They'll do all kinds of things to try and get their hands. We now have completely quit Afghanistan. [00:55:19] We left in a hurry. We did some incredibly stupid things. I just, I can't believe a president of the United States would do what was done here. And now it's been coming out that president Biden completely ignored. The advice that he was getting from various military intelligence and other agencies out there and just said, no, we're going to be out of there. [00:55:46] You have to limit your troops to this. And that's what causes them to close the airbase bog that we had had for so many years. Apparently the Chinese are talking about taking it over now. Yeah. Isn't that nice. And whereas this wasn't an eternal war, right? We hadn't had anybody die in a year and a half. [00:56:05] Uh, it's crazy. We have troops in south Vietnam. We have troops in Germany. We have troops in countries all over the world, Japan, you name it so that we have a local forest that can keep things calm. And we were keeping things calm. It's just mind blowing. But anyhow, politics aside, we left behind a massive database of biometric database. [00:56:40] Of Afghanis that had been helping us over in Afghanistan, as well as a database that was built using us contractors of everyone in the Afghan military, and basically third genealogy. Who their parents were the grandparents blood type weight, height. I'm looking at it right now. All of the records in here, the sex ID nationality. [00:57:13] Uh, date of exploration, hair color, favorite fruit, favorite vegetables, place of birth, uncle's name marker signature approval. Signature date, place of birth. Date of birth address, permanent address national ID number, place of ISS. Date of ISS native language salary. Date of salary, group of salary, police of salary education. [00:57:38] Father's named graduation date kind of weapon. And service number. These were all in place in Afghanistan. We put them in place because we were worried about ghost soldiers. A gold soldier was someone who we were paying the salary of taxpayers. The United States were paying the salaries of the Afghan military for quite some time. [00:58:06] And we were thinking that about half of the. Payroll checks. We were funding. We're actually not going to people who were in the military, but we're going to people who were high up within the Afghan government and military. So we put this in place to get rid of the ghost soldiers. Everybody had to have all of this stuff. [00:58:33] In the database, 36 pieces of information, just for police recruitment. Now this information we left behind and apparently this database is completely in the hand of the Taliban. Absolutely. So we were talking about Americans who helped construct Afghanistan and the military and the Teleman, the looking for the networks of their Poland supporters. [00:59:07] This is just absolutely amazing. So all of the data doesn't have clear use, like who cares about the favorite fruit or vegetable, but the rest of it does the genealogy. Does they now know who was in the police department, who was in the military, who their family is, what their permanent address is. Okay. [00:59:31] You see the problem here and the biometrics as well in the biometrics are part of this us system that we were using called hide H I D E. And this whole hide thing was a biometric reader. Well, the military could keep with them. There were tens of thousands of these things out in the field. And when they had an encounter with someone, they would look up their biometrics, see if they were already in the database and in the database, it would say, yeah, you know, they're friendly, they're an informant. [01:00:08] Or we found them in this area or w you know, we're watching them. We have concerned about them, et cetera, et cetera. Right. All of their actions were in. Well turns out that this database, which covered about 80% of all Afghans and these devices are now in the hands of the Taliban. Now, the good news with this is that that a lot of this information cannot be easily extracted. [01:00:40] So you're not going to get some regular run of the mill Taliban guide to pick one of these up and start using. But, uh, the what's happening here is that we can really predict that one of these surrounding companies like Pakistan that has been very cooperative with the Taliban. In fact, they gave refuge to Saddam, not Saddam Hussein, but to bin Ladin and also Iran and China and Russia. [01:01:13] Any of those countries should be able to get into that database. Okay. So I think that's really important to remember now, a defense department spokesperson quote here, Eric Faye on says the U S has taken prudent actions to ensure that sensitive data does not fall into the Tolo bonds. And this data is not at risk of misuse. [01:01:38] Misuse that's unfortunately about all I can say, but Thomas Johnson, a research professor at the Naval postgraduate school in Monterey, California says, uh, not so fast. The Taliban may have used biometric information in the Coon dues attack. So instead of taking the data straight from the high devices, he told MIT technology review that it is possible that Tolo bond sympathizers in Kabul provided them. [01:02:11] With databases as a military personnel against which they could verify prints. In other words, even back in 2016, it may have been the databases rather than these high devices themselves pose the greatest risk. This is very concerning big article here in MIT technology review. I'm quoting from it a little bit here, but there are a number of databases. [01:02:39] They are biometric. Many of these, they have geological information. They have information that can be used to round up and track down people. I'm not going to mention world war two, and I'm not going to mention what happened with the government before Hitler took over, because to do that means you lose that government had registered firearms, that government had registered the civilians and the people and Afghanistan. [01:03:13] The government was also as part of our identification papers, registering your religion. If you're Christian, they're hunting you down. If you were working for the military, they're hunting new day. And this is scary. That's part of the reason I do not want biometric information and databases to be kept here in the U S Hey, make sure you get my show notes every week on time, along with free training, I try to help you guys out. [01:03:50] Craig peterson.com. Craig peterson.com. Here I am. Cybersecurity strategist and available to you.
Arianna Tricomi is a three-time Freeride World Tour champion and thus one of the most successful freeriders of all time. After a challenging winter, the 29-year-old Italian thought deeply - especially about her life as a skier. With the result of her reflection, „Na Vita de Nëi“ („A Snow Life"“, Arianna joins this year's Freeride Filmfestival. What her intentions are with the poetic-melancholic production, why she likes to enjoy beautiful moments in the mountains also alone, why she calls her freeriding „mini golf“ and why you can understand her film even if you don't speak Ladin, Arianna tells in a new episode of our podcast #offpisteonair. Enjoy! Arianna Tricomi ist dreifache Freeride World Tour Siegerin und damit eine der erfolgreichsten Freeriderinnen aller Zeiten. Nach einem herausfordernden Winter machte sich die 29-jährige Italienerin tiefgreifende Gedanken – speziell über ihr Leben als Skifahrerin. Mit dem Ergebnis ihrer Reflexion, „Na Vita de Nëi“ („Ein Schneeleben“), ist Arianna am heurigen Freeride Filmfestival zu Gast. Welche Absichten sie mit der poetisch-melancholischen Produktion hat, warum sie schöne Momente in den Bergen gerne auch alleine genießt, warum sie ihr Freeriden „Minigolf“ nennt und warum man ihren Film auch versteht, wenn man nicht Ladinisch spricht, erzählt Arianna in einer neuen Folge unseres Podcasts #offpisteonair. Viel Vergnügen!
Joseph Ladin is the CEO of SFLMaven Corporation, an online provider of premium, high-end luxury jewelry and goods, which he founded in 2003. He is a highly-accomplished entrepreneur with more than 18 years of e-commerce experience. Ladin graduated from the University of Florida with a degree in sociology and business. “Just go for it, do it while you are young… Even if you fail there's still you went out and you did it you try your hardest and you learned lessons and you are just ready for the next adventure after that. There is no failing ”…[Listen for More] Click Here for Show Notes To Listen or to Get the Show Notes go to https://wp.me/p6Tf4b-lSM
Welcome to another episode of The Speechly Podcast! Today I am joined by Marc Ladin, General Partner at the VoicePunch Venture Fund. In the conversation, we explore the intersection of Venture Capital and Voice Technology. In this discussion we dig into the following topics: - Why Marc started a fund focused on Audio & Voice Technology - What makes a good Voice Tech investment in light of a hot Venture Capital market - The difference in value between 3rd Party and 1st Party oriented Voice Experiences - Current User Behavior with Voice Enabled Experiences I hope you enjoy this conversation with Marc Ladin of the VoicePunch Venture Fund on The Speechly Podcast! Follow Speechly: Speechly.com Twitter - @SpeechlyAPI GitHub.com/Speechly LinkedIn Follow VoicePunch: VoicePunch.vc Twitter - @VoicePunchVC LinkedIn
This week on Dancing Through the Lens, Coral spoke with Evie Ladin. Not only is Ladin the director of the Oakland-based MoToR/dance, she is a singer/songwriter with many groups including the eponymous Evie Ladin band and also the director of the International Body Music Festival (a project of Oakland-based nonprofit Crosspulse). The episode discusses her upbringing in music and dance, technical considerations of creating music videos, and the inspiration behind 2021 SFDFF selection Drumset. The Storm(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWJKC9wqM5M&ab_channel=EvieLadin)filmed and edited by Chafic Saad and Kris LeeAin't No Grave(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiDrGmgj1CM&ab_channel=EvieLadin_filmed by Mark Kohr (2014 SFDFF Co-Lab Participant)@evieladin@crosspulsehttps://evieladin.com/ #MoToRMondays
0 (1s): Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us this morning. Online it's a little different for me and the band and just like last week, we're going to go ahead and we're going to worship here. We're going to trust that you're going to worship with us at home. You know, we'll remember that it doesn't matter where we're at. God is everywhere. Omnipresent. We can praise him from the rooftops, from the empty rooms to the living rooms, to the bedrooms. He's worthy to be praised. So wherever you are, join us worship with us this morning and we'll get it going, Lord, please accept our worship this morning. 0 (45s): As pleasing we come to you, we humbly confess that we have nothing to offer. Lord. Everything we have is because of you. We praise you. We worship you in Jesus name. Amen. 1 (1m 6s): . 1 (6m 21s): Hi, 2 (11m 30s): 1 (11m 42s): 0 (15m 51s): Lord, we thank you this morning for your great gift of grace to each one of us. We thank you, Lord, that you've made it obvious to everywhere. We look at your creation, cries out of a creator. I pray this morning that you'd help us all to remove the scales from our eyes. Only you can remove Lord that we could see that every day we'd sent your presence. Remember who we serve and worship. Pray that you'd bless your word this morning. 0 (16m 32s): You anointed. You'd give us ears to hear what you want to say to us. We ask in Jesus name. Amen 3 (16m 42s): For let's see here flows of you standing there in the back. We've got a couple of seats right up, over here in front. And then I think we have a seat right back there in the back free. Now I'm just having fun with you anyway. It's great to be here. You guys, and let's let's, let's go ahead and pray and Lord God, we thank you father that you, that you do see all Lord God that you do know all. And just thank you father, that you have equipped us as believers with everything that we need to address and face the challenges that come before us. Even if we feel powerless, even if we feel like there's a we're out of control, like we don't have control or God, these are, these are the opportunities father for us to lean on you completely. 3 (17m 27s): And to see your power work in your grace abound father, we pray for your Holy spirit to move through this message this morning. And for those who don't know you father, we pray Lord God, that they will be receptive to your Holy Spirit's call to become a member of your family in Jesus name. We pray amen. What happens in when everything is going really smooth and there you are driving, and you're finally on cruise control and things are going really well. What happens in life? I'll tell you what happens. Suddenly a big cow gets in the middle of the road and you have to go left or right, or have lots of hamburger meat. 3 (18m 9s): And you know, that works much better in Texas, but anyway, but the reality is that's what life is about. We have, we, we never had a stay on cruise control forever. There's just things that happen. Even if you think you're doing everything correct. We live in a fallen world and things happen. I know I was challenged once I was a Western regional coordinator for an organization called Rutherford Institute, and that was coordinated litigation in 14 Western States out of our, out of the Sacramento office and everything was going really smooth. I had this network of attorneys developed and Aaron's going great coordinating over 40% of their active litigation. 3 (18m 50s): And what happens? The national office calls me and says, Brad, we're shutting down the last regional offices, including yours, but don't worry. We have a promotion for you. Why don't you hit up our public affairs office in Washington, DC you'll have a higher salary, larger staff, larger office. You'll be the face of the organization. You'll be literally the media and media rep for all television and radio throughout the country. For all of our litigation. Of course, I don't have to pray about that. You know, I mean, right. When something is just like, so obviously God was closing, wonder opening it elements. You don't have to pray about that. Yes. Yeah. And I had insomnia. 3 (19m 31s): I couldn't sleep. Couldn't sleep the next night couldn't sleep the next night. Why? Because I was wrestling with the Lord. I knew that if I prayed that God was going to probably challenge me to take the rough path and not the easy path. That's just what happens in my life. You know, when, when you pray, I usually very rarely feel led to go the easy way. It's this thing called faith that needs stretching going this way. And so I went ahead and prayed and that's what I should've done from the beginning. But I prayed. And when I did the Lord gave me this question, which is Brad what does Isaiah I put on your heart real pointed, really clear. 3 (20m 12s): And the answer was to make sure people got the help they needed here on the West coast. That was a passion on my heart. The next question was, what do I choose to follow the passions on my heart or something else? So with boldness and courage, I stepped up and I said, Lord, I will face the challenges I will boldly go. I will do exactly on several conditions. And isn't that what we are sometimes in life, we say yes to we're going to do it, but I'm scared. That's okay because God's stretching us. And when he stretches us, it's not supposed to just really be, you know, when you're, when you're lifting weights, I had some, maybe some guys here in the audience here, weightlifters, you know, we lifted the weights. 3 (20m 54s): You lift it with. So it's easy. No, you lift as hard and you're stretching those tit, those muscles and everything. Well, that's what God does with us spiritually. When we go through situations where we have to stretch our faith. And so I says, God, I've just, I got a few things here. One, I want to make sure that we have a free office space indefinitely donated free in Sacramento, a free computer system donated, you know, keep me on the radio stations for free. There were two, a rate, two radio stations. At the time we have to use the black Lord in just three months. And I'm never going to charge anyone at any time for any legal work I ever do. Ever. I thought it was very reasonable with my business model. 3 (21m 35s): And anyway, God, he knows where he knew I was at. He knew exactly where I was and he takes us right where we are in that great that God knows inside and out. He says, so he took care of everything. I get a call out of the blue. We're shutting down the other for the office. It's the last month I get a call. I didn't tell anyone about the free office space I was looking for. I thought I don't have to. I told God, God doesn't provide it fine done. It's not at him. And I'm getting on my boat and I'm leaving Nineveh. Okay. I'm just from head to Barcelona. I'm just, I was already, you know, it's anyway. Yeah. 3 (22m 15s): Biblical analogy there. Okay. Gotcha. So, so there, so, so what happens? I get a call answer. The phone guy says, yeah, I heard you needed office space to have office space for you. Free office space. Now did I say praise the Lord? Thank you. No, this was my ticket to avoid going to Nineveh. Okay. The office space. So instead I raised my voice and said, well, Hey, how'd, you know, I need office space. Well, my secretary who's my tone quickly comes in, says, put him on hold, put him on hold. She goes, yeah. I just, I Brad, you didn't know this, but I knew there before we knew they were shutting down our office, I knew our lease was going to expire here. 3 (22m 55s): So I thought I would surprise you. And so I called KYC radio and I asked him to put in an announcement that we're looking for free office space too, because yes, we need office space. But that's how God works in the computer. I told one person computer system, we needed. One person goes, Oh yeah, I've got a computer system for you. The boat is not leaving. It's going to stay in it. So it's how God works. Radio stations. They said, Oh, we'll keep you on. And now by God's grace, we have a half hour radio show and it's heard on over 500 stations and transmitters across the country for free the, the commentary. 3 (23m 40s): We have the legal EDS for that over. Well, I'll say over 790, plus at least radio stations Monday through Friday, it's for free. I mean, this is how God works. And we now have offices. Pacific justice. Now has offices went to theaters anyway. I've I don't know how many offices, but coast to coast, Miami New York, Dallas, Mississippi, Denver, Seattle, Salem, foreign, California, Reno, Nevada, all donated office space. It's it's what God does. It's when we let go, we let God, he goes beyond what we can think or imagine when you're facing things in life. 3 (24m 23s): Remember none of this takes God by surprise. If you feel out of control, it's obviously it's a great time for those spiritual muscles to be stretched called faith. And we could put our trust and hope in the Lord. Now, why is this a good introduction? It's a good intro because what we're going to talk today is about perilous times from God's word. If you turn, if you will, to second Timothy chapter three second, Timothy chapter three, verse one, are you don't bother turning there. Just trust. I mean, I'm a lawyer. So that was a joke. That's good. You guys laughed. Okay, good. 3 (25m 4s): Yeah. It starts off what I love about this. This is understood by many to be the last writings of the apostle Paul. So this is, this is the last two chapters. We're going to finish all chapter four for time, but this is the last two chapters of the last letter of the apostle Paul and Guest who he's writing it to. He's really addressing it to us, I believe. And here's why here's the first verse, but understand this, that in the last days there will come times of diff difficulty or perilous times. That's, that's not, I think, written to the early church. I think it's written to the last days. I think it's written to us. 3 (25m 46s): And yet we act as though some, some strange things happening and we see crazy things happening our world, right? And yet Paul makes it really clear of the word of God, makes it very clear that we're to face these things. Verse two also love it. That he doesn't leave it just obscure. Like what does he mean by perilous? Well, he actually says it real clearly here. Verse two for people who we lovers of self don't. We see that in our society, what's the most common picture for someone to take, what's it called? 4 (26m 16s): Selfie? It's not a 3 (26m 17s): UAE or they it's a selfie. Right? And lovers of self lovers of money. Don't we see that that's part of our culture materialism and, and it's very apparent. And we see it around the world and we see it around the world now arrogant, abusive disobedient to their parents. Now I used to say, you know, things that disobedient to parents, you know, I thought, well, this is the end of the world's happening. 3 (26m 58s): All these teenagers are just so rebellious. Well, that's part of growing up in a way you've becoming your own person. I get that. But what we're talking about here is rebelling, not just becoming their own person, but disobedient to the parents and the teachings of their parents pulling away from the faith of their parents. We see that statistically, like we've never seen it ever in us. History is greater now than it was even back in the late sixties. And they're the, the counter, the cultural revolution it's happening at a very fast clip in our society. The fastest growing religion in America today are nuns. Now I'm not talking about the ladies with the black, you know, thing and the okay. 3 (27m 40s): And the Catholic church. No, no. I mean, there are none there, nothing. They don't believe in anything you say, Oh, you're an atheist. No, you are you this? No, I'm just nothing. That's the fastest growing religion, turning away from the parent teaching of their family and their parents. Ungrateful ungrateful. It's interesting because I think the synonym for an ungrateful is entitlement. You don't need to be grateful for something. If you're entitled to it. If, if you're owed it, if you're dessert, if you deserve it, do we have that in our society? Is that a part of what's? Our children are learning and our government schools in particular and our universities, actually a lot of private quote, Christian universities. 3 (28m 27s): I know there's a number here in the state of California, frankly, that need to be called out because of this, this, this new thinking of, of entitlement, very progressive quote unquote philosophy that goes totally against the teachings of scripture and the word of God. So it's unholy. What's that? Holy being separate from God and what's righteous. And what's good. A turning from God heartless on a, on a peaceable slanderous without self-control. When I was a kid, self-control was a good thing. 3 (29m 8s): It's what we learned. Right? Self-control exercise. Self-control what do they teach you? What's our society embracing. Now I'll tell you right now, we're all indoctrinated. I'm going to say the first few words and you're going to repeat it. If it feels right. Good do it. We're programmed. And our society does that. What God's word says no, no. Self-control is a good thing. We're human beings. God has given us moral choice. And with that comes a responsibility and self control. And our society is just, if it's a log as someone, you know, wants to, or it feels like this is something they're there they desire to do, then that's who they are. 3 (29m 51s): They should do it. Well, no, no. That's called temptation. We should turn from temptation because temptation leads to sin and see it. Sin leads to destruction and death. And that's what the stats show the statistics lovers. I was always, sorry. We'll keep here without self-control brutal. No loving good. Instead of what's hip in our society is, is to love that, which is evil and it's evil to, and instead to, to hate that, which is good. We see it in our society today. When I was growing up, there are two kinds of people. Pretty much there were those who went to church and those who are knowing that they should be going to church. 3 (30m 33s): Right? That's what I grew up with. Yeah. I know we should give you one. Church I just our society today, not that Church saves us, but it's just, it's an indicator oftentimes of our desire to, to be close and to fellowship. Fellowship is a part of healthy, spiritual growth as Christians. And yet our society today are those who go to church and then you have, and they have those who despise churches and what they stand for and what they teach and a very large part of our culture society. And then those, even those who go to church, you have those. When I was a kid, I'm selling an old man, this is not good when I was a child. Let me tell you no, but it was always thinking like two groups of Christians, you got those, the sprinkle and those that dunk. 3 (31m 20s): And that's the big divider. That was my mind thinking I was a kid and I wasn't sure about the sprinklers. Okay, boy, have things changed. The real question today is, is your church one that believes that Jesus is the way the truth and the life that no one comes to the father, but to faith in Jesus, is your church, or is it, or is it more of a universal status that decides to dilute the word and believe just everything sort of gets there. We see main did not mainline denominations falling into this deception. We also see, you know, is your church one that believes that the Bible is the Holy word of God and you don't need to apologize for this, but it live by it because this is God's word. 3 (32m 3s): Or do you believe, are you part of a church that decides to dilute, cross out, tear out and modify what the word of God says? That's where we are in our society today. Unlike at any time in world history, do we have a tearing away among the churches from those who are followers of Jesus and the Holy word of God and those that follow something else. And then love is a good treacherous. Reckless this verse for swollen with conceit pride. Pride is basically saying that I know more than God. I know that I know the way and I'm, and I know what's best for me more than God. That's sort of the conceit. 3 (32m 44s): It's pride lovers of pleasure, rather than lovers of God. I'll never forget. When I, the Supreme court decision regarding same-sex marriage came out from the Supreme court. It was a five to four decision, very close, actually. And the majority of the decision wrote that not only was equal protection, the basis of it. And I thought that's probably how they're going to go with the equal protection clause. We'll get into the details of that. But instead, they went much farther than that. And they said they defined a sexual fulfillment as a fundamental right. Individuals' sexual fulfillment. I looked at this, I thought this makes bigamy, polygamy, BCL. 3 (33m 30s): I mean, my mind started going, going off the edge there, thinking this just opens up the flood gate for all kinds of just immoral activity and justifying it as a constitutional fundamental, right? What's the fundamental, right? By the way, it's something given to us by our creator. How can you ignore the laws of nature? And nature's God the source of our fundamental rights in claiming something that goes totally against those rights. It's, it's, it's crazy. It makes no sense. And yet that's what we see facing us today. And that's what the Supreme court ruled. It basically, it was like, they shook their fist at God and say, we'd rather be lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of you. 3 (34m 22s): First five, having the appearance of godliness, but denying its power. I remember I was on an airplane. You know, those people that they talk and talk on the airplane and you're just like, I wish it'd be quiet so you can CA that's me. Okay. Right here. It just happened. So I'm sitting here talking with this guy and I said, somehow it comes up. I said, if you don't mind me asking, I said, what'd you do you have religious background? And he says, he goes, no, I'm not religious, but I am very spiritual. So we know it. We know the language, we know the lingo, right? Spiritual, it's very hip to be spiritual. So I said, well, what does it mean? What do you, what do you believe? 3 (35m 2s): Well, I just really feel that I'm at one and at peace with the universe. Okay. And where does that come from? What's 1 (35m 17s): That's it. 3 (35m 20s): Okay. So there's nothing to this cloud. It's just a cloud. It's a floating, it's a floating cloud. There's no nothing, no substance. And our society embraces sort of this spiritual ism as an alternative because it makes you feel good. Doesn't it? You feel like you're, you're somewhere, even though you really know where, but it makes you feel better. Right? And, and yet it's a deception. And yet it says, but denying its power, it has no power because, or does not come from our, our mind. It doesn't come from our, our own energy. Doesn't come from the universe. Power comes through Jesus Christ and the powerful working of our creator. 3 (36m 5s): One thing I love about being a Christian and I'm a lawyer too. I'm sorry. Okay. Let me just tell you something about lawyers. It's the 99% out there. They give us 1% of bad reputation. No one laughed at that one. That was a lawyer joke. Okay. Very good. Thank you. Some courtesy. Laughter. Appreciate it. Okay. But anyway, I keep talking about before I lost my place. This is not good. Okay. So beginning, back onto where I was. All right, here we go. But the thing is, is that God wants us to recognize that we need to understand that. 3 (36m 49s): Like I said, all power comes from him. I have a very logical mind. So as a Christian it's makes sense because we have a history. We have God, two thirds of the prophecy has already been fulfilled. We have 12 eye witnesses that gave their lives. The concept that Jesus has been not only risen from the dead, but they saw him risen from the dead, from an evidentiary perspective. It makes sense. Even the understanding of the, the origins of the universe and the development correlates with the science correlates, with what we've learned, it makes complete sense. And then we also have the witness and the power of the gospel transformation in our lives and what we've seen. 3 (37m 34s): And yet that's shunned by the world to follow something else. None of this takes God by surprise. And it shouldn't take us by surprise. And yet the word says in verse five, avoid such people. No, Whoa, wait a minute. We, as believers are not to avoid people who don't know the Lord, right? So we're talking about, we're talking about people that are invading the church. That's very different. Actual, these are people eating the Church with these attitudes and philosophies and ideas. And that's why the church has to be strong too, for extra rotation. We're going to see that in a moment. Now, if we were to stop right here, be terrible. Wouldn't it it'd be like this terrible cycle. 3 (38m 15s): Do you know the world's coming to an end? Now let's go out and have some coffee. What's really awesome. Is that starting in verse, verse 10, we have a whole blueprint of victory and miss these hard times. So let's continue. Let's go on right here. But you have followed my teaching, my conduct, my, my aim until in life, my faith, my patients, my love, my steadfastness. Now notice that word love is right there. I always say, then he has my persecutions and sufferings. Love is right there. Missed all these things have challenged. How can we love when we're going through persecution? Right? 3 (38m 55s): Instead, you know, long suffering stays is another word used for steadfastness. How can we love? We can't love in these situations. Can we not on our own, but through Jesus, we can. The more of a church is persecuted. The more we're trounced on the more we're attacked, the stronger our testimony, because the more resilient and more evident is the love of Christ. And it baffles the world. When we are able to love those that hate us, able to turn the other cheek. We're able to walk the extra mile. These, these are coming from from Jesus. And we can do that as followers of Jesus, verse 11, my persecutions and sufferings that happened to me at Antioch and a code them. 3 (39m 38s): And it lists what persecution is. I had toured yet from them all the Lord rescued me, wait a minute. How did Lord rescue them? You guys know what Paul went through, right? He had a shipwrecked stone poison, flogged near death or died. I mean, the guy, you really can't get much more persecution than what this guy went through. I mean, he didn't end his life even with a big mansion. I mean, he didn't have a nice ending. Yeah. You know, and his power from his testimony was all the more powerful because of all that he went through it. Wasn't about avoiding persecution. It didn't say the Lord prevented me from going through persecution as the Lord delivered me for what? We're a purpose to continue to share the good news of Jesus to share the gospel and the life changing opportunity to hope in Christ, verse 12. 3 (40m 26s): He see, he reveals that. He says, indeed, all who desire to live a godly life in Christ. Jesus will be persecuted. Isn't that a great promise. You're going to be persecuted. Now let me know if you're like, well, I don't want this promise. We don't live for this world. We live for a whole nother world. This is a train station. This is temporary. And, and we're going to be suffering persecution. Verse 13 while evil people and imposters will go from bad to worse deceiving and being deceived posters is he, there's going to be imposters in the Church right? Who are deceiving. I've seen him on television before for you continue in what you've learned and from an F and have firmly believed knowing from whom you've learned it. 3 (41m 15s): And now from childhood you've, you've been acquainted with the sacred writings, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ. Jesus. What are the sacred writings? Is it from some ancient something? No, it's the Bible God's word. And so we're supposed to, to, to clean to it. We're supposed to, to, to learn from it and, and, and, and to grow from it. Verse 15 and now, and how from childhood, you have been acquainted with the sacred rice, which we would like your wife to Christ for salvation through faith in Christ. Jesus. All scripture is breathed out by God profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction and for training and righteousness. 3 (42m 3s): Would you say that the Bible is pretty, has it all together? I mean, this is the most important book. Good read. This is, this is it. And oftentimes we neglect the word don't we so much of our time. We, or we could be religious about it. I remember my life. It was a time I read one chapter a day. If I didn't have time, I read the chapter and the presence of many witnesses, trust, phase one managers or and quickly go through it and say, okay, what one thing did you get out of it? I don't know. I was too busy reading it. You ever been done that before? It's called religion and death. God doesn't want religion. He wants a relationship. It's better. I think to read one verse and to be open to the spirit of God than to go through this big rigid ritual. 3 (42m 48s): I got to read the whole Bible in one year. So I got to quickly do I didn't make time. Walk with God and let him speak to you in his word. He's talking to you in his word and is it has a trustworthy will verse 16. All scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training racist, that the man of God may be complete equipped for every good work. Did she love these absolutes and God's word. We can put our hands, our trust completely. And when he teaches us and tells us in his word, it's proven itself, time and time again, and the testimonies and the evidence is overwhelming. 3 (43m 33s): If we'd only listen and hear what God has to tell us, we're going to face tough times. Verse four, chapter four, verse one. I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ. Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead and by his appearing and his kingdom. Would you say what he's about to say is pretty important? I mean, I don't, I don't, there's not many times in scripture. I see this kind of an intro to an exhortation, to a command verse two. We see what that command is. Preach the word. Pretty awesome. Isn't it preach the word whenever you feel like it? 3 (44m 16s): No, no, no. Preach the word. Be ready. The in season and out of season. In other words, when you see the results and when you don't see the results, DePaul always see the great results. When they're about to just read acts chapter 22, you know, it was, he was preaching and they wanted a fling. Dustin, the air traffic cooks. They wanted the guy dead. He didn't base his ministry on results. His ministry was on faith in Jesus. God's the one who moves Gaza. Results person is a great that God doesn't count on us for results. What does he want from us? He wants to obedience and we can put our trust in him, preach the word, be ready in season and out of season, reprove, rebuke and exhort with complete patience and teaching. 3 (45m 7s): I'll never forget. There was one guy. I was getting my house in citrus Heights and it was a for sale by owner. And I was writing down the number. He says, Hey dude, you want to commit? Obviously, dude, he goes, Hey, you want to come in and see the house? And my uncle's not here, but he really needs it. So I go in and watch, look at it and everything. And, and, and I said, wow, this, this ad on here had this big add on with the slanted roof, but it's okay. The floor matched it. So it was fine. So it's all slanted. I said, well, you could, you could have a church service here. He goes, Oh, are you a Christian? I go, yeah. Are you? He goes, no, I go, well, what are you going? Well, you don't want to know. I said, well, yeah, I do. No. I thought I'm not gonna be able to get this house anyway. 3 (45m 48s): And by the way, I ended up getting the house. So it was like, like a total God thing, another story. So I sit down with him and he goes, cause I was, since I went to college, I learned some new ways of thinking, Oh, well there are no absolutes. Yeah. And how it may be right for you, but it may not be right for me. And he goes, yeah. And how everything is relative. Yeah. I said, well, let me tell you that's wrong. And I went through and I went through the apologetics and I gave him the, the bridge diagram, you know, man on one side, God, since separating, you know, and then I gave him more than a carpet. But the book later on, more than a carpenter and his eyes were just glassed over. And I thought, what a waste of my time. 3 (46m 31s): And that's what my attitude was. I'm going to be honest with you. It wasn't like a whole Lord just work in his life. No, I thought kids hopeless rebel. What a waste of my time. And I shared this story. A number of times with people saying, nonetheless, we still need to share the good word. Even if we know people have rejected it and they're not going to, well, you don't have it. About 17 years later, someone knocks on my door. I wasn't there. Someone else answered the door. He says, yeah, yeah. I'm here to see brags on here. Okay. Well, he shared with me gospel about 17 years ago here in this house. And I didn't accept it and made some bad decisions. I went to prison, but when I was in prison, I remember what he shared with me. 3 (47m 14s): And I gave my life to Christ. I'm now out of prison. I'm now in full-time ministry. I just wanted to come by and thank you for taking the time. And when I heard that, I was like, Chris, where are you going to be like happier praise the Lord. Well, you know what the Holy spirit did. First thing was brought to my mind exactly what I said and felt afterwards, which was what a waste of my time. I wish I hadn't bothered that. So reality is it's not a waste. So, and let the Lord do the reaping. Let God, let God move in his, through his Holy spirit. And maybe someone else down the road will, will lead them to cry. So the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears, they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions. 3 (48m 5s): Do we see it? There's churches in this town probably that fits this criteria very well. We have denominations that have pledged to be followers of this and to do this verse four. And we'll turn away from listening to the truth. What is the truth? This the word of God and wander off into myths. As for you always be sober-minded enduring suffering. Do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry. Sometimes in life we say, well, that's, I don't really have a ministry to talk about pastor Steve, pastor Steve we're rooting for you, pastor Steve. 3 (48m 48s): No, no. They're talking about you. If you've given your life to Jesus, the way God wants to work in your life, how do you know if God has a ministry for you? Ask yourself two questions there. One, have I received Jesus, my Lord and savior. And number two is my heartbeat. Cause otherwise God to take you home, he's a gracious God heaven so much better than this place. He has a purpose. Even this one lady, I know she was going blind and she loved Jesus. She says, I can't even do anything. And I says, this is a prayer warrior. You can be a primary, like never before she goes, you're right. And she was a prayer warrior all the way up until the time she passed away, two months later, it's a living for Jesus and not ourselves. 3 (49m 31s): And, and also I, when I was 16 years old, I w too much time on this cause time. But I loved the Lord. I was in my little Opal GT driving motorcycle hits me head on, goes through my windshield smashes through this whole part of my head, I was going 55 on a, how fast he was going, rushed me to Parkland general hospital. I was in ICU. I had major brain damage. How many people can say I had major brain damage? Not many. My parents were told quote from the doctor. I was struggling to live critical condition. They said your son has had major brain damage. 3 (50m 11s): Even if he lives, he still could be a vegetable. You may still have to pull the cord and quote. And yet Californians. Our God is a great recycler. He loves to take that, which the world throws away, do something new. And that's what he did in my life and incredible healing buddy, by the act of God, do I still have the same brain? No. I think my kids will tell you. I'm a little weird. I got my idiosyncrasies, but, but the reality is it's not about us. It's what God wants to do with us. It's not about what gifts we have. It's not about, it's not about who we are. It's about whose we are. We realize it's about who we are in Christ and not about this other stuff. 3 (50m 53s): We have freedom. There's freedom in Christ because it's not about us. It's about who we are in Christ and what he wants to do with what he's given us at this time. And this day, by the way, I supposed to have serious problems with, with logic, reasoning, analytical skills and speech communications, the left frontal lobe. This whole thing was like was swelling. I've had to cut a large hole just for the swelling. You could see the swelling of the brain. Talk to a neurologist. I'll tell you that's not a minor head injury. I ended up getting my degree in finance at Texas a and M university. That's where I learned my manners. And that was a joke. You could say, you're not supposed to do that guys. I could just sit here. 3 (51m 33s): And I graduate with a finance degree, logic reasoning, 3.8, six in my major, put myself through school. Undergrad worked two years, went to one of the top 20 law schools in the country graduated the top half of my class by God's grace, because it's not about us. It's about him and what he wants to do through us and, and following his direction. It's exciting. Being a Christian. You want purpose in life, become a member of the family, of other living and powerful God that created life. Verse six for I'm already being poured out as a drink offering at the time of my departure has come. 3 (52m 16s): What's that mean? I'm about to die. People say really important things right before they're going to die. Here's what he says. I have fought the good fight I have finished the race. I have kept the faith. There is laid up for me, the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge will award to me on that day. Wait a minute, Paul, you're the Zola bin Ladin of the early church. Your name needs to be saw. It used to persecute the Christians. You are the biggest loser. The righteous judge giving you a crown of righteous. Yes. You know why? Because it wasn't based on who he was or what he'd done based on who who's. He was that he'd received Jesus Christ as his Lord and savior. And he was washed clean by the blood of the lamb. 3 (52m 59s): What about the rest of us? Oh, he responds to that. But the rest of the verse, it says, and not only to me far as awarding the crown, but also to all who have loved his appearing. You, what I love about this is that he didn't say all people who've went to confession or went to church camp or goes to church all the time, or even set a certain prayer a certain time. It's loved his appearing. There's a relationship. And you may not have a relationship with the Lord. You may have gone through religion. You may be a religious person all your life. But if you knew that Jesus was coming back tomorrow at 2:30 PM and no one knows the day of the time I get that, this is hypothetical. 3 (53m 40s): Okay. If you knew that two 30 he's coming back, what would you be thinking and feeling? Would you be loving his appearing or would you be saying to yourself, Oh shoot. At three 30, I've got a big real estate deal. I've got a corporate merger. I've got this big data I'm going on or would it possibly also be, Oh shoot, he's not going to take me. He's not going to take me. I I've got this ugly closet, this dark ugly closet. W and by the way, just for the record, everyone has a dark ugly closet. Okay. But you see, but all, but this mine's really bad. I've got stuff here. So shameful. So disgraceful, I can't even forgive myself. How can God forgive me? 3 (54m 22s): You know what you're really doing? When you say that it's like walking up to Jesus on the cross. Let's just say, he's he's right here at lacrosse bleeding and dying in pain and agony for our sins, gasping in pain and agony to bear our sins on the cross, to pay for our death penalty for our sins on the cross that he's paying for. And we walk up to him and we say, nice try Jesus. But you see, for me, that's just not good enough. In other CROs, his response to that lie was revealed when he said it is finished. 3 (55m 5s): And all's we have to do in humility is to believe it and receive it. Receive his gift of payment for our sins on the cross and surrender our lives at the foot of the cross to be a follower of Jesus. And he will separate that ugly sin. As far as the East is from the West. He will wipe, you will wash you clean from, with his blood on the cross. He will wash you clean and pure in his eyes and receive you as a child of the living God for eternity. Awesome. Some of you may, what I just shared that may just felt convicted. There's a good chance. 3 (55m 45s): That's the Holy spirit. Speaking to you, giving you the call right now to receive Jesus. And we're going to give you that opportunity to do that right now. Let's please bow your heads, father. I thank you, Lord God that you are on the throne. Thank you, Lord God, that you are the way the truth and the life through Jesus Christ, your son, and that no one comes to the father. No one gets clean. No one gets redeemed, but through faith in Jesus Christ, Lord got to pray for the believers, hearing this father right now that we will be exhorted not to follow into the, the trappings of this world. Oh Lord God, where we're tempted. And we fall, Lord God, bill that put us back up, father, Lord. And, and to be followers you Lord God, not to give up, not to turn to the left or right, but to keep her eyes on you and to share your good news father, many people right now watching this broadcast or here, even here. 3 (56m 35s): And they say to themselves, I really felt convicted when he said about shame, about not having that personal relationship, playing religion, but never receiving Jesus in a personal way and surrender my life to him as my Lord and savior. If I would pray right now, father for your Holy spirit father, to speak to them in their hearts. And w and, and if you're one of those people out there right now, just pray this prayer with me, right? Where you are just say, Lord Jesus, I'm a sinner. You know, all the garbage in my life, all the shame. And right now in faith, I receive your full payment for my sin on the cross, through Jesus Christ. 3 (57m 21s): I thank you for forgiving me for covering all my sin through dying on the cross in my place. And I receive that forgiveness right now. Thank you for forgiving me and I surrender my life to you. I want to be a follower of Jesus from now on. Thank you for being my Lord and my savior from this day forward in Jesus name. Amen. Now, if you just prayed that parameter to tell you, Satan is really ticked off because he just lost his hand, a dominion in your life in a he's hoping you. So you're going to forget what just happened. So what I'm gonna exhort you to do is to, is to contact someone, maybe contact us. 3 (58m 1s): Church give them a call, talk to them, let them know that you just made that decision that you want to grow, because we need each other as we're going to grow as Christians and they'll help you. They'll give you some, some good counsel on how to grow as a Christian and be a follower of Jesus. As we move forward today, this is not the time to hesitate. This is not the time to fear. Fear is gripping our nation, but we have not received a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and discipline, or sound mind through faith in Christ, brothers and sisters. Let us live that faith as we move forward. Amen. 2 (59m 8s): 1 (59m 35s): stop. 1 (1h 7m 46s): . 0 (1h 10m 3s): And remember, there's not much else to say, but that you are worthy. The one true and Holy God, thank you for your word this morning. Thank you for speaking to us. We pray that you would be with us this week. Give us strength to walk hard after you let me pray in Jesus name. Amen. Everybody have a great week.
Liam and Peterson welcome Diamond Stylz to the podcast. She unpacks and repackages the Book of Ruth, while she relentlessly highlights the patriarchy that fuels the narrative. Diamond Stylz is one of the premier voices among the millennial black trans community. Currently, Diamond is the Executive Director of Black Trans Women Inc, a national non-profit that is led by Black trans women focused on social advocacy, economic equity and building strong leadership among Black trans women. Diamond is the host and producer of Marsha's Plate, a weekly podcast that archives and centers the trans social justice movements and pro-black feminist culture. Diamond also contributed an essay the the anthology OtherWise Christian 2: Stories of Resistance. Liam shares the "Other Text," the poem, Gender, by Dr. Joy Ladin from her collection of poems entitled Impersonation. Dr. Ladin was a guest on Bible Bash and spoke about the story of Jonah as a metaphor for her own life. In each episode of Bible Bash Podcast, Peterson, cisgender gay Bible scholar and co-host, Liam Michael Hooper, a trans Bible scholar, take turns presenting the text. They then discuss. In addition, each episode they present another text, a non-Biblical text of note--religious or secular--that may or may not correspond to the Bible text. Bible Bash Podcast is a project of Ministries Beyond Welcome. Our theme song is Playbill by The Jellyrox. It is available on iTunes, Spotify, or through Rock Candy Recordings To share your questions, comments, requests for passages to be discussed, or suggestions for guests who can talk about texts, email Liam & Peterson: ministriesbeyondwelcome@gmail.com Bible Bash Podcast is part of the Rock Candy Network Bible Bash logo was designed by Diana Coe at Crone Communications Check out other Rock Candy podcasts Brown Suga Diaries Sacred Tension by Stephen Long Bubble&Squeak by Peterson Toscano Eleventylife by EleventySeven Common Creatives
Martha and Rob discuss the first episode of the fourth season of The Killing - Blood in the Water. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
Martha and Rob discuss the eleventh episode of the third season of The Killing - From Up Here. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
Martha and Rob discuss the twelfth episode of the third season of The Killing - The Road to Hamelin. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
Martha and Rob discuss the tenth episode of the third season of The Killing - Six Minutes. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
Martha and Rob discuss the ninth episode of the third season of The Killing - Reckoning. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
s3e8 Martha and Rob discuss the eighth episode of the third season of The Killing - Try. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
s3e7 Martha and Rob discuss the seventh episode of the third season of The Killing - Hope Kills. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
s3e6 Martha and Rob discuss the sixth episode of the third season of The Killing - Eminent Domain. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!
s3e5 Martha and Rob discuss the fifth episode of the third season of The Killing - Scared and Running. Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com. You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think. Be sure to rate us and review the episode. It really helps other people find us. Thanks!