POPULARITY
Le Plein-les-Watts Festival est de retour ! Pour sa 18ème édition, l'événement « open air » incontournable de Genève vous donne rendez-vous du 9 au 11 juillet 2026 au Parc Navazza-Oltramare de Lancy. Trois jours de musique et de partage en plein air à ne pas manquer. Découvrez la programmation complète sur […] The post Plein les Watts Festival first appeared on Radio Vostok.
Le Plein-les-Watts Festival est de retour ! Pour sa 18ème édition, l'événement « open air » incontournable de Genève vous donne rendez-vous du 9 au 11 juillet 2026 au Parc Navazza-Oltramare de Lancy. Trois jours de musique et de partage en plein air à ne pas manquer. Découvrez la programmation complète sur […] The post Plein les Watts Festival first appeared on Radio Vostok.
I Ching · Book of Changes · Part 1 of 2 (Hexagrams 1-45) The Book of Changes (Traditional: 易經; Simplified: 易经; Legge: Yî King, Wade-Giles: I Ching; Pīnyīn: Yìjīng; Bopomofo: ㄧˋㄐㄧㄥ; Korean: 역경; Japanese: 易経; Vietnamese: Kinh Dịch) Fúxī (伏羲), King Tāng of Shāng (商湯), King Wén of Zhōu (周文王), his son the Duke of Zhōu (周公旦), and Confucius (孔子) have traditionally been credited as the originators of the trigrams (八卦 bāguà), hexagrams (卦 guà), hexagram statements (彖 tuàn), line statements (爻辭 yáocí), and Ten Wings (十翼) commentaries. "The I Ching does not offer itself with proofs and results; it does not vaunt itself, nor is it easy to approach. Like a part of nature, it waits until it is discovered." — Carl Jung Different combinations of three yang (⚊) and yin (⚋) lines create the eight trigrams, namely: ☰ (乾 Qián Heaven, the sky. S. Untiring strength; power.) or (Father. NW) ☱ (兌 Duì Lake, or marsh. Collected water. SE. Pleasure; complacent satisfaction.) or (Youngest daughter. W) ☲ (離 Lí Fire, as in lightning; the sun. E. Brightness; elegance.) or (Second daughter. S) ☳ (震 Zhèn Thunder. NE. Moving, exciting power.) or (Oldest son. E) ☴ (巽 Xùn Wind; wood. SW. Flexibility; penetration.) or (Oldest daughter. SE) ☵ (坎 Kǎn Water, as in rain, clouds, springs, streams, and defiles. The moon. NW. Peril; difficulty.) or (Second son. N) ☶ (艮 Gèn Hills, or mountains. NW. Resting; the act of arresting.) or (Youngest son. NE) ☷ (坤 Kūn The Earth. N. Capaciousness; submission.) or (Mother. SW) When three lines are added to a trigram the resultant pairs of trigrams constitute the sixty-four hexagrams. The lower trigram is called 'the inner,' and the one above 'the outer.' The lines are numbered from one to six, commencing with the lowest. To denote the number of it and of the sixth line, the terms for 'commencing' and 'topmost' are used. The intermediate lines are simply 'second,' 'third,' &c. As the lines must be either whole or divided, technically called strong and weak, yang and yin, this distinction is indicated by the application to them of the numbers nine and six. All whole lines are nine, all divided lines, six. The Book of Changes is included as one of the Five Classics (五經) of the Confucian canon and Confucius said, "If some years were added to my life, I would give fifty to the study of the Yì, and might then escape falling into great errors." (Analects, VII.16) Scottish translator James Legge was a Hong Kong missionary, Non-Conformist Pastor of the English Union Church, and the first professor of Chinese studies at Oxford University. The original manuscript of his translation was nearly destroyed after being soaked in the Red Sea for a month. Cover: Leftmost Guardian of the Yî by cartoonist Robin Bougie (2024), released by him into the public domain. Special thanks to Lancy (王欣兰), a graduate student at Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, for her help with Chinese pronunciation.
Le guitariste et compositeur franco-brésilien installé à Lausanne Edwin Correia sort un nouvel album, son premier avec la chanteuse brésilienne Dandara Modesto "Chama", mêlant la richesse dʹun héritage afro-brésilien et la liberté créative du jazz. En tournée, le duo se produira le 9 mai à Neuchâtel à Emoh Leef, jeune lieu culturel co-fondé par Oscar Palmadés. Autres dates de concert : le 8 mai à la Cave Marignac dans le cadre des concerts de Lancy. Le 24 juin dans le off du festival Lavaux Classics. Edwin Correia et Oscar Palmadés sont les invités d'Anne Laure Gannac.
78,36%. C'est le taux d'abstention aux élections communales de Lancy en avril 2025. Ce qui en fait l'une des villes de Suisse romande où l'on vote le moins, étrangers et jeunes en tête. Comment en est-on arrivé là? Est-ce le reflet d'une méconnaissance institutionnelle, d'un désintérêt, d'une lucidité envers une organisation démocratique à bout de souffle? Reportages de Christophe Canut Réalisation: Mathieu Ramsauer Production: Raphaële Bouchet
Live turntable enregistré au Rooftop 106 à Lancy (Genève), le vendredi 10 octobre 2025. Une ouverture progressive et hypnotique signée Jean Lostebien, pour lancer la soirée Rooftop 105 by Marzan Prod. Live turntable at Rooftop 106, Lancy. ℗ & © 2025 Marzan Prod. MP 310 – 10.10.25 - Switzerland. Playlist 1. Markus Schulz presents Dakota - Before the Light Knew [Black Hole Recordings] 2. London Grammar - Into Gold (Kitty Amor Remix) [Black Hole Recordings] 3. Woo York Feat. Mark Tarmonea - Feeling (Korolova Remix) [Watergate Records] 4. Rebūke - Glow [ERA] 5. Markus Schulz & BLR - Ten Seconds Before Sunrise (Extended Mix) [Black Hole Recordings] 6. KISS - I Was Made For Lovin You (Alar and Korolova Remix) [CDR] 7. Swimming Paul - Fading (Extended) [Headroom Records] 8. Deep Dish X Eynka Feat. Wrabel - Midnight (Extended Mix) [Armada Music] 9. Nic Vegter & Raz Nitzan Pres. Solid Globe - North Pole (BLR Extended Mix) [RNM] 10. Eelke Kleijn - Regenerator (Extended Mix) [DAYS like NIGHTS] 11. Faithless vs David Guetta - God Is A DJ (Extended Mix) [Ministry of Sound Recordings] 12. HI-LO vs. Kx5 & HAYLA - Reese vs. Escape (Oliver Heldens Mashup) [CDR] 13. Sasha & Super Flu - Astra (Sasha's Daydream mix) [Last Night On Earth] 14. Astral Projection - Mahadeva (Save the Robot Remix) [Iboga Records]
Créée il y a 30 ans dans la ville de Lancy, lʹassociation " La Virgule " pour lutter contre le sans-abrisme, inaugure aujourdʹhui un nouveau projet. Un pavillon de 11 places d'hébergements d'urgence. Pour soutenir la création de ce pavillon construit il y a peu, Cristina Picco- Rivera directrice de " La Virgule " a décidé de monter de toutes pièces un rendez-vous culturel inédit, intitulé le " Chrono Festival ". Il se tiendra ce samedi 30 août de 10h à 23h. Un festival où le public pourra voir sur scène, le rappeur Monkey Dola, Salvaje, la chanteuse Fanny Leeb, le groupe " Imperial Road " ainsi que " Les Stevans ". Sans oublier un groupe dʹhumoristes suisses, issu du " Caustic Comedy Club ", Cristina Picco- Rivera, directrice de lʹassociation est au micro de Layla Shlonsky.
La Fondation Clair Bois fête ses 50 ans. Son directeur Alain Kolly, était invité de Béatrice Rul, à 7h30, sur Radio Lac. La Fondation Clair Bois fête ses 50 ans. 50 ans où elle a œuvré à faire évoluer l'image des personnes en situation de handicap dans la société…"Exactement, c'est une fondation qui a pris place sur le canton de Genève avec notamment la création d'un premier foyer à Lancy, d'une école qui a reçu des enfants et puis ensuite évidemment qui s'est adaptée au fil du temps aux différents besoins et aux évolutions des attentes de la société. Aujourd'hui c'est une fondation qui a plus de 600 collaborateurs, on a 347 personnes que l'on accompagne au quotidien et nous sommes très fiers de fêter ses 50 ans cette année pour à la fois montrer notre travail. Mais aussi nos portes pour les familles, pour les proches et essayer de trouver un moyen aussi de réconcilier les attentes des familles avec le travail de la fondation Clair Bois".Il y avait, effectivement, eu des tensions avec les proches, avec le Covid"Oui et c'est bien normal finalement. Les proches, les familles sont évidemment très à l'écoute des besoins des personnes qui nous sont confiées et donc elles veulent naturellement le meilleur pour elles. La fondation, notamment après le Covid, a dû aussi adapter un peu ses moyens, adapter sa manière de faire et donc ça a créé effectivement parfois des malentendus que nous sommes aujourd'hui en train de mettre à plat et d'expliquer finalement cet engagement extraordinaire de nos équipes au quotidien qui essayent de faire le mieux et qui essayent aussi d'adapter finalement les prestations qui sont données à cette évolution des attentes et des besoins".Le scandale du foyer de Mancy a mis en lumière ce type d'établissement:"C'est pour ça qu'on a deux journées portes ouvertes mais c'est aussi pour ça que par exemple nos restaurants sont ouverts au public, que c'est toujours possible de s'intéresser à ce qu'on fait. On a beaucoup de partenariats avec les communes, comme Carouge ou la Ville de Genève, ou Lancy, par exemple sur des écoles intégrées dans les écoles publiques et ce qui veut dire que notre volonté aussi c'est d'ouvrir vraiment ces portes pour voir que le travail qui est fait est un travail professionnel. On peut toujours s'améliorer, c'est sûr, mais donc il faut réussir à faire comprendre que non, la fondation Clair Bois, comme toutes les autres fondations, ne sont pas des endroits fermés, ce sont des endroits ouverts où les personnes reçoivent le meilleur accompagnement possible"Le personnel avait dénoncé les conditions de travail, pendant la pandémie:"Ça s'améliore. Evidemment, c'est toujours souvent une question de moyens mais aussi une question d'organisation et je crois que c'est par le dialogue qu'on arrive à régler ces questions là. C'est pour ça qu'on a toute une série de démarches qui sont en cours et ces 50 ans doivent nous permettre véritablement cette réconciliation si j'ose utiliser ce terme"
Gehört ihr zu den Menschen, die morgens aus dem Bett hüpfen und auf den neuen Tag mit einem “Ja, ich schaffe das!” blicken? Oder seid ihr doch eher Leute, die im Geiste erstmal durchgehen, was heute alles schwierig wird und schiefgehen kann? Leon und Atze sprechen über das Vertrauen in die eigenen Fähigkeiten: Was bewirkt es und wie können wir mehr davon bekommen? Aber Vorsicht: Zu viel Vertrauen in sich selbst kann auch schaden! Fühlt euch gut betreut Leon & Atze Start ins heutige Thema: 13:52 min. VVK Münster 2025: https://betreutes-fuehlen.ticket.io/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/leonwindscheid/ https://www.instagram.com/atzeschroeder_offiziell/ Der Instagram Account für Betreutes Fühlen: https://www.instagram.com/betreutesfuehlen/ Mehr zu unseren Werbepartnern findet ihr hier: https://linktr.ee/betreutesfuehlen Tickets: Atze: https://www.atzeschroeder.de/#termine Leon: https://leonwindscheid.de/tour/ Es geht am Anfang um Suizid und Atze spricht eine Nummer an, wo man Hilfr kriegt. Die lautet 0800 111 0 111. Noch mehr Hilfsangebote gibts hier: https://www.suizidprophylaxe.de/hilfsangebote/hilfsangebote/ Wichtige Quellen: Online-Studie von Eva Asselmann zum Mitmachen: (Für Erwachsene zwischen 18 und 30 Jahren) https://selftie-studie.de/ Review zur Frage, wie sich Selbstwirksamkeit auf Körper und Geist auswirkt: Schönfeld, P. et al. (2017). Costs and benefits of self-efficacy: Differences of the stress response and clinical implications. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 75:40-52. Doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2017.01.031 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0149763416302718 Review zu verschiedenen Interventionen: Ashford, S. et al. (2010). What is the best way to change self-efficacy to promote lifestyle and recreational physical activity? A systematic review with meta-analysis. Br J Health Psychol. 15(2):265-288. Doi: 10.1348/135910709X461752 https://bpspsychub.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1348/135910709X461752 Meta-Analyse zum Zusammenspiel von Erfolgserfahrungen und Selbstwirksamkeitserwartung: Talsma, K. et al. (2018). I believe, therefore I achieve (and vice versa): A meta-analytic cross-lagged panel analysis of self-efficacy and academic performance. Learn Ind Diff. 61:136-150. Doi: 10.1016/j.lindif.2017.11.015 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S104160801730211X Die ARD-Doku, die Leon empfiehlt https://www.ardmediathek.de/video/ard-wissen/mein-koerper-meine-brueste-was-soll-der-hype/swr/Y3JpZDovL3N3ci5kZS9hZXgvbzIxNDU3MDg Der Bericht der 50 Fachleute: McGorry, P. D., Mei, C., Dalal, N., Alvarez-Jimenez, M., Blakemore, S. J., Browne, V., ... & Killackey, E. (2024). The Lancet Psychiatry Commission on youth mental health. The Lancet Psychiatry, 11(9), 731-774. Der Bericht in der ZEIT: https://www.zeit.de/2024/36/psychische-stoerungen-kinder-jugendliche-eltern-erkennen Mögliche Ursache der psy. Probleme bei Kindern: Gray, P., Lancy, D. F., & Bjorklund, D. F. (2023). Decline in independent activity as a cause of decline in children's mental well-being: summary of the evidence. The Journal of pediatrics, 260. Redaktion: Stefanie Uhrig Produktion: Murmel Productions
V'là les bonnes nouvelles du mercredi 27 novembre 2024 La ville de Lancy dit non à la pub dans l'espace public, ce qui fait moins de papier gaspillé et moins de pollution visuelle. À Genève, le budget fraichement voté pour planter des arbres dans la ville vient renforcer cette logique: […] The post Lancy dit non à la pub #JDBN first appeared on Radio Vostok.
V'là les bonnes nouvelles du mercredi 27 novembre 2024 La ville de Lancy dit non à la pub dans l'espace public, ce qui fait moins de papier gaspillé et moins de pollution visuelle. À Genève, le budget fraichement voté pour planter des arbres dans la ville vient renforcer cette logique: […] The post Lancy dit non à la pub #JDBN first appeared on Radio Vostok.
Ils sont plus de 320 à soutenir l'achat de la maison de Zep par la Ville. Un collectif s'est constitué pour défendre ce projet et le crédit de 21,5 millions de francs, voté par le Municipal, la semaine dernière. Ayari Félix Beltrametti, conseillère municipale Verte en Ville de Genève, membre du collectif de soutien au futur parc de la campagne Masset était invitée de Béatrice Rul, à 7h30, sur Radio Lac. Vous faites partie de ce comité, qui soutient l'achat de la maison de Zep, par la Ville. Achat de 21,5 millions de francs, menacé par un référendum. Après la passerelle du Mont-Blanc à 54 millions, vous nous faites le coup de la Villa à 21,5. Vous ne vous moqueriez pas un peu de nous?"Non, je ne pense pas du tout que ce soit une moquerie, je pense que c'est une opportunité extraordinaire, unique et qu'il ne faut surtout pas la manquer, pour rendre un petit peu d'égalité dans un quartier déjà très dense et précarisé. Le budget de la Ville de Genève est de 1,5 milliard, on a un budget d'investissement de 180 millions annuels, on a des grosses rénovations comme le bâtiment d'art contemporain ou le muséum qui coûte 40 millions. Il faut garder juste les proportions de ce que c'est un budget Ville de Genève. Il n'y a quasiment pas d'opportunité d'acquérir du foncier, en Ville. Le prix a été évalué et par la Ville et par le canton, il est plus que juste. Monsieur Chapuis (Zep) descend le prix pour la Ville de Genève à 21,5 millions au lieu de 25, donc non ce n'est pas du tout dilapider l'argent public"On ne peut pas en faire n'importe quoi: la maison est classée, comme une partie du terrain. Ca ressemble à une très chère coquille vide…Elle est classée, donc c'est clairement un objet patrimonial. Mais on a plusieurs exemples dans le canton de bâtisses comme celle-ci qui sont extrêmement bien utilisées, notamment la Villa Bernasconi à Lancy qui a, à peu près, les mêmes enjeux en termes de conservation et qui est utilisée tous les jours par des enfants et des artistes"
Les Lancéens décideront le 24 novembre prochain, s'ils veulent ou pas de la publicité commerciale, dans leurs rues. Le conseiller municipal socialiste, en ville de Lancy, Nicolas Clémence et partisan de cette interdiction, était invité de Béatrice Rul, à 7h30. Vous souhaitez la suppression de la publicité dans l'espace public. Mais pas la publicité pour les associations culturelles ou sportives. La pollution visuelle est donc sélective?"Elle n'est pas sélective, elle est simplement de se dire que l'espace public appartient à tous, et donc ce qui est d'intérêt public peut être affichée dans l'espace public. Par contre, la publicité commerciale serait supprimée de la rue. L'intérêt financier des affiches commerciales peut être intéressant selon ce que ça rapporte. En l'occurrence, ça ne rapporte pas tant que ça en regard du budget communal. 250 000 francs est annoncés mais pour l'instant, ça rapporte plutôt 60 000 francs jusqu'à la fin de l'année.C'est un montant qui représente 0,1 % du budget communal. Donc, il y a d'autres sources de revenus pour assurer les prestations".
Le 24 novembre, les Lancéens décideront s'ils veulent encore de la publicité dans l'espace public. Jean-Adrien Lorenzini, le président du Centre à Lancy, était invité de Béatrice Rul, à 7h30, sur Radio Lac.Vous vous opposé à ce règlement, voté par le Municipal de Lancy, via un référendum. C'est vrai que la publicité dans les Villes, c'est tellement beau…"En tout cas, ce n'est pas moche, ça c'est sûr. Je ne suis pas forcément fan, mais je ne pense pas qu'elle dérange plus que ça et ça ne mérite pas forcément une interdiction pure et dure"Vous assurez que les commerçants locaux ne seront plus autorisés à faire de la publicité dans leurs vitrines en cas d'acceptation. Il y a une interdiction de la publicité commerciale, mais pas la publicité pour «compte propre», c'est à dire celle des commerçants est toujours autorisée"La publicité pour compte propre, elle détermine certains types de publicités. Par exemple, un commerçant ne pourrait plus afficher des promotions pour des produits. Typiquement, un magasin de jouets, s'il fait une promotion pour des Lego, ne pourrait plus l'afficher. A partir du moment où il y a une forme d'interventionnisme sur les vitrines, on considère que ce n'est pas normal. On devrait trouver des alternatives pour ne pas les impacter directement".
Animation du quartier du Vélodrome à Plan-les-Ouates
In this episode, Ken Lain The Mountain Gardener is joined by Wendi Lancy, the chair for the Prescott Rotary's Grapes for Good event. This event is coming up on September 29th from 5:00 pm-8:00 pm at Watters Garden Center. The garden center transforms into "A Garden Party" and is a great fundraiser that goes to causes that support education, strong business ethics, better communities, ending polio, and improving leadership skills. Want to know more about this event? Listen in!Listen to Mountain Gardener on Cast11: https://cast11.com/mountain-gardener-with-ken-lain-gardening-podcast/Follow Cast11 on Facebook: https://Facebook.com/CAST11AZFollow Cast11 on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cast11_podcast_network/
Le Plein-les-Watts Festival, un événement incontournable de la scène musicale genevoise, revient pour sa 16ème édition du 11 au 13 juillet 2024 au Parc-Navazza-Oltramare de Lancy. Organisé par l'association à but non lucratif Plein-les-Watts, ce festival met à l'honneur le reggae avec des têtes d'affiche internationales comme Steel Pulse, Ky-Mani Marley, et Marcia Griffiths. Cette année, le festival innove avec de nouvelles scènes et espaces, promettant une expérience unique pour tous les âges. Pour en savoir plus, nous avons interrogé Nicolas Clémence, secrétaire général de l'association.
Le Festival Éclaté revient pour sa cinquième édition du 2 au 11 juillet 2024 au Parc des Bastions, proposant six soirées gratuites de spectacles d'arts de rue. Organisé par l'association ALARUE avec le soutien de divers partenaires, le festival se déroulera dans trois communes genevoises : Carouge, Lancy, et la Vieille-Ville de Genève. Chaque soirée débutera à 19h30 et proposera des spectacles variés allant du théâtre de rue aux arts du cirque, en passant par le fakirisme, la jonglerie et la musique. Les représentations se tiendront à divers endroits, avec des spectacles adaptés à tous les publics. Le festival, créé par Joane Reymond, a su fidéliser un public croissant depuis ses débuts, offrant une expérience artistique unique en plein air. Cette année, ALARUE prend en charge l'organisation, succédant à la Cie Mine de Rien, tout en maintenant Joane Reymond à la direction artistique qui nous en parle.
Le Festival Plein-Les-Watts revient à Genève du 11 au 13 juillet 2024. Au programme : trois soirées de concerts reggae avec des artistes internationaux de renom comme Steel Pulse, Ky-Mani Marley, Luciano et Marcia Griffiths. On s'entretient avec Nicolas Clémence, secrétaire général et responsable programmation, presse et communication pour en […] The post Plein-Les-Watts 2024: le gratin du reggae à Lancy first appeared on Radio Vostok.
Le Festival Plein-Les-Watts revient à Genève du 11 au 13 juillet 2024. Au programme : trois soirées de concerts reggae avec des artistes internationaux de renom comme Steel Pulse, Ky-Mani Marley, Luciano et Marcia Griffiths. On s'entretient avec Nicolas Clémence, secrétaire général et responsable programmation, presse et communication pour en […] The post Plein-Les-Watts 2024: le gratin du reggae à Lancy first appeared on Radio Vostok.
A lot of us take great confidence in our technical skills. We may be the very best at our jobs of all the competition, but if we cannot connect on a personal level then we are going to struggle. Join me in this episode as Lance Cayko walks through his journey of learning to connect with others, and eventually with God. So often we run from God - or at least from what we think God represents. Yet, God patiently draws us back to Himself. The truth always points to Him. You can find Lance's podcast at https://www.insidethefirmpodcast.com/ You can follow his fishing adventures at Fishing With Lance.
Ne l'appelez plus la patinoire de Trèfle-Blanc, mais le Nid des Aigles! La future enceinte du Genève-Servette a été présentée, mardi: 8500 places, deux glaces, un toit recouvert de panneaux photovoltaïques, mais aussi des surfaces commerciales sur près de 20'000 m². Ouverture prévue pour 2028. Le projet est exposé jusqu'à jeudi prochain, à l'Event Center de la Praille. Thierry Apothéloz, le conseiller d'Etat chargé des Sports, était invité de Béatrice Rul, à 7h30, sur Radio Lac.Vous avez présenté, hier, le projet lauréat pour la patinoire du Trèfle Blanc. Genève va avoir enfin une nouvelle patinoire!"C'est très enthousiasmant, c'est une belle œuvre qui sera proposée aux Genevoises et aux Genevois. Elle répond, aussi, aux besoins du club et de Lancy. La deuxième patinoire pourra être utilisée par le grand public. Il y a également un restaurant, une médiathèque. C'est un ensemble qui a été bien pensé et qui est magnifique d'un point de vue architecturale"Des plateaux multiformes, s'ouvrant sur des terrasses et des galeries vitrées, pour une capacité de 8500 places. Soit 1500 de plus que les Vernets. Enfin une patinoire digne des champions de Suisse et d'Europe…"La Ligue suisse avait clairement demandé une nouvelle patinoire. Il faut changer d'époque. On soutient une académie de jeu avec des horaires terribles et les jeunes avaient besoin d'avoir une glace, à eux".
Et voici les bonnes nouvelles du mardi 13 février 2024 : Edwy Plenel, co-fondateur de Mediapart, tire sa révérence et à Genève la commune de Lancy a interdit la pub dans ses rues. Edwy Plenel tire sa révérence S'il y a bien un média de référence, c'est Mediapart en France […] The post Edwy Plenel tire sa révérence #JDBN first appeared on Radio Vostok.
Depuis peu, l'IMAD, l'institution genevoise de maintien à domicile a investi des locaux flambants neufs situés sur l'esplanade de Pont-Rouge, à Lancy. Un bâtiment ultra moderne détaillé par Antoine Bazin, le directeur des projets stratégiques.
Production et présentation: Jean-Marc Richard Conseillère musicale: Judith Zieri Réalisation: Laurence Boss Technique: Stéphane Tornare, Charlotte Fernandez Accueil: David Mendes Attachée de production: Dyane Dufault FORMATIONS: Fanfare Les Joyeux Retraités Suisse Chérie Red Sticks Sunday Jazz Avenir de Châtelaine
Wij hebben zelf als kind veel buiten gespeeld, hutten bouwen, nieuwe spelletjes bedenken en de omgeving verkennen met je buurkinderen. Uit wetenschappelijk onderzoek blijkt dat kinderen tegenwoordig veel minder vaak buiten spelen zonder dat er toezicht is. Dat heeft te maken met de toegenomen verkeersdrukte en angst voor criminaliteit. Maar is het wel zo verstandig om kinderen nauwelijks zonder toezicht te laten spelen? In deze aflevering bespreken we een artikel dat ingaat op het belang van zonder toezicht spelen en naar school gaan voor de mentale gezondheid van kinderen. Onderzoek: Dr. Anita Eerland, prof.dr. Rolf ZwaanPresentatie: Rolf Zwaan & Anita EerlandMuziek: Rolf ZwaanBronnenGray, P., Lancy, D. F., & Bjorklund, D. F. (2023). Decline in Independent Activity as a Cause of Decline in Children's Mental Well-being: Summary of the Evidence. The Journal of Pediatrics, 260, 113352. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2023.02.004Website met grappige correlaties: https://tylervigen.com/spurious-correlationsEen compleet overzicht met alle thema's uit de podcast en de bijbehorende afleveringen is hier te vinden. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Segment 4, October 28th, 2023 A recent study by Peter Gray, a researcher in psychology & neuroscience at Boston College joined with David Bjorklund from Florida Atlantic University & David Lancy, an anthropologist & professor from Utah State argues that the crisis that has befallen U.S. youth can be traced to a lack of independence. Lancy stated that the three authors were "struck by the shrinkage in the amount of time that children spend on their own & the territory they may explore..." during an interview with Caitlin Gibson of the Washington Post. This along with the published theory of Richard Louv in his 2005 book "Last Child in the Woods" coined the term Nature Deficit Disorder. This was from children now spending much more time indoors than in previous generations. The gang at the Carolina Outdoors isn't for promoting high risk activities in children but feel that the promotion of being outside, enjoying a hike, some time fly fishing, or even a permitted bike ride in the neighborhood helps build independence and a healthy, mental state & disposition. In other words, make your kids spend some portion of their week outdoors.
Dr. Peter Gray from Boston College, discusses the article: Decline in Independent Activity as a Cause of Decline in Children's Mental Wellbeing: Summary of the Evidence published with David Lancy and David Bjorklund. We talk about the causes of the rise in mental disorders for children, and spoiler alert, it seems to be the lack of play! This is the organization Dr. Gray discussed https://letgrow.org/ (Let Grow) Full Cite: Gray, P., Lancy, D. F., & Bjorklund, D. F. (2023). Decline in independent activity as a cause of decline in children's mental wellbeing: Summary of the evidence. The Journal of Pediatrics. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2023.02.004 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pwrhpe/support
Culture in general plays an important role in human development and particularly childhood is shaped by culture. Not so long ago raising children was considered rather noisy, dirty, tedious and anything but pleasant. However, those living in WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic) societies that make up about 12% of the world's population have perpetuated over-protective child-rearing practices and principals while ignoring the cultural wisdom of the rest of the world. With this rise in parental hyper-vigilance in creating independent children, there is a growing trend that parents are turning everything in the child's life into a learning/teaching opportunity, which is a likely source of learned helplessness and a predictable path to a failure to launch.On this episode, anthropologist, researcher, and author and Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Utah State University, David Lancy, discusses the loss of autonomy and freedom in WEIRD societies and the relationship between how we raise children and the eventual likelihood of a failure to launch and the insecurity, anxiety, and breakdown in executive function. About David F LancyDavid Lancy has done extensive cross-cultural fieldwork with children as the focus. His most important work, just published in a third edition, is The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings. That scholarly book was paired by a popular version in 2017, entitled Raising Children: Surprising Insights From Other Cultures. In total, Lancy has authored nine books and edited three. A new work on pedagogy in culture is in progress. Publishers have included Academic Press, Cambridge, Longman, Praeger and Oxford. He has also authored over eighty articles and book chapters.Website:https://www.davidlancy.org/Books:The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattels, ChangelingsRaising Children: Surprising Insights from Other CulturesAbout Host, Sucheta KamathSucheta Kamath, is an award-winning speech-language pathologist, a TEDx speaker, a celebrated community leader, and the founder and CEO of ExQ®. As an EdTech entrepreneur, Sucheta has designed ExQ's personalized digital learning curriculum/tool that empowers middle and high school students to develop self-awareness and strategic thinking skills through the mastery of Executive Function and social-emotional competence.Support the show
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Violaine Lochu tells us about her fascination with voice, which led to her art, and how this materializes in her performances and installations. She also talks about her thoughts on being a woman in her field, her work process, and all the forms her art can take. Violaine Lochu shares her fascination on voice and how she uses it for her art, a transdisciplinary practice which takes its roots in encounters with humans and non-humans and voice recordings. She talks about her process, her discipline and emotional connection to her art, her views on being a woman artist, and speaks about her upcoming exhibition at the Galerie Analix Forever: MblaHah. Conversation Highlights How Violaine uses voice in her art The role of improvisation, and an improvised performance night Being a woman in the arts for Violaine Violaine's upcoming exhibition at Galerie Analix Forever: MblaHah To learn more about our guests and our podcast, please visit rawradical.com This podcast is supported by Pro Helvetia the swiss arts council, The city of Lancy, and the Republic and Canton of Geneva, Switzerland --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
Bike Talk with Dave: Bicycle racing, cyclocross, gravel, mountain bike, road and tech
Lance Haidet juggles racing on the road, gravel mountain bike and cyclocross at the highest level while studying mechanical engineering at Cal Poly. As the 2019 U23 U.S. National Road Race Champion he caught the eye of Justin and Cory Williams and the Legion of LA race team and joined for 2o20. Legion of LA has allowed him to explore the world of gravel as well continue in cyclocross and mountain bike racing while supporting the criterium-heavy Legion team. In 2022 he was accepted as one of 30 competitors in the six-race Lifetime Grand Prix. He and Dave connected the week before the final race in Bentonville in mid-October.Be sure and follow his adventures throughout this cyclocross season, but also on the road, gravel and mountain bike all year long! You can find him on instagram at @Lancy_pants. and follow the entire Legion team at @Legion of Los Angeles. He did wrap up the Lifetime Grand Prix series at the BigSugar Gravel race in Bentonville Arkansas where he finished 18th in the 104 mile race in 5 hours 13 minutes. That place kept him in 10th for the Lifetime Grand Prix - final paying spot.BIGSUGAR RESULTSLIFETIME GRAND PRIX LEADERBOARDWatch YouTube: Lance Haidet Talks with Dave Mable at 2021 Fayetteville CXWorld CupCheck out Episode no. 3 of Bike Talk with Dave to listen to Lance, along with then National CX Champ Gauge Hecht and Becca Farringer talk about their 2021 cyclocross seasons and how they managed during the summer and fall of 2020. Thanks again for listening to Bike Talk with Dave! I'd love if if you'd be so kind as to support the show by rating and reviewing, and sharing with friends! If you'd like to support the show financially, and help me make this podcast better, you can go to BuyMeACoffee.com or hit me on Venmo at David.Mable- If you do I'll send you a Bike Talk with Dave sticker!https://www.buymeacoffee.com/dmable122QAnd, as a reminder, as a Bike Talk with Dave listener, you're welcome to a free three-month subscription to the Adventure Plus streaming platform! Its a streaming service with hundreds of independent adventure films! Just click the link in the show notes and get registered for a free 90 day subscription and then you can watch more than 600 films on cycling, skiing, surfing, running, mountain and rock climbing- pretty much all the cool stuff! Head on over to adventureplus.com click the link in the show notes for the free trial!https://adventureplus.com/orders/complete_order?o=76196I want to thank bikeiowa.com for being the online host of Bike Talk with Dave - BikeIowa.com where you can find all kinds of cycling events news, information and trails in Iowa and around the midwest!Bike Talk with Dave is a production of Summit Media Films, an award-winning indy film company that is not afraid of snow. Check out our films at AdventurePlus.com with your free 90 day subscription!
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Olivia Fahmy tells us about her background as an art historian in relation to her curatorial work, the co-founding and running of the independent art space Tunnel Tunnel, and the question of heritage, particularly attached to her recent curation of African contemporary art. Show summary Olivia Fahmy begins by tracing back to her roots: how she developed an interest in art history which propelled her to current career, explaining that she initially didn't have encouraged exposure to the art world. She goes on elaborating on the question of heritage and legitimacy, having Egyptian parents. She co-founded an independent art space, Tunnel Tunnel, and talks about the experience of this collective and what they strive to achieve through their projects, with a highlight on diversity and multiplicity. She speaks about the relation between curatorial work and societal changes, being a woman in her field of work, the reshaping of education, discrepancies in matters of equality and identity, the panel discussions on photography she has created, and women photographers. She mentions artists such as Sim chin Yin, Leobang Thlako and Sabine Weiss. Finally, Olivia ends off with a word of advice for artists to fight against inequality and to be empowered. Conversation Highlights Origins, heritage, legitimacy Tunnel Tunnel and how curating exhibitions contributes to changes in society Intersectionality, identity and diaspora art To learn more about our guests and our podcast, please visit rawradical.com This podcast is supported by Pro Helvetia the swiss arts council, The city of Lancy, and the Republic and Canton of Geneva, Switzerland --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
La Ville de Lancy inaugure ce lundi 17 octobre un événement dénommé " Mosaïque Urbaine" sur le thème de l'identité. Jusqu'au 17 novembre, la localité va mettre en consultation son nouveau plan directeur communal. Mélissa Nahory la responsable de la section urbanisme ainsi qu'Angèle Canelli, urbaniste junior, toutes les deux, à la Ville de Lancy détaillent le concept avec Epiphane Amanfo.
Lance Kinsey (whom we've decided to call Uncle Lance- you'll hear) joins us to talk about how improv and the second city method influenced the writing and directing of his movie "All Stars" (Featuring multiple Second City Alums), and how it continues to inform his process today. Lance's interview was recorded shortly after the passing of his good friend and Second City Legend Mike Haggerty (Joyce had to find him another job so he would stop doing Second City shows) and this episode is dedicated in memory of Haggs.Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/secondcitizenspod/Twitter: https://twitter.com/SecondCitizens_
Lancy annonce ses 46 mesures pour économiser l'énergie ! La Ville de Lancy a arrêté un plan de mesures d'économies visant à limiter le risque de pénurie durant l'hiver 2022 – 2023. Ce plan, constitué de mesures concrètes et de recommandations, s'adresse au personnel de l'administration communale, aux locataires des bâtiments appartenant à la Commune et plus globalement à l'ensemble des usagères et usagers des infrastructures communales. Explications avec Madame Salima Moyard, Maire de Lancy au micro de Damien Demenus.
(Interview starts at 2.10) Welcome to Season Four of the Untaming Podcast! It is currently the First Quarter of the Waking Moon here in the Southern Hemisphere. David Lancy is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Utah State University. His current research interests centre on the anthropology of childhood, in particular, the study of delayed personhood, the chore curriculum, children as a reserve labor force, children growing up in a Neontocracy, how children acquire their culture, socio-historical analyses of schooling, and the culture of street kids. Further Information: Book: Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3542180-the-anthropology-of-childhood Book: Raising Children: Surprising Insights from Other Cultures: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/35223743-raising-children David's Website: https://chass.usu.edu/davidlancyspages/index.html Untaming Contact: FB: https://www.facebook.com/Untaming-396582437559159/ IG: @untaming_podcast Twitter: @UntamingP Email: untaming.podcast@gmail.com https://anchor.fm/emily033
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Nadine Wietlishbach talks about her career as a curator and her philosophy in relation to exhibitions and art, and insights on being a woman in her environment. Nadine Wietlishbach has an unusual background for her career as a curator and museum director: she has no formal education or background in arts history. But her immense curiosity and interest for visual arts in all its mediums has propelled her to her current standing. In this episode we discuss the catalyst of her interest in visual arts, where she draws inspiration from, her approach and vision on exhibition creation and the space that surrounds it, the reality of contemporary photography being a medium of exclusion, and her punk attitude coasting through her career. Conversation Highlights Nadine's background and inspiration The art of making exhibitions Photography: a medium of exclusion On Institutions' social responsibilities & the punk attitude To learn more about our guests and our podcast, please visit rawradical.com This podcast is supported by Pro Helvetia the swiss arts council, The city of Lancy and the Republic and Canton of Geneva, Switzerland --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Founder of the Women Photographers International Archive (WOPHA), Aldeide Delgado comes in to talk about her organization, the ongoing research project that unveiled the work of past generations of women artists/photographers in Cuba, leading to a career defined by her contributions to photography, empowering women and gender equality through establishing meaningful connections and threads across multiple organizations, eventually redefining art history. Show Summary Aldeide Delgado has been on a mission to uncover lost art and artists, particularly women photographers, particularly in Cuba, where she started out. She founded the Women Photographers International Archive (WOPHA). While studying art history she noticed a gap in the curriculum that had failed to notice women in the history of Cuban Photography before the 90s. This has led to her ongoing research that aims to uncover some of this lost art and forgotten women photographers. This in turn led to the creation of WOPHA – Women Photographers International Archive, a rising non profit, and the first edition of a free international congress that gathers artists and numerous organizations with similar interests. She discusses the challenges of the research, the “Fast Forward Manifesto”, and the highlights of the Congress. Conversation Highlights Redefining art history by unveiling lost photography of women in Cuba and its challenges WOPHA and the first Congress The Fast Forward Manifesto To learn more about our guests and our podcast, please visit rawradical.com This podcast is supported by Pro Helvetia the swiss arts council, The city of Lancy and the Republic and Canton of Geneva, Switzerland --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
Le festival Plein les Watts a lieu cette année au parc Navazza à Lancy du 14 au 16 juillet. Durant 3 soirées, 12 artistes ou groupes se produiront en live. Il y aura également 13 shows de DJ, de la nourriture et des stands d'artisanat. Nicolas Clémence, membre du staff d'organisation en parle au micro d'Epiphane Amanfo.
A Lancy, près de Genève, les 1 et 2 juillet, le Transforme Festival conjugue formation professionnelle et hip-hop. Et sʹoffre un plateau de choix avec notamment la superstar franco-algérienne Soolking. Au micro de Thierry Sartoretti, explications du duo Caroline Grondahl et Renaud Durussel. www.transforme-festival.ch
Le Transforme Festival c'est pour les 1er et 2 juillet à Lancy, Caroline Grøndahl la directrice en parle avec Épiphane Amanfo.
You will want to get a regularly updated Reconstruction Cost Estimate. Make sure that this is up to date and accurate. Get the maximum available dwelling replacement extension coverage. Make sure that you have sufficient ordinance and law coverage based on the age of your home. Make sure that you have enough loss of use coverage to provide housing for your family while you rebuild. You will want Actual Loss Sustained for 24 months or a dollar amount that would provide similar coverage. Make sure that you're covered for 24 months. Many policies only cover 12 months.Finally, do an accounting of your personal property and take pictures or videos of your possessions. This will be extremely valuable in the claims process. Make sure that you have enough coverage to replace these items, and make sure that you have “replacement cost contents” loss settlement for personal property on your insurance policy. Many policies will have “Actual Cash Value” loss settlement.I was lucky to grow up on a small farm in Southeastern Ohio. It was a kind of idyllic childhood surrounded by fields and forests. When I graduated high school, I was looking for adventure, so I booked a one-way ticket to Anchorage, Alaska with vague ideas of making a fortune in the frontier. I discovered that the few thousand bucks I had saved from growing and selling melons wasn't going to go far in the real world, and I started roughing it and hitch-hiking. A few months later I had made it as far as Mexico City when my money ran out and I headed home. The seed that the trip had planted grew into years of adventures throughout the world, including working as a mountain guide in Peru and teaching English throughout East Asia and Latin America. In my mid-twenties, I met my wife Lancy and we moved back to Ohio. While looking for jobs I stumbled across an advertisement saying, “Tower Climbers Wanted.” I applied, and a few months later I got a call and a job offer. On the first day we climbed 400 feet in the air to change some bolts on an old tower, and I was hooked. I spent the next 5 years travelling around the United States while building, repairing, and decommissioning cell towers and cell equipment. Eventually, the constant wear and tear on my body took its toll and I had to find something else to do for a living. Through a roundabout journey this led me to the insurance industry! I am now an independent agent with Trailstone Insurance Group focusing on helping people master the defensive portion of their financial strategy. I love what I do and try to treat every client like a friend.Learn More: https://trailstoneinsurancegroup.com/morgan-lloyd/Influential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-morgan-lloyd-independent-insurance-agent-with-trailstone-insurance-group-insurance-for-short-term-rentals
You will want to get a regularly updated Reconstruction Cost Estimate. Make sure that this is up to date and accurate. Get the maximum available dwelling replacement extension coverage. Make sure that you have sufficient ordinance and law coverage based on the age of your home. Make sure that you have enough loss of use coverage to provide housing for your family while you rebuild. You will want Actual Loss Sustained for 24 months or a dollar amount that would provide similar coverage. Make sure that you're covered for 24 months. Many policies only cover 12 months.Finally, do an accounting of your personal property and take pictures or videos of your possessions. This will be extremely valuable in the claims process. Make sure that you have enough coverage to replace these items, and make sure that you have “replacement cost contents” loss settlement for personal property on your insurance policy. Many policies will have “Actual Cash Value” loss settlement.I was lucky to grow up on a small farm in Southeastern Ohio. It was a kind of idyllic childhood surrounded by fields and forests. When I graduated high school, I was looking for adventure, so I booked a one-way ticket to Anchorage, Alaska with vague ideas of making a fortune in the frontier. I discovered that the few thousand bucks I had saved from growing and selling melons wasn't going to go far in the real world, and I started roughing it and hitch-hiking. A few months later I had made it as far as Mexico City when my money ran out and I headed home. The seed that the trip had planted grew into years of adventures throughout the world, including working as a mountain guide in Peru and teaching English throughout East Asia and Latin America. In my mid-twenties, I met my wife Lancy and we moved back to Ohio. While looking for jobs I stumbled across an advertisement saying, “Tower Climbers Wanted.” I applied, and a few months later I got a call and a job offer. On the first day we climbed 400 feet in the air to change some bolts on an old tower, and I was hooked. I spent the next 5 years travelling around the United States while building, repairing, and decommissioning cell towers and cell equipment. Eventually, the constant wear and tear on my body took its toll and I had to find something else to do for a living. Through a roundabout journey this led me to the insurance industry! I am now an independent agent with Trailstone Insurance Group focusing on helping people master the defensive portion of their financial strategy. I love what I do and try to treat every client like a friend.Learn More: https://trailstoneinsurancegroup.com/morgan-lloyd/Influential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-morgan-lloyd-independent-insurance-agent-with-trailstone-insurance-group-insurance-for-short-term-rentals
Intégrer le football à l'école sera possible dès la rentrée scolaire prochaine! Grâce au partenariat qui lie l'Institut International de Lancy à FOOTLAB, ce sport pourra être enseigné comme matière optionnelle. Patrick La Spina, technicien de football et à l'origine du projet est l'invité d'Epiphane. Il nous en parle dans cet entretien.
Monique Roiné est la Directrice Générale de l'Institut International de Lancy qui va intégrer le football au programme du parcours scolaire dès la rentrée 2022/2023. Elle en parle dans Cité Sport avec Épiphane AMANFO.
You will want to get a regularly updated Reconstruction Cost Estimate. Make sure that this is up to date and accurate. Get the maximum available dwelling replacement extension coverage. Make sure that you have sufficient ordinance and law coverage based on the age of your home. Make sure that you have enough loss of use coverage to provide housing for your family while you rebuild. You will want Actual Loss Sustained for 24 months or a dollar amount that would provide similar coverage. Make sure that you're covered for 24 months. Many policies only cover 12 months.Finally, do an accounting of your personal property and take pictures or videos of your possessions. This will be extremely valuable in the claims process. Make sure that you have enough coverage to replace these items, and make sure that you have “replacement cost contents” loss settlement for personal property on your insurance policy. Many policies will have “Actual Cash Value” loss settlement.I was lucky to grow up on a small farm in Southeastern Ohio. It was a kind of idyllic childhood surrounded by fields and forests. When I graduated high school, I was looking for adventure, so I booked a one-way ticket to Anchorage, Alaska with vague ideas of making a fortune in the frontier. I discovered that the few thousand bucks I had saved from growing and selling melons wasn't going to go far in the real world, and I started roughing it and hitch-hiking. A few months later I had made it as far as Mexico City when my money ran out and I headed home. The seed that the trip had planted grew into years of adventures throughout the world, including working as a mountain guide in Peru and teaching English throughout East Asia and Latin America. In my mid-twenties, I met my wife Lancy and we moved back to Ohio. While looking for jobs I stumbled across an advertisement saying, “Tower Climbers Wanted.” I applied, and a few months later I got a call and a job offer. On the first day we climbed 400 feet in the air to change some bolts on an old tower, and I was hooked. I spent the next 5 years travelling around the United States while building, repairing, and decommissioning cell towers and cell equipment. Eventually, the constant wear and tear on my body took its toll and I had to find something else to do for a living. Through a roundabout journey this led me to the insurance industry! I am now an independent agent with Trailstone Insurance Group focusing on helping people master the defensive portion of their financial strategy. I love what I do and try to treat every client like a friend.Learn More: https://trailstoneinsurancegroup.com/morgan-lloyd/Influential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-morgan-lloyd-independent-insurance-agent-with-trailstone-insurance-group-protect-from-natural-disasters
You will want to get a regularly updated Reconstruction Cost Estimate. Make sure that this is up to date and accurate. Get the maximum available dwelling replacement extension coverage. Make sure that you have sufficient ordinance and law coverage based on the age of your home. Make sure that you have enough loss of use coverage to provide housing for your family while you rebuild. You will want Actual Loss Sustained for 24 months or a dollar amount that would provide similar coverage. Make sure that you're covered for 24 months. Many policies only cover 12 months.Finally, do an accounting of your personal property and take pictures or videos of your possessions. This will be extremely valuable in the claims process. Make sure that you have enough coverage to replace these items, and make sure that you have “replacement cost contents” loss settlement for personal property on your insurance policy. Many policies will have “Actual Cash Value” loss settlement.I was lucky to grow up on a small farm in Southeastern Ohio. It was a kind of idyllic childhood surrounded by fields and forests. When I graduated high school, I was looking for adventure, so I booked a one-way ticket to Anchorage, Alaska with vague ideas of making a fortune in the frontier. I discovered that the few thousand bucks I had saved from growing and selling melons wasn't going to go far in the real world, and I started roughing it and hitch-hiking. A few months later I had made it as far as Mexico City when my money ran out and I headed home. The seed that the trip had planted grew into years of adventures throughout the world, including working as a mountain guide in Peru and teaching English throughout East Asia and Latin America. In my mid-twenties, I met my wife Lancy and we moved back to Ohio. While looking for jobs I stumbled across an advertisement saying, “Tower Climbers Wanted.” I applied, and a few months later I got a call and a job offer. On the first day we climbed 400 feet in the air to change some bolts on an old tower, and I was hooked. I spent the next 5 years travelling around the United States while building, repairing, and decommissioning cell towers and cell equipment. Eventually, the constant wear and tear on my body took its toll and I had to find something else to do for a living. Through a roundabout journey this led me to the insurance industry! I am now an independent agent with Trailstone Insurance Group focusing on helping people master the defensive portion of their financial strategy. I love what I do and try to treat every client like a friend.Learn More: https://trailstoneinsurancegroup.com/morgan-lloyd/Influential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-morgan-lloyd-independent-insurance-agent-with-trailstone-insurance-group-protect-from-natural-disasters
I was lucky to grow up on a small farm in Southeastern Ohio. It was a kind of idyllic childhood surrounded by fields and forests. When I graduated high school, I was looking for adventure, so I booked a one-way ticket to Anchorage, Alaska with vague ideas of making a fortune on the frontier. I discovered that the few thousand bucks I had saved from growing and selling melons wasn't going to go far in the real world, and I started roughing it and hitch-hiking. A few months later I had made it as far as Mexico City when my money ran out and I headed home. The seed that the trip had planted grew into years of adventures throughout the world, including working as a mountain guide in Peru and teaching English throughout East Asia and Latin America. In my mid-twenties, I met my wife Lancy and we moved back to Ohio. While looking for jobs I stumbled across an advertisement saying, “Tower Climbers Wanted.” I applied, and a few months later I got a call and a job offer. On the first day, we climbed 400 feet in the air to change some bolts on an old tower, and I was hooked. I spent the next 5 years traveling around the United States while building, repairing, and decommissioning cell towers and cell equipment. Eventually, the constant wear and tear on my body took its toll and I had to find something else to do for a living. Through a roundabout journey, this led me to the insurance industry! I am now an independent agent with Trailstone Insurance Group focusing on helping people master the defensive portion of their financial strategy. I love what I do and try to treat every client like a friend.Learn More: https://trailstoneinsurancegroup.com/morgan-lloyd/Influential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-morgan-lloyd-independent-insurance-agent-with-trailstone-insurance-group
I was lucky to grow up on a small farm in Southeastern Ohio. It was a kind of idyllic childhood surrounded by fields and forests. When I graduated high school, I was looking for adventure, so I booked a one-way ticket to Anchorage, Alaska with vague ideas of making a fortune on the frontier. I discovered that the few thousand bucks I had saved from growing and selling melons wasn't going to go far in the real world, and I started roughing it and hitch-hiking. A few months later I had made it as far as Mexico City when my money ran out and I headed home. The seed that the trip had planted grew into years of adventures throughout the world, including working as a mountain guide in Peru and teaching English throughout East Asia and Latin America. In my mid-twenties, I met my wife Lancy and we moved back to Ohio. While looking for jobs I stumbled across an advertisement saying, “Tower Climbers Wanted.” I applied, and a few months later I got a call and a job offer. On the first day, we climbed 400 feet in the air to change some bolts on an old tower, and I was hooked. I spent the next 5 years traveling around the United States while building, repairing, and decommissioning cell towers and cell equipment. Eventually, the constant wear and tear on my body took its toll and I had to find something else to do for a living. Through a roundabout journey, this led me to the insurance industry! I am now an independent agent with Trailstone Insurance Group focusing on helping people master the defensive portion of their financial strategy. I love what I do and try to treat every client like a friend.Learn More: https://trailstoneinsurancegroup.com/morgan-lloyd/Influential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-morgan-lloyd-independent-insurance-agent-with-trailstone-insurance-group
La mutualisation de l'accueil de la petite enfance se poursuit à Lancy, on en parle avec Salima Moyard, conseillère administrative.
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Dana Hoey, a San Fransisco born artist and photographer based in upstate New York, talks about her photography and video work which investigates gender roles, archetypes, aggression, and power in society. For the last episode of the season, we welcome Dana Hoey, an American artist that captures videos and photographs, and blends fact and fiction to question society's preconceived ideas of gender, relations between each other, masculinity, and femininity. Avid in her practice of combat sports, she integrates that into her work as well and uses it in the directions she gives her models. She also talks to us about her thoughts on being a woman in the arts as well as her philosophy on motherhood and how it impacted her career. Conversation Highlights The use of combat sports in her work Exploring gender roles and identity In for freedom and being a woman/mother in the art world To read the story and learn more about Dana Hoey's work, please visit our website rawradical.com Subscribe to our newsletter here. Raw and Radical Women in the Arts Podcast is supported by Pro Helvetia the Swiss arts council, The Republic and Canton of Geneva, and the City of Lancy. We thank them for their support to women, culture, and the arts --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Lyz Parayzo, a Brazilian-born artist currently studying in the Beaux-Arts de Paris talks about her art, inspired by her personal experiences, and which focuses on the body, gender identity, and fluidity. Lyz Parayzo, a Brazilian artist who works sculptures, live performances and audiovisual pieces, is with us on the show recorded from the gallery Espace L in Geneva, where there's an exhibition called “PornoChic”. It was inspired by one of the tale of the book of the “Erotic Tales” by the Brazilian writer Hilda Hilst. In this episode, we talk about the feminine performative, gender, its fluidity and its place in the art world that sometimes remains conservative. Through her work, like sharply cut sculptures representing ‘jewelry as self defense', she aims to create the aforementioned debate, raising questions on desire and violence and its relation to the feminine performative. She shares how her personal experiences have heavily influenced her art, along with external inspiration through writers, artists and thinkers such as Lygia Clark, Hilda Hilst, Hudinilson Junior, Kubra Khademi, Paul Preciado and Annie Sprinkle. Her work is provocative, and affronting to some. Some of it has once been censored. But her art, as her body - which she draws from for her creations - takes a political stance, as the LGBT community still suffers from hate crimes, phobia and rejection. Conversation Highlights: Lyz' “Guerilla Plans”: claiming art spaces for her art Her series: “Bellic Prosthesis”, sculptures of ‘jewelries for self-defense' Desire and violence, gender and identity To learn more about Lyz and this episode, visit our website rawradical.com This podcast is supported by Pro Helvetia The swiss arts council, The Republic and Canton of Geneva, and the City of Lancy in Switzerland. We thank them for their support to culture, women and the arts. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
Pour compenser le solstice d'hiver, les communes organisent des illuminations… Rendez-vous du 2 au 15 décembre du côté du Stade de Florimont, au Petit-Lancy, pour un voyage ponctué de spectacles.
Pour compenser le solstice d'hiver, les communes organisent des illuminations… Rendez-vous du 2 au 15 décembre du côté du Stade de Florimont, au Petit-Lancy, pour un voyage ponctué de spectacles.
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio.. This is: Notes on The Anthropology of Childhood, published by juliawise on the LessWrong. Crossposted from The Whole Sky. I read David Lancy's “The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, and Changelings” and highlighted some passages. A lot of passages, it turns out. [content note: discussion of abortion and infanticide, including infanticide of children with disabilities, in “Life and Death” section but not elsewhere] I was a sociology major and understood anthropology to be basically “like sociology, but in Papua New Guinea.” This is the first cultural anthropology book I've read, and that was pretty much right. I found it very accessible as a first dive into anthropology. The first chapter summarizes all his points without the examples, so you could try that if you want to get the gist without reading the whole book. I enjoyed it and would recommend it to people interested in this topic. A few things that shifted for me: I feel less obliged to entertain my children and intervene in their conflicts. We don't live with a tribe of extended family, but my two children play with each other all day, which is how most people throughout time have spent their childhoods. Lancy isn't a child development expert, but I buy his argument that handling conflict (for example about the rules of a game) is a skill children need to learn, rather than having conflicts always mediated by adults. Even though it doesn't change anything concrete, I feel some relief that not having endless patience for toddlers seems to be normal. Except where families were very isolated, it's not normal in traditional societies for one or two adults to watch their own children all day every day. And childcare has traditionally looked mostly like “being sure they don't hurt themselves too badly.” It surprised me that childcare by non-parents was so common. Some more modern views treat women's childcare work as basically free, but traditional cultures have valued women's labor enough that the society wants to free up their time from childcare. It was striking to me that the expectation that stay-at-home mothers will be responsible for all childcare was a relatively short historical blip. But of course, having childcare done by teenagers and grandmothers requires that those people's time be available, which usually isn't the reality we live in. I was surprised at how apparently universal it is for fathers to be uninvolved. I expect they're typically involved in providing food and other material resources, but that wasn't emphasized in this book. I'm a little unclear on how valid Lancy's conclusions are or how much data they're based on. It seems like an anthropologist could squint at a society and see all kinds of things that someone with a different ideology wouldn't see. Big caveat that what Lancy is describing is traditional, non-industrialized societies where children are expected to learn how to fit into the appropriate role in their village, not to develop as an individual or do anything different from what their parents and ancestors did. He stresses that traditional childrearing practices are very poor preparation for school. Given that I want my children to learn things I don't know, to think analytically, etc, the way I approach learning is very different from how traditional societies approach it. Lancy periodically complains about how much money Western families spend on fertility treatments, medical care for premature infants, etc. He argues that the same money could be used to provide adequate nutrition for many more children in the societies he's studied. I'm sympathetic, but assuming that families would donate this money if they weren't spending it to have a baby is not realistic. I see cutting luxury spending as a much more feasible way that people might do some redistribution. And now, my no...
Découvrez nos 5 propositions culturelles des Concerts de Lancy pour les fêtes de fin d'année présentées par Michel Bovey, président de l'association : Concert Romantique, Orchestre et Chœur de l'Université de Genève, Vendredi 10 décembre 2021 à 20h00 & Dimanche 12 décembre à 17h00 à Eglise Notre-Dame-des-Grâces, Grand‑Lancy Musiques Actuelles, Carte blanche à Emagina-Son, Jeudi 16 décembre 2021 à 20h00 à la Cave Marignac, Grand-Lancy Jazz – Masters HEMU Lausanne , Hommage à Duke Ellington et Musique Copacabana . Samedi 18 décembre 2021 à 20h30 à la Cave Marignac, Grand-Lancy Concert de Noël, Orchestre de Lancy-Genève, Dimanche 19 décembre 2021 à 17h00 à l'Eglise Notre-Dame-des-Grâces, Grand‑Lancy Concert du Nouvel An, Orchestre Buissonier, » Strauss, Mozart, Bizet, Faust, Offenbach… » le 2 janvier à la Salle Jean-Jacques Gautier à Chêne-Bougeries
« JAZZ À LA CAVE » deux concerts à la Cave Marignac, (av. Eugène-Lance 28 Grand-Lancy) ce week-end dans le cadre les Concerts de Lancy, avec : “Ticket to New York City” – Ben Rosenblum Trio, Samedi 4 décembre 2021, 20h30 « Christmas Songs » – Nicolas Hafner Swisstet, dimanche 5 décembre à 17h Michel Bovey, président de l'association nous présente ces évènements.
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Calling herself a ‘visual narrator', ‘intimate outsider', and ‘subjective documentarist', Mimiko Türkkan comes on the show to talk about her visual video project on water, in relation to fear, her creative process and social identity. Our unique guest in this episode is Turkish artist Mimiko Türkkan. She creates artwork such as photography series, books and videos with a focus on gender roles and socially constructed identities. She shares with us her artistic process in coming up with ideas, forming a narrative and going through a project. We focus particularly on her most recent creative endeavour, resulting in “Energy Watery Incantations” in the Galerie Analix Forever in Geneva, to which we get to listen to an excerpt. She investigates her fears, in relation to ‘the flow', her creative process and her relation to the world. With traveling and physical activity playing a major role in her artistic process, she gives us a glimpse into the making of “Energy Watery Incantations.” She also gives her piece about being a woman in the arts and gender equality in Turkey. We also welcome Barbara Polla, owner of the Galerie Analix Forever, adding to the subject of the show ‘Water Paintings', having had the opportunity to follow Mimiko throughout her creation. Conversation Highlights: Mimiko's artistic process where traveling and physical activity have an important place “Energy Watery Incantations”, her relation with fear and the flow. Her thoughts on female identity, gender equality, and being a woman in the arts in Turkey To listen to read the story and learn more about Mimiko, please go to our website www.rawradical.com This podcast is supported by Pro Helvetia the Swiss arts council, The Republic and Canton of Geneva, and the city of Lancy, Switzerland. We thank them for their support to culture, women, and the arts. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Spanish curator, art historian, writer and currently the director of the Art Gender Nature Institute at the FHNW Academy of Art and Design in Basel, Chus Martinez talks about reimagining the exhibition public space, the transformative role of art in society and being a woman in her field of work. It's a pleasure to welcome Chus Martinez to the show and to listen to her enriching thoughts, opinions, and experiences as a woman in the very pit of the artworld. She talks about how she reimagines and innovates the exhibition space as a curator, art's powerful impact in driving social change, and being a woman in the art world. We also discuss the mindset of artists working collaboratively versus this false idea of “the genius”, the experience of being immersed in the art education world, and the gradual coming back of man into cohabitation with nature. Conversation Highlights: Reimagining how to organize exhibitions The impact of art on society The gradual reconnection of man with nature Chus's experience being in the world of art education Being a woman, and also a mother in the art world For more information on our guest, read the show notes or the transcript, know more about our podcast, or subscribe to our newsletter, please go to our website www.rawradical.com This podcast is made with the support of prohelvetia the Swiss Arts Council, The Republic and Canton of Geneva and the City of Lancy, Switzerland. We thank them for their support for culture, women, and the arts. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Photojournalist, and then litigator turned one of the most celebrated photographers of the female nude of our time, Renée Jacobs talks about her career transformation, the visual representation of women in society and being a queer woman in her field of work. I'm happy to receive Renée Jacobs on today's episode. She explains her career choices and transitions, details on her “PARIS” and “POLAROIDS” book, insights and anecdotes on the pressure of being a woman, especially queer, photographer of the female nude. We also highlight the importance of authenticity in the depiction of female sensuality, and of accurately shaping our own image (as women). In her words, “women can't be heard if we can't be seen.” Conversation Highlights: Her transition from photojournalism to law to photography of the female nude The visual representation of women in our society, particularly of the erotic woman Her books “PARIS” and “POLAROIDS”, and the “PHOTOS DE FEMME” organization For more information on our guest, read the show notes, see the transcript, know more about our podcast, or subscribe to our newsletter, please go to our website www.rawradical.com This podcast is made with the support of prohelvetia the Swiss Arts Council, The Republic and Canton of Geneva and the City of Lancy, Switzerland. We thank them for their support for culture, women, and the arts. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
Another Halloween has come and that means costumes, trick-or-treating, the Great Pumpkin and of course, Mephisto! This year he is trying to mix things up by giving us the most mixed up crossover of them all, My Little Pony/Transformers: Friendship in Disguise! Here in Part Three of the crossover we are joined by Tim Price of the Outcasters. Tim is here to talk issue 3, John de Lancy, the exact definition of friendship and what meaning (if any) we can find in this wonderful nonsense! What? You didn't know this was Part Three? Well, let's make it easy for you! Here are the links to Parts One , Two and Four! Abby Trott Andrea Libman Ashleigh Ball Dug Days Facebook Fluttershy Frank Welker Grand Comics Database Jersey Devil Legion of Substitute Podcasters Mike's Amazing World of Comics Rainbow Dash Story Synospys To Know Her Is To Fear Her: The Spider-Woman Podcast The Toys That Made Us Tumblr Twitter Windblade Wright On Network Opening Music- "Intro Pompeii" by Lino Rise Licensed Under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Closing Music- Sound Design Provided by Jason Donnelly All Rights Reserved
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Radical feminist artist, video artist, and Italian-Swiss performer Angela Mazullo talks about artistic alter egos, motherhood, and third wave feminism Today I'm delighted to welcome Angela Mazulla to the show to talk about her artistic alter ego, how she has combined motherhood and art, and a unique oral history project she has nurtured over the past several years titled, “The Archives of Radical Feminism.” Today's podcast is unique in that it was originally conducted in French, and the interview is overlaid with an English translation. Key points of the conversation: Her artistic alter ego Being a mother and an artist The Archives of Radical Feminism Her artistic alter ego Angela was born to an Italian father and a Swiss mother and grew up in a small village near Zurich, where there was a great deal of liberal thought and conversations about progressive political movements. This shaped a great deal of her early thinking and influenced the direction of her artistic exploration later. After she moved to Geneva for art school, she created an alter ego for her art performances named “Makita.” She says this allowed her to have more freedom to experiment with more sensitive and provocative subjects in her performances than if she'd performed under her own legal name. Angela says that “Makita” is a role that she plays that lends more power and depth to her performances, but because it is an alter ego, she doesn't have to inhabit that role all the time, which makes it possible for her to be more courageous and provocative in her performances. Being a mother and an artist Angela says that she always wanted to be a mother, but unlike many women, deliberately chose to get pregnant with her children while she was also in school. At the time, this was a radical, defiant act because many women either hid their pregnancies or dropped out of school. However, not only did she have two daughters, she also found ways to include them in her work, ultimately creating a project called “Homeschool,” which features her daughters reenacting portions of critical texts to highlight the childishness of certain critical actions. The Archives of Radical Feminism For the last five years, Angela has been working on an oral history project of feminism, which includes both recording conversations among contemporary women about critical topics, and transcribing an audio archive of 1970s radical feminist Italian consciousness-raising sessions. These conversations and transcriptions raise the questions of how feminism has evolved over the last several decades. It also cemented Angela's position that feminism is a movement best done by groups of women. She says that as a performer, she is a lone activist. But once she began working with small groups of women, she realized how feminism is a moment of many and that it is a collective vibration. For more information about our guest or the podcast, visit our website www.rawradical.com This podcast is produced with the support of The swiss arts council prohelvetia, the Republic and Canton of Geneva, the city of Lancy. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
Musician, educator, and mentor Laura Escudé shares her tips for success and self-confidence, and the importance of prioritizing joy in your career Many of us are multi-passionate, but are told that we must focus on one thing to become successful. Laura Escudé, a multifaceted artist and entrepreneur, is here with us today to share how she has found success in her career. Laura is a violinist, songwriter, live performance specialist and sound engineer, and has worked and played with artists such as Kanye West, Ariana Grande, Bon Iver, and the Pentatonix. She also educates and mentors other artists and musicians through her Transmute Accelerator and Transmute Academy coaching and training programs. Finding success through letting go Laura says one of the keys to her success is hiring specialists and learning to trust other people to handle the work she hires them to do. “I've been able to get a lot of help in the areas that I'm not the best at,” Laura says. “I think that's one of the secrets to my success, especially in recent years, is hiring people that are better than me at certain things or their jam is something that I don't really want to do or am not the best at, and that has really freed me up to do the things that I love to do.” She also understands how challenging it can be to let go of control and feel okay with spending money. “It was scary at first … because you don't know if you're going to make the money to pay them every month. As an entrepreneur it's always a challenge ... but I always trust that it's going to work out, and it always does,” she says. Staying aligned with your passions After she landed in the hospital during a tour, Laura realized she needed to focus more on her health and well-being. As a result she has become more thoughtful about where she spends her time and energy. “I've learned that the most important thing is me being in my highest joy. The grinding that I did for so many years, constantly saying yes to everything... I can't do that anymore,” she says. “So I do have to be particular about the things that I say yes to because once I say yes to certain things I have to say no to other things.” Making time for her own creative projects has also been critical to maintaining her health and healing. Her 2018 EP release, “Transmute,” was especially restorative. “It was a way for me to express how I was transforming. I didn't know how at that time but I wanted to capture it in a musical format,” she says. “I just really delved into the creation of this music as a way to heal myself.” Her latest EP release 'ENOUGHNESS' (May 2021) she produced during deep introspective moments in last year's pandemic journey where she was forced to confront her inner darkness. She realized she needed to put the focus on her mental health after years of obsessing over her physical appearance and not loving herself. Escudé decided to focus on becoming more content with who she is and how she is being—and to help others on their path through her music and creations. ENOUGHNESS is intended to be a journey and space to cultivate knowing, healing and for transformation. "I use my compositions to practice embodied liberation and allow the creative space to be my teacher—to let the process be the process and let go of what it should be. I hope ENOUGHNESS becomes this for you too because you are ENOUGH." Music: Embrace Your Shadow (released May 5, 2021) For more information on this episode and our guest, visit our website www.rawradical.com This podcast is supported by the Swiss arts council pro helvetia, the canton of Geneva and the city of Lancy, Switzerland --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
Pour certaines communes, s'engager pour la petite enfance signifie aussi municipaliser les crèches. C'est le cas à la ville de Lancy où le projet est porté par la conseillère administrative socialiste Salima Moyard. Est-ce que la municipalisation peut pour autant résoudre les problèmes du milieu de la petite enfance, notamment le manque de places disponibles ? Notre entretien est à écouter ici :
In this 92nd in a series of live discussions with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying (both PhDs in Biology), we discuss the state of the world through an evolutionary lens.In this episode, we discuss childhood. Beginning with an excerpt from chapter 9 (Childhood) of our forthcoming book, A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st Century, we discuss what childhood is, what other organisms have it, and why it is important. We discuss plasticity in development, and the need to develop flexibility as a growing human. We discuss Lenore Skenazy (America's Worst Mom!), and Let Grow, an organization dedicated to helping kids build real-world confidence, competence and openness. We discuss the need for play—real, unstructured play without interference from adults—and for risk. And we discuss the adaptive underpinnings of play.Get your Goliath shirts right here: store.darkhorsepodcast.orgHeather's newsletter, Natural Selections (subscribe to get free weekly essays in your inbox): https://naturalselections.substack.comSupport the sponsors of this show:Four Sigmatic: Delicious mushroom coffee made with both real coffee and two species of mushrooms. Up to 40% off and free shipping at Foursigmatic.com/DARKHORSE.Vivo Barefoot: Shoes for healthy feet—comfortable and regenerative, enhances stability and tactile feedback. Go to www.vivobarefoot.com/us/darkhorse to get 20% off, and a 100-day free trial.Allform: Get 20% off any order (of a beautiful sofa) from Allform at https://allform.com/darkhorse.Our book, A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st Century, is now available for pre-sale at amazon. Publication date: 9-14-21: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0593086880/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_5BDTABYFKRJKZBT5GSQAhttp://huntergatherersguide.com/DarkHorse merchandise now available at: store.darkhorsepodcast.orgFind more from us on Bret's website (https://bretweinstein.net) or Heather's website (http://heatherheying.com).Become a member of the DarkHorse LiveStreams, and get access to an additional Q&A livestream every month. Join at Heather's Patreon.Like this content? Subscribe to the channel, like this video, follow us on twitter (@BretWeinstein, @HeatherEHeying), and consider helping us out by contributing to either of our Patreons or Bret's Paypal.Looking for clips from #DarkHorseLivestreams? Here are some, updated frequently: @DarkHorse Podcast ClipsTheme Music: Thank you to Martin Molin of Wintergatan for providing us the rights to use their excellent music.Q&A Link: https://youtu.be/bsNfjGVrZOAMentioned in this episode:A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st Century: https://huntergatherersguide.comSkenazy, L., 2021 (2nd ed). Free-range kids, giving our children the freedom we had without going nuts with worry. John Wiley & Sons.Skenazy, L. 2008. Why I Let My 9-Year-Old Ride the Subway Alone. The New York Sun, April 1, 2008. https://www.nysun.com/opinion/why-i-let-my-9-year-old-ride-subway-alone/73976/Let Grow: https://letgrow.orgGray, P. 2013. Free to Learn: Why Unleashing the Instinct to Play Will Make Our Children Happier, More Self-Reliant, and Better Students for Life. Basic Books.Martini, M. (1994). Peer interactions in Polynesia: A view from the Marquesas. In J. L. Roopnarine, J. E. Johnson, & F. H. Hooper (Eds.), Children's play in diverse cultures (pp. 73-103). Albany: State University of New York Press.Lancy, D.F., 2014. The anthropology of childhood: Cherubs, chattel, changelings. Cambridge University Press.Spinka, M., Newberry, R.C. and Bekoff, M., 2001. Mammalian play: training for the unexpected. The Quarterly review of biology, 76(2): 141-168. https://www.journals.uchicago.edSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/bretweinstein)
Lancy fait son cinéma, dix projections gratuites en plein air du 16 juillet au 11 août
Installé au petit Lancy, Erwane Signe y est vraiment à l'aise. On s'est retrouvé au Geneva Trade Center qu'il a fondé. Selon lui, si le trading s'est démocratisé, l'audace fait toute la différence. Discussion passionnante à écouter où il est même question de liens lointains avec le Maroc.
« Les concerts de Lancy » révèlent un programme de qualité, éclectique et dynamique. Nous sommes allés à la rencontre de son président depuis 35 ans, Michel Bovet. Il nous reçoit dans son quartier général afin de découvrir une première partie de la saison à partir du 12 septembre prochain.
Hello and welcome back to the campfire! Today we have the honor of having Dr. David Lancy join us for a conversation, and it is one filled with many 'golden nuggets'. David is an Emeritus Professor of Anthropology. He began college teaching at Cuttington College in the interior of Liberia in 1968 and subsequently taught at a Community College and at three universities. Dr. Lancy has authored 5 books and his current research interests center on the anthropology of childhood. He has done fieldwork with children as the focus for extended periods in Liberia, Papua New Guinea and Mormon Utah; for shorter periods in Trinidad (Fullbright Fellow), Sweden (Fullbright Fellow), Uganda, Madagascar, and in urban schools in the U.S. We discuss childhood in the indigenous cultures versus the WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) society. David points out that in the village, youth have great autonomy and learning bouts are self-initiated rather than teacher or caretaker initiated. Learning is woven into the flow of daily life versus being encapsulated in formal lessons.So grab a seat by the fire as we travel to Utah to speak to him about the lost art of self education and the anthropology of childhood learning!If you like what you hear and have enjoyed our show, please show your appreciation by subscribing to our Podcast and leaving us a review on your Podcast App of choice.We would love to hear from you so please email us with any comments or questions you have.Visit us and all of our content, including our blog, at www.thehomeschoolprojectpodcast.comAs always, let's Light A Fire They Can't Put OutThank you for listening!Show NotesYou can find all of David's work at his website: David F. Lancy, Ph.D. (usu.edu)
La programmation de Mai au Parc enfin dévoilée
La programmation de Mai au Parc enfin dévoilée
Nous sommes le 12 mai et c'est la journée mondiale de la fibromyalgie. Pour cette journée, le jet de Genève va se parer de bleu ce soir… A cette occasion, voici le témoignage de Valérie Luscher qui vit au petit Lancy et qui est atteinte de fibromyalgie depuis une vingtaine d'années.
On Display by Raw and Radical - Conversations with extraordinary women in the arts
The Guerilla Girls share their take on sexism, racism, and corruption in the art world, and how they fight back with “creative complaining” It was a great honor to welcome two of the Guerrilla Girls, “Frida Kahlo” and “Käthe Kollwitz,” to this episode of the Raw and Radical Women in the Arts podcast. The Guerilla Girls group is made up of anonymous feminist activist artists, who wear gorilla masks and adopt the names of famous women artists as pseudonyms so that public attention remains on the work they do, rather than on their identities. Beginning of the Guerrilla Girls The group formed in 1985, after a 1984 MOMA exhibition included just 13 women and 8 artists of color in their line up of 169 artists. “We realised … we had to do something, and a bunch of women, not us, called a protest,” says Käthe. “It had no effect at all. And we understood at that moment that people thought the art world was a meritocracy … where the gatekeepers, the powers that be, always picked the best. So if you weren’t in a museum, you sucked, you weren’t any good, and that was our ‘ah ha’ moment. We realized there had to be a better way to tell people about this issue, a way that broke through their preconceived notions: Since then, the Guerrilla Girls have engaged in what they call “creative complaining,” to raise awareness and catalyze change. Their new book, Guerrilla Girls: The Art of Behaving Badly, documents the hundreds of projects they have done over the last 35 years to expose sexism, racism, and corruptions. “Our idea from the beginning was to create a new kind of political art using strategies of persuasion, like advertising,” says Käthe. “We do books, we do videos, we do huge billboards, but it’s all based on that kind of graphic execution and we started out doing street posters and bringing our work directly to people.” For more information on our guests and this episode, visit the website of raw and radical. This podcast is supported by the Swiss arts council prohelvetia and the City of Lancy, Switzerland --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rawradical/message
Nous découvrons les armoiries de Lancy, avec Laurence Dier Yeo archiviste à la commune de Lancy.
Today im joined by Cedric Lancey. We talked about collecting cards, designing cards, and starting a small brand. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cardistrytalk/support
Pour sa toute première semaine, « Genève s'engage » s'intéresse au bien-être des personnes âgées qui doivent quitter leur logement et vivre en EMS ou dans des habitats adaptés. Différentes initiatives voient le jour pour adoucir cette étape de vie souvent difficile. C'est le cas de l'ADRET, habitat évolutif pour seniors qui ouvre ses portes à Lancy. Laurent Beausoleil et Sandrine Grether, en charge de ce lieu, nous parlent aujourd'hui de ces logements intergénérationnels.
A Lancy, des bons de solidarités ont été distribués aux habitants. La commune veut encourager à renouer avec les commerces locaux touchés par la crise. Une campagne est prévue sur ce thème. Écoutons Damien Bonfanti, maire de la commune :
Every now and then, we get a little serious… and this is one of those times. This episode isn’t really served justice by just listening to it, given the number of graphs, charts, and tables involved during the conversation. We encourage you to hit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/ITinTheD/ and catch the video at https://www.facebook.com/ITinTheD/videos/168007971161634/ in order to really get the most out of this episode. We’re joined by Fred Brown, an infectious disease expert with incredible credentials. We were lucky enough that he gave us well over an hour and a half chatting about the COVID-19 outbreak… where we are, where here really is, and what you can reasonably expect moving forward… And we are good to go. What is up quarantine land? This is the one and only it and the D show where all the way to episode three 45 we got a phenomenal, we were very lucky to have a phenomenal guest this week. Mr Fred Brown, he’s an infectious disease expert. I feel like this is every now and then we get a little serious and I feel like just just, just to keep us on our toes. We have to get a little serious now and again. Oh, and by the way, happy birthday Dave. Thank you. I appreciate it man. Um, but yeah, uh, you made fire when ready and we’re looking forward to this week show. Hey, what’s going on? How’s everybody doing? I think our guests are still asleep with our, this is the one and only it in the D show. We made it all the way to episode three 45 do the math, Dave. So that’s Bob’s wrong plus 329 to close it. And the D that come to his favor, give us a, like on the socials and subscribe to us everywhere. Buying podcasts are sold yet again, this is usually the point where we tell people about our upcoming events and we don’t have any, uh, and, and the reason we don’t have any upcoming events is why we have our guest on the show tonight. Uh, so yeah. Uh, I guess without further ado, let’s go ahead and dive in and, and talk about God. Uh, I guess the only topic that’s dominating conversation these days. Oh, you got yourself muted. Yeah. Oh, you got yourself muted, Fred red, you’re on mute. There we go. There you go. I apologize. I’m off and running. Well, thanks for having me, Dave. I appreciate it. Of course. No, I appreciate you taking the time to come in. Absolutely. It’s a pleasure. Well, you know, I, and I want to get the word out about, you know, what to expect a little bit with this. I, I’ve been in this game since 1984 we, uh, I actually helped develop the first, uh, AIDS back, uh, the first AIDS test, uh, with a company called Centocor. And we were lucky enough to find the good development first definitive test for AIDS. And from there, that was a 1986. And then from there I helped develop six or seven more vaccines effective for your guests. They have children, they, most of them have been vaccinated by, by my vaccines in the 1990s that we developed. Uh, and I’ve been involved with probably seven or eight pandemics. We have, we have an epidemic vote every two years. People don’t really realize it because they’re able to call them now, but you know, they’re reasonably frequent. And so if you think about Ebola coming around twice, and we had Zika virus scare, which I was involved with malaria I’ve been involved with and failed it three times now. So it’s, it’s a, it’s an interesting game. And, um, you know, what, welcome to my world. I’m looking forward to talking a little bit about it. I want to talk about, go a little bit maybe in the background, like I gave a talk to, uh, the Harvard fellows were interested in, in what was happening and so they asked me to give a presentation and I got a little bit of that here just so people have a little bit of background before we talk about what’s going on in Michigan. Okay. So right now I guess I’m, you know, my full set of credentials is that I’ve been in drug discovery, drug development and vaccine development for, uh, 35 years now. I’ve developed, uh, 27 major drugs, uh, six vaccines, uh, 13 major diagnostic products. I was head of Roche’s portfolio management, a team that was, I was global head of that for several years. And you’ll hear a little bit about my experience managing the H five N one epidemic that went into Europe and we just were able to contain that. There’ll be, and I’ve created a tool that I think it’d be helpful for the audience to eventually they can look at and see what we’re doing. So what you’re saying is that you’re not some guy in a mask that I found at Meyer to just, you know, hop on the show. I’m working with Johns Hopkins, so if you guys are looking at that, sadly I helped them. I helped do this. They should put up this, you know this, this clock just so we can watch the virus come up and then come down again at, that’d be fun. All the time you say no, you’re one rung below a politician on their knowledge base on infectious disease. That’s what he’s, he’s, he’s, he’s, he’s somewhere underneath a Facebook certified epidemiology expert and a and somewhere above. Fred, let me keep it up. Let me give you some, I just got a quick question. You know, I’ve lived, you know, we joke around like I call our 2009 vacation to Mexico, the swine flu tour because the swine flu broke and then we didn’t know we should be flying home every two years. Something’s going on. Bird flu, SARS, you know, you kind of listed off a few of them. Also be bold on all that. Like why, what’s different now? Like, why, why this one? Because like again, I don’t mind doing all this stuff. The, the government, everybody has us doing it wasn’t that, but like I walked into this going, Hey, it’s nothing. I’ve been through this crap. And you know, it’s not, it’s something, yeah. You know, we, we sorta got caught with this one. Vernor’s and Robitussin is not curing this. That’s, that’s what I, yeah. You know, people keep comparing a little bit to the flu and I’ll go into live with why that isn’t the case. Um, so with this one, you know, it’s funny, we do, we do, uh, we actually do prep work. So when you’re up in Asia, we do a lot of prep work and in fact it’s called prepare. And every two years we go through a couple of scenarios. And what was interesting was the U S was part of that in the early two thousands we went through the prep work and we had actually, we did so badly that we decided that we, that we should develop a plan for it. And in 2008, nine we put together a plan, part of bushes administration then moved into a balanced nutrition. We thought it was a pretty good plan, but we then it was sort of, well you know, it’s not that important but we’ll, we’ll, we’ll wait on it. But what we found out was there a couple of scenarios where we do really, really badly and this particular virus is one of those scenarios. It’s human to human transmission. That’s the first problem. So let’s, you know, we’ve got a lot of population. People are close together. They traveled together for a global day. So anything that any small population can move in doing an open travel to a and really cause pandemics, that’s the first problem. The second problem is mode of transmission. This thing is really infectious. And so as you can start to infect people from, you know, just breathing and coughing, uh, and, and the, and the molecules on the aerosol stay on the air for enough time, up to, up to up to three hours. Actually. Unfortunately that that really is a bad scenario because, you know, if you think about the AIDS virus, it’s sexually transmitted. You think about Zika was uh, had a vector of the mosquito and we weren’t able to stop it but vector. But here it’s just out there. And so it’s a, and unfortunately, you know, it’s got a, it’s got a high kill. It’s got a reasonably high kill rate, sort of moderate for fires. It was a hierarchal rate. Equity you would probably die out because it would lose hosts. But this one is just sort of in the, in the perfect area where you kill enough people that are able to survive. Um, and uh, and then we’ve got the transmission uh, problem. And the transmission problems is a big one cause because we have a lot of asymptomatic carriers in this space. So viruses are getting smarter is what you’re saying. Great. That’s one. And this guy is hard, great, great vaccines, but we still don’t have any back. You know, let’s think about the common pole. We’ve had it for a long time. He was trying to stop it for a long time. And we, it’s one of the grownup viruses. We don’t, we don’t have much against these guys. So we’ve, we’ve got a little bit of a wait. So when actually in the end there’s, I guess there’s a good starting point, cause I’ve heard people use those terms interchangeably. They say Corona virus, they say covert, they say COBIT 19. They say like, so from, from a science perspective, w w lay that hierarchy out. Absolutely. So this is called the scientific game is SARS co V to a, so it’s a Sargent [inaudible], uh, virus. Uh, and we’ve had, uh, two, uh, epidemics of SARS and virus. One was his first, the first one was SARS. And then we had murders. I was middle East virus, middle East had us set a very high kill rate and luckily died out in middle East. Stars almost got over here, you know, made it all the way through Asia and then all the way to Canada. And then all of a sudden, just sorta, you know, Peter DOE, this one is not petering out. So this is our second Sarz Cove. Uh, and it’s Covin 19 because it was founded and 20, 19, uh, we’ve actually have about seven. It’s not, it’s not the 19th iteration of it. Like you see all the Facebook memes of that’s, yeah, that’s, yeah. Oh, so you know, it’s a, it’s a tough one. And I thought one of the things I could, I should show people is, is, is something about, it’s important to understand why we’re having so much trouble and what, what, what’s, what’s funny about, about trying to manage, uh, viruses and that is they have exponential growth. I didn’t know if your audience really understood exponential growth. I can give you a first step sense of it. And then I wanted to show you a slide or two that actually showed what really happened and if it made sense for sure. Absolutely. So like, so I mean we’ve, well, I mean, and that’s the thing we used to think we had a very it centric crowd. Um, but then we’ve learned, we have a lot of folks that aren’t in it, that listened to us simulate from an it perspective. We’re familiar with, you know, computer viruses and that kind of stuff and dealing with that. But I mean, I would say assume nothing and start with layman terminology and, and go from there. Okay. Well, you know, um, so what’s it about? The computer crowd is they understand networking and network. We’re working, you know, it’s just think about in fact working and how important it is. It works as end times and nine as one, right? We guys know, you guys know, uh, exponential growth once you hit the network, uh, to give you a sense of this network, uh, it took us about four months to kill a million people and then we killed another million people in 12 days. That’s exponential growth. So let me explain why that’s so hard to manage. Yeah, that’s a, that’s sort of a wild, wild little statistic. Well, yeah, no, those numbers really kind of hit you like a sledgehammer in the forehead. Yeah. Yeah. So once this baby starts getting going and I just show on the slide now, I’ll tell you what, what happened in China and why they were all thought, uh, so here what happened in China, this is, this is actually what happened. Um, you know, and I know a lot of those guys over there and they said, you know, when we first started off, you know, we, we found a couple of, of infected people and we even had a death and we had on a couple of packs of fake people. So at day five for example, if you, if you see, you know, uh, influence, uh, you’d expect to have one about one and a half people being infected and out with COBIT. What happens? So, you know, it has a 1.25 infection rate. In 30 days you’ll have the first case, uh, all the way through. You do the math and to get 15 cases pretty manageable. We got 15 cases. Okay. Now Colby, it has a slightly higher, R actually has about a double with size. Art has a 2.37. I just use this used use 2.5 to make the math easy. Um, but here we have [inaudible] and if you let the infection go for 30 days with Kobe, but think you got influenza, you don’t have your 15 or 30 15 cases to work with. You’ve got a 406 cases. And if you wait another day or two, you’ve got thousands. So that gives you a sense of just how fast you have to act. And unfortunately, we’re used to sort of sitting back, let me look, let me figure this out. Or linear, you know, but this guy works fast. Once it gets started, it goes fast. So what’s happened in China is that they decided that Hey, you know, I think it’s, I don’t think it’s influenced. They started seeing this curve coming up. So we said, let’s stop, let’s, let’s, let’s, you know, put in socialists and then distancing. Now let’s, let’s take a, let’s take this seriously. If they had, so at about the 12 they stopped. They said, no, we’re going to take it seriously. We’re going to go after it. If they had waited, if they actually made the decision a week earlier, they would have only had passed the cases to worry about if they waited a week longer, they would have had nine times the cases to worry about. So you know, you can see that, that, that, that decision, you’ve got to really be able to hit it fast. So here’s, so here’s my thing, the analogy that I, cause again, a computer guy, the analogy I keep coming back to is I’m having so many flashbacks to Y two K right now because it’s, it’s so hard to prove the effect of a negative. Like everybody’s like, Oh that was such a joke. There was nothing really going to happen. No, no, no. You don’t understand how much work went into nothing happening. And so like, like, like I don’t think people understand math like this and, and just exactly how scary insane things can get so quickly. Like this. Yeah. These biological systems really go fast and we’re just not used to working with them in our day to day life. You know, working with, you know, one on one to one, solely making our decisions, thinking it over. And you know, it was funny, in Italy, a friend, a friend of mine is in charge of I and I, I ran Europe. And so, uh, for, for Roshan middle East right next to us and Switzerland. And so what I did, I dealt a lot with the Italian border, uh, covenant CDC up there. And I, I saw what was going on. Literally, I was kind of monitoring it and I said, you know, I called him up and said, you’ve got a serious issue. He said, yeah, I know, you know, I went, I went to the prime minister, I went and talked to the, the, to the head of head of Milan mayor, and they said, what are you talking about? Everybody’s great, you got everything in control. We’ve got a couple of deaths here and there, but you know, it’s good. And besides, we’re coming up with, you know, weekend and so they let it go an extra week and that’s what happened. And there’s your, there’s your number on what an extra week means. Yeah. Wow. Yeah. So was it funny, you know? Uh, so I am a consultant, you know, and, and I had lots of clients and I was working along and all of a sudden and middle of February I told all my guys, you know, I think this is going to be serious. I want to stop consulting now and it’s going to focus on this. Cause you know, we’ve just had a mistake in the CDC and so I think it’s better. I work on this just to focus on it. And so there’s all this on everything I’m doing right now is free. I want everyone to understand it so we can get out and get a good solution to it if everyone understands. Dude kudos. Wow. Thank you. That’s awesome. Well it’s a pleasure but, but, but what was interesting, all my clients said, Oh sure. You know, go ahead. You know it, we’ll be back in a couple of weeks. It will be fine. Yeah. So here I am, I got my gum, I fell self caught in the tar. Hey Fred, quick question. I don’t know if our jumping too far ahead or I really like the misinformation that’s thrown at us is, is obscene these days and I just want to like throw a couple of things at you because you hear like, Hey, the hospitals are packed. Then you hear they’re not. Then you hear the hospitals get paid more if they classify coven and then they get paid a lot more if they put them on ventilators and there’s like USA to even fact check. That is true, but it’s still, it seems weird and then you have things like they’re not classifying anything else. Anything else is a death. So regular flu deaths are stopping and their classmate, everything is cold man. I mean what, how do we make sense of of that? What, what? What’s real? What’s not? Yeah, so a couple of things. The first thing I would say is don’t trust anyone who’s really confident because they will. No one really knows. I’m in this game for a long time. I talk with, you know, experts in the field all the time. We have our own arguments about what we think death rates are. Prevalence rates are what we think the R’s are. You’ll get it. We’ll get into that a little while. But you know, um, so first of all, don’t trust anybody who isn’t, isn’t coming to you with real data. And the USA today reports are about, uh, you know, are, are accurate. You know, they, they have the, they have some of the data, but they sort of selected it, you know, and you can’t, you can’t do that fairly. Uh, so there are some, I’m sure there’s some incidences of people pushing the envelope in terms of, uh, quantification of diseases. But, but I’ll tell you, most of the people I know of, first of all, several of them have died. Sadly, most people I know who were on the front lines are working 12, 15, 16 hours a day. And these aren’t normal work days. You know, these, these are really high stress work days where you’re, you’re dealing with death or you’re trying to help people save people on the last minute of their lives. You’ve gotta be really on all the time. And so, you know, my heart goes out to them and I, they’re there, they’re working super hard and, and uh, so if there are a couple mistakes made here and there, I, I, you know, I give it to them. What happens is, interestingly, what we, what we’re finding in COBIT is that it’s not if you’re in control and some of this is luck and so on, but it’s great management. But if you’re in control, we have the capacity in our hospital systems to actually manage it. Uh, if you’re, if what happens though, if you have a sudden outbreak and you’ll see, you know, you should make a slight decision like New York did, of keeping the school open an extra couple of days. Those of those small little decisions really start to overwhelm the hospital systems. And once the hospital systems get overwhelmed and they’re, you know, they’re already close to capacity anyway. They’re not used to dealing with COBIT is a brand new disease. We don’t know anything about it. So once those things happen, you, you, you have a very high fatality rate. If you have an overwhelmed hospital system, usually it’s two to 14 times higher than if the hospital’s system is, they’re just proceeding normally. And as it has it under control. That’s why we’re so concerned about whether you’re going to a peak or not. Because if you can’t control that peak and you start to, you know, start to really go over it, you have a really high fatality rate with this particular, uh, disease. If you’re able to manage it. It’s not too bad. It’s, it’s, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s doable. It’s, it’s, it’s, it’s, it’s probably, we think it’s about five to seven times worse than the flu, but at least it isn’t 20 times worse than the flu, which you get with a and others and AIDS. So that, uh, so like my, my, my counsel is to, um, so first of all, scientific literature don’t believe anything. It doesn’t peer reviewed and, and, and, and if you really look at the methodologies used, because there’s a lot of stuff going out really fast to try to demonstrate something and prove something, usually those studies are fairly biased. They’re looking at, they want to prove their, they want to prove a point that they already believe is the case. And so the way, if you look at the experimental design, it’s flawed and peer review will kind of come through, take a look at it, you’ll absorb it all. But, um, unless, unless you’re talking to a real expert, a medical doctor, epidemiologist, a drug designer, um, I would, uh, I understand where they’re coming from and they have a, they have a job. They have a representation. Me, I don’t have that. I don’t have that wrinkles restrictions, but most of my colleagues do. And they keep pretty quiet. Well, that’s the thing I always talk about, you know, follow the money that’s going to tell you whether you’re done. It seems like there really isn’t an agenda though. It’s like some people are so dead set against this being a thing. There’s some people that are so set against this being a hoax. There’s some people, so like paranoid about like, and there’s no angle. Like, I don’t, you know what I mean? I guess it’s just they’re formulating their own hypothesis and then they’re kind of just running with it. No, I, I, I, so there are a couple of things. Um, first, I, I, I, uh, I hope that we have a solution pretty quickly, but what’s happening in the, in the news media unfortunately is, well, actually why don’t I show you that? Because I had to explain this to, I guess let’s, let’s start with the big one. Do you recommend a bleach injections and UV lights down your throat? No. The president, the president is under a lot of stress. He’s doing the best he can, I think under the circumstances, but he, you know, we all, we all screw up that, that was truth. But you know, I like the fact that he’s trying to at least, you know, put this on the table and talk to people about it. And I think that’s positive. Unfortunately. You know, whenever you’re on the, on the dude on TV, as much as that, I’m not on that much, that office, I don’t have any skills. You know, everyone’s bit, two hours a day. It can be a bit much. Yeah. But, uh, you know, here are the, uh, the situation is, you know, the question is, okay, how do we proceed? And the thing that bothers me when I, when I listened to the, you know, the news media, especially up until about the last few days, is most of the people think that, you know, we’re going to have a vaccine in 18 months and everything’s going to go back to normal. And even between that, you know, we’ll have a one quick peek and then we’ll be done and we’ll wait for the vaccine to come. And then everything. Uh, and you know, it is possible. You know, I don’t wanna, I don’t want to say that it’s impossible, but it certainly is. It’s not probable. What is more probable is, uh, and then the second option, of course, as you said, is let’s just let it run. You know, let, you know, we don’t think it’s that bad. We’re not really sure yet. But you know, if we just let it run through, people get hurt, immunity. And, you know, it looked like a Spanish flu. We’ll have a little bit of population, um, crunch and then we’ll be done. And I’ll go into that a little bit in a second. The last issue, the last, the last, uh, uh, option here is that this is going to be a long, hard slog and I think it’s going to be my experience is that are long, hard slogs. And so if you’re, if you’re managing a business out there and you think that everything’s going to be fine and may, uh, that’s fine. You know, you want to hope for the best, but, um, you want to prepare for something that’s going to last, my guess is at least 18 months of this kind of this, this kind of management of can we open up the economy, close down the economy, open up the company, and we’ll talk about how we can do that more effectively, uh, in a little bit. I have never wanted to rely on get lucky. Um, as, as a strategy. Let’s, let’s just be clear. Um, and, and actually I was, I was just talking about this, uh, the whole Philadelphia thing specifically with the Spanish flu back in 1918, um, you know, the, uh, the war bonds parade that they did that, you know, Hey, we’re going to go ahead and we’re going to relax the restrictions before everybody else says we should. Um, and we’re going to hold this giant ass parade. And within like five days, every bed in the 41 hospitals in the city were full and people were dying by the tens of thousands. I mean that, that’s insane. That’s what we want to avoid that because then you start to overwhelm everything and you get a, you and you have this. So I don’t think this is just a period of time. I think like the Spanish, I think this is going to be sort of an era. There’s going to be a new sort of sadly, sort of a period of time that we refer back to as the Kobe era. And I wish it was just a blip, but I don’t think it’s going to be a V-shape or anything like that. I think it’s going to take a little time. We wanted the wonder years. We got the covert years. That’s you terms of getting lucky. You, it’s your, your, your, your first, uh, first hope. Hope is, you know, right now, uh, I’ll tell you, I, I’ve developed six vaccines. It took me about an average of nine years each vaccine. Wow. Yeah. And actually I’m better than most. So usually about, it takes about 13 and a half years to develop a vaccine for novel virus. So, you know, on a normal platform, you know, proven, scaled, uh, ready to go with, uh, you know, uh, you start from scratch. You know, you’re talking about 13 years, 14 years. Right now we don’t have a single vaccine for a coronavirus. Everything we’ve tried for coat, you know, for, for, for MERS and SARS hasn’t worked. So, you know, right now there are actually over a hundred. This is, this is from, I gave this presentation, uh, in, uh, April, April 4th. So, uh, Harvard and they publish it, uh, in world record time because I thought it was important to get out. But basically, you know, we’ve got, the good thing is we’ve got a lot of shots on goal here, you know, so we can, we can afford to have a couple of losers and still, and we got the whole world working at half the vaccine candidates are actually in China. Um, but there right now, you know, we’re still kind of getting a sense of where we think we can, we can go and, you know, one of these days we can talk about, you know, my area really is drug discovery and vaccine discovery. We can go into a lot of depth and other those options. But today I just want to talk a little bit about the, the it implications for this. Um, and then there we got lots of, lots of committed resources. You’ll almost, almost every major vaccine manufacturer, the implicated is in this big time. Uh, uh, and you know, said they’re going to vote a billion dollars into it. But my guess if I had to say no, if we, you know, everyone’s saying 18 months to a vaccine, my guests of that occurring really is less than 20%. My base in my experience, we could get lucky, but we’re talking about everything working perfectly and you know, I know all the tricks and if we’re talking about, you know, ring trials and ways of, of, uh, of, of looking at, uh, master protocols and having, you know, uh, parallel manufacturing scale up while you’re doing phase three studies, doing phase one and doing what we’re talking about every possible trick in the book, even that I’m getting 19 months, uh, Mac, uh, you know, best. So my suggestion is we probably should have another plan just in case. And he got it. Guy will tell you to have a contingency plan. That’s totally good. That extra 20%. You have the contingency plan and then we’ll talk about disaster recovery. Well, right, that word disaster recovery. So true. So the other option is, you know, people say, look, you know, I’m a young guy, I’m strong. I’ve taught, I can, I can take this, just let it run right through. You know what, we’ll get a herd immunity, we’ll have some deaths. But overall, we’ll also have some deaths if we, um, if we don’t, if we, if we shut down the economy this way, there’s a lot of economic trouble. I mean, you know, what’d you call this David chickenpox parties when we were kids. Yeah. That’s, yeah. Yeah. This isn’t like when like when we were kids and our parents would get us all together cause w one neighborhood kid got chickenpox. All right. You’re having a sleep over at his house cause you’re going to get it and get it out of the way. That’s right. And you know, it might be when we know more about this that that isn’t a bad decision. But right now we don’t know nearly enough about this. My guess is that that’s probably never going to be a good decision, but don’t now that’s for sure. Don’t do that. Do not. Yeah. I believe we’ve seen studies showing that people who have been reinfected in South Korea, so getting it once is not a guarantee that you won’t get it again. Yup. You know, and that’s not something we don’t even know if the immunity is gonna you know, how long it is, how, how, how confirmed it is in terms of preventing disease. We don’t know those numbers yet. We think based on SARS and MERS and we’re gonna have a lot of, we’re going to get about a two year immunity. That’s going to be pretty good if based on a lot of different factors though it could be as little as 12 bucks or even less. Uh, first of all it’ll be, it could be slight or it could be full. We don’t know that either. But so, you know, as you said Randy, we there, there’s a lot of risk in terms of going after this cause it may not even work. So w we know it’s a big bet right now and I wouldn’t know a lot of, a lot of States are saying let’s just go for it. I don’t think we’re ready to do that yet. If I had, if I had my brothers, but I think we have a better way of managing this even short term. And don’t forget, I mean this thing is all in, right. If you start, if you start the herd effect, it’s really hard to stop, you know, cause Oh well let’s, let’s, let’s slow it down. We made a little miscalculation that has all sorts of side effects. You want to word we know about. It kills more people than we thought. And then you want to stop it. You really can’t. It has its own life. And so, uh, right now you don’t have any drugs and we don’t have any immunity and you don’t know much about this thing. So I would take it, you know, I would take it slow and careful and learn. Learn as much as you can about it before you have to really have a big fight for sure. Just jumping around with good. We’ve got a quick question. Have you seen the Dr. Erickson video on Kobe? Um, do you have any thoughts on it? I haven’t seen it. Not tell me about it. No. Someone just does somebody put it in the chat box on the video. So I don’t know. I don’t know. Dr. Erickson, uh, where’s he at? I don’t know. Do I have no, other than, I guess we’ll be Googling it after the show. I’ll take, I’m happy to take a look cause I, you know, there are a number of people who, so, so there are a number of studies where they’ve tried, they’re trying to do this in Germany. They’re trying to do this. There’s a guy named, uh, professor, uh, uh, clique, uh, S, S, C, H, R, E, K, C. K. And he’s, uh, he’s sort of in the middle of Germany. They had a lot of COBIT there and he won. He has a hundred thousand tests that he wants to do on a population that’s quite structured and he’s going to look at what he thinks the right numbers are to do, to do better policy judgments. And it’s gonna take him a few years. He’s already released the first part of that study and it’s pretty interesting. But as far from conclusive, there are a couple of guys at Stanford who are also advocating this. They’re saying, look, you know, we don’t think it’s that big. We’re not really sure, but we don’t think it’s that big. So why don’t we just, you know, block off a part of the United States and see what happens. And so, and so they’ve actually, so you know, submitted grants to do this since um, my guess is that there are countries that will do that, but probably, but hopefully not in United States cause that, that you’re, you’re really asking for, for potential things to go really wrong. This isn’t Sweden doing this right now. It’s interesting. You know, Sweden Sweden’s got Sweden is, is a, is is very interesting. They decided to um, go ahead and do this. They’re protecting their older people, which is smart cause the older people, you know, we look at the death rates and it just scares you. You know, if you’re my age, it just starts to take off. You know what you’re doing. You’re so, you’re almost, there’s almost no death semester compromised until you’re, you know, in their forties by the time you get to 50 now this isn’t, this is, this is population level. And I’m was saying as an individual you should go out and be, feel safe. There are a lot of instances where you’ve got so at a population level and the statistical level, it just, it really takes off with compromised patients and older patients. So what they’ve done is they said we’re going to shelter all the older patients but you don’t shelter all this, uh, of the children, all the compromised patients. And then we feel like we’re not that population dense. Uh, and we are going to do some social distancing, but we, you know, we’ll keep some of the things open and we’re just gonna you know, see what happens. Right now in Sweden, everything’s pretty, you know, Sweden sun 24 hours a day. They, they’re out on the islands and not really concentrated. Once they get into fall, I’m a bit worried that it might come back to get them because people are, are blocked in more. It’s November, the flu seasons up. And also I think I’m just concerned that we might have a, we might sit back and then they’re going to get, yeah, those were the, those were the two things that I heard that I, whatever that discussion about Sweden comes up. The two things that I keep reading and seeing are, um, the population density issue. Um, and then the, uh, they’ve got universal health care, so they don’t have quite as many issues with underlying conditions, conditions, and preexisting conditions like we do here. Yeah. They’re healthier than we are. No doubt about it. Yeah, that’s true. And they have quite a, uh, yeah. So I don’t, I, that’s why we’re all watching Sweden very carefully. The other, the other countries to watch actually are completely the opposite, completely opposite. As Taiwan, Taiwan, these Asian countries got ready because they had SARS. And so if you were in Taiwan, you go to a hotel and your own, and my friend had this happen, this phone shut off and by lost battery power and at seven 30 in the morning, 20 minutes after he lost battery power, they were police at his door in his hotel door and he was quarantined 14 days. So that’s, that’s the, and they can, they can run their diagnostics. It takes us about, takes us about, right now with panel demand takes, you know, five, six, seven, eight days, Korea, seven minutes. So, you know, you can get a sense of just how much faster you can react. If you could get that kind of a throughput. I keep saying, I keep joking and saying this episode of black mirror sucks, but I mean it’s, it sounds like that’s actually not that far. Yeah, no, no, it’s a, yeah, it’s a [inaudible]. So there are different strategies and it’s, we’re lucky because we’re a little bit after everybody else, we can sort of look and see what’s working, what’s not working. So you know, that that’s actually an advantage to us if learn from the other group. Yeah. And I, you know, I think that was one of the things that I re, you know, I remember, you know, there was the, uh, you know, the, all the YouTube videos that came out, um, the folks in Italy, you know, leaving a message for themselves 10 days ago, um, at basically as a warning to us that, Hey, this is where, you know, that’s where, that’s where you are right now. Here’s where we are right now. Open your eyes. And, and again, we were all kinda, uh, you know, like I said, I mean, I have no problem admitting that I was a little flippant about this when it first broke and, you know, the, you know, and it was, you know, an until thing, you know, until the numbers and the data really started coming out. It was like, Oh yes, we actually should take this seriously. Okay. Yeah, you know, my life is at that, that, that doomsday clock and every morning I wake up and it’s on. And you just see, you know, how many deaths have occurred in that, that, that that’s reality, you know. Uh, and luckily there’ve been some, some areas in the United States that it skip and, uh, you know, uh, that’s great. Celebrate, because next time it’s going to come around a few more times. Well, and for sure, I mean, and, and a lot of those areas, you know, it comes down to those things we were just talking about with Sweden. I mean, no, South Dakota and Wyoming are, aren’t seeing huge outbreaks. They don’t have the population density that in New York city, a Detroit, uh, Chicago and you know, do, so it was interesting, there was a study out of university of Texas, a dr Merida to that and she’s very well known, very great epidemiologists. And they said, if you’re, if you’re in a very rural area of the country and you see zero evidence of Kobe, there is a 9% chance you’re actually having an epidemic. And if you see one case of [inaudible], there’s a 50% chance of having the paper. I said, well, the math all works, but Holy moly, this is, this is quite a conclusion. Well, what’s your take on California opening up the beaches already extended and I was a little bit premature, but you know, well actually I’ll tell you, uh, I can see it in the data. Uh, you can, and I’ll show you that in a little bit. Uh, how accurate some of this data is. It’s quite interesting. You can actually start to see what they call reproductive rates of the, of the virus started back up in California, was in very good control up until this weekend. And now it’s out of control. And it, it happens that fast. You don’t notice it. You know, it’s, Oh, it had a nice time at the beach, but in two weeks we’re going to pay. Yeah, it’s too bad. Uh, they, they, they didn’t hold on quite long enough and you have to keep, you can go to the beach, but just maintain your social distance, you know, try to see that six feet and they weren’t, you know, and so I think that sadly, we’re going to see an, uh, we already see a blip and I’ll show you that in a second. So what I gave to the, what I gave to the business guys, I said, look, they’re going to call you forward is combustion. I love it. We don’t know. So if you don’t know what, let’s think about some scenarios and how likely they are. So I said, you know, there’s, you know, it could be like SARS reaches Canada and all of a sudden the whole thing is, you know, we don’t like it anymore. We’re done. We’re good, we’re good. We had our, we had our fund for duct. It’s um, it’s unlikely it’s going to happen, but you know, I gave it a 1% chance. The magic bullet is one here. All about, you know, everyone sort of counting on, right, 18 months we’re going to have a vaccine wrong. I’ll go back to normal. We have to pay for a little bit of economy in the meantime, but going to be wonderful. Um, I give that about a 20% chance. Uh, unfortunately I wish it was bigger than that. But if you talk to epidemiologists and you talk to guys who, you know, create vaccines that are going to tell you, you know, uh, the chances of success before you get to phase three or which all the way through a vaccine development. So, um, there are few cocktails. Good chance here. I think it will be likely that this is the most likely thing will I have happened. And worst thing that could happen is even though we’re working very hard on this, everyone’s active at it, we have all this new technology, it still takes about as long as it ever does before and that’s 10 years. So that was the sort of, and I give that about a 20% chance cause I think we got a lot of good stuff in life. Here’s what it looks like. You can see the different, the different options. Um, and um, so spontaneous combustion heard about magic bullet means we’ve got a vaccine in 18 months. Therapeutic cocktails. It’s much more like the way we manage AIDS. For example. You know, you can’t, you can’t, you don’t have a vaccine for AIDS, but you know, with a good cocktail and it’s tailored for you and you’re monitoring very carefully, you can really suppress the vaccine and sort of express the HIV virus enough that you really don’t have to have account anymore. You realize there are people’s heads exploding right now reading those years across the bottom of your chart. Right? I’m sorry, I want to be responsible for it. Yeah. Yeah. I’ll tell you, when people see this, they know this is sort of the timeframe we use to develop drugs. Normally, you know it’s like no, okay, in 15 years, so he’d always step one, step two, step three and he’s one phase two will be, we can do a lot to make things do things in parallel, but you also take a lot more risk when you do that. You have to kind of balance that and you can see it. Typically, you know, it takes about, you know, for lucky 10 years plus they develop a real full blown, okay, some plasma therapy. Okay, we’ve got some, I know repurpose drugs. Okay, we’ve got a couple of cocktails that really are designed just for this and eventually you get the vaccine. That’s usually what happens. So hopefully it will break that paradigm, but that’s sort of what it looks like. Could be more like a therapeutic cocktail. I have Newt and know Jerry the therapeutic cocktails. I’ll have to, I’ll have to bring my cup next time. I didn’t realize. So I think I, well, so what’s interesting is what I’ll talk, maybe we should just talk a little bit about where we’re at right now and then I’ll show you what we can do about it. And I won’t talk about drugs and vaccines. So I think a little bit further on it. We can always come back to that later if you want to, but maybe we should just talk about what’s going on now with absolutely all we have right now really is social distancing diagnostics. You know, we don’t have any backstop. So if this thing start going at us, all we can do is try to prevent it from hitting us and allowing it to reproduce. Um, and so if we know where it’s coming from with the diagnostics, we can then separate a way from those. Everybody who’s contagious from us and we can, we can reduce the viral load in the environment, which is great, but it costs a lot of money as we, as we see, you know, that’s a big unemployment and we have the drugs. Once you have a drug that that was what I was dealing with with Tamiflu and H five N one I had, I had a great diagnostics, I was working at Roche, we had 80% cupboard. We have about, we had about eight times the coverage that we do in the United States right now. Uh, I’m sorry, no 800 times covered. We have in United States right now for this particular area, and I had a, I had a backstop, I had Tamiflu. So, and even then, even though I had that much coverage and I had a drug at work, we know at one point we, we, you know, it was, it was close to going out of control even with that much support. And then when you get the vaccine of course, then you really have back to normal and then you can start to say, especially with now that’s if it’s a full vaccine and full, full immunity and everyone’s, you know, everyone gets a, enough of it probably about our case, it’ll have to be over 80% 85% of the population should be vaccinated. That point, you can really say, okay, I’m good. I can, I can avoid getting this, this disease and we can go back to normal. But that’s sort of where we at. And what’s interesting is once you’re in one of these boxes, when you’re in one of these boxes, there is not much you can do no to improve your performance, you know, to really fight your, your effectiveness is really limited when you jumped to the next area. So when we get our first drug, we’ll be able to do quite a bit more. And when you get a vaccine, then of course you can do an awful lot more. So, you know, once you’re, once you’re in this box and we’re in the social distancing box right now, you know, you’re sorta, you don’t have many options and uh, but you know, hopefully it’ll, uh, we’ll, we’ll move quickly to the next and the next. But this social listening is all about to and behavior and he has, you know, it’s highly variable. People really good about it. They’ll do it if you will, don’t feel good about it. They won’t. And, um, yeah. Well and honestly, I mean that’s, I, you know, we’ve had that conversation on here before. It’s, you know, the sad reality is, is we are forcing our government to legislate for the lowest common denominator. Well, and, and you know, it’s really unpopular to do something. It doesn’t look like it needs to being done. But as you know, the exponential growth, sometimes you’ve got to take a stand and say, wait, you know, if it goes off, I can’t control it and I’m going to have overwhelmed hospital. So that’s, that’s sort of the idea. And yeah, I think that’s the consensus too, is everybody thinks that the vaccine is going to come out in like two weeks, then we’re gonna go back to business. So everyone you talk to like, Oh yeah, vaccine. Maxine comes out like, yeah, five years, you know that. Yeah, that’s, that’s the, so dude, I’m gonna, I’m going to print out that one slide with all the years across the bottom. Like I’m going to print it out by the thousands. You just start leaving them in people’s mailbox. Well, there’s, this is the other, this is the other two slides you should probably show because yeah, the, you know, it’s, it’s great if it happens and it happens, but you count on it, you know, that’s the problem. And I, and w I don’t see many other alternatives out there other than people saying, I’m going to count on it. You know? And when you really talk to you who’ve done this before, they all say, well, you know, it’s probably going to be a little longer. Uh, so you have to watch those kinds of words. Right. I’m hopeful that, I think that maybe it’s possible that those are all true statements that people who I know are epidemiologists who know that it could be 15 years, but we’re hopeful that it could be. If you listen to how G he’ll say that all the time. I’m hopeful that, I agree. I hope that too. But you know, the realistic numbers anyway, you know, we’ve had this once and done, right? So China went through this, it went up, came back down. You can see that they had a peak peak case on February 10th in the slide and then, you know, by March and the March, they said, okay, we’ve got it now. And so we’re going to ease travel restriction. Now. That really wasn’t so much the case. They let people into restaurants, but if you want to eat in China, uh, initially when they let you out, they were, you know, and, and 95 masks and they had to take them off and put it in and everything he got was, you know, sanitized and plastic wrappings uh, you had to wear your plastic suit and just then to be waived when anybody across the way. I mean, we’re not talking about normal, we’re just talking about ability to do it. I don’t know for sure. Like, I think, uh, I, I just saw like Texas is planning on, uh, starting to open up May 1st, and they’re talking about, uh, restaurants have to be at 25% capacity max. Um, tables have to be at least 10 feet apart from each other. Um, so I mean it’s, it’s gonna be interesting to see how that plays out. How do they expect them to stay in business? I mean that’s the thing. You restrict them to that they have a hard enough time to stay in businesses. Yeah. When their phone. Yeah. I, I feel really bad for these guys cause it’s nothing they did wrong. It’s just that we got a situation where if you go to the restaurant tighter than that, I mean, we’ve done the study. We know, uh, you know, in a normal situation, a person whose problem is two things. Number one, the ventilation isn’t that good and all the restaurants and number two, you sit there for a long time and whenever those two things come together and you’re crowded, we’ve done studies that show that, you know, one person can infect at least seven or eight, even if you’re pretty far away from home. Um, and so that’s, uh, we have, we’ve, we’ve done those, those studies is sort of interesting to watch. Uh, there’s, you know, some at MIT, you can see that a study at any rate and then where they have the big outbreak areas. And Mohan, uh, then, uh, they waited an extra two and a half, three weeks. But even now, they’re still pretty careful about what they’re doing. So that’s sort of a site. And the big question you’d have to ask is, is it once and done, you know, are we all done that, you know, we, we, we, we, we paid the price. No, we should be over. Right. Well, we’ve done the studies and what we’ve looked at is Mars and MERS and SARS. Excuse me. And if you look at MERS and SARS in the wild, we would anticipate actually, and, and if you, and this is the, this is their closest relative COBIT, you anticipate actually, that we’re going to have to go through this probably six times next year and the next, yeah. So we’ve got, we’ve got once, but probably in the United States, we’ll probably go through it another six times. So we’re going to have to figure this out pretty quick. Um, and herd immunity won’t happen even after six. We’re only gonna we’ll only be about 37% given the Gil rate and the infection rates. Uh, yeah. Holy shit. Well, editing it, people don’t really talk about this very much because it doesn’t look very happy. Oh yeah, exactly. This is not shiny happy news. But I mean, so you know, and you kind of touched on this earlier, you know, I do, and Bob touched on this earlier. I think one of the biggest issues that everybody has is, you know, they want that flag in the ground, they want that answer. And science doesn’t work that way. Like that’s not how this is gonna play out. Like, cause nobody knows. And to your point, like if anybody sounds like they think they know, disregard them immediately because no, this, this is, this is a very fluid situation still. Yeah. Just ask them what they got their MD degree in epidemiology degree and how many PhDs they’ve got after the name and you can get her and they only get their sense of rights. Well, you know, three months ago everybody was a constitutional scholar. So, you know. Yup. And this is our best guests based on the closest relative. So it made up. And you know, if you, if you look at the flu, what happens in the flu is then you know, what happens to the peaks drop in the summer because after March it gets hot in the car and the flu virus is actually very susceptible to heat. Unfortunately, the Corona virus from what we can tell isn’t so susceptible. I think we think it’s going to be a slight tick, but we don’t think it’s going to be like the flu. Sadly. It would be really helpful if it was cause it gives us a break. But um, uh, so far we see it in the summer. So that’s sort of the big question we’ve got. I’ll just show you this quickly because it’s important to the discussion about, about it and AI. What’s interesting about this is it, is it a little bit of a different take on exponential growth. So what happens is suppose today you see one death, right? Well, if we think back about the Corona virus, it actually, that guy took about four or five weeks to die, right? Right. Now at that time, if you do the math, if you have a case spec calibrate of 1% and you go through the cycle, people at the time, right? Probably sick because you have one set set, the present fatality rate. So now you can see that one person come out and you got, so that means you got a hundred people right there at four weeks ago you had a hundred people with the disease. Well, if a doubles every, every week, then week two you got 200 people. Week three you got four people, we four, you got 800 people and a day you’re off the page, right? So, so, so the problem with the problem with using death as an indicator is that it’s a really latent trigger, right? Right, right. Now they’re starting to say, well, let’s take a look at infection rate. Now that’s, that’s a better trigger. We want to have 14 days and infection rates going down. Uh, and that’s, that’s again, that’s a pretty late trigger because problem is we don’t have a very good diagnostic system. As I said, we do our diagnosis and then between five and 10 days later, sadly if you go to a doctor, it’d be nine days. If go to the hospital before five, then you find out what they’ve got and the problem. And that’s already allowed. You know, that’s another week or so, right? Even after you get started to get symptoms, which is already weekend. So we have to do is you have to get these, you have to get these triggers going earlier. And I’ll talk a little about those triggers. Those are diagnostic tests that we do in the field. So you actually know where you can already at like day three or four. So that, that way it’s easy to stop if you wait until you see a death. And then if you’re not really sure and you say, well, let’s just see, see what happens. Wait another week. Well now you’re at 3,200. Right? You know, let’s wait one more week and you have four deaths. It’s not that many people. Right? Well, now you’re 64 and the problem with this is we think that this is a pretty easy, uh, this is a relatively good scenario. We think that the numbers could be 10 times this. So actually one death as he’s 16,000 people aren’t thinking that sort of the rate that’s sort of, you know, the level of unknowns we’re at. So that gives you a sense of why these triggers are so important and why everyone’s talking about these diagnostic tests, diagnostic tests, they can push you into understanding whether you’ve got disease in day three, you’re not having to wait until week five. That’s a huge difference. And that’s the opportunity and we’ll get into how we can use that at the, toward the end we’re getting where we got some good stuff was that one of the issues in the beginning was they didn’t have a test and they couldn’t get accurate numbers. Yeah. That’s killing us. You know, we sorta, we sort of sort of, we sort of dropped the ball. What happened was, um, we thought that China had it and then, you know, had it properly done, they thought that they’re going to be able to stop it. They thought, we thought the testing would largely be done in China. China, that’s very expensive. So the big companies said, you know, we’re not that interested in doing this test, you know, ramp up and I’m gonna have to do all this stuff and then we’ll turn out the whole thing. I’ll fizzle out like SARS and everything else did in the past. So we’re not gonna, you know, we don’t really want to create these new tests. And that happened in February kind of timeframe. And so it started to really ramp up. Like we couldn’t, we’re out, we’re taking the three weeks. We know humans as, as, as creatures. Um, so I mean, it did. I mean, is it safe to say that what happened was SARS kind of lulled this into a false sense of security? No. SARS is really dangerous if you, if you, if you were to Asia today. Well, no, no, no. I mean, just, just from the standpoint, like from an, from an, from a us perspective. Yeah. Oh, absolutely. Yeah. You know, I have to, I probably would say, yeah, we think, well, you know, apply that. Meanwhile, the Asian countries where they were really ready for this, right? They have the laws in place. They’d done a SAR if they had a lot of, you know, had a lot of deaths and so they were ready for a lot of this stuff. And so they were able to stop a lot of it early on and we were sort of, as you said, lulled into it, um, a little bit and, and, and we got a little, we lost that. We sorta lost that month, uh, in February, and that, that really hurt. Um, but, you know, it’s, it’s recoverable. It’s just, it’s a lot of, a lot of fatalities. So one of the things that’s sort of interesting on the it side is how you do these diagnostics, right. And, um, you can start to see, president Trump said today that he wanted us to be able to test about 2%, uh, of the Americans. My, my numbers are going to have to do a little bit more than that. A 2% is a good start, but really controlled liars. You really have to probably be doing, uh, this is a test per week, says about 20 million a day and he would be down at about what, uh, 6 million a day. So I’m recommending kind of three to four times what he would recommend initially, but you know, but that’s a good start, right? So we have, we have three different kinds of tests. The first is surveillance. You come in, you and, and so if you go to a bar in China, they’ll actually take your temperature awesome about whether you’re, and they’ll take it outside the bar. And actually if you see order, the best hospitals today, they’ll also do the same thing, right? They want to test out before you even walk in the door. They’re checking your temperature and that kind of stuff now. Yeah, exactly. And that’s good practice, right? If you see that that’s a much better situation than if you walk in the door and then they start taking the temperature or they don’t get the temperature at all. Go ahead and wander around the building and when we’ll figure it out, if you’ve already come in contact with a few people, then you’ve got a problem with taking your temperature at this. This actually reduces in Singapore, this reduced the number of cases by 58% and the hospitals that did this versus that. So it’s a very effective means of controlling viral barrel. It’s not that, it’s not very sensitive that very specific. So this was, you have a theater doesn’t mean you got to go big. It’s a good start. And especially if they’re best practices, they test you outside in the parking lot. And then if you got a fever they say go get a test and don’t, don’t go into the building. And that’s the best practice. Uh, so I still have to a friend, I still have to see my orthopedic doctor cause I still have some problems with my knee and they wouldn’t even let me open the front door. Like they had someone opened it for me, testing me outside. We drove fine. And then inside like half of those roped off, we could only go here and good for them now that, that that’s really good practice, especially if it’s a maintaining distance all the way through in the waiting room and everything else that that’s, that’s a nice, nice job. That’s a really good jet so that you’re going, you’re going to a good guy. The other thing I’d say is if at all possible to do a telemedicine wise over the, you know, over the internet, that’s even even better. Obviously with orthopedics you can’t do that. They got to test certain physical capabilities you’re having after the surgery. Uh, but uh, for, for, you know, if you’re doing psychological work or if you’re doing normal, just, you know, diagnostics initially, uh, to the extent you can do it with a telemedicine, you’re better off right now. Uh, just to do it cause sure. Yeah. Yeah. So the, the other, so there’s a surveillance. Yes. Uh, uh, the other kind of surveillance test is actually what they call Sentinel testing and they’ll actually, you know, they’ll say really interested in opening up this building. And so we’re going to really do a real area. We’re gonna do a real high density testing just to that area. It’s a little rope it off and really look at what’s going on in that area. That’s, you know, setting all ties passing. We have to do a lot more of that. Um, especially if you want to start to preserve some areas of effective economic activity. PCR area is sort of interesting. That’s, that’s the test for the actual virus. So, uh, the, the, and this is unfortunately, this is the area where we made a little, we lost a little bit of time, uh, and we need to do about 75, in my estimation, somebody had billion deaths a week or so on this. This is to now, this is to manage the demand for viruses. If we’re con, if we’re actually treating them. There are other numbers that say I’m an epidemiologist, I’m just interested in sort of knowing what the prevalence of the viruses then you have. Then you can do it at a much in a much lower rate of testing. But if you really want to manage the test, you know, you got a COPD patient, your doctor, you’re going to have to measure him, him or her, that the patient the five, six, 10 times to understand what the level of vital is that. So it isn’t just about the UVL just this test just once. Right. Gotcha. So that was, yeah, that was, I was actually, I’m like, I’m like, okay, so you’re testing the entire population every five weeks, but now that you’ve got multiple tests on, okay, gotcha. Yeah. Yeah. So, and then what happens is you do more surveillance testing all of a sudden doing an awful lot more PCR testing because people are thought to
------------------Support the channel------------ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thedissenter PayPal: paypal.me/thedissenter ------------------Follow me on--------------------- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thedissenteryt/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheDissenterYT Dr. David F. Lancy is Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at Utah State University. He is the author/editor of several books on childhood and culture, including Cross-Cultural Studies in Cognition and Mathematics (1983), Studying Children and Schools (2001), Playing on the Mother Ground: Cultural Routines for Children's Learning (1996) and Anthropological Perspectives on Learning in Childhood (2010). Here, we talk about children's play as a human universal; teaching behavior from adults in different cultures and ecological conditions; children's acquisition of language and motherese; what children naturally seek to learn and what they can learn just through observation, imitation, and emulation; the differences between parents' behavior toward children learning in traditional and WEIRD societies; gender roles; the role of alloparenting in traditional societies; and the relationship between learning impairments and infanticide. -- O Dr. David F. Lancy é Professor Emérito de Antropologia na Utah State University. É o autor/editor de vários livros sobre infância e cultura, incluindo Cross-Cultural Studies in Cognition and Mathematics (1983), Studying Children and Schools (2001), Playing on the Mother Ground: Cultural Routines for Children's Learning (1996) e Anthropological Perspectives on Learning in Childhood (2010). Aqui, falamos sobre a brincadeira nas crianças como universal humano; o comportamento de ensino da parte dos adultos em diferentes culturas e condições ecológicas; a aquisição de língua por parte das crianças e o “motherese”; o que as crianças naturalmente procuram aprender e o que podem aprender através da observação, imitação e emulação; as diferenças entre o comportamento dos pais em relação à aprendizagem das crianças em sociedades tradicionais e WEIRD; papéis de género; o papel do “alloparenting” nas sociedades tradicionais; e a relação entre défices de aprendizagem e infanticídio. -- Follow Dr. Lancy's work: Faculty page: http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/authors/239709#iW28x5caQADeAqq0.97 His Psychology Today blog: https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/benign-neglect His books: https://www.amazon.com/David-F.-Lancy/e/B001HP196G -- A HUGE THANK YOU TO MY PATRONS: KARIN LIETZCKE, ANN BLANCHETTE, JUNOS, SCIMED, PER HELGE HAAKSTD LARSEN, LAU GUERREIRO, RUI BELEZA, MIGUEL ESTRADA, ANTÓNIO CUNHA, CHANTEL GELINAS, JIM FRANK, JERRY MULLER, FRANCIS FORD, AND HANS FREDRIK SUNDE! I also leave you with the link to a recent montage video I did with the interviews I have released until the end of June 2018: https://youtu.be/efdb18WdZUo And check out my playlists on: PSYCHOLOGY: https://tinyurl.com/ybalf8km PHILOSOPHY: https://tinyurl.com/yb6a7d3p ANTHROPOLOGY: https://tinyurl.com/y8b42r7g
Today we speak with Lance Cayko and Alex Gore, partners at the architecture and design firm, F9 Production based out of Longmont, Colorado. These guys are great examples of the entrepreneurial spirit. Since starting their firm in 2009, they've grown both the size and scale of the projects they work on, including a current project where they are actually developing themselves. Today, we talk about selling architecture among a bunch of other great topics. On today's episode you'll discover: Should you launch a podcast for your design firm? The worst advice I've received in architecture ... Should architects advertise? A conversation about selling architecture ... How to 'sell' architecture
Developmental psychology seems to tell us how to best to raise our children into competent and decent adults. However, comparing our theories and practices to those of other cultures raises questions about whether our ideas are ethnocentric. This topic is at the center of anthropologist David F. Lancy's latest book, The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings, 2nd edition (Cambridge University Press, 2015). In his book, he offers a comprehensive review of cross-cultural research pertaining to societies treatment of children and argues that Western practices around child-rearing are out of step with those of the rest of the world. In our interview, he explains how our neontocratic orientation differs from most other societies gerontocratic values and offers some fresh ways of thinking about aspects of everyday family life. David F. Lancy is Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at Utah State University, and author/editor of several books on childhood and culture, including Playing on the Mother Ground: Cultural Routines for Childrens Learning (1996), Studying Children and Schools (2001), and The Anthropology of Learning in Childhood (2010). He also authors the Psychology Today blogpost Benign Neglect. Eugenio Duarte is a licensed psychologist and psychoanalyst practicing in New York City. He treats individuals and couples, with specialties in LGBTQ issues, eating and body image problems, and relationship problems. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram.
Developmental psychology seems to tell us how to best to raise our children into competent and decent adults. However, comparing our theories and practices to those of other cultures raises questions about whether our ideas are ethnocentric. This topic is at the center of anthropologist David F. Lancy's latest book, The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings, 2nd edition (Cambridge University Press, 2015). In his book, he offers a comprehensive review of cross-cultural research pertaining to societies treatment of children and argues that Western practices around child-rearing are out of step with those of the rest of the world. In our interview, he explains how our neontocratic orientation differs from most other societies gerontocratic values and offers some fresh ways of thinking about aspects of everyday family life. David F. Lancy is Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at Utah State University, and author/editor of several books on childhood and culture, including Playing on the Mother Ground: Cultural Routines for Childrens Learning (1996), Studying Children and Schools (2001), and The Anthropology of Learning in Childhood (2010). He also authors the Psychology Today blogpost Benign Neglect. Eugenio Duarte is a licensed psychologist and psychoanalyst practicing in New York City. He treats individuals and couples, with specialties in LGBTQ issues, eating and body image problems, and relationship problems. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychology