POPULARITY
This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/lindy_lou_isonhood_a_juror_s_reflections_on_the_death_penalty ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/107-academic-words-reference-from-lindy-lou-isonhood-a-jurors-reflections-on-the-death-penalty-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/HCbOiBQ08eQ (All Words) https://youtu.be/rK3y77_mpjQ (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/lq22oBQXGIs (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)
We're hard at work on new episodes of the TED Radio Hour, which will start rolling out in March. In the meantime, new host Manoush Zomorodi shares some of her favorite episodes of the show. This episode originally aired on June 21, 2019. When the life you've built slips out of your grasp, you're often told it's best to move on. But is that true? Instead of forgetting the past, TED speakers describe how we can move forward with it. Guests include writers Nora McInerny and Suleika Jaouad, and human rights advocate Lindy Lou Isonhood.
When the life you've built slips out of your grasp, you're often told it's best to move on. But is that true? Instead of forgetting the past, TED speakers describe how we can move forward with it. Guests include writers Nora McInerny and Suleika Jaouad and human rights advocate Lindy Lou Isonhood.Commercial free broadcast from June 22, 2019 on the Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network, online at heartlandnewsfeed.com, Spreaker and other platforms.Listen Live: https://www.heartlandnewsfeed.com/listenliveFollow us on social mediaFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/hlnfradionetworkTwitter: https://www.twitter.com/HLNF_BulletinInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heartlandnewsfeedMastadon: https://liberdon.com/@heartlandnewsfeedDiscord: https://discord.gg/6b6u6DTSupport us with your financial supportStreamlabs: https://streamlabs.com/heartlandmediaPayPal: https://www.paypal.me/heartlandmediaSquare Cash: https://cash.app/$heartlandnewsfeedPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/heartlandnewsfeedCrypto via 1UpCoin: https://1upcoin.com/donate/heartlandmedia
When the life you've built slips out of your grasp, you're often told it's best to move on. But is that true? Instead of forgetting the past, TED speakers describe how we can move forward with it. Guests include writers Nora McInerny and Suleika Jaouad, and human rights advocate Lindy Lou Isonhood.
Lindy Lou Isonhood grew up in a town where the death penalty was a fact of life, part of the unspoken culture. But after she served as a juror in a capital murder trial -- and voted "yes" to sentencing a guilty man to death -- something inside her changed. In this engaging and personal talk, Isonhood reflects on the question she's been asking herself in the 25 years since the trial: Am I a murderer? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lindy Lou Isonhood a grandi dans une ville où la peine de mort fait partie du quotidien et de la culture non verbale. Mais après avoir été appelée comme membre du jury dans un procès où elle a voté pour condamner ainsi un homme à mort, quelque chose a changé en elle. Dans cette intervention proche de l'introspection, elle pose la question qui la taraude depuis 25 ans : « Suis-je une meurtrière ? »
Lindy Lou Isonhood cresceu em uma cidade onde a pena de morte era um fato da vida, parte da cultura tácita. Mas, depois de ser jurada em um julgamento de um homicídio qualificado e ter votado "sim" para condenar um homem culpado à morte, algo dentro dela mudou. Nesta palestra envolvente e pessoal, Isonhood reflete sobre a questão que ela tem se feito nos 25 anos desde o julgamento: "Eu sou uma assassina?"
Lindy Lou Isonhood se crió en una ciudad donde la pena de muerte era parte de la realidad cotidiana, una parte silenciada de su cultura. Pero luego de integrar un jurado para juzgar a un hombre por homicidio, y de haber votado a favor de su condena con la pena de muerte, algo cambió en su fuero interno. En esta interesante e íntima charla, Isonhood reflexiona sobre la pregunta que se ha venido haciendo en los 25 años posteriores a aquel juicio: ¿soy una asesina?
Lindy Lou Isonhood grew up in a town where the death penalty was a fact of life, part of the unspoken culture. But after she served as a juror in a capital murder trial -- and voted "yes" to sentencing a guilty man to death -- something inside her changed. In this engaging and personal talk, Isonhood reflects on the question she's been asking herself in the 25 years since the trial: Am I a murderer?
린디 루 아이슨후드는 공공연한 문화로 사형제도가 실행되는 마을에서 자랐습니다. 하지만 살인범의 사형에 찬성하며 재판에서 배심원으로서의 역할을 수행해낸 이후 그녀안에서 어떤 변화가 일어났습니다. 이 사려깊고 사적인 이야기에서 아이슨후드는 재판이후 25년간 스스로에게 물어왔던 질문에 대해 숙고합니다. 과연 나는 살인자인가?
“Juror No 2”, as Lindy Lou Isonhood was known, talks about the impact that a death sentence had on her and other jurors in a case in Mississippi in which […] The post Jurors as victims in death penalty cases appeared first on KKFI.