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Today's HeadlinesNetwork of believers in Myanmar already in place to bring earthquake aidRocket fire and Israeli strikes test ceasefireHave you written a blank check to God?
Use code tldrnews at the link below to get an exclusive 60% off an annual Incogni plan: https://incogni.com/tldrnewsWelcome to the TLDR News Daily BriefingIn today's episode, we run through the Ukraine aid approved by the EU after Hungary drops its veto. Also, we discuss the three year anniversary of the Myanmar Coup; U.S. sanctions on Israeli settlers; & the Presidential feud in The Philippines.
Since the 2021 coup in Myanmar, many Burmese have taken up arms against the military and thousands more have fled. BBC Burmese editor Soe Win Than tells us about life in the country now, and the challenges he and his team face in reporting it. What's in a name? People in Thailand take naming very seriously. BBC Thai's Tossapol Chaisomritpol explains the meanings behind his many names - from birth, through renaming, and onto his nicknames too! Prague's Little Hanoi Vietnamese people are the third largest ethnic community in the Czech Republic. Khue Luu Binh of BBC Vietnamese explains how they came to be such a significant community, and tells us about 'Little Hanoi', a large commercial hub outside Prague. Iran: How your phone can land you in jail An insight into how the Iranian regime is targeting people's mobile phones to stifle protests and prevent images leaving the country, with BBC Monitoring's Khosro Isfahani. Triumph against the odds Sarika Singh of BBC Hindi TV shares the inspiring story of rebuilding her career after a life-threatening illness, in our series celebrating the BBC's 100 years. (Photo: Pro-democracy demonstrators in Bangkok, Thailand. Credit: Chaiwat Subprasom/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Sign up for to Nebula to get the ad-free access to the full Daily Briefing every single day: http://go.nebula.tv/tldrnewsukWelcome to the TLDR News Daily BriefingIn today's episode, we run through the United States' plan to counter China with bases in the Philippines. Also, we discuss the FBI's latest raid on Biden; the anniversary of the Myanmar Coup; and Shell's controversial end of year profits.
Two years ago, Myanmar's military seized power in a coup. It was a major setback for the country, which had begun to slowly move toward democracy and free elections after decades of military rule. For other countries and organizations like the United Nations – the coup raised some big, and still open, questions about whether and how to interact with the military junta, particularly amid efforts to hold Myanmar's leaders accountable for grave crimes, including acts of genocide, against the Rohingya and other ethnic groups.The junta has announced that it plans to hold “elections” in August, but most experts believe that free and fair elections are impossible under current conditions, and that the elections are merely an effort by the military to deepen its control over the country. On the two-year anniversary of the coup, we speak with Akila Radhakrishnan and Angela Mudukuti from the Global Justice Center, a nonprofit organization that advances gender equity and human rights. Global Justice Center has worked closely with organizations in Myanmar since 2005. Akila is Global Justice Center's President and an expert on the role that gender plays in genocide. Angela Mudukuti, is a Zimbabwean lawyer and the Senior Legal Adviser at the Global Justice Center. She has worked for a number of organizations including the International Criminal Court (ICC) and her experience includes working on universal jurisdiction and precedent-setting cases before South African courts including seeking the arrest of the former president of Sudan during his visit to South Africa.Show Notes Akila Radhakrishnan (@akilaGJC)Angela Mudukuti (@AngelaMudukuti)14:25 Global Justice Center and BROUK's recommendations to the Argentinian judiciary in a case brought against Myanmar military leaders for the genocide of the Rohingya21:15 NYU's American Journalism Online Program21:45 Just Security's Beyond the Myanmar Coup seriesMusic: “The Parade” by “Hey Pluto!” from Uppbeat: https://uppbeat.io/t/hey-pluto/the-parade (License code: 36B6ODD7Y6ODZ3BX)
Your daily news in under three minutes.
0:08 — Rashid Khalidi, is the Edward Said Professor of Modern Arab Studies at Columbia University. His most recent book is The Hundred Years' War On Palestine. 0:33 — Seinenu Thein-Lemelson, is a Lecturer in the Anthropology Department at UCLA, and has been working with activists and former political prisoners in Burma since 2013. 0:44 — Dr. Teresa Palmer, is a family physician and geriatrician who formerly worked at Laguna Honda Hospital, and now is lead organizer on hospital for the Gray Panthers of San Francisco. The post Blinken in Israel and Palestine; Plus, the two-year anniversary of the Myanmar coup; Plus, Laguna Honda Hospital hearing appeared first on KPFA.
14-months on from the Myanmar coup, and the country's former leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been sentenced to prison. So could this escalate the junta's political crackdown and hasten the sentencing of other detainees of the regime, like Australian Professor Sean Turnell?
News and labour updates from the Asia Pacific region.It has been one year since the military coup in Myanmar. So what are the prospects for democracy in a country whose economy is in freefall, where millions face poverty and food insecurity, and where violence is increasing at an alarming rate? On today's program we speak to Debbie Stothard to discuss the coup in Myanmar, one year on. Debbie is one of the founding members of the Alternative ASEAN on Burma.Asia Pacific Currents provides updates of labour struggles and campaigns from the Asia Pacific region. It is produced by Australia Asia Worker Links, in the studio of 3CR Radio in Melbourne, Australia
A grim anniversary for Myanmar. Discussing Ukraine. Uneven times for Malaysia tourism. Dr. Fauci tells us about vaccine donation. Lunar New Year incense. Electrifying your ride. Jim Stevenson hosts VOA Asia.
It's a year since Myanmar's military removed the democratically elected government from power. We share key moments in Myanmar's journey towards democracy from The Fifth Floor archive, with BBC Burmese editor Soe Win Than, former editor Tin Htar Swe and presenter Yee Yee Aung. And we hear how the service is marking the anniversary, with stories about the opposition-run 'zoom government' outside Myanmar, the past year of military leadership, and how citizens will be marking the day. Driving on the frozen sea Around this time of year Estonia opens up its ice roads on the frozen Baltic sea. People can drive their cars and visit some of the islands off the coast, and in 2019, two intrepid reporters from BBC Russian - Ivan Chesnokov and Yury Baranyuk - couldn't resist driving the ice road for themselves. Reporting from the Democratic Republic of Congo The risks of rebel activity, capsizing boats and an active volcano – some of the challenges BBC Africa's health correspondent Rhoda Odhiambo faced on a recent trip to eastern DRC to report on child malnutrition and a vaccination campaign. Brazil's pioneering female football referee Lea Campos was one of the first women in the world to become a qualified football referee. But in her home country, Brazil, she was barred from working after being told women were too emotional to referee in men's football games. Fernando Duarte of BBC Minute tells us how she fought back. Celebrating Vietnamese Tet Vietnam's lunar new year celebration of Tet is the time families come together to see out the old year and welcome the new. BBC Vietnamese journalist Tran Vo is spending her first ever Tet away from home in Bangkok, and put together a report on how Bangkok's Vietnamese community celebrates with the traditional Banh Chung rice cake, to remind her of home. (Photo: Protestors after the military coup in Myanmar, February 2021. Credit: Reuters)
On this episode, Cyrus is joined by Amit and Silverie (Antariksh) to discuss CloudFlare's end of year 2021 study of the most popular social media platforms, streaming platforms and websites and domains in the past year. Did you know that YouTube was the most used streaming platform for only one particular day in 2021? We didn't either! Tune in.Subscribe to our new YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmY4iMGgEa49b7-NH94p1BQAlso, subscribe to Cyrus' YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UCHAb9jLYk0TwkWsCxom4q8AYou can follow Amit on Instagram & Twitter @DoshiAmit: https://twitter.com/doshiamit and https://instagram.com/doshiamitYou can follow Antariksh on Instagram @antariksht: https://instagram.com/antarikshtDo send in AMA questions for Cyrus by tweeting them to @cyrussaysin or e-mailing them at whatcyrussays@gmail.comDon't forget to follow Cyrus Broacha on Instagram @BoredBroacha (https://www.instagram.com/boredbroacha)In case you're late to the party and want to catch up on previous episodes of Cyrus Says you can do so at: www.ivmpodcasts.com/cyrussaysYou can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the new and improved IVM Podcasts App on Android: https://ivm.today/android or iOS: https://ivm.today/ios
2021 began with the promise of vaccines to the rescue. But as one variant begets another, rich nations talk of boosters and jabs for kids while much of the developing world still waits for first doses.
THE Getting Into Good Trouble Podcast - explaining world conflicts and protests since 2019
မြန်မာနိုင်ငံမှာ အာဏာသိမ်းပြီး ၉ လအကြာအထိ ပြည်သူတွေအပေါ် မတရားဖမ်းဆီး အကြမ်းဖက်နှိမ်နင်းတာတွေ လုပ်ဆောင်နေတဲ့ စစ်ကောင်စီဟာ လက်ရှိကာလမှာတော့ မမျှော်လင့်ထားတဲ့ ဖိအားတွေနဲ့ ရင်ဆိုင်နေရပါတယ်။
အကြမ်းဖက်စစ်ကောင်စီဟာ စစ်အာဏာသိမ်းကာလအတွင်း ပြည်သူပေါင်း ၇ ထောင်ကျော်ကို အဓမ္မဖမ်းဆီးထိမ်းသိမ်းခဲ့ပါတယ်။
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We're launching our fall season with J. R. Ching '01, the chief financial officer for Yoma Strategic Holdings. We asked J. R. to join the show to help us understand the military coup in Myanmar and to hear how his company has managed the ongoing crisis as the Delta variant continues to surge throughout the country. CreditsThe music for this episode was produced and contributed by Nicholas Byrne '19 of Arts + Crafts.Nicholas is a producer, guitarist, and singer, and a graduate student at the Parsons School of Design in NYC. The alumnus earned his bachelor's degree from the UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media with a minor in music. Follow Nicholas @art.sandcrafts on Instagram or on Spotify.This episode also featured intro music by Scott Hallyburton '22, guitarist of the band South of the Soul. An audio clip of protests used in this episode was contributed by YouTube user Bendobrown. You can watch the full video here.How to listenOn your mobile device, you can listen and subscribe to Catalyze on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. For any other podcast app, you can find the show using our RSS feed.Catalyze is hosted and produced by Sarah O'Carroll for the Morehead-Cain Foundation, home of the first merit scholarship program in the United States and located at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. You can let us know what you thought of the episode by finding us on Twitter or Instagram at @moreheadcain or you can email us at communications@moreheadcain.org.
တောင်ဇလပ်ပန်းတွေ၊ အောက်ချင်းငှက်တွေ၊ တိမ်ပင်လယ်တွေနဲ့ အေးချမ်းလှတဲ့ တောင်ပေါ်ဒေသချင်းပြည်နယ်ဟာ လက်ရှိအချိန်မှာတော့ ယမ်းငွေ့တွေ ဝေခဲ့ရပါပြီ။
စစ်ကောင်စီရဲ့ အာဏာသိမ်းကာလဟာ ၇ လကျော်လာတာနဲ့အမျှ အကြမ်းဖက်ဖိနှိပ်မှုများစွာ လုပ်ဆောင်ခဲ့ပါတယ်။
အရင်ကဆိုရင် စစ်ဘေးရှောင်ဆိုတဲ့ စကားလုံးဟာ ကချင်၊ ကရင်၊ ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်မြောက်ပိုင်းနဲ့ ရခိုင်ပြည်နယ်တို့မှာသာ အများဆုံးကြားသိခဲ့ရတာပါ။
အမျိုးသားညီညွတ်ရေး အစိုးရ NUGက စက်တင်ဘာလ ၇ရက် ထုတ်ပြန်ချက်ဟာ မြန်မာပြည်သူ့လူထုကြားမှာရော နိုင်ငံတကာသတင်းစာမျက်နှာအထိပါ လှုပ်ခတ်ခဲ့ပါတယ်။
ကမ္ဘာ့ကုလသမဂ္ဂ အထွေထွေညိလာခံမှာ စစ်အာဏာရှင်ကို ဖယ်ရှားပြီး၊ NUG အစိုးရကို လက်ခံဘို့ ကြိုးစားနေတဲ့ မြန်မာနိုင်ငံလုံးဆိုင်ရာ အလုပ်သမားသမဂ္ဂ ဥက္ကဌ ဦးမောင်မောင်က ရှင်းပြထားပါတယ်။
အမျိုးသား ညီညွတ်ရေးအစိုးရ NUG က စက်တင်ဘာလ ၇ ရက် ကစပြီး နိုင်ငံတော် အရေးပေါ် အခြေအနေအဖြစ် ကြေညာလိုက်ပြီး ပြည်သူတွေအနေနဲ့ စစ်အာဏာရှင်ကို ဆန့်ကျင်တော်လှန်ကြဖို့ တိုက်တွန်းလိုက်ပါတယ်။
စစ်ကောင်စီက နိုင်ငံရဲ့ အာဏာသိမ်းကို အဓမ္မသိမ်းယူထားတာ ၇ လနီးပါးအကြာမှာတော့ စံချိန်ကျိုးလောက်တဲ့ မြန်မာငွေတန်ဖိုးကျမှုနဲ့ အတူ ပြည်သူတွေရဲ့ စီးပွားရေးကျပ်တည်းမှုတွေဟာလည်း ပိုမိုဆိုးဝါးလို့လာပါတယ်။
မမိုးဦးက သူမ ၂၀၁၂ ခုနှစ်မှာ သူနာပြု ဆရာမ ဖြစ်လာအပြီး တစ်လျှောက် တွေ့ကြုံခဲ့ရတဲ့ အဖြစ်ပျက်တွေနဲ့၊ ယ္ခု ကိုးဗစ်တတိယလှိုင်းမှာ လုပ်ဆောင်နေရပုံများကို ရှင်းပြထားပါတယ်။
မြန်မာနိုင်ငံရဲ့ တိုင်းရင်းဒေသတွေထဲက စစ်ရှောင်စခန်းတွေမှာ ပြည်သူပေါင်းများစွာ ခိုလှုံနေရဆဲပါ။
စစ်ကောင်စီရဲ့ တရားဥပဒေမဲ့လုပ်ဆောင်မှုတွေကြားမှာ ပြည်သူကို ကာကွယ်နိုင်ဖို့အရေး ဒေသအသီးသီးမှာ ပြည်သူ့ကာကွယ်ရေးတပ်ဖွဲ့တွေ အသီးသီးပေါ်ထွက်ခဲ့ပါတယ်။
စစ်ကောင်စီရဲ့ အာဏာသိမ်းကာလအတွင်းမှာ အလုပ်အကိုင်အခွင့်အလမ်းဟာ မရှိသလောက် နည်းပါးခဲ့ပါတယ်။
မြန်မာနိုင်ငံရဲ့ လူသိများတဲ့ နိုင်ငံရဲ့ဖြစ်စဉ်တွေထဲက ၈၈၈၈ လူထုအရေးတော်ပုံဟာ မနက်ဖြန်ဆိုရင် ၃၃ နှစ်တိုင်ခဲ့ပါပြီ။
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1 August marks six months since Myanmar's military overthrew the democratically-elected government in a coup. Here's what's happened since and what the future could hold. - 1 Ogos sómac furaí bo militery yé sorkar hárí loíyé lotí.Eçe fúni só yá la lotí ken óí aíccé ar ken oíbodé yan.
(This is part 2 of a 2 part discussion. We highly recommend listening to part 1 before starting this episode). In February of 2021, Myanmar's military leadership annulled the results of a general election and removed the National League for Democracy (NLD), led by Aung San Suu Kyi, from power. Popular resistance immediately erupted in response to the coup, but the military has responded with an increasingly violent crackdown. The military has dominated politics in Myanmar for decades, with NLD and Suu Kyi having long been the darlings of Western liberals (the latter enjoying an almost saintly media status for a time). But what is really going on here? Geoff Aung joins us this week to discuss the coup, growing resistance, as well as the broader political context that set the stage for these events. We cover a lot of ground - everything from how Myanmar's colonial past still haunts the present to the history of Burmese left. Geoff Aung is a PhD candidate in Anthropology at Columbia University, with a research focus on Southern Myanmar. You can follow him on Twitter @Rgnhardliner Also check out some of his recent writings: Keep the Streets: Coup, Crisis and Capital in Myanmar: https://spectrejournal.com/keep-the-streets-coup-crisis-and-capitalism-in-myanmar/ Dead Generations: https://nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/dead-generations/ And for more general background on Myanmar/Burma: https://newleftreview.org/issues/ii60/articles/mary-callahan-myanmar-s-perpetual-junta
Since Myanmar's Tatmadaw (military) overthrew the civilian government and took power on 1 February, a civil disobedience movement has rapidly grown. This has seen civil servants and workers in all walks of life, such as banking personnel and medical workers, going on strike, causing significant disruption in daily lives. Weeks of demonstrations and the ensuing military crackdown have roiled the country. Join Dane Chamorro for a conversation with Dereck Aw, Senior Analyst at Control Risks about the preliminary and potential impact of the tumultuous past month on duty of care, business continuity and exposure to political and external communications risks for foreign businesses in Myanmar. Stay updated with new episodes by subscribing wherever you listen to your podcasts.
In February of 2021, Myanmar's military leadership annulled the results of a general election and removed the National League for Democracy (NLD), led by Aung San Suu Kyi, from power. Popular resistance immediately erupted in response to the coup, but the military has responded with an increasingly violent crackdown. The military has dominated politics in Myanmar for decades, with NLD and Suu Kyi having long been the darlings of Western liberals (the latter enjoying an almost saintly media status for a time). But what is really going on here? Geoff Aung joins us this week to discuss the coup, growing resistance, as well as the broader political context that set the stage for these events. We cover a lot of ground - everything from how Myanmar's colonial past still haunts the present to the history of Burmese left. Geoff Aung is a PhD candidate in Anthropology at Columbia University, with a research focus on Southern Myanmar. You can follow him on Twitter @Rgnhardliner Also check out some of his recent writings: Keep the Streets: Coup, Crisis and Capital in Myanmar: https://spectrejournal.com/keep-the-streets-coup-crisis-and-capitalism-in-myanmar/ Dead Generations: https://nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/dead-generations/ And for more general background on Myanmar/Burma: https://newleftreview.org/issues/ii60/articles/mary-callahan-myanmar-s-perpetual-junta (This is part 1 of a 2 part episode, so stay tuned for part 2 next week!)
It's been over three months since the military coup in Myanmar that has resulted in violence and mass protests. Press freedom has suffered immensely, as the military junta shut down the internet, muzzled and attacked journalists. In this latest episode of Trouble with the Truth, Lana speaks about the origins and the consequences of the coup with UK-based academic and human rights activist Maung Zarni. He is a co-founder Forces of Renewal Southeast Asia network, Burmese coordinator of the Free Rohingya Coalition and has been engaged in activism for over thirty years. Zarni gave a detailed and thought-provoking account of the events in Myanmar – the unravelling of the coup, how people came together to join the fight against the junta and how civilians and journalists are navigating the social media and information shutdown. He touches on what can be done at a local and global level to help topple the military dictatorship.
In Episode 4 we interview Pulitzer prize winning Burmese-American journalist Aye Min Thant about that ongoing military coup in Myanmar. We discuss the protest movement opposing the coup, the violent police crackdown in the country, and the role of technology in both upholding and resisting authoritarian rule. In the time since this episode was recorded the police crackdown has intensified with journalists being targeted, escalating internet shutdowns, and reports that over 500 protestors have been killed by the military.
Ambassador Derek Mitchell, former U.S. ambassador to Myanmar and current President of the National Democratic Institute, sits down with the Council to tackle recent events in Myanmar, including the military coup d'état that ousted the nation's democratically elected leaders and subsequent nationwide protests. But what led up to this point and what happens next? Is this coup a sign that democracy is in retreat around the world?
Elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and members of her National League for Democracy (NLD) party are among hundreds of people detained, by the Myanmar government, so why? Mo Gerstley answers. http://www.gerstnation.com/
VOTT: Myanmar coup threatens Asean unity, opportunities | Mar 07, 2021 Subscribe to The Manila Times Channel - https://tmt.ph/YTSubscribe Visit our website at https://www.manilatimes.net Follow us: Facebook - https://tmt.ph/facebook Instagram - https://tmt.ph/instagram Twitter - https://tmt.ph/twitter DailyMotion - https://tmt.ph/dailymotion Subscribe to our Digital Edition - https://tmt.ph/digital Check out our Podcasts: Spotify - https://tmt.ph/spotify Apple Podcasts - https://tmt.ph/applepodcasts Amazon Music - https://tmt.ph/amazonmusic Deezer: https://tmt.ph/deezer Stitcher: https://tmt.ph/stitcherTune In: https://tmt.ph/tuneinSoundcloud: https://tmt.ph/soundcloud #TheManilaTimes#VoiceOfTheTimes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week's episode explores Valentine's Day traditions from around the world. We then look at what is causing these record breaking freezing temperatures in Texas, UAE's mission on Mars, the military coup in Myanmar, and Meghan and Harry's second pregnancy announcement.
News and chat about society, with a soundboard and propaganda mixed in. On all podcast platforms. This episode, I was joined by returning guest Nick (twitter: @100000horses), we talked about numerous things, such as: - The Dyatlov Pass Incident in Russia, where nine hikers were mysteriously killed - New research sheds light on the cause of the incident (an avalanche) - Some of the alternate theories and strange evidence at the scene of the incident - The military coup in Myanmar, and the history of coup governments in Myanmar - Myanmar's genocide of the Rohingya people - The farmer's protest and strike in India, and what exactly the laws being protested are - Rihanna advocates for farmer protest - The Indian right-wing has same taking points as the US right wing - Society Show quiz: 80s cartoon character, or British period piece character? - Jeff Bezos to step down as CEO of Amazon - Jack Ma, rumored to be disappeared by Chinese government, has reappeared - Boardwalk Empire Ocean Shores, WA Leave a message on the Society Show voicemail: (917) BETH-1EU [(971) 238-4138 Follow the show on twitter: @society_show Write in to the show: societyshowpodcast@gmail.com
The eighth episode of the Future Gone Virtual podcast features a summarization of another candidate interview, among other things.
This week we talk about Aung San, the Anglo-Burmese Wars, and the 2021 Myanmar military coup.We also discuss Aung San Suu Kyi, genocide, and the politics of democracy. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit letsknowthings.substack.com/subscribe
Five months ago Vladimir Putin's most prominent critic was almost killed in a nerve agent attack — now he's been jailed for 3-and-a-half years. Alexei Navalny says it's Putin's punishment for surviving the poisoning — and a warning to the huge crowds who've joined protests in more than a-hundred cities. But what should the west do about it? And how much will countries like the UK be willing to do? We look at the coup in Myanmar that's seen Aung San Suu Kyi deposed and locked up. And we report on a new warning about the state of much military accommodation, and claims it's worsening a retention crisis in the forces. Plus we look back at the extraordinary life of Captain Sir Tom Moore, after his death this week at the age of 100.
What better way to start the new beginnings of our podcast by talking about the new year! Is it 2021 or more of 2020 'pro'? What is the covid situation in Singapore and around the world? Should you take the covid vaccine when it's available? What about the side effects? Further more, on 1st Feb the military of Myanmar seized power in a successful Coup. So how? That and more will be discussed in our very first episode! Hosts: Ko Moe & Ko Aung If you have any queries you can reach us on our Facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/chilledTeaPodcast/
The army in Myanmar staged another coup this week, but the opposition from Buddhist monks is much weaker. So what has broken them as a force in Burmese society?
Institute for Global Engagement's Nick Pitts looks at the exodus of some conservative Republicans from the party, as well as problems caused by a GOP representative who spouts QAnon conspiracies. Philos Project's Luke Moon looks at world news, including the recent coup in Myanmar and issues around China.
Institute for Global Engagement's Nick Pitts looks at the exodus of some conservative Republicans from the party, as well as problems caused by a GOP representative who spouts QAnon conspiracies. Philos Project's Luke Moon looks at world news, including the recent coup in Myanmar and issues around China.
Conservative MP Lee Anderson starts the week. Dr Alan Mendoza talks about the Myanmar coup. Inaya Folarin Iman tells Mike about 'Free Speech Champions.' Peter Hitchens and Mike have their weekly catch up. Dr Lars Laamann takes the homeschooling segment on the Samurai. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.