Capital of India
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Deux semaines après un attentat qui a fait 26 morts au Cachemire indien, la tension grimpe entre les deux puissances nucléaires d'Asie du Sud. Entre représailles diplomatiques et menaces militaires se dessine le risque d'un nouvel affrontement. Mais d'où vient ce conflit entre Inde et Pakistan ? Carole Dieterich, journaliste basée à New Dehli, revient sur 80 ans de discorde dans le Point J. Caroline Stevan Réalisation : Brian Lanni Pour aller plus loin : https://www.rts.ch/info/monde/14349778-podcast-qui-est-vraiment-narendra-modi.html
Nous discutons aujourd'hui de l'un des plus vieux conflits territoriaux du monde, celui du territoire du Cachemire, partagé principalement entre l'Inde et le Pakistan, qui s'en disputent la souveraineté depuis plus de 70 ans. Une région stratégique à la une de l'actualité depuis l'attentat du 22 avril qui a fait 26 morts civils côté indien et que New Dehli impute à Islamabad. Depuis deux semaines, sur fond de nationalisme exacerbé, l'escalade n'en finit plus entre les deux puissances nucléaires. Jusqu'où ?
100 jours qu'il anime nos journées d'incertitudes avec sa diplomatie transactionnelle. « Vous n'avez encore rien vu » a promis Donald Trump. Jusqu'où peut-il entrainer le monde ? New Dehli promet une frappe militaire au Pakistan. Les 2 puissances nucléaires procèdent déjà à des échanges de tirs depuis une semaine. L'Inde va-t-elle mettre sa menace à exécution ? Nous revenons également sur cette méga-panne d'électricité survenue dans la péninsule ibérique. Que nous dit-elle de nos modes de vie ?
04-01-25 - BR - TUE - Thriller Is Finally Back To Explain What Took Him So Long Getting Coke Zero - Study Says Men Can't Hear As Well As Women - New Dehli Pooping Thief CaughtSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
04-01-25 - BR - TUE - Thriller Is Finally Back To Explain What Took Him So Long Getting Coke Zero - Study Says Men Can't Hear As Well As Women - New Dehli Pooping Thief CaughtSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Încetarea parțială a focului, convenită în timpul convorbirii telefonice dintre președinții Donald Trump și Vladimir Putin, nu este deloc de natură a-i liniști pe europeni. Ei continuă să se teamă de un atac masiv al Rusiei. Și se pregătesc pentru ce-i mai rău. Nu a fost deloc un sentiment de ușurare. Concluziile discuțiilor dintre Donald Trump și Vladimir Putin au fost primite în cancelariile europene cu un amestec de scepticism și teamă.Încetarea focului trebuie să fie „verificabilă”, cu ucrainenii „în jurul mesei”, a avertizat imediat președintele francez Emmanuel Macron după discuția dintre Trump și Putin.Într-o declarație comună în urma primirii președintelui francez, la Berlin, de către cancelarul german Olaf Scholz, cei doi lideri europeni au asigurat că Ucraina poate conta pe continuarea ajutorului militar european. Ceea ce sugerează că, din punctul de vedere franco-german, pacea nu este deloc aproape.Declarația a venit în aceeași zi în care parlamentul german, Bundestag, a aprobat un plan istoric de înarmare, de 500 de miliarde de euro.Amenințarea rusă privește toate țările europene, iată avertismentul președintelui Consiliului European, Antonio Costa, într-un interviu acordat marți Agenția France-Presse.Antonio Costa, care prezidează organismul ce-i reunește pe șefii de state și de guverne, a declarat că „vecinii Rusiei sunt preocupați de amenințarea militară reprezentată de Rusia”. Costa a spus că „este esențial ca toată lumea să înțeleagă că această amenințare este colectivă”.”Rusia se pregătește pentru o confruntare cu democrațiile europene în timp ce Statele Unite își schimbă atenția către regiunea Indo-Pacific”. Este declarația-avertisment făcută marți de șefa Comisiei Europene, Ursula von der Leyen, într-un discurs ținut la Academia Militară Regală de la Copenhaga.Potrivit șefei Comisiei Europene, Rusia și-a extins masiv capacitatea de producție militaro-industrială”, în timp ce ”se pregătește pentru confruntarea viitoare cu democrațiile europene”.Europa trebuie să se înarmeze rapid pentru a stabili o descurajare credibilă până în 2030, a mai spus Ursula von der Leyen. Comisia Europeană urmează să își prezinte astăzi „Cartea albă” privind apărarea, ca parte a strategiei sale de înarmare a Europei. Iar joi va avea loc un summit european pe aceeași temă.Un mesaj în aceeași direcție a venit de la înalți diplomați din Letonia și Estonia, aflați la o conferință pe teme de securitate din capitala indiană New Dehli.Ei au avertizat că Vladimir Putin nu este de fapt interesat de niciun acord de pace semnificativ.„Nu există măcar un singur indicator că Rusia dorește pace”, a spus Baiba Braže, ministrul de externe al Letoniei.În timp ce Jonatan Vseviov, secretarul general al Ministerului Afacerilor Externe al Estoniei spune că Rusia cu siguranță ”nu și-a schimbat niciunul dintre obiective”.Aceste avertismente subliniază un sentiment profund de neliniște în capitalele europene atât cu privire la adevăratele dorințe ale Rusiei cât și față de adevărata capacitate de negociere cu care se laudă Donald Trump.Ceea ce europenii înțeleg – nu se știe dacă și președintele Trump - este natura războiului de agresiune declanșat de Vladimir Putin. Este un război împotriva aspirațiilor europene ale Ucrainei. Și un război împotriva democrațiilor europene în general.Iar marele semn de întrebare este dacă un asemenea război civilizațional poate fi oprit prin concesii teritoriale sau aranjamente economice. Ascultați rubrica ”Eurocronica”, cu Ovidiu Nahoi, în fiecare zi, de luni până vineri, de la 8.45 și în reluare duminica, de la 15.00, numai la RFI România
Delhi, India Part 1 In this episode, the FAQ is: My listeners ask: How do I check for the weather where I'm going? Today's Destination is: Delhi, India Today's Misstep- Stuck in India and missed the bus Travel Advice: Ask a group of people for directions FAQ: You asked me how to get the most reliable weather forecast: Here's how> Use apps like AccuWeather, weather.com, and windy or local services, with hourly and long-range forecasts, radar maps, and severe weather alerts. For more local alerts, sign up for location-based apps on Google Weather or MyRadar. Look for seasonal patterns that are already known. Goa, India has monsoons from June to September. Wind and rain forecasts like windy.com will tell you the wind and wave conditions, especially to help with beach plans. Check for Cyclone Warnings in places like coastal India. Answer: Reliable Weather Apps and Websites: For accurate forecasts, use apps like AccuWeather, Weather.com, Windy, or local Indian weather services (like IMD). Many offer hourly and long-range forecasts, radar maps, and severe weather alerts. Localized Alerts: Sign up for location-based alerts on apps like Google Weather or MyRadar, which provide real-time weather updates for your location. This can be especially helpful for any sudden coastal storms or cyclones. Seasonal Patterns: Since you're going to Goa or nearby coastal regions, familiarize yourself with local weather patterns. For example, Goa experiences the monsoon season from June to September, with dry and sunny weather from October to March. Wind and Rain Forecasts: Coastal areas are affected by both rain and wind speed. Windy.com offers detailed wind and wave conditions, which can help with beach plans. Check for Cyclone Warnings: Especially in coastal India, monitor IMD's cyclone warnings as they provide updates on tropical storms that may affect Goa. Lastly, social media can help by using WhatsApp groups to get firsthand information from locals. Today's destination: Delhi, India Part 1 My visit to Delhi, or New Delhi, India Which is it? New Delhi when referring to the specific district that serves as India's capital. New Delhi is a planned city developed during British rule and officially designated as the capital in 1931. Delhi refers to the larger metropolitan area, encompassing both New Delhi and other historical and residential parts like Old Delhi, which includes the Red Fort and Jama Masjid. Delhi is the correct term when speaking broadly about the city and its culture, so we will use that one here. After two weeks in India, visiting four southern cities, I flew north to Dehli from Goa, barely missing the seasonal monsoons. My flight had a Female co-pilot who Said hello to me with a big smile, which made me happy to see a woman pilot there. The flight attendants checked my boarding tickets. Again, getting off the plane! That was a first. Who checks them getting off the plane? Should I take a Bus, train, or taxi to Agra? Even after arriving, I could not decide. I was overwhelmed with the decisions, but I knew I had to get there. A taxi costs at least $6000 rupees each way, maybe more. Although this sounded like a lot, it was only $72 USD. Bus or train may be best. However, the temperature is
Our second episode of this season takes us to London, Karachi and New Dehli in Ayesha Manazir Siddiqi's debut novel, ‘The Centre'.This one leapt onto our radar as soon as that incredibly arresting cover was unveiled and we found out it was about a prestigious translation centre - it had to be a podcast book!Welcome to The Centre. The cost may be high, but you'll never be the same . . .Anisa Ellahi longs to become a translator of 'great works of literature', but right now she is stuck in her London flat writing subtitles for Bollywood films.Then she is told about the Centre, an elite, invite-only programme that guarantees complete fluency in any language in just ten days. Seduced by all that it could make possible, Anisa enrols. But the Centre's services come at a disturbing hidden cost. Still - it's worth it, right? After all, success comes at a price . . .By turns dark, funny and surreal, The Centre by Ayesha Manazir Siddiqi takes the reader on a journey through Karachi, London and New Delhi. Throughout it interrogates the sticky politics of language, translation and appropriation and asks: what price would you be willing to pay for success?‘The Centre' is undoubtedly going to be an interesting and thought-provoking read, but how does it fit into dark academia?In this episode we discuss:The intersection of translation and colonialismThe potentially meta nature of a book within a bookPrivilege, money, power and the intersections with living abroad
Quarta puntata del podcast “Diplomazia senza Confini - SIOI nel Panorama Globale”. Quest'anno celebriamo l'80° anniversario della SIOI, un traguardo che sottolinea il ruolo fondamentale che questa istituzione ha svolto nella formazione di generazioni di diplomatici, contribuendo alla loro crescita professionale e promuovendo una profonda comprensione delle dinamiche delle relazioni internazionali. Il MSOI, movimento giovanile della SIOI, è parte integrante di questa storia, con l'obiettivo di supportare e ispirare i giovani che aspirano a una carriera diplomatica. Nella quarta puntata vi presentiamo Pietro Sferra Carini, Vice Capo Missione presso l'ambasciata d'Italia a Mosca. La sua esperienza, che lo ha visto rappresentare l'Italia a Brasilia, Pechino, New Dehli ed infine a Mosca, non può che essere fonte di ispirazione per i giovani che desiderano intraprendere una carriera nel mondo della diplomazia. Sferra Carini ci ricorda che il “mestiere” del diplomatico non si impara bruciando le tappe bensì è frutto di tanto studio, tanto lavoro e tanta passione. Il mestiere del diplomatico è una vocazione che è tanto difficile quanto soddisfacente. Ascolta il nostro podcast per sapere i consigli ad hoc del Vice Capo Missione per MSOI. #StayMSOI#DiplomaziaSenzaConfini#MSOIUNYA#Podcast#SIOI#Russia#Mosca
Die Kinodoku erzählt von der Reise eines in Indien geborenen Regisseurs ins Land seiner Herkunft. Nach 20 Jahren in Europa besucht er 2019 seine wohlhabende Familie in New Dehli und vergleicht er die Klassengesellschaft mit den Hoffnungen zu Beginn der Unabhängigkeit von 1947. Mit trockenem Humor und einem Blick fürs Absurde fragt er nach der sozialen Gerechtigkeit in der größten Demokratie der Welt.
Climate News Weekly is back to cover the week's biggest stories in climate news. Emma Crow-Willard and co-hosts Julio Friedmann (Carbon Direct) and Heather Clancy (GreenBiz) begin by discussing why the OECD's $100 billion in climate finance for developing nations is better late than never. Later, the team covers international stories, including record-breaking temperatures in New Dehli and Kenya's president visiting the United States to discuss climate goals and trade. Next, our hosts cover the US Department of Energy's announcement of its principles for integrity in the voluntary carbon market. The team rounds out this week's news by digging deeper than the headlines on Microsoft's emissions hikes, attributed to the company's AI operations – but not for the reasons you may think.Follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram.Contact us at contact@climatenow.comVisit our website for all of our content and sources for each episode.
Aujourd'hui dans "Parlons-en", nous discutions de l'élection législative à laquelle se prépare l'Inde, le pays le plus peuplé au monde. Un marathon électoral de six semaines qui devrait confirmer la toute-puissance du Premier Ministre sortant, Narendra Modi, en campagne pour un troisième mandat après dix ans au pouvoir. Entre persécution des opposants et discours nationalistes, c'est le sort de la démocratie indienne qui semble se jouer, avertissent Mélissa Levaillant, spécialiste de l'Inde, et Alban Alvarez, avec nous depuis New Dehli.
À la veille des élections parlementaires, l'Inde demande aux négociants en blé de ne pas se précipiter sur la nouvelle récolte : l'État a besoin de reconstituer au plus vite ses réserves, pour continuer à mettre en œuvre ses programmes d'aide aux plus démunis. Chaque année, l'État indien achète du blé sur les marchés locaux, via une agence gouvernementale, la Food Corporation of India. Ce blé est destiné à son programme alimentaire pour les populations les plus défavorisées. L'année dernière, cette entité publique n'a pu acquérir que 26 millions de tonnes sur les 34 qu'elle s'était fixée. Elle a donc été contrainte de puiser dans ses stocks qui sont tombés au plus bas depuis 2017.À la veille des élections législatives qui débutent le 19 avril, les autorités veulent donc reconstituer au plus vite les réserves nationales. Leur objectif est d'acheter plus de 30 millions de tonnes cette année sur les marchés de gros. Et pour que cela soit possible, elles appellent les opérateurs privés à la retenue, comme cela avait déjà été le cas en 2007.Selon l'agence Reuters, les négociants auraient été priés de ne pas se ruer sur la nouvelle récolte vendue à compter de ce mois d'avril, afin de permettre à la Food Corporation of India d'avoir la priorité. La consigne aurait même été passée aux chemins de fer sommés, notamment dans l'Uttar Pradesh, de ne pas mettre de wagons à la disposition des acheteurs privés durant ce mois.Objectif affiché : ne pas importerCette stratégie permettra-t-elle à l'État de ne pas avoir recours aux importations de blé ? Cela dépendra des volumes récoltés et de l'attitude des agriculteurs, qui pourraient être réticents de vendre au prix proposé par l'agence gouvernementale. Selon une note du ministère américain de l'Agriculture (USDA), le pays pourrait redevenir un importateur de blé qui compte et être contraint d'acheter cette année 2 millions de tonnes sur les marchés internationaux. Mais ce n'est pas l'objectif affiché par le gouvernement. Le blé est une denrée éminemment politique et les agriculteurs indiens constituent un réservoir de vote qu'il ne faut pas froisser. En 2022, New Dehli avait déjà pris une autre mesure perçue comme électoraliste : l'interdiction de l'exportation de blé, pour éviter une flambée des prix intérieurs, à l'heure où les marchés craignaient de manquer de grains de la mer Noire. Une interdiction qui pourrait rester en vigueur au moins jusqu'aux élections.
Miss France 2020 était sur le plateau du «Buzz TV» ce jeudi 15 février, avant son départ en Inde pour Miss Monde. Elle a révélé les détails du costume représentant la France, qu'elle portera le samedi 9 mars à New Dehli.
Le premier semestre 2024 s'annonce toujours tendu sur le marché du riz. Avec des prix encore très élevés en raison d'une forte demande et de restrictions indiennes à l'exportation, en vigueur depuis un an et demi, pour certaines. «Tout est cher, les riz blancs sont difficiles à trouver, et même un des riz les moins chers, le riz étuvé, en Inde, a pris 80 dollars la tonne en trois mois », résume un négociant. Même si le « parboiled » indien comme on l'appelle sur le marché reste beaucoup moins cher que les riz blancs pakistanais, vietnamien ou thaïlandais, son augmentation est révélatrice d'un marché qui s'annonce encore tendu en 2024. « Nous sommes repartis pour une année difficile au moins jusqu'en juillet-août », assure notre interlocuteur. Forte demande en Malaisie et en IndonésieCe qui contribue à faire monter les cours, c'est notamment la demande de pays au Moyen-Orient et en Asie qui achètent beaucoup et sans être très regardants sur les prix. On peut citer, en particulier, les Philippines, la Malaisie et l'Indonésie, devenue très présente sur le marché depuis l'année dernière après avoir été quasi-absente pendant cinq ans.Ces prix qui grimpent chez tous les grands exportateurs, Inde, Vietnam et Thaïlande pourraient peser à court terme sur les importateurs africains. Même si ces États ont plutôt de bons stocks et ont pour certains baissé leur consommation – Sierra Leone et Côte d'Ivoire, par exemple – ils vont devoir tôt ou tard passer de nouvelles commandes, à un prix peu attractif.Un ajustement des prix au second semestre ?Pour espérer voir la tendance s'inverser, il faudra probablement attendre cet été : une fois l'élection indienne passée, New Dehli pourrait lever les restrictions imposées ces derniers mois sur les brisures de riz et le riz blanc non basmati. « Le pays devra dans tous les cas exporter à un rythme plus soutenu s'il veut libérer de la place pour stocker ses prochaines récoltes » estime Patricio Mendez del Villar, économiste au Cirad, Centre de recherche agronomique pour le développement, et éditeur de la note de conjoncture Osiriz.Tout dépendra du niveau de la récolte, tempère un de nos interlocuteurs, qui rappelle qu'il est encore difficile d'évaluer l'effet de la perturbation climatique El Nino sur les rizières. Ce qui pourrait aussi stabiliser les prix, c'est une confirmation de la baisse des importations chinoises. L'année dernière déjà, l'Empire du milieu a réduit drastiquement ses achats de riz -2,7 millions de tonnes contre 6,6 millions de tonnes en 2022. Avec cette baisse, « la Chine a joué un rôle de régulateur et soulagé le marché », explique l'expert du Cirad. Un scénario qui pourrait à nouveau se reproduire cette année. À lire aussiLe manque de riz blanc maintient des prix hauts
We get the latest Sanjay Jha, ITV News Journalist in New Dehli
The latest report on the rescue efforts in India from Sanjay Jha, ITV news journalist based in New Dehli.
Hardeep Singh Nijjar når aldrig ind i sin bil, da han en sommer forlader sit tempel i Surrey, Canada. Den prominente sikh-leder bliver nemlig likvideret på parkeringspladsen. Et mord, der først for alvor fanger omverdenens opmærksomhed, da den canadiske premierminister, Justin Trudeau, for nylig anklager Indien for selv at stå bag mordet på den canadiske statsborger. Nu har drabet eskaleret en diplomatisk krise mellem to af verdens største nationer, mens resten af verden er bemærkelsesværdig stille. Journalist Sonja Furu, bosiddende i New Dehli fortæller, hvorfor den internationale forargelse udebliver overfor verdens mest folkerige nation. Vært: Anna Ingrisch.
This week on WAIA, we sit down with Ariana Page Russell and muse over the power balance between model and artist, the line between beauty and disgust, embracing imperfect birth stories, making the private public, feminism in and out of the work, the ability to exist artfully, and... kelp! Ariana Page Russell is a visual artist with dermatographia. She creates images that explore the skin as a document of human experience, using her own hypersensitive flesh to illustrate the ways we expose, express, adorn and articulate ourselves. You can find out more about Ariana and dermatographia at Skintome.com and ArianaPageRussell.com Russell has exhibited internationally and currently resides in Los Angeles, California. Recent exhibitions include Shrine Empire Gallery in New Dehli, India; the Royal Hibernian Academy in Dublin; Magnan Metz in New York City; Platform Gallery in Seattle; Town Hall Gallery in Australia; the Luminato Festival in Toronto; and Museo de Arte Contemporáneo in Bolivia. Her work has appeared in Art in America, the Huffington Post, Wired, The Atlantic, VISION Magazine: China, and the monograph ‘Dressing' published by Decode Books. She was featured on ABC News 20/20 and was a recent participant in the Sexto Encuentro Mundial de Arte Corporal in Caracas, Venezuela. She received her MFA from the University of Washington, Seattle in 2005.
Shane Leary joins Miles Yu for a conversation on Biden's Busy Weekend at the G20 Summit in New Dehli and his visit to Hanoi, Vietnam. They then discuss the latest development in US-China tech competition, the new Huawei Mate 60 Pro, a source of controversy and concern over the current chip export controls in place. Finally, Miles offers his thoughts on a proposed law in China which would punish citizens for statements and clothing deemed “detrimental to the spirit of Chinese people.”Follow the China Center's work at https://www.hudson.org/china-center and subscribe to our newsletter China Digest.
In this week's podcast, Deputy Managing Editor Adam Jasser and Agnieszka Homańska discuss the launch of the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor at the G20 meeting in New Dehli, which seems to be a challenge to China's Belt and Road and its claim to lead the Global South. The podcast also gives an update on the election campaigns in Poland and Slovakia, as surveys indicate a very close race in both countries.
Leaders from the Group of 20 world top economies have just concluded their summit in the Indian capital of New Dehli. While national governments shared common concerns over issues like food, energy, supply chains, their positions over the war in Ukraine were polarized. Some western leaders tried to pull the global south into their camp but failed. What's the G20 platform for? Is it still pursuing the mission of improving global governance set by leaders of these countries when they first gathered in Washington in 2008? Host Liu Kun is joined by Swaran Singh, Professor of International Relations at Jawaharlal Nehru University; Zhang Baohui, Professor of Government and International Affairs, Lingnan University in Hong Kong.
Ce mercredi 12 juillet, le gouvernement de l'Inde qui n'entend pas admettre de revers avec l'électronicien Taïwanais Foxconn qui s'est retiré d'un projet important a été abordé par Benaouda Abdeddaïm dans sa chronique, dans l'émission Good Morning Business, présentée par Laure Closier et Christophe Jakubyszyn, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
An arranged marriage with an awkward start explodes into abuse just weeks after its beginning. It would take two decades for Kanchan Bhaskar to untangle from the man who was a stranger that became her husband and ultimately her abuser. Ms. Bhaskar has authored the new memoir "Leaving: How I Set Myself Free from an Abusive Marriage" and joins the show to share her story. Listen to the end of the episode for an excerpt from the book read by the author.
Oggi i riflettori si accendono sull'India, dove oltre al G20, si svolge il Raisina Dialogue. Ospite d'onore della conferenza di geopolitica è stata la premier Giorgia Meloni, che ha parlato di "Mediterraneo allargato" e della collaborazione con la potenza guidata da Narendra Modi. Ne abbiamo parlato con Diego Maiorano, docente di Storia e sistemi politici dell'India contemporanea all'Università Orientale di Napoli, Ugo Tramballi, responsabile del desk India all'Ispi, e Zoya Hazan, professoressa emerita di Scienze politiche alla Jawaharlal Nehru University di Nuova Delhi.
Inchiesta Covid a Bergamo: la Procura indaga anche Conte, Speranza e Fontana. Ripercorriamo le tappe dell'inchiesta con Francesca Nava, giornalista autrice di "Il focolaio" (Laterza). G20 di New Dehli: la premier Meloni incontra l'omologo Modi. Ci concentriamo sul ruolo dell'India nello scacchiere globale con Nicola Missaglia, analista ISPI – Desk India. Al via i concorsi per i nuovi aspiranti medici di famiglia: tra di loro tanti in fuga dagli ospedali. Sentiamo Marzio Bartoloni del Sole 24 Ore.
Vi snakker om forskellen på Danmark og Indien, og om hvad Deepanjali bedst kan lide fra de to lande! Modul 3-5: Ervins "podcast-studie" er tilbage med endnu en snak med et endnu et vidunderligt menneske, som har valgt at lære dansk: Deepanjali er fra New Dehli, Indien, og arbejder som forsikringsmatematiker(!) i København, og jeg kan "forsikre" jer, at lære dansk for hende har ikke været en let opgave, men nu er hun på modul 5 efter kun 2 år i Danmark, og jeg siger bare: stort tillykke, Deepanjali!
Happy 2023! We lead with the story of Dion Rabouin, an awesome WSJ reporter who was in Phoenix with family over the holidays when he decided to do work on a story about low interest rates on savings accounts at big banks. The Chase bank he went to on 12038 N 32nd St in Phoenix asked him what he was doing. He told him. They said nothing. They called their corporate security and then they called the cops where an overzealous idiot detained Dion for 15 minutes despite never being asked to leave or anything. I discuss the role the branch had, but mainly how "The telephone game" with corporate security led to this, and how similarities to the Ryan Coogler incident are obvious with lazy lazy employees not actually trying to understand what was going on. I break it down like no one else can. Story from CNN Video from incident Plus, I dive into the story of Wells Fargo executive Shankar Mishra, arrested in India on charges he urinated on a 70 year old woman in a flight from New York to New Dehli and how WF did something right for a change. I discuss how ridiculous this story was. NYT Link Here NB Has recovered over $3.7 Million from big banks back to consumers, with nearly $700k of it being Zelle fraud! 29,000+ Followers on TikTok, Twitter and Instagram Buy My Book "High-Risk Transaction" Find all my social media and other links at: TheNotoriousBanker.com (Links to YouTube, my book's page, podcast links, and how to contribute by Venmo/Cashapp and much more!!!) MY PATREON Page! For as little as $1, you can help James in his fight against big banks. http://patreon.com/NotoriousBanker --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thenotoriousbanker/support
Dit zijn de headlines van het SBS Dutch nieuwsbulletin van zaterdag 26 november: Victorianen naar de stembus voor nieuwe staatsregering, verdachte voor moord op vrouw in Queensland gearresteerd in New Dehli en Engeland en de Verenigde Staten spelen gelijk op WK.
Trigger Warnings: Child Abuse, Sexual Assault, Sexual Assault of a MinorFirst, Rachel shares the horrific tale of John Wayne Gacy, the killer clown. Then, Emily takes on a lighter story and shares information about the Champawat Tiger, a tigress that killed 463 people in the early 1900s. +++Sources: MediumViceAll That's InterestingWicked WeIMDBFind a GraveWikipediaSword and ScaleNonprofit Sector NewsBiographyGrungeNewsweekSpotifySpotifyPeacock TVAmazonAETVChicago TributeMysterious ChicagoSupport the show
“Il faut être clair : dans le travel, on ne va pas attirer les candidats avec les salaires. Donc il faut que la culture d'entreprise soit axée sur la passion. C'est essentiel pour conserver son ADN !” Un an et demi après leur première rencontre (en mars 2021), Laurent Kretz et Alexandre Zurcher font le point sur le secteur du voyage dans un contexte de sortie de pandémie. Le fondateur de Vintage Rides revient sur le pivot qu'il avait commencé à opérer entre son siège historique de New Dehli et la relocalisation de ses équipes à Lyon. Une transition plutôt rock & roll, puisqu'elle a consisté à renouveler presque entièrement ses effectifs, alors même que l'entreprise voyait ses ventes chuter de plus de 20 %. Et pourtant, Vintage Rides sort de cette réorganisation grandi. Alexandre a réussi à rester rentable et de recréer une équipe de passionnés de voyage et de découverte. Il a même signé un partenariat exclusif avec son premier fournisseur de motos, Royal Enfield. Dans ce catch-up, Alexandre nous parle d'agilité dans un contexte incertain et de la bonne stratégie pour conserver son ADN lorsque l'on change de staff, de persona et de produits. Il nous donne également ses enseignements pour se développer à l'international grâce à ses partenaires, réussir sa refonte web, et faire face aux turbulences sans se faire trop de cheveux blancs. Dans ce nouvel épisode du panier, vous trouverez des apprentissages en : Agilité : assurer sa position de Travel Operator dans un contexte où le voyage est incertain et plus complexe [7”20] ; RH : Faire de la passion le coeur de sa culture d'entreprise pour attirer les bons candidats et conserver son ADN [20”10] ; Produit : pivoter 50 % de son offre vers le court et le moyen courrier [24”15] ; Développement international : truster de nouvelles destinations et de nouveaux clients en s'appuyant sur les bons partenaires [35”05] ; Refonte web : concentrer ses efforts non pas sur le choix de la technologie mais sur le project management [45”28] ; Résilience : rester rentable malgré une chute de 20 % de ses ventes en divisant ses coûts de fonctionnement par deux [56”05] . Pour en savoir plus sur les références abordées dans l'épisode : # 92 - Vintage Rides : Intégrer la scalabilité dans un métier sur-mesure, avec Alexandre Zurcher # 159 - Ipone : Revenir au « Why » pour digitaliser son business moto, avec Ariel Walker # 116 - Raid Amazones et les 12 vies d'Alexandre Debanne Royal Enfield, le partenaire moto de VIntage Rides L'épisode de The Knowledge project avec Kunal Shah Le Festival Aces Expérience où VR avait son Good ride camp. Le film Ride to The Moon L'épisode de GDIY avec JP Nadir de FairMoove La voie des glaces avec Sylvain Tesson Zoho, la solution de back office indienne Inscrivez- vous à la newsletter sur lepanier.io pour ne rater aucun conseil des invités du Panier et cartonner en e-comm ! Pour découvrir tout ça, c'est par ici. Si vous préférez Apple Podcasts, par là si vous préférez Podcast Addict ou encore ici si vous préférez Spotify. Et n'oubliez pas de laisser 5 étoiles et un commentaire sympa sur Apple Podcasts si l'épisode vous a plu. Le Panier est un podcast du label Orso Media, produit par CosaVostra.
And with that, the final season of cryptid v.s. cryptid comes to an end. Get ready for the jaw dropping finale and we hope you've enjoyed the episode!If you enjoy what we do here then try checking out some of these links:Instagram: CryptidVSCryptidEmail: cryptidvscryptid@gmail.com
durée : 00:02:41 - La chronique d'Anthony Bellanger - par : Anthony BELLANGER - Dans la banlieue de New Dehli, deux tours de 100m de haut ont été détruites parce qu'illégales. En Inde, les constructions illégales sont particulièrement nombreuses et le gouvernement a décidé de faire un exemple.
durée : 00:02:41 - La chronique d'Anthony Bellanger - Dans la banlieue de New Dehli, deux tours de 100m de haut ont été détruites parce qu'illégales. En Inde, les constructions illégales sont particulièrement nombreuses et le gouvernement a décidé de faire un exemple.
Marcus & Corey's What You Know 'Bout That? trivia game for Friday, August 19th, 2022
Military Historians are People, Too! A Podcast with Brian & Bill
Today's guest is retired Indian Air Force General Dr. Arjun Subramanium. Arjun is the President's Chair of Excellence & Mentor at National Defence College, New Delhi, and a former Air Vice Marshal of the Indian Air Force. He commissioned as a fighter pilot in the Indian Air Force in 1981 and accumulated more than 3000 flying hours in fighter aircraft, including all variants of the Mig-21 and Mirage-2000. He is a graduate of the Defence Services Staff College and the National Defence College, New Dehli, and also served as senior faculty at the National Defence College. Arjun earned his B.A. in History and Humanities at Jawaharlal University, a Masters in Defence and Strategic Studies at the University of Madras, and a Ph.D. in Defence and Strategic Studies at the University of Madras. Arjun has published widely, including A Military History of India Since 1972: Full Spectrum Operations and the Changing Contours of Modern Conflict (University Press of Kansas, 2021), Full Spectrum: India's Wars 1972-2020 (Harper Collins, 2020), India's Wars: A Military History 1947-1971 (Harper Collins, 2016, Published in the US with US Naval Institute Press in 2017). He also writes op-eds for a variety of publications, including India Today, Times of India, Indian Express, and The Tribune. Arjun has held visiting professorships at the Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy at Tufts University, Ashoka University, and the Jindal School of International Affairs. In addition, he held fellowships at Harvard University's Asia Center, the University of Oxford's Changing Character of War Programme, and the D'Amore-McKim School of Business at Northeastern University in Boston. He's also done his own podcast - Wars and Warriors! Arjun brings an array of diverse experiences and perspectives on military history to the table, and has solid recommendations on Indian food, beer, and film, as well as a surprise BBQ preference and brief review of Top Gun! Follow Arjun on Twitter @rhinohistorian! We are delighted and honored to have our first general officers and fighter pilot on the pod! Rec.: 05/31/2022
Welcome. This week my guest is Shweta Bist, a photographer currently based in New York City, USA, and a mother of 2 girls.Shweta was born in New Dehli in India. Both her parents were artistic but put it aside to work. Shweta painted a lot, drew, sang, was in the theatre, acted and danced. Art was an outlet for her even as a child, spending time doing oil canvasses . Art was a way for her to find solace and process things that weren't going right for her as a teenagerIn 2007 Shweta moved to Dubai with her husband and lived there until 2013 when she moved to New York with her young family. It was during this time of being a new mother that her interest and enjoyment from photography came to light.As her experiences with photography developed, Shweta found that the pictures became more art-like, and began to reflect her inner thoughts and feelings, more so than doing work for others.While drawing attention to her maternal identity and the intimate relationship she shares with her daughters, Shweta stages conceptual photographs to draw attention to the emotional labour of mothering, highlighting maternal love and the reciprocity of mothering between mother and child. Her endeavour is to create images that urge the viewer to contemplate the complexities of the maternal experience in its ambivalent entirety, and to contribute to a narrative about the lives of women and their children, told from their perspectives.This episode contains discussions around anxiety and depressionThe COVID Family Portrait ©️2021 Shweta BistMotherhouse ©️2021 Shweta BistCaught in Single Use - from the Plastic Series ©️2021 Shweta BistShwetas article in The Lockdown MothersSpilt Milk Gallery / Great Pacific Garbage Patch / Andrea O'ReillySusan Maushart - The Mask of MotherhoodThe Divided Heart - Art and Motherhood by Rachel PowerRachel's Art of Being the Mum podcast interview / The Museum of MotherhoodConnect with ShwetaConnect with the podcastMusic heard today is from Australian new age trio Alemjo, and is used with permission.When chatting to my guests I greatly appreciate their openness and honestly in sharing their stories. If at any stage their information is found to be incorrect, the podcast bears no responsibility for guests' inaccuracies.
and a film about about bird medics in New Dehli
80% of the world's trade will pass through the Indian Ocean at some point on its journey, yet the importance of this crucial theatre seems lost on many observers at the moment. With Beijing, Washington and the New Dehli all making moves to capitalise on this crucial waterway which one of these nations has the momentum behind them? And which nation is beginning to fall behind? On the show this week - - Michael Kugelman (Wilson Centre) - Michael Wesley (Uni of Melbourne) - Dhruva Jaishankar (ORF) Follow the show on @TheRedLinePod Follow Michael on @MikeHilliardAus For more info please visit - www.theredlinepodcast.com
Don't miss this week's "Sixty six degrees of Milt and Wilt" CDST show in our almost toasty Newport Beach studios. May's flowering all over, and we got playoff basketball and playoff hockey blossoming along with some juicy baseball banter to boot. Our special guest will be networker extraordinaire Cincy Lee, the Connector, and speaking of connections, we'll serve up a main course of Milt and Wilt clips, including a Chamberlain-Davis Jr. boxing match, a Vegas roast, Uncle Milty on stage with RuPaul, and Milt from Bachelor Party, who knew a pimp from New Dehli, and remember Putney Swope?. It's truly the mother of all pre-Mothers' Day mish-mashes.
Au sommaire: des témoignages sur les crimes commis par l'armée russe ; la dissuasion nucléaire malgré les traités internationaux ; New Dehli veut améliorer la qualité de son air.
Saurabh is from New Dehli, India. Now his home is Ukraine. As an outsider, he used to be able to joke about the place. But these days it's different.
- Trong lúc nhiều nỗ lực ngoại giao đang được triển khai nhằm chấm dứt cuộc xung đột Nga – Ukraine, một điểm đến được đặc biệt chú ý trong thời gian gần đây là Ấn Độ. Trong tuần này, Ấn Độ liên tục tiếp đón các nhà ngoại giao, các cố vấn an ninh của nhiều nước. Dự kiến, Ngoại trưởng Anh và Phó cố vấn An ninh Quốc gia Mỹ sẽ có mặt tại Delhi vào hôm nay và ngày mai sẽ là chuyến thăm của Ngoại trưởng Nga Sergey Viktorovich Lavrov. Trước đó, hàng loạt cuộc điện đàm của lãnh đạo các nước Mỹ, Nhật Bản với Ấn Độ cũng đã diễn ra và đều xoay quanh cuộc xung đột Nga – Ukraine hiện nay. Có ý kiến cho rằng, với lập trường trung lập như hiện nay, Ấn Độ đối mặt với một “sức nóng” ngoại giao. Quốc gia Nam Á này sẽ làm gì để giữ vững lập trường trung lập, không gây “mất lòng” với bất kỳ bên đối tác nào trong khi không ảnh hưởng đến lợi ích của New Dehli? Chủ đề : xung đột nga, phép thử, ấn độ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/vov1sukien/support
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi landed in India on March 24, just a few days after a serious diplomatic war of words between the two countries over Kashmir and after the failure of the 15th round of military talks earlier this month. https://ept.ms/3qym8og
Brace yourself folks, the legend of Bigfoot / Sasquatch / Yeti, etc. isn't dead – it's just getting started. Hulu is premiering a new, big budget miniseries on April 20. Thus, we re-open the file on this amazingly elusive, popular, thousands year old myth – but which unexpectedly exploded into the mass media only in the late 1960's. Giant hoax? (maybe, but by who?) Silly folklore, disingenuously pumped up by cable TV? Collective mass hysteria or conspiracy theory, like UFO's or ghosts? Your hosts go deep to discover the real truth. Regardless, this creature/person has become an A-list media celebrity from Alaska to New Dehli to Bejing. Buckle up as we take you into the story of “Bigfoot”. The famous 1967 film we discuss: Uncut Patterson–Gimlin film (Bigfoot portion at end) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBTUQI60yqQ Bigfoot portion stabilized: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q60mSMmhTZU Zoom In/Slow Motion: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbuNMk9bojM Our music is composed, preformed and produced by the genius John Hoekstra. You Tube https://youtube.com/channel/UC2Gon6qb9ar07BP0hsNPXdA SoundCloud https://soundcloud.com/user-363005792 If you like us, you can help us grow. We'd sooooo appreciate if you'd share with your friend network! Reach out to us at contact@scandalsheetpod.com, find us on Facebook as 'Scandal Sheet' or on Twitter @scandal_sheet
Welcome back to the cryptid vs cryptid ring. This time we bring you another round of bigfoot type creatures going head to head in the ring. While they could be considered bigfoot types, they do bring many differences to the ring.If you enjoy what we do here then try checking out some of these links:Instagram: CryptidVSCryptidEmail: cryptidvscryptid@gmail.comDiscord: https://discord.gg/e27frBdjquWC:Monkey Manhttps://skepticalinquirer.org/exclusive/the-monkey-man-panic-20-years-later/https://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/south/05/16/india.monkeyman/Fouke Monsterhttps://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/fouke-monster-2212/https://librariesblog.uark.edu/boggy-creek-blog-the-legend-of-the-fouke-monster/https://www.thv11.com/article/features/legend-mystery-fouke-monster-boggy-creek/91-68bc9222-934f-46ec-a281-18634544488c
This is not the day that repeats and to my knowledge there are no important prognostications or forecasts that I am aware of. But this is the first day of the second month of the current year, and there may be sayings that I am not saying, except to say hello and welcome to the February 1 edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement, a newsletter and podcast that does repeat in the sense that it comes out as often as possible. I’m Sean Tubbs, here are the things I have to say: On today’s program:The University of Virginia is in the early stages of creating a new master plan for the future of its land use A bill to extend oyster season is one of several bills that has passed the Virginia Senate, and I have a small rundownThe housing market in the Charlottesville area shows signs of cooling downCamp Albemarle shout-out!Today’s first subscriber-supported public service announcement goes out to Camp Albemarle, which has for sixty years been a “wholesome rural, rustic and restful site for youth activities, church groups, civic events and occasional private programs.”Located on 14 acres on the banks of the Moorman’s River near Free Union, Camp Albemarle continues as a legacy of being a Civilian Conservation Corps project that sought to promote the importance of rural activities. Camp Albemarle seeks support for a plan to winterize the Hamner Lodge, a structure built in 1941 by the CCC and used by every 4th and 5th grade student in Charlottesville and Albemarle for the study of ecology for over 20 years. If this campaign is successful, Camp Albemarle could operate year-round. Consider your support by visiting http://campalbemarleva.org/donate. Pandemic updateCOVID’s omicron surge continues to recede, though numbers are still higher than at most points of the pandemic. Today the Virginia Department of Health reports another 6,055 new cases and the seven-day percent positivity dropped to 24.5 percent. The Blue Ridge Health District reports another 130 new cases today and the percent positivity in the district is at 22.4 percent. Yesterday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration fully approved the Moderna version of the COVID-19 vaccine. The vaccine has been authorized for emergency use since December 18, 2020 and will now be marketed as Spikevax. (release)Black History Month begins todayFebruary 1 marks the beginning of Black History Month, and Governor Glenn Youngkin has issued a proclamation to mark the occasion that cites leadership provided by Black Virginians including former Governor Doug Wilder as well as Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears, the first woman of color to be elected to statewide office. The proclamation also recognizes the roles played by Dr. Robert Russa Moton, Maggie Lena Walker, and Dorothy Height. Each of those links goes to Encyclopedia Virginia, where you can learn more. (read the proclamation)CAAR: Residential sales in region beginning to cool The housing market in the Charlottesville area continued to increase in price with constrained inventory, though there are signs of cooling. Sales were down five percent but sales prices were up six percent according to an analysis published this morning by the Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors. “There were 436 active listings across the CAAR footprint at the end of the fourth quarter, which is 33 percent fewer listings than this time last year,” reads the report. The report suggests more homes are on the way. Housing construction was up 34 percent in the first eleven months of 2021 compared to the previous year. “Between 2020 and 2021, the number of permits for new single-family homes increased by 15 percent, while the number of permits for multifamily units more than doubled,” the report continues. The report also breaks matters down by jurisdiction. Sales were up 14 percent in Charlottesville in the fourth quarter of 2021 and up 15 percent in Greene County. However, sales were down 14 percent in Fluvanna and 38 percent in Nelson County. The median price in Charlottesville was down was one percent, but was 26 percent higher in Nelson. Check out the report for more information on consumer confidence, mortgage interest rates, employment, and many other economic indicators.General Assembly update: Split Senate votes on law enforcement notification, funding for kidney disease Let’s continue with another quick update on the status of some legislation in the Virginia General Assembly beginning with a bill that has passed the House of Delegates.The House passed a bill 99 to 0 to require companies that charge for services on a continuing basis to notify the consumer at the end of a seven-day trial period. (HB78)The Senate passed a bill 40 to 0 to direct the Department of Education to develop policies to inform coaches, parents, and guardians about the risks of heat-related illness. (SB161)The Senate also passed a bill to direct the State Registrar of Vital Records to update the Department of Elections once a week with names of people who have died. The vote was 32-8. (SB211)The two parties split 21 to 19 on a bill to create the Renal Disease Council and a fund to support people with kidney disease. (SB241)Another party line vote was held on a bill that would require law enforcement officers to tell a motorist why they have been pulled over before identification must be presented. (SB246)A bill that would clarify the definition of composting also passed the Senate on a unanimous vote. (SB248)Food manufacturers that operate in historic buildings would be exempt from certain laws and regulations if SB305 also passed the House of Delegates. The Senate passed this bill from Senator Creigh Deeds (D-25)The Senate passed a bill 39 to 1 to create the Historic Triangle Recreational Facilities Authority to be made up of Williamsburg and the counties of James City and York. (SB438)A bill to extend oyster season to March 31 passed the Senate on a 39 to 0 vote. (SB629)Second shout-out goes to Code for CharlottesvilleCode for Charlottesville is seeking volunteers with tech, data, design, and research skills to work on community service projects. Founded in September 2019, Code for Charlottesville has worked on projects such as an expungement project with the Legal Aid Justice Center, a map of Charlottesville streetlights, and the Charlottesville Housing Hub. Visit codeforcville.org to learn about those projects.MPO Policy Board briefed on the UVA Master PlanReaders and listeners should know by now that planning is a constant theme of Charlottesville Community Engagement. Tonight the Albemarle Planning Commission will get an update on the county’s Comprehensive Plan process. Visit the new engage.albemarle.org to learn more about AC44 (which is also a regular Air Canada flight between Vancouver and New Dehli). Staff and consultants are at work on the third phase of Charlottesville’s Cville Plans Together initiative, which will see the rewriting of the city’s zoning code.But how does the University of Virginia plan for its future? Something called the Grounds Framework Plan. Julia Monteith is the Associate University Planner and she briefed the Charlottesville-Albemarle Metropolitan Planning Organization on January 26. “The last one of these that we did was completed in 2008 and we roughly due them on a ten-year cycle,” Monteith said. (read the 2008 plan)Creation of the next plan was to have begun in 2020, but as with many things, the pandemic got in the way. “The world had other plans for us so the project went on hold,” Monteith said. Last spring, UVA hired a consultant called Urban Strategies to do some of the background work. The Toronto-based firm recently completed a master plan for Princeton University.“This plan will take about a year and they’re planning to wrap it up in fall of next year and so to date what they’ve been doing is really coming up to speed, doing a background review, data assembly, interviews, and quite a bit of analysis and understanding of who we are and what we’ve done to date,” Monteith said. Monteith said the plan will help to physically implement the Great and Good University Plan, which was adopted in August 2019 as UVA’s strategic plan. One of the strategic goals in that document is to “be a strong partner with and good neighbor to the Charlottesville region.” A key initiative is the “Good Neighbor Program.” The next Grounds Framework will update the 2008 plan which Monteith said called for compact growth and redevelopment of existing sites where possible. “We’ll be considering the Grounds and for those who may not be familiar, we delineate the Grounds into three precincts—Central Grounds, West Ground, and North Grounds with the Academical Village at the center of Central Grounds,” Monteith said.All of those properties are owned by the state of Virginia through the Rector of the Board of Visitors. The University of Virginia Foundation also owns property throughout the community and some of that will also be addressed in the plan update. “We’re also going to be considering the context of some of the Foundation properties,” Monteith said. “Westover, Boar’s Head, Birdwood, Foxhaven and the [Blue Ridge Sanitorium].”In the context of the plan, these properties are not intended for new facilities any time soon but instead are intended to be “spheres of influence” for development into the future. Monteith said there is a lot of capacity for redevelopment within the Central Grounds area. Urban Strategies will also take into account a Strategic Framework for Academic Space from 2018 and a Landscape Framework Plan from 2019. There’s also a key transportation study as well. “In 2019, we completed our third parking and transportation plan,” Montieth said. “This plan really takes a hybrid approach towards transportation that really looks at transportation demand management balanced with more traditional transportation planning.” Among other things, this plan seeks to limit the number of parking spaces that UVA will need to build by offering alternatives to driving alone in a single occupancy vehicle. In all there are eighteen strategies, ranging from “reorganize commuter and student parking to reduce event impact and enhance commuter service” to “evaluate need to build new parking facilities in the long term.” Back to the idea of redevelopment. Monteith said a master plan is completed for each one before construction begins. That includes Brandon Avenue, Emmet-Ivy, Ivy Mountain, Fontaine, and more. There’s also Ivy Gardens, which is owned currently by the UVA Foundation. The Grounds Plan update is intended to bring it all together. (See also: UVA making plan for Ivy Garden redevelopment, June 9, 2021)“A framework plan of this type is going to be looking at place and character, land use and facilities, and transportation, but equally important to us are equity and inclusivity, community well-being, and sustainability,” Monteith said. One theme is to continue to move more medical programs and outpatient services from the West Complex to the Fontaine Research Park.UVA has set a goal to be carbon neutral by 2030 and fossil-free by 2050 and the Grounds Plan will take this into account, and how UVA will work with Albemarle and Charlottesville to achieve those mutual goals, as well as others. “Of course I think you are all aware that UVA is committed to facilitating the development of 1,000 to 1,500 affordable housing units, so that’s part of our discussion also,” Monteith said. Those are at the UVA North Fork Discovery Park, the Piedmont site on Fontaine Avenue, and Wertland Street. Monteith said the plan also will provide opportunities to think how the University Transit Service can work better with Charlottesville Area Transit and Jaunt to improve the regional transportation system. Supervisor Ann Mallek said she wants the University to make an investment to connect Old Ivy Road to points south. At the eastern end, there’s currently a narrow railroad tunnel with no sidewalk or other concessions for pedestrians and Mallek said that needs to change. “I do hope that the University will take on its responsibility for dealing with that trestle either with a walk over the top or something for pedestrians because it really is dangerous every day for the people who live there now,” Mallek said. Monteith said Old Ivy Road is the responsibility of the Virginia Department of Transportation, and she said the University is working with VDOT on potential solutions for both ends of the roadway. In addition to the Ivy Residences, Greystar Development is seeking to build over 400 units at the western end of the roadway. “We’re waiting to hear back from what the thinking is to approach that and long-term it has been discussed that it’s a priority for [Albemarle] County should funding appear but it’s quite a challenge to figure out how to realign the road to better move through that railroad trestle,” Monteith said. More information on the development of this plan, and all of the other plans, will come in future installments of Charlottesville Community Engagement. Support the program!Special announcement of a continuing promo with Ting! Are you interested in fast internet? Visit this site and enter your address to see if you can get service through Ting. If you decide to proceed to make the switch, you’ll get:Free installationSecond month of Ting service for freeA $75 gift card to the Downtown MallAdditionally, Ting will match your Substack subscription to support Town Crier Productions, the company that produces this newsletter and other community offerings. So, your $5 a month subscription yields $5 for TCP. Your $50 a year subscription yields $50 for TCP! The same goes for a $200 a year subscription! All goes to cover the costs of getting this newsletter out as often as possible. Learn more here! This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe
http://polaroid41.com/trajectoires/ Lundi 10 Mai 2021, 9h55. Les deux informations se télescopent, c'est souvent le cas. Aucun parallèle à établir bien sûr, ni d'opposition. C'est la règle du bulletin d'information, c'est tout. Les sujets sont traités les uns après les autres et se retrouvent rangés les uns à côté des autres, comme des œufs dans leur boîte. Je suis peut-être plus à l'écoute que d'habitude, ou plus sensible aux nouvelles du monde ces temps-ci. A la radio, en quelques minutes seulement, deux destins vont se croiser. Deux hommes d'une quarantaine d'années. On commence tout d'abord par la trajectoire sans accroc d'un astronaute hors pair. Fabuleux Thomas Pesquet qui fait rêver l'humanité. Le type est grand, beau, souriant, et d'une simplicité désarmante. A quarante-trois ans, il est commandant de bord de l'ISS, la station spatiale internationale. Il parle six langues, il joue du saxophone, il est passionné de judo, de basket et pratique la photographie en amateur. Il vient même d'être nommé ambassadeur de bonne volonté de l'organisation des Nations Unies pour l'alimentation et l'agriculture. J'aime tout ce que représente ce type. C'est simple, j'adorerais l'avoir comme ami. Quel bonheur de le voir pénétrer dans l'ISS et serrer dans ses bras ses collègues. Et oui, ironie de l'époque, pour voir des humains se comporter normalement les uns avec les autres et s'embrasser comme du bon pain, il nous faut aujourd'hui lever les yeux vers le ciel. Elle est là-haut notre regrettée vie d'avant. 408 kilomètres direction les étoiles, qu'il l'eut cru… Alors on vit cette aventure incroyable de la conquête spatiale par procuration. On est tous un peu Thomas l'astronaute. On rêve et ça nous fait un bien fou. Il va réaliser un nombre incroyable d'expériences scientifiques à bord de l'ISS. La recherche avance, l'humanité est en marche. On va de prouesse technologique en prouesse technologique et c'est Thomas notre ambassadeur. Que ta route soit belle et aussi longue que possible, l'ami. On sera là pour prendre de tes nouvelles à intervalles réguliers. On saura qu'on a vieilli en regardant les premières rides se creuser sur ton visage de héros, ça sera moins douloureux du coup. Merci pour ça et pour tout le reste. Le temps du reportage, j'ai quitté la terre, j'étais plus léger, comme en apesanteur. C'est maintenant au tour de Mukesh Kashyap, depuis New Dehli, de raconter son histoire. Il nous est rapidement décrit comme un homme fatigué, les yeux rougis dans sa combinaison bleue. Il a une quarantaine d'année lui aussi, et porte dans ses bras le corps de sa femme. Elle vient de décéder du Covid-19 et doit être incinérée le plus rapidement possible. Elle avait trente-huit ans. Il nous explique qu'il n'a pas réussi à trouver de l'oxygène pour la sauver. Ils ont fait le tour des grands hôpitaux privés mais sans succès. C'est finalement dans un petit hôpital qu'elle aura pu bénéficier d'une heure d'oxygène moyennant cinquante cinq euros. "Quand ma femme en prenait, elle allait bien, mais après, c'est revenu. On essayait de trouver un lit pour elle, mais elle s'est effondrée dans le triporteur. Les docteurs n'ont pas pu la sauver", nous confie Mukesh au micro de France Info. Alors il apporte lui-même la dépouille de sa femme dans un immense crématorium à ciel ouvert au sud de New Delhi. Il fait ce qui doit être fait, avec une dignité qui force le respect. En quinze jours, le nombre de morts du Covid dans cette capitale frôle les 4000. On vient d'installer cinquante bûchers de fortune sur la pelouse à l'extérieur du crématorium pour faire face à l'affluence de corps. La pénurie de bois commence à poindre. Mukesh espère simplement bénéficier d'un bûcher comme ceux-là, son ultime cadeau fait à sa femme. On est là en présence d'une humanité bouleversante de détresse contenue. ... Polaroid intégral (photo, texte et audio) disponible sur : http://polaroid41.com/trajectoires/
Today on Sojourner Truth we rebroadcast a show from Alternative Radio, featuring a May 19, 2020 talk given by Naomi Klein and Arundhati Roy, moderated by Asad Rehman, and narrated by David Barsamian. Naomi Klein is an aware winning journalist and columnist and Glory Steinem endowed chair in media culture and feminist studies at Rutgers University. She's the author of many books, including The Shock Doctrine, This Changes Everything, and On Fire; The Burning Case for a Green New Deal. She's co-founder of the climate justice organization, The Leap. Arundhati Roy is a world renowned writer and global justice activist. The New York Times calls her India's most impassioned critic of globalization and American influence. She's the author of the novels the God of Small Things for which she received the Book Arppise, and The Ministries of Utmost Happiness. A collection of her essays My Seditious Heart is published by Haymarket. Arundhati Roy spoke from New Dehli, Naomi Klein, from New Jersey. Naomi and Arundhati spoke about The Corona Virus, climate change, and The Green New Deal. What will tomorrow bring in the age of COVID-19? There is so much uncertainty. Arundhati Roy sees an opportunity. She writes, Whatever it is, coronavirus has made the mighty kneel and brought the world to a halt. And in the midst of this terrible despair, it offers us a chance to rethink the doomsday machine we have built for ourselves. Nothing could be worse than a return to normality. Historically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different. It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next. We can choose to walk through it, dragging the carcasses of our prejudice and hatred, our avarice, our data banks and dead ideas, our dead rivers and smoky skies behind us. Or we can walk through lightly, with little luggage, ready to imagine another world. And ready to fight for it.