Podcasts about nora b

  • 23PODCASTS
  • 32EPISODES
  • 45mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Apr 4, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about nora b

Latest podcast episodes about nora b

ExplicitNovels
Cáel Defeats The Illuminati: Part 18

ExplicitNovels

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2025


Can You Segway?Book 3 in 18 parts, By FinalStand. Listen to the ► Podcast at Explicit Novels.So exactly who was going to be sympathetic to their plight, who we cared about?Beyond my fevered dream of making a difference there was a pinch of reality. See, the Cabindans and the people of Zaire were both ethnic Bakongo and the Bakongo of Zaire had also once had their own, independent (until 1914) kingdom which was now part of Angola. The Bakongo were major factions in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) -(formerly for a short time known as the nation of Zaire, from here on out to be referred to as the DRC and in the running for the most fucked up place on the planet Earth, more on that later)- and Congo (the nation) yet a minority in Angola. Having an independent nation united along ethnic and linguistic lines made sense and could expect support from their confederates across international boundaries.The Liberation Air ForceThe Earth & Sky operated under one constant dilemma ~ when would Temujin make his return? Since they didn't know and it was their job to be prepared for the eventuality if it happened tomorrow, or a century down the line, they 'stockpiled', and 'stockpiled' and 'stockpiled'.That was why they maintained large horse herds and preserved the ancient arts of Asian bowyers, armoring and weapons-craft. That was why they created secret armories, and sulfur and saltpeter sites when musketry and cannons became the new ways of warfare. They secured sources of phosphates and petroleum when they became the new thing, and so on.All of this boiled over to me being shown yet again I worked with clever, creative and under-handed people. The Khanate came up with a plan for a 'Union' Air Force {Union? More on that later} within 24 hours, and it barely touched any of their existing resources. How did they accomplish this miracle? They had stockpiled and maintained earlier generation aircraft because they didn't know when Temujin would make his re-appearance.They'd also trained pilots and ground crews for those aircraft. As you might imagine, those people grew old just as their equipment did. In time, they went into the Earth & Sky's Inactive Reserves ~ the rank & file over the age of 45. You never were 'too old' to serve in some capacity though most combat-support related work ended at 67.When Temujin made his return and the E&S transformed into the Khanate, those people went to work bringing their lovingly cared for, aging equipment up to combat-alert readiness. If the frontline units were decimated, they would have to serve, despite the grim odds of their survival. It was the terrible acceptance the Chinese would simply possess so much more war-making material than they did.Well, the Khanate kicked the PRC's ass in a titanic ass-whooping no one (else) had seen coming, or would soon forget. Factory production and replacement of worn machines was in stride to have the Khanate's Air Force ready for the next round of warfare when the Cease-fire ended and the Reunification War resumed.Always a lower priority, the Khanate military leadership was considering deactivating dozens of these reserve unit when suddenly the (Mongolian) Ikh khaany khairt akh dáé (me) had this hare-brained scheme about helping rebels in Africa, West Africa, along the Gulf of Guinea coast/Atlantic Ocean, far, far away, and it couldn't look like the Khanate was directly involved.They barely knew where Angola was. They had to look up Cabinda to figure out precisely where that was. They brought in some of their 'reservist' air staff to this briefing and one of them, a woman (roughly a third of the E&S 'fighting'/non-frontline forces were female), knew what was going on. Why?She had studied the combat records and performance of the types of aircraft she'd have to utilize... back in the 1980's and 90's and Angola had been a war zone rife with Soviet (aka Khanate) material back then. Since she was both on the ball, bright and knew the score, the War Council put her in overall command. She knew what was expected of her and off she went, new staff in hand. She was 64 years old, yet as ready and willing to serve as any 20 year old believer in the Cause.Subtlety, scarcity and audacity were the watchwords of the day. The Khanate couldn't afford any of their front-line aircraft for this 'expedition'. They really couldn't afford any of their second-rate stuff either. Fortunately, they had some updated third-rate war-fighting gear still capable of putting up an impressive show in combat ~ providing they weren't going up against a top tier opponents.For the 'volunteers' of the Union Air Force, this could very likely to be a one-way trip. They all needed crash courses (not a word any air force loves, I know) in Portuguese though hastily provided iPhones with 'apps' to act as translators were deemed to be an adequate stop-gap measure. Besides, they were advised to avoid getting captured at all cost. The E&S couldn't afford the exposure. Given the opportunity ~ this assignment really was going above and beyond ~ not one of these forty-six to sixty-seven year olds backed out.No, they rolled out fifty of their antiquated aircraft, designs dating back to the 1950's through the mid-70's, and prepared them for the over 10,000 km journey to where they were 'needed most'. 118 pilots would go (72 active plus 46 replacements) along with 400 ground crew and an equally aged air defense battalion (so their air bases didn't get blown up). Security would be provided by 'outsiders' ~ allies already on the ground and whatever rebels could be scrounged up. After the initial insertion, the Indian Air Force would fly in supplies at night into the Cabinda City and Soyo Airports.The composition,14 Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 jet fighters ~ though she entered service in 1959, these planes' electronics were late 20th century and she was a renowned dogfighter. 12 were the Mig-21-97 modernized variant and the other two were Mig-21 UM two-seater trainer variants which could double as reconnaissance fighters if needed.14 Sukhoi Su-22 jet fighter-bombers ~ the original design, called the Su-17, came out in 1970, the first 12 were variants with the 22M4 upgrade were an early-80's package. The other 2 were Su-22U two-seat trainers which, like their Mig-21 comrades, doubled as reconnaissance fighters. The Su-22M4's would be doing the majority of the ground attack missions for the Cabindans, though they could defend themselves in aerial combat if necessary.6 Sukhoi Su-24M2 supersonic attack aircraft ~ the first model rolled off the production lines in the Soviet Union back in 1974. By far the heaviest planes in the Cabindan Air Force, the Su-24M2's would act as their 'bomber force' as well as anti-ship deterrence.8 Mil Mi-24 VM combat helicopters ~ introduced in 1972 was still a lethal combat machine today. Unlike the NATO helicopter force, the Mi-24's did double duty as both attack helicopter and assault transports at the same time.4 Mil Mi-8 utility helicopters, first produced in 1967. Three would act as troop/cargo transports (Mi-8 TP) while the fourth was configured as a mobile hospital (the MI-17 1VA).4 Antonov An-26 turboprop aircraft, two to be used as tactical transports to bring in supplies by day and two specializing in electronic intelligence aka listening to what the enemy was up to. Though it entered production in 1969, many still remained flying today.2 Antonov An-71M AEW&C twin-jet engine aircraft. These were an old, abandoned Soviet design the Earth & Sky had continued working on primarily because the current (1970's) Russian Airborne Early Warning and Control bird had been both huge and rather ineffective ~ it couldn't easily identify low-flying planes in the ground clutter so it was mainly only good at sea. Since the E&S planned to mostly fight over the land,They kept working on the An-71 which was basically 1977's popular An-72 with some pertinent design modifications (placing the engines below the wings instead of above them as on the -72 being a big one). To solve their radar problem, they stole some from the Swedish tech firm Ericsson, which hadn't been foreseen to be a problem before now.See, the Russians in the post-Soviet era created a decent AEW&C craft the E&S gladly stole and copied the shit out of for their front line units and it was working quite nicely ~ the Beriev A-50, and wow, were the boys in the Kremlin pissed off about that these days. Whoops, or was that woot?Now, the Khanate was shipping two An-71's down to Cabinda and somewhere along the line someone just might get a 'feel' for the style of radar and jamming the Cabindans were using aka the Swedish stuff in those An-71's. The Erieye radar system could pick out individual planes at 280 miles. The over-all system could track 60 targets and plot out 10 intercepts simultaneously. NATO, they were not, but in sub-Saharan Africa, there were none better.Anyway, so why was any of this important?Why the old folks with their ancient machines? As revealed, since the Earth & Sky had no idea when Temüjin would return, they were constantly squirreling away equipment. World War 2 gave them unequaled access to Soviet military technology and training.Afterwards, under Josef Stalin's direction, thousands of Russian and German engineers and scientists were exiled to Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan who were then snatched up (reportedly died in the gulags/trying to escape) and the E&S began building mirror factories modeled on the 'then current' Soviet production lines.So, by the early 1950's, the E&S was building, flying and maintaining Soviet-style Antonov, Beriev, Ilyushin, Myasishchev, Mikoyan-Gurevich, Sukhoi, Tupolev and Yakovlev airplanes. First in small numbers because their pool of pilots and specialists was so small.The E&S remedied this by creating both their own 'private' flight academies and technical schools. They protected their activities with the judicious use of bribes (they were remarkably successful with their economic endeavors on both side of the Iron Curtain) and murders (including the use of the Ghost Tigers).By 1960, the proto-Khanate had an air force. Through the next two decades they refined and altered their doctrine ~ moving away from the Soviet doctrine to a more pure combined-arms approach (the Soviets divided their air power into four separate arms ~ ADD (Long Range Aviation), FA (Front Aviation), MTA (Military Transport Aviation) and the V-PVO (Soviet Air Defenses ~ which controlled air interceptors).).It wasn't until the collapse of the Soviet Union and the independence of the various former SSR's that the E&S program really began to hit its stride. Still, while Russia faltered, China's PLAAF (Peoples' Liberation Army Air Force) began to take off. Since the Chinese could produce so much more, the E&S felt it had to keep those older planes and crews up to combat readiness. The younger field crews and pilots flew the newer models as they rolled off the secret production lines.Then the Unification War appeared suddenly, the E&S-turned Khanate Air Force skunked their PLAAF rivals due to two factors, a surprise attack on a strategic level and the fatal poisoning of their pilots and ground crews before they even got into the fight. For those Chinese craft not destroyed on the ground, the effects of Anthrax eroded their fighting edge. Comparable technology gave the Khanate their critical victory and Air Supremacy over the most important battlefields.What did this meant for those out-of-date air crews and pilots who had been training to a razor's edge for a month now? Their assignment had been to face down the Russians if they invaded. They would take their planes up into the fight even though this most likely would mean their deaths, but they had to try.When Operation Fun House put Russia in a position where she wasn't likely to jump on the Khanate, this mission's importance faded. The Russian Air Force was far more stretched than the Khanate's between her agitations in the Baltic and her commitments in the Manchurian, Ukrainian, Chechen and Georgian theaters.With more new planes rolling off the production lines, these reservist units began dropping down the fuel priority list, which meant lowering their flight times thus readiness. Only my hare-brained scheme had short-circuited their timely retirement. Had I realized I was getting people's grandparents killed, I would have probably made the same call anyway. We needed them.The KanateThe Khanate's #1 air superiority dogfighter was the Mig-35F. The #2 was the Mig-29. No one was openly discussing the Khanate's super-stealthy "Su-50", if that was what it was, because its existence 'might' suggest the Khanate also stole technology from the Indian defense industry, along with their laundry list of thefts from South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, the PRC, Russia and half of NATO.Her top multi-role fighters were the Su-47, Su-35S and Su-30SM. The Su-30 'Flanker-C/MK2/MKI were their 2nd team with plenty of 3rd team Su-27M's still flying combat missions as well.Strike fighters? There weren't enough Su-34's to go around yet, so the Su-25MS remained the Khanate's dedicated Close Air Assault model.Medium transport aircraft? The An-32RE and An-38. They had small, large and gargantuan transports as well.Bombers? The rather ancient jet-powered Tu-160M2's and Tu-22M2's as well as the even older yet still worthwhile turboprops ~ from 1956's ~ the Tu-95M S16.Helicopters? While they still flew updated variants of the Mil Mi-8/17 as military transports, the more optimized Kamov Ka-52 and Mil Mi-28 had replaced them in the assault role.Bizarrely, the Khanate had overrun several Chinese production lines of the aircraft frames and components ~ enough to complete fairly modern PLAAF (Peoples Liberation Army Air Force) FC-1 and J-10 (both are small multi-role fighter remarkably similar to the US F-16 with the FC-1 being the more advanced model, using shared Chinese-Pakistani technology and was designed for export,).They did have nearly two dozen to send, but they didn't have the pilots and ground crews trained to work with them, plus the FC-1 cost roughly $32 million which wasn't fundage any legitimate Cabindan rebels could get their hands on, much less $768 million (and that would just be for the planes, not the weeks' worth of fuel, parts and munitions necessary for what was forthcoming).Meanwhile, except for the An-26, which you could get for under $700,000 and the An-71, which were only rendered valuable via 'black market tech', none of the turboprop and jet aircraft the Khanate was sending were what any sane military would normally want. The helicopters were expensive ~ the 'new' models Mi-24's cost $32 million while the Mi-17's set you back $17 million. The one's heading to Cabinda didn't look 'new'.The Opposition:In contrast, the Angolan Air Force appeared far larger and more modern. Appearances can be deceptive, and they were. Sure, the models of Russian and Soviet-made aircraft they had in their inventory had the higher numbers ~ the Su-25, -27 and -30 ~ plus they had Mig-21bis's, Mig-23's and Su-22's, but things like training and up-keep didn't appear to be priorities for the Angolans.When you took into account the rampant corruption infecting all levels of Angolan government, the conscript nature of their military, the weakness of their technical educational system, the complexity of any modern combat aircraft and the reality that poor sods forced into being Air Force ground crewmen hardly made the most inspired technicians, or most diligent care-takers of their 'valuable' stockpiles (which their officers all too often sold on the black market anyway), things didn't just look bleak for the Angolan Air Force, they were a tsunami of cumulative factors heading them for an epic disaster.It wasn't only their enemies who derided their Air Force's lack of readiness. Their allies constantly scolded them about it too. Instead of trying to fix their current inventory, the Angolans kept shopping around for new stuff. Since 'new'-new aircraft was beyond what they wanted to spend (aka put too much of a dent in the money they were siphoning off to their private off-shore accounts), they bought 'used' gear from former Soviet states ~ Belarus, Russia and Ukraine ~ who sold them stuff they had left abandoned in revetments (open to the elements to slowly rot) on the cheap.To add to the insanity, the Angolans failed to keep up their maintenance agreements so their newly fixed high-tech machines often either couldn't fly, or flew without critical systems, like radar, avionics and even radios. Maybe that wasn't for the worst because after spending millions on these occasionally-mobile paperweights, the Angolans bought the least technologically advanced missile, gun and rocket systems they could get to put on these flying misfortunes.On the spread sheets, Angola had 18 Su-30K's, 18 Su-27, 12 Su-25's, 14 Su-22's, 22 Mig-23's, 23 Mig-21bis's and 6 Embraer EMB 314 Super Tucano (a turboprop aircraft tailor-made for counter-insurgency operations), 105 helicopters with some combative ability and 21 planes with some airlift capacity. That equated to 81 either air superiority, or multi-role jet fighters versus the 12 Union Air Force (actually the Bakongo Uni o de Cabinda e Zaire, For as Armadas de Liberta  o, For a Area ~ Liberation Armed Forces, Air Force (BUCZ-FAL-FA) Mig-21-97's.It would seem lopsided except for the thousands of hours of flight experience the 'Unionists' enjoyed over their Angolan rivals. You also needed to take into account the long training and fanatic dedication of their ground crews to their pilots and their craft. Then you needed to take into account every Unionist aircraft, while an older airframe design, had updated (usually to the year 2000) technology lovingly cared for, as if the survival of their People demanded it.A second and even more critical factor was the element of surprise. At least the PRC and the PLAAF had contingencies for attacks from their neighbors in the forefront of their strategic planning. The Angolans? The only country with ANY air force in the vicinity was the Republic of South Africa (RSA) and they had ceased being a threat with the end of Apartheid and the rise of majority Black rule in that country nearly two decades earlier.In the pre-dawn hours of 'Union Independence Day', the FAL-FA was going to smash every Angolan Air base and air defense facility within 375 miles of Cabinda (the city). Every three hours after that, they would be hitting another target within their designated 'Exclusion Zone'. Yes, this 'Exclusion Zone' included a 'tiny' bit of DRC (Democratic Republic of Congo) territory. The DRC didn't have an air force to challenge them though, so,Inside this 'Exclusion Zone', anything moving by sea, river, road, rail, or air without Unionist governmental approval was subject to attack, which would require neutral parties to acknowledge some semblance of a free and independent B U C Z. Worse for Angola, this 'Zone' included Angola's capital and its largest port, Luanda, plus four more of their ten largest urban centers. This could be an economic, military and humanitarian catastrophe if mishandled.The Angolan Army did not have significant anti-aircraft assets. Why would they? Remember, no one around them had much of an air force to worry about. The FAL-FA in turn could hit military convoys with TV-guided munitions 'beyond line of sight', rendering what they did have useless. It got worse for the Army after dark. The FAL-FA could and would fly at night whereas the average Angolan formation had Zip-Zero-Nadda night fighting capacity.Then geography added its own mountain of woes. As far as Cabinda was concerned, there was no direct land line to their border from Angola. Their coastal road only went as far as the port of Soyo where the Congo River hit the South Atlantic Ocean. Across that massive gap was the DRC where the road was not picked back up. Far up the coast was the DRC town of Muanda (with an airport) and though they did have a road which went north, it did not continue to the Cabindan border.Nope. To get at Cabinda from the south meant a long, torturous travel through northeastern Angola, into the heart of the DRC then entailed hooking west to some point 'close' to the Cabindan frontier before finally hoofing it overland through partially cleared farmland and jungle. Mind you, the DRC didn't have a native air force capable of protecting the Angolans in their territory so,In fact the only 'road' to Cabinda came from the Republic of Congo (Congo) to the north and even that was a twisted route along some really bad, swampy terrain. This had been the pathway of conquest the Angolans took 39 years earlier. The difference being the tiny bands of pro-independence Cabindan guerillas back then couldn't hold a candle to the Amazons fighting to free Cabinda this time around in numbers, zeal, training and up-to-date equipment.Next option ~ to come by sea. They would face a few, stiff problems, such as the FAL-FA having ship-killer missiles, the Angolan Navy not being able to defend them and the Unionists having no compunction to not strike Pointe-Noire in the 'not so neutral' Republic of the Congo if they somehow began unloading Angolan troops. It seemed the Republic of the Congo didn't have much of an Air Force either.Before you think the FAL-FA was biting off more than they could chew, Cabinda, the province, was shaped somewhat like the US State of Delaware, was half the size of Connecticut (Cabinda was 2,810 sq. mi. to Conn.'s 5,543 sq. mi.) and only the western 20% was relatively open countryside where the Angolan Army's only advantage ~ they possessed armed fighting vehicles while the 'Unionists' did not (at this stage of planning) ~ could hopefully come into play.Centered at their capital, Cabinda (City), jets could reach any point along their border within eight minutes. Helicopters could make it in fifteen. To be safe, some of the FAL-FA would base at the town of Belize which was in the northern upcountry and much tougher to get at with the added advantage the Angolans wouldn't be expecting the FAL-FA to be using the abandoned airfield there, at least initially.Where they afraid attacking Angolan troops in the DRC would invite war with the DRC? Sure, but letting the Angolans reach the border unscathed was worse. Besides, the DRC was in such a mess it needed 23,000 UN Peacekeepers within her borders just to keep the country from falling apart. Barring outside, read European, intervention, did "Democratically-elected since 2001" President (for Life) Joseph Kabila want the FAL-FA to start dropping bombs on his capital, Kinshasa, which was well within reach of all their aircraft?Congo (the country), to the north, wasn't being propped up by the UN, or anything else except ill intentions. In reality, it hardly had much of a military at all. Its officer corps was chosen for political reliability, not merit, or capability. Their technology was old Cold War stuff with little effort to update anything and, if you suspected corruption might be a problem across all spectrums of life, you would 'probably' be right about that too.If you suspected the current President had been in charge for a while, you would be correct again (1979-1992 then 2001- and the 'whoops' was when he accidently let his country experiment with democracy which led to two civil wars). If you suspected he was a life-long Communist (along with the Presidents of the DRC and Angola), you'd be right about that as well. Somehow their shared Marxist-Leninist-Communist ideology hadn't quite translated over to alleviating the grinding poverty in any of those countries despite their vast mineral wealth,At this point in the region's history, little Cabinda had everything to gain by striving for independence and the vast majority of 'warriors' who could possibly be sent against her had terribly little to gain fighting and dying trying to stop them from achieving her goal. After all, their lives weren't going to get any better and with the Amazons ability ~ nay willingness ~ to commit battlefield atrocities, those leaders were going to find it hard going to keep sending their men off to die.And then, it got even worse.See, what I had pointed out was there were two oil refineries in Angola, and neither was in Cabinda. Cabinda would need a refinery to start making good on their oil wealth ~ aka economically bribe off the Western economies already shaken over the Khanate's first round of aggressions.But wait! There was an oil refinery just across the Congo River from Cabinda ~ which meant it was attached to mainland Angola. That had to be a passel of impossible news, right?Nope. As I said earlier, it seemed the people of northern Angola were the same racial group as the Cabindans AND majority Catholic while the ruling clique wasn't part of their ethnic confederacy plus the farther south and east into Angola you went, the less Catholic it became.But it got better. This province was historically its own little independent kingdom (called the Kingdom of Kongo) to boot! It had been abolished by Portugal back in 1914.The 'good' news didn't end there. Now, it wasn't as if the leadership of Angola was spreading the wealth around to the People much anyway, but these northerners had been particularly left out of this Marxist version of 'Trickle Down' economics.How bad was this? This northwestern province ~ called Zaire ~ didn't have any railroads, or paved roads, linking it to the rest of the freaking country. The 'coastal road' entered the province, but about a third of the way up ran into this river, which they'd failed to bridge (you had to use a single track bridge farther to the northeast, if you can believe it). It wasn't even a big river. It was still an obstacle though.How did the Angolan government and military planned to get around? Why by air and sea, of course. Well, actually by air. Angola didn't have much of a merchant marine, or Navy, to make sealift a serious consideration. Within hours of the 'Union Declaration of Independence' anything flying anywhere north of the Luanda, the capital of Angola, would essentially be asking to be blown out of the sky.Along the border between Zaire province and the rest of Angola were precisely two chokepoints. By 'chokepoints', I meant places where a squad (10 trained, modernly-equipped troopers) could either see everything for miles & miles over pretty much empty space along a river valley and the only bridge separating Zaire province from the south, or overlook a ravine which the only road had to pass through because of otherwise bad-ass, broken terrain.Two.Zaire Province had roughly the same population as Cabinda ~ 600,000. Unlike Cabinda, which consisted of Cabinda City plus a few tiny towns and rugged jungles, Zaire had two cities ~ Soyo, with her seventy thousand souls plus the refinery at the mouth of the Congo River, and M'banza-Kongo, the historical capital of the Kingdom of Kongo, spiritual center of the Bakongo People (who included the Cabindans) and set up in the highlands strategically very reminiscent of Điện Biàn Phủ.Of Zaire's provincial towns, the only other strategic one was N'Zeto with her crappy Atlantic port facility and 2,230 meter grass airport. The town was the northern terminus of the National Road 100 ~ the Coastal Road. It terminated because of the Mebridege River. There wasn't a bridge at N'Zeto though there was a small one several miles upstream. N'Zeto was also where the road from provinces east of Zaire ended up, so you had to have N'Zeto ~ and that tiny bridge ~ to move troops overland anywhere else in Zaire Province.So you would think it would be easy for the Angolan Army to defend then, except of how the Amazons planned to operate. They would infiltrate the area first then 'rise up in rebellion'. Their problem was the scope of the operation had magnified in risk of exposure, duration and forces necessary for success.The serious issue before Saint Marie and the Host in Africa were the first two. They could actually move Amazons from Brazil and North America to bolster their numbers for the upcoming offensive. Even in the short-short term, equipment wouldn't be a serious problem. What the Amazons dreaded was being left in a protracted slugfest with the Angolan Army which the Condottieri could jump in on. The Amazons exceedingly preferred to strike first then vanish.There was reason to believe a tiny number could have stayed behind in Cabinda to help the locals prepare their military until they could defend themselves. They would need more than a hundred Amazons if Cabinda wanted to incorporate Zaire. The answer was to call back their newfound buddy, the Great Khan. While he didn't have much else he could spare (the Khanate was ramping up for their invasion of the Middle East after all, the Kurds needed the help), he had other allies he could call on.India couldn't help initially since they were supposed to supply the 'Peace-keepers' once a cease-fire had been arranged. That left Temujin with his solid ally, Vietnam, and his far shakier allies, the Republic of China and Japan.First off ~ Japan could not help, which meant they couldn't supply troops who might very well end up dead, or far worse, captured.. What they did have was a surplus of older equipment the ROC troops were familiar with, so while the ROC was gearing up for their own invasion of mainland China in February, they were willing to help the Chinese kill Angolans, off the books, of course.The ROC was sending fifteen hundred troops the Khanate's way to help in this West African adventure with the understanding they'd be coming home by year's end. With Vietnam adding over eight hundred of her own Special Forces, the Amazons had the tiny 'allied' army they could leave shielding Cabinda/Zaire once the first round of blood-letting was over.To be 'fair', the Republic of China and Vietnam asked for 'volunteers'. It wasn't like either country was going to declare war on Angola directly. Nearly a thousand members of Vietnam's elite 126th Regiment of the 5th Brigade (Đặc cáng bộ) took early retirement then misplaced their equipment as they went to update their visas and inoculations before heading out for the DRC (some would be slipping over the DRC/Cabindan border).On Taiwan, it was the men and women of the 602nd Air Cavalry Brigade, 871st Special Operations Group and 101st Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion who felt the sudden desire to 'seek enlightenment elsewhere, preferably on another continent'.They too were off to the Democratic Republic of Congo, man that country was a mess and their border security wasn't worth writing home about, that's for damn sure, via multiple Southeast Asian nations. Besides, they were being issued fraudulently visas which showed them to be from the People's Republic of China, not the ROC/Taiwan. If they were captured, they were to pretend to "be working for a Communist Revolution inside Angola and thus to be setting all of Africa on fire!" aka be Mainland Chinese.There, in the DRC, these Chinese stumbled across, some Japanese. These folks hadn't retired. No. They were on an extended assignment for the UN's mission in, the DRC. OH! And look! They'd brought tons of surplus, outdated Japanese Self Defense Forces' equipment with them, and there just so happened to be some Taiwanese who had experience in using such equipment (both used US-style gear).And here was Colonel Yoshihiro Isami of the Chūō Sokuō Shūdan (Japan's Central Readiness Force) wondering why he and his hastily assembled team had just unloaded,18 Fuji/Bell AH-1S Cobra Attack helicopters,6 Kawasaki OH-6D Loach Scout helicopters,12 Fuji-Bell 204-B-2 Hiyodori Utility helicopters,6 Kawasaki/Boeing CH-47JA Chinook Transport helicopters and4 Mitsubishi M U-2L-1 Photo Reconnaissance Aircraft.Yep! 46 more aircraft for the FAL-FA!Oh, and if this wasn't 'bad enough', the Chinese hadn't come alone. They'd brought some old aircraft from their homes to aid in the upcoming struggle. Once more, these things were relics of the Cold War yet both capable fighting machines and, given the sorry state of the opposition, definitely quite deadly. A dozen F-5E Tiger 2000 configured primarily for air superiority plus two RF-5E Tigergazer for reconnaissance, pilots plus ground crews, of course.Thus, on the eve of battle, the FAL-FA had become a true threat. Sure, all of its planes (and half of its pilots) were pretty old, but they were combat-tested and in numbers and experience no other Sub-Saharan African nation could match.The Liberation Ground Forces:But wait, there was still the niggling little problem of what all those fellas were going to fight with once they were on the ground. Assault/Battle rifles, carbines, rifles, pistols, PDW, SMGs as bullets, grenades and RPG's were all terrifyingly easy to obtain. The coast of West Africa was hardly the Port of London as far as customs security went. They were going to need some bigger toys and their host nations were going to need all their native hardware for their upcoming battles at home.And it wasn't like you could advertise for used IFV (Infantry Fighting Vehicles), APCs (armored personnel carriers) and tanks on e-Bay, Amazon.com, or Twitter. If something modern US, or NATO, was captured rolling around the beautiful Angolan countryside, shooting up hostile Angolans, all kinds of head would roll in all kinds of countries, unless the country,A) had an Executive Branch and Judiciary who wouldn't ask (or be answering) too many uncomfortable questions,B) wasn't all that vulnerable to international pressure,C) really needed the money and,D) didn't give a fuck their toys would soon be seen on BBC/CNN/Al Jazeera blowing the ever-living crap out of a ton of Africans aka doing what they were advertised to do and doing it very well in the hands of capable professionals.And politics was kind enough to hand the freedom-loving people of Cabinda & Zaire a winner, and it wasn't even from strangers, or at least people all that strange to their part of the Globe. If you would have no idea who to look for, you wouldn't be alone.That was the magic of the choice. See, the last three decades had seen the entire Globe take a colossal dump on them as a Nation and a People. They were highly unpopular for all sorts of things, such as Crimes Against Humanity and 'no', we were not talking about the Khanate.We would be talking about Република Србија / Republika Srbija aka Serbia aka the former Yugoslavia who had watched all their satellite minions (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo and Macedonia) slip away. Despite being reduced to a tiny fraction of their former selves thus fighting two incredibly brutal and bloody World Wars for nothing, Serbia insisted on maintaining a robust armaments industry.Mind you, they didn't make the very best stuff on the planet. That didn't stop them from trying though. Of equal importance was their geographic location and the above mentioned desire for some hard currency without asking too many questions. The geography was simple, you could move even heavy gear unnoticed from central Serbia to the Montenegrin port of Bar by rail and load them up on freighters and off to the Congo you went.The Serbians produced an APC called the BVP M-80A's which weren't blowing anyone's minds away when they started rolling off the production lines back in 1982, plus some over-eager types on the Serbian Army's payroll sweetened the deal by offering 'the rebels' some BVP M-80 KC's and a KB as well.Then they slathered on the sugary-sweet Maple syrup by upgrading a few of the M-80A's to BVP M-98A's. Why would they be so generous? The KC's and KB were the Command & Control variants, so that made sense (C = company & B = battalion commander). The -98A had never been tested in the field before and they were kind of curious how the new turrets (which was the major difference) would behave. 'Our' procurement agents didn't quibble. We needed the gear.Besides, these Slavic entrepreneurs gave them an inside track on some 'disarmed/mothballed' Czech (introduced in 1963) armored mobile ambulances and Polish BWP-1 (first rolled out in 1966) APC's which were either in, or could be quickly configured into, the support variants those ground-fighters would need. The 'disarmed' part was 'fixable', thanks to both the Serbians and Finland. The 'missing' basic weaponry was something the Serbians could replace with virtually identical equipment.It just kept getting better. Unknown to me at the time, the Finnish firm, Patria Hágglunds, had sold twenty-two of their 'most excellent' AMOS turrets ~ they are a twin 120 mm mortar system ~ then the deal fell through. Whoops! Should have guarded that warehouse better. Those bitches were on a cargo plane bound for Albania inside of six hours.The ammunition for them was rather unique. Thankfully, it was uniquely sold by the Swiss, who had no trouble selling it to Serbia, thank you very much! Twenty-two BWP-1's became mobile artillery for the Unionist freedom fighters, though I understood the ship ride with the Serbian and Chinese technicians was loads of fun as they struggled to figured out how to attach those state-of-the-art death-dealing turrets to those ancient contraptions.To compensate, the Serbians added (aka as long as our money was good) two Nora B-52 155 mm 52-calibre mobile artillery pieces and one battery of Orkan CER MLRS (Multiple Launch Rocket System) for long-range artillery, two batteries of their Oganj 2000 ER MRLS for medium range carnage and six batteries of their M-94 MRLS for 'close support' as well. More field-testing new gear for the "freedom fighters" We also managed to 'purchase' ten M-84AS Main Battle tanks plus an M-84A1 armor recovery vehicle. It should have been twelve tanks, but two had 'loading issues'.Not to be deterred, our busy little procurement-beavers discovered four tanks no one was using, in neighboring Croatia. Why wasn't anyone immediately keen on their placement? They were two sets of prototypes, Croatia's improvements on the M-84; the M-95 Degman which was a 'failed redesign' and the M-84D, which was a vast up-grade for the M-84 line which had been sidelined by the 2008 Global economic collapse, after which the project stagnated.It seemed they were all in working order because late one night 'my people' exited a Croatian Army base with them, never to be seen again, until two weeks later when an intrepid news crew caught the distinctive form of the M-95 sending some sweet 125 mm loving the Angolan Army's way. Whoops yet again! At least they hit what they were aiming at and destroyed what they hit, right?By then, millions of other people would be going 'what the fuck?' right along with them as Cabinda's camouflage- and mask-wearing rebel army was laying the smack-down on the Angolans. That was okay; over a million 'free Cabindan Unionists' were in the same boat. Over a thousand Asians with their mostly-female militant translators were right there to prop up their 'Unionist Allies', but then they were the ones with the tanks, armored vehicles, planes and guns, so they were less worried than most.To pilot these tanks, APC, IFV and man this artillery, they had to go back to the Khanate. Sure enough, they had some old tankers used to crewing the T-72 from which the M-84's and -95 Degman were derived. They'd also need drivers for those BVP M-80A's and Polish BWP-1's and OT-64 SKOT's... who were, again, derived from old Soviet tech (just much better). The Serbian artillery was similar enough to Soviet stuff, but with enough new tech to make it 'more fun' for the reservists to 'figure out' how to use.More volunteers for the Liberation Armed Forces! More Apple sales, great apps and voice modulation software so that the vehicle commanders would be heard communicating in Portuguese if someone was eavesdropping. As a final offering the Turkish Navy spontaneously developed some plans to test their long range capabilities by going to, the South Atlantic.On the final leg they would have six frigates and two submarines, enough to give any navy in the region, which wasn't Brazil, something to think about. This was a show of force, not an actual threat though. If anyone called their bluff, the Khanate-Turkish forces would have to pull back. These were not assets my Brother, the Great Khan, could afford to gamble and lose.If someone didn't call that bluff, he was also sending two smaller, older corvettes and three even smaller, but newer, fast attack boats, a "gift" to the Unionists ASAP. The frigates would then race home, they had 'other' issues to deal with while the submarines would hang around for a bit. The naval gift was necessitated by the reality the Unionists would have to press their claim to their off-shore riches and that required a naval force Angola couldn't hope to counter.As things were developing, it was reckoned since a build-up of such momentous land and air power couldn't be disguised, it had to happen in a matter of days ~ four was decided to be the minimum amount of time. More than that and the government of the Democratic Republic might start asking far too many questions our hefty bribes and dubious paperwork couldn't cover. Less than that would leave the task forces launching operations with too little a chance of success.Our biggest advantage was audacity. The buildup would happen 100 km up the Congo River from Soyo, the primary target of the Southern Invasion, in the DRC's second largest port city, Boma. Though across the river was Angolan territory, there was nothing there. The city of roughly 160,000 would provide adequate cover for the initial stage of the invasion.There they grouped their vehicles & Khanate drivers with Amazon and Vietnamese combat teams. The Japanese were doing the same for their 'Chinese' counterparts for their helicopter-borne forces. Getting all their equipment in working order in the short time left was critical as was creating some level of unit dynamic. Things were chaotic. No one was happy. They were all going in anyway.What had gone wrong?While most children her age were texting their schoolmates, or tackling their homework, Aya Ruger ~ the alias of Nasusara Assiyaiá hamai ~ was getting briefings of her global, secret empire worth hundreds of billions and those of her equally nefarious compatriots. She received a very abbreviated version of what the Regents received, delivered by a member of Shawnee Arinniti's staff.When Aya hopped off her chair unexpectedly, everyone tensed. Her bodyguards' hands went to their sidearms and Lorraine (her sister by blood), also in the room on this occasion, stood and prepared to tackle her 'former' sibling to the ground if the situation escalated into an assassination attempt. No such attack was generated, so the security ratcheted down and the attendant returned her focus to her Queen. Aya paced four steps, turned and retraced her way then repeated the action three more times."How many people live in the combined areas?" she asked."The combined areas? Of Cabinda and Zaire?""Yes.""I," the woman referenced her material, "roughly 1.1 million.""What is the yearly value of the offshore oil and natural gas production?""Forty-nine billion, eighty hundred and sixty-seven million by our best estimates at this time,""How many live in Soyo City proper?""Roughly 70,000.""We take Soyo," she spoke in a small yet deliberate voice. "We take and hold Soyo as an independent city-state within the Cabindan-Zaire Union. From the maps it appears Soyo is a series of islands. It has a port and airport. It has an open border to an ocean with weaker neighbors all around.""What of the, Zairians?""Bakongo. As a people they are called the Bakongo," Aya looked up at the briefer. "We relocate those who need to work in Soyo into a new city, built at our expense, beyond the southernmost water barrier. The rest we pay to relocate elsewhere in Zaire, or Cabinda."By the looks of those around her, Aya realized she needed to further explain her decisions."This is more than some concrete home base for our People," she began patiently. "In the same way it gives our enemies a clearly delineated target to attack us, it is a statement to our allies we won't cut and run if things go truly bad.""In the same way it will provide us with diplomatic recognition beyond what tenuous handouts we are getting from Cáel Wakko Ishara's efforts through JIKIT. Also, it is a reminder we are not like the other Secret Societies in one fundamental way, we are not a business concern, or a religion. We are a People and people deserve some sort of homeland. We have gone for so long without.""But Soyo?" the aide protested. "We have no ties to it, and it backs up to, nothing.""Northern Turkey and southern Slovakia mean nothing to us now as well," Aya debated. "No place on Earth is any more precious than another. As for backing up to nothing, no. You are incorrect. It backs into a promise from our allies in the Earth & Sky that if we need support, they know where to park their planes and ships."Aya was surrounded with unhappy, disbelieving looks."The Great Khan is my mamētu meáeda," she reminded them, "and I have every reason to believe he completely grasps the concept's benefits and obligations."The looks confirmed 'but he's a man' to the tiny Queen."Aya, are you sure about this?" Lorraine was the first to break decorum."Absolutely. Do you know what he sent me when he was informed of my, ascension to the Queendom?""No," Lorraine admitted."We must go horse-riding sometime soon, Daughter of Cáel, Queen of the Amazons."More uncertain and unconvinced looks."He didn't congratulate me, or send any gifts. He could have and you would think he would have, but he didn't. He knew the hearts of me & my Atta and we weren't in the celebratory mood. No. The Great Khan sent one sentence which offered solace and quiet, atop a horse on a windswept bit of steppe."Nothing.Sigh. "I know this sounds Cáel-ish," Aya admitted, "but I strongly believe this is what we should do. We are giving the Cabindans and Bakongo in Zaire independence and the promise of a much better life than what they now face. We will be putting thousands of our sisters' lives on the line to accomplish this feat and well over two hundred million dollars.""What about governance of the city ~ Soyo?" the aide forged ahead."Amazon law," Aya didn't hesitate. "We will make allowances for the security forces of visiting dignitaries and specific allied personnel, but otherwise it will be one massive Amazon urban freehold.""I cannot imagine the Golden Mare, or the Regents, will be pleased," the attendant bowed her head."It is a matter of interconnectivity," Aya walked up and touched the woman's cheek with the back of her small hand. "We could liberate then abandon Cabinda with the hope a small band could help them keep their independence. Except we need the refinery at Soyo so the people of Cabinda can truly support that liberty.""So, we must keep Soyo and to keep Soyo, we must keep Zaire province. There is no other lesser border which makes strategic sense ~ a river, highlands, a massive river, an ocean ~ those are sustainable frontiers. You can't simply keep Soyo and not expect the enemy to strike and destroy that refinery, thus we must take Zaire province.""But the Bakongo of Zaire cannot defend themselves and will not be able to do so for at least a year, if not longer. That means we must do so, and for doing so, they will give us Soyo and we will be honest stewards of their oil wealth. We cannot expect any other power to defend this new Union and if we don't have a land stake we will be portrayed as mercenaries and expelled by hostile international forces.""So, for this project to have any chance of success, we must stay, fight and have an acknowledged presence, and if you can think of an alternative, please let me know," she exhaled."What if the Cabindans and Bakongo resist?""It is 'us', or the Angolans and they know how horrible the Angolans can be. Didn't you say the average person their lives on just $2 a day?""Yes.""We can do better than that," Aya insisted."How?" the aide persisted. "I mean, 'how in a way which will be quickly evident and meaningful?'""Oh," Aya's tiny brow furrowed. Her nose twitched as she rummaged through the vast storehouse of her brain."Get me in touch with William A. Miller, Director of the U.S. Diplomatic Security Service. He should be able to help me navigate the pathways toward getting aid and advisors into those two provinces ASAP.""I'll let Katrina know," the attendant made the notation on her pad."No. Contact him directly," Aya intervened. "We established a, rapport when we met. I think he might responded positively to a chance to mentor me in foreign relations.""Really?" Lorraine's brows arched."Yes," Aya chirped."Are you sure, Nasusara?" the attendant stared. She used 'Nasusara' whenever she thought Aya had a 'horrible' idea instead of a merely a 'bad' one."Yes. He owes me. Last time we met I didn't shoot him.""Didn't?" the woman twitched."Yes. I drew down on him with my captured Chinese QSW-06. I didn't want to kill him, but I felt I was about to have to kill Deputy National Security Advisor Blinken and he was the only other person in the room both armed and capable of stopping me.""Why is he still alive?""Cáel Ishara saw through my distraction and then took my gun from me, asked for it actually," she shyly confessed."Would you have shot him?" the aide inquired."What do you think?" Aya smiled.And Then:So, given t

christmas god tv new york director amazon head black president new york city father chicago stories earth china peace house mother work japan french care kingdom war africa russia brothers chinese european ukraine sex global german japanese russian moon mind western army north america dad mom iphone brazil fortune irish north african indian attack high school security argentina fantasy asian middle east portugal vietnam union daughter clear atlantic catholic navy medium narrative cult worse unknown sisters honestly strike taiwan south america bar independence sexuality air force south korea pacific swedish finland fuck republic twenty ukrainian preview nato ot cold war port opposition bless swiss rpg bay presidents delaware excuse command factory globe shut goddess congo soviet union world war portuguese soviet transport gulf bi cheat forty tem aew croatia communists joseph stalin helicopters serbia illuminati west africa cobra vietnamese serpent bff finnish centered explicit belarus patagonia wells fargo besties czech jaguar utility roc marxist asians kremlin kazakhstan bosnia kosovo novels angola atlantic ocean ajax slovenia slovakia special forces arial belize vm macedonia apartheid asshole establishment albania brigades taiwanese maple helvetica appearances montenegro defeats west african georgian democratic republic trojan yugoslavia secret societies serbian cease guinea us marines southeast asian tp kb erotica soviets baltic anthrax mongolian usf ericsson grenades northern hemisphere bombers iron curtain judiciary conn liberta saharan africa southern hemisphere times new roman slavic drc regents send off kurds kongo clans kyrgyzstan glock my mother mig world wars great plains realist prc herzegovina wiggle tajikistan kinshasa regiment turkmenistan chinook tahoma apc barring executive branch armadas queendom crimes against humanity luanda comparable atta ssr subtlety cloud nine angolan chechen us state manchurian south atlantic unionists salamis boma congo drc parul coils gurr unconquered antonov bizarrely loach indian air force communist revolution skot democratically great hunt torm epona sub saharan african national road temujin montenegrin mpla un peacekeepers tamarin war council miyako cabinda congo river bwp apcs literotica pointe noire sukhoi diplomatic security service great khan tupolev pdw ifv more apple smgs special operations group mrls angolans nora b unification war simsun
Transmission
Nora Bussigny - Peut-on appliquer les théories woke ?

Transmission

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 78:47


Aujourd'hui nous recevons Nora Bussigny, journaliste d'investigation au Point pour parler infiltration, culpabilité, et secte.Les ouvrages de Nora Bussigny que Transmission vous recommande : ➡️ "Les Nouveaux Inquisiteurs", Albin Michel (2023) https://www.fnac.com/a17961505/Nora-B...

Rehab Rebels: OTs, PTs, and SLPs transition to Alternative Careers
Entrepreneurial Insights from Nora Bachman, Pediatric Physical Therapist Turned Practice Owner 034

Rehab Rebels: OTs, PTs, and SLPs transition to Alternative Careers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 49:25 Transcription Available


#034 Ever wondered what it takes to break the mold and start your own business in the healthcare field? Prepare to be inspired by our guest Nora, a pediatric physical therapist  (PT) who's stepped out of routine hospital settings to create her own pediatric PT practice. Nora turned her passion for pediatrics into a rewarding venture, offering services to families who might not usually have access to physical therapy. Nora's journey from hospital to private practice is filled with valuable insights. Her transition was marked by an interdisciplinary experience, a move to sunny California, and finally, the brave decision to set up her own practice, "Nora B, PT". This new chapter brought along its set of challenges - liabilities, the pressure of providing services to a diverse clientele, and the introduction of a revolutionary program, Dynamic Movement Intervention. But Nora handled them with the resilience of a true entrepreneur. Navigating the world of entrepreneurship is no small feat, and Nora candidly opens up about this. Building "Nora B, PT" from the ground up, she stresses on the importance of having a strong support system, the necessity of a flexible mindset, and the crucial role of professional mentors and friends. With her story, Nora offers invaluable insights for anyone thinking about owning a business, laying bare the personality traits that can make or break an entrepreneur. All in all, this episode with Nora is an enriching journey into the realm of pediatric physical therapy entrepreneurship that you simply cannot miss!For links and show notes, head to: https://rehabrebels.org/034Start your Rehab Rebel Journey! Receive access to FREE monthly progress updates, interview schedule, and a BONUS Top 25 Alternative Careers List for Rehab Professionals when you Start your Rebel Career and be part of the Rehab Rebels Tribe!Join us on Instagram and Facebook or your favorite social media @rehabrebels!Subscribe through Apple Podcast or Spotify!Support the show

Was jetzt? – Spezial
Lampedusa, die überforderte Insel

Was jetzt? – Spezial

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2023 28:56


Lampedusa steht wie keine andere Insel für das Sterben im Mittelmeer und für ein überfordertes Europa. Zuletzt erreichten in nur drei Tagen 10.000 Geflüchtete die kleine Insel zwischen Sizilien und Nordafrika. Vergangene Woche kamen an einem einzigen Tag mehr als 100 Boote an, mit Menschen aus dem Sudan, aus Eritrea, aus Guinea oder aus Tunesien. Seit dem Schiffsunglück vor rund zehn Jahren vor Lampedusa versprechen Politikerinnen und Politiker in Rom und Brüssel Besserung. In dieser Spezialfolge von Was jetzt? fragen wir, was aus den Versprechungen von damals geworden ist. Warum wiederholen sich diese Szenen immer und immer wieder? Und wie sieht das Leben auf Lampedusa aktuell aus? Über die Lage auf der Insel berichtet im Podcast Ann Esswein. Sie ist Teil des Selbstlaut Kollektivs, war im August auf Lampedusa und hat mit Geflüchteten und Bewohnerinnen der Insel gesprochen. Über die politischen Zusammenhänge spricht in der Folge ihre Kollegin, Eva Hoffmann. Moderation und Skript: Jannis Carmesin Recherche: Ann Esswein, Eva Hoffmann, Anina Ritscher, Anna-Theresa Bachmann, Paul Hildebrandt, Nora Börding, Helena Manhartsberger und Pierluigi Bizzini Redaktion: Elise Landschek, Simon Langemann und Constanze Kainz Fragen, Kritik, Anregungen? Sie erreichen uns unter wasjetzt@zeit.de.

Medially – der Medienkompetenzpodcast
Folge 78: Das Alles ist Medienpädagogik

Medially – der Medienkompetenzpodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 56:29


Medienpädagogik ist weit mehr als nur Kinder und Smartphones. Als fleißige Hörer*innen von medially wisst ihr das natürlich, dennoch hoffen wir, euch mit dieser Folge noch ein paar andere spannende Bereiche der Medienpädagogik vorstellen zu können. Wir haben 5 Expertinnen aus ganz unterschiedlichen Bereichen zu Gast, die uns und euch von ihrem Arbeitsfeld erzählen. Wir haben uns so sehr auf und über diese Folge gefreut und bedanken uns ganz herzlich bei: Nora Bünger, Helen Rademakers, Kristina Richter, Stephanie Rifkin und Marie-Therese Stedry (alphabetische Reihenfolge).

The Wicked Library
TWL 1115: “Children of the Dream Root”, by Nora B. Peevy

The Wicked Library

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 62:28


Get these episodes ad free!Support the show on Patreon for as little as $3 / month.Welcome to The Wicked Library for our season of Sci-Fi Themed Horror. Author: Nora B. PeevyStoryteller: GP MckenzieHost: Daniel FoytikFeaturing a custom score by Nico Vettese, of We Talk of Dreams. Story Summary: For centuries Aina's people have harvested the Dream Root to cultivate the health of their planet, but Aina is now occupied by the enemy Reptilian race, searching for a cure to the mysterious fungus plaguing their people.The Reptilians believe the Dream Root is the cure they've been seeking. They've enslaved the Ainan people, destroying the wild growing Dream Root and forcing the Ainans to farm the root indoors for the Reptilians' scientific experiments.Ammalynn, a young teenage Ainan, possesses a powerful gift that could be her people's salvation, but if Ammalynn uses her gift, she will be forced to make a great sacrifice. Will Aina survive? What will Ammalynn choose?Warning: The Wicked Library is a horror fiction podcast created for a mature audience. Our stories contain graphic descriptions of pain, murder, violence, blood, betrayal, and inhumanity; monsters win, people die, and hope is often shattered. There is also beauty, heart, catharsis, and raw emotion. Fear may be deeply personal, but we all share it.If at any time a story takes you to a place too dark, turn on the lights, press pause, or press stop. And always remember, that unlike in the real world, these nightmares, and your participation in them, are under your control.Producer & Showrunner: Daniel Foytik Producer: Meg WilliamsLead Editor & Executive Producer: Scarlett R. Algee Creative Director & Executive Producer: Jeanette AndromedaResident Composer & Executive Producer: Nico Vettese, of We Talk of DreamsArtwork: Jeanette Andromeda Score & Incidental Music: Nico VetteseMain Theme: “The Library Awakens” Nico VetteseFinal Audio Mix: Daniel Foytik, 9th Story Studios LLCGet your copy of The Wicked Library Presents: 13 Wicked Tales on Kindle, or in print. Visit thewickedlibrary.com/read to get your copy today.Get your copy of The Lift, 9 Stories of Transformation Volume One on Kindle, or in print. Visit victoriaslift.com/read to get your copy today.The Wicked Library is created by 9th Story Studios LLC: www.9thstory.comAudio program ©2022 – 9th Story Studios LLC. All Rights Reserved.No reproduction or use of this content is permitted without the express written consent of 9th Story Studios LLC. The copyrights for stories are held by the respective authors.

Pase lo que pase
Remarcan la importancia del uso del barbijo a pesar de la baja de casos

Pase lo que pase

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 9:29


La periodista especializada en Ciencia y Salud destacó que, si bien la ventilación cruzada es “buena” en grandes espacios, “no hay que abandonar el tapabocas” ya que es la protección necesaria ante la proximidad con otra persona. “No sabemos si estamos en el fin de la pandemia, pero parece que estamos en el fin del comienzo”, declaró Nora Bär y agregó: “El virus no va a desaparecer por arte de magia. Por el reinicio de las actividades con presencialidad, la movilidad, el frío y volver a estar en lugares cerrados puede ser que vuelvan a subir los casos”. A su vez la especialista señaló que bajaron los casos porque “Ómicron se quedó sin susceptibles” para infectar ante la cantidad de vacunados y quienes ya atravesaron el coronavirus. Pase lo que pase, lunes a viernes de 7.00 a 9.00 Con Darío Villarruel, Romina Calderaro y Jorge Vaccaro.

Los caminos de Pacho O'Donnell
Homenaje a Guillermo Roux y entrevista a la periodista Nora Bär

Los caminos de Pacho O'Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2021 53:49


En esta emisión, Pacho O´Donnell homenajeo al dibujante recientemente fallecido, Guillermo Roux, a través de una entrevista en la que cuenta sus primeros pasos en el dibujo, la herencia artística familiar y repasa su carrera. En la segunda parte del programa, Pacho entrevista a la periodista Nora Bär, pionera del periodismo científico en la Argentina, quien explica acerca de su área de especialidad, la forma de ejercer esta profesión y la confluencia entre la ciencia y la política.    

Encuentro Nacional
1 de diciembre: Día Mundial de la Lucha contra el SIDA

Encuentro Nacional

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 11:35


Nora Bär, periodista especializada en ciencia y salud, se refirió a la infección como una “pandemia que aún sigue, a pesar de estar controlada”. “Antes se pensaba que era una enfermedad que podían padecer las personas que se relacionaba con el mismo sexo, desconocimiento que contribuyó a que se expandiera muchísimo más”, detalló. Actualmente, a nivel de controles y tratamientos, “estamos al mismo nivel de cualquier país del mundo”, señaló Nora, pero destacó al Doctor Pedro Cahn y al Doctor Julio Montaner, “quienes hicieron contribuciones esenciales para contener esta pandemia”. El concepto del Día Mundial de la lucha contra el VIH SIDA se originó en la Cumbre Mundial de ministros de Salud en 1988, donde se abordaron programas de prevención del SIDA. A partir de allí, los organismos de las Naciones Unidas, los Estados y diferentes sectores sociales conmemoran la fecha.   Encuentro Nacional, lunes a viernes de 17.00 a 20.00 Con Luisa Valmaggia, Horacio Embón, Natalia Maderna, Nora Lafón, Daniela Bruno, Silvia Bacher, Claudio Leveroni y Carla Ruíz.

Aprender de Grandes
#101 Nora Bär y comunicar la ciencia

Aprender de Grandes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2021 110:54


A esta altura ya saben que me encanta conversar con gente que le dedicó muchos años a una disciplina, una tarea específica, porque de esa gente sé que puedo aprender mucho. Tuve el lujo de conversar con Nora Bär. Nora es periodista científica, escribe sobre ciencia y salud hace mucho tiempo en distintos medios. Le pregunté qué aprendió en todo ese trayecto, y aprendí muchísimo de ella. ¡No se lo pierdan! Soy Gerry Garbulsky y quiero que juntos aprendamos durante toda la vida. El lunes 19 de julio de 2021 a las 18:30 h (hora de Argentina) tendremos un encuentro gratuito de la Comunidad Aprender de Grandes para festejar los 100 episodios, interactuando entre todos. Nos vamos a encontrar por Zoom para festejar con muchas sorpresas que estamos preparando. El encuentro es gratuito, con inscripción previa en https://aprenderdegrandes.com/comunidad, mientras queden lugares. Si te gusta Aprender de Grandes y querés celebrar nuestra capacidad de aprender durante toda la vida, no te lo pierdas. Pueden ver los links relevantes de este episodio en http://aprenderdegrandes.com/nora Inscripción a los cursos de Aprender de Grandes: https://aprenderdegrandes.com/cursos Suscripción al email corto de los lunes con ideas para empezar la semana: https://aprenderdegrandes.com/newsletter Episodios del podcast Aprender de Grandes: https://aprenderdegrandes.com/episodios Aprender de Grandes está disponible en... Youtube: http://youtube.com/AprenderdeGrandes Spotify: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesSpotify Apple Podcasts: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesApple Google Podcasts: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesGoogle Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/aprenderdegrandes/ Stitcher: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesStitcher TuneIn: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesTuneIn ivoox: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesivoox Overcast: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesOvercast Pocket Casts: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesPocketcast Y en las redes sociales... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aprenderdegrandes/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/apdegran/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/apdegrandes/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/aprenderdegrandes/ Música y sonido: Estudio Pomeranec (http://pomeranec.com/).

Busenfreundin - der Podcast
Frauenslot (Gast: Lisa Feller, Bella Lesnik & Nora Böckler)

Busenfreundin - der Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2021 68:17


Heute sind Komikerin Lisa Feller, Moderatorin Bella Lesnik sowie Schauspielerin Nora Böckler im Podcast. Grund: der Frauenslot bei Ricarda war nicht belegt. Die drei Frauen interessante Einblicke in ihren Job innerhalb der Entertainment-Branche. Und ganz nebenbei haben die drei Unterhalterinnen eine Aufgabe zu erfüllen, die Ricarda ihnen stellt. Reinhören lohnt sich!---------www.busenfreundin-magazin.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Mindalia.com-Salud,Espiritualidad,Conocimiento
Cómo transitar los cambios del 2021 con ayuda de la PNL, por Nora Báez

Mindalia.com-Salud,Espiritualidad,Conocimiento

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2021 44:05


En Ivoox puedes encontrar sólo algunos de los audios de Mindalia. Para escuchar las 4 grabaciones diarias que publicamos entra en https://www.mindaliatelevision.com. Si deseas ver el vídeo perteneciente a este audio, pincha aquí: https://youtu.be/8iSLHnqBmgw Tiempos de reinvención... Desarrolla tu Inteligencia Emocional con Programación Neurolingüística: La PNL como disciplina de modelado, hace posible el análisis y aprendizaje de las habilidades relacionadas con la gestión emocional. El estudio de la experiencia subjetiva posibilita la identificación de las emociones y su comprensión. Nora Báez Educadora de profesión y alma. Su primer titulo como profesora en Educ. Pre-Escolar fue a los 22 años, mientras cursaba la Licenciatura en ciencias de la Educación en la Univ. Nacional de Rio Cuarto. Luego de unos años....en el 2000, pensando en psicología y otras áreas del conocimiento, estudió Comunicación con Herramientas de Neurociencias en la Univ. Nacional de Córdoba, al mismo tiempo Programación Neurolingüística y Desarrollo del Talento Personal en la Univ. Nacional Blas Pascal, habiendo realizado otras maestrías y cursos dentro y fuera de mi país. Actualmente, es capacitadora del Ministerio de Educación de la Pcia. de Córdoba, Argentina. Ejerce conjuntamente la docencia en otros centros y universidades. Se define como inquieta, curiosa y emprendedora. Infórmate de todo el programa en: http://television.mindalia.com/catego...​ ***CON PREGUNTAS AL FINAL DE LA CONFERENCIA PARA RESOLVER TUS DUDAS **** Si te parece interesante.... ¡COMPÁRTELO!! :-) DURACIÓN: 45m Aproximadamente -----------INFORMACIÓN SOBRE MINDALIA---------- Mindalia.com es una ONG internacional sin ánimo de lucro. Nuestra misión es la difusión universal de contenidos para la mejora de la consciencia espiritual, mental y física. -Apóyanos con tu donación mediante Paypal https://www.mindaliatelevision.com/ha...​ -Colabora con el mundo suscribiéndote a este canal, dejándonos un comentario de energía positiva en nuestros vídeos y compartiéndolos. De esta forma, este conocimiento llegará a mucha más gente. - Sitio web: https://www.mindalia.com​ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mindalia.ayuda/​ - Twitter: http://twitter.com/mindaliacom​ - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mindalia_com/​ - Periscope: https://www.pscp.tv/mindaliacom​ - Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/mindaliacom​ - Vaughn: https://vaughn.live/mindalia​ - VK: https://vk.com/mindalia​ *Mindalia.com no se hace responsable de las opiniones vertidas en este vídeo, ni necesariamente participa de ellas. *Mindalia.com no se responsabiliza de la fiabilidad de las informaciones de este vídeo, cualquiera sea su origen. *Este vídeo es exclusivamente informativo.

Mindalia.com-Salud,Espiritualidad,Conocimiento
Cómo transitar los cambios del 2021 con ayuda de la PNL, por Nora Báez

Mindalia.com-Salud,Espiritualidad,Conocimiento

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2021 44:05


En Ivoox puedes encontrar sólo algunos de los audios de Mindalia. Para escuchar las 4 grabaciones diarias que publicamos entra en https://www.mindaliatelevision.com. Si deseas ver el vídeo perteneciente a este audio, pincha aquí: https://youtu.be/8iSLHnqBmgw Tiempos de reinvención... Desarrolla tu Inteligencia Emocional con Programación Neurolingüística: La PNL como disciplina de modelado, hace posible el análisis y aprendizaje de las habilidades relacionadas con la gestión emocional. El estudio de la experiencia subjetiva posibilita la identificación de las emociones y su comprensión. Nora Báez Educadora de profesión y alma. Su primer titulo como profesora en Educ. Pre-Escolar fue a los 22 años, mientras cursaba la Licenciatura en ciencias de la Educación en la Univ. Nacional de Rio Cuarto. Luego de unos años....en el 2000, pensando en psicología y otras áreas del conocimiento, estudió Comunicación con Herramientas de Neurociencias en la Univ. Nacional de Córdoba, al mismo tiempo Programación Neurolingüística y Desarrollo del Talento Personal en la Univ. Nacional Blas Pascal, habiendo realizado otras maestrías y cursos dentro y fuera de mi país. Actualmente, es capacitadora del Ministerio de Educación de la Pcia. de Córdoba, Argentina. Ejerce conjuntamente la docencia en otros centros y universidades. Se define como inquieta, curiosa y emprendedora. Infórmate de todo el programa en: http://television.mindalia.com/catego...​ ***CON PREGUNTAS AL FINAL DE LA CONFERENCIA PARA RESOLVER TUS DUDAS **** Si te parece interesante.... ¡COMPÁRTELO!! :-) DURACIÓN: 45m Aproximadamente -----------INFORMACIÓN SOBRE MINDALIA---------- Mindalia.com es una ONG internacional sin ánimo de lucro. Nuestra misión es la difusión universal de contenidos para la mejora de la consciencia espiritual, mental y física. -Apóyanos con tu donación mediante Paypal https://www.mindaliatelevision.com/ha...​ -Colabora con el mundo suscribiéndote a este canal, dejándonos un comentario de energía positiva en nuestros vídeos y compartiéndolos. De esta forma, este conocimiento llegará a mucha más gente. - Sitio web: https://www.mindalia.com​ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mindalia.ayuda/​ - Twitter: http://twitter.com/mindaliacom​ - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mindalia_com/​ - Periscope: https://www.pscp.tv/mindaliacom​ - Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/mindaliacom​ - Vaughn: https://vaughn.live/mindalia​ - VK: https://vk.com/mindalia​ *Mindalia.com no se hace responsable de las opiniones vertidas en este vídeo, ni necesariamente participa de ellas. *Mindalia.com no se responsabiliza de la fiabilidad de las informaciones de este vídeo, cualquiera sea su origen. *Este vídeo es exclusivamente informativo.

Mindalia.com-Salud,Espiritualidad,Conocimiento
Cómo transitar los cambios del 2021 con ayuda de la PNL, por Nora Báez

Mindalia.com-Salud,Espiritualidad,Conocimiento

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2021 44:05


En Ivoox puedes encontrar sólo algunos de los audios de Mindalia. Para escuchar las 4 grabaciones diarias que publicamos entra en https://www.mindaliatelevision.com. Si deseas ver el vídeo perteneciente a este audio, pincha aquí: https://youtu.be/8iSLHnqBmgw Tiempos de reinvención... Desarrolla tu Inteligencia Emocional con Programación Neurolingüística: La PNL como disciplina de modelado, hace posible el análisis y aprendizaje de las habilidades relacionadas con la gestión emocional. El estudio de la experiencia subjetiva posibilita la identificación de las emociones y su comprensión. Nora Báez Educadora de profesión y alma. Su primer titulo como profesora en Educ. Pre-Escolar fue a los 22 años, mientras cursaba la Licenciatura en ciencias de la Educación en la Univ. Nacional de Rio Cuarto. Luego de unos años....en el 2000, pensando en psicología y otras áreas del conocimiento, estudió Comunicación con Herramientas de Neurociencias en la Univ. Nacional de Córdoba, al mismo tiempo Programación Neurolingüística y Desarrollo del Talento Personal en la Univ. Nacional Blas Pascal, habiendo realizado otras maestrías y cursos dentro y fuera de mi país. Actualmente, es capacitadora del Ministerio de Educación de la Pcia. de Córdoba, Argentina. Ejerce conjuntamente la docencia en otros centros y universidades. Se define como inquieta, curiosa y emprendedora. Infórmate de todo el programa en: http://television.mindalia.com/catego...​ ***CON PREGUNTAS AL FINAL DE LA CONFERENCIA PARA RESOLVER TUS DUDAS **** Si te parece interesante.... ¡COMPÁRTELO!! :-) DURACIÓN: 45m Aproximadamente -----------INFORMACIÓN SOBRE MINDALIA---------- Mindalia.com es una ONG internacional sin ánimo de lucro. Nuestra misión es la difusión universal de contenidos para la mejora de la consciencia espiritual, mental y física. -Apóyanos con tu donación mediante Paypal https://www.mindaliatelevision.com/ha...​ -Colabora con el mundo suscribiéndote a este canal, dejándonos un comentario de energía positiva en nuestros vídeos y compartiéndolos. De esta forma, este conocimiento llegará a mucha más gente. - Sitio web: https://www.mindalia.com​ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mindalia.ayuda/​ - Twitter: http://twitter.com/mindaliacom​ - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mindalia_com/​ - Periscope: https://www.pscp.tv/mindaliacom​ - Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/mindaliacom​ - Vaughn: https://vaughn.live/mindalia​ - VK: https://vk.com/mindalia​ *Mindalia.com no se hace responsable de las opiniones vertidas en este vídeo, ni necesariamente participa de ellas. *Mindalia.com no se responsabiliza de la fiabilidad de las informaciones de este vídeo, cualquiera sea su origen. *Este vídeo es exclusivamente informativo.

The Wicked Library
WIHM 2021: Wicked Women in Horror Special - Six Sinister Stories

The Wicked Library

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 68:45


It's our 2021 Wicked Women in Horror Special! While we celebrate women in horror every month here at The Wicked Library, we're officially celebrating Women in Horror Month with six dark tales written just for us by amazingly talented women writers, and presented by one of our executive producers, Cynthia Lowman."On a Cold Basement Floor", by Pippa Bailey ~ Told by Erika Sanderson"The Hearing Aid Museum", by Cameron Ulam ~ Told by Jessica McEvoy"Dirt and Iron", by Nora B. Peevy ~ Told by Heather Thomas"Junie Proctor’s Panties" by KT Jayne ~ Told by by Nelson Pyles"I Love Every Part of You", by Scarlett R Algee ~ Told by Cynthia Lowman"Digital Olives", by B. Renard ~ Told by Mary MurphyCustom Scoring: Nico Vettese, of We Talk of DreamsVoice of the Librarian: Nelson Pyles | Artwork: Jeanette Andromeda | Host: Cynthia Lowman | Producer / Showrunner: Daniel Foytik | Lead Editor: Scarlett R. AlgeeExecutive Producers: Cynthia Lowman, Nelson Pyles, Nico Vettese, Scarlett R. Algee, Jeanette AndromedaThe Wicked Library Theme: Anthony Rowsick | In the Library (background music): Nico Vettese, of We Talk of DreamsGet your copy of The Wicked Library Presents: 13 Wicked Tales on Kindle, or in print.  Visit thewickedlibrary.com/read to get your copy today.Get your copy of The Lift, 9 Stories of Transformation Volume One on Kindle, or in print.  Visit victoriaslift.com/read to get your copy today.Audio RecordingFinal mix by Daniel Foytik, 9th Story Studios: www.9thstory.com9th Story Studios:Visit The Wicked Library:On Facebook: www.facebook.com/thewickedlibraryOn Twitter: @wickedlibraryOn Instagram: @wickedlibrarypod

Medios Públicos Uruguay
“Cuando estuve internada pasé unos días bastante feos”, contó periodista argentina

Medios Públicos Uruguay

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 18:47


Nora Bär habló con Codo a codo sobre la pandemia de covid-19 en su país. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mediospublicosu/message

Coronavirus | Breve Podcast de la Pandemia
Coronavirus y dinosaurios

Coronavirus | Breve Podcast de la Pandemia

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2020 27:19


¡Vos tan distanciamiento y yo tan aislamiento! En este episodio, actualizamos la info de esta semana. ¿Qué significa el aumento de pacientes en terapia intensiva para el sistema de salud? ¿Qué novedades hay sobre la vacuna? ¿Qué va a pasar con la movilidad en el AMBA? Además, analizamos los nuevos datos y hablamos sobre comunicación científica responsable con la enorme Nora Bär. Y hablamos de esteroides, un tipo de moléculas que no tienen nada que ver con los asteroides, que son los que provocaron la extinción de los dinosaurio. ¿Qué tiene que ver esto con el coronavirus? Vas a tener que escuchar. Nos desvela sorprenderte. Conduce Juan Manuel Carballeda. Entrevista desde el armario: Valeria Sanabria. Coordinación general: Nahuel Ugazio. Guión: Juan Cruz Balian, Valeria Sanabria, Ezequiel Calvo, Florencia Fernandez Chiappe y Juan Manuel Carballeda. Producción por Posta: Lucila Lopardo, Luciano Banchero y Diego Dell' Agostino. Edición: Leo Fernández. Identidad visual: Belén Kakefuku. Una producción de El Gato y la Caja junto a Posta.

Sexy Pipol Podcast
Coronavirus: información, estadísticas y ciencia

Sexy Pipol Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2020 29:05


Nora Bär, periodista cientifica, nos explicó la actualidad en torno al coronavirus y la idea de levantar la cuarentena.

Radio Lumen - Študentské šapitó
Študentské šapitó 20:00 10.02.2020

Radio Lumen - Študentské šapitó

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2020


Ľudia, ktorí nás inšpirujú. Nora Bělousovová - podpredsedníčka rady študentov. Ondrej Rosík a Lenka Bartošová

nora b
Ancestral Wellness
Interview with Nora B

Ancestral Wellness

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2019 22:09


Nora’s favorites in the kitchen and halo top! Enjoy!! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/daniel-mayorga/message

nora b
Vidas prestadas
Nora Bär: “Me gustan las preguntas que no tienen todavía una respuesta”

Vidas prestadas

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2019 55:30


En Vidas prestadas, Hinde Pomeraniec recibe a la periodista y divulgadora científica Nora Bär. En una extensa entrevista, la autora de Diez preguntas que la ciencia (todavía) no puede contestar habla sobre su infancia, el cambio de las mujeres y su especial atracción por las preguntas sin respuesta.

preguntas tienen diez todav respuesta gustan nora b hinde pomeraniec en vidas
Conversaciones
Arleen Salles: "La neuroética se ocupa de lo bueno y lo malo de manipular el cerebro"

Conversaciones

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2018 26:27


Arlen Salles, filósofa, especialista en neuroética e investigadora senior de la Universidad de Uppsala, Suecia, pasó por Conversaciones en LA NACION , donde se refirió a algunos conceptos relativos al cerebro. "La neuorética comienza en el 2002 en un congreso en San Francisco", contó. Sobre la disciplina, dijo que "se ocuparía de lo bueno y de lo malo en la manipulación del cerebro". Por otra parte, opinó sobre hasta dónde llegarán las intervenciones farmacológicas. En ese sentido, planteó: "Una pastilla puede incrementar mi capacidad de prestar atención". Y añadió: "Causa terror la posibilidad de intervenir directamente en el cerebro". En LA NACION podés encontrar [el video de la entrevista](https://www.lanacion.com.ar/2168733-arleen-salles-la-neuroetica-se-ocupa-lo) que le hizo Nora Bär y que se publicó el 4 de septiembre de 2018.

Conversaciones
Carlos Vullo: "Los argentinos tenemos un porcentaje de genes africanos"

Conversaciones

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2018 26:37


Carlos Vullo, director del laboratorio de genética del Equipo Argentino de Antropología Forense, pasó por Conversaciones en LA NACION , donde contó cómo es el trabajo en el área en que se desempeña. "Hay investigación histórica, levantamiento arqueológico, análisis antropológico y genético", manifestó. A su vez, contó que se trabajó en "identificar víctimas de la guerra de Vietnam 60 años post mortem". También explicó que "la migración del hombre actual se puede seguir por los genes". Por último, lanzó: "Hay un 5 % de ADN mitocondrial en Argentina que es de origen africano". Encontrá en LA NACION la [versión completa en video](https://www.lanacion.com.ar/2167173-carlos-vullo-los-argentinos-tenemos-porcentaje-genes) de la entrevista que le hizo Nora Bär, y que se publicó el 30 de agosto de 2018.

Conversaciones
Rolando González: "Los científicos no parecemos estar convocados para el desarrollo"

Conversaciones

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2018 26:31


El director del Instituto Patagónico de Ciencias Sociales y Humanas, Rolando González, pasó por Conversaciones en LA NACION , donde habló sobre los primeros pobladores de la Patagonia. "Es tierra de forasteros pero también de originarios", dijo sobre la región del sur de la Argentina. A su vez, describió que quienes poblaron primero la Patagonia eran cazadores y recolectores marinos. Además, manifestó: "Todos los muestreos genéticos indican que hay complejos escenarios de mestizaje de culturas". Por otra parte, se refirió al proyecto Poblar, al que definió como "un ejercicio de soberanía científica". Asimismo, señaló: "La situación presupuestaria del CONICET y del Ministerio de Ciencia es compleja". En LA NACION podés encontrar el [video completo de la entrevista](http://www.lanacion.com.ar/2162598-rolando-gonzalez-estamos-en-una-fase-politica-y-economica-en-la-que-los-cientificos-no-parecemos-estar-convocados-para-el-desarrollo) que le realizó Nora Bär, y que se publicó el 15 de agosto de 2018.

Conversaciones
Gustavo de Simone: "Lo mejor para un paciente terminal es ayudarlo a vivir en paz"

Conversaciones

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2018 25:54


El especialista en cuidados paliativos Gustavo De Simone pasó por Conversaciones en LA NACION y se refirió al tratamiento de los pacientes que se encuentran en una etapa terminal. "Es necesaria la escucha, la empatía para transitar el final con dignidad", apuntó. "El cuidado paliativo tiene 4 dimensiones: física, psicológica, social y espiritual", explicó. En ese sentido, manifestó la necesidad de que los estudiantes de medicina se formen en este aspecto. Por otra parte, dijo que la Argentina es un país líder en cuidados paliativos en América Latina. "Nuestros maestros son los pacientes", concluyó. En LA NACION podés ver el [video completo de la entrevista](https://www.lanacion.com.ar/2160058-gustavo-de-simone-lo-mejor-para-un-paciente-terminal-es-ayudarlo-a-vivir-en-paz) que le hizo Nora Bär, y que se publicó el 24 de junio de 2018.

Conversaciones
Francisco Quintana: "Descubrimos que tenemos otro órgano: el microbioma intestinal"

Conversaciones

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2018 26:37


El inmunólogo molecular e investigador en Harvard Francisco Quintana pasó por Conversaciones en LA NACION , donde explicó de qué se trata el microbioma intestinal, un nuevo órgano del cuerpo humano. "El microbioma instestinal son comunidades microbianas que vienen en distintos tejidos", manifestó. A su vez, añadió: "Hay una movida fuerte para identificar cómo el microbioma es relevante para muchas enfermedades". El inmunólogo molecular que está afiliado en Harvard contó que Boston es una ciudad "muy receptiva y vibrante" para este tipo de investigaciones. "Hay una movida fuerte para identificar cómo el microbioma es relevante para muchas enfermedades", concluyó. En LA NACION podés ver el [video completo de la entrevista](https://www.lanacion.com.ar/2156188-francisco-quintana-descubrimos-que-tenemos-otro-organo-el-microbioma-intestinal) que le hizo Nora Bär, y que se publicó el 25 de julio de 2018.

Conversaciones
Pedro Cahn: "El 30% de quienes viven con VIH desconocen su situación"

Conversaciones

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2018 27:49


El director científico de la Fundación Huésped, Pedro Cahn, pasó por Conversaciones en LA NACION, donde se refirió a la problemática del VIH en la Argentina. "Hay una posible vacuna preventiva que está en proceso de investigación", dijo en relación al virus. Asimismo, manifestó: "En estos 35 años del virus VIH vivimos el pasaje de una enfermedad mortal a una crónica con la cual se puede convivir" y alegó que el "gran problema de la Argentina" es que el 30% de los pacientes que viven con sida desconocen su situación. Por otra parte, lanzó: "El aborto sigue siendo la principal causa de muerte materna en la Argentina". "Queremos ayudar a tomar una decisión no basada en convicciones religiosas sino en los criterios de salud pública", concluyó. En LA NACION podés ver el [video completo de la entrevista](https://www.lanacion.com.ar/2145077-pedro-cahn-el-problema-de-argentina-es-que-el-30-de-quienes-viven-con-vih-desconocen-su-situacion) que le hizo Nora Bär el 18 de junio de 2018