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Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester
Ep #58: A New Voice at Inside Press: Elise Trainor on Celebrating Community

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2025 26:20


The local magazine industry faces constant pressure to go digital, yet The Inside Press's community publications continue to thrive through authentic storytelling and meaningful local connections. Their success stems from a deep understanding of what makes Northern Westchester's towns unique and vibrant.   Elise Trainor, the new owner and publisher of The Inside Press, brings fresh vision and creative energy to the quarterly magazines serving Armonk, Chappaqua, Briarcliff, and Pleasantville. In this episode, she shares her journey from national advertising producer to local media leader, and how professional reinvention can strengthen community bonds.    Get full show notes, transcript, and more information here: https://harrietlibovhomes.com/58

Keen On Democracy
Episode 2538: Biden, Harris & the Exhausted Democratic Establishment

Keen On Democracy

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2025 38:00


So why did Harris lose in 2024? For one very big reason, according to the progressive essayist Bill Deresiewicz: “because she represented the exhausted Democratic establishment”. This rotting establishment, Deresiewicz believes, is symbolized by both the collective denial of Biden's mental decline and by Harris' pathetically rudderless Presidential campaign. But there's a much more troubling problem with the Democratic party, he argues. It has become “the party of institutionalized liberalism, which is itself exhausted”. So how to reinvent American liberalism in the 2020's? How to make the left once again, in Deresiewicz words, “the locus of openness, playfulness, productive contention, experiment, excess, risk, shock, camp, mirth, mischief, irony and curiosity"? That's the question for all progressives in our MAGA/Woke age. 5 Key Takeaways * Deresiewicz believes the Democratic establishment and aligned media engaged in a "tacit cover-up" of Biden's condition and other major issues like crime, border policies, and pandemic missteps rather than addressing them honestly.* The liberal movement that began in the 1960s has become "exhausted" and the Democratic Party is now an uneasy alliance of establishment elites and working-class voters whose interests don't align well.* Progressive institutions suffer from a repressive intolerance characterized by "an unearned sense of moral superiority" and a fear of vitality that leads to excessive rules, bureaucracy, and speech codes.* While young conservatives are creating new movements with energy and creativity, the progressive establishment stifles innovation by purging anyone who "violates the code" or criticizes their side.* Rebuilding the left requires creating conditions for new ideas by ending censoriousness, embracing true courage that risks something real, and potentially building new institutions rather than trying to reform existing ones. Full Transcript Andrew Keen: Hello, everyone. It's the old question on this show, Keen on America, how to make sense of this bewildering, frustrating, exciting country in the wake, particularly of the last election. A couple of years ago, we had the CNN journalist who I rather like and admire, Jake Tapper, on the show. Arguing in a piece of fiction that he thinks, to make sense of America, we need to return to the 1970s. He had a thriller out a couple of years ago called All the Demons Are Here. But I wonder if Tapper's changed his mind on this. His latest book, which is a sensation, which he co-wrote with Alex Thompson, is Original Sin, President Biden's Decline, its Cover-up and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again. Tapper, I think, tells the truth about Biden, as the New York Times notes. It's a damning portrait of an enfeebled Biden protected by his inner circle. I would extend that, rather than his inner circle protected by an elite, perhaps a coastal elite of Democrats, unable or unwilling to come to terms with the fact that Biden was way, way past his shelf life. My guest today, William Deresiewicz—always get his last name wrong—it must be...William Deresiewicz: No, that was good. You got it.Andrew Keen: Probably because I'm anti-semitic. He has a new piece out called "Post-Election" which addresses much of the rottenness of the American progressive establishment in 2025. Bill, congratulations on the piece.William Deresiewicz: Thank you.Andrew Keen: Have you had a chance to look at this Tapper book or have you read about Original Sin?William Deresiewicz: Yeah, I read that piece. I read the piece that's on the screen and I've heard some people talking about it. And I mean, as you said, it's not just his inner circle. I don't want to blame Tapper. Tapper did the work. But one immediate reaction to the debate debacle was, where have the journalists been? For example, just to unfairly call one person out, but they're just so full of themselves, the New Yorker dripping with self-congratulations, especially in its centennial year, its boundless appetite for self-celebration—to quote something one of my students once said about Yale—they've got a guy named Evan Osnos, who's one of their regulars on their political...Andrew Keen: Yeah, and he's been on the show, Evan, and in fact, I rather like his, I was going to say his husband, his father, Peter Osnos, who's a very heavy-hitting ex-publisher. But anyway, go on. And Evan's quite a nice guy, personally.William Deresiewicz: I'm sure he's a nice guy, but the fact is he's not only a New Yorker journalist, but he wrote a book about Biden, which means that he's presumably theoretically well-sourced within Biden world. He didn't say anything. I mean, did he not know or did he know?Andrew Keen: Yeah, I agree. I mean you just don't want to ask, right? You don't know. But you're a journalist, so you're supposed to know. You're supposed to ask. So I'm sure you're right on Osnos. I mean, he was on the show, but all journalists are progressives, or at least all the journalists at the Times and the New Yorker and the Atlantic. And there seemed to be, as Jake Tapper is suggesting in this new book, and he was part of the cover-up, there seemed to be a cover-up on the part of the entire professional American journalist establishment, high-end establishment, to ignore the fact that the guy running for president or the president himself clearly had no idea of what was going on around him. It's just astonishing, isn't it? I mean, hindsight's always easy, of course, 2020 in retrospect, but it was obvious at the time. I made it clear whenever I spoke about Biden, that here was a guy clearly way out of his depth, that he shouldn't have been president, maybe shouldn't have been president in the first place, but whatever you think about his ideas, he clearly was way beyond his shelf date, a year or two into the presidency.William Deresiewicz: Yeah, but here's the thing, and it's one of the things I say in the post-election piece, but I'm certainly not the only person to say this. There was an at least tacit cover-up of Biden, of his condition, but the whole thing was a cover-up, meaning every major issue that the 2024 election was about—crime, at the border, woke excess, affordability. The whole strategy of not just the Democrats, but this media establishment that's aligned with them is to just pretend that it wasn't happening, to explain it away. And we can also throw in pandemic policy, right? Which people were still thinking about and all the missteps in pandemic policy. The strategy was effectively a cover-up. We're not gonna talk about it, or we're gonna gaslight you, or we're gonna make excuses. So is it a surprise that people don't trust these establishment institutions anymore? I mean, I don't trust them anymore and I want to trust them.Andrew Keen: Were there journalists? I mean, there were a handful of journalists telling the truth about Biden. Progressives, people on the left rather than conservatives.William Deresiewicz: Ezra Klein started to talk about it, I remember that. So yes, there were a handful, but it wasn't enough. And you know, I don't say this to take away from Ezra Klein what I just gave him with my right hand, take away with my left, but he was also the guy, as soon as the Kamala succession was effected, who was talking about how Kamala in recent months has been going from strength to strength and hasn't put a foot wrong and isn't she fantastic. So all credit to him for telling the truth about Biden, but it seems to me that he immediately pivoted to—I mean, I'm sure he thought he was telling the truth about Harris, but I didn't believe that for one second.Andrew Keen: Well, meanwhile, the lies about Harris or the mythology of Harris, the false—I mean, all mythology, I guess, is false—about Harris building again. Headline in Newsweek that Harris would beat Donald Trump if an election was held again. I mean I would probably beat—I would beat Trump if an election was held again, I can't even run for president. So anyone could beat Trump, given the situation. David Plouffe suggested that—I think he's quoted in the Tapper book—that Biden totally fucked us, but it suggests that somehow Harris was a coherent progressive candidate, which she wasn't.William Deresiewicz: She wasn't. First of all, I hadn't seen this poll that she would beat Trump. I mean, it's a meaningless poll, because...Andrew Keen: You could beat him, Bill, and no one can even pronounce your last name.William Deresiewicz: Nobody could say what would actually happen if there were a real election. It's easy enough to have a hypothetical poll. People often look much better in these kinds of hypothetical polls where there's no actual election than they do when it's time for an election. I mean, I think everyone except maybe David Plouffe understands that Harris should never have been a candidate—not just after Biden dropped out way too late, but ever, right? I mean the real problem with Biden running again is that he essentially saddled us with Harris. Instead of having a real primary campaign where we could have at least entertained the possibility of some competent people—you know, there are lots of governors. I mean, I'm a little, and maybe we'll get to this, I'm little skeptical that any normal democratic politician is going to end up looking good. But at least we do have a whole bunch of what seem to be competent governors, people with executive experience. And we never had a chance to entertain any of those people because this democratic establishment just keeps telling us who we're going to vote for. I mean, it's now three elections in a row—they forced Hillary on us, and then Biden. I'm not going to say they forced Biden on us although elements of it did. It probably was a good thing because he won and he may have been the only one who could have won. And then Harris—it's like reductio ad absurdum. These candidates they keep handing us keep getting worse and worse.Andrew Keen: But it's more than being worse. I mean, whatever one can say about Harris, she couldn't explain why she wanted to be president, which seems to me a disqualifier if you're running for president. The point, the broader point, which I think you bring out very well in the piece you write, and you and I are very much on the same page here, so I'm not going to criticize you in your post-election—William Deresiewicz: You can criticize me, Andrew, I love—Andrew Keen: I know I can criticize you, and I will, but not in this particular area—is that these people are the establishment. They're protecting a globalized world, they're the coast. I mean, in some ways, certainly the Bannonite analysis is right, and it's not surprising that they're borrowing from Lenin and the left is borrowing from Edmund Burke.William Deresiewicz: Yeah, I mean I think, and I think this is the real problem. I mean, part of what I say in the piece is that it just seems, maybe this is too organicist, but there just seems to be an exhaustion that the liberal impulse that started, you know, around the time I was born in 1964, and I cite the Dylan movie just because it's a picture of that time where you get a sense of the energy on the left, the dawning of all this exciting—Andrew Keen: You know that movie—and we've done a show on that movie—itself was critical I guess in a way of Dylan for not being political.William Deresiewicz: Well, but even leaving that aside, just the reminder you get of what that time felt like. That seems in the movie relatively accurate, that this new youth culture, the rights revolution, the counterculture, a new kind of impulse of liberalism and progressivism that was very powerful and strong and carried us through the 60s and 70s and then became the establishment and has just become completely exhausted now. So I just feel like it's just gotten to the end of its possibility. Gotten to the end of its life cycle, but also in a less sort of mystical way. And I think this is a structural problem that the Democrats have not been able to address for a long time, and I don't see how they're going to address it. The party is now the party, as you just said, of the establishment, uneasily wedded to a mainly non-white sort of working class, lower class, maybe somewhat middle class. So it's sort of this kind of hybrid beast, the two halves of which don't really fit together. The educated upper middle class, the professional managerial class that you and I are part of, and then sort of the average Black Latino female, white female voter who doesn't share the interests of that class. So what are you gonna do about that? How's that gonna work?Andrew Keen: And the thing that you've always given a lot of thought to, and it certainly comes out in this piece, is the intolerance of the Democratic Party. But it's an intolerance—it's not a sort of, and I don't like this word, it's not the fascist intolerance of the MAGA movement or of Trump. It's a repressive intolerance, it's this idea that we're always right and if you disagree with us, then there must be something wrong with you.William Deresiewicz: Yeah, right. It's this, at this point, completely unearned sense of moral superiority and intellectual superiority, which are not really very clearly distinguished in their mind, I think. And you know, they just reek of it and people hate it and it's understandable that they hate it. I mean, it's Hillary in a word. It's Hillary in a word and again, I'm wary of treading on this kind of ground, but I do think there's an element of—I mean, obviously Trump and his whole camp is very masculinist in a very repulsive way, but there is also a way to be maternalist in a repulsive way. It's this kind of maternal control. I think of it as the sushi mom voice where we're gonna explain to you in a calm way why you should listen to us and why we're going to control every move you make. And it's this fear—I mean what my piece is really about is this sort of quasi-Nietzschean argument for energy and vitality that's lacking on the left. And I think it's lacking because the left fears it. It fears sort of the chaos of the life force. So it just wants to shackle it in all of these rules and bureaucracy and speech codes and consent codes. It just feels lifeless. And I think everybody feels that.Andrew Keen: Yeah, and it's the inability to imagine you can be wrong. It's the moral greediness of some people, at least, who think of themselves on the left. Some people might be listening to this, thinking it's just these two old white guys who think themselves as progressives but are actually really conservative. And all this idea of nature is itself chilling, that it's a kind of anti-feminism.William Deresiewicz: Well, that's b******t. I mean, let me have a chance to respond. I mean I plead guilty to being an old white man—Andrew Keen: I mean you can't argue with that one.William Deresiewicz: I'm not arguing with it. But the whole point rests on this notion of positionality, like I'm an older white man, therefore I think this or I believe that, which I think is b******t to begin with because, you know, down the street there's another older white guy who believes the exact opposite of me, so what's the argument here? But leaving that aside, and whether I am or am not a progressive—okay, my ideal politician is Bernie Sanders, so I'll just leave it at that. The point is, I mean, one point is that feminism hasn't always been like this. Second wave feminism that started in the late sixties, when I was a little kid—there was a censorious aspect to it, but there was also this tremendous vitality. I mean I think of somebody like Andrea Dworkin—this is like, "f**k you" feminism. This is like, "I'm not only not gonna shave my legs, I'm gonna shave my armpits and I don't give a s**t what you think." And then the next generation when I was a young man was the Mary Gates, Camille Paglia, sex-positive power feminism which also had a different kind of vitality. So I don't think feminism has to be the feminism of the women's studies departments and of Hillary Clinton with "you can't say this" and "if you want to have sex with me you have to follow these 10 rules." I don't think anybody likes that.Andrew Keen: The deplorables!William Deresiewicz: Yes, yes, yes. Like I said, I don't just think that the enemies don't like it, and I don't really care what they think. I think the people on our side don't like it. Nobody is having fun on our side. It's boring. No one's having sex from what they tell me. The young—it just feels dead. And I think when there's no vitality, you also have no creative vitality. And I think the intellectual cul-de-sac that the left seems to be stuck in, where there are no new ideas, is related to that.Andrew Keen: Yeah, and I think the more I think about it, I think you're right, it's a generational war. All the action seems to be coming from old people, whether it's the Pelosis and the Bidens, or it's people like Richard Reeves making a fortune off books about worrying about young men or Jonathan Haidt writing about the anxious generation. Where are, to quote David Bowie, the young Americans? Why aren't they—I mean, Bill, you're in a way guilty of this. You made your name with your book, Excellent Sheep about the miseducation...William Deresiewicz: Yeah, so what am I guilty of exactly?Andrew Keen: I'm not saying you're all, but aren't you and Reeves and Haidt, you're all involved in this weird kind of generational war.William Deresiewicz: OK, let's pump the brakes here for a second. Where the young people are—I mean, obviously most people, even young people today, still vote for Democrats. But the young who seem to be exploring new things and having energy and excitement are on the right. And there was a piece—I'm gonna forget the name of the piece and the author—Daniel Oppenheimer had her on the podcast. I think it appeared in The Point. Young woman. Fairly recent college graduate, went to a convention of young republicans, I don't know what they call themselves, and also to democrats or liberals in quick succession and wrote a really good piece about it. I don't think she had ever written anything before or published anything before, but it got a lot of attention because she talked about the youthful vitality at this conservative gathering. And then she goes to the liberals and they're all gray-haired men like us. The one person who had anything interesting to say was Francis Fukuyama, who's in his 80s. She's making the point—this is the point—it's not a generational war, because there are young people on the right side of the spectrum who are doing interesting things. I mean, I don't like what they're doing, because I'm not a rightist, but they're interesting, they're different, they're new, there's excitement there, there's creativity there.Andrew Keen: But could one argue, Bill, that all these labels are meaningless and that whatever they're doing—I'm sure they're having more sex than young progressives, they're having more fun, they're able to make jokes, they are able, for better or worse, to change the system. Does it really matter whether they claim to be MAGA people or leftists? They're the ones who are driving change in the country.William Deresiewicz: Yes, they're the ones who are driving change in the country. The counter-cultural energy that was on the left in the sixties and seventies is now on the right. And it does matter because they are operating in the political sphere, have an effect in the political sphere, and they're unmistakably on the right. I mean, there are all these new weird species on the right—the trads and the neo-pagans and the alt-right and very sort of anti-capitalist conservatives or at least anti-corporate conservatives and all kinds of things that you would never have imagined five years ago. And again, it's not that I like these things. It's that they're new, there's ferment there. So stuff is coming out that is going to drive, is already driving the culture and therefore the politics forward. And as somebody who, yes, is progressive, it is endlessly frustrating to me that we have lost this kind of initiative, momentum, energy, creativity, to what used to be the stodgy old right. Now we're the stodgy old left.Andrew Keen: What do you want to go back to? I mean you brought up Dylan earlier. Do you just want to resurrect...William Deresiewicz: No, I don't.Andrew Keen: You know another one who comes to mind is another sort of bundle of contradictions, Bruce Springsteen. He recently talked about the corrupt, incompetent, and treasonous nature of Trump. I mean Springsteen's a billionaire. He even acknowledged that he mythologized his own working-class status. He's never spent more than an hour in a factory. He's never had a job. So aren't all the pigeons coming back to roost here? The fraud of men like Springsteen are merely being exposed and young people recognize it.William Deresiewicz: Well, I don't know about Springsteen in particular...Andrew Keen: Well, he's a big deal.William Deresiewicz: No, I know he's a big deal, and I love Springsteen. I listened to him on repeat when I was young, and I actually didn't know that he'd never worked in a factory, and I quite frankly don't care because he's an artist, and he made great art out of those experiences, whether they were his or not. But to address the real issue here, he is an old guy. It sounds like he's just—I mean, I'm sure he's sincere about it and I would agree with him about Trump. But to have people like Springsteen or Robert De Niro or George Clooney...Andrew Keen: Here it is.William Deresiewicz: Okay, yes, it's all to the point that these are old guys. So you asked me, do I want to go back? The whole point is I don't want to go back. I want to go forward. I'm not going to be the one to bring us forward because I'm older. And also, I don't think I was ever that kind of creative spirit, but I want to know why there isn't sort of youthful creativity given the fact that most young people do still vote for Democrats, but there's no youthful creativity on the left. Is it just that the—I want to be surprised is the point. I'm not calling for X, Y, or Z. I'm saying astonish me, right? Like Diaghilev said to Cocteau. Astonish me the way you did in the 60s and 70s. Show me something new. And I worry that it simply isn't possible on the left now, precisely because it's so locked down in this kind of establishment, censorious mode that there's no room for a new idea to come from anywhere.Andrew Keen: As it happens, you published this essay in Salmagundi—and that predates, if not even be pre-counterculture. How many years old is it? I think it started in '64. Yeah, so alongside your piece is an interesting piece from Adam Phillips about influence and anxiety. And he quotes Montaigne from "On Experience": "There is always room for a successor, even for ourselves, and a different way to proceed." Is the problem, Bill, that we haven't, we're not willing to leave the stage? I mean, Nancy Pelosi is a good example of this. Biden's a good example. In this Salmagundi piece, there's an essay from Martin Jay, who's 81 years old. I was a grad student in Berkeley in the 80s. Even at that point, he seemed old. Why are these people not able to leave the stage?William Deresiewicz: I am not going to necessarily sign on to that argument, and not just because I'm getting older. Biden...Andrew Keen: How old are you, by the way?William Deresiewicz: I'm 61. So you mentioned Pelosi. I would have been happy for Pelosi to remain in her position for as long as she wanted, because she was effective. It's not about how old you are. Although it can be, obviously as you get older you can become less effective like Joe Biden. I think there's room for the old and the young together if the old are saying valuable things and if the young are saying valuable things. It's not like there's a shortage of young voices on the left now. They're just not interesting voices. I mean, the one that comes immediately to mind that I'm more interested in is Ritchie Torres, who's this congressman who's a genuinely working-class Black congressman from the Bronx, unlike AOC, who grew up the daughter of an architect in Northern Westchester and went to a fancy private university, Boston University. So Ritchie Torres is not a doctrinaire leftist Democrat. And he seems to speak from a real self. Like he isn't just talking about boilerplate. I just feel like there isn't a lot of room for the Ritchie Torres. I think the system that produces democratic candidates militates against people like Ritchie Torres. And that's what I am talking about.Andrew Keen: In the essay, you write about Andy Mills, who was one of the pioneers of the New York Times podcast. He got thrown out of The New York Times for various offenses. It's one of the problems with the left—they've, rather like the Stalinists in the 1930s, purged all the energy out of themselves. Anyone of any originality has been thrown out for one reason or another.William Deresiewicz: Well, because it's always the same reason, because they violate the code. I mean, yes, this is one of the main problems. And to go back to where we started with the journalists, it seems like the rationale for the cover-up, all the cover-ups was, "we can't say anything bad about our side. We can't point out any of the flaws because that's going to help the bad guys." So if anybody breaks ranks, we're going to cancel them. We're going to purge them. I mean, any idiot understands that that's a very short-term strategy. You need the possibility of self-criticism and self-difference. I mean that's the thing—you asked me about old people leaving the stage, but the quotation from Montaigne said, "there's always room for a successor, even ourselves." So this is about the possibility of continuous self-reinvention. Whatever you want to say about Dylan, some people like him, some don't, he's done that. Bowie's done that. This was sort of our idea, like you're constantly reinventing yourself, but this is what we don't have.Andrew Keen: Yeah, actually, I read the quote the wrong way, that we need to reinvent ourselves. Bowie is a very good example if one acknowledges, and Dylan of course, one's own fundamental plasticity. And that's another problem with the progressive movement—they don't think of the human condition as a plastic one.William Deresiewicz: That's interesting. I mean, in one respect, I think they think of it as too plastic, right? This is sort of the blank slate fallacy that we can make—there's no such thing as human nature and we can reshape it as we wish. But at the same time, they've created a situation, and this really is what Excellent Sheep is about, where they're turning out the same human product over and over.Andrew Keen: But in that sense, then, the excellent sheep you write about at Yale, they've all ended up now as neo-liberal, neo-conservative, so they're just rebelling...William Deresiewicz: No, they haven't. No, they are the backbone of this soggy liberal progressive establishment. A lot of them are. I mean, why is, you know, even Wall Street and Silicon Valley sort of by preference liberal? It's because they're full of these kinds of elite college graduates who have been trained to be liberal.Andrew Keen: So what are we to make of the Musk-Thiel, particularly the Musk phenomenon? I mean, certainly Thiel, very much influenced by Rand, who herself, of course, was about as deeply Nietzschean as you can get. Why isn't Thiel and Musk just a model of the virility, the vitality of the early 21st century? You might not like what they say, but they're full of vitality.William Deresiewicz: It's interesting, there's a place in my piece where I say that the liberal can't accept the idea that a bad person can do great things. And one of my examples was Elon Musk. And the other one—Andrew Keen: Zuckerberg.William Deresiewicz: But Musk is not in the piece, because I wrote the piece before the inauguration and they asked me to change it because of what Musk was doing. And even I was beginning to get a little queasy just because the association with Musk is now different. It's now DOGE. But Musk, who I've always hated, I've never liked the guy, even when liberals loved him for making electric cars. He is an example, at least the pre-DOGE Musk, of a horrible human being with incredible vitality who's done great things, whether you like it or not. And I want—I mean, this is the energy that I want to harness for our team.Andrew Keen: I actually mostly agreed with your piece, but I didn't agree with that because I think most progressives believe that actually, the Zuckerbergs and the Musks, by doing, by being so successful, by becoming multi-billionaires, are morally a bit dodgy. I mean, I don't know where you get that.William Deresiewicz: That's exactly the point. But I think what they do is when they don't like somebody, they just negate the idea that they're great. "Well, he's just not really doing anything that great." You disagree.Andrew Keen: So what about ideas, Bill? Where is there room to rebuild the left? I take your points, and I don't think many people would actually disagree with you. Where does the left, if there's such a term anymore, need to go out on a limb, break some eggs, offend some people, but nonetheless rebuild itself? It's not going back to Bernie Sanders and some sort of nostalgic New Deal.William Deresiewicz: No, no, I agree. So this is, this may be unsatisfying, but this is what I'm saying. If there were specific new ideas that I thought the left should embrace, I would have said so. What I'm seeing is the left needs, to begin with, to create the conditions from which new ideas can come. So I mean, we've been talking about a lot of it. The censoriousness needs to go.I would also say—actually, I talk about this also—you know, maybe you would consider yourself part of, I don't know. There's this whole sort of heterodox realm of people who did dare to violate the progressive pieties and say, "maybe the pandemic response isn't going so well; maybe the Black Lives Matter protests did have a lot of violence"—maybe all the things, right? And they were all driven out from 2020 and so forth. A lot of them were people who started on the left and would even still describe themselves as liberal, would never vote for a Republican. So these people are out there. They're just, they don't have a voice within the Democratic camp because the orthodoxy continues to be enforced.So that's what I'm saying. You've got to start with the structural conditions. And one of them may be that we need to get—I don't even know that these institutions can reform themselves, whether it's the Times or the New Yorker or the Ivy League. And it may be that we need to build new institutions, which is also something that's happening. I mean, it's something that's happening in the realm of publishing and journalism on Substack. But again, they're still marginalized because that liberal establishment does not—it's not that old people don't wanna give up power, it's that the established people don't want to give up the power. I mean Harris is, you know, she's like my age. So the establishment as embodied by the Times, the New Yorker, the Ivy League, foundations, the think tanks, the Democratic Party establishment—they don't want to move aside. But it's so obviously clear at this point that they are not the solution. They're not the solutions.Andrew Keen: What about the so-called resistance? I mean, a lot of people were deeply disappointed by the response of law firms, maybe even universities, the democratic party as we noted is pretty much irrelevant. Is it possible for the left to rebuild itself by a kind of self-sacrifice, by lawyers who say "I don't care what you think of me, I'm simply against you" and to work together, or university presidents who will take massive pay cuts and take on MAGA/Trump world?William Deresiewicz: Yeah, I mean, I don't know if this is going to be the solution to the left rebuilding itself, but I think it has to happen, not just because it has to happen for policy reasons, but I mean you need to start by finding your courage again. I'm not going to say your testicles because that's gendered, but you need to start—I mean the law firms, maybe that's a little, people have said, well, it's different because they're in a competitive business with each other, but why did the university—I mean I'm a Columbia alumnus. I could not believe that Columbia immediately caved.It occurs to me as we're talking that these are people, university presidents who have learned cowardice. This is how they got to be where they got and how they keep their jobs. They've learned to yield in the face of the demands of students, the demands of alumni, the demands of donors, maybe the demands of faculty. They don't know how to be courageous anymore. And as much as I have lots of reasons, including personal ones, to hate Harvard University, good for them. Somebody finally stood up, and I was really glad to see that. So yeah, I think this would be one good way to start.Andrew Keen: Courage, in other words, is the beginning.William Deresiewicz: Courage is the beginning.Andrew Keen: But not a courage that takes itself too seriously.William Deresiewicz: I mean, you know, sure. I mean I don't really care how seriously—not the self-referential courage. Real courage, which means you're really risking losing something. That's what it means.Andrew Keen: And how can you and I then manifest this courage?William Deresiewicz: You know, you made me listen to Jocelyn Benson.Andrew Keen: Oh, yeah, I forgot and I actually I have to admit I saw that on the email and then I forgot who Jocelyn Benson is, which is probably reflects the fact that she didn't say very much.William Deresiewicz: For those of you who don't know what we're talking about, she's the Secretary of State of Michigan. She's running for governor.Andrew Keen: Oh yeah, and she was absolutely diabolical. She was on the show, I thought.William Deresiewicz: She wrote a book called Purposeful Warrior, and the whole interview was just this salad of cliches. Purpose, warrior, grit, authenticity. And part of, I mentioned her partly because she talked about courage in a way that was complete nonsense.Andrew Keen: Real courage, yeah, real courage. I remember her now. Yeah, yeah.William Deresiewicz: Yeah, she got made into a martyr because she got threatened after the 2020 election.Andrew Keen: Well, lots to think about, Bill. Very good conversation, as always. I think we need to get rid of old white men like you and I, but what do I know?William Deresiewicz: I mean, I am going to keep a death grip on my position, which is no good whatsoever.Andrew Keen: As I half-joked, Bill, maybe you should have called the piece "Post-Erection." If you can't get an erection, then you certainly shouldn't be in public office. That would have meant that Joe Biden would have had to have retired immediately.William Deresiewicz: I'm looking forward to seeing the test you devise to determine whether people meet your criterion.Andrew Keen: Yeah, maybe it will be a public one. Bread and circuses, bread and elections. We shall see, Bill, I'm not even going to do your last name because I got it right once. I'm never going to say it again. Bill, congratulations on the piece "Post-Election," not "Post-Erection," and we will talk again. This story is going to run and run. We will talk again in the not too distant future. Thank you so much.William Deresiewicz: That's good.Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe

Fourth Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Westchester
One Human Family, a Baha'i Perspective - Susan Cody

Fourth Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 51:22


Susan Cody serves as the Baha'i representative on the Interfaith Council of Yorktown and Somers. She is a founding member of Race Amity of Northern Westchester and Putnam and has served for 30 years on the Friends of the Somers Library Board, Professionally, Susan teaches piano and voice and has been the music director for the NECS Youth Theater since its inception in 2006 as the Children's Theater Company of Peekskill.Susan Cody serves as the Baha'i representative on the Interfaith Council of Yorktown and Somers. She is a founding member of Race Amity of Northern Westchester and Putnam and has served for 30 years on the Friends of the Somers Library Board, Professionally, Susan teaches piano and voice and has been the music director for the NECS Youth Theater since its inception in 2006 as the Children's Theater Company of Peekskill.

The Filmmaker's Life
The Filmmaker's Life with Walter Schlomann - 03/06/2025

The Filmmaker's Life

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 60:45


Our guest this week was documentary filmmaker Walter Schlomann. Walter tackled the topic of teenage suicide in his film "Ezra: May His Memory Be For a Blessing" and his last film "Hidden Court" was a feature length documentary about a group of 11 men from Northern Westchester, NY who, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, found a sense of community and camaraderie by playing 'prohibition basketball' on a hidden outdoor court.Here's a link to the page fo "Ezra: May His Memory Be For a Blessing" https://www.ezrasfilm.com/Here's a link to the film website for "Hidden Court" https://thehiddencourt.comTo obtain the Zoom link for upcoming live interviews, you must register at The Filmmaker's Life webpage at https://www.filmmakersuccess.com/the-filmmakers-life-homeWalter Schlomann is documentary filmmaker and founder of Heritage Media Group, a boutique company that produces video biographies depicting the extraordinary lives of ordinary people. His recent documentaries “Ezra: May His Memory Be For A Blessing” (2021), and “The Hidden Court” (2023) received numerous awards at domestic and international film festivals. Walter has worked in film since the 1980s and filmed around the world, extensively in South America and Australia. Rock stars such as Michael Stipe (R.E.M.), Rob Zombie, and Cyndi Lauper have collaborated with him as an editor on long form projects and music videos. In 2024 Walter published a book about his legacy video work:Transmitting Wisdom: The Art of the Video Biography. https://www.amazon.com/Transmitting-Wisdom-Biography-RECORDING-EXTRAORDINARY-ebook/dp/B0DNY331KL/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3UAJVIAUR1XX6&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.ayZeU2Vo8SvJTHJ1hXd4PQ._bEIpwxC9qmM5yHYjizqjiKz6xHe3RxSmqbtS1D5Wvg&dib_tag=se&keywords=Transmitting+Wisdom%3A+The+Art+of+the+Video+Biography.&qid=1741712363&sprefix=%2Caps%2C268&sr=8-1He is just beginning pre-production on his third feature documentary, a film about the history of the Star of David, from mystical origins through contemporary significance.If you'd like to learn more about the podcast host Joanne Butcher, visit https://www.filmmakersuccess.com/ or if you'd like to talk to Joanne about your filmmaking dreams, schedule a 30 minute Breakthrough Session at https://www.filmmakersuccess.com/book-a-call#filmpodcasts #filminterview #filmproducers #filmbusinesscoach #documentaryfilmmakers #joannefilm

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester
Ep #47: Northern Westchester Real Estate Market: Reflecting on Trends from the First Half of 2024

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 11:02


As we close in on the end of June, it's time to recap and learn what the spring market for Northern Westchester has shown us this year. In this episode, I summarize the findings of the reports and stats provided by Houlihan Lawrence to reflect on the trends from the first half of the year.   Join me this week as I review the markets of Armonk, Chappaqua, Bedford, and Katonah, and the trends that are different in each town in 2024's real estate market. I share data and statistics comparing the 2024 market so far with that of previous years and share what the data has shown us for the first half of 2024 in each of the different communities.    Get full show notes and more information here: https://harrietlibovhomes.com/47

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Psalm 126 (Mark Swanson) "Joy and Longing"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2024 33:53


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Psalm 126 (Mark Swanson) "Joy and Longing"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2024 33:53


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Psalm 126 (Mark Swanson) "Joy and Longing"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2024 33:53


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester
Ep #44: Embracing Community and Coming Home to Chappaqua with Jaime Barr of JABFIT Collective

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 15:33


If there is one thing I love, it's highlighting successful journeys, especially when they are local to Northern Westchester. I recently had the pleasure of getting to know Jaime Barr, a mother of three precious girls who lives and works in Chappaqua. Jaime is the owner of JABFIT Collective, and she joins me this week to share her path to owning this delightful fitness boutique.    Jaime was raised in Chappaqua and eventually returned to the town and opened JABFIT Collective, after spending her post-college years in the city. JABFIT Collective offers fitness classes for parents and kids, a retail boutique, a venue for kids' birthday parties, and a happy place for members of the community to chat, work out, and relax. In this episode, I chat with Jamie about what life is like in Chappaqua, what she loves about living and working there, and what's in store for the future of the JABFIT Collective.    Get full show notes and more information here: https://harrietlibovhomes.com/44

State of the Arts
State of the Arts Episode 160: The Holiday Special; Visual Artist & Events Coordinator Monique Ford

State of the Arts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2023 29:23


State of the Arts Episode 160 now available on Spotify! For the 2023 Holiday Special of State of the Arts, I am overjoyed to introduce a champion of all art forms, Monique Langlais Ford. A visual artist, an arts events coordinator and a performing arts manager. This pillar of the arts community was a teacher before she entered into arts administration and events management. In Katonah, the town where she grew up, she works on the Board of The Katonah Museum Artists Association. As the exhibition chair she helps artists showcase their work and unites artists along with patrons of the arts in the community. This community includes Southern Westchester, Northern Westchester and parts of Connecticut. She is an extraordinary visual artist who focuses on painting, arts curation and arts education. I cannot dream of a better guest for my holiday special! I am greatly honored to have this exceptional leader and role model on my podcast. Thanks to this dynamic creative, this week's episode is my holiday tour de force!

20-Minute Health Talk
What everyone needs to know about obesity

20-Minute Health Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 21:01


There are many misconceptions around weight — starting with the fact that people burn fat differently depending on their size, says Mitchell Roslin, MD, director of bariatric surgery at Lenox Hill and Northern Westchester hospitals. On this episode, he breaks down the factors that contribute to obesity, from genetics and lifestyle to the way our bodies convert food into energy. Obesity itself has an impact on one's ability to lose weight due to something he calls the "metabolic switch." Dr. Roslin explains how weight gain is linked to other illnesses like cancer and when people should consider talking to their doctor about medical weight loss strategies, such as medications and weight loss surgery. Dr. Roslin is a pioneer in the field of bariatric surgery, helping to develop advanced treatments like the single-anastomosis duodenal-switch, also known as SADI. More from the expert Dr. Roslin shares 3 surprising benefits of bariatric surgery. Dr. Roslin talks about his passion for bariatric surgery.    Watch episodes of 20-Minute Health Talk on YouTube.   Northwell Health is New York state's largest healthcare provider, with 23 hospitals, 650 outpatient facilities and nearly 15,000 affiliated physicians. We're here to set the standard of care for our communities—and make the 2 million-plus patients we treat every year not only healthier, but happier.   Visit https://www.northwell.edu/ Subscribe to Northwell Health's YouTube http://bit.ly/2wPz7on and follow us on social media: Facebook – http://www.facebook.com/northwellhealth Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/northwellhealth Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/northwellhealth LinkedIn - http://www.linkedin/northwellhealth

TINW Torah Study
294. The Rape of Dinah - December 10, 2022

TINW Torah Study

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2022 7:12


At Temple Israel of Northern Westchester, we do not insist that the text in the Bible should direct our way of thinking today, or that it is in line with our modern values. We recognize that the text can run from sublime to abhorrent, and it is up to us to determine what, if anything, is meaningful to us today. The text of this podcast is available on our blog.If you like this podcast, you might enjoy the book Biblical Origins: The Political Intent of the Bible's Writers, by renowned Bible scholar Dr. S. David Sperling.

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Retire There with Gil & Gene
E110 Retire in Mohegan Lake, Northern Westchester County, NY

Retire There with Gil & Gene

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2022 37:54


Would you enjoy a small getaway house, near New York City, for under $150,000? Check out some of the former bungalow colonies north of the city. Marcy Kahn, and her wife Diane Churchill, found such a place in the northern Westchester County town of Mohegan Lake, just 50 miles north of their Manhattan residence.  Their community, the Mohegan Woodlands Cooperative, includes a swimming pool, rights to the private lake, tennis courts, and, soon, pickleball courts! Find out more about living in a bungalow colony on episode 110 of Retire There with Gil & Gene.

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 10:1-22 (Dick Wiedenheft) "Not a Free Pass"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2022 27:02


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 10:1-22 (Dick Wiedenheft) "Not a Free Pass"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2022 27:02


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 9:19-27 (Chad Wade) "The Gospel Transforms"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2022 48:35


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 9:19-27 (Chad Wade) "The Gospel Transforms"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2022 48:35


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 9:1-18 (Eli Policarpio) "Shepherding God's Flock"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2022 24:56


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 9:1-18 (Eli Policarpio) "Shepherding God's Flock"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2022 24:56


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 8:1-13 (Dick Wiedenheft) "Knowledge Puffs Up"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2022 27:58


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
1 Corinthians 8:1-13 (Dick Wiedenheft) "Knowledge Puffs Up"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2022 27:58


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
2 Corinthians 12:9 (David Dawson) "Praise the Lord"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2022 14:50


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
2 Corinthians 12:9 (David Dawson) "Praise the Lord"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2022 14:50


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
2 Corinthians 12:9 (David Dawson) "Praise the Lord"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2022 14:50


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Psalm 127:1-2 (Doug Reside) "I Will Give You Rest"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2022 29:01


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Psalm 127:1-2 (Doug Reside) "I Will Give You Rest"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2022 29:01


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Psalm 127:1-2 (Doug Reside) "I Will Give You Rest"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2022 29:01


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester
Ep #14: Luxury Real Estate in Northern Westchester

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 28:17


Hear how the luxury market has changed pre- and post-COVID and how quickly luxury real estate has sold in 2021 in Northern Westchester County. We discuss what has propelled buyers into luxury real estate over the last 18 months and why, as agents, we need to adapt to this new luxury landscape that continues to evolve.   Get full show notes and more information here: https://connectnorthofnyc.com/14

covid-19 luxury real estate northern westchester
The Pursuit of Health Podcast
Ep12 - Pediatric Psychiatry During Covid-19, Dr. Richard Hahn

The Pursuit of Health Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 47:58


On Episode 12 of the Pursuit of Health Podcast, Dr. Fethke invites a local colleague, Dr. Richard Hahn - an experienced Pediatric Psychiatrist - to address a very important and timely issue: the Mental Health of Children during the Covid-19 pandemic.   Dr. Hahn is a graduate of several prestigious institutions, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),  NY Medical College,  Cornell Medical Center, and NY-Presbyterian Hospital. For the past 25 years, he has been a Consulting Psychiatrist for the Hudson Valley NY public schools, NY's Putnam and Northern Westchester counties' BOCES, and the NJ Child Study teams. He has been a mental health Consultant  at Vassar College of NY, served as the Vice President of NY's Chapter of the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry, and continues to serve as an Educational Counselor on behalf of his alma mater, MIT.   Dr. Hahn begins the episode by calling attention to decades old pre-existing legislation that was intended to strengthen and expand mental health services in the U.S., but have yet to meet their full potential because of political and economic conflicts of interest. He expresses his concerns about longstanding deficits in resources available to train and support mental health professionals.  He invites us into the world of School-based Pediatric Psychiatry, stressing the importance of providing care at this local community level for both children and their families. He provides keen insights into the social dynamics of American families' whose members are often spread out across the country with the public education system as the only glue that still holds us all together.  The discussion then turns front and center to the Psychological Impacts of the Covid-19 Pandemic on our Children. He teaches us that “Isolation is as bad an issue as the virus.” He urges families to be conscientious about exposing kids to age-inappropriate stresses while confined at home in tight quarters with their families. He gives us great advice to make engaging our children in direct communication and interactions a priority so that they can feel safe to share their own thoughts and concerns.  With his unique combination of basic science background in Biology and years of experience as a frontline pediatric psychiatrist, he remains convinced that the Covid-19 vaccine is a critical intervention for both the physical and mental health of our children. Only when we all work together to achieve herd immunity can our children get back to school and normal life.  As we finish this poignant episode, Dr. Hahn gives us all hope with a powerfully unique solution to our nation's mental health crisis.  We owe it to our children to heed his advice and keep moving forward.  Next time, on POH  Ep 13, Dr. Fethke is honored to introduce his most influential mentor, Dr. Welton Gersony, to our audience. This world-renowned Pediatric Cardiologist takes us back to the fundamentals of patient care with Words of Wisdom - How to Best Communicate with Patients as a Physician.You can follow Dr. Eric Fethke on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Tik Tok @drfethkemd(This episode will also available in video format on Youtube @drfethkemd).

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester
Ep #12: Emerging From COVID: My Real Estate Predictions for 2021 and Beyond

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2021 27:08


I'm reflecting on the real estate market through the pandemic and sharing my predictions for the real estate market as we emerge from this period. Barry Graziano, Regional Manager at Houlihan Lawrence, and I discuss the changes in buyer demand in Northern Westchester and share our takes on what we believe the market will look like in 2021 and beyond. Get full show notes and more information here: https://connectnorthofnyc.com/12

Hey Boss Lady!
Cynthia Delfino: Your Tribe is Everything

Hey Boss Lady!

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 20:43


Cynthia Delfino's career path has been full of surprises. She's been a lobbyist, a town manager, and is now leading a turnaround at the YMCA, Central and Northern Westchester, outside of New York City, as it adapted its services to the urgent community needs for child care during the pandemic. Through it all, she says a key to her success has been her tribe, her network of women whom she stays connected with daily. Meet Cynthia Delfino, in conversation this week with Hey, Boss Lady Hosts Andrea Goeglein and Kristi Atwater.

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester
Get to Know Northern Westchester County

Your Real Estate Connection in Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2021 1:08


I'm on a mission to help you get to know Northern Westchester, where I live and love – and discover all it has to offer. Join me and my special guests twice a month as we share a wealth of knowledge about the local communities as well as the process of buying and selling homes here in Northern Westchester County. If you're ready to learn more about your future neighborhood and all it has to offer be sure to subscribe to the podcast and tune in for each new episode.

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The Rabbi's Husband
S1E103 - Rabbi Joshua Davidson on Genesis 18 and Genesis 22 – “Abraham: Our Complicated Father”

The Rabbi's Husband

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2020 29:54


Mark is delighted to welcome Rabbi Joshua Davidson to the podcast today. A graduate of Princeton, and, like Mark’s wife, a graduate of Hebrew Union College as well, Rabbi Davidson is currently the Senior Rabbi of Congregation Emanu-El of the City of New York, having previously served as senior rabbi of Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester in Chappaqua, New York. He is involved in numerous social justice issues and organizations, and, in 2009, was honored for his interfaith efforts by the Westchester Jewish Council and the AJC. On today’s episode, Rabbi Davidson has chosen to discuss Genesis 18 and Genesis 22 and the relationship between them. Throughout the episode, the Rabbi offers both his summary of these passages as well as his perspective on their various lessons and interpretations. Touching upon such notions as God’s love of a good argument, what God and Abraham teach each other, and the differences between the public and private aspects of both righteousness and the lives of public figures, he and Mark highlight the dual elements of Abraham’s personality and what we can learn from it. As you listen in, you will quickly discover that the analysis of these two seminal passages of the Torah here today, by these two insightful seekers of biblical truth, truly brings to life ‘both their depth and their relevance to our present struggles, challenges, and opportunities’. Episode Highlights: · Rabbi Davidson’s summary of the passages, how they relate, and their significance for him · God’s love of a good argument · Abraham stepping out of comfort to argue with God · What God and Abraham are teaching each other · Privately righteous and publically righteous people · Public figures and their private lives · Some different interpretations of the Akedah · The multiple potential lessons from it · The dual elements of Abraham’s personality · The lessons that Rabbi Davidson has learned about humankind  Quotes: “Even though Abraham is a junior partner in the project of teaching humanity, Abraham is still a partner.”  “This is the greatest act of hutzpah in human history.” “Of course, there were 10 righteous people.” “The story of Sodom and Gomorrah is our admonishment against this sense that what’s happening within our city, within our country, doesn’t have anything to do with us.” “The difference in his behaviors in the two passages is extraordinary.” “No passage in the Bible’s been studied more than this one…it’s a terrifying passage.” “You’ve got to take care of your own family, too.” “We ground our leadership in our relationships with those closest to us.” “Abraham may, in fact, be testing God.” “I think the writers of the Bible placed it in the Torah as a polemic against child sacrifice.” “The Bible has always been countercultural.” “We project onto God what we believe to be right and what we believe to be wrong.” “There are fundamentalists who use religious tradition to commit heinous crimes.” “The private mess and the public hero, and the complicated father we have.” “Our public figures and our patriarchs – these are not perfect people.” “The Bible was either written by God or an anti-Semite because no people would write their own history this way.” “People will always try to do the right thing.” “They don’t know that they’ve got that strength until they find themselves in that position.”   Genesis 18 - https://www.sefaria.org/Genesis.18.1-33?lang=en&with=all&lang2=en  Genesis 22 - https://www.sefaria.org/Genesis.22.1-24?lang=en&with=all&lang2=en  Links: The Rabbi’s Husband homepage:  http://therabbishusband.com/ Mark’s Twitter:  https://twitter.com/markgerson?lang=en The Rabbi’s Husband Newsletter contact: daniel@therabbishusband.com

What's Pac'n
What's Pac'N - Episode 015 - Lou Cardillo

What's Pac'n

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2020 34:03


Jack sits with Lou Cardillo, head of Keller Williams real estate agency for Northern Westchester, Putnam, and Dutchess. Lou chops it up about life, real estate, and keeping a relentless mentality. Like, Comment and Subscribe For More Exclusive Content from Jack Lemmens on the What's Pac'n Podcast!

A Therapist Takes Her Own Advice
Connecting With Kids Through Creativity with Jessica Irons

A Therapist Takes Her Own Advice

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2020 36:15


In this episode, I speak with Jessica Irons, founder and Artistic Director of Theater O, an independent theater school for kids in Ossining New York. She discusses the struggles of finding her purpose and then serving that purpose during a pandemic. She gives us the perspective of an artist and educator with the daunting task of trying to keep kids connected to their creative spirit while remaining safe. Jessica, an Ossining resident, and sits on the boards of the Ossining Arts Project (The Village Art Committee) and Bethany Arts Community.  She sat on the Board of Ossining MATTERS for 6 years and was president for 2. For 10 years she was the Artistic Director of the award-winning , NYC based Andhow ! Theater Company where she fostered new plays from a seed of an idea through to full productions. She directed Off & Off Off-Broadway at the Flea, The Ohio, HERE Arts Center, 78th Street Theater Lab, The Connelly Theater, Dixon Place, The Blue Heron Arts Center, The Ontological at St. Mark's Church in the Bowery  New Georges and adobe theatre company. She was the Associate Artistic Director of adobe theatre company and the Artistic Associate at Adirondack Theater Festival. As an educator she has directed/taught in Newark NJ, Redhook, Brooklyn, for the 52nd Street Project in Manhattan, Allan Stevenson, Fordham University, the Boys & Girls Club of Northern Westchester and elsewhere throughout the tri-state area. She was the original therapeutic arts director at Children of Promise, NYC in Bedford Stuyvesant, where she developed and implemented therapeutic art & theater curricula for children of incarcerated parents.  Jessica studied theater at Skidmore College (BA) and Creative Arts Therapy at the New School.Thanks so much for joining me today for A Therapist Takes Her Own Advice. If you connected with what you heard here, and you want to work with me, go to my website, rebekahshackney.com and send a message through my contact page. And if you have enjoyed what you've heard here, please subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.To learn more about DBT group therapy with Rebekah Shackney LCSW, go to https://rebekahshackney.com/groups

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Acts 10:28-35 (Dr. B. Salter McNeil) "Journey to Reconciliation"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2020 26:03


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Acts 10:28-35 (Dr. B. Salter McNeil) "Journey to Reconciliation"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2020 26:03


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Acts 10:28-35 (Dr. B. Salter McNeil) "Journey to Reconciliation"

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2020 26:03


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Westchester Talk Radio
Isolation Therapy Episode 33 with Amy Price - Chief Development Officer YWCA

Westchester Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2020 34:43


Host John Marino talks with Christna Altomare, Board of Directors member, YWCA of White Plains & Northern Westchester about the group's recent "In the Virtual Company of Women" event and the many services provided to the Community

Westchester Talk Radio
Isolation Therapy Episode 32 with Christina Altomore of the YWCA

Westchester Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2020 22:55


Host John Marino talks with Christna Altomare, Board of Directors member, YWCA of White Plains & Northern Westchester about the group's recent "In the Virtual Company of Women" event and the many services provided to the Community

Whitlockville: A Katonah, NY Podcast
Dr Pete Richel, Chief of Pediatrics at Northern Westchester Hospital

Whitlockville: A Katonah, NY Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 51:04


Dr Pete Richel, Chief of Pediatrics at Northern Westchester Hospital, joins us to discuss all things Covid-19 and what’s happening here in our area. We also want to give a big shout out to our co-host Craig Johnson as he has successfully come out of the woods after battling the dreaded virus.

Westchester Talk Radio
Northern Westchester Hospital Center First Annual Night Of Comedy, Chappaqua Performing Arts Center, Chappaqua, NY, April 27, 2019

Westchester Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2019 52:14


Seg 1 Whitney Wasserman Seg 2 Scott Horwitz Seg 3 Reka Osborn Seg 4 Doug Krohn Seg 5 Eric Sandhusen Seg 6 Ron Peragallo Seg 7 Vikki Salese Seg 8 Gina O'Connel

College Commons
Rabbi Geoff Mitelman: Truths, Untruths, and the Problem of Perspective

College Commons

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019 18:42


Our brains are not scientists, they’re lawyers. So, how do we view truth and evidence from a scientific perspective? Rabbi Geoffrey A. Mitelman is the Founding Director of Sinai and Synapses, an organization that bridges the scientific and religious worlds, and is being incubated at Clal – The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership. His work has been supported by the John Templeton Foundation, Emanuel J. Friedman Philanthropies, and the Lucius N. Littauer Foundation, and his writings about the intersection of religion and science have been published in the books Seven Days, Many Voices and A Life of Meaning (both published by the CCAR press), as well as on The Huffington Post, Nautilus, Orbiter, Science and Religion Today, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, and My Jewish Learning. He has been an adjunct professor at both the Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion and the Academy for Jewish Religion, and is an internationally sought-out teacher, presenter, and scholar-in-residence. He was ordained by the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, where he received the Cora Kahn Prize from the Cincinnati faculty for the most outstanding sermon delivery and oratory. An alumnus of Princeton University, he received multiple prizes for outstanding scholarship in Biblical and Judaic studies. He was selected to be a member of the first cohort of Clal’s prestigious Rabbis Without Borders fellowship, a national program that seeks to position rabbis as American religious leaders and spiritual innovators who contribute Jewish wisdom to the American spiritual landscape. Additionally, he was chosen to be in the first group of the Balfour Brickner Rabbinic Fellowship, a a joint program with Clal and the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism that aims to integrate Jewish textual tradition with modern social and political issues. He is on the advisory board of several organizations, including the 92nd St. Y’s “7 Days of Genius” Festival, as well as the URJ’s 6-Points Sci-Tech Academy. From 2007 to 2014, he served as Assistant and then Associate Rabbi of Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester, and he appeared on Jeopardy! in March 2016. He lives in Westchester County with his wife Heather Stoltz, a fiber artist, with their daughter and son.

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Work in Two Kingdoms - Greg Jao

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2017 20:16


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Work in Two Kingdoms - Greg Jao

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2017 20:16


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Work in Two Kingdoms - Greg Jao

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2017 20:16


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

The Lubetkin Media Companies
Geoff Mitelman - Sinai and Synapses, Judaism and Science

The Lubetkin Media Companies

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2017 26:04


  In the newest episode of the Jewish Sacred Aging Podcast, Rabbi Address speaks with Rabbi Geoffrey A. Mitelman, the Founding Director of Sinai and Synapses, which "seeks to bridge the religious and scientific worlds, offering people a worldview that is scientifically grounded and spiritually uplifting." About the Guest Rabbi Geoffrey A. Mitelman is the Founding Director of Sinai and Synapses, an organization that bridges the scientific and religious worlds, and is being incubated at Clal – The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership. His work has been supported by the John Templeton Foundation, Emanuel J. Friedman Philanthropies, and the Lucius N. Littauer Foundation, and his writings about the intersection of religion and science have appeared on the homepages of several sites, including The Huffington Post, Nautilus, Science and Religion Today, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, and My Jewish Learning. He has been an adjunct professor at both the Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion and the Academy for Jewish Religion, and is a sought-out teacher, presenter, and scholar-in-residence throughout the country. He was ordained by the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, where he received the Cora Kahn Prize from the Cincinnati faculty for the most outstanding sermon delivery and oratory. An alumnus of Princeton University, he received multiple prizes for outstanding scholarship in Biblical and Judaic studies. He was selected to be a member of the first cohort of Clal's prestigious Rabbis Without Borders fellowship, a national program that seeks to position rabbis as American religious leaders and spiritual innovators who contribute Jewish wisdom to the American spiritual landscape. Additionally, he was chosen to be in the first group of the Balfour Brickner Rabbinic Fellowship, a a joint program with Clal and the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism that aims to integrate Jewish textual tradition with modern social and political issues. He is on the advisory board of several organizations, including the 92nd St. Y's “7 Days of Genius” Festival, as well as the URJ's 6-Points Sci-Tech Academy. For seven years, he served as Assistant and then Associate Rabbi of Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester, and appeared on Jeopardy! in March 2016. He lives in Westchester County with his wife Heather Stoltz, a fiber artist, with their daughter and son.

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Christ in the Passover - Mitch Glaser

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2016 41:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Christ in the Passover - Mitch Glaser

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2016 41:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Christ in the Passover - Mitch Glaser

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2016 41:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Lou Cardillo Home Selling Team Real Estate Podcast
How Can You Get Your Home Sold Quickly and for Top Dollar?

Lou Cardillo Home Selling Team Real Estate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2015


.embed-container { position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.25%; height: 0; overflow: hidden; max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .embed-container iframe, .embed-container object, .embed-container embed { position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; width: 100%; height: 100%; } Buying a home? Click here to perform a full home searchSelling a home? Click here for a FREE Home Price Evaluation Challenge me to sell your home in 60 DAYS OR LESS!Today, I cover what's on everyone's mind: the state of the Northern Westchester and Putnam County market! If you're thinking about selling your home in this market, there are a few things you need to keep in mind.Exposure: You need to get your home in front of as many possible buyers as you can in the shortest amount of time possible. Internet search tools have changed the industry, and as professionals, it's our job to use them to get more people looking at your home. This will help to get you more money in your pocket and in less time.Pricing: Having a home priced right from day one makes a huge difference in getting the home sold! Pricing your home incorrectly will drive away tons and tons of buyers who would otherwise be interested in it.Condition: Make sure the home is deodorized, decluttered, and depersonalized so that buyers are wowed by its appearance. The pictures of your listing make all the difference when so many people go online for the initial viewing. Keeping your home in great condition will make taking great pictures that much easier.These are the three key things to focus on when selling in our current market. If you have questions about selling or need real estate assistance of any kind, give me a call or shoot me a quick email. I would love to hear from you!

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Children of God - Dick Wiedenheft

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2015 29:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Children of God - Dick Wiedenheft

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2015 29:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Children of God - Dick Wiedenheft

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2015 29:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Spiritual Gifts - Dave Anderson

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2015 31:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Spiritual Gifts - Dave Anderson

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2015 31:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Spiritual Gifts - Dave Anderson

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2015 31:44


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Faith of the Centurion - Greg Jao

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2014 60:01


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Faith of the Centurion - Greg Jao

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2014 60:01


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Faith of the Centurion - Greg Jao

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2014 60:01


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Jesus Goes Fishing: Dick Wiedenheft

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2014 29:35


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Jesus Goes Fishing: Dick Wiedenheft

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2014 29:35


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester
Jesus Goes Fishing: Dick Wiedenheft

Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2014 29:35


Inspirational and encouraging messages from Community Bible Church of Northern Westchester, New York. For more information about what kind of church we are, we invite you to visit our web site at www.communitybiblechurch.org