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Cliff Gray interviews Drew Rouse, a seasoned elk hunter known for his success in the toughest public land units and as the inventor of the Elk Reel elk call. They dive into effective elk calling strategies, navigating high-pressure hunts, and the realities of hunting non-vocal elk in over-the-counter areas. Whether you're a beginner or a seasoned hunter, this episode is packed with actionable tips to help you refine your approach and improve your odds in the field. Visit Drew's Elk Reel website for info on his calls - https://reelgamecalls.com/Drew's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/reelgamecalls[00:00:04] Drew's Story and the Elk Reel Call[00:02:08] Drew's Start in OTC Elk Units[00:13:07] Misconceptions About Elk Calls[00:20:10] The Reality of OTC Units[00:41:39] Stick to One Unit for Success[01:16:10] How Setup Impacts Your Hunt[01:27:53] Shot Placement Matters More Than Your Arrow Setup[01:29:43] Adapting to Changing Tactics---FOLLOW CLIFFYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/CliffGrayInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/Cliffgry/Facebook - https://facebook.com/PursuitWithCliffPursuit With Cliff Podcasthttps://pursuitwithcliff.com/interviews-and-podcasts/Cliff's Hunt Planning and Strategy Membership https://pursuitwithcliff.com/membership/Hunt. Fish. Spear. (Experiences, Courses and Seminars) https://pursuitwithcliff.com/ExperiencesMerchhttps://pursuitwithcliff.com/shop/SUBSCRIBE TO CLIFF'S NEWSLETTER:https://PursuitWithCliff.com/#Newsletter
The nuclear regulator for South Africa, NNR, has announced that one of the plant's two units may continue to operate for an additional 20 years at the Koeberg nuclear power station.Unit 1 of the plant, west of Cape Town was set to have its 40-year operating license expire this month, but state-owned power company Eskom requested a 20-year extension to continue operations in an attempt to alleviate the severe power outages. We are joined by Princess Mthombeni, creator of Africa4Nuclear, to discuss the implications of the regulator's decision for the nation's power system over the next 20 years and how it will move away from a coal-dominated energy mix.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What really separates one receiver to the next one, or from one pre/pro to the next pre/pro? Room correction? Supported audio formats? What does it for you? Also Joe finds a diamond in the ruff of a bookshelf speaker. Post EQ it doesn't look bad at all! Spinorama.org --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dailyhifi/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dailyhifi/support
In a Parsha filled with the details of building a Mishkan why is this called Vayakhel, with a singular term referring to the collective congregation? The Secret to Unity, the Secret to Collective Joy.
Walter Nanni has worked in the real estate industry for over 25 years, and has rightfully earnt himself the title of Sydney's top buyers agent. Starting with his first property at 20 years old, he helped his parents pay a large proportion of their mortgage, and realised this was only the beginning. He bought a real estate business at 22, grew the Harcourts franchise from 5 offices to 40 within a 5 year period, and now has $6.5 million worth of property in his portfolio.Join us on this episode of Property Investory where we delve into Nanni's real estate career and investing journey, starting with his simple strategy that evolved with the help of a friend. He shares how he made a mistake early on despite having bought in the most stunning beachside location, fun facts about building in Bondi and the Eastern suburbs, and why you shouldn't let rising Sydney property prices deter you from reaching for your goals. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Nicht nur in der Bibel ist Josias Burger treffsicher, sondern auch auf dem Fussballfeld. Wöchentlich trifft man ihn als Innenverteidiger auf dem Fussballfeld an. Als Pfarrer sieht er sich dann aber doch eher mehr als Trainer. So nimmt er auch in diesem Podcast die sportliche Herausforderung an, zusammen mit Chris Strauch über eine zufällig aufgeschlagene Bibelstelle zu diskutieren. Dieses Mal geht es darum, sich in den Dienst einer guten Sache zu stellen. Ganz nach dem Motto seines Fussballteams: «Verschiedene Teile, eine Einheit»
Our special guest this week on Empowering Homeschool Conversations was Cheryl Swope, M.Ed., homeschool mom, curriculum creator, author, speaker and consultant. Cheryl shared with us about "Using Good Books to Create All-in-One Holiday Unit Studies".Watch the full broadcast on YouTube at https://youtu.be/qywXtg9fk3kThis episode of Empowering Homeschool Conversations was funded by viewers like you. To learn how you can support the nonprofit work of SPED Homeschool and this broadcast, visit https://spedhomeschool.com/donate/To connect with Cheryl Swope and her resources, use these links:Strengthening Family Bonds w/Bonus Christmas Reading List - published by SPED Homeschool https://spedhomeschool.com/strengthening-family-bonds-bonus-christmas-reading-list/ Simply Classical Read-Aloud Sets for year-round reading: includes arithmetic read-alouds, American history read-alouds, and literature & science read-aloudshttps://www.memoriapress.com/curriculum/simply-classical-read-alouds/ Simply Classical Curriculum for Special Needs -- ages or abilities 2 to 21https://www.memoriapress.com/curriculum/special-needs-about/To find out more about SPED Homeschool, visit our website at https://spedhomeschool.com/ Check out our most recent articles on SPED Homeschool at https://spedhomeschool.com/articles/ #unitstudy #picturebooks #literaturestudy
One Unit 5 teacher who had her resignation rejected says she feels like a hostage now, working for the district.
One Unit 5 teacher who had her resignation rejected says she feels like a hostage now, working for the district.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Casey Glass is a strength and conditioning coach who works with special operators in the United States military including special operators preparing to screen for Tier One units, the most elite military units in the world. We talk about training and stress management techniques from the world of special operations that anyone can use to improve mental and physical performance in work, in life and in sport. Normally I would steer you to a guest's social media or website. While Casey graciously shares her knowledge in this interview, due to the nature of her work, you won't find her on the internet. Casey got her start working in collegiate strength and conditioning for Olympic sports before shifting to work with tactical athletes. This marks the 50th episode of Choose the Hard Way and I want to say thank you to everyone who listens to the show and shares it with their friends. When I started out three years ago, I had no idea there would be such an overwhelming response to the show or that it would get this big. Thanks for listening, thanks for helping Choose the Hard Way grow, and I'm excited to keep growing it with your help. If you enjoy this episode, please give it a five-star rating on Spotify or Apple podcasts, subscribe and forward it to a friend who likes doing hard things. If you want to suggest a guest or be in touch, hit me at choosethehardway@gmail.com or @hardwaypod on Twitter or Instagram. Links mentioned in this conversation:Casey's appearance on the Building the Elite podcast.Pavel Tsatsouline's 2004 essay outlining tactical periodization.
A cereal, oilseed, and even pulse drill, the Ultra SR 60 foot air drill from SeedMaster is an all-in-one complete unit, the company says. It has a 750-bushel capacity and uses the Ultra-Pro II metering system for both fertilizer and seed says Duane Kent, territory manager at SeedMaster. “This is kind of a new concept... Read More
The HOBI Gang is preparing for Thanksgiving by giving thanks for unhealthy breakfast cereals, review Ghostbusters: Afterlife, the love for the Rookie, and the horror of Home Sweet Home Alone. Plus Jason tries to watch Dune, the death of ESPN Classic, X-Men the Animated Series returns, the future of MCU projects, and they list their Top Five Favorite Non-Superhero Characters in the MCU! This episode is sponsored by the Cincinnati Comic Expo.
This episode Murph is joined by Cathay, she is a key contributor of the success of TalkaBrothas Network. She spoke about how you can leverage social media in multiple ways, why it's important to bring resources together and never be afraid to be who you are. Will Murph decide to use TikTok now? Tune In! Follow Cathay: TikTok: @CKeyes2 Follow Murph: Twitter: @ItsDMurph Instagram: @ItsDMurph Follow Flagrant 2: Instagram: @Flagrant2pod_ www.dmurphspeaks.com
Your body can remain alive without consciousness. Homo sapiens are the only species that possess advanced language and abstract thinking. Every other species is hardwired to avoid threats and seek safety and they don't have to think about it. The mind and body are a single unit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Walter Nanni has worked in the real estate industry for over 25 years, and has rightfully earnt himself the title of Sydney's top buyers agent. Starting with his first property at 20 years old, he helped his parents pay a large proportion of their mortgage, and realised this was only the beginning. He bought a real estate business at 22, grew the Harcourts franchise from 5 offices to 40 within a 5 year period, and now has $6.5 million worth of property in his portfolio.Join us on this episode of Property Investory where we delve into Nanni's real estate career and investing journey, starting with his simple strategy that evolved with the help of a friend. He shares how he made a mistake early on despite having bought in the most stunning beachside location, fun facts about building in Bondi and the Eastern suburbs, and why you shouldn't let rising Sydney property prices deter you from reaching for your goals! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Walter Nanni has worked in the real estate industry for over 25 years, and has rightfully earnt himself the title of Sydney's top buyers agent. Starting with his first property at 20 years old, he helped his parents pay a large proportion of their mortgage, and realised this was only the beginning. He bought a real estate business at 22, grew the Harcourts franchise from 5 offices to 40 within a 5 year period, and now has $6.5 million worth of property in his portfolio.Join us on this episode of Property Investory where we delve into Nanni's real estate career and investing journey, starting with his simple strategy that evolved with the help of a friend. He shares how he made a mistake early on despite having bought in the most stunning beachside location, fun facts about building in Bondi and the Eastern suburbs, and why you shouldn't let rising Sydney property prices deter you from reaching for your goals! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
While excellent newsletters on specific themes within public policy already exist, this thought letter is about frameworks, mental models, and key ideas that will hopefully help you think about any public policy problem in imaginative ways.Audio narration by Ad-Auris. India Policy Watch #1: Satyam Eva Jayate? Insights on burning policy issues in India- RSJWe often talk about truth, disinformation and radically networked societies in this newsletter. Our interest in these issues is often on account of news stories around us. But that’s not all. We find there’s a more fundamental shift on the understanding of truth that’s underway in societies around the world. That is what fascinates us about truth. Now, truth or its nature is the basis of all philosophy from the time Socrates started asking questions of fellow Athenians at the public square many centuries ago. Yet we come back to the question of truth and certainty again and again over the course of our history. Not because attaining the truth is an epistemological necessity for our race. That it might be. Instead understanding the nature of truth is important to control it. And those who control the truth control power. Not only for the present but far into the future. So what’s the point of this random discourse on truth at the start? Truth Is The First CasualtyThere were a few news stories over the past couple of weeks that made me wonder about where we are on truth in India today. First, the kerfuffle between Twitter and the Indian government. A lot of commentary on this topic conflate two issues - one, Twitter not complying (yet) to certain parts of the new IT intermediary guidelines and two, Twitter tagging certain tweets by BJP spokespersons on the Congress ‘toolkit’ case as manipulated media. The first point is of limited interest to me. There are new guidelines and they must be followed if you want to be treated as an intermediary in India. Others have complied and Twitter has been lax. The second point is interesting. Twitter claims it has a global policy on tagging certain tweets as manipulated media and that’s what it followed in the Congress ‘toolkit’ case too. This claim has been attacked by many. Some have questioned Twitter’s commitment to free speech and alleged it suppresses right wing handles more than others. I haven’t seen any credible data to support this so I don’t know. But, more importantly, invoking freedom of speech argument here betrays a poor understanding of the concept. Free speech is a right of the citizens that has to be protected from the state which holds a legitimate monopoly on violence (Weber). Suppression of free speech is an issue only when the state is involved. Private entities don’t have that monopoly on violence. If they suppress free speech on their platform, well, there are other platforms. The other attack on Twitter is more credible. Who is Twitter to arbitrate on truth? How does Twitter know what’s the truth? These questions are closely linked to the other news story about a viral video involving an attack on a Muslim man in Ghaziabad. The UP police filed an FIR against Twitter and Mohammed Zubair among others for creating communal divide and intending to disrupt public peace. Zubair is the co-founder of AltNews, a fake news busting media outlet. Zubair and AltNews had done the forensic work debunking the Congress toolkit document on Twitter. It is possible that work could have been the reason for Twitter to have tagged certain tweets as manipulated. Now AltNews was being accused by the state for spreading fake news. Life has came full circle in two weeks for Zubair. Why has the question of truth become so fraught in our lives? Why are we inundated with versions of truth on social media each with its compelling argument and logic? Have we lost objectivity while looking for balance while reporting on truth? These are tough questions. I have no answers. Easy or otherwise. But since we have come so far with piece, like Crime Master Gogo, we need to go back with some takeaways. Truth And TruthfulnessWe live in times where we are suspicious of every claim of truth. We look for who is making the claim, we investigate it, we check on their politics and we debunk the claim if there’s even a whiff of their allegiance to the other side of the political divide from us. This is now the norm.Of course this has always been the case in politics. Political parties are formed on the basis of the belief among the members that theirs is the right path. That the party knows the truth that will lead the society or the nation to the lofty goals set out in the constitution. Politics has always been about '“our truth” versus “their truth”. It is a contestation on versions of truth.This we lived with. But the problem of our times is how deeply politics has pervaded every sphere. There’s not even a sliver of convergence on truths in any subject these days because politics cannot countenance it. No inch can be yielded to “their truth” anywhere. So, the effort on all sides is to bury the others in an avalanche of lies. The more tenuous your truth, the greater the desire to fight with an arsenal of lies. Bernard Williams, the great analytical British philosopher, wrote about this in his last book, Truth and Truthfulness (2002). For Williams, truth is a cultural value to be defended against the onslaught of lies. The accuracy and the sincerity with which we identify and then speak the truth across all social forms is worthy of a good fight. Else, we lose everything. I have excerpted from the first couple of pages of the book below. Williams had presaged the current times of the widespread suspicion of truth even before the advent of social media: “Two currents of ideas are very prominent in modern thought and culture. On the one hand, there is an intense commitment to truthfulness - or, at any rate, a pervasive suspiciousness, a readiness against being fooled, an eagerness to see through appearances to the real structures and motives that lie behind them. Always familiar in politics, it stretches to historical understanding, to the social sciences, and even to interpretations of discoveries and research in the natural sciences.Together with this demand for truthfulness, however, or (to put it less positively) this reflex against deceptiveness, there is an equally pervasive suspicion about truth itself: whether there is such a thing; if there is, whether it can be more than relative or subjective or something of that kind; altogether, whether we should bother about it, in carrying on our activities or in giving an account of them. These two things, the devotion to truthfulness and the suspicion directed to the idea of truth, are connected to one another. The desire for truthfulness drives a process of criticism which weakens the assurance that there is any secure of unqualifiedly stateable truth. Suspicion fastens, for instance, on history. Accounts which have been offered as telling the truth about the past often turn out to be biased, ideological, or self-serving. But attempts to replace these distortions with “the truth” may once more encounter the same kind of objection, and then the question arises, whether any historical account can aim to be, simply true: whether objective truth, or truth at all, can honestly (or, as we naturally put it, truthfully) be regarded as the aim of our inquiries into the past. Similar arguments, if not quite the same, have run their course in other fields. But if truth cannot be the aim of our inquiries, then it must surely be more honest or truthful to stop pretending that it is, and to accept that.We can see how the demand for truthfulness and the rejection of truth can go together. However, this does not mean that they can happily co-exist or that the situation is stable. If you do not really believe in the existence of truth, what is the passion for truthfulness a passion for? Or - as we might also put it - in pursuing truthfulness, what are you supposedly being true to? This is not an abstract difficulty or just a paradox. It has consequences for real politics, and it signals a danger that our intellectual activities, particularly in the humanities may tear themselves to pieces.…. My question is: how can we address this situation? Can the notions of truth and truthfulness be intellectually stabilised, in such a way that what we understand about truth and our chances of arriving at it can be made to fit with our need for truthfulness? I believe this to be a basic problem for present-day philosophy.” Pluralism, Balance And ObjectivityThe other challenge to truth has come from a total lack of understanding of the concept of value pluralism among the media. The construct, popularised by Isaiah Berlin, allows for two or more incommensurable values to be held at the same time by a polity each of which may be true and still be at odds with one another. For Berlin, these differences are unlike a titanic battle between the right and the wrong; instead they are about accepting contradictions and differences in values which then deliver diversity and strength to a society. The media has distorted the notion of pluralism to some kind of an elusive ‘balance’ in its coverage of any issue. Both sides must be represented is a common refrain. The role of the media is to unearth truth through objectivity. Balance doesn’t help in that. That the earth is round is a truth objectively established. Of course, there are ‘flat earthers’ still who think otherwise. The role of media is not to give air time to both in in the interest of pluralism or balance. That’s lazy journalism and an invitation to untruths of every stripe to be concocted to crowd out the truth. This is what has happened. Social media platforms have accentuated this generation of untruths. Over time these turn into ‘versions of truths’ which get quoted by mainstream media aiming for a balance by presenting both sides of the story. It is a systematic perversion of truth. We All Have Our Truths NowThere’s also the failure of liberalism to defend stoutly the core values it stands for in the past decade. It has been attacked from the outside by those with conventional suspicion of the liberals. But liberal ideas have withered under the attack from within from the supporters of relativism, moral scepticism and extreme identity politics. The reverence of relativism among the liberals has meant there’s no objective truth for them anymore. Everything is true in its context. Therefore, everything is false too. This ambiguity has meant everyone can claim their own truth based on some kind of a lived experience. Nothing is sacred in general anymore because everything can be questioned. Simultaneously, everything is sacred in particular because there’s a never ending contest to be purer than the next person. It is difficult to even define a truth in these circumstances. Forget defending it. This absence of a rigid commitment to an ideology by the liberals would lead to moral panic, anarchy and philistinism as Leo Strauss had warned. This is where we seem to have arrived.Lastly, there’s a vast majority who watch this battle of different versions of truth from the sidelines. They think of themselves as the audience. They aren’t. It is they who are being played in the arena. Yet, often, they know the truth and they see through the game. But they remain onlookers, reluctant to take sides and ever willing to be taken in by what’s unfolding in front of them. When truth is no longer valuable, it is they who end up paying the highest price. Like Ramdhari Singh Dinkar wrote:समर शेष है, नहीं पाप का भागी केवल व्याघ्र,जो तटस्थ हैं, समय लिखेगा उनका भी अपराध।Translation: This war over truth is eternal. Your adversary isn’t alone in the wrong. Those on the sidelines, unwilling to take a stand are culpable too. In time, they will face a reckoning. India Policy Watch #2: When Federating Units are ExtinguishableInsights on burning policy issues in India— Pranay KotasthaneMany reports of restoration of J&K’s statehood came out this week. In what appeared to be a step towards restoration, the PM and HM met leaders of significant political parties of the J&K Union Territory. And so it appears that a former state in the Indian Union — reduced to a UT a couple of years ago — might soon become a state again, albeit a truncated one, and on terms different from the ones before August 2019. Any issue involving J&K is a Pandora’s Box. So, for a moment, keep the particularities of J&K aside and consider this question: what does the Indian government’s flip-flop story tell us about the nature of federalism in India? Before answering this question, let’s take a detour to our western neighbour. As in many other areas, it teaches us what not to do. The One Unit ProgrammeThe four provinces of Pakistan as we know today didn’t exist between 14th October 1955 and 1 July 1970. These provinces, along with erstwhile princely states, were merged together into a single unit: the One Unit called West Pakistan. The primary reason was to create parity between the eastern and western wings of the country. East Bengal was renamed East Pakistan and the whole of its western wing became West Pakistan. Provincial governments of Sindh, NWFP, Balochistan, and West Punjab were dismissed and these units were relegated to being merely divisions of the province of West Pakistan.The One Unit of West Pakistan (1955–1970). Source: modified from wikimediaIn 1954, the then Prime Minister of Pakistan, Mohammad Ali Bogra, is believed to have expressed this hope:There will be no Bengalis, no Punjabis, no Sindhis, no Pathans, no Balochis, no Bahawalpuris, no Khairpuris. The disappearance of these groups will strengthen the integrity of Pakistan.We know how that turned out.Now, look at this from a federalism angle. Most federations have a centripetal bias meaning that the union is stronger than the states. But if provincial governments can be dismissed with the ease as it was done in Pakistan, can that system even be called a federal one?Perhaps not. I came across a key differentiation between federalism and decentralisation that sheds some light on this question in A Review of Indian Fiscal Federalism by Dr Govinda Rao:A federal system is the one in which the entire set of powers — legislative, fiscal and regulatory — are divided in the Constitution or conventions between different levels of government. There is a measure of permanency in the assignments and in particular, the powers given to lower level governments cannot be extinguished by higher level governments (Breton, 2000). Thus, checks and balances to safeguard the system is an inherent part of the federal system whereas, decentralisation does not necessarily entail that. In other words, all federal systems are decentralized whereas all decentralized systems are not federal. The Constitution and other institutions set up to ensure checks and balances and safeguard the domains of different levels of government are inherent components of a federal system.Seen from this lens, the Pakistani system was decentralised but not federal.What about the Indian system?Article 3 of the Indian constitution permits the Parliament to, by law:(a) form a new State by separation of territory from any State or by uniting two or more States or parts of States or by uniting any territory to a part of any State;(b) increase the area of any State;(c) diminish the area of any State;(d) alter the boundaries of any State;(e) alter the name of any State;At the same time, the ‘basic structure doctrine’ recognises Federalism as one of the basic and hence unalterable components of the Indian constitution. So, in all likelihood, if the Indian union were to embark on a One-Unit or Four-Units programme of its own, the Supreme Court would come in its way. In other words, the ‘measure of permanency of the Indian federation’ rests on the role of the judiciary.What about the J&K Reorganisation Act?Now, we return to the central question. Does J&K’s conversion into a UT go against the basic structure doctrine? I’m not competent to analyse the legal aspects of this question. As it stands, several cases are pending before the Supreme Court which argue that the act was unconstitutional because it goes against the basic structure doctrine. Even after two years, the Court hasn’t made a decision yet.From a non-legal perspective, it does seem to me that the J&K reorganisation goes against the spirit of federalism. This is perhaps the first time a full-fledged state of the Indian union has been converted into a union territory. This is an important distinction because the powers that J&K enjoyed as a state were in one fell swoop ‘extinguished’ by the Indian government. A notification in Oct 2020 allowing non-residents to own immovable property in the union territory illustrates this point further. This was not allowed under J&K’s pre-independence State Subject Laws. Many border states and regions in India still have such restrictions. Even beyond India, it is not unusual for peripheries of nation-states to be accorded special status, as a quid pro quo for accepting a higher sovereign. The undoing of this arrangement with J&K by a union government rule militates against ‘permanency in assignments of powers’ to lower levels of governments, a key requirement of federal systems.In sum, even if we keep the specifics of J&K aside, India took a step back on the issue of federalism on August 5, 2019. The move towards reversing some of the damage caused is welcome and much-needed. Pakistan should warn us about the costs of sacrificing federalism at the altar of national integration.Other good articles on the One Unit scheme:Formation of One Unit, The NewsFlashback: One Unit: a dark chapter in our history, DawnIndia Policy Watch #3: Phrases that Should Fall into DisuseInsights on burning policy issues in India— Pranay KotasthaneWords have meanings. They indicate the quality of a nation’s policy discourse. With this idea in mind, we are compiling a running list of words and phrases that should disappear from India’s public discourse. Here’s the first instalment.Haves and Have-nots. You would have come across this phrase in many policy discussions. It is easy to present every policy problem as an eternal class struggle between the ‘haves and the have-nots’. And yet, this understanding is misplaced. A speaker at an event I attended a few years ago said that ‘there is no such thing as haves vs have-nots. Instead, there are haves and want-to-haves’. A lightbulb went off in my head.The underlying story behind the haves/have-nots formulation is a zero-sum one. The implicit causality is that the haves have it because the have-nots don’t. The haves are the villains merely because they are successful, rich, or privileged. Structured this way, only one kind of policy recommendation can surface — take things away from the haves and distribute them to the have-nots. The alternate formulation of haves and want-to-haves has a positive sum game at its core. It acknowledges that individuals from both groups are united by the same purpose — to make their lives better off. It doesn’t vilify the haves. The policy recommendations derived from this perspective focus on the ways to increase opportunities for the want-to-haves. A language of confrontation is replaced by a language of competition.Centre/Central GovernmentThe DMK government in Tamil Nadu has raised this issue in recent times. And they are right. ‘Centre’ and ‘Central government’ are terms that are not mentioned even once in the Indian constitution. Not only is it inaccurate to call the union government as the central government, this formulation implicitly assumes that Delhi and the Union government are at the centre while other Indian places and state governments are at the periphery. Given that the Indian constitution explicitly devolves certain powers to states, there is no scope for a government that can claim centrality over the others. This is what well-known constitutional expert Subhash C Kashyap has to say on the matter:“From the point of the usage of the words, 'centre' indicates a point in the middle of a circle, whereas 'Union' is the whole circle. In India, the relationship between the so-called 'Centre' and States, as per the Constitution, is actually a relationship between the whole and its parts. The relation between the whole and its parts is definitely different from the relation between a centre and its periphery”.Population Bomb/Population Explosion.It is a national pastime to blame overpopulation for India’s problems. Maybe, population was a problem in the last decades of the Raj and the early years of the Republic. But those Malthusian concerns have long become irrelevant. India’s total fertility rate has dropped from six in 1950s to near replacement levels of 2.2 in 2020. This decline has happened across religions and regions in India. Note what the Population Foundation of India says:“Religion has little to do with fertility levels. Muslim dominated countries like Indonesia and Bangladesh, have out-performed India in terms of falling birth rates. Even within India, the fertility rates among Muslims in Kerala is lower than the fertility rates among Hindus in Bihar. States like Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Andhra Pradesh have proven that it is not religion that matters. What has made the difference is education, employment opportunities and accessibility of contraceptives. In neighbouring Sri Lanka, fertility rates were stabilised by simply increasing the age at marriage, a move that was made more effective by ensuring girls were educated.”In fact, we might soon have the problem of a falling working-age population. By 2035, the dependency ratio — the proportion of working-age population to non-working age population — is expected to peak. So, we should get rid of Malthusian notions of overpopulation from our public discourse. Blame undergovernance, not overpopulation, as my colleague Nitin Pai says.HomeWorkReading and listening recommendations on public policy matters[Article] “Don't Give Up on Truth” in the Persuasion: Yascha Mounk and Jonathan Rauch discuss the dangers of disinformation, the limits on robust debate, and why truth is fundamental to preserving democracies around the world. [Article] The Population Foundation of India has a note on Lessons for India as China calls off two-child policy. Again, a case of a neighbour helpfully reminding India of the mistakes it should avoid.[Interview] The News Minute speaks to Subhash Kashyap on the differences between ‘centre’ and ‘union’.[Podcast] On Puliyabaazi, Saurabh and Pranay discuss China’s three-child policy, rising petrol prices in India, and implications of the economic and social disparities between India’s southern and northern states. Get on the email list at publicpolicy.substack.com
Biden, Harris & top officials to sell relief law to public; Tonight: Biden’s first primetime address on heels of relief bill victory; Rep. McCarthy: Covid bill isn’t about pandemic, is a “payoff for Pelosi’s political allies”; WH: Stimulus checks will begin hitting bank accounts this weekend; One year ago today: COVID-19 infects Tom Hanks, shuts down NBA, Europe travel, Seattle schools; Fauci admits he would be “shocked” a year ago to learn 530K+ Americans would die from Covid; In new ad, all living former presidents, except Trump, urge Americans to get vaccinates; New guidelines lift restrictions on visits inside nursing homes; Veteran charged in riot received special security clearance for those working close to the president; CNN KFile: Cuomo downplayed and deflected questions about nursing home data last spring; Texas Attorney General files lawsuit against city of Austin and Travis county over mask requirement; Houston Mayor responds to lifted restrictions in Texas; Virginia Capitol police officer dies of Covid-19; Visit teambeans.shop to help fight childhood cancer; To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The PatMan Saturday Cycling Adventures through Oakland and Berkeley continues.... --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/intelligenthumanvoice/message
They should have used comedy in their comedy movie. Joe Rosensteel and Dan Sturm.
They should have used comedy in their comedy movie. Host Joe Rosensteel and Dan Sturm.
Today's question comes from Martin, who wants to know if it is a good move to buy a multi-unit, live in one of the units, and have the rest rent out. Download your FREE copy of The Ultimate Guide to Passive Real Estate Investing. IF YOU LIKE THIS PODCAST we would love it if you would go to iTunes and Subscribe, Rate & Review our podcast. This will greatly help share our podcast with others wanting to learn. Thank you!
Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power
Why Africa Must Unite and Grow as One Unit - Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast Uploads Audiobooks and Lectures By The Best Black Authors In Audio Format To Download. All Authors Wrote Stories From Their REAL Life, Not Fiction. X X X X please support with 2$ or 8$ per month we try to stay alive and pay for the content to remain online
Discover how the country of Denmark handled the COVID19 crisis, how it impacted Ammar's business, and why he recommends being a mentor to young people. Ammar co-founded One Unit and Crew Cut with his brother, and last year founded DenmarkReal. https://crewcut.dk/ This is a 16-minute episode. NOTE: To receive a free copy of the "10 Most Common CEO Blindspots", please visit ceoblindspots.com Birgit Kamps ceoblindspots.com
About VCC San Diego Everything we do is in support of our veterans and their families We Establish Partnerships of Collaboration Connect Veterans to Resources What We Believe: We believe in working together as “One-Unit“; in promoting and supporting all veterans. Our Mission is clear:We empower Individuals who have programs that positively impact the lives of veterans Our Message […]
Planet With The Con Artists: Rolling Review #12 Summer 2018 The intro music is: "One Unit" by Minami The outro music is: "Rainbow Planet" by Mai Fuchigami Soya is the lone survivor of xenocide. He has a maid and a weird cat dude in his house to help him cope. He becomes the villain, then he becomes the good guy, and then love saves the day. Or something. The dragon is fat and ugly, the CG is weird and ugly and nobody should ever allow Japan to read Arthur C. Clarke's Childhood's End again. This show just rips off the names and the concepts and then has a catbot fight a dogbot. No I'm not kidding. Were you hoping all the psychological plot stuff was going to pay off? Yeah...so were we... Want to know what Planet With is really about? Read our Rolling Reviews on Planet With here: https://theconartistsblog.com/rolling-review/ Disclaimer: The Con Artists own nothing but our opinions and this podcast.
Larry Carltonの公演/ご飯炊けてもた/わらじオフ会/徹夜/終日ONE/UNIT/valkneeさんとの密会/スピード感/教養としてのYoutube/ベッカムみたいですね(20181118 2/5)#80e.m4a感想ツイートありがとうございました!valkneeさん達とお会いした話はpodcast番組「ラジオ屋さんごっこ」で詳しく話してもらっていたので、興味ある人は聞いてみてください笑>>https://itunes.apple.com/jp/podcast/%E..
If you and I profess to be Christians, we are the bride of Christ. And Bride means lover, loyalty, commitment, submission, Where He goes we go, where He stays we stay, His passions and our passions are supposed to meld as we are One Unit. We’ve left our parents - the flesh, and our lodgings - in the world but no longer of it - to join our Husband. And James slaps a bunch of so-called Christians who are arguing because we’re so smart, and got it all figured out, and we start idolizing our own so-called wisdom, and in the process demonizing anyone else who disagrees. James grips us by the shirt and convicts us, “Cheaters! Adulteresses! You’ve taken a lover on the side! Don’t you know that friendship with the world is hostility toward God?”
Jeff Bloem is a PhD student in applied economics at the University of Minnesota. He's written several peer-reviewed papers, including a recent one on "measuring hope" in Myanmar and a program evaluation of the material, social, and spiritual impacts of a business skills training program in western Kenya. Jeff is also an active blogger on the topics of international development, economics, policy, and theology. Check out his blog at: www.jeffbloem.wordpress.com and find him on Twitter @jeffbloem. Jeff's book recommendations: Slow Kingdom Coming by Kent Annan. https://www.amazon.com/Slow-Kingdom-Coming-Practices-Justice/dp/0830844554 Experimental Conversations: Perspectives on Randomized Trials in Development Economics by Timothy Ogden. https://www.amazon.com/Experimental-Conversations-Perspectives-Randomized-Development/dp/0262035103/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1532710731&sr=1-1-fkmr0&keywords=timothy+ogden+%28nyu%29%3A+experimental+conversations Cents and Sensibility by Morson & Schapiro. https://www.amazon.com/Cents-Sensibility-Economics-Learn-Humanities/dp/069117668X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1532710769&sr=1-1&keywords=Cents+and+Sensibility
SHOW NOTES Brenan Ghassemieh was introduced to me by a good friend, Dr. Cody Dimak (Session 31), as the perfect guy to speak about training responsibility around injuries. Since we’ve been focusing on hamstring injuries, we kept that as a central focus BUT it’s important to realize the body works as ONE UNIT and we can’t separate regions in training and rehab. You’ll hear this concept of centrality throughout the entire podcast. A few major points/ concepts we come back to are: Hamstring tightness vs the “feeling of tightness” Exercises to train the hamstring that are safe If you’re feeling a hamstring “grab” during exercises then it’s not normal Training of the hamstring centers around posture, compound lifts and eccentrics Hamstring tightness is not always bad Assessment of an individual starts with observation! Videos Correlated: Everything can be found in this single video Assessments movements to watch: SRDL Goblet Squat Lateral Squat Lateral Wedge Warm-ups or Movement Prep: Lateral Band Crab Walks Lateral Squat (just record once) Rotational Squat Side Bridge Pallof Press Anti-Cops Rotational Chops Curtsy Lunges Transverse Lunges If you’re a clinician this is the perfect podcast session to share with that patient who’s been asking questions about what they can/can’t do in the gym with a hamstring strain. If you’re a patient/athlete you need to be examined first and properly diagnosed with the CORRECT condition before you rehab. Movement is everything and often times you need to be cued properly by a professional. Contact Brenan IG: @brenan_ghassemieh Email: brenan.ghassemieh@gmail.com Sebastian’s Youtube Channel for hamstring videos. Attention Docs and Fitness Professionals: Access your client educational products, banners and posters here. You can access the show notes at https://www.p2sportscare.com/71 Dr. Sebastian Gonzales is an expert in trouble shooting sports injuries and overuse conditions. This podcast is intended for sports medicine topics to become easier for patients and athletes to understand. Don’t get confused by what your doctor told you in your appointment. If you like in Orange County CA, book an exam with Dr. Gonzales, your Huntington Beach Chiropractor.
Welcome back to Tuff Love with Rob Kandell. This show is around the concept of fear and scarcity, which follows on from an episode from November last year called ‘One Unit of Fear’. This episode won’t duplicate that too much. We all have fear. We actually swim in an ocean of fear and scarcity. You might not even be aware that we live in a fear-based, scarcity-based society. It’s all we’ve ever known. Society is always saying ‘You’re doing it wrong, you’re not good enough and you’re not good looking.’ It actually takes an incredible amount of energy, courage, motivation and agency to move away from that. Rob is not immune to this, he experiences fear and has barbarians and phantoms in his mind just like everybody else. Even after 18 years of work on himself, the fear is still there, the fear of the flame, the fear of the haters. He still struggles with this every single day. However, it’s easier than it was 18 years ago and he likes himself a lot more, but there’s still a battle against society’s message. Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! Here’s How » Join the Tuff Love Community today: robertkandell.com Tuff Love Facebook Tuff Love Instagram Tuff Love YouTube Tuff Love LinkedIn
Welcome back to Tuff Love with Rob Kandell. This show is around the concept of fear and scarcity, which follows on from an episode from November last year called ‘One Unit of Fear’. This episode won’t duplicate that too much. We all have fear. We actually swim in an ocean of fear and scarcity. You […]
Welcome back to Tuff Love, with your host Rob Kandell. The topic is “One Unit of Fear” and comes from a conversation Rob had with a coaching client who felt overwhelmed by fear. Rob was helping him move through the fear and get back into life, the idea being that you could live ten units of life if you just move through one unit of fear. There is an excessive amount of fear going on in the world today, post US election. All over the world there is a new level of fear. People are talking about leaving the country now that Trump is President. There’s a lot of future planning and thoughts based on fears. Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! Here’s How » Join the Tuff Love Community today: robertkandell.com Tuff Love Facebook Tuff Love Instagram Tuff Love YouTube Tuff Love LinkedIn
Welcome back to Tuff Love, with your host Rob Kandell. The topic is “One Unit of Fear” and comes from a conversation Rob had with a coaching client who felt overwhelmed by fear. Rob was helping him move through the fear and get back into life, the idea being that you could live ten units […]
Bryan Erwin Writer & Producer Bryan Erwin moved from Wisconsin to Los Angeles to be a comedian. Then, he got married, had kids, a vasectomy and is now a PTA President. He still does stand up and is known in a very small industry circle as the guy who runs the most popular filming location in Hollywood, The Herald Examiner Building. Bryan has worked on over 800 productions and is considered to be the most "Unknown Known" person in L.A. On a successful note, Bryan created the critically acclaimed "Sordahon's Journey" campaign for the video game Two Worlds Two and the Youtube sensation Policeman vs Fireman. Firemen really like him. The policemen, not so much. Bryan has co-produced and directed two television pilots with comedian Louie Anderson. Bryan is currently producing on the features "The Untitled Jamal Hill Project" for Queen Latifah's company One Unit and "Frozen Peas", the story of one man's vasectomy, minivan and mid-life crisis.
Bryan Erwin Writer & Producer Bryan Erwin moved from Wisconsin to Los Angeles to be a comedian. Then, he got married, had kids, a vasectomy and is now a PTA President. He still does stand up and is known in a very small industry circle as the guy who runs the most popular filming location in Hollywood, The Herald Examiner Building. Bryan has worked on over 800 productions and is considered to be the most "Unknown Known" person in L.A. On a successful note, Bryan created the critically acclaimed "Sordahon's Journey" campaign for the video game Two Worlds Two and the Youtube sensation Policeman vs Fireman. Firemen really like him. The policemen, not so much. Bryan has co-produced and directed two television pilots with comedian Louie Anderson. Bryan is currently producing on the features "The Untitled Jamal Hill Project" for Queen Latifah's company One Unit and "Frozen Peas", the story of one man's vasectomy, minivan and mid-life crisis.