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This week, we're discussing the mysterious disappearance of Dail Dinwiddie, who vanished after a U2 concert in 1992. We'll cover her background, the immediate search efforts, the ongoing investigation, and the emotional toll on her family. Additionally, we'll explore various leads and suspects over the years, including a serial killer, while ultimately highlighting the unresolved nature of the case and the enduring hope of Dail's family for answers. Thank you to this week's sponsors! Give yourself the luxury you deserve with Quince! Go to Quince.com/moms for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. It's time to get your own personal stylist with DailyLook. Head to DailyLook.com to take your style quiz and use code MOM50 for 50% off your first order. Right now, IQBAR is offering our special podcast listeners 20% off all IQBAR products, plus get FREE shipping. Text MOMS to 64000. Message and data rates may apply. See terms for details. Now's your chance to change the way you sleep with Boll & Branch. Get 15% off, plus free shipping on your first set of sheets at Bollandbranch.com/moms. Exclusions apply. See site for details. Shop easy breezy with Thrive Market! Make the switch at Thrivemarket.com/momsadmysteries for 30% off your first order plus a FREE $60 gift! Check-out bonus episodes up on Spotify and Apple podcast now! To advertise on the show, contact sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://www.advertisecast.com/MomsandMysteriesATrueCrimePodcast. Listen and subscribe to Melissa's other podcast, Criminality!! It's the podcast for those who love reality TV, true crime, and want to hear all the juicy stories where the two genres intersect. Subscribe and listen here: www.pod.link/criminality Check-out Moms and Mysteries to find links to our tiktok, youtube, twitter, instagram and more. Sources: “Missing in America…”, Dateline, 4 December 2014 Connor, Eric, “Vanished in Five Points…”, Greenville News, 1 April 2019 Flach, Tim, “25 years later…”, The State, 24 September 2018 Hinshaw, Dawn, “Dinwiddie case…”, 22 November 1992 Parker, Kathleen, “25 years later…”, The Washington Post, 22 September 2017 Parker, Kathleen, “Dail Dinwiddie still…”, The Washington Post, 25 September 2012 Flach, Tim, “You never, ever…”, The State, 22 September 2017 Leblanc, Clif, “Dail Dinwiddie case…”, The State, 25 September 1997 Staff, “Dail Dinwiddie…”, Herald-Journal, 2 October 1992 McConchie, Brian, “Authorities release age…”, WACH Fox 57, 13 August 2012 “Missing Person 30 year…”, Columbia Police Department, 24 September 2022 Hayes, Hallie, “Dail Dinwiddie…”, Carolina News & Reporter, 28 September 2020 Livingston, Mike and Stuart, Bob, “We won't stop until…”, The State, 25 September 2020 “Dail Boxley Dinwiddie”, The Doe Project Gyee, Gregory, “Missing 25 years…”, The Post and Courier, 14 September 2020 Staff, “UPDATE: Family of…”, 12 NBC 26, 12 August 2016 Rivera v. State (2007) Lewis, Kimathi and Burris, Roddie, “Local family says…”, The State, 18 October 2000 N/A, “Officials: man may…”, Associated Press, 29 January 2004 N/A, “Separating fact from rumor”, FITS News, 21 March 2021 “Dail Dinwiddie - 9 of Diamonds, South Carolina”, The Deck Podcast
Xavier guard Roddie Anderson III, who is redshirting this season, sits down with Coach Miller and Adam Baum for his Sean Miller Podcast debut. They discuss why Roddie decided to redshirt after starting two seasons at the Division I level, what he's looking to improve on during his year in practice, and where he likes to eat in Cincinnati. ---------- All platforms: https://linktr.ee/seanmillerpod Follow Sean on X (Twitter): https://twitter.com/CoachMillerXU Follow Paul on X (Twitter): https://twitter.com/PaulFritschner Follow Adam on X (Twitter): https://twitter.com/AdamJBaum The Sean Miller Podcast is brought to you by Deer Park Roofing. Visit their website at: https://www.deerparkroofing.com/
Pippa talks to the delightful Roddie about becoming a dad for the first time and how he navigated supporting his partner, Natalie, through a difficult birth, in Covid conditions. Content Warning: We discuss the fear of cot death quite a lot, as something that played on our minds hugely for the first six months.
Roddie Neeson Funeral Mass 19th March 2024
Concert Week continues with more ticket giveaways, Max Rice - in studio and unplugged, talking about six years with Boise State basketball, processing the final loss, how NIL is changing the sport and what's next with his playing career, former Rice teammate Roddie Anderson III leaving for the transfer portal, NFL Draft - safeties and quarterbacks, Bob on which BSU football players should land on the All-Mountain West preseason team in July, how professional hockey is changing in the WestSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Concert Week continues with more ticket giveaways, Max Rice - in studio and unplugged, talking about six years with Boise State basketball, processing the final loss, how NIL is changing the sport and what's next with his playing career, former Rice teammate Roddie Anderson III leaving for the transfer portal, NFL Draft - safeties and quarterbacks, Bob on which BSU football players should land on the All-Mountain West preseason team in July, how professional hockey is changing in the WestSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Concert Week continues with more ticket giveaways, Max Rice - in studio and unplugged, talking about six years with Boise State basketball, processing the final loss, how NIL is changing the sport and what's next with his playing career, former Rice teammate Roddie Anderson III leaving for the transfer portal, NFL Draft - safeties and quarterbacks, Bob on which BSU football players should land on the All-Mountain West preseason team in July, how professional hockey is changing in the WestSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Felder, Surber and Hartzell welcome Roddy Jones from ESPN/ACCNet to the show and it is a very RadDad episode; including Dadden rankings (a play on Madden rankings if you're dense). They talk moving plants in and out with the wild weather in the south, hocking loogies and as always your voicemails. The highlight is probably Roddie talking about skill development in youth sports, not winning and also not pressuring kids or trying to live through them. Rate. Review. Subscribe. #LETSGROWSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Katie and Kristi update many of the cases they are following. Daybell, Doerman, Majorjon Kaylor, Tiger King, Delphi, Shawn Combs, Sherri Papini, Ammon Bundy, Murdaugh/Becky Hill, Greg McMichael, Travis McMichael, and William "Roddie" Bryan, Kouri Richins, and Carlee Russell.
Live from X-Golf Boise, we continue our postseason debate and conversation on the end of Boise State basketball - offseason priorities from B.J. (Bronco Nation News Report) and top/most important radio calls of the season from Bob (Bronco Focus), what is Roddie Anderson III's future (and his offseason priorities) as the Broncos' point guard, our top NCAA storylines and headlines (MW and Pac-12), what's one golf course you really want to playSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Live from X-Golf Boise, we continue our postseason debate and conversation on the end of Boise State basketball - offseason priorities from B.J. (Bronco Nation News Report) and top/most important radio calls of the season from Bob (Bronco Focus), what is Roddie Anderson III's future (and his offseason priorities) as the Broncos' point guard, our top NCAA storylines and headlines (MW and Pac-12), what's one golf course you really want to playSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Live from X-Golf Boise, we continue our postseason debate and conversation on the end of Boise State basketball - offseason priorities from B.J. (Bronco Nation News Report) and top/most important radio calls of the season from Bob (Bronco Focus), what is Roddie Anderson III's future (and his offseason priorities) as the Broncos' point guard, our top NCAA storylines and headlines (MW and Pac-12), what's one golf course you really want to playSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Boise State basketball has historic opportunity with NCAA game against Colorado - we open the show with a scouting report on the Buffs, Bob sits down with 'very important player' Roddie Anderson III in Bronco Focus, what's our gut feeling on all six Mountain West games, national handicapper Lee Sterling on which teams to bet on early - and which ones end up in the Final Four, former BSU wide receiver Cedrick Wilson Jr. joins IST to talk about his new NFL chapter with the SaintsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Boise State basketball has historic opportunity with NCAA game against Colorado - we open the show with a scouting report on the Buffs, Bob sits down with 'very important player' Roddie Anderson III in Bronco Focus, what's our gut feeling on all six Mountain West games, national handicapper Lee Sterling on which teams to bet on early - and which ones end up in the Final Four, former BSU wide receiver Cedrick Wilson Jr. joins IST to talk about his new NFL chapter with the SaintsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Boise State basketball has historic opportunity with NCAA game against Colorado - we open the show with a scouting report on the Buffs, Bob sits down with 'very important player' Roddie Anderson III in Bronco Focus, what's our gut feeling on all six Mountain West games, national handicapper Lee Sterling on which teams to bet on early - and which ones end up in the Final Four, former BSU wide receiver Cedrick Wilson Jr. joins IST to talk about his new NFL chapter with the SaintsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
BRONCO FOCUS EVERY MONDAY-FRIDAY AT 3:45 P.M.: Bob Behler, the voice of Boise State athletics, shares his interview with sophomore guard Roddie Anderson III. Behler said he's the most important player on the Broncos' roster - going into Wednesday's NCAA game against Colorado.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
BRONCO FOCUS EVERY MONDAY-FRIDAY AT 3:45 P.M.: Bob Behler, the voice of Boise State athletics, shares his interview with sophomore guard Roddie Anderson III. Behler said he's the most important player on the Broncos' roster - going into Wednesday's NCAA game against Colorado.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
BRONCO FOCUS EVERY MONDAY-FRIDAY AT 3:45 P.M.: Bob Behler, the voice of Boise State athletics, shares his interview with sophomore guard Roddie Anderson III. Behler said he's the most important player on the Broncos' roster - going into Wednesday's NCAA game against Colorado.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
B.J. Rains is LIVE in Colorado Springs with the Boise State men's basketball team ahead of Tuesday's road game at Air Force. Point guard Roddie Anderson and assistant coach Tim Duryea join the show on a Blue and Orange Store Monday edition of Bronco Nation News LIVE.
Disclaimer: The views, information, or opinions expressed on this program are solely the views of the individuals involved and by no means represent absolute facts. Opinions expressed by the host and guests can change at any time, and do not represent views of past, present, or future employers. Buy here: https://subscription.packtpub.com/book/security/9781801076715 Amazon Link: https://packt.link/megan Youtube VOD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1_jQa9OQ2w Show Topic Summary: Megan Roddie is currently working as a Senior Security Engineer at IBM. Along with her work at IBM, she works with the SANS Institute as a co-author of FOR509, presents regularly at security conferences, and serves as CFO of Mental Health Hackers. Megan has two Master's degrees, one in Digital Forensics and the other in Information Security Engineering, along with many industry certifications in a wide range of specialties. When Megan is not fighting cybercrime, she is an active competitor in Muay Thai/Kickboxing. She is a co-author of “Practical Threat Detection Engineering” from Packt publishing, on sale now in print and e-book. Buy here: https://subscription.packtpub.com/book/security/9781801076715 https://packt.link/megan ← Amazon redirect link that publisher uses if you want something easier on the notes Questions and topics: Of the 3 models, which do you find you use more and why? (PoP, ATT&CK, kill chain) What kind of orgs have ‘detection engineering' teams? What roles are involved here, and can other teams (like IR) be involved or share a reverse role there? Lab setup requires an agent… any agent for ingestion or something specific? How does Fleet or data ingestion work for Iot/Embedded device testing? Anything you suggest? How important is it to normalize your log output for ingestion? (app, web, server all tell the story) Additional information / pertinent LInks (Would you like to know more?): Unified Kill Chain: https://www.unifiedkillchain.com/ ATT&CK: https://attack.mitre.org/ D3FEND matrix BrakeSec show from 2021: https://brakeingsecurity.com/2021-023-d3fend-framework-dll-injection-types-more-solarwinds-infections Pyramid of Pain: https://detect-respond.blogspot.com/2013/03/the-pyramid-of-pain.html https://www.securitymagazine.com/articles/98486-435-million-the-average-cost-of-a-data-breach https://medium.com/@gary.j.katz (per Megan, ‘it's basically Chapter 11 of the book') Show points of Contact: Amanda Berlin: @infosystir @hackershealth Brian Boettcher: @boettcherpwned Bryan Brake: @bryanbrake on Mastodon.social, Twitter, bluesky Brakesec Website: https://www.brakeingsecurity.com Twitter: @brakesec Youtube channel: https://youtube.com/c/BDSPodcast Twitch Channel: https://twitch.tv/brakesec
Boise State basketball star Tyson Degenhart is joined by teammate Roddie Anderson III, a transfer from UC San Diego, on episode 4 of the Tyson Degenhart Show.
Ransomware continues to pose a serious threat to organizations, and the threat is only growing as ransomware attacks increase in sophistication and number. This episode of Wait Just an Infosec is hosted by ransomware subject-matter expert Ryan Chapman, who invites on cloud DFIR SME Megan Roddie for a lively discussion aimed at helping arm our community with actionable tactics to combat ransomware attacks in cloud environments.From the June 20th episode of Wait Just An InfosecWait Just an Infosec is produced by the SANS Institute. You can watch the full, weekly Wait Just an Infosec live stream on the SANS Institute YouTube, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook channels on Tuesdays at 10:00am ET (2:00pm UTC). Feature segments from each episode are published in a podcast format on Wednesdays at noon eastern. If you enjoy the Wait Just an Infosec live, weekly show covering the latest cybersecurity trends and news and featuring world-renowned information security experts, be sure and become a member of our community. When you join the SANS Community, you will have access to cutting edge cyber security news, training, and free tools you can't find anywhere else. Learn more about Wait Just an Infosec at sans.org/wjai and become a member of our community at sans.org/join. Connect with SANS on social media and watch the weekly live show: YouTube | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter
Cuáles son los riesgos de la inteligencia artificial¿Cómo desarrollar tu potencial? El potencial es la capacidad que tiene una persona para lograr sus objetivos. Sin embargo, muchas veces esta persona no desarrolla su potencial por las barreras que se presentan en su camino, como la falta de confianza, la falta de motivación o la falta de habilidades. El coach Roddie Nelson nos cuenta como superarlas. ¿Cómo desarrollar tu potencial? Un coach, nuestro invitado te ayudaráUn coach es un profesional que se dedica a guiar y acompañar a una persona en su proceso de desarrollo personal y profesional, a través de técnicas y herramientas que le permiten identificar y superar las barreras. Estas son algunas de las formas en que un coach puede ayudarte a desarrollar tu potencial.Identificación de tus fortalezas y debilidades: Un coach puede ayudarte a identificarlas a través de diferentes técnicas, como evaluaciones de personalidad, entrevistas, observación, entre otras. Conociendo tus fortalezas y debilidades, podrás trabajar en ellas para mejorar tus habilidades y alcanzar tus objetivos.Establecimiento de metas claras y alcanzables. Un coach te ayudará a definir objetivos realistas, medibles pero también inspiradores. Te guiará en el proceso de planificación para alcanzarlos. De esta manera, podrás enfocar tus esfuerzos en las áreas que realmente importan y avanzar hacia tus metas de manera más efectiva.Desarrollo de habilidades y competencias. Un coach puede ayudarte a identificarlas para alcanzar tus metas, y te guiará en el proceso de desarrollo de las mismas. De esta manera, podrás ser más efectivo en tu trabajo o en cualquier otra área de tu vida.Mejora de la confianza y autoestima. Si no crees en ti mismo y en tus habilidades, será difícil que alcances tus metas. Un coach puede ayudarte a mejorar tu confianza y autoestima, a través de diferentes recursos, como la visualización, la afirmación y el refuerzo positivo. Así, podrás creer en ti mismo y en tus habilidades, y tener más éxito en lo que hagas.Sobre nuestro invitado Roddie NelsonEn este episodio Roddie Nelson responde a la pregunta: ¿Cómo desarrollar tu potencial? Roddie es un reconocido experto en el mundo del desarrollo personal y liderazgo. Su objetivo es que las personas alcancen el éxito con un sentido de plenitud personal. Por su deseo de trabajar con líderes, emprendedores y soñadores, Roddie fundó su empresa Nelson Coaching para facilitar la necesidad.is an expert in the world of personal development and leadership. Success with fulfilment is the goal. With a desire to work with leaders, entrepreneurs, and dreamers, Roddie started Nelson Coaching to facilitate the need to develop and deploy a new generation of influencers.Cómo Desarrollar Tu Potencial, Roddie Nelson, Coach, podcast, Podcast Corporativo, Comunicación Organizacional, Recursos Humanos, Desarrollo Profesional, Desarrollo Personal, Comunicación Efectiva, Santiago Ríos, Mil Palabras
On this Episode 337 of Health Solutions, Shawn & Janet Needham, R. Ph. discuss Roddie Markel's book "She's a Boss". They talk about Roddie's life changes, her coaching business and future plans. EP 337: Discussing Roddie Markel's Book with Shawn & Janet Needham R. Ph. Episode Resources Facebook ~ https://www.facebook.com/groups/118248720115643 Instagram ~ https://www.instagram.com/roddie_plante/ ~ *** Ben Shapiro & Dave Ramsey Fans. Learn how to be in the driver's seat for your healthcare choices {not the system or doctors!}
What if there was a hero in your own family, and you didn't even know it? What if that hero was your own father? This is what happened to Chris Edmonds, who discovered the incredible bravery and sacrifice of his late father, Master Sgt. Roddie Edmonds, an American soldier, born and raised in Knoxville, who put his own life on the line to stand up to the Nazis and save hundreds of his Jewish compatriots during the darkest moments of World War II. This is the story of a father and a son, and of a true American hero.
We sit down with Chef and Founder of Edible Beats, Justin Cucci, to chat about his lifelong love of restaurants and being born into the industry. He shares stories of growing up in the Waverly Inn, making his way to Denver and looking out for the future of his employees by making them owners. Then we are treated to the old soul, three-time Grammy nominee Roddie Romero. Showcasing the modern day Louisiana Sound, Roddie's been performing Cajun and Creole music live since he was in middle school, and has led the band the Hub City All Stars for nearly 30 years.Snacky Tunes: Music is the Main Ingredient, Chefs and Their Music (Phaidon), is now on shelves at bookstores around the world. It features 77 of the world's top chefs who share personal stories of how music has been an important, integral force in their lives. The chefs also give personal recipes and curated playlists too. It's an anthology of memories, meals and mixtapes. Pick up your copy by ordering directly from Phaidon, or by visiting your local independent bookstore. Visit our site, www.snackytunes.com for more info.Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Snacky Tunes by becoming a member!Snacky Tunes is Powered by Simplecast.
Dr. Fix Me meets Roddie Redringer who not only seeks fame, but also wants to defame someone else. Onlyfans.com star Scott Says joins the show to explain his relationship with Roddie. Today's episode is sponsored by Klein from the Law Offices of Davis, Davis, & Klein. Finally, “Simon” gets to the root of Scott's insecurities and suggests a miraculous way to boost Roddie's fame. Cast: Joshua Zuar, Byron Dow, Lauren Levine, Toby Gastler, and Michael Kim Lewis as Dr. Fix Me Get Tickets to Dr. Fix Me Live! at The Lincoln Lodge in Chicago, IL Watch episodes of Dr. Fix Me on YouTube TikTok @DrFixMe Instagram @DrFixMe Facebook @DrFixMeShow Enjoy the show? Let us know! drfixmeshow@gmail.com
As I was perusing the internet today and doing my daily reading, I found a very confusing headline on Yahoo News.The headline read, “Earth's temperature to dip but still sizzle in 2017.” I read it over and over again trying to figure out what the hell it meant. Then I decided that yet again this was a headline of newspeak basically pointing out that no matter how cold it is outside the temperatures are hopefully going to climb and sizzle so that the global warming cult can justify their climate apocalypse stories.This headline tells me that it isn't fake news that we should worry about in 2017 but junk news that leads to infobesity, which later creates a problem of disinfobesity, meaning that your intellectual health will be left fattened with lies.Originally Broadcast On 12/23/2016
In this episode of The Gate 15 Interview, Andy Jabbour speaks with Amanda Berlin and Megan Roddie, cybersecurity leaders & mental health hackers, and they've got their hands in a lot more too! Amanda is the Lead Incident Detection Engineer at Blumira and has worked in I.T. for almost her entire adult life. Before working at Blumira, Amanda's responsibilities have included infrastructure security, network hardware and software repair, email management, network/server troubleshooting and installation, purple teaming with a focus on phishing employees and organizational infrastructure as well as teaching employees about security and preventing exploits. She currently serves as the Chief Executive Officer for Mental Health Hackers and is the co-host of the Brakeing Down Security Podcast (BrakeSec Podcast, @brakesec)! Megan is a Senior Security Engineer at IBM, Co-Author of SANS FOR509 and has worked in cybersecurity since graduating from Sam Houston State University (and while she was still a student!). Previous roles have been with the Texas Department of Public Safety, Recon InfoSec, and with IBM's X-Force. She currently serves as the Chief Financial Officer for Mental Health Hackers. Megan is also a Muay Thai fighter and coach. Follow Mental Health Hackers on Twitter! @HackersHealth Follow Amanda on Twitter at @InfoSystir and on LinkedIn and follow Blumira on Twitter! Follow Megan on Twitter at @megan_roddie and on LinkedIn. In the discussion we address: Amanda & Megan's backgrounds and origin stories Awesome tips for breaking into security! DEFCON and how to score a free breakfast at DEFCON!! Mental Health Hackers The Brakeing Down Security podcast Muay Thai, Musicals, Apples & Bannanas! Fruits, music and so much more! A few references mentioned in or relevant to our discussion include: Mental Health Hackers website Mental Health Hackers on Twitter! @HackersHealth Amanda on Twitter at @InfoSystir and on LinkedIn. Megan on Twitter at @megan_roddie and on LinkedIn. Tom Williams on Twitter: @ginger_hax Amanda's InfoSec Staples tweet - https://twitter.com/infosystir/status/972906318875983873?s=21&t=CCp0CmDgDcZXQVWtnpEXEA Blackhat USA 2022 - https://www.blackhat.com/us-22/defcon.html?_mc=sem_bhus_sem_bhus_x_tspr_Google_defcon30_bhusagcompetitvedefcon30_2022&gclid=Cj0KCQjwn4qWBhCvARIsAFNAMihsrClH8Aygi2UnTsbSus3teDdktlK2NiamBzyAORwM5nHcaE4pynwaArHkEALw_wcB DEFCON 30 - https://defcon.org 10th Annual Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Smackdown. A Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu event for information security professionals hosted by Jeremiah Grossman during Black Hat and Defcon - https://www.eventbrite.com/e/10th-annual-brazilian-jiu-jitsu-smackdown-tickets-348058561527 Amanda's Book! Defensive Security Handbook: Best Practices for Securing Infrastructure (1st Edition) - https://www.amazon.com/Defensive-Security-Handbook-Practices-Infrastructure/dp/1491960388 Megan's SANS Course! FOR509 Course Update - Introducing Google Workspace, the Multi-Cloud Intrusion Challenge - https://www.sans.org/blog/for509-course-update---introducing-google-workspace-the-multi-cloud-intrusion-challenge-and-more/
On this episode of Health Solutions, Shawn and Janet Needham RPh talk with Roddie Markel about the power of healthy eating. Her life-changing story will give you chills! Watch to learn more! 00:00 Shawn & Janet Intro 01:32 Roddie's journey into nutrition 03:36 Nutrition By Design – Roddie's business 07:34 Health coaching vs Nutrition coaching 10:32 Balanced diet and sustainability 15:18 What happens when a client fails the diet? 16:46 Tracking apps: myfitnesspal 18:15 Life-changing client story: Why Roddie Markel does what she does 23:42 Movement is medicine 27:57 Nutrition and inflammation 30:43 Closing comments, Roddie's contact ~ Episode Resources... Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/118248720115643 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/roddie_plante/ ~ *** Ben Shapiro & Dave Ramsey Fans. Learn how to be in the driver's seat for your healthcare choices {not the system or doctors!}
In this episode, Nick and Steven chat with experienced property investor, Bill Roddie. His company, Spectrum Properties has built up a portfolio of over 700 units across central Scotland and they are now active in a number of large scale residential developments.We talk about the following:Starting out in the 1980's buying commercial property in n the east end of Glasgow Lending money in the 80's for his first property purchases Some case studies of residential developments that Bill has undertaken over the yearsHow Bill has a passion for developing old buildings and the challenges involved in thatHow he thinks Build to rent is a growing sector with opportunity with a shift towards young people wanting to rent with shared spaces. What can be done by local government to make the planning process easier for developersHow Bill has built up a successful team and where he sees spectrum properties in the futureCheck out Spectrum Properties website herePROPERTY NETWORKING: Book your ticket for a Scottish Property Podcast networking event near you.Visit scottishpropertypodcast.co.uk for ticket links⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Hope you find it useful and we would appreciate it hugely if you could find time to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. Connect with us on social media: Join the Scottish Property Podcast Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/628274537711227/Steven Clark on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stevenclark84/Nick Ponty on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nick_ponty/ Email us:Steven@steven-clark.comNick@arcproperty.uk
He was a small, but courageous young Christian man from Knoxville, Tennessee. And one decision, during WWII, changed the course of over 200 Jewish lives.
This week's the SOL Podcast welcomes Dr Charles Roddie, Founder & CEO of Summatic.When asked about market and growth opportunities, “[...]Since we had our first large university clients, it is a lot easier to put [...] reliable numbers that investors can look at,” says Dr Roddie.We addressed issues like releasing a product, growth culture, designing a team around company culture, developing technology according to current needs, adjusting to the market, impacts of past experiences whilst becoming an entrepreneur. Listen to our insightful chat with Dr Charles Roddie to broaden your horizons about entrepreneurship through the experiences of another startup.
Episode 97 continues the Battle of the Bulge series of episodes that began with Episode 94: A Battle of the Bulge Primer. Every day beginning Thursday, December 16th, we're releasing a new episode commemorating the 77th anniversary of the Ardennes Counteroffensive. This episode, episode 97, tells the greatest story from that fight. In fact, this may be the most inspirational story in the American World War II experience. This is the true story of Roddie Edmonds, a Christian and an American Soldier who protected American Jews under his care while held captive in a German prison camp after his unit was captured during the early moments of the Battle of the Bulge. This is a story that has inspired millions in Europe, Israel, and the United States. It is a story that earned Roddie many posthumous awards, decorations, and international recognitions, including Righteous Among Nations, a revered titled bestowed by the State of Israel on non-Jews who risked their lives during the Holocaust to save Jews from extermination by the Nazis for altruistic reasons. Roddie's son Chris, who uncovered this story after his father's death, joins host Joe Buccino to describe his father's remarkable example of love and valor. This is a podcast episode every American should hear.
Jury Duty continues its complete coverage of the murder trial of Travis and Greg McMichael and William "Roddie" Bryan. In our last episode we examined Glynn County Investigator Stephen Lowrey's testimony regarding his interview with defendant Willam Roddie Bryan on February 23, 2020, the day Ahmaud Arbery was killed. In The Killing of Ahmaud Arbery: The Second and Third William “Roddie” Bryan Interviews, host Kary Antholis examines the questioning of Georgia Bureau of Investigation Asst. Special Agent In Charge Jason Seacrist. Agent Seacrist conducted two interviews with William Bryan on May 11 and May 13 of 2020, two and a half months after Mr. Arbery's killing. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jury Duty continues its complete coverage of the murder trial of Travis and Greg McMichael and William "Roddie" Bryan. In The Killing of Ahmaud Arbery: The First William “Roddie” Bryan Interview, host Kary Antholis examines the testimony of Glynn County Police Investigator Stephen Lowrey, who led the investigation into the death of Ahmaud Arbery prior to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation taking over the case. Investigator Lowrey's primary area of testimony was his interview with defendant William “Roddie” Bryan, both at the scene of Mr. Arbery's killing and at Glynn County Police Headquarters on February 23, 2020. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
*) US jury finds three white men guilty of murdering Ahmaud Arbery A US jury has found all three white men charged in the death of black man, Ahmaud Arbery, guilty of murder. Travis McMichael, who shot Ahmaud Arbery, his father Gregory, and their neighbour William "Roddie" Bryan now face minimum sentences of life in prison. The convicts had chased Arbery in their pickup trucks and shot him dead in the southern US state of Georgia in February last year. *) Dozens of migrants and refugees loose their lives in English Channel boat disaster British and French officials have traded blame after 27 migrants and refugees died when their dinghy deflated as they made a perilous crossing of the English Channel. Wednesday's accident was the worst disaster on record involving migrants and refugees in the narrow seaway separating the two countries. Human traffickers typically overload the dinghies, leaving them barely afloat and at the mercy of waves as they try to reach British shores. *) UN seeks truce as Ethiopia's Abiy reaches frontline to fight Tigray rebels The United Nations chief has called for an "unconditional and immediate" ceasefire in Ethiopia, where government forces are battling rebels from the northern Tigray region. Antonio Guterres' appeal came after Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed arrived at the frontline where government soldiers are fighting rebels. International alarm has mounted over the escalating year-long conflict in Ethiopia, where Tigrayan rebels are feared to march on the capital Addis Ababa. *) Germany's centre-left-led alliance reach deal on new government A centre-left-led alliance of parties has announced a deal to form Germany's new government. The coalition will replace Angela Merkel's cabinet and put the Social Democrats (SPD) in charge for the first time in 16 years. The alliance concluded a roadmap on Wednesday on plans for Germany's next four years that will install Finance Minister Olaf Scholz as chancellor. And finally… *) World honours Maradona on first death anniversary of 'Golden Kid' The world marks the one-year anniversary of the death of Diego Maradona, regarded by some as the best player of all time. Argentine club matches will mark a minute of silence and players will arrange themselves in a "10" formation on the pitch to honour Maradona's famous jersey number. Two statues are set to be unveiled for the striker in the Italian city of Naples, where he spent part of his career.
45" Catch up with AwakenHub, shout for further applications for the SheGenerates Accelerator Light...Listen to Episode 54.3.00" Diarmaid Mac Colgáin, co-founder Concept Dairy, on his new app, useful for dairy farmers and processors to see, and lock in, the best market prices. The app uses Diarmaid's extensive knowledge as a commodity trader in the UK for many years. Self funded to date, he's keen to talk to 'smart money' (must have serious connections into world dairy and other food commodity markets) but more so, he'd like introductions to processors across Europe and eventually the US. Intriguingly he also says his app can be adapted to trade other farming commodities, so we may see Cavan pig farmers selling pork belly futures, a la Wall St.? Diarmaid also rowed for Ireland, with medals to prove it!Two 'hire in a heartbeat' choices for Diarmaid, McKenzie Scott, philanthropist, ex-hedge fund manager, ex-Jeff Bezos and Bill Winters, a former wunderkind at JP Morgan, the man who matured the derivatives market.Update on Stephen McPeake and Civic Dollars (Episode 45).23.00" Dr. Luke Kelly and Dr. Declan Kelly, of Eolas Medical, a software that "allows hospitals to have a single source of truth for their medical knowledge". The IgniteNI backed company has already raised £2 million, but that won't be the end of it, as they have world ambitions. They're already in 40 hospitals, they're generating revenue, and they want TeamGBS to introduce them to other hospital groups around the world.Their 'hire in a heartbeat'? Bob Brisk, cardiologist plus a PhD in AI - as you do!45.00" Trinity College Dublin has left Dublin 2! They've opened up operations in Wexford, Athlone and Galway...all is explained. Gillian Roddie explains what TCD Tangent is doing and who should pop onto their courses that gives you a TCD parchment on completion, plus the opportunity to throw a mortar board skyward!Courses can be free and you'll have to listen to find out who gets to get on these free, business related, courses. Marie Vahey, an alumna, sings the praises of the courses and explains how Tangent has changed her business fundamentally. Eventually they chose John Rocha and David Attenborough as their hires in a heartbeat... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Como a intrepidez de um americano cristão foi capaz de salvar vidas? Conheça um pouco mais sobre a história de Roddie Edmonds e como ele valorizou o amor de Cristo pela humanidade. Comentário, Antônio Cabrera. Um podcast Instituto Fé e Trabalho / Rádio IPB. Apoio APECOM.
This week we talk to CCIE, Technical Solutions Architect, Cisco Press Author, Pilot, and Blogger – Roddie Hasan. Roddie has over 30 years of experience in networking, and today focuses on Cisco Software-Defined Access, among other technologies. We’ll hear how Roddie got into IT and what ultimately influenced him to choose networking. Roddie also sharesContinue reading "Ep 54 – eiddoR"
Is being in nature the antidote to the negatives of technology use? Or does technology have a place to enhance our experience of nature? In this episode, we welcome Jenny Tough, an endurance athlete and adventurer, and Alex Roddie, nature photographer and explorer. Jenny is currently working on a global challenge to run, solo and unsupported, across a mountain range on every continent. Alex is a long-distance backpacker, mountaineer, and lover of wild places. At work he's a freelance writer, photographer, and the editor of Sidetracked magazine. In this episode we discuss: the place for technology in exploring our relationships with nature and technology how getting outdoors can support creativity More on Alex: Website: www.alexroddie.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/alex_roddie Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alex_roddie/ Sidetracked: https://www.sidetracked.com/ More on Jenny: Website: http://jennytough.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/terms/unblock/?next=/jennytough/ Host and Producer: Georgie Powell Music: Toccare
image credit: CWWally: http://www.threadless.com/@cwwally) “Tech In Religion” is a running series under the Technically Religious umbrella. In these episodes, we look at technology - be it a website, a phone app, or a gadget - that somehow deepens, strengthens, or improves our experience of or connection to our faith (our religious, moral, and/or ethical point of view). This is a tech review lovingly wrapped in a through-line about faith in general and our experience of faith in particular. The goal is to uncover and promote tech you (our audience) might not have heard about; or describe a use for tech you may know, but didn't think of using in connection with your religious experiences. In this episode, Leon Adato is joined by Doug Johnson and Stephen Foskett. Listen or read the transcript below: music (00:01): [Music] Leon Adato (00:32): Welcome to our podcast, where we talk about the interesting, frustrating and inspiring experiences we have as people with strongly held religious views working in corporate IT, we're not here to preach or teach you our religion. We're here to explore ways. We make our career as IT professionals mesh, or at least not conflict with our religious life. This is technically religious Leon Adato (00:53): Here on technically religious. We focus on how we work to make our religious lives compliment, or at least not conflict with our career in tech. But what about the way tech enhances our lives as people with a strong connection to our faith, or lack thereof. In our ongoing series tech in religion, we aim to do just that in each episode, we'll highlight technological innovations that enhance, strengthen, and deepen, our connections to our religious, moral or ethical point of view. I'm Leon Adato and sharing their reason. Thoughtful, humble opinions with me today on the tech that helps our religion, our Doug Johnson, Hey, and also a newcomer to the technically religious, uh, cast is Stephen Foskett great to be here. Great to have you. Okay. So as is our want on technical, what we'll do is we're going to start off with shameless self promotion. Go ahead and tell us, uh, a little bit about yourself, whatever you're working on, that you want to bring to light for the listeners. And of course we want to know your religious point of view. Um, Doug, as the seasoned veteran, that means you're old. Doug Johnson (01:57): All right, here we go. I'm the old guy. Yep. Uh, Doug Johnson, I'm a web. Uh, my day job is I'm a web developer for Southwestern health resources, my side gig, which is going to make me a billion kazillionaire some day, If I live long enough is, uh, I'm the CTO for, uh, an RFID inventory company. So if you are an op, somebody with an optical shop and you really want to do your inventory better, why check out waverfid.net? I can be found on all of the various sundries Facebooks, et cetera, as @Dougjohnson. And I'm an evangelical Christian, but not one of those weird ones. You know, we were allowed to dance, but not in the, uh, not, not in the aisles. Leon Adato (02:40): There we go. Okay. I didn't realize there was a delineation between aisle dancing, Doug Johnson (02:43): I should show you Leon Adato (02:45): Aisle dancing, Evangelical Christians and not, Doug Johnson (02:48): I'll tell you that aisle dancing white evangelical Christians have got better music than a lot of the rest of us, but, but yeah, the, yeah, it's. Leon Adato (02:56): Ok, all right. Doug Johnson (02:57): I'll show someday when we have nothing better to do, I'll show you, there's some great video out there. Leon Adato (03:01): We should record that. That'll be educational for everyone or entertaining. We'll see. All right, Steven, uh, please help bring this a little bit of maturity and, uh, and seriousness to this. Stephen Foskett (03:13): Well, I'm glad that you, uh, brought me in to bring you both down to, down to earth as it were. So, yeah, so I'm Steven. Uh, I, uh, my day job is running gestalt IT and tech field day. Um, maybe you didn't know this, but I am also a writer in the wristwatch community, um, and quite active in the world of collectors there. And, um, I do a podcast on artificial intelligence as well called utilizing AI. Um, as far as religion goes, I was raised as a liberal Christian in the Episcopalians in Connecticut. And, um, have since become even more, um, I dunno, loony left by going to the Unitarian Universalists and becoming essentially a humanist. Leon Adato (04:04): Uh, we, we take all kinds here, uh, and it does, it would take all kinds. Doug Johnson (04:09): Just this side of Buddhism is cool stuff. Leon Adato (04:11): It's. Stephen Foskett (04:12): I believe in people. Doug Johnson (04:12): Right. Leon Adato (04:14): That's good. I think be believing in people is not a bad position to take. All right, I will, um, I will close the circle by providing my information, which probably the technical religious folks can repeat on their own, but we'll do it anyway. I am Leon Adato. I am a head geek. Yes, that is actually my job title, and I took it almost sight unseen when they offered it to me at SolarWinds, which is neither solar nor wind. It is a software vendor that makes monitoring solutions. You can find me on the Twitters, and I say it just that way to horrify Keith Townsend's daughter. Every time I say it, you can find me there at @LeonAdato. Uh, I also am known to pontificate on things, both technical and religious on my website, which is adatosystems.com. And I identify as an Orthodox Jew and occasionally my rabbi will admit to knowing me. So there we go. That gives you an idea of what, Doug Johnson (05:05): So you're like a liberal Orthodox, Leon Adato (05:09): Yes, okay. Orthodox in terms of Judaism, not in terms of perhaps political or even, uh, you know, personal restraint, concept. Stephen Foskett (05:21): Hush up there you Non dancing evangelic. Leon Adato (05:23): Oh you want to see non dancing. You should come to my side, then it's, you know, then you can't leave no mixed dancing, like, forget about it. It's the whole thing. All right. So tech in religion, which is what this series is called focuses on, uh, finding technology that helps deepen strengthen, or, uh, clarify our connection to our religious point of view or religious experience. So, um, Doug, I'm going to pick on you first. Do you have some technology that really helps you out with your being an evangelical, but not one of those kinds? Doug Johnson (05:57): Yes. Well, I mean, I've got technology that helps me everywhere and it's, it enables, it enables my, uh, religious practice because, um, I am multiple things. Uh, some of them good, but most of them are like, I'm ADD, or I'm now AAD. Right. I was ADHD. And then I was, I thought I was ADD, and then I found out I was ADD HD, and then now it's AED. I'm an adult. I, Leon Adato (06:25): Attention defecate. Doug Johnson (06:25): They, they keep on changing the letters on me. So I am whatever the current one is. All right. But, uh, and I'm also have SAD, which is a seasonal affective disorder, except now it's called depression seasonal type or who cares? I mean, you know, it's just so some, between the months of October and March, my brain stops. Not completely. Um, but it just becomes absolutely worthless. In fact, we have quite an indicator. Um, I was late to this meeting because I forgot. It was on my calendar. It was everywhere. Things were beeping. I'm sure phones were going off. And, you know, I just completely forgot. So everything that I have is basically, uh, designed around to keep my brain on target when I'm doing stuff. Leon Adato (07:12): Okay. Doug Johnson (07:12): So, uh, the first one is Trello. Trello is basically used for managing projects, right? Leon Adato (07:19): I was going to say, when you put it on the list, when we were prepping for this and you put on the list, I'm like Trello, helpful for being an evangelical Christian. These are, I wasn't going to make that connection, but I want to hear this. Doug Johnson (07:30): The question is, so what does your practice involve? I mean, do you do stuff for your church. Or your synagogue or whatever, do you do projects? Do you work with people on things? Leon Adato (07:43): Uh huh. Doug Johnson (07:43): Imagine that you were stuck with me on your committee, and. Leon Adato (07:48): [snorts with laughter] Doug Johnson (07:49): Exactly there you are. Now you understand, keep in mind that people who are, because I've been a Christian for so long. And because I actually do read the Bible and know the stuff that's in there, people always think, gee, this guy's really devout, which I am, but they don't also realize how flaky I am. And so by the time they find out how flaky I am, it's too late. Leon Adato (08:12): Its to late. Doug Johnson (08:12): They've already brought me in. They have me on committees. They have me doing stuff. One church made me a deacon. I mean, come on, think about this. So the reality is I have to go ahead and find ways so that I can get the things done that need to be done. The fact is there's a lot of people in Christianity who are wound just a little bit a little bit tightly. Just a smidge. Leon Adato (08:40): I even, I might have noticed that occasionally, but I wasn't going to attributed to Christianity particularly, but ok. Doug Johnson (08:46): Well I don't know. It's the group that I'm used to working within the, and I will tell you that the ones who actually make it into any kind of leadership position, except for ones who are attributed to be devout, but they don't know in flaky yet, anybody that's actually really, they're pretty tightly wound because they're, you know, in, in Christianity, it's really easy to offend people. And so the people who really make it are really good at not offending people. Now imagine that you go ahead and give Doug something to do, and he totally freaking forgets or the waits till the last minute. And there's like 15 people or, you know, anything at all. So Trello allows me to go ahead and keep track of what it is that I have to get done and what I've promised. And I actually, it's easy enough to use that. I can get other people on the committee, to go ahead and assign me tasks in Trello, and now it's there and I can track it because if they just ask me to do it, I'll agree to it. And if I can write it down right then fine. But the odds are by the time I get to my car, I've already forgotten, Leon Adato (09:47): Right? By the time you turned around and said, hello to the next person, you've forgotten. Doug Johnson (09:50): pretty much. Well, I mean, you know, w when we were all in churches all the time, you know, we were greeting, meeting and greeting each other, and I could have had a great conversation with you. And by the time I've talked to the third person after you it's gone. So that's why that's how Trello helps. I mean, I use it a lot of different places, but it does help me. It keeps me from getting kicked out of the church. So I may get kicked out for another reason, but at least I don't get kicked out off the committee for not doing my work. Leon Adato (10:18): Got it. Okay. What's up next? Doug Johnson (10:21): Um, the next one is not actually an app. It's, uh, it's called the Pomodoro technique. Uh, Pomodoro is Italian for a tomato and some Italian guy, had a timer, a little spinner timer thing that looked like a tomato. Leon Adato (10:40): Aha. Doug Johnson (10:40): And what he did was he came up with this tea, He would spin it to 25 minutes. He would work, heads down for 25 minutes. When the timer went up, he would get up and walk away for 5 minutes and then he'd come back and he'd spin it for 25 minutes and he would heads down and you would do one thing for that 25 minutes. And then you'd get up, uh, another tech in another way, you can do it like 45 and then 15 or 50 minutes and 10, you know, but it's a combination of block of time with a timer and then a break. Um, now again, back to ADD, SAD, all those kinds of wonderful things. Now, the only way I get anything done, the only way I can go ahead and do stuff is to say, ah, for the next 25 minutes, I'm going to read scripture. And I'll sit down and do it. Whereas if I sit down to go and read and I'm like 3 verses, and I go, Oh, that's a good idea. I'm going to go look at this other thing. And I look up something on that and look, and next thing you know, I've read 3 verses it's 3 hours later. Um, and You know, Leon Adato (11:43): You've rea 42 Wikipedia, half of 42 Wikipedia articles, Doug Johnson (11:46): OH exactly, Leon Adato (11:46): you've built three websites partially, Doug Johnson (11:51): Exactly, but I haven't finished, Leon Adato (11:51): And you're holding a chicken in one hand and an Apple in the other. Doug Johnson (11:55): Exactly. But I have not yet finished my scripture reading for the day. So. Leon Adato (12:00): Of course not. Doug Johnson (12:01): The Pomodoro technique is it helps me at work, but it also helps me with my spiritual life, because I can go ahead and say for this next 25 minutes, I'm reading scripture. Or for this next 25 minutes, I'm praying or what, and it's limited, it's time, limited time boxed. When that thing goes off, I can get, stand up and walk away from it and say, that's it. I did it good. It's just like, it's like a spiritual discipline except, you know, not exactly. Leon Adato (12:29): I always wonder I mean especially. Stephen Foskett (12:30): Except its the exact opposite of being disciplined. Doug Johnson (12:32): Exactly. It's spiritual discipline for those of us who have no discipline whatsoever. Leon Adato (12:37): Right. And I just want to imagine God's side of that conversation, right? Like, you know, you're praying for 25 minutes and, you know, the, the, the beginning starts off real slow and real careful. And at the end it's like, and then I went, Oh, I'm done. So wait. and its like. Doug Johnson (12:56): Well, . And again, it depends on how you pray. A lot of my prayer is like a couple of things, and then I just shut up because really. Leon Adato (13:02): Got it. Doug Johnson (13:03): I think, God talks to God talks to me a lot more than I, he knows what's going on with me. And he knows it's really messed up. I mean, that's just the way that's, he knows that. So, uh, so I find it it's a lot, a lot easier for me to just shut up and listen for God. And I always know it's God talking, because he always asks me to do stuff that I would never come up. Leon Adato (13:26): [snorts in laughter] Doug Johnson (13:26): with in a million years on my own. I, once I once wrote a children's Christmas play, that had, 30 kids from the church in it, that I directed, and acted in, because I knew that it would get the parents into church one day in the year that they would never have come in otherwise. Now, you know, that's from God. Cause she, Leon knows I'm not a, I'm not a great fan of kids. Uh, you know, it's just like it, Leon Adato (13:55): You're really a people person and you're not a small people person. Doug Johnson (13:58): No! And they love me for God only knows why, but it just, you know, and so there it is. I'm just, so that was God. Leon Adato (14:07): Got it. Okay. One more. We got one more, you only get three on these shows. Doug Johnson (14:11): Ok. One more, this one, this one's easy and this one's relatively new to me. I came across it. It's called habitbull as habit. The word habit and bull as in a cow except. Leon Adato (14:21): Moo. Doug Johnson (14:21): The male kind. Yes. Moo Stephen Foskett (14:23): I was thinking it was where the nuns put their hats. Doug Johnson (14:25): Um, could be. Leon Adato (14:28): You know, I haven't been on a farm a whole lot, but don't mess with the bull is, Doug Johnson (14:33): There's all kinds of ways we could. Stephen Foskett (14:34): I though it was bowl like a, like a cylinder, like a half of a sphere. Doug Johnson (14:37): Oh yes, no, no. In this case. Leon Adato (14:38): No, no, this is. Doug Johnson (14:38): it's a, yeah. The logo is, you know, like hook 'em horns, Texas, uh, university of Texas stuff, whatever. But. Leon Adato (14:46): Got it. Doug Johnson (14:46): Basically it's, it, uh, allows you to go ahead and habits that you want to do to go ahead and give it, uh, a frequency, a cadence, like I want every day I want to do this or 3 times a week. I want to do this. Or in the next month, I need to do this once a week. So you can lay out what they are, and it gives you reminders. And as you Mark them off, it gives you a string which actually builds that. Um, what are they, you, you, you you've put a string that string, that string of successes together. And after a while, you don't want to break the streak. So. Leon Adato (15:26): Got it. Doug Johnson (15:26): The beginning of this side, the first time I used it, I used at the beginning of the summer, when we were all locked down, I decided I should really start getting, and I got to like 80 or 90 days of walking, 8,000 steps every day. And I can tell you that since I'm not doing that at the moment, um, I managed to get 8,000 steps at least twice a month. Um, so. Leon Adato (15:48): wow. Doug Johnson (15:48): When I use it, and so basically what I, I had a scripture reading down my daily scripture, reading on habit bulletin, and that helps you maintain a streak. So it's really good. You, you get like 3 or 4 habits, uh, for the free version. And for, I forget however much it, you can get unlimited habits that you want to track, but Stephen Foskett (16:10): I just even thinking of the nuns, I'm sorry. Leon Adato (16:13): I was going to say, like you could see it on his face that he's just thinking of the nuns unlimited habits, it's like a panty raid but at a monastary. Stephen Foskett (16:19): how many can you put on it once, right? Doug Johnson (16:22): And now we know why the Catholic church, doesn't like the rest of us. Leon Adato (16:28): There's. I still. Doug Johnson (16:29): Oh, well, in any case, I'm going to let all of that just go because I am much more kind than that. Yeah. Okay. Bye none of us, none of us bye that, so, okay. But those are my three. Leon Adato (16:43): Great. And, and for the last one though, I, I like the idea of GAM, gamifying, your spiritual experience that, you know, I mean, we really are, you know, little monkeys sometimes as far as that goes and, you know, just feed the mice and the maze or whatever metaphor we want to use, you know, feed you know, you get that one little burst of endorphin and it just causes you to want to do more. And why not make your, your religious experience. Doug Johnson (17:09): Yeah, exactly. Well, and that's why Trello works for me because I get to check out, when my wife figured out that I like scratching things off lists. I mean, trust me, I get lists of things that she doesn't ask me to do anything more. She puts out on a list because she knows I'll check it off. So I'm a, I am for better or worse. I am really, I'm not a good human being, but I'm a heck of a monkey. So just so I use my tools to make me a better human being. Doug Johnson (17:40): There We go. All right. So Stephen Foskett (17:43): Were all just tech of a monkey, I think. Leon Adato (17:44): Yeah. Well, we're all, we're all wonderful monkeys. The question is whether we can make into better human beings as Well. Um, I like it. All right, Steven. Uh, I. Stephen Foskett (17:54): Yes. Leon Adato (17:54): Realized that that was a very, bizarre conversation to follow up on, but, uh, you've given us some thoughts. So I'm curious about the tech that you use. Stephen Foskett (18:04): All right. Well, I'm gonna, um, first apologize, uh, for, um, uh, you know, I'm going to defend Facebook, so I'm sorry. Um, I'm sorry, those of you who find that a sin, um, frankly, it's terrible. We all know it's terrible, but it's also kind of not terrible. Um, because truly, I think that essentially we all need to find ways of connecting to each other and frankly, it's where everyone is. And it's not only that, but if you squint and turn your head and mute enough, you can actually see some positives to it too. And, um, you know, for example, um, you know, here in, in my town, um, there's a terrible town Facebook group, and everyone has one of those. Um, there's also a group where people go out in nature and take pictures of owls and trees and ponds, and talk about how they've discovered something lovely and wonderful in the town. And somehow that group has not yet been polluted by red and blue comments, and it's just, you know, wonderful. And it's the same thing, you know what I mean? You know, connecting with your family, connecting, you know, maybe some people in your family, you kind of don't want to connect with any more, but you know what, it's important that we know who's graduating. It's important that we know who's sick and who's better. And it's important that we keep connected and frankly, whatever makes that happen is I think a pretty good tool. And, uh, again, I, I don't want to say anything nice about them, but this is what makes it happen for me, frankly. This is the tool that we're using to keep connected with our families and, you know, in the pandemic, I think that that's doubly important. Um, people who have distributed families like me, that's incredibly important. Um, and so, yeah, um, Leon Adato (20:09): Ok. Stephen Foskett (20:09): It's a great, it's a great thing. Leon Adato (20:11): I, you know, I can see the treatise now, you know, in defense of Facebook. Doug Johnson (20:18): I was away from it for a year and I came back and, you know, it's, it's not terrible. Um, I it's, I'm learning how to not follow people. That really are just over the side, but you're, I mean, there's a lot of good this, there, I, in fact, I miss Twitter because there were so many people that I enjoyed following, but everybody's just so wacko for a while there during the, during the Trump years. I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm hoping that it's just gonna chill some here. Leon Adato (20:46): Well And there's there. Just to add one quick comment, which is, um, a conversation that we were having a friend of mine. And I said, you know, he, he said, this is it. I can't deal with so-and-so anymore. I'm going to have to cut them out of my life. And, uh, you know, they're saying all this stuff on Facebook, it happened to be that I just can't, I can't deal with it. I can't fall. And into this conversation, my rabbi, who by the way, is on Twitter, which is a whole other conversation, but okay. And he said, you know, you don't actually have to listen to them. You could actually choose to mute. And again, this is by rabbi talking to me, the tech, you know, technology person and my friend who is a programmer and saying, you know, they have these options so that you never see anything that they say at all. And that way you wouldn't have to hear the horrible things that I'm not saying. They don't say horrible things. I'm just saying this doesn't have to impact your relationship with them in the sense of like, if the things they say bother you don't read them because they don't say them in public. Stephen Foskett (21:54): Yeah. And honestly, um, that, you know, I'm going to say, I'm going to, I'm going to change, changing up my, my list here. Um, I have to say that I've learned more about people and I've gained a better appreciation from people from dealing with people on social media, generally, um, Twitter. Um, so here's the thing, the other month I said something off the cuff that came off as incredibly stupid. And insensitive. Um, and it got retweeted a lot, like a lot, like I got probably 500 hateful comments, um, from people. And it was enough that I actually just got another spate of them last week because it's one of those famous things that keeps coming back, look at this stupid guy and this stupid thing he said, but, you know, what's funny. Um, and I think that this is, you know, perfectly fitting for, um, uh, context like this. The most remarkable thing is that I took the advice of, well, of all of the people that I admire and all the philosophers that I respect. And basically the answer was, you know, you did the thing, you know, recognize the humanity in these people. They're angry at you because of the way that they're perceiving you and, and, and what can you do with that? And so, instead of, um, and I haven't, I haven't talked about this really much. Um, so this is kind of a nice opportunity for me instead of, um, like yelling at people or telling them, you know, they're stupid or muting everybody or deleting it. Um, instead, you know, what I decided to do, I decided to write a response to every one of the people that contacted me, except if they swore at me, if they, if they swore at me or called me a Nazi or something, I was just like, okay, I don't need to engage. This person is just angry. Leon Adato (24:07): Uh huh. Stephen Foskett (24:07): And engaging with somebody who's just angry is probably not good. But if they said something like you're so insensitive, what about women? What about the disabled? You know, I replied and I said, you know what? I can see how you could get that from what I wrote. And I don't feel good about that. And that's not a reflection of who I am, and I'm sorry that you feel this way. And I'm sorry that I said something that, and you know, what happened next? What happened next was I got hundreds of responses back saying, wow, that was really nice. I really appreciated this response. You know, um, I'm still talking to some of these people, you know, six months later who basically introduced themselves by saying you're an idiot and you're insensitive. And I have to say, I've actually learned a lot more about people and I've learned how to work with people and how to, um, and I've learned more respect and humility from a bad day on Twitter than I did in a lot of Sunday school. Doug Johnson (25:15): Good. Leon Adato (25:15): Wow. Doug Johnson (25:15): Yes, I totally get that. I mean, it, it's hard to go ahead and, not, not strike back. And so that, that on your part is admirable. And, you know, being able to go ahead and essentially own what you own, what you did and be willing to engage. And I try and engage. I offend people all the time, not intentionally there's people who do it intentionally. Leon Adato (25:42): I can vouch for the truth of this. Doug Johnson (25:43): It is right. When people come to me and say, I'm an idiot and I'm insensitive. I go, boy, you're, I could, I, you are so right. And I, upon, you know, what, what did, what did I do today? All right. And, and so, and, and, but, you know, again, being willing to own it and apologize for it, if it deserves an apology or to say, Oh, I, you know, I did not even think of it that way. I apologize to, you know, it goes a long way towards connecting with people. Which im not great at. Stephen Foskett (26:12): Yeah. And what you find is that, you know, people are really, a lot of people are really hurting and a lot of people are really, um, angry at the situations that they see around them. And they're kind of ascribing things to these situations. And by basically opening up and listening, um, you know, you can get a lot more out of it. And a lot of like real personal growth out of it. Um, and really that kind of fits with my, you know, my beliefs, you know, I believe that, you know, that people can transcend what they are, and what they, what they seem to be. And if you give them a chance, a lot of the time they will. And like I said, truly, a lot of people are just angry and, you know, sometimes, you know, you got to just let that burn out a little bit. So anyway, so I have definitely learned a lot more about that. Um, you know, and frankly, I feel like, you know, the other things that I was going to talk about, um, you know, unlike Doug, I absolutely do not have the Bible memorized. Um, but I do have blue light, uh, blue letter Bible on my iPad. And that lets me look stuff up and cross reference it when I need to. Um, Leon Adato (27:29): I think that overall the, you know, if there's one thing about just devices in our pocket at all, it's having access to a text that I am comfortable with, as opposed to having to arrive at a building and pull a book off the shelf that I might not be as familiar with, or know where to find things or whatever, and in a language that I'm comfortable with in a font size that I'm comfortable with. Like, I think that just the single most effective use of technology is personalizing the text in ways that are very personal to us. I think that that makes a huge difference. So yeah, I can see that. Stephen Foskett (28:08): Yep. And the amazing power of computers to cross-reference. Leon Adato (28:12): Uh huh. Stephen Foskett (28:12): Is just, um, and then search is just incredible. I mean, to think that you can say, um, you know, I want to find like, like, like, you know, Doug, you're writing a sermon and you're like, I need to find that quote where Jesus says this one thing, and to be able to just like, like click the little magnifying glass and you're there, you know, I mean, Doug Johnson (28:34): And you find out it was actually Joshua who said it. Stephen Foskett (28:37): Yeah. Jesus didn't say a lot of the things people think he said. Leon Adato (28:42): Right. Stephen Foskett (28:42): Um, yeah. And then I guess the final thing that I'll give a pitch to is, um, especially in the pandemic, I think a lot of people are in need of some personal connection and, and someone to talk to and someone to talk back. And yet we can't really go out. And so I am, I never thought that I would be into audio books, but I got to say, audio books are awesome. And. Leon Adato (29:07): Uh huh. Stephen Foskett (29:07): Being able to, you know, to sit down and just listen as somebody reads you, their book is, uh, it's weird and cool. Um, also puts me to sleep, but, um, at least. Leon Adato (29:23): But in a good way. Stephen Foskett (29:23): it couldn't go back again. Leon Adato (29:25): In a good, but in a good way, I mean, you know, it is, it is that comforting voice of somebody who has basically promised no, no, I'm going to read to you until you're calm. I'm going to keep giving you some ideas that will distract you from the circle, spinning of your brain. And I'll be there. Stephen Foskett (29:42): And there's something wonderfully soothing about somebody reading to you. Leon Adato (29:46): Uh huh. Stephen Foskett (29:46): I think it's a, it's like one of those things, like, you know, we're, you know, from when we're children, like, we love to have somebody reading to us. And especially now, like I said, with the pandemic, you know, you're, you, you know, everybody's trapped inside, you can at least sit and you can listen to somebody and you can kind of escape from this, into your head in a good way. Leon Adato (30:05): Uh huh. Stephen Foskett (30:05): And, um, and, and I'm loving that. Leon Adato (30:09): So just to, to add on to that one, uh, again, as, as people have been listening are familiar with, but if, if you're not familiar with Orthodox Judaism, uh, on Shabbat, the Sabbath from Friday night sundown until Saturday Sunday, and if it has an on switch, it's off limits, that's the easiest way to say it. So that means that, um, you know, for, for 24, 25 hours playing an audio book, or the television or any of those things is, is not going to work. So what's happened in our house is that, um, I will read. You know, we'll, we'll pick a book. We've, we've worked our way through the Harry Potter series a couple of times. And I will read with all the voices and that's what we do and lows during the day. And then at night the same thing, like, you know, my wife is sitting there, her brain is spinning with all the things that have to happen, whatever. And of course your brain is spinning with things that have to happen that you can not do because it's Shabbat, right? So now you have nowhere to put this and nowhere, nothing to do with this. So what do you do? You know, I sit there and I read, I read until she falls asleep and it's really, it's just sort of a delightful and the kids all come trundling to the room. My kids are in their twenties. Okay. Let's just be honest about this. So they come in and they've got their blanket and they lay, you know on the floor or whatever it is and we read and it's just, You know. Stephen Foskett (31:31): That's about the nicest thing I have heard in months. Leon Adato (31:36): Yeah. It's, it's fun. And they look forward to it. It's one more reason to look forward to what a lot of people like, how can 24 hours without anything, how do you do that? I mean, well, in my house, it's like, is it Shabbat yet? Can't we have Shabbat now? Like still got two more days to go kid. Come on. Stephen Foskett (31:53): Can you do Dumbledore for us please? Leon Adato (31:56): [Reading Harry Potter] She may have taken you grudgingly furiously, unwillingly, bitterly, Yet, She still took you. And in doing so, she sealed the charm. I had placed upon you. Your mother's sacrifice made the bond of blood, the strongest shield I could give you. While you can still call the poll, call home the place where your mother's blood dwells there, you cannot be touched or harmed by Voldemort. He shed your blood. He shed her blond, but it lives on and you and your, and her sister, her blood became your refuge. So that's Dumbledore. Stephen Foskett (32:28): I hear it. I hear it. I'm really glad that you don't sound like the Dumbledore in the movies. Leon Adato (32:32): No, no, no. John Huston, John Huston is the voice of Gandalf and Dumbledore like that is the wizard voice. Um, that's just in my head. That's what he sounds like. Um, so anyway, uh, back to our conversation, back to the topic, uh, audible books certainly are, you know, a calming source so that I can see how that, that would, that would be good. Okay. So tell you what, after, uh, doing my Dumbledore impression, I'm gonna, uh, wrap this up with a couple of recommendations of mine. Uh, just two of them. The first one is something that I mentioned in another episode, hebecal.com. And I said that right as Stephen was taking a drink. So now I own the new cube, keyboard because he just spit all over it. Um, yeah, hebcal.com. That's actually a website and it is a calendar that will give you all the different holidays and times and things like that incredibly useful because, uh, the Jewish calendar can be insanely complicated. And that's something I mentioned in the other episode, but what I wanted to bring out here is that there's two particular features on that website. First one is after you have created your customized calendar, that shows the things that you want and not the things that you don't want, you can export that to an Ical format. So it's not just like you have to go back to that website every time you want something, you can create your own calendar, including things like, you know, people's the, the anniversary people's deaths within what's called a Yartzite, which is very important. You can output that in the Ical format and have that sort of in perpetuity year after year, you can have it built into your calendar. And I find that that's especially useful because it's easy to forget that it's the first night of Hanukkah because it changes from year to year across the regular calendar. The other part is that, and this is very, very, you know, technically religious, there's an API, there's an actual restful JSON API. So if you're building your own application that needs to grab a Hebrew date, or what Torah reading, what Torah portion is that week, or what time sundown is or whatever, or what holidays are coming up, you can actually make a function call to the website, through their API and grab all that information back and use that. And as a technologist who has written a couple of WordPress modules and things like that, it is incredibly helpful because they've done the legwork on all the really hair on the knuckles, hard, uh, calendar programming that is so difficult to do. So that's the first one. Doug Johnson (35:09): sweet. Leon Adato (35:09): And, um, Stephen Foskett (35:10): I really want to know if you can do a JSON post of why is this night different from any other night. Leon Adato (35:17): Uh, and get answers back. Stephen Foskett (35:19): Yeah. That I, that would be an API. So subscribed to, Leon Adato (35:22): I can, I can. Doug Johnson (35:23): That would actually be a get. Leon Adato (35:26): Well, hold on. No, no, no, no. Stephen Foskett (35:27): No no, That's something different. Doug Johnson (35:30): Unless you're going to send an unless you're sending your answer. Leon Adato (35:33): No, no, no. You need to do is you'd need to have the URL. And the first variable is which son you are. Doug Johnson (35:40): Right. Leon Adato (35:40): Because that's going to tell you what the return that's. So it would be, uh, a, uh, uh, get function. Doug Johnson (35:47): Alright, I know what I'm doing this weekend. Stephen Foskett (35:50): Yup, bracket quote. sun order colen. Doug Johnson (35:52): Right. I have to tell you, I am, I'm grateful for hebcal, because I remember Leon talking to me probably 10, 12 years ago about how we were going to build this thing. And fortunately, they got it built before I had to do it. Leon Adato (36:07): Right. Doug Johnson (36:08): We, we started talking about this and I'm going, Oh my God. Leon Adato (36:13): Right? And I don't know nearly enough to be able to spec that out appropriately either. So no, it, uh, Doug Johnson (36:19): It would have been if we'd still be working on it. Leon Adato (36:22): Yeah we would. And it would still be a horrible, it would never work Right. Doug Johnson (36:24): Exactly. So thank you, HebCal. Leon Adato (36:27): Thank you. So, and the last thing I want to bring up is just a website. Um, YeahThat'skosher.com. No, really. That's the website. YeahThat'skosher.com. There are a lot of websites that talk about whether a thing is kosher or not. This is actually a restaurant review website, and the guy who runs the website, um, does a lot of traveling, did a lot of traveling lives in the New York area. And he highlights the, the restaurants that are new and opening and what kind of cuisine they have. And honestly, you know, is it good? Is it run of the mill? Is it no, you really need to skip this place. He really does a good job of keeping up to date so that when I'm in a new city, typically I can rely on that to know what, uh, some of the places like I don't want to miss, or nah, that's, you know, I don't need to pay the cab fare or the, you know, Uber or Lyft ride to get out there it's not, it's going to be a hot dog and that's gonna be the end of it or whatever it is. So that, especially as somebody who travels to conferences and things, it helps me to know when there's a new place. Like, Oh, I've been in Vegas. No, no, no. They have a steakhouse. Now they have a kosher steak house. I would actually give away one of my children and I can name which one for the steak that I have. I fonder memories of the Tomahawk steak I had there than I have of at least one of my kids. Um, it's a really good kosher steak house, so that, but those are the kinds of things you can get from that. So that's very helpful unless you're one of my kids. Um, so that's, that's it, that's, that's the episode, uh, I'll quickly go to the lightning round, any final words or things that you want to add. Yeah, Stephen. Stephen Foskett (38:01): I actually, I really want to add something from my other world, from the world of watches. Leon Adato (38:06): Oh, go ahead. Stephen Foskett (38:06): There is a remarkable watchmaker who created a watch, a wristwatch that has the full Muslim calendar built into it. And it, and it actually shows the correct Islamic date using the phases of the moon. And one of the coolest things about mechanical watches that are all the cool things you can do with gears. So just imagine your API that tells us which day or which month it is. Okay. Now, now do that gears. Leon Adato (38:36): Uh huh. Stephen Foskett (38:36): Um, so if, if you want to look this up, it actually won the, one of the highest awards in watchmaking in 2020, uh, because it is a pretty remarkable achievement. Leon Adato (38:45): Great. Stephen Foskett (38:45): So it's by a company called Parmigiani, which is not Pomodoro, but it still has some pretty good technique. Leon Adato (38:51): So it's not the tomato, it's the cheese. Stephen Foskett (38:53): Yes. Leon Adato (38:54): That's great. And we'll have the links for everything that we talked about in the show notes. Um, okay, great. That's that's cool. Doug, any final comments? Doug Johnson (39:02): Nope. I like all of the stuff I've used, all the stuff that Stephen uses, uh, probably not as effectively as he has, but that's good. I mean, there's just a lot of good stuff out there. I was just thinking today, you know, I read through the calendar thing this today in calendar and I realized how much stuff has happened since I was born. Queen Elizabeth became queen Elizabeth about three months before I was born. Stephen Foskett (39:28): Did you know that Betty White really is older than sliced bread? Leon Adato (39:31): Yes, I saw that. Stephen Foskett (39:33): True fact. Doug Johnson (39:33): That's funny. I did not know that Leon Adato (39:36): She's something like 3 or 4 years. 3 or 4 years older then sliced bread. Yeah. Doug Johnson (39:40): And that, and that's the important stuff that we have now. The good thing about having only a part partial brain at least for half of the year is now we've got technology that fills in the rest of it. Um, so that I can make it look like I actually deserve to exist on this. Leon Adato (39:56): You're a functioning, functional adult. Doug Johnson (39:58): Yeah I get a lot more done now than I used to. And, um, even, even though, uh, my brain is not working at full, I, at least I I've got systems and tools set up that sort of prop me up. Stephen Foskett (40:11): Well, can I just make a pitch? I think what the, the best, uh, technology tool to help religious people would be, would be a head-up display inside your glasses that tells you who is that person? What was I talking to them about last time? And what's their mother's name? Doug Johnson (40:27): Yep there you go . Stephen Foskett (40:27): I think that would really help. Doug Johnson (40:28): Well, as, as soon as, yeah, I was going to say there there's a new batch of AR glasses that somebody is coming out with. It look a lot better than the, uh, than the ones we've had so far. So maybe that maybe that'll be my next side gig after I make my million billion on this first one. Leon Adato (40:44): There we go. Doug Johnson (40:45): Or actually 43rd one whenever when I'm on. Leon Adato (40:47): Well, uh, I definitely appreciate all the parts of your brain that you decided to bring to the show today. Doug Johnson (40:53): late. Leon Adato (40:53): And whenever you chose to bring them, look, I, you know, we're very flexible here and, uh, we're doing this, uh, you know, for fun. So it ain't like, uh, you're gonna, we're gonna dock your paycheck for it. So, uh, I appreciate you taking the time. Doug Johnson (41:10): I appreciate it. Thanks. I love this. Leon Adato (41:12): Good. Doug Johnson (41:13): Human beings. I like that I like, Oh my God. Stephen Foskett (41:17): I'm just glad to be able to meet Doug. Leon Adato (41:21): Yeah. Well, he's, you know. Doug Johnson (41:21): Oh, you say that now. Leon Adato (41:23): Yeah, someday soon. Thanks a lot, guys. Have a good night. Doug Johnson (41:28): Bye now. Roddie (41:29): Thank you for making time for us this week, to hear more of technically religious visit our website at technicallyreligious.com, where you can find our other episodes, leave us ideas for future discussions or connect with us on social media.
Roddie Shanley shares with us her story of how exercise helped her to overcome addiction to alcohol. In this episode Roddie has a large family that has supported her along her journey and is very excited about her new business Inspired Life, which includes nutrition, fitness apparel and art. To learn more about Roddie, please contact her directly https://facebook.com/roddie.plante; https//facebook.com/reflectionsbyroddie
Here is your Emo Freshman Class 2020. This year we're joined by two alumni, David from Charmer and Roddie from niiice., to bring you the list. Thank you all for voting in such a diverse and excellent class this year.
Utah State Aggie Basketball great, Roddie Anderson joins The Full Court Press to talk about his career at Utah State, what brought him there, & some of his best memories as an Aggie.
2 years of The E Word. We finally allowed Roddie from niiice. on the podcast and opened the call lines for people to call in. 5 people called in and then stayed on the line to talk about topics and takes submitted by our followers. Thanks for supporting us for two years.
All about geoengeneered chemtrails, that's right folks those are NOT clouds. First Hour Guest Shawn Gardner, 46 yrs old from San Jose, California. He is currently working for a local Parks Department, an Arborist and ran a small startup called Fun2Rent for a few years. Shawn started becoming aware of chemtrails and dangers of vaccines around 2010 and finally could not be silent on the problems and became an outspoken activist in 2015. Main Guest Patrick Roddie is a chemtrails/geoengineering activist who runs http://StopSprayingUs.com. He is currently studying the human health effects of the spraying, particularly the rise of Alzheimer's. He is collecting data to build a free database matching observed spraying with adverse health outcomes and will sue geoengineer David Keith in federal court to prevent him spraying alumina over Tuscon Arizona this summer. .http://stopsprayingus.com/
Forsaken Generation is going to have a different sort of show this week with Guest who will be talking all about chemtrails, that's right folks those aren't clouds. First Hour Guest Shawn Gardner, 46 yrs old from San Jose, California. He is currently working for a local Parks Department, an Arborist and ran a small startup called Fun2Rent for a few years. Shawn started becoming aware of chemtrails and dangers of vaccines around 2010 and finally could not be silent on the problems and became an outspoken activist in 2015. Main Guest Patrick Roddie is a chemtrails/geoengineering activist who runs http://StopSprayingUs.com. He is currently studying the human health effects of the spraying, particularly the rise of Alzheimer's. He is collecting data to build a free database matching observed spraying with adverse health outcomes and will sue geoengineer David Keith in federal court to prevent him spraying alumina over Tuscon Arizona this summer. .http://stopsprayingus.com/
Now that the Paris climate conference is over, we can reflect back on what it was and what were the results of this huge UN-sponsored meeting. The agreement that was intended to be reached was apparently achieved, and like all "voluntary suggestions," that come out of the UN, such as Agenda 21 (now Agenda 2030), we can expect it to be gradually imposed on us by force and threat of violence, to our great detriment. This is in keeping with the real purpose of the United Nations. This week, we are fortunate to have with us international journalist, author, educator and consultant Alex Newman (The New American | Twitter) and San Francisco-based geoengineering activist, speaker and writer Patrick Roddie (www.stopsprayingus-sf.com), both of whom attended the Paris conference. Their insights on what was achieved at the conference, the coming restrictions on every activity that emits carbon in any form (in other words activity we engage in), and how this fits in with United Nations Agenda 21 (Agenda 2030) as well as with the global program of chemical air raids going on worldwide ("geoengineering"), will be highly educational and you will definitely want to tune in to this show.
What really happened at the Paris Climate Conference? Was it actually about climate, or was that a cover for a deeper real agenda? On the surface, it was promoted as a gathering of world leaders out of genuine concern for the future of our planet, focused on the issue of the threat to all life on Earth posed by "climate change." What do the world rulers want to do because of the threat of climate change? They want us to pay global taxes and submit to supranational governing agencies to totally monitor and control every aspect of our lives. Will this stop climate change? Well no, but it will be a tremendous step forward for mankind toward world tyranny. Damaging climate disruption is undoubtedly happening, and is an authentic threat to the biosphere. But the most direct cause of the problem is the dumping of toxic metal nanoparticles over almost every country in the world on a daily basis, in the most massive and highly coordinated attack against humanity that has ever occurred. This week's show features three world class experts on this attack program, otherwise known as geoengineering, or chemtrails. Patrick Roddie and Max Bliss are serious and devoted anti-geoengineering researchers focusing on health effects and history, respectively, and each of them has a vast knowledge base on this critical subject to share. Russ Tanner, with a lifetime of sky and aircraft observation and a rare physical sensitivity to the ongoing toxic spraying, is the owner of www.globalskywatch.com, and devotes his life full time to spreading awareness of this pressing life and death issue, working to find solutions to get it to stop. The show this week will provide you with exceptional direct insight into how our rulers are doing their best to make geoengineering and global control an inescapable permanent feature of our lives, and what our options may be to avoid this fate.